[70] The Arcadians celebrated the worship of Jupiter with human sacrifices.
[71] He was king of Pisa in Elis, where was the celebrated Olympia, with its temple of Jupiter. Œnomaus had ascertained from an oracle that he would perish by the agency of his son-in-law, and he was anxious, in self-defence, to keep his daughter, Hippodamia, from marrying. As he possessed the swiftest horses in the world he required her suitors to contend with him in a chariot-race, which allowed them no chance of success. The prize of victory was to be his daughter; the penalty of defeat was death, and the bones which laid unburied in the neighbourhood of Jupiter's temple were those of the lovers of Hippodamia.
[72] The Cretans claimed to possess both the birth-place and burial-place of Jupiter.
[73] "Derived from Jove," inasmuch as Perseus, one of the kings of Argos, was the son of Jupiter and Danae.
[74] Eteocles and Polynices.—Pope.
[75] Mercury, so called because he was born upon Mount Cyllene.
[76] Eteocles.
[77] Stephens's translation:
This were such a day
He'd spend an age to see 't.
[78] To Argos, of which Danaus had been king, whence the Argives were also called Danai.