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A Note on Pindar Olympian II. 56–60

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

H. T. Deas
Affiliation:
Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.

Abstract

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Type
Other
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1930

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References

page 191 note 1 This view may be conjecturally ascribed to Didymus (1)as being directly, and immediately, opposed to that of Aristarchus; (2) as being followed in the paraphrase (Sch. 105a); (3) cf. Sch. P. VII. 4 δ Δδυμος πλοστερν κοει.

page 192 note 1 Cf. Lehrs, Die Pindarscholim, p. 16 sqq.

page 192 note 2 This is not, of course, Chrysippus of Soli, but a grammarian, a pupil of Aristarchus, who seems to come, in point of time, between Aristarchus and Didymus; cf. Körte, A., Rhein. Mus. 55 (1900), p. 131Google Scholar.

page 192 note 3 For this to us extraordinary supplement, apparently quite wanton and groundless, cf. Sch.O. II. 117c, where παρ τιμς θεν is rendered by παρ τοτις διατρβουσι τοῖς τιμωνοις ὑ π θεν, and Sch. P. IV. 113a, where ὲν is similarly inserted.