[1093] Works and Days, 325 ff.
[1096] Hom. Il. XXIII. 69 ff.
[1097] Hom. Od. XI. 51 ff.
[1098] Eur. Hec. 1–58.
[1099] Aesch. Eum. 94 ff. It must be observed, however, that Clytemnestra’s restlessness is represented as being due to her being a murderess quite as much as to her having been violently slain. There was a double cause. See below, p. [474].
[1100] cap. 29.
[1101] Other references are given by Schmidt, das Volksleben, p. 169, among them Servius on Virg. Aen., IV. 386 and Heliod. Aethiop., II. 5.
[1102] Certain hints however are to be found, on which see below, pp. [438]-[9].