38:. She is believed to have first visited the statue in AD 130, and returned to have the next two poems inscribed upon it. Not much is known of her aside from the poems that she left behind on this monument, as she lived during a time where verses written by women were not typically published so she left her work as graffiti.
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She was not the only poet to leave her mark on this monument, or even the only female poet to leave her mark, but the inscriptions left by female poets on Memnon's leg are almost 6% of the surviving works by women from the ancient world. It is likely that she did not inscribe her poem herself, but
26:, about whom little is known. She may have been an aristocrat based on assumptions made about the nature of her writing and knowledge of literary Greek. She wrote Greek
50:, the goddess of dawn, because the stones made a sound as they were warmed by the rising sun. It is possible that this sound inspired her to mention her own mother.
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to do it for her in memory of her visit after she composed each poem. A popular belief at the time was that the statue of Memnon sang to his mother
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201:. Plant, I. M. (Ian Michael), 1963- (University of Oklahoma Press ed.). Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 2004. p. 244.
153:. Plant, I. M. (Ian Michael), 1963- (University of Oklahoma Press ed.). Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 2004. p. 149.
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The language of ruins : Greek and Latin inscriptions on the Memnon colossus
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I longed for you, mother, and I prayed for you to hear it too.
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Women writers of ancient Greece and Rome : an anthology
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Women writers of ancient Greece and Rome : an anthology
115:Today I cry sounds inarticulate and unintelligible
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