FOOTNOTES:

[13] Iliad xvi. 490, 491, cf. also Hes. Th. 444.

[14] Odyss., xi. 261-65.

[15] Iliad, ii. 117.

[16] Hesiod. Works and Days. 265. Cf. also Ovid, A.A. i. 655, 656.

[17] “Inventus forsan eodem modo est quo Eurotas, iii. i.” Siebelis.

[18] Iliad, ii. 571.

[19] Hymn to Demeter, 474-476.

[20] ii. 120.

[21] See the story told by Addison, Spectator, No. 483.

[22] Hdt. vi. 77.

[23] The word Gorgon means grim, terrible.

[24] Il. xxiv. 609.

[25] See Il. v. 127, 128.

[26] Il. ix. 457.

[27] Iliad, ii. 571.

[28] Iliad, iv. 193, 194. Is Pausanias nodding here?

[29] Qu. “Now Lerna by the sea” (ἡ κατὰ Θάλασσαν Λέρνα). Cf. a little below.