<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:id="eng"><body><div n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg084a.perseus-eng4" type="translation" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="31"><p rend="indent"><label><emph>Question</emph> 31.</label> Why is that so much celebrated name Thalassius sung at nuptials?</p><p rend="indent"><emph>Solution.</emph> Is it not from wool-spinning? For the Ro mans call the Greek <foreign xml:lang="grc">τάλαρος</foreign> (<emph>wool-basket</emph>) <foreign xml:lang="lat">talasus</foreign>. Moreover, when they have introduced the bride, they spread a fleece under her; and she, having brought in with her a <pb xml:id="v.2.p.222"/> distaff and a spindle, all behangs her husband’s door with woollen yarn? Or it may be true, as historians report, that there was a certain young man famous in military achievements, and also an honest man, whose name was Thalassius; now when the Romans seized by force on the Sabine daughters coming to see the theatric shows, a comely virgin for beauty was brought to Thalassius by some of the common sort of people and retainers to him, crying out aloud (that they might go the more securely, and that none might stop them or take the wench from them) that she was carried as a wife to Thalassius; upon which the rest of the rabble, greatly honoring Thalassius, followed on and accompanied them with their loud acclamations, praying for and praising Thalassius; that proving a fortunate match, it became a custom to others at nuptials to call over Thalassius, as the Greeks do Hymenaeus.<note xml:lang="eng" place="unspecified" anchored="true">See Livy, I. 9, 12.</note> </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="32"><p rend="indent"><label><emph>Question</emph> 32.</label> Why do they that throw the effigies of men from a wooden bridge into the river, in the month of May, about the full moon, call those images Argives?</p><p rend="indent"><emph>Solution.</emph> Was it that the barbarians that of old inhabited about that place did in this manner destroy the Grecians which they took? Or did their so much admired Hercules reform their practice of killing strangers, and teach them this custom of representing their devilish practice by casting in of images? The ancients have usually called all Grecians Argives. Or else it may be that, since the Arcadians esteemed the Argives open enemies by reason of neighborhood, they that belonged to Evander, flying from Greece and taking up their situation in Italy, kept up that malignity and enmity.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>