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Philomela

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The Rape of Philomela by Tereus, engraved by Virgil Solis for a 1562 edition of Ovid's Metamorphoses (Book VI, 519-562).

Philomela /ˌfɪləˈmlə/ or Philomel /ˈfɪləˌmɛl/ (Ancient Greek: Φιλομήλη, Philomēlē) is a minor figure in Greek mythology and is frequently invoked as a direct and figurative symbol in literary, artistic, and musical works in the Western canon.

She is identified as being the "princess of Athens" and the younger of two daughters of Pandion I, King of Athens, and Zeuxippe. Her sister, Procne, was the wife of King Tereus of Thrace. While the myth has several variations, the general depiction is that Philomela, after being raped and mutilated by her sister's husband, Tereus, obtains her revenge and is transformed into a nightingale (Luscinia megarhynchos), a migratory passerine bird native to Europe and southwest Asia and noted for its song. Because of the violence associated with the myth, the song of the nightingale is often depicted or interpreted as a sorrowful lament. Coincidentally, in nature, the female nightingale is mute and only the male of the species sings.[1][2]

Ovid and other writers have made the association (either fancifully or mistakenly) that the etymology of her name was "lover of song," derived from the Greek φιλο- and μέλος ("song") instead of μῆλον ("fruit" or "sheep"). The name means "lover of fruit," "lover of apples,"[3] or "lover of sheep."[4]

The story of Philomela in myth

The most complete and extant rendering of the story of Philomela, Procne, and Tereus can be found in Book VI of the Metamorphoses of the Roman poet Ovid (Publius Ovidius Naso) (43 BC - AD 17/18), where the story reaches its full development during antiquity.[5] It is likely that Ovid relied upon Greek and Latin sources that were available in his era such as the Bibliotheca of Pseudo-Apollodorus (2nd century BC),[6] or sources that are no longer extant or exist today only in fragments—especially Sophocles' tragic drama Tereus (5th century BC).[7][8][9]

According to Ovid, in the fifth year of Procne's marriage to Tereus, King of Thrace and son of Ares, she asked her husband to "Let me at Athens my dear sister see / Or let her come to Thrace, and visit me."[5] Indulging his wife's request, Tereus agreed to travel to Athens and escort Philomela, his wife's sister, to Thrace.[5] King Pandion of Athens, the father of Philomela and Procne, was apprehensive about letting his only remaining daughter leave his home and protection and asks Tereus to protect her as if he were her father.[5][10] Tereus agrees. However, Tereus lusted for Philomela when he first saw her, and that lust grew during the course of the return voyage to Thrace.[5]

"The Rape of Philomela by Tereus", book 6, plate 59. Engraved by Johann Wilhelm Baur for a 1703 edition of Ovid's Metamorphoses

Arriving in Thrace, he forced her to a cabin or lodge in the woods and raped her.[5] After the assault, Tereus threatened her and advised her to keep silent.[5] Philomela was defiant and angered Tereus. In his rage, he cut out her tongue and abandoned her in the cabin.[5] In Ovid's Metamorphoses Philomela's defiant speech is rendered (in an 18th-century English translation) as:

Still my revenge shall take its proper time,
And suit the baseness of your hellish crime.
My self, abandon'd, and devoid of shame,
Thro' the wide world your actions will proclaim;
Or tho' I'm prison'd in this lonely den,
Obscur'd, and bury'd from the sight of men,
My mournful voice the pitying rocks shall move,
And my complainings echo thro' the grove.
Hear me, o Heav'n! and, if a God be there,
Let him regard me, and accept my pray'r.[11]

Rendered unable to speak because of her injuries, Philomela wove a tapestry (or a robe[12]) that told her story and had it sent to Procne.[5] Procne was incensed and in revenge, she killed her son by Tereus, Itys (or Itylos), boiled him and served him as a meal to her husband.[5] After Tereus ate Itys, the sisters presented him with the severed head of his son, and he became aware of their conspiracy and his cannibalistic meal.[5] He snatched up an axe and pursued them with the intent to kill the sisters.[5] They fled but were almost overtaken by Tereus at Daulia in Phocis.[12] In desperation, they prayed to the gods to be turned into birds and escape Tereus' rage and vengeance.[12] The gods transformed Procne into a swallow and Philomela into a nightingale.[5][13] Subsequently, the gods would transform Tereus into a hoopoe.[12]

