[661]. l. 26, σύ κατὰ τῶν δύο πλέον, for the interpretation of which see Jüthner, p. 28.
[662]. Mus. Greg. i. 103.
[663]. Heliodorus, Aethiop. x. 31.
[664]. Homer, Il. xxiii. 712; Lucian, Anacharsis, 1; Philostrat. Vit. Soph. 225.
[665]. Plutarch, Symp. ii. 4, enumerates as wrestling terms συστάσεις, παραθέσεις, ἐμβολαί, παρεμβολαί. Jüthner in his interesting account of the Oxyrhynchus Papyrus appears to deny this interpretation, but suggests no satisfactory alternative.
[666]. On the interior of this kylix the same group is repeated, but the moment is not quite the same. Cercyon appears to be trying to draw back.
[667]. Homolle, Fouilles de Delphes, iv. 76.
[668]. Anacharsis, 24.
[669]. A small ivory statuette of two boys wrestling, recently acquired by the British Museum, perhaps represents the moment of the turn.
[670]. Dar.-Sagl. 4624.