4. The Early Poets.

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The earliest of the passages now in question comes from the poet Pratinas, a contemporary of Aeschylus. It is quoted by Heraclides Ponticus, in the course of a long fragment preserved by Athenaeus (xiv. cc. 19-21, p. 624 c-626 a). The words are:

mÊte syntonon diÔke mÊte tan aneimenan
Iasti mousan, alla tan messan neÔn
arouran aiolize tÔ melei.

'Follow neither a highly-strung music nor the low-pitched Ionian, but turning over the middle plough-land be an Aeolian in your melody.' Westphal takes the word 'Iasti with syntonon as well as with aneimenan, and infers that there were two kinds of Ionian, a 'highly-strung' and a 'relaxed' or low-pitched. But this is not required by the words, and seems less natural than the interpretation which I have given. All that the passage proves is that in the time of Pratinas a composer had the choice of at least three scales: one (or more) of which the pitch was high (syntonos); another of low pitch (aneimenÊ), which was called Ionian; and a third, intermediate between the others, and known as Aeolian. Later in the same passage we are told that Pratinas spoke of the 'Aeolian harmony' (prepei toi pasin aoidolabraktais Aiolis harmonia). And the term is also found, with the epithet 'deep-sounding,' in a passage quoted from the hymn to Demeter of a contemporary poet, Lasus of Hermione (Athen. xiv. 624 e):

Damatra melpÔ Koran te Klymenoio alochon Meliboian,
hymnÔn anagÔn Aiolid' hama barybromon harmonian.

With regard to the Phrygian and Lydian scales Heraclides (l. c.) quotes an interesting passage from Telestes of Selinus, in which their introduction is ascribed to the colony that was said to have followed Pelops from Asia Minor to the Peloponnesus:

prÔtoi para kratÊras HellÊnÔn en aulois
synopadoi Pelopos matros oreias phrygion aeison nomon;
toi d' oxyphÔnois pÊktidÔn psalmois krekon
Dydion hymnon.

'The comrades of Pelops were the first who beside the Grecian cups sang with the flute (aulos) the Phrygian measure of the Great Mother; and these again by shrill-voiced notes of the pectis sounded a Lydian hymn.' The epithet oxyphÔnos is worth notice in connexion with other evidence of the high pitch of the music known as Lydian. The Lydian mode is mentioned by Pindar, Nem. 4. 45:

exyphaine glykeia kai tod' autika phorminx
Lydia syn harmonia melos pephilÊmenon.

The Dorian is the subject of an elaborate jest made at the expense of Cleon in the Knights of Aristophanes, ll. 985-996:

alla kai tod' egÔ ge thaumazÔ tÊs hyomousias
autou phasi gar auton hoi paides hoi xynephoitÔn
tÊn DÔristi monÊn enarmottesthai thama tÊn lyran,
allÊn d' ouk ethelein labein; kata ton kitharistÊn
orgisthent' apagein keleuein, hÔs harmonian ho pais
outos ou dynatai mathein Ên mÊ DÔrodokÊsti.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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