Variations on the myth

Depiction of Philomela and Procne showing the severed head of Itys to his father Tereus, engraved by Baur for a 1703 edition of Ovid's Metamorphoses (Book VI:621–647)

It is typical for myths from antiquity to have been altered over the passage of time or for competing variations of the myth to emerge.[14][15] With the story of Philomela, most of the variations concern which sister became the nightingale or the swallow, and into what type of bird Tereus was transformed. Since Ovid's Metamorphoses, it has been generally accepted that Philomela was transformed into a nightingale, and Procne into a swallow.[12] The description of Tereus as an "epops" has generally been translated as a hoopoe (scientific name: Upupa epops).[16][17] Since many of the earlier sources are no longer extant, or remain only fragments, Ovid's version of the myth has been the most lasting and influenced most later works.

Early Greek sources have it that Philomela was turned into a swallow, which has no song; Procne turns into a nightingale, singing a beautiful but sad song in remorse.[12] Later sources, among them Ovid, Hyginus, and the Bibliotheca of Pseudo-Apollodorus, and in modern literature the English romantic poets like Keats write that although she was tongueless, Philomela was turned into a nightingale, and Procne into a swallow.[12][18] Eustathius' version of the story has the sisters reversed, so that Philomela married Tereus and that Tereus lusted after Procne.[19]

It is salient to note that in taxonomy and binomial nomenclature, the genus name of the martins (the larger-bodied among swallow genera) is Progne, a Latinized form of Procne. Other related genera named after the myth include the Crag Martins Ptyonoprogne, and Saw-wings Psalidoprocne. Coincidentally, although most of the depictions of the nightingale and its song in art and literature are of female nightingales, the female of the species does not sing—it is the male of the species who sings its characteristic song.[1][2]

In an early account, Sophocles wrote that Tereus was turned into a large-beaked bird whom some scholars translate as a hawk[8][20][21] while a number of retellings and other works (including Aristophanes' ancient comedy, The Birds) hold that Tereus was instead changed into a hoopoe.[16][17] Various later translations of Ovid state that Tereus was transformed into other birds than the hawk and hoopoe, including references by Dryden and Gower to the lapwing.[11][22]

Several writers omit key details of the story. According to Pausanias, Tereus was so remorseful for his actions against Philomela and Itys (the nature of the actions is not described) that he kills himself. Then two birds appear as the women lament his death.[23] Many later sources omit the Tereus' tongue-cutting mutilation of Philomela altogether.[24]

According to Thucydides, Tereus was not King of Thrace, but rather from the city of Daulia in Phocis, a city inhabited by Thracians. He cites in proof of this that poets who mention the nightingale refer to it as a "Daulian bird."[25] It is thought that Thucydides commented on the myth in his famous work on the Peloponnesian War because Sophocles' play confused the mythical Tereus with contemporary ruler Teres I of Thrace.[26]

Elements borrowed from other myths and stories

The story of Philomela, Procne and Tereus is largely influenced by the lost tragedy Tereus of Sophocles. Scholar Jenny Marsh claims that Sophocles borrowed certain plot elements from Euripides drama Medea—notably a wife killing her child in an act of revenge against her husband—and incorporated them in his tragedy Tereus. She implies that the infanticide of Itys did not appear in the Tereus myth until Sophocles' play and that it was introduced because of what was borrowed from Euripides.[27]

It is possible that social and political themes have woven their way into the story as a contrast between Athenians who believed themselves to be the hegemonic power in Greece and the more civilized of the Greek peoples, and the Thracians who were considered to be a "barbaric race."[7][9][28] It is possible that these elements were woven into Sophocles' play Tereus and other works of the period.

