
Strenuorum immortale nomen.
Achievers have an immortal name
EMBLEMA CXXXVI.
AEacidae tumulum Rhoetaeo in littore cernis,[1]
Quem plerumque pedes visitat alba Thetis.[2]
Obtegitur semper viridi lapis hic amarantho;[3]
Qụd nunquam Herois sit moriturus honos.
Hic Graium murus,[4] magni nex Hectoris. Haud plus
Debet Maeonidae, quàm sibi Maeonides.[5]
You see the tomb of Aeacus’ descendant on the Rhoetean shore, which white-footed Thetis often visits. This stone is always covered with green amaranth, because the honour due to heroes shall never die. This man was‘the wall of the Greeks’, and the destruction of great Hector, and he owes no more to the Lydian poet than the poet does to him.
1. ‘Aeacus’ descendant’, i.e. Achilles, the greatest warrior on the Greek side in the Trojan War. Rhoeteum was a promontory on the Trojan coast (though normally associated with the tomb of Ajax).
2. Thetis, a sea-nymph, mother of Achilles, called ‘silver-footed’ by Homer.
3. amarantho: the name of the plant means ‘never-fading’. See Pliny, Natural History, 21.23.47.
4. ‘the wall of the Greeks’, translating Homer’s description of Achilles at Iliad, 3.229.
5. Maeonidae, ‘to the Lydian poet’, i.e. Homer, who told in the Iliad the famous story of Achilles’ wrath and refusal to fight during the Trojan War, and of his eventual slaying of Hector, the chief warrior on the Trojan side. (For which see Emblem 154, [A21a154]). For the sentiment that great deeds need to be sung in order not to be forgotten, see Horace, Odes, 4.8.20ff; and that great literature needs great themes, see Tacitus, Dialogus de oratoribus, 37.
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- arm stretched forward (+ reaching, handing, giving) [31A2512(+9341)] Search | Browse Iconclass
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