[59] Il. vii. 135.
[60] This passage is transposed from the following section, as proposed by Groskurd.
[61] θρύον, the meaning of this word is uncertain; Meyer in his “Botanische erklarung” of Strabo does not attempt to explain it.
[62] Od. iii. 4.
[63] Book xii. c. 3, 4. Little, however, can be obtained of their history, which is buried in the same obscurity as the Pelasgi and Leleges.
[64] This passage is an interpolation by the same hand probably as that in s. 11. Cramer.
[65] Dardanus was the son of Jupiter and Electra, one of the seven daughters of Atlas, surnamed Atlantides.
[66] Il. ii. 591.
[67] Il. ii. 721.
[68] Hercules, after killing the Hydra, dipped the arrows which he afterwards made use of against the Centaurs, in gall of this monster. Pausanias, however, speaks of one Centaur only, Chiron, or, according to others, Polenor, who washed his wounds in the Anigrus.