Appearances in the Western canon

The material of the Philomela myth has been used in various creative works—artistic and literary—for the past 2,500 years.[29][30] Over the centuries, the myth has been associated with the image of the nightingale and its song described as both exceedingly beautiful and sorrowful. The continued use of the image in artistic, literary, and musical works has reinforced this association.

From antiquity and the influence of Ovid

Image from an Attic wine cup, circa 490 BC, depicting Philomela and Procne preparing to kill Itys. (Musée du Louvre, Paris)

Beginning with Homer's Odyssey,[31] ancient dramatists and poets evoked the story of Philomela and the nightingale in their works.[30] Most notably, it was the core of the tragedy Tereus by Sophocles (lost, extant only in fragments), and later in a set of plays by Philocles, the nephew of the great playwright Aeschylus. In Aeschylus's Agamemnon, the prophetess Cassandra has a visionary premonition of her own death in which she mentioned the nightingale and Itys, lamenting:

Ah for thy fate, O shrill-voiced nightingale!
Some solace for thy woes did Heaven afford,
Clothed thee with soft brown plumes, and life apart from wail(ing)—[32]

In his Poetics, Aristotle points to the ″voice of the shuttle″ in Sophocles′ tragedy Tereus as an example of a poetic device that aids in the ″recognition″—the change from ignorance to knowledge—of what has happened earlier in the plot. Such a device, according to Aristotle, is ″contrived″ by the poet, and thus is ″inartistic.″.[33] The connection between the nightingale's song and poetry is evoked by Aristophanes in his comedy The Birds and in the poetry of Callimachus. Roman poet Virgil compares the mourning of Orpheus for Eurydice to the “lament of the nightingale”.[34]

While Ovid's retelling of the myth is the more famous version of the story, he had several ancient sources on which to rely before he finished the Metamorphoses in A.D. 8.[6] Many of these sources were doubtless available to Ovid during his lifetime but have been lost or come to us at present only in fragments. In his version, Ovid recast and combined many elements from these ancient sources. Because his is the most complete, lasting version of the myth, it is the basis for many later works.

In the 12th century, French trouvère (troubadour) Chrétien de Troyes, adapted many of the myths recounted in Ovid's Metamorphoses into Old French. However, de Troyes was not alone in making use of Ovid's material. Geoffrey Chaucer recounted the story in his unfinished work The Legend of Good Women[35] and briefly alluded to the myth in his Troilus and Criseyde.[36] John Gower included the tale in his Confessio Amantis.[37] References to Philomela are common in the motets of the ars nova, ars subtilior, and ars mutandi musical eras of the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries.[38]

In Elizabethean and Jacobean England

Throughout the late Renaissance and Elizabethean eras, the image of Philomela and the nightingale incorporated elements of mourning and beauty after being subjected to an act of violence. In the long poem "The Steele Glas" (1576), poet George Gascoigne (1535–1577) depicts "Philomel" as the representative of poetry (Poesys), her sister Progne as satire (Satyra), and Tereus as "vayne Delight."[39] The characterization of Philomela and the nightingale was that of a woman choosing to exercise her will in recovering her voice and resisting those forces which attempts to silence her. Critics have pointed to Gascoigne's use of the Philomela myth as a personal appeal and that he was fighting in verse a battle with his enemies who violently opposed his poems.[40][41] In his poem "The complaynt of Philomene" (1576), the myth is employed to depict punishment and control.[42]

In "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd", Sir Walter Raleigh (1554–1618) relays consolation regarding the nymph's harsh rejection of the shepherd's romantic advances in the spirit of "time heals all wounds," by citing in the second stanza (among several examples) that eventually with the passage of time Philomel would become "dumb" to her own pain and that her attention would be drawn away from the pain by the events of life to come.[43][44]

In Sir Philip Sidney's (1554–1586) courtly love poem "The Nightingale", Sydney's narrator who is in love with a woman he cannot have compares his own romantic situation to that of Philomela's plight and claims that he has more reason to be sad. However, recent literary criticism has labelled this claim as sexist and an unfortunate marginalization of the traumatic rape of Philomela. Sydney argues that the rape was an "excess of love" and less severe than being deprived of love as attested by the line, "Since wanting is more woe than too much having."[45]

