[1391]. Ibid. i. 306 = Wiener Vorl. iii. 1 (the names may be fanciful); ibid. i. 77 (cf. Overbeck, Her. Bildw. p. 333).

[1392]. Louvre E 609 = Reinach, i. 395 = Wiener Vorl. 1888, 1, 3 (Chares pyxis).

[1393]. Like others of the Homeric scenes on B.F. vases, this type is sometimes used for an ordinary warrior taking leave of his family, and unless names are given it is difficult to distinguish.

[1394]. Robert, in Hermes, 1901, p. 391, connects this scene with Book xix. 320 ff.

[1395]. The text is not exactly followed here. Menelaos kills Euphorbos in the Iliad, but does not fight over his body with Hector as he does on the vase. Possibly there is a confusion with the Patroklos episode below.

[1396]. The “Psychostasia” is also referred to the combat of Achilles and Memnon (p. [132]).

[1397]. See, for a revised drawing of this vase, Hill, Illustrations of School Classics, p. 105.

[1398]. B.M. B 209–10 (= Wiener Vorl. 1888, pl. 6, 2, 1889, pl. 3, 3 = Reinach, ii. 105), B 323 (?), E 280; Munich 478 = Reinach, ii. 105, and 370 = Furtwaengler-Reichhold, 6.

[1399]. See below, p. [144].

[1400]. Boston Mus. Report, 1903, No. 70: cf. Quint. Smyrn. i. 741 ff.