y YOUTH AXD PROSPERITY. 139
lP . ) L air > iir : ) And let the shapely Spartan damsel fair Bring with a rounded arm and graceful Water to wash, and garlands for our hair In spite of all the systems and the rules Invented and observed by sickly fools, Let us be brave, and resolutely drink ; Not minding if the Dog-star rise or sink." (F.) A very pretty vignette might be made of this, or of a kindred fragment that seems to belong to his later days. And to tell the truth, the poet's rule seems to have been that you should " live while you may." Whether, as has been surmised b} T Mr Frere, he refers to the catastrophe of Hipparchus or not, the fourjines which follow indicate Theognis's conviction that everything is fated, a conviction very conducive to enjoyment of the passing hour. ' Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die ' : " No costly sacrifice nor offerings given
Can change the purpose of the powers of Heaven ;
Whatever Fate ordains, danger or hurt, I Or death predestined, nothing can avert." (F.) This conviction, no doubt, to a great degree influenced the poet's indifference to the honours of a pompous funeral, for which, considering his birth and traditions, lie. might have cherished a weakness. But his tone of mind, we see, was such that he could anticipate no satisfaction from " hat-bands and scarves," or what- ever else in his day represented handsome obsequies. 'Vlien some great chLf, perhaps a, tyrant, ^perhaps one of the heads of his party at Megara, was to be borne to his long home with a solemn pageant, Theognis has