Playwright and poet William Shakespeare (1564–1616) makes frequent use of the Philomela myth—most notably in his tragedy Titus Andronicus (c. 1588–1593) where characters directly reference Tereus and Philomela in commenting on rape and mutilation of Lavinia by Aaron, Chiron, and Demetrius.[46] Prominent allusions to Philomela also occur in the depiction of Lucrece in The Rape of Lucrece,[47][48] in the depiction of Imogen in Cymbeline,[49][50] and in Titania's lullaby in A Midsummer Night's Dream where she asks Philomel to "sing in our sweet lullaby".[51] In Sonnet 102, Shakespeare addresses his lover (the "fair youth") and compares his love poetry to the song of the nightingale, noting that "her mournful hymns did hush the night" (line 10), and that as a poet would "hold his tongue" (line 13) in deference to the more beautiful nightingale's song so that he "not dull you with my song" (line 14).[52][53][54] Emilia Lanyer (1569–1645), a poet who is considered by some scholars to be the woman referred to in the poetry of William Shakespeare as "Dark Lady", makes several references to Philomela in her patronage poem "The Description of Cookeham" in Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum (1611). Lanyer's poem, dedicated to Margaret Clifford, Countess of Cumberland and her daughter Lady Anne Clifford refers to Philomela's "sundry layes"(line 31) and later to her "mournful ditty" (line 189).[55]

The image of the nightingale appears frequently in poetry of the period with it and its song described by poets as an example of "joyance" and gaiety or as an example of melancholy, sad, sorrowful, and mourning. However, many use the nightingale as a symbol of sorrow but without a direct reference to the Philomela myth.[56]

In Classical and Romantic works

Tereus Confronted with the Head of his Son Itylus (oil on canvas, painted 1636–1638), one of the late works of Flemish Baroque painter Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640) (Prado Museum in Madrid, Spain)

Poets in the Romantic Era recast the myth and adapted the image of the nightingale with its song to be a poet and “master of a superior art that could inspire the human poet”.[57][58] For some romantic poets, the nightingale even began to take on qualities of the muse. John Keats (1795–1821), in "Ode to a Nightingale" (1819) idealizes the nightingale as a poet who has achieved the poetry that Keats himself longs to write. Keats directly employs the Philomel myth in "The Eve of St. Agnes" (1820) where the rape of Madeline by Porphyro mirrors the rape of Philomela by Tereus.[18] Keats' contemporary, poet Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822) invoked a similar image of the nightingale, writing in his A Defence of Poetry that "a poet is a nightingale who sits in darkness and sings to cheer its own solitude with sweet sounds; his auditors are as men entranced by the melody of an unseen musician, who feel that they are moved and softened, yet know not whence or why.”[59]

First published in the collection Lyrical Ballads, "The Nightingale" (1798) is an effort by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834) to move away from associations that the nightingale's song was one of melancholy and identified it with the joyous experience of nature. He remarked that "in nature there is nothing melancholy," (line 15) expressing hope "we may not thus profane / Nature’s sweet voices, always full of love / And joyance!" (lines 40–42).[60]

At the poem's conclusion, Coleridge writes of a father taking his crying son outside in the night:

And he beheld the moon, and, hushed at once,
Suspends his sobs, and laughs most silently,
While his fair eyes, that swam with undropped tears,'
Did glitter in the yellow moon-beam! Well!—
It is a father’s tale: But if that Heaven
Should give me life, his childhood shall grow up
Familiar with these songs, that with the night
He may associate joy.—[61]

Coleridge, and his friend William Wordsworth (1770–1850) who called the nightingale a "fiery heart,"[62] depicted the bird "as an instance of natural poetic creation," and as the "voice of nature."[63]

Other notable mentions include:

