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Daphnis and Chloe

Daphnis and Chloe (Greek: Δάφνις καὶ Χλόη, Daphnis kai Chloē) is an ancient Greek novel written in the Roman Empire, the only known work of the second-century AD Greek novelist and romance writer Longus.[1]

Daphnis and Chloe by Jean-Pierre Cortot

Setting and style edit

It is set on the Greek isle of Lesbos, where scholars assume the author to have lived. Its style is rhetorical and pastoral; its shepherds and shepherdesses are wholly conventional, but the author imparts human interest to this idealized world. Daphnis and Chloe resembles a modern novel more than does its chief rival among Greek erotic romances, the Aethiopica of Heliodorus, which is remarkable more for its plot than for its characterization.

Plot summary edit

Daphnis and Chloe is the story of a boy (Daphnis) and a girl (Chloe), each of whom is abandoned at birth along with some identifying tokens. A goatherd named Lamon discovers Daphnis, and a shepherd called Dryas finds Chloe. Each decides to raise the child he finds as his own. Daphnis and Chloe grow up together, herding the flocks for their foster parents. They fall in love but, being naive, do not understand what is happening to them. Philetas, a wise old cowherd, explains to them what love is and tells them that the only cure is kissing.[2] They do this. Eventually, Lycaenion, a woman from the city, educates Daphnis in love-making. Daphnis, however, decides not to test his newly acquired skill on Chloe, because Lycaenion tells Daphnis that Chloe "will scream and cry and lie bleeding heavily [as if murdered]."[2] Throughout the book, Chloe is courted by suitors, two of whom (Dorcon and Lampis) attempt with varying degrees of success to abduct her. She is also carried off by raiders from a nearby city and saved by the intervention of the god Pan. Meanwhile, Daphnis falls into a pit, gets beaten up, is abducted by pirates, and is very nearly raped by a drunkard. In the end, after being recognised by their birth parents, Daphnis and Chloe get married and live out their bucolic lives in the country.[2][3]

Characters edit

 
Daphnis et Chloe, oil on canvas by Louise Marie-Jeanne Hersent-Mauduit

The characters in the novel include:

  • Astylus – Dionysophanes' son
  • Chloe – the heroine
  • Daphnis – the hero
  • Dionysophanes – Daphnis' master and father
  • Dorcon – the would-be suitor of Chloe
  • Dryas – Chloe's foster father
  • Eros – god of love
  • Eudromus – a messenger
  • Gnathon – the would-be suitor of Daphnis
  • Lamon – Daphnis' foster father
  • Lampis – a cow-herder
  • Lycaenion – woman who educates Daphnis in love-making
  • Megacles – Chloe's father
  • Myrtale – Daphnis' foster mother
  • Nape – Chloe's foster mother
  • Pan - god of shepherds and the wild
  • Philetas – old countryman who advises the heroes about love; likely named after Philitas of Cos[4]
  • Rhode – Chloe's mother

Text tradition edit

Until the beginning of the nineteenth century, about a page of text was missing; when Paul Louis Courier went to Italy, he found the missing part in one of the plutei (an ancient Roman reading desk or place for storing manuscripts) of the Biblioteca Laurenziana in Florence. However, as soon as he had copied the text, he upset the ink-stand and spilled ink all over the manuscript. The Italian philologists were incensed, especially those who had studied the pluteus giving "a most exact description" (un'esattissima notizia) of it.

Influences and adaptations edit

 
A nineteenth-century painting by the Swiss-French painter Marc Gabriel Charles Gleyre depicting a scene from Daphnis and Chloe

The first vernacular edition of Daphnis and Chloe was the French version of Jacques Amyot, published in 1559. Along with the Diana of Jorge de Montemayor (published in the same year), Daphnis and Chloe helped inaugurate a European vogue for pastoral fiction in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Daphnis and Chloe was the model of La Sireine of Honoré d'Urfé, the Aminta of Torquato Tasso, and The Gentle Shepherd of Allan Ramsay. The novel Paul et Virginie by Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre echoes the same story.

Jacques Amyot's French translation is perhaps better known than the original. The story has been presented in numerous illustrated editions, including a 1937 limited edition with woodcuts by Aristide Maillol, and a 1977 edition illustrated by Marc Chagall. Another translation that rivals the original is that of Annibale Caro, one of those writers dearest to lovers of the Tuscan elegances.

