[P. 30, l. 955.] Dryas’ hasty son. Lycurgus. See Homer, Iliad, vi.

[l. 971.] Phineus’ two sons. Idothea, the second wife of Phineus, persecuted his two sons by Cleopatra, a daughter of Boreas, whom he had repudiated and immured. The Argonauts saw them in the condition here described.

[P. 34, l. 1120.] The all-gathering bosom wide. The plain of Eleusis, where mysteries were held in honour of Dêo or Demeter.

[P. 39, l. 1301.] Reading *οξυθηκτω ... περι*ξιφει.

[l. 1303.] The glorious bed of buried Megareus. Megareus, son of Creon and Eurydice, sacrificed himself for Thebes by falling into a deep cave called the Dragon’s Lair.

[page 314]AIAS.

[P. 48, l. 172.] Her blood-stained temple. In some of her temples Artemis was worshipped with sacrifices of bulls, and, according to an old tradition, also with human sacrifices.

[P. 49. l. 190.] The brood of Sisyphus. Amongst his enemies, Odysseus was reputed to be the offspring of Sisyphus and not of Laertes.

[P. 59, l. 574.] Named of the shield. Eurysakes means Broadshield.

[P. 71, l. 1011.] Who smiles no more. Compare a fragment of the Teucer of Sophocles (519, Nauck),