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ΟΡΩ ΜΕΝΟΣ ΠΝΕΟΥΣΑΝ

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

J. E. Harry
Affiliation:
University of Cincinnati.

Extract

No tragic poet uses the phrase μ⋯νος πν⋯ουσαν, except Aeschylus, who employs it in describing the Erinyes, not a Greek maiden. Similarly Homer of his ‘Mut-schnaubende’ heroes and of the savage steeds of Diomed. Hence, in the Sophoclean passage, some scribe may have mistaken the familiar ΜΕΝΟCΠΝΕΟΤCΑΝ for the more unusual ΜΕΝΕΙCΙCΤΝΟΤCΑΝ. Initial C attached itself to the preceding word, and ΤΝΟΤCΑΝ became ΠΝΟΤCΑΝ, which was promptly changed to πν⋯ουσαν.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1911

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