[1482]. Onomast. ix. 60.
[1483]. Ad Il. t. iv. p. 238. He remarks, that Arist. Ethic. v. 11, quotes this verse on showing that no man can be injured voluntarily—ἀδικεῖσθαι ἑκούσιον. That it became a proverb may be inferred from Cicero, ad Ath. vi. 1.
[1484]. Διδραχμον· τὸ δ`ε παλαιὸν τοῦτο ἦν Αθ᾿ηναῖοις νόμισμα καὶ ἐκαλεῖτο βοῦς, ὅτι βοῦν εἶχεν ἐντετυπωμένον Pollux. ix. 60.
[1485]. Spanheim, de Præstantia et Usu Numismatum Antiquorum, p. 129, 267.
[1486]. Thes. § 25. Cf. Goguet, t. iv. p. 228.
[1487]. Il. ι. 122. 264. σ. 507, sqq. Cf. Herod. i. 14. et Adnot. ad Ælian. i. 22. Goguet, iv. 229.
[1488]. Antiq. Homer. ii. 10. 3.
[1489]. Heyne, ad Il. σ. 507, who observes, justly no doubt, that we are ignorant what the Homeric talent weighed. Cf. Serv. ad Æneid. v. 112.
[1490]. Herod. viii. 137.
[1491]. Hymn. in Herm. 400. Pausan. iv. 3. 6.