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Jan 30, 2024 18 tweets 7 min read Read on X
Dream with me, just for a moment:

Somewhere, buried in a forgotten land, is a scroll, miraculously preserved.

A masterpiece, thought lost to history, waiting to be rediscovered.

What could be out there? Epics? Histories? Plays?

A 🧵 of 15 Lost Works I Hope We Find Someday In the Days of Sappho, 1904, by John William Godward
1. Sappho's Poems (~600 BC)

Plato declared Sappho the "Tenth Muse" - the greatest Greek lyric poet.

Of the 10,000 lines of poetry she likely wrote, we only have 650.

Her Aeolic Greek dialect fell out of use in Late Antiquity, so scribes did not think to preserve her work. Sappho and Alcaeus (1881) by Lawrence Alma-Tadema
2. Homer's Margites (8th c BC)

A comic mock-epic about the adventures of the dumbest man alive.

Its true authorship is uncertain, but the ancients attributed it to Homer and esteemed it highly.

It's all lost, except for a few quotes and a few lines in the Oxyrhynchus papyri. Homer and His Guide (1874) by William-Adolphe Bouguereau
3. Peisander's Heracleia (~640 BC)

This epic was the first great telling of the story of Heracles and his 12 labors.

Among the dozens of lost epics of this era, this one was considered to be a masterpiece by contemporaries and a worthy peer of the Iliad and Odyssey. Hercules as Heroic Virtue Overcoming Discord, 1632-33, by Peter Paul Rubens
4. Phrynicus's The Fall of Miletus (492 BC)

A play by the founder of Greek tragedy about the recent Persian sack of Miletus, it was so upsetting that Greek authorities immediately banned it.

Except for a few excerpts, Phrynicus's works are all lost. Image
5. Any lost Greek play by Sophocles, Aeschylus, or Euripides (5th c BC)

Sophocles wrote 120 plays. We have only 7 complete works.

Aeschylus? Over 70, we have 7.

Euripides? 92, we have 18.

For all the other Greek tragedians of this Golden Age of theater? No complete works. Ancient Roman wall painting from House of the Vettii in Pompeii, showing the death of Pentheus, as portrayed in Euripides's Bacchae
6. Heraclitus's On Nature (~500 BC)

Heraclitus is probably the most influential ancient Greek philosopher pre-Socrates.

He spoke in epigrams that were often paradoxical and are still challenging today.

We have several intriguing quotes, but his work is otherwise lost. Heraclitus, 1628, by Hendrick Terbrugghen
7. Ptolemy's Memoirs (~300 BC)

A first-hand account of Alexander the Great's campaigns written by his childhood friend & trusted general.

It is astounding to think a book like this existed, yet was lost.

It's believed to be Arrian's primary source for the Anabasis. Image
8. Manetho's Aegyptiaca (~250 BC)

A 3000-year history of ancient Egypt, written in Greek by an Egyptian priest serving the Ptolemies.

Manetho was in a rare position to utilize original Egyptian sources.

Except for his dynasty lists and some later summaries, the work is lost. Ptolemy Philadelphus in the Library of Alexandria by Vincenzo Camuccini (1813)
9. Ennius's Annales (~184 BC)

Ennius was supposedly the greatest Roman poet who ever lived -- an inspiration to Virgil and others.

Only a few fragments remain of his masterpiece, an epic poem that told the story of Rome from the fall of Troy up to Ennius's day. Ny Carlsberg Glyptothek, Copenhagen. Double herm with the portrait of the Roman poets Virgil or Ennius. Photographer: Wolfgang Sauber, CC BY-SA 3.0
10. Claudius's Tyrrhenika (~AD 40)

A lost 20-book history of the mysterious Etruscan people, who lived in Italy before the rise of Rome.

It was written by the emperor Claudius, who was *obsessed* with the Etruscans, learning their language and obtaining rare primary sources. Proclaiming Claudius Emperor, 1867, by Lawrence Alma-Tadema
11. Agrippina the Younger's "Misfortunes of My Family" (~AD 50)

A memoir by perhaps the most notorious woman in Roman history -- Claudius' wife and Nero's mother, who endlessly schemed to win Nero the throne.

Cited in Tacitus's Annales, the work is otherwise lost. Gustav Wertheimer: The Shipwreck of Agrippina (1874)
12. Philo's Phoenician History (~AD 100)

A Greek translation of a purported original 13th c BC Phoenician history by Sanchuniathon.

Except for an excerpt about ancient Phoenician religion, this work -- like nearly all original sources for ancient Phoenicia -- is lost. The limits of Tyre, 1911, by Vasily Polenov
13. Aztec & Mayan codices (~1500)

The indigenous peoples of Mexico and Central America long maintained elaborate and detailed historical accounts, primarily using pictograms and hieroglyphs.