  • In the poem "Philomela" (1853) by English poet Matthew Arnold (1822–1888), the poet asks upon hearing the crying of a fleeing nightingale if it can find peace and healing in the English countryside far away from Greece, although lamenting its pain and passion "eternal."
  • In his 1881 poem "The Burden of Itys", Oscar Wilde describes Itys as the symbol of Greek art and pleasure is contrasted with Christ. The landscape of Greece is also compared to the landscape of England, specifically Kent and Oxford.
  • Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837–1909) wrote a poem called "Itylus" based on the story in which Philomela and Procne, after being transformed into the nightingale and swallow, ask when they will be able to forget the grief of having slain Itylus—the answer being they will forget when the world ends.
  • English poet Ann Yearsley (1753–1806) in lamenting the sufferings of African slaves invokes the myth and challenges that her song "shall teach sad Philomel a louder note," in her abolitionist poem "A Poem on the Inhumanity of the Slave-Trade" (1788)[64]
  • In "A la Juventud Filipina", Filipino national hero José Rizal (1861–1896), used the image of Philomel as inspiration for young Filipinos to use their voices to speak of Spanish injustice and colonial oppression.[65]

In modern works

Poet T. S. Eliot's poem "The Waste Land", published in 1922, incorporates elements of the Philomela myth

The Philomela myth is perpetuated largely through its appearance as a powerful device in poetry. In the 20th century, American-British poet T. S. Eliot (1888–1965) directly referenced the myth in his most famous poem, "The Waste Land" (1922), where he describes,

The change of Philomel, by the barbarous king
So rudely forced; yet there the nightingale
Filled all the desert with inviolable voice
And still she cried, and still the world pursues,
"Jug Jug" to dirty ears.[66]

Eliot employs the myth to depict themes of sorrow, pain, and that the only recovery or regeneration possible is through revenge.[67] Several of these mentions reference other poets' renderings of the myth, including those of Ovid and Gascoigne. Eliot's references to the nightingales singing by the convent in "Sweeney and the Nightingales" (1919–1920) is a direct reference the murder of Agamemnon in the tragedy by Aeschylus—wherein the Greek dramatist directly evoked the Philomela myth. The poem describes Sweeney as a brute and that two women in the poem are conspiring against him for his mistreatment of them. This mirrors not only the elements of Agamemnon's death in Aeschylus' play but the sister's revenge against Tereus in the myth.

In the poem "To the Nightingale", Argentine poet and fabulist, Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986), who compares his efforts as a poet to the bird's lament though never having heard it. He describes its song as "encrusted with mythology" and that the evolution of the myth has distorted it—that the opinions of other poets and writers have kept both poet and reader from actually hearing the original sound and knowing the essence of the song.

Several artists have applied Ovid's account to new translations or reworkings, or adapted the story for the stage. British poet Ted Hughes (1930–1998) used the myth in his 1997 work Tales from Ovid (1997) which was a loose translation and retelling of twenty-four tales from Ovid's Metamorphoses. Both Israeli dramatist Hanoch Levin (in The Great Whore of Babylon) and English playwright Joanna Laurens (in The Three Birds) wrote plays based on the story. Most recently the story was adapted into an opera by Scottish composer James Dillon in 2004[68] and a 1964 vocal composition by American composer Milton Babbitt[69] with text by John Hollander.[70]