The 1952 work Shiosai (The Sound of Waves), written by the Japanese writer Yukio Mishima following a visit to Greece, is considered to have been inspired by the Daphnis and Chloe myth. Another work based on it is the 1923 novel Le Blé en herbe by Colette.[5]

The 1987 film The Princess Bride contains similarities to Daphnis and Chloe (for example, in both stories the male romantic lead is captured by pirates). Lawrence Rinder, director of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, attributes the inspiration for the film to Longus.[6]

Opera edit

Ballet edit

Art edit

 
Photographic print by F. Holland Day of Ethel Reed in costume as Chloe (c. 1895–98).
  • Marc Chagall produced a series of 42 color lithographs based on the tale of Daphnis and Chloe.

Cinema edit

Radio edit

The work was adapted into a 45-minute radio play in 2006 by Hattie Naylor.

Gallery edit

Editions edit

  • Columbani, Raphael; Henry Cuffe and Marcello Adriani (1598). Longi Pastoralium, de Daphnide & Chloë libri quatuor. Florence: Apud Philippum Iunctam. The first printed edition.
  • Courier, Paul Louis (1810). Contained a previously unknown passage, after the discovery of a new manuscript.
  • Athenian Society (1896). Longus, literally and completely translated from the Greek. Athens: Privately printed. Retrieved 2007-06-22. With English translation.
  • Edmonds, John Maxwell (1916). Daphnis & Chloe, by Longus; The Love Romances of Parthenius and Other Fragments. Loeb Classical Library. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-99076-5. With English translation revised from that of George Thornley.
  • Dalmeyda, Georges (1971) [1934]. Pastorales (Daphnis et Chloe) / Longus. Collection des universités de France. Paris: Belles Lettres. With French translation.
  • Viellefond, Jean-René (1987). Pastorales (Daphnis et Chloé) / Longus. Collection des universités de France. Paris: Belles Lettres. With French translation.
  • Reeve, Michael D. (1994) [1982]. Daphnis et Chloe / Longus. Bibliotheca scriptorum Graecorum et Romanorum Teubneriana (Editio correctior ed.). Stuttgart: Teubner. ISBN 3-8154-1932-8. Reeve's text is reprinted with the translation and commentary by Morgan (see below).

English translations edit

  • Thornley, George (1657). . Archived from the original on 2011-05-17. Retrieved 2007-08-20. A revised version is printed with Edmonds's text (see above).
  • Hadas, Moses (1953). Three Greek Romances. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill. ISBN 978-0-672-60442-3.
  • Turner, Paul (1989) [1956]. Longus: Daphnis and Chloe. Penguin Classics. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-044059-1.
  • Gill, Christopher (1989). "Longus: Daphnis and Chloe". In Bryan P. Reardon (ed.). Collected Ancient Greek Novels. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. pp. 285–348. ISBN 978-0-520-04306-0.
  • McCail, Ronald (2002). Daphnis and Chloe / Longus. Oxford World's Classics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-284052-3.
  • Morgan, J. R. (2004). Longus: Daphnis and Chloe. Aris and Phillips Classical Texts. Oxford: Oxbow Books. ISBN 978-0-85668-562-0. With reprint of Reeve's text and a commentary.
  • Tyrrell, Wm. Blake (n.d.). "Daphnis and Chloe: A Novel by Longus". Retrieved 2007-08-20.
  • Henderson, Jeffrey (2009). Longus: Daphnis and Chloe / Xenophon of Ephesus: Anthia and Habrocomes. The Loeb Classical Library. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-99633-5. Side-by-side Greek text and English translation.
  • Humphreys, Nigel (2015). The Love Song of Daphnis and Chloe, Circaidy Gregory Press. ISBN 978-1-906451-88-2. In the format of an Epic Poem.

