| Name: Asclepiades Date: 3rd century BCE Region:    Samos [modern Greece] Citation: Greek Anthology 12.163 | 
Love has discovered the joy in mixing something beautiful with beautiful,
Not an emerald mixed with gold,
(Which neither blooms nor stands as equal)
Nor can ebony mixed with ivory,
Nor the colors black and white together,
can compare to Cleander & Eubiotus,
darling flowers of Persuasion and Friendship.
εὗρεν Ἔρως τί καλῷ μίξει καλόν, οὐχὶ μάραγδον
χρυσῷ, ὃ μήτ᾽ ἀνθεῖ, μήτε γένοιτ᾽ ἐν ἴσῳ,
οὐδ᾽ ἐλέφαντ᾽ ἐβένῳ, λευκῷ μέλαν, ἀλλὰ Κλέανδρον
Εὐβιότῳ, πειθοῦς ἄνθεα καὶ φιλίης.
Invenit Amor
quodnam pulchro misceat pulchrum, non smaragdum,
auro, quod neque
floret neque fiat compar 
neque ebur ebeno,
albo nigrum, sed Cleandrum
Eubioto, Suadae flores Amicitiae.
Translated
into Latin by Hugo Grottius
 Asclepiades of Samos was a Greek lyric poet
  from the 3rd century BCE. His works are preserved in the Greek
  Anthology, a collection of Greek lyric poetry that spans numerous genres,
  topics, and authors.
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