While a few have been preserved, it is unfathomable how many have been lost (cont.). from the Dresden Codex, believed to be the oldest surviving book written in the Americas, dating to the AD 11th or 12th century.
Much of the destruction can be attributed to the Spanish conquest, but significant losses also predate this.

e.g., in 1427, a new Aztec regime seized power and ordered the destruction of the codices of all peoples they'd conquered, to erase any memory of pre-Aztec history. First page of the Codex Mendoza, created 1541, believed to depict the founding of Tenochtitlan.
14. Lord Byron's Memoirs (~1824)

When the poet died at age 36, his executors burned his memoirs.

Why? Some speculate it contained revelations about his private life too scandalous for 19th-century Britain.

Some believe a copy exists, but this is likely wishful thinking. Image
15. Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Won (~1598)

The only thing we know about this lost Shakespeare play is its name.

Perhaps it was a sequel to Love's Labour's Lost, portraying the further amorous adventures of King Ferdinand and his attendants. The Plays of Shakespeare, 1849, by John Gilbert, depicting the characters of many of Shakespeare's plays.
The amount of literature that has been lost to the ravages of time is unfathomable.

This list barely scratches the surface.

What works would be on your wish list? Tell me.

And if you enjoyed this, please do me a favor and share the first post in this thread, linked below.

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More from @CoffeewClassics

Jun 11
Nothing like a good hook to reel in the reader!

A Thread of the 50 Best Opening Lines in Classic Literature. 🧵 👇 Dickens' Dream by Robert William Buss, 1875
1. "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..."

~Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities

2. "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife."

~Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice By Thomas Gainsborough, Public Domain
3. "It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen."

~George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four

4. "Of arms and the man, I sing..."

~Virgil, The Aeneid

5. "I am an invisible man."

~Ralph Ellison, The Invisible Man Claude Lorrain: Landscape with Aeneas at Delos
Read 27 tweets
May 29
Today is G.K. Chesterton's birthday, May 29, 1874.

Let's get him trending today.

In this thread, I have collected 25 of his best-loved quotes.

Which is your favorite? Share it, tell me about it, or post your own. 🧵👇 Image
“A dead thing can go with the stream, but only a living thing can go against it.”

~G.K. Chesterton
1/ Image
"The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and left untried."

~G.K. Chesterton
2/ Image
Read 27 tweets
May 26
Poet Wilfred Owen was killed-in-action in 1918, one week before the First World War's end.

Among his papers was found, unfinished, what would become the preface to his posthumous poetry collection.

Read on, for a Memorial Day thread on the War Poets: 🧵👇 Field with Poppies by Van Gogh, 1890
Owens wrote:

"This book is not about heroes.

English Poetry is not yet fit to speak of them.

Nor is it about deeds or lands, nor anything about glory, honour, dominion or power, except War... 2/ Field of Poppies by Claude Monet, 1881
"Above all, this book is not concerned with Poetry.

The subject of it is War, and the pity of War.

The Poetry is in the pity..." 3/ Poppy Field by Gustav Klimt, 1907
Read 12 tweets
Apr 27
On this day in 1882, writer Ralph Waldo Emerson breathed his last.

Emerson's transcendentalist worldview is not without its pitfalls, but it is *alive*. Few wrote about the possibilities of human achievement with more brilliance.

A thread of my favorite Emerson quotes: Image
15. "God will not have his work made manifest by cowards...

Trust thyself: every heart vibrates to that iron string."

~Emerson, Self-Reliance The Oath of the Horatii by Jacques-Louis David
14. "Insist on yourself; never imitate.

Your own gift you can present every moment with the cumulative force of a whole life's cultivation...

That which each can do best, none but his Maker can teach him."

~Emerson, Self-Reliance Francisco Goya - La fragua
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Apr 26
On this day in AD 121, the Philosopher Emperor, Marcus Aurelius, was born.

His diary (never meant for publication) is a reservoir of quotable sayings, preaching resilience and self-control. It's worth reading.

Here's a thread of my favorite lines from his Meditations: licensed from Adobe Stock
15. Be like the rock against which the waves break.

It stands firm and tames the fury of the waters around it. Waves Breaking on a Rocky Coast by David James, bef. 1904
14. Consider the past.

Empires rose and fell, and they will in the future, too.

So it is with a human’s life. Thomas Cole: The Course of Empire: Destruction
Read 17 tweets
Apr 23
Happy Birthday to the Immortal Bard!

To celebrate, a thread of every Shakespeare play, with the most memorable lines from each: Image
1. Romeo and Juliet

"What's in a name? That which we call a rose,
By any other name would smell as sweet..." (II.ii) Romeo and Juliet by Ford Maddox Ford, c. 1850
2. Macbeth

"...Out, out, brief candle!
Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing." (V.v) Macbeth and Banquo meeting the witches on the heath, Théodore Chassériau, 1855
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