Normal view
Why Trump Has an Edge With These 11 Michigan Voters — Even Though They Don’t Like Him
Democrats Finally Did What Sherrod Brown Asked For. It Might Be Too Late.
Republicans Assumed a Nebraska Senate Seat Was Safe. Then This Candidate Came Along.
For Companies in China, Pulling Out of Xinjiang Poses ‘Messy Dilemma’
China to Investigate U.S. Retailer, Sending a Message Over Xinjiang
U.S. Research Aided Chinese Military Technology, House Republicans Say
Heroines 20, 21: Cydippe’s apple of love
There’s more to classical Greek and Roman myths than rape, murder and metamorphoses. Sometimes they tell touching stories of true love, like that of Acontius and Cydippe. You won’t have heard of them, because their story is tucked away in a couple of imagined letters in Ovid’s Heroines (letters 20 and 21), and in his Art of Love (1, from line 457 on).
Acontius was a young man from the lovely Greek island of Keos, who fell hopelessly in love with the beautiful young woman Cydippe. Sadly, she was of higher social standing than he was, and such a marriage was unthinkable to her family. He devised an ingenious plan to trick her into making a commitment to him: he wrote the words I swear before Diana that I will marry only Acontius on an apple.
He then approached Cydippe when she was in the temple of Diana, and rolled the inscribed apple in front of her. Her nurse picked it up, and handed it to Cydippe to read his words aloud before the altar, so binding her to the vow.
The wonderful Swiss painter Angelica Kauffman exhibited a painting titled Acontius and Cydippe at the Royal Academy in London in 1771. Like so many of her paintings, it was wildly popular, but now appears to have been lost. A copy was made by someone from her circle, and that has survived, although it was earlier thought to show Orestes and Iphigenia.
This surviving version of Acontius and Cydippe Before the Altar of Diana shows Cydippe with Acontius behind her, armed with his inscribed apple, but there’s no sign of any nurse. Acontius holds his ingeniously inscribed apple high above Cydippe, apparently waiting for the perfect moment to drop it in front of her.
Kauffmann’s painting was engraved, and the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm has what I understand to be a hand-coloured print made by the Swedish painter Johan Fredrik Martin.
That’s a fine narrative work that does the story justice, but pales in comparison to the painting of Cydippe in the Rijksmuseum, by a little-known Dutch artist Paulus Bor.
His Cydippe with Acontius’s Apple is undated, but probably from around 1630-40. It puts a different slant on the story: here, Cydippe leans on the altar, alone, the inscribed apple held up in her right hand. But she isn’t reading Acontius’ words: she has clearly already said those out aloud, and now seems to be thinking through the vow she has just made.
Bor paints the details of the altar exquisitely. Cydippe’s dress may be anachronistic, but Bor brings in the skull of a sacrificed goat and festoons of flowers.
She then seemingly overlooked this inadvertent commitment that she had made in front of Diana.
Sadly, Cydippe’s family had other ideas, and found her a prospective husband of appropriate status. Shortly before the couple were due to marry, Cydippe fell ill with a severe fever, and the proceedings had to be postponed. After she had recovered, a second attempt was made to marry the couple, but again Cydippe fell ill just before the ceremonies, and so the wedding had to be called off yet again.
Unsure of what to do next, Cydippe’s parents consulted the oracle at Delphi, who told them the whole story. Recognising the strength of the vow that she had made, Cydippe and her parents finally accepted the match, and Acontius and Cydippe married with the blessing of both families.
I still feel sure that some artist would have depicted some more of their story, but my reference sources only point to poetry and operas. These include an allusion in Spenser’s Faerie Queene, verse by Edward Bulwer Lytton and the artist and designer William Morris. There have been no less than six operas written about the story, including Hoffman’s Acontius und Cydippe, first performed in 1709. Apparently Angelica Kauffmann and Paulus Bor were alone among painters.
迁移博客
目前将博客和一些附属的东西迁移到了 Azure 去了。
为什么要迁移呢,因为国内的审查制度(虽然我在博客不表达政治观点,但有一篇技术类文章还是触发了服务器提供商的舆情监控系统)其他的还有原本部署的不够优雅,现在基本把博客一些组件都容器化了,做到了能够几分钟快速从其他的服务器迁移,还有一个相对适合我的完备的备份策略。绝大部分部署都自动化了,这样做以后我需要的仅仅是写一篇文章,然后 commit 到 GitHub 的 private repo 就完事了。
在原来的博客中,图床使用的都是又拍云的存储方案,包括一些博客的缩略图,都是由它去处理的。之后发现我又拍云账户虽然有之前赞助计划给的 100 GB+ 流量,但是每天都有海外请求导致一天都会扣 0.01 元,然后我就不得不每隔一段时间去充值一次 1 元。为了避免这样我选择了自建方案。存储我选择了 MinIO,图片处理用了 thumbor。这两个上手都相当快,尤其 MinIO 还是完全兼容 Amazon S3 的方案。然后图像处理参数设计成与我在又拍云的设定一样就完事了。图片这块基本无痛迁移。
网站速度方面,我没有特别的去优化国内的用户。目前网站的所有流量都得经过 cloudflare 的 CDN。
最后就是此次迁移用到的各种东西:docker,docker-compose,nginx,thumbor,MinIO,GitHub Actions