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==Sources== [[Hesiod]] refers to the horse's well on Helicon in his ''[[Theogony]]''.<ref>"Hesiod": {{cite book |last = Most |first = Glenn W |authorlink = Glenn W. Most |title = Hesiod |publisher = [[Harvard University Press]] |series = The Loeb Classical Library |volume = 1 |year = 2006 |location = Massachusetts |isbn = 0-674-99622-4 |page = [https://archive.org/details/hesiod00hesi/page/3 3] |url = https://archive.org/details/hesiod00hesi/page/3 }}</ref> <blockquote> And after they have washed their tender skin in [[Permessus]] or '''''Hippocrene''''' or holy [[Olmeius|Olmeidus]], they perform choral dances on highest '''''Helicon''''', beautiful, lovely ones, and move nimbly with their feet. </blockquote> [[Petrarch]] refers to the fountain of Helicon in his epic poem ''[[Africa (Petrarch)|Africa]]'': <blockquote> Sisters who are my sweet care, <br /> If I sing to you of wonders, <br /> I pray that it be granted to me <br /> To drink again at the '''''fountain of Helicon'''''. <br /> </blockquote> [[Camoens]] cites the fountain as a great source of poetic inspiration in his epic Portuguese poem ''[[The Lusiads]],''<ref> {{cite book |last=Camoens |first=Luiz Vaz de |translator=John James Aubertin |title=The Lusiads |date=1884 |origyear=1572 |publisher=K. Paul, Trench & Company |location=Canto I, Stanza IV |page=5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lPMyAQAAIAAJ |access-date=23 February 2023 |language=English |chapter=I}}</ref><ref> {{cite book |last1=Camoens |first1=Luiz Vaz de |translator=Richard Francis Burton |editor1-last=Burton |editor1-first=Isabel |title=The Lusiads |date=1880 |origyear=1572 |publisher=Bernard Quaritch |location=London |url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Lusiads_(tr._Burton)/Canto_I |language=English |chapter=Canto I}} </ref> as translated: <blockquote> And you, my [[Tagus|Tagian]] [[Naiads|Nymphs]], oh, since my rhyme <br /> With ardent genius new you now inspire, <br /> If I was wont, well pleased, in former time <br /> To celebrate your stream with humble lyre, <br /> Oh, grant me now a lofty note sublime, <br /> A grand and glowing line of poet's fire, <br /> That of your waters [[Phoebus]] may ordain: <br /> They shall not envy those of '''''Hippocrene'''''. <br /> </blockquote> [[John Keats]] refers to Hippocrene in his poem "[[Ode to a Nightingale]]".<ref>"Ode to a Nightingale": {{cite book |last= Keats |first= John |editor= Stephen Greenblatt |title= [[Norton Anthology of English Literature]] |publisher= [[W. W. Norton|Norton]] |year= 2006 |edition=Eighth |location= London}}</ref> <blockquote> O for a beaker full of the warm South<br /> Full of the true, the blushful '''''Hippocrene''''',<br /> With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,<br /> And purple-stained mouth;<br /> That I might drink, and leave the world unseen,<br /> And with thee fade away into the forest dim:<br /> </blockquote> [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]] mentions the fountain in his poem "Goblet of Life": <blockquote> No purple flowers,βno garlands green, <br /> Conceal the goblet's shade or sheen, <br /> Nor maddening draughts of '''''Hippocrene''''', <br /> Like gleams of sunshine, flash between <br /> Thick leaves of mistletoe. <br /> </blockquote>
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