MIMNERMUS, an ancient poet and musician, flourished about the beginning of the sixth century B.C. He was of Smyrna, and contemporary with Solon. Athenæus gives him the invention of pentameter verse. His elegies, of which only a few fragments are preserved, were so much admired in antiquity, that Horace preferred them to those of Callimachus. He composed a poem of this kind, as we learn from Pausanias, Vol. XIV. Part I.
upon the battle fought between the people of Smyrna, and the Lydians under Gyges. He likewise was author of a poem in elegiac verse, quoted by Strabo, which he entitled Nanno, and in which we may suppose he chiefly celebrated a young and beautiful girl of that name, who, according to Athenæus, was a player on the flute, with whom he was enamoured in his old age. With respect to love matters, according to Properius, his verses were more valuable than all the writings of Homer.
Plus in amore valet Mimnermi versus Homero.
Lib. I. Eleg. ix. v. 11.
And Horace bears testimony to his abilities in describing that seducing passion:
Si Mimnermus uti censeat, sine amore jocisque
Nil est jucundum, vivas in amore jocisque.
Lib. I. Epist. vi. v. 65.
If, as wife Mimnermus said,
Life unblest with love and joy
Ranks us with the senseless dead,
Let these gifts each hour employ.
Alluding to some much admired lines of the Greek poet, which have been preferred by Stobæus.
Τὸ δὲ βίος, τὶ δὲ πρὸς ἡμᾶς χεῖρες Ἀφειδέντες, &c.
What is life and all its pride,
If love and pleasure be denied?
Snatch, snatch me hence, ye Fates, whence'er
The am'rous bliss I cease to share.
Oh let us crop each fragrant flow'r
While youth and vigour give us pow'r:
For frozen age will soon destroy
The force to give or take a joy;
And then, a prey to pain and care,
Detested by the young and fair,
The sun's blest beams will hateful grow,
And only shine on scenes of woe.