[916] Od. xi. 287. xiv. 210. Il. xiii. 363.
[917] Friedreich, Realien, c. III. ii. p. 204.
[918] Il. iii. 427. xxiv. 763.
[919] Il. iii. 140. Of Deiphobus, we are never told that he was Helen’s husband: and he could only for a very short time have had possession of her. The only trace of the connection is that, when Helen went down to the horse, Deiphobus followed her. Od. iv 276.
[920] Il. iii. 53.
[921] Il. iv. 169–75.
[922] Od. xxii. 38.
[923] Od. xvi. 75.
[924] Il. iv. 441.
[925] Od. x. 2.