[63]. Menand. ap. Clem. Alexand. Stromat. ii. p. 421, a. Heins.
[64]. Potter, Arch. Græc. ii. 281.
[65]. Eurip. Helen. 722. Hesiod, Scut. Heracl. 275, seq. where the torches are said to be borne by Dmoës.
[66]. In Hesiod a troop of blooming virgins, playing on the phorminx, lead the procession. αἱ δ᾽ ὑπὸ φορμίγγων ἄναγον χορὸν ἱμερόεντα. A band of youths follow, playing on the syrinx. See the note of Gœttling on Scut. Heracl. 274, p. 117, sqq.
[67]. Iliad, σ. 490, sqq. Pope’s Translation.
[68]. Ἁρμάτειον μέλος. Leisner, in his notes on Bos (Antiq. Græc. Pars. iv. c. ii. § 4.), observes, that in Suidas, Hesychius, and Eustathius (ad Il. χ. p. 1380. 5), these words have a different meaning from that which, with Bos and Potter (Antiq. Græc. ii. 282), I have adopted. But in the passage quoted by Henri de Valois (ad Harpocrat. p. 222), they would seem to bear the signification above given them.
[69]. Plut. Quæst. Roman. xx. 19. Valckenaer ad Herodot. iv. 114.
[70]. Poll. iii. 37.
[71]. Poll. i. 246.
[72]. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 834.