[115] Fragment from the "Sthenebœa" of Euripides.
[116] Anytus was one of the accusers of Socrates, and so one of the causers of his death. So Horace calls Socrates "Anyti reum," "Sat." ii. 4, 3.
[117] Homeric Epigrammata, xiii. 5. Quoted also in "On Virtue and Vice," [§ I.]
[118] Odyssey, xix. 40.
[119] I adopt the suggestion of Wyttenbach, εἶπεν ῶ Δαφναῖε.
[120] Pinder, "Pyth." i. 8.
[121] See for example Homer, "Iliad," xi. 3, 73; ix. 502.
[122] Euripides, "Pirithous," Fragm. 591. Dindorf.
[123] An allusion to Homer, "Odyssey," xii. 453.
[124] So Terence, "Andria," 555. "Amantium iræ amoris integratiost."