[1060]. Ovid. Ibis. 349. seq. Tzetz. ad Lycoph. 384. 1093.
[1061]. Apollod. ii. 3. 7. Sch. Aristoph. Ran. 1041.
[1062]. Hesiod suggests a luxurious picture of female life in the heroic ages.—Opp. et Dies. 519. seq.
[1063]. See Book II. v2-Chapter III.
[1064]. Clytemnæstra, again, in Æschylus exhibits considerable knowledge of geography, which she could only have acquired from conversation with travellers or from the songs of the poets.—Agamemn. 287. sqq.
[1065]. And Theocritus enumerates among the accomplishments of Helen, that she could sing and play upon the cithara.—Eidyll. xviii. 35. sqq. et Kiesling ad Theocrit. Cf. Æneid. vi. 647.
[1066]. Odyss. θ. 457. sqq.
[1067]. Apophthegms, Old and New, § 278.
[1068]. Alexand. ab Alexand. iv. 8.
[1069]. Iliad, ζ. 491.