Author:Julianus the Egyptian

Works

 * Epigram 5.298 of the Greek Anthology
 * "To Mary" translated by William Mcleager Hay (1837)
 * Epigram 6.13 of the Greek Anthology
 * "The Offering of Three Brother Sportsmen" translated by John Herman Merivale (1813)
 * Epigram 6.18 of the Greek Anthology
 * "Lais, when Time had spoil’d her wonted Grace," translated by George Ogle (1737)
 * "I, Lais, who on conquered Greece looked down with haughty pride;" translated by Charles Neaves (1874)
 * Epigram 6.19 of the Greek Anthology
 * "Beauty as Venus’ gift I own:" translated by Henry Wellesley (1849)
 * Epigram 6.26 of the Greek Anthology
 * "Old Cyniras to the Nymphs this net: no more" translated by Charles Neaves (1874)
 * Epigram 7.32 of the Greek Anthology
 * "What oft alive I sung, now dead I cry" translated by Francis Fawkes (1760)
 * "This lesson oft in life I sung," translated by Thomas Moore (1800)
 * "Epitaph of Anacreon" translated by Richard Swainson Fisher (1838)
 * "Another Version" translated by Richard Swainson Fisher (1838)
 * "Oft have I sung, now from the tomb I cry:" translated by Henry Wellesley (1849)
 * Epigram 7.58 of the Greek Anthology
 * "If o’er the smileless dead beneath the earth" translated by M. A. S. (1852)
 * Epigram 7.59 of the Greek Anthology
 * "On Democritus" translated by John Herman Merivale (1813)
 * "Greet, Pluto, greet Democritus, and have" translated by Henry Wellesley (1849)
 * Epigram 7.565 of the Greek Anthology
 * "Another" translated by William Cowper (1803)
 * "Thy likeness breathes: would it were missed! that so," translated by Henry Wellesley (1849)
 * "Dear shade! The painter makes thee live again:" translated by Henry Wellesley (1849)
 * Epigram 7.586 of the Greek Anthology
 * "Let not thy loss to winds and waves be laid," translated by Henry Wellesley (1849)
 * Epigram 7.590 of the Greek Anthology
 * "Epitaph" translated by William Mcleager Hay (1837)
 * "A. John the illustrious. B. John the mortal, say." translated by Henry Wellesley (1849)
 * Epigram 7.599 of the Greek Anthology
 * "She that was called the Beautiful—(so named" translated William Mcleager Hay (1835)
 * "More for her gracious spirit than her face" translated by John William Burgon (1849)
 * Epigram 7.600 of the Greek Anthology
 * "Thine, Laura—thou, of every grace the bloom!" translated by Francis Wrangham (1828)
 * "The Bride of Sixteen" translated by Frank Laurence Lucas (1939)
 * Epigram 7.603 of the Greek Anthology
 * "Cruel is Death? Nay kind. He that is ta’en" translated by Goldwin Smith (1849)
 * Epigram 9.447 of the Greek Anthology
 * "From the Greek of Julianus" translated by William Cowper (1803)
 * Epigram 9.654 of the Greek Anthology
 * "On a Cottage" translated anonymously from Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1825)
 * "Seek a more profitable job," translated by Henry Wellesley (1849)
 * Epigram 9.763 of the Greek Anthology
 * "If you transgress, in me" translated by Henry Wellesley (1849)
 * Epigram 16.113 of the Greek Anthology
 * ’Tis Philoctetes’ self! To all how well" translated by Goldwin Smith (1849)
 * Epigram 16.130 of the Greek Anthology
 * "On a Statue of Niobe" translated William Mcleager Hay (1835)
 * Epigram 16.157 of the Greek Anthology
 * "Why, Pallas, armed in Athens do you stand?" translated by Charles Neaves (1874)
 * Epigram 16.388 of the Greek Anthology; also in the Anacreontea
 * "In Imitation of Anacreon" translated by George Ogle (1728)
 * "On Cupid" translated by Joseph Addison (1735)
 * "The Love-Draught" translated by Francis Fawkes (1760)
 * "Ode VI" translated by Thomas Moore (1800)
 * "Epigram" translated by French Laurence (1801)
 * "An Anacreontic" translated by John Herman Merivale (1809)
 * "While for my fair a wreath I twined," translated by Charles James Blomfield (1814)
 * "From the Greek of Julianus" translated by John Doran (1831)
 * "Once on a time, while wreathing a garland, I found" translated by John Wilson (1833)
 * "Once on a time while wreathing" translated by William Mcleager Hay (1833)
 * "Cupid Swallowed! A Paraphrase" translated by Leigh Hunt (1836)
 * "Cupid Swallowed" translated by Richard Swainson Fisher (1838)
 * "Love in the Heart" translated by Thomas Bourne (1846)
 * "Twining a wreath, I found, one day," translated by Charles Neaves (1874)
 * "Dinking Cupid" translated by H. Bower (1874)
 * "Dinking Cupid" translated by H. Bower (1878)
 * "An Ode in the Manner of Anacreon" translated by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1893)