See also edit

Other ancient Greek novelists:

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ It has been suggested that the name "Longus" is merely a misreading of the last word of the title Λεσβιακῶν ἐρωτικῶν λόγοι δ in the Florentine manuscript; Seiler also observes that the best manuscript begins and ends with λόγου (not λόγγου) ποιμενικῶν.
  2. ^ a b c Longus; Xenophon of Ephesus (2009), Henderson, Jeffery (ed.), Anthia and Habrocomes (translation), Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, pp. 69 & 127, ISBN 978-0-674-99633-5
  3. ^ Blanchfield; Jones, Jamie; Lefler, Carrie. . University of North Carolina, Wilmington. Archived from the original on 2009-03-29. Retrieved 2011-03-01.
  4. ^ Richard Hunter (1996). "Longus, Daphnis and Chloe". In Gareth L. Schmeling (ed.). The Novel in the Ancient World. Brill. pp. 361–86. ISBN 90-04-09630-2.
  5. ^ Fischler, Alexander (1969). "Unity in Colette's Le Blé en Herbe". Modern Language Quarterly. 30 (2): 248–264. doi:10.1215/00267929-30-2-248.
  6. ^ Edelstein, Wendy (March 4, 2009). "In a Galaxy not all that far away..." UC Berkeley News. The University of California at Berkeley. Retrieved 2011-03-01.
  7. ^ Arnold Haskell (ed.) 'Gala Performance' (Collins 1955) p226.
  8. ^ . The Hamburg Ballet. www.hamburgballett.de. Archived from the original on 2011-06-25. Retrieved 2011-03-01.
  9. ^ . Daphnis et Chloé. Archived from the original on 2013-01-24. Retrieved 2013-07-27.

External links edit

Editions of the Greek text

  • Longi Pastoralium de Daphnide et Chloe Libri IV Graece et Latine Ed. Christ. Guil. Mitscherlich, Biponti (Zweibrücken), 1794.
  • Longi Pastoralia First complete Greek text of Daphnis and Chloe, edited by P.-L. Courier, with a Latin translation by G. R. Lud. de Sinner. Paris, 1829.
  • Longi Pastoralia Greek text of Daphnis and Chloe with a Latin translation, edd. Seiler, Schaefer, Boissonade & Brunck. Leipzig, 1843.
  • Erotici Scriptores Paris, 1856. Longi Pastoralia, Greek text with Latin translation, edited by G A Hirschig, pp. 174–222.
  • Daphnis and Chloe The Bibliotheca Classica Selecta's 2006/07 edition of the Greek text with the French translation of Jacques Amyot revised, corrected and completed by P.-L. Courier.

Synopses, analyses, and other studies

  • Chirping Cicadas and Singing Crickets An article – written from the standpoint of a cultural entomologist – by Herbert Weidner, Hamburg, Germany.
  • Daphnis and Chloe: Its influence on art and its impact on Goethe An entry in the Encyclopedia of World Biography which also notes the work done by William E. McCulloh, Emeritus Professor of Classics at Kenyon College, Ohio, in dating Daphnis and Chloe.
  • Longus: Life, Influence & Bibliography An entry in the Encyclopedia of the Ancient World.
  • J. C. Dunlop's History of Fiction London, 1888, vol. 1, pp. 45–57.

