[529] Heb. v. 4.
[530] Browne’s Roman Classical Literature, ch. i. p. 13.
[531] Hor. de Art. Poet. v. 53.
[532] Hare and Thirlwall’s Niebuhr, vol. i. p. 65.
[533] Horæ Pelasg. ch. iv.
[534] Sechster Theil. Leipzig, 1838.
[535] Applied principally to the shoulder of animals by the Latins.
[536] The link of ideal connection is to be found in the sacrificial office of the primitive rex.
[537] Scott and Liddell in voc.
[538] Compare the Homeric derivation of Ὀδύσσευς from ὀδύσσομαι, Od. xix. 407.