At dawn, on the verge of dream and awakening, the verses of the old Greek memoriter snake out of my memory, with galloping iambs ˘ ¯ ˘ ¯ ˘ ¯ ¯, like Franz Marc’s dream-colored horses. It was Anacreon who wrote them in this serpentine way: at the brand of the horses in the first verse you don’t know yet what he is getting at, then with the Persian tiaras he bends away all the way ’round, to finally return to the burned property signs with the lovers at the end.
Between the horses and lovers who rhyme with each other, the Persian men continue to stand somewhat like cuckoo eggs, whose only rhetorical role is that their tiaras have as much of a distinctive character – that is, for a Greek –, as the burning brand for the other rôles.
The emotional missing link is provided by this tiny, perhaps fist-sized Persian head from the ancient exhibition at the National Museum in Tehran. With his tiara, he looks like an altertumswissenschaftliche illustration to the poem. But his face, his pensive, inward-looking gaze, his almost invisible delicate smile suggest that he, too, wears a secret brand burned in the soul.
It will take another thousand years for Hafez to write his love poems. The love poetry of Anacreon’s Persian contemporaries was incinerated by the Greeks of Alexander the Great and the Arabs of Caliph Omar. That there must have been such a poetic tradition is attested by the love episodes in the Book of Kings, in which Ferdowsi summarizes in the 10th century, after the Arab devastation and a hiatus of three hundred years, all that was left of ancient Persian poetry. And it is attested, too, by the mysterious facial expression of this little Persian contemporary of Anacreon.
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