a poet of Colophon, in Asia Minor, of whose private history we know scarcely anything. He seems to have flourished about a.c. 280, at the same time as Theocritus, and was the author of three books of elegies, which he addressed to his mistress Leontium, as Propertius did to Cynthia. Athenæus (xiii. 597) has preserved ninety-eight verses of a very beautiful elegy, which has been published separately by Weston in his Conjectura in Athenæum, Lond. 1784. Van Santen has translated it into Latin verse under the title of Tentamen Hermesianacænum, as also Rigier and Axti (Colon. 1828). The best edition is by Bach (Hale, 1829). See LEONTIUM.