Audiobooks

  •   The pastoral loves of Daphnis and Chloe public domain audiobook at LibriVox

daphnis, chloe, this, article, about, novel, mythical, sicilian, poet, daphnis, mother, alexander, great, which, name, myrtale, olympias, myrtale, redirects, here, genus, moth, myrtale, moth, plant, genus, myrtales, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, Δάφνις, . This article is about the novel For the mythical Sicilian poet see Daphnis For the mother of Alexander the Great which had one of her name as Myrtale see Olympias Myrtale redirects here For the genus of moth see Myrtale moth For the plant genus see Myrtales For other uses see Daphnis and Chloe disambiguation Daphnis and Chloe Greek Dafnis kaὶ Xloh Daphnis kai Chloe is an ancient Greek novel written in the Roman Empire the only known work of the second century AD Greek novelist and romance writer Longus 1 Daphnis and Chloe by Jean Pierre Cortot Contents 1 Setting and style 2 Plot summary 3 Characters 4 Text tradition 5 Influences and adaptations 5 1 Opera 5 2 Ballet 5 3 Art 5 4 Cinema 5 5 Radio 6 Gallery 7 Editions 7 1 English translations 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 External linksSetting and style editIt is set on the Greek isle of Lesbos where scholars assume the author to have lived Its style is rhetorical and pastoral its shepherds and shepherdesses are wholly conventional but the author imparts human interest to this idealized world Daphnis and Chloe resembles a modern novel more than does its chief rival among Greek erotic romances the Aethiopica of Heliodorus which is remarkable more for its plot than for its characterization Plot summary editDaphnis and Chloe is the story of a boy Daphnis and a girl Chloe each of whom is abandoned at birth along with some identifying tokens A goatherd named Lamon discovers Daphnis and a shepherd called Dryas finds Chloe Each decides to raise the child he finds as his own Daphnis and Chloe grow up together herding the flocks for their foster parents They fall in love but being naive do not understand what is happening to them Philetas a wise old cowherd explains to them what love is and tells them that the only cure is kissing 2 They do this Eventually Lycaenion a woman from the city educates Daphnis in love making Daphnis however decides not to test his newly acquired skill on Chloe because Lycaenion tells Daphnis that Chloe will scream and cry and lie bleeding heavily as if murdered 2 Throughout the book Chloe is courted by suitors two of whom Dorcon and Lampis attempt with varying degrees of success to abduct her She is also carried off by raiders from a nearby city and saved by the intervention of the god Pan Meanwhile Daphnis falls into a pit gets beaten up is abducted by pirates and is very nearly raped by a drunkard In the end after being recognised by their birth parents Daphnis and Chloe get married and live out their bucolic lives in the country 2 3 Characters edit nbsp Daphnis et Chloe oil on canvas by Louise Marie Jeanne Hersent MauduitThe characters in the novel include Astylus Dionysophanes son Chloe the heroine Daphnis the hero Dionysophanes Daphnis master and father Dorcon the would be suitor of Chloe Dryas Chloe s foster father Eros god of love Eudromus a messenger Gnathon the would be suitor of Daphnis Lamon Daphnis foster father Lampis a cow herder Lycaenion woman who educates Daphnis in love making Megacles Chloe s father Myrtale Daphnis foster mother Nape Chloe s foster mother Pan god of shepherds and the wild Philetas old countryman who advises the heroes about love likely named after Philitas of Cos 4 Rhode Chloe s motherText tradition editUntil the beginning of the nineteenth century about a page of text was missing when Paul Louis Courier went to Italy he found the missing part in one of the plutei an ancient Roman reading desk or place for storing manuscripts of the Biblioteca Laurenziana in Florence However as soon as he had copied the text he upset the ink stand and spilled ink all over the manuscript The Italian philologists were incensed especially those who had studied the pluteus giving a most exact description un esattissima notizia of it Influences and adaptations edit nbsp A nineteenth century painting by the Swiss French painter Marc Gabriel Charles Gleyre depicting a scene from Daphnis and ChloeThe first vernacular edition of Daphnis and Chloe was the French version of Jacques Amyot published in 1559 Along with the Diana of Jorge de Montemayor published in the same year Daphnis and Chloe helped inaugurate a European vogue for pastoral fiction in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries Daphnis and Chloe was the model of La