Several female writers have used the Philomela myth as a vehicle for exploring the subject of rape, women and power (empowerment), and feminist themes, including novelist Margaret Atwood in her novella Nightingale published in The Tent (2006), Emma Tennant in her story "Philomela", Jeannine Hall Gailey who uses the myth in several poems published in Becoming the Villainess (2006), and Timberlake Wertenbaker in her play The Love of the Nightingale (1989) (later adapted into an opera of the same name composed by Richard Mills). Karen Blixen (as Isak Dinesen) plays on the myth in her story "The Dreamers" in Seven Gothic Tales.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Kaplan, Matt. "Male Nightingales Explore by Day, Seduce by Night" in National Geographic News (4 March 2009). (Retrieved 23 November 2012).
  2. 2.0 2.1 PHYS.ORG. "And a nightingale sang... experienced males 'show off' to protect their territories" (9 November 2011). (found online here). (Retrieved 23 November 2012).
  3. Defining φιλόμηλος as "fond of apples or fruit", see Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; and Jones, Henry Stuart. A Greek-English Lexicon (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1st Ed. 1843, 9th Ed. 1925, 1996). (LSJ) found online here; citing "Doroth.Hist. ap. Ath. 7.276f." (Retrieved 7 October 2012)
  4. Defining it as "lover of sheep", see White, J. T. Virgil: Georgics IV (London, 1884) (vocabulary), found online here (Retrieved 7 October 2012).
  5. 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 5.11 5.12 Ovid. Metamorphoses Book VI, lines 424–674. (*Note that the line numbers vary among translations).
  6. 6.0 6.1 Frazer, Sir James George (translator/editor). Apollodorus, Library in 2 volumes (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd., 1921). See note 2 to section 3.14.8, citing Pearson, A. C. (editor) The Fragments of Sophocles, II:221ff. (found online here - retrieved 23 November 2012), where Frazer points to several other ancient source materials regarding the myth.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Sophocles. Tereus (translated by Lloyd-Jones, Hugh) in Sophocles Fragments (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard College, 1996), 290-299
  8. 8.0 8.1 Fitzpatrick, David. "Sophocles' Tereus" in The Classical Quarterly 51:1 (2001), 90-101. (found online here). Retrieved 23 November 2012.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Fitzpatrick, David. "Reconstructing a Fragmentary Tragedy 2: Sophocles' Tereus" in Practitioners Voices in Classical Reception Studies 1:39-45 (November 2007) (found online here - retrieved 23 November 2012).
  10. According to the Bibliotheca of Pseudo-Apollodorus (Book III, chapter 14, section 8), in the translation by Sir James George Frazer, Pandion fought a war with Labdacus, King of Thebes and married his daughter Procne to Tereus to secure and alliance and obtain his assistance in fighting Thebes.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Dryden, John; Addison, Joseph; Eusden, Laurence; Garth, Sir Samuel (translators). Ovid. Ovid's Metamorphoses in Fifteen Books, translated by the most eminent hands (London: Jacob Tonson, 1717) Volume II, p. 201.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca, 3.14.8; in Frazer, Sir James George (translator/editor). Apollodorus, Library in 2 volumes (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd., 1921). (found online [1] - Retrieved 23 November 2012). Notes on this passage include references several variations on the myth.
  13. Note though that earlier Greek accounts say the opposite (Procne as the nightingale, the "tongueless" Philomela as the silent swallow) and are more consistent with the facts of the myth. Frazer in his translation of the Bibliotheca [Frazer, Sir James George (translator/editor). Apollodorus, Library in 2 volumes (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd., 1921), in note 2 to section 3.14.8] comments that the Roman mythographers "somewhat absurdly inverted the transformation of the two sisters."
  14. Magoulick, Mary (folklorist and Professor of English & Interdisciplinary Studies at Georgia College & State University). What is myth? . Retrieved 9 January 2013.
  15. Honko, Lauri. "The Problem of Defining Myth" in Dundes, Alan (editor) Sacred Narrative: Readings in the Theory of Myth (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984), 41-52.
