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Silenus and Poets
Silenus was born into an aristocratic family on Earth, during the Hegira, and was later among the settlers of the Poets ' City.
After this setback, the pilgrims delegate Lamia and the poet Martin Silenus to travel to Keep Chronos and the Poets ' City for food.
The murders continue until only Silenus is left living in the City of Poets.

Silenus and Hyperion
Martin Silenus is the satyr-like and alcohol-appreciating poet-pilgrim in American writer Dan Simmons ' Hyperion Cantos.
Within the fictional storyline, the Hyperion Cantos is an epic poem written by the character Martin Silenus.
Back on Hyperion, Brawne Lamia, who has awakened from her coma-like state, penetrates the Shrike Palace to find Silenus and all of the other victims of the Shrike connected via a long cable.

Silenus and Cantos
Quotes from actual Keats poems and the fictional Cantos of Martin Silenus are interspersed throughout the novels.
At the same time, Silenus ' muse returns, and he continues work on the Cantos.

Silenus and ",
* Harry Thurston Peck Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, 1898: " Faunus ", " Pan ", and " Silenus ".
Martin Silenus was born as a wealthy scion of an ancient dying North American house, growing up in the time around the " Big Mistake ", which led to the destruction of Earth.

Silenus and is
Sileni is the plural ( Latin ) form of Silenus, a creature often related to the Roman wine god, Bacchus, thus represented in pictorial art as inebriated, merry revellers, who are mounted on donkeys, singing, dancing, playing flutes etc.
Erasmus lists several Sileni and then questions whether Christ is the most noticeable Silenus of them all.
The Victorian artist and poet Thomas Woolner wrote Silenus, a long narrative poem about the myth, in which Syrinx becomes the lover of Silenus, but drowns when she attempts to escape rape by Pan, as a result of the crime Pan is transmuted into a demon figure and Silenus becomes a drunkard.
Silenus shared with the king a pessimistic philosophy: That the best thing for a man is not to be born, and if already born, to die as soon as possible.
In Euripides's satyr play Cyclops, Silenus is stranded with the Satyrs in Sicily, where they have been enslaved by the Cyclops.
A poinçon bearing the head of Silenus in relief, discovered in Roman strata at Holt, Cheshire, is believed to be an artist's die, from which potters ' sunk dies would be cast, for appliqués
The Drunken Silenus, Peter Paul Rubens, painted in 1616-17 is conserved in the Alte Pinakothek, Munich.
At the left, the newborn god is surrounded by Silenus.
Silenus appears in the writings of Arthur Schopenhauer, who endorsed his most famous dictum that " the best thing for a man is not to be born ".
Silenus is a character, along with Bacchus, in the C. S.
In the Percy Jackson series written by Rick Riordan, Silenus is a satyr who serves as a member of the Council of the Cloven Elders.
Professor Silenus is a Character from Evelyn Waugh's first novel, Decline and Fall.
In the prophetic style of the traditional Greek Silenus he informs the protagonist that life is, " a great disc of polished wood that revolves quickly.
The god himself is drawn in a chariot, usually by exotic beasts such as lions or tigers, and is sometimes attended by a bearded, drunken Silenus.
Silene is the feminine form of Silenus, a Greek woodland deity.
He is rescued by Martin Silenus and asked to perform a series of rather extraordinarily difficult tasks.
* Heaven's Gate — Orbiting the star Alpha Lyrae or Vega, a toxic planet that is difficult to keep terraformed, but rich in mineral resources ; it serves as a temporary ( and highly unpleasant, but nevertheless important ) home for Martin Silenus after he is forced to leave Old Earth.
Fourth-century BC classicism is represented by Roman copies of the best artists of the period: the magnificent Head of the Cnidian Venus, the Satyr in Repose by Praxitiles, Scopas's Hercules, and the Head of Silenus and Head of Hercules by Lysippus.
Alcibiades begins by comparing Socrates to a statue of Silenus ; the statue is ugly and hollow, and inside it is full of tiny golden statues of the gods ( 215a-b ).

Silenus and by
The old satyr Silenus had been drinking wine and had wandered away drunk, later to be found by some Phrygian peasants, who carried him to their king, Midas ( alternatively, he passed out in Midas ' rose garden ).
Dionysos greeting Ariadne with her sacred serpent, in the sacred grove for their marriage, symbolized by the winged cherub with a nuptial torch, in the presence of his foster-father, Silenus
The Phrygian King Midas was eager to learn from Silenus and caught the old man by lacing a fountain from which Silenus often drank.
An alternative story was that when lost and wandering in Phrygia, Silenus was rescued by peasants and taken to King Midas, who treated him kindly.
In return for Midas ' hospitality Silenus told him some tales and Midas, enchanted by Silenus ’ s fictions, entertained him for five days and nights.
Another story was that Silenus had been captured by two shepherds, and regaled them with wondrous tales.
Silenus appears as an amorous satyr in the children's story " Odysseus in the Serpent Maze ," by Jane Yolen and Robert J. Harris.
Silenus ' Procession, by Peter Paul Rubens | Rubens.
* Mare Infinitus — A planet covered by water — Martin Silenus had a guest bathroom on this planet consisting of a small raft with a toilet, no walls, and no ceiling.

Silenus and Shrike
She manages to free Silenus, just as the Shrike appears and prepares to attack her.
At this time, Silenus becomes convinced that it is the Shrike who is his muse, who, in some occult way, his poem had brought into existence.
After Billy is taken away by the Shrike, Silenus recopies his poem as well as possible.

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