Polygnotus depicted men as better than they are and Pauson worse, while Dionysius made likenesses. Polygnotus’s portraits were in the grand style and yet expressive of character(cf. Aristot. Poet. 6.15 ): Aristophanes aIludes to a Pauson as a perfectly wicked caricaturist : Dionysius of Colophon earned the name of the man-painter because he always painted men and presumably made good likenesses. Clearly each of the above mentioned arts will admit of these distinctions, and they will differ in representing objects which differ from each other in the way here described. In painting too, and flute-playing and harp-playing, these diversities may certainly be found, and it is the same in prose and in unaccompanied verse. For instance Homer’s people are better, Cleophon’s are like, while in Hegemon of Thasos , the first writer of parodies, and in Nicochares, the author of the Poltrooniad , they are worse. Cleophon wrote epics (i.e., hexameter poems), describing scenes of daily life in commonplace diction (cf. Aristot. Poet. 22.2 ): Hegemon wrote mock epics in the style of the surviving Battle of Frog and Mice : of Nicochares nothing is known, but his forte was evidently satire. It is the same in dithyrambic and nomic poetry, for instance . . . a writer might draw characters like the Cyclops as drawn by Timotheus and Philoxenus. Both famous dithyramhic poets. There is evidence that Philoxenus treated Polyphemus in the vein of satire: Timotheus may have drawn a more dignified picture.