  16. 16.0 16.1 Arrowsmith, William (editor). Aristophanes: Three Comedies: The Birds, The Clouds, The Wasps. (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1969), 14, 109.
  17. 17.0 17.1 DeLuca, Kenneth (Hampden-Sydney College). "Deconstructing Tereus: An Introduction to Aristophanes' Birds" (paper prepared for the American Political Science Association Convention Chicago 2007). Found online here. Retrieved 9 January 2013.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Fields, Beverly. "Keats and the Tongueless Nightingale: Some Unheard Melodies in 'The Eve of Saint Agnes'". Wordsworth Circle 19 (1983), 246–250.
  19. For the comparison between Homer's version and Eusthathius' version of the myth, see: Notes to Book XIX (regarding line 605&c.) in Pope, Alexander. The Odyssey of Homer, translated by A. Pope, Volume V. (London: F. J. DuRoveray, 1806), 139-140.
  20. Halmamann, Carolin. "Sophoclean Fragments" in Ormand, Kirk (editor). A Companion to Sophocles. (Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012), 175.
  21. compare with the "hawk" in Hyginus (Gaius Julius Hyginus ). Fabulae, 45. Hyginus based his interpretation on Aesch.Supp.60 from Smyth, Herbert Weir (translator); Aeschylus. Aeschylus, with an English translation by Herbert Weir Smyth, Ph. D. in two volumes. in Volume 2. Suppliant Women. (Cambridge, MA. Harvard University Press. 1926).
  22. Gower, John. Confessio Amantis Book V, Lines 6041–6046, refer to a "lappewincke" or "lappewinge"
  23. Pausanias, Description of Greece 1:41 section 8 and 9.
  24. According to Delany, Chaucer barely mentions it and the Chretien de Troyes omits the "grotesquerie" entirely. Delany, Sheila. The Naked Text: Chaucer's Legend Of Good Women. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994), 216-217, and passim.
  25. Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War. 2.29. In the version translated by Thomas Hobbes (London: Bohn, 1843). (found online here – retrieved 23 November 2012).
  26. Webster, Thomas B. L. An Introduction to Sophocles (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1936), 3, 7.
  27. Marsh, Jenny. "Vases and Tragic Drama" in Rutter, N.K. and Sparkes, B.A. (editors) Word and Image in Ancient Greece (Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh, 2000) 121–123, 133–134.
  28. Burnett, A. P. Revenge in Attic and later tragedy (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998) 180–189.
  29. Salisury, Joyce E. Women in the Ancient World (ABC-CLIO, 2001), 276.
  30. 30.0 30.1 Chandler, Albert R. "The Nightingale in Greek and Latin Poetry," in The Classic Journal XXX:2:78–84 (The Classical Association of Middle West and South, 1934). (found online here) (Retrieved 23 November 2012).
  31. Homer. The Odyssey Book XIX, lines 518–523.
  32. Aeschylus, Agamemnon" (found online here). (Retrieved 23 November 2012).
  33. Aristotle, Poetics, 54b.
  34. Doggett, Frank. "Romanticism's Singing Bird" in Studies in English Literature 1500–1900 XIV:4:568 (Houston, Texas: Rice University, 1974) (found online here
  35. Gila Aloni, "Palimpsestic Philomela: Reinscription in Chaucer's 'Legend of Good Women'", in Palimpsests and the Literary Imagination of Medieval England, eds. Leo Carruthers, Raeleen Chai-Elsholz, Tatjana Silec. New York: Palgrave, 2011. 157–73.
  36. Chaucer, Geoffrey. Troilus and Criseyde Book II, lines 64–70.
  37. Gower, John. Confessio Amantis Book VIII, lines 5545 - 6075.
  38. Elizabeth Eva Leach, Sung Birds: Music, Nature, and Poetry in the Later Middle Ages (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell, 2006)
  39. Olson, Rebecca. Behind the Arras: Tapestry Ekphrasis in Spenser and Shakespeare (ProQuest, 2008), 164
  40. Maslen, R. W. “Myths Exploited: the Metamorphoses of Ovid in Early Elizabethan England” in Taylor, A. B. (editor). Shakespeare’s Ovid: The Metamorphoses in the Plays and Poems. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 25.
  41. Henderson, Diana E. Passion Made Public: Elizabethan Lyric, Gender, and Performance. (University of Illinois Press, 1995), 48-49.
  42. Hunter, Lynette, and Lichtenfels, Peter. Negotiating Shakespeare's Language in Romeo and Juliet: Reading Strategies from Criticism, Editing and the Theatre. (Farnham, England and Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2009), 106.
  43. Lourenco, Alexander. Poetry analysis: The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd, by William Raleigh (sic). Retrieved 9 January 2013.