Sireine of Honore d Urfe the Aminta of Torquato Tasso and The Gentle Shepherd of Allan Ramsay The novel Paul et Virginie by Jacques Henri Bernardin de Saint Pierre echoes the same story Jacques Amyot s French translation is perhaps better known than the original The story has been presented in numerous illustrated editions including a 1937 limited edition with woodcuts by Aristide Maillol and a 1977 edition illustrated by Marc Chagall Another translation that rivals the original is that of Annibale Caro one of those writers dearest to lovers of the Tuscan elegances The 1952 work Shiosai The Sound of Waves written by the Japanese writer Yukio Mishima following a visit to Greece is considered to have been inspired by the Daphnis and Chloe myth Another work based on it is the 1923 novel Le Ble en herbe by Colette 5 The 1987 film The Princess Bride contains similarities to Daphnis and Chloe for example in both stories the male romantic lead is captured by pirates Lawrence Rinder director of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive attributes the inspiration for the film to Longus 6 Opera edit Jacques Offenbach wrote a one act operetta based on the story in 1860 Joseph Bodin de Boismortier wrote a Daphnis et Chloe pastorale in 3 acts in 1747 Jean Jacques Rousseau wrote a pastorale heroique called Daphnis et Chloe between 1774 and 1776 The work was never finished due to his death in 1778 Ballet edit Maurice Ravel wrote the 1912 ballet Daphnis et Chloe for Sergei Diaghilev s Ballets Russes choreographed by Michel Fokine The music by Ravel was also used in the ballet of the same name by Frederick Ashton first performed by the Sadler s Wells Ballet now The Royal Ballet at Covent Garden on 5 April 1951 with Margot Fonteyn as Chloe and Michael Somes as Daphnis Decor was by John Craxton 7 John Neumeier choreographed the ballet Daphnis and Chloe for his Frankfurt Ballet company 8 Jean Christophe Maillot created a contemporary and sensual choreography of the ballet Daphnis et Chloe for Les Ballets de Monte Carlo This shorter 35 minute choreography also uses Maurice Ravel s music but not the whole original ballet It features Jeroen Verbruggen as Daphnis Anjara Ballesteros Cilla as Chloe Bernice Coppieters as Lycenion and Chris Roelandt as Dorcon and was directed by Denis Caiozzi and produced by Telmondis Les Ballets de Monte Carlo and Mezzo The ballet premiered on April 1 2010 at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco and has since then been broadcast several times on television internationally 9 Art edit nbsp Photographic print by F Holland Day of Ethel Reed in costume as Chloe c 1895 98 Marc Chagall produced a series of 42 color lithographs based on the tale of Daphnis and Chloe Cinema edit The work was adapted into a 64 minute silent film by Orestis Laskos in 1931 one of the first Greek cinema classics The movie was originally considered shocking due to the nudity in some of the scenes The story was the basis for the 1963 film Mikres Afrodites Mikres Afrodites or Young Aphrodites by the Greek filmmaker Nikos Koundouros based on a script of Vassilis Vassilikos Radio edit The work was adapted into a 45 minute radio play in 2006 by Hattie Naylor Gallery edit nbsp Daphnis et Chloe by Pierre Paul Prud hon 1808 nbsp Daphnis et Chloe by Louise Marie Jeanne Hersent 1837 nbsp Daphne et Chloe by Dominique Louis Papety 1848 nbsp Daphnis and Chloe by Gaston Renault 1881 nbsp Raphael Collin 1890 cover nbsp Daphnis und Chloe 1958 statue by Ursula Querner at Hamburg Altona GermanyEditions editColumbani Raphael Henry Cuffe and Marcello Adriani 1598 Longi Pastoralium de Daphnide amp Chloe libri quatuor Florence Apud Philippum Iunctam The first printed edition Courier Paul Louis 1810 Contained a previously unknown passage after the discovery of a new manuscript Athenian Society 1896 Longus literally and completely translated from the Greek Athens Privately printed Retrieved 2007 06 22 With English translation Edmonds John Maxwell 1916 Daphnis amp Chloe by Longus The Love Romances of Parthenius and Other Fragments Loeb Classical Library Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 99076 5 With English translation revised from that of George Thornley Dalmeyda Georges 1971 1934 Pastorales Daphnis et Chloe Longus Collection des universites de France Paris Belles Lettres With French translation Viellefond Jean Rene 1987 Pastorales Daphnis et Chloe Longus Collection des universites de France Paris Belles Lettres With French translation Reeve Michael D 1994 1982 Daphnis et Chloe Longus Bibliotheca scriptorum Graecorum et Romanorum Teubneriana Editio correctior ed Stuttgart Teubner ISBN 3 8154 1932 8 Reeve s