Ancient poet saved by a dolphin. Arion. poet saved by a dolphin

Lived in Ancient Greece one poet, his name was Arion. I wrote some poems for myself and performed them on the lyre. They applauded him politely. Like other similar poets - there were many of them in Ancient Greece, the situation allowed.
The poet Arion was sad. There are plenty of the same poets around, but the public doesn’t care. You won't stand out at all. And that’s why he wrote sad poems, like all the other poets who are sad about the same thing.
And then one day he went for a walk on the shore of the Ionian Sea. And there just happened a sunset of extraordinary beauty. The poet Arion was inspired and began to compose sad poems, wandering straight into the sunset. I composed and composed until I wandered so far into the sea that I lost the bottom under my feet and began to drown. And from horror, something went wrong in his head, and instead of shouting “Save, help,” he began to read his sad poems that he had just composed. But at the same time it is very loud and joyful.
Quite by chance he was heard by a dolphin swimming by. And I was so amazed by these verses that I instantly experienced enlightenment and catharsis. The dolphin swam up to Arion and told him: “I’ll save you now. Just don’t twitch and keep quiet.”
And the dolphin saved the drowning poet Arion. And all the other poets who crowded on the shore saw this and realized that Arion was cool, and they were sons in front of him.
Since then Arion has not written anymore sad poems, and he was made a worldwide symbol of poetry.

And several thousand years later, in 1994, the first “thick” poetry magazine was published in Russia. And they called him "Arion".
And this, I must say, is truly a legendary publication.
We have all his numbers.

And in the magazine’s logo (if you click on the photo), you can see that ancient Greek Arion and the enlightened dolphin.

Pythagorean philosopher, contemporary of Plato

An ancient Greek poet, whose name is associated with a legend about his miraculous rescue (a dolphin, enchanted by the poems, carried him to the shore)

Poet-singer from Pushkin's poem

River in France

Genus of slugs

Poem by A. Pushkin

IN Greek mythology- a horse gifted with speech and prophetic gifts, sent by Neptune to Adrast

Ancient Greek poet, musician, creator of the genre of poetry - dithyramb

An ancient Greek poet, whose name is associated with a legend about his miraculous rescue by a dolphin

He was saved by a dolphin

Saved by a dolphin

Poet Saved by a Dolphin

Poem by Pushkin

Pushkin's verse

Ancient Greek singer

Russian Poetry Magazine

Ancient Greek divine horse

Ancient Greek poet

Ancient Greek lyric poet

Rescued by a dolphin near Pushkin

Pushkin's work

Pushkin sang him

Introduced the dithyramb genre into poetry

Hellenic poet

Hellene, glorified by Pushkin

The name that Pushkin sang

Divine horse in ancient Greek mythology

Ancient Greek poet or Pushkin's verse

Poem by A.S. Pushkin

Ancient Greek poet (7th-6th centuries BC)

Creator of the dithyramb genre

In Greek mythology, the divine talking horse, son of Poseidon and Demeter

poet saved by a dolphin

Alternative descriptions

Pythagorean philosopher, contemporary of Plato

An ancient Greek poet, whose name is associated with a legend about his miraculous rescue (a dolphin, enchanted by the poems, carried him to the shore)

Poet-singer from Pushkin's poem

River in France

Genus of slugs

Poem by A. Pushkin

In Greek mythology, a horse gifted with speech and prophetic gifts, sent by Neptune to Adrast

Ancient Greek poet, musician, creator of the genre of poetry - dithyramb

An ancient Greek poet, whose name is associated with a legend about his miraculous rescue by a dolphin

He was saved by a dolphin

Saved by a dolphin

Poem by Pushkin

Pushkin's verse

Ancient Greek singer

Russian Poetry Magazine

Ancient Greek divine horse

Ancient Greek poet

Ancient Greek lyric poet

Rescued by a dolphin near Pushkin

Pushkin's work

Pushkin sang him

Introduced the dithyramb genre into poetry

Hellenic poet

Hellene, glorified by Pushkin

The name that Pushkin sang

Divine horse in ancient Greek mythology

Ancient Greek poet or Pushkin's verse

Poem by A.S. Pushkin

Ancient Greek poet (7th-6th centuries BC)

Creator of the dithyramb genre

In Greek mythology, the divine talking horse, son of Poseidon and Demeter