[110] Genesis xxi. 14 f.
[111] Iliad, xvi. 428 f.: ‘As vultures with crooked talons and curved beaks that upon some high crag fight, screaming loudly.’ Ibid. v. 770 f.: ‘As far as a man’s view ranges in the haze, as he sits on a point of outlook and gazes over the wine-dark sea, so far at a spring leap the loud-neighing horses of the gods.’
[112] Poetics, c. 23 (tr. Butcher).
[113] ‘Stranger, tell the Spartans that we lie here, obeying their words.’
[114] Phaedo, 118 B.
[115] fr. 95: ‘Star of evening, bringing all things that bright dawn has scattered, you bring the sheep, you bring the goat, you bring the child back to its mother.’
[116] Iliad, xxiv. 277 f. (with omissions).
[117] I have taken these quotations of Keats from Bradley, Oxford Lecture on Poetry, p. 238.
[118] Callimachus, Epigr. 20: ‘His father Philip laid here to rest his twelve-year old son, his high hope, Nicoteles.’
[119] Thuc. iv. 104, 105, 106 (tr. Jowett, mainly).