[22:1] Iliad, iv. 3.
[22:2] Odyss. iv. 18.
[23:1] Odyss. vii. 481.
[23:2] Ib. xii. 191.
[25:1] "ὑπόρχημα, a hyporcheme or choral hymn to Apollo, near akin to the Pæan. It was of a very lively character, accompanied with dancing (whence the name) and pantomimic action; and is compared by Athenæus to the κόρδαξ (630 E). Pindar's Fragments, 71-82, are remains of hyporchemes."—Liddell & Scott, in voc. ὑπόρχημα.
[26:1] That is to say, in the eighteenth book of the Iliad, which relates the making of the arms for Achilles by Vulcan.
[27:1] Odyss. ix. 7.
[28:1] Iliad, xiv. 173.
[28:2] Schweighauser says here that the text of this fragment of Eupolis is corrupt, and the sense and metre undiscoverable.
[29:1] The Ninth Book.