'Pigres', a native of
Halicarnassus, either the brother or the son of the celebrated
Artemisia, satrap of
Caria. He is spoken of by the
Suda (s.v. where, however, he makes the mistake of conflating Artemisia the wife of
Mausolus with Artemisia the advisor of Xerxes in the ''Histories''
Herodotus) as the author of the
Margites, and the
Batrachomyomachia. The latter poem is also attributed to him by
Plutarch (''de Herod. malign.'' 43. p. 873f), and was probably his work. One of his performances was a very singular one, namely, inserting a
pentameter line after each hexameter in the
Iliad, thus: —
:''Mênin aeide thea Pêlêiadeô Achilêos;''
:''Mousa gar su pasês peirat' echeis sophiês.''
Bode (''Gesch. der Hellen. Dichtkunst''. i. p. 279) believes that the Margites, though not composed by Pigres, suffered some alterations at his hands, and in that altered shape passed down to posterity. Some suppose that the
iambic lines, which alternated with the
hexameters in the Margites, were inserted by Pigres. He was the first poet, apparently, who introduced the iambic
trimeter. (Fabric. ''Bibl. Graec.'' i. p. 519, &c.)
References
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Pigres from Smith's ''Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology'' (1867), from which this article was originally derived
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Suda On Line: Pigres