text is reprinted with the translation and commentary by Morgan see below English translations edit Thornley George 1657 Daphnis and Chloe A Most Sweet and Pleasant Pastorall ROMANCE for Young Ladies Archived from the original on 2011 05 17 Retrieved 2007 08 20 A revised version is printed with Edmonds s text see above Hadas Moses 1953 Three Greek Romances Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill ISBN 978 0 672 60442 3 Turner Paul 1989 1956 Longus Daphnis and Chloe Penguin Classics Harmondsworth Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 044059 1 Gill Christopher 1989 Longus Daphnis and Chloe In Bryan P Reardon ed Collected Ancient Greek Novels Berkeley California University of California Press pp 285 348 ISBN 978 0 520 04306 0 McCail Ronald 2002 Daphnis and Chloe Longus Oxford World s Classics Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 284052 3 Morgan J R 2004 Longus Daphnis and Chloe Aris and Phillips Classical Texts Oxford Oxbow Books ISBN 978 0 85668 562 0 With reprint of Reeve s text and a commentary Tyrrell Wm Blake n d Daphnis and Chloe A Novel by Longus Retrieved 2007 08 20 Henderson Jeffrey 2009 Longus Daphnis and Chloe Xenophon of Ephesus Anthia and Habrocomes The Loeb Classical Library Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 99633 5 Side by side Greek text and English translation Humphreys Nigel 2015 The Love Song of Daphnis and Chloe Circaidy Gregory Press ISBN 978 1 906451 88 2 In the format of an Epic Poem See also edit nbsp Novels portalOther ancient Greek novelists Chariton The Loves of Chaereas and Callirhoe Xenophon of Ephesus The Ephesian Tale Achilles Tatius Leucippe and Clitophon Heliodorus of Emesa The AethiopicaFootnotes edit It has been suggested that the name Longus is merely a misreading of the last word of the title Lesbiakῶn ἐrwtikῶn logoi d in the Florentine manuscript Seiler also observes that the best manuscript begins and ends with logoy not loggoy poimenikῶn a b c Longus Xenophon of Ephesus 2009 Henderson Jeffery ed Anthia and Habrocomes translation Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 69 amp 127 ISBN 978 0 674 99633 5 Blanchfield Jones Jamie Lefler Carrie Longus Daphnis and Chloefirst1 Kelly University of North Carolina Wilmington Archived from the original on 2009 03 29 Retrieved 2011 03 01 Richard Hunter 1996 Longus Daphnis and Chloe In Gareth L Schmeling ed The Novel in the Ancient World Brill pp 361 86 ISBN 90 04 09630 2 Fischler Alexander 1969 Unity in Colette s Le Ble en Herbe Modern Language Quarterly 30 2 248 264 doi 10 1215 00267929 30 2 248 Edelstein Wendy March 4 2009 In a Galaxy not all that far away UC Berkeley News The University of California at Berkeley Retrieved 2011 03 01 Arnold Haskell ed Gala Performance Collins 1955 p226 John Neumeier The Hamburg Ballet www hamburgballett de Archived from the original on 2011 06 25 Retrieved 2011 03 01 Les Ballets de Monte Carlo Daphnis et Chloe Archived from the original on 2013 01 24 Retrieved 2013 07 27 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Daphnis and Chloe nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Daphnis and Chloe Editions of the Greek text Longi Pastoralium de Daphnide et Chloe Libri IV Graece et Latine Ed Christ Guil Mitscherlich Biponti Zweibrucken 1794 Longi Pastoralia First complete Greek text of Daphnis and Chloe edited by P L Courier with a Latin translation by G R Lud de Sinner Paris 1829 Longi Pastoralia Greek text of Daphnis and Chloe with a Latin translation edd Seiler Schaefer Boissonade amp Brunck Leipzig 1843 Erotici Scriptores Paris 1856 Longi Pastoralia Greek text with Latin translation edited by G A Hirschig pp 174 222 Daphnis and Chloe The Bibliotheca Classica Selecta s 2006 07 edition of the Greek text with the French translation of Jacques Amyot revised corrected and completed by P L Courier Synopses analyses and other studies Chirping Cicadas and Singing Crickets An article written from the standpoint of a cultural entomologist by Herbert Weidner Hamburg Germany Daphnis and Chloe Its influence on art and its impact on Goethe An entry in the Encyclopedia of World Biography which also notes the work done by William E McCulloh Emeritus Professor of Classics at Kenyon College Ohio in dating Daphnis and Chloe Longus Life Influence amp Bibliography An entry in the Encyclopedia of the Ancient World J C Dunlop s History of Fiction London 1888 vol 1 pp 45 57 Audiobooks nbsp The pastoral loves of Daphnis and Chloe public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daphnis and Chloe amp oldid 1184657606, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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