Scythinus of Teos I Epigrams in Greek
Scythinus of Teos was an obscure iambic poet known only from later sources. His work, the Epigrams, is lost and survives in a single fragment. The primary source, Diogenes Laertius, reports that Scythinus attempted to render the philosophy of Heraclitus into verse. The sole surviving line, quoted by Diogenes Laertius, illustrates the work's didactic purpose: "One thing, the only truly wise, does and does not consent to be called by the name of Zeus." This indicates the epigrams versified core Heraclitean doctrines, such as the unity of opposites and the cosmic Logos, reinterpreting the nature of the divine governing principle through a philosophical lens. The work is transmitted exclusively through fragmentary quotations in doxographical sources. Diogenes Laertius provides the one extant line, and the Byzantine Suda encyclopedia also mentions Scythinus as a poet who versified Heraclitus but offers no additional text. Scythinus represents a minor tradition of philosophical didactic poetry aimed at popularizing complex thinkers. His historical significance lies primarily as a named example of the posthumous reception and interpretation of Heraclitus's thought.
| book 22.1.1 | Ἦλθέν μοι μέγα πῆμα, μέγας πόλεμος, μέγα μοι πῦρ, |
| book 22.1.2 | Ἰλισὸς πλήρης τῶν ἐς ἔρωτ’ ἐτέων, |
| book 22.1.3 | αὐτὰ τὰ καίρι’ ἔχων ἑκκαίδεκα καὶ μετὰ τούτων |
| book 22.1.4 | πάσας καὶ μικρὰς καὶ μεγάλας χάριτας |
| book 22.5.1 | καὶ πρὸς ἀναγνῶναι φωνὴν μέλι καὶ τὸ φιλῆσαι |
| book 22.5.2 | χείλεα καὶ τὸ λαβεῖν ἔνδον ἀμεμπτότατον. |
| book 22.5.3 | καὶ τί πάθω; φασὶν γὰρ ὁρᾶν μόνον· ἦ ῥ’ ἀγρυπνήσω |
| book 22.5.4 | πολλάκι τῇ κενεῇ Κύπριδι χειρομαχῶν. |
| book 232.1.1 | Ὀρθὸν νῦν ἕστηκας, ἀνώνυμον, οὐδὲ μαραίνῃ, |
| book 232.1.2 | ἐντέτασαι δ’ ὡς ἂν μήποτε παυσόμενον· |
| book 232.1.3 | ἀλλ’ ὅτε μοι Νεμεσηνὸς ὅλον παρέκλινεν ἑαυτὸν |
| book 232.1.4 | πάντα διδούς, ἃ θέλω, νεκρὸν ἀπεκρέμασο. |
| book 232.5 | τείνεο καὶ ῥήσσου καὶ δάκρυε· πάντα ματαίως· |
| book 232 | οὐχ ἕξεις ἔλεον χειρὸς ἀφ’ ἡμετέρης. |