  44. Raleigh, Sir Walter "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd" (1600), lines 5-8: "Time drives the flocks from field to fold / When rivers rage and rocks grow cold, / And Philomel becometh dumb; / The rest complains of cares to come."
  45. Addison, Catherine. "‘Darkling I Listen’: The Nightingale’s Song In and Out of Poetry". Alternation 16:2 (2009) 190–220, at 203.
  46. Oakley-Brown, Liz. Ovid And the Cultural Politics of Translation in Early Modern England. (Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, 2006), 26-32.
  47. See: Newman, Jane O. "'And Let Mild Women to Him Lose Their Mildness': Philomela, Female Violence, and Shakespeare's The Rape of Lucrece" Shakespeare Quarterly Vol. 45, No. 3 (Autumn, 1994), 304-326.
  48. Cheney, Patrick (editor). The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare's Poetry. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), 94-95, 105, 191.
  49. Shakespeare, William. "Cymbeline", Act II, Scene ii, and Act III, Scene iv.
  50. Kemp, Theresa D. Women in the Age of Shakespeare (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2010), 98-99.
  51. Smith, Nicole. "The Significance of the Reference to Philomel in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” by Shakespeare" (4 December 2011). Retrieved 9 January 2013.
  52. Cheney, Patrick. Shakespeare, National Poet-Playwright. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), 235-236.
  53. Luckyj, Christina. "A Moving Rhetoricke": Gender and Silence in Early Modern England. (New York: Palgrave, 2002), 169.
  54. Parker, Patricia A. Shakespeare and the Question of Theory (New York: Methuen, 1985), 97.
  55. Lanyer, Emilia. "The Description of Cookeham" in Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum (1611).
  56. Addison cites examples including William Drummond of Hawthornden, Charlotte Smith and Robert Southey, Mary Robinson. However, cites later examples like Robert Bridges where an indirect reference to the myth may be called a "dark nocturnal secret"; in Addison, Catherine. "‘Darkling I Listen’: The Nightingale’s Song In and Out of Poetry". Alternation 16:2 (2009) 190–220
  57. Shippey, Thomas. "Listening to the Nightingale" in Comparative Literature XXII:1 (1970), 46–60 (found online here – retrieved 24 November 2012).
  58. Doggett, Frank. "Romanticism's Singing Bird" in Studies in English Literature 1500–1900 XIV:4 (1974), 570 (found online here – retrieved 24 November 2012).
  59. Shelley, Percy Bysshe. A Defense of Poetry (Boston: Ginn & Company, 1903), 11.
  60. Ashton, Rosemary. The Life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. (Oxford: Blackwell, 1997), 136-139; Mays, J. C. C. (editor). The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Poetical Works I (Volume I). (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001), 518.
  61. Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. "Philomela" (1798), lines 102–109 in Volume I of Lyrical Ballads with a few other poems (with William Wordsworth) (London: J. & A. Arch, 1798)
  62. Wordsworth, William. "O Nightingale, thou surely art" (1807), line 2.
  63. Rana, Sujata; Dhankhar, Pooja. "Bird Imagery in Keats’s “Ode to a Nightingale” and Yeats’s “The Wild Swans at Coole”: A Comparative Study" in Language in India Volume 11 (12 December 2011).
  64. Yearsley, Ann. "A Poem on the Inhumanity of the Slave-Trade" (1788) lines 45–46.
  65. Zaide, Gregorio. Jose Rizal: Life, Works, and Writings of a Genius, Writer, Scientist, and National Hero (Manila, Philippines: All Nations Publishing Co., 1994).
  66. Eliot, T(homas) S(tearns). "The Waste Land" (New York: Horace Liveright, 1922), lines 98–103. See also lines 203–206, 428.
  67. Donnell, Sean M. Notes on T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land (retrieved 24 November 2012).
  68. Stating that it was adapted from Sophocles, Thales, Eva Hesse, R. Buckminster Fuller, see The Living Composers Project: James Dillon. (Retrieved 22 December 2012).
  69. Hair, Graham, and Stephen Arnold. "Some Works of Milton Babbitt, Reviewed", Tempo new series, no. 90 (1969): 33–34.
  70. Hollander, John. "A Poem for Music: Remarks on the Composition of Philomel", pp. 289–306 in Vision and Resonance: Two Senses of Poetic Form (New York: Oxford University Press, 1975)

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