Wikipedia
"Thyrsis" (from the title of Theocritus's poem "Θύρσις") is a poem written by Matthew Arnold in December 1865 to commemorate his friend, the poet Arthur Hugh Clough, who had died in November 1861 aged only 42.
The character, Thyrsis, was a shepherd in Virgil's Seventh Eclogue, who lost a singing match against Corydon. The implication that Clough was a loser is hardly fair, given that he is thought by many to have been one of the greatest Nineteenth Century poets (but see line 80: "For Time, not Corydon, hath conquer’d thee").
Arnold's decision to imitate a Latin pastoral is ironic in that Clough was best known for The Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich, subtitled 'a long-vacation pastoral': a thoroughly modern poem which broke all the rules of classical pastoral poetry.
Arnold's poem is remembered above all for its lines describing the view of Oxford from Boars Hill: "And that sweet city with her dreaming spires,/ She needs not June for beauty's heightening". Portions of it also appear in An Oxford Elegy by Ralph Vaughan Williams.
Thyrsis or Tirsi may refer to:
- Thyrsis (poem) (1865), a poem by Matthew Arnold
- Thyrsis, the title of the first idyll by Theocritus
- Thyrsis, a character in the opera La Dafne by Marco da Gagliano
- Tirsi, one of the characters in Clori, Tirsi e Fileno, a comic cantata by George Frideric Handel
- Thyrsis, a character in Edna St. Vincent Millay's 1920 play, "Aria da Capo"
- Thyrsis's Cave, a natural cavern located in the Manifold Valley in Staffordshire, England
- Cupidesthes thyrsis, a butterfly in the Lycaenidae family
- Gangara thyrsis, commonly known as the Giant Redeye, a butterfly belonging to the family Hesperiidae
- Chilo thyrsis, a moth in the Crambidae family