| Name:   Athenaeus Date:   2nd century CE Region:   Naucratis [modern Egypt] Citation:    Deipnosophists  14.7 | 
But Selinuntius Telestes, refuting Melanippus’ statement,
said the following about Athena in his Argive History: “I don’t
reckon that Athena, the wisest of minds, took up a musical instrument in the
tree-topped mountains, and then, being afraid it would make her look ugly and
shameful, threw it away. Instead, the flute gave fame to Marsyas, the noisy
nymph-born satyr. Why should she care 
| ‘ ἀλλ᾽ ὅ γε Σελινούντιος
  Τελέστης τῷ Μελανιππίδῃ ἀντικορυσσόμενος ἐν Ἀργοῖ ἔφη—ὁ δὲ λόγος ἐστὶ περὶ
  τῆς Ἀθηνᾶς: ὃν σοφὸν σοφὰν λαβοῦσαν οὐκ ἐπέλπομαι νόῳ δρυμοῖς
  ὀρείοις ὄργανον δῖαν Ἀθάνᾶν, δυσόφθαλμον αἶσχος ἐκφοβηθεῖσαν αὖθις ἐκ χερῶν
  βαλεῖν νυμφαγενεῖ χειροκτύπῳ φηρὶ Μαρσύᾳ κλέος. τί γαρ νιν εὐηράτοιο κάλλεος
  ὀξὺς ἔρως ἔτειρεν, ᾇ γὰρ παρθενίαν ἄγαμον καὶ ἄπαιδ᾽ ἀπένειμε Κλωθώ;” 
 | At Selinuntius Telestes, repugnans Melanippidi,
  in Argo dixit: (agitur autem de Minerva:) “Non mihi
  credibile videtur, unum omnium sapientissimum instrumentum acceptum Divam
  sapientem Athenen in montium nemoribus, verentem oris deformitatem adspectu
  turpem, rursus e manibus proiecisse, Nympha—genito manibus—perstrepenti
  Sileno Marsyae gloriam. Qui enim illam optabilis pulcritudinis vehemens amor
  vexasset, cui virginitatem absque nuptiis liberisque tribuit Clotho?” Translated
  into Latin by Johann Schweighäuser | 
Athenaeus of
Naucratis [2nd century CE, modern Egypt] was a scholar who lived
in Naucratis during the reign of the Antonines. His fifteen volume work, the Deipnosophists,
are invaluable for the amount of quotations that preserve otherwise lost
authors, including the poetry of Sappho. 
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