Commentary on the Homeric HymnsMachine readable text


Commentary on the Homeric Hymns
By Thomas W. Allen
London Macmillan 1904



Perseus Documents Collection Table of Contents



THE HOMERIC HYMNS IN ANTIQUITY
   FIFTH CENTURY B.C.
   THIRD CENTURY B.C.
   FIRST CENTURY B.C.6
   SECOND CENTURY A.D.

THE NATURE OF THE HOMERIC HYMNS

HYMN TO DIONYSUS

HYMN TO DEMETER

HYMN TO APOLLO

HYMN TO HERMES

HYMN TO APHRODITE

HYMN TO APHRODITE

HYMN TO DIONYSUS

HYMN TO ARES

HYMN TO ARTEMIS

HYMN TO APHRODITE

HYMN TO ATHENA

HYMN TO HERA

HYMN TO DEMETER

HYMN TO THE MOTHER OF THE GODS

HYMN TO HERACLES THE LION-HEARTED

HYMN TO ASCLEPIUS

HYMN TO THE DIOSCURI

HYMN TO HERMES

HYMN TO PAN

HYMN TO HEPHAESTUS

HYMN TO APOLLO

HYMN TO POSEIDON

HYMN TO ZEUS

HYMN TO HESTIA

HYMN TO THE MUSES AND APOLLO

HYMN TO DIONYSUS

HYMN TO ARTEMIS

HYMN TO ATHENA

HYMN TO HESTIA

HYMN TO EARTH THE MOTHER OF ALL

HYMN TO HELIOS

HYMN TO SELENE

HYMN TO THE DIOSCURI

THE HOMERIC HYMNS IN ANTIQUITY
   FIFTH CENTURY B.C.
   THIRD CENTURY B.C.
   FIRST CENTURY B.C.6
   SECOND CENTURY A.D.

THE NATURE OF THE HOMERIC HYMNS

HYMN TO DIONYSUS

HYMN TO DEMETER

HYMN TO APOLLO

HYMN TO HERMES

HYMN TO APHRODITE

HYMN TO APHRODITE

HYMN TO DIONYSUS

HYMN TO ARES

HYMN TO ARTEMIS

HYMN TO APHRODITE

HYMN TO ATHENA

HYMN TO HERA

HYMN TO DEMETER

HYMN TO THE MOTHER OF THE GODS

HYMN TO HERACLES THE LION-HEARTED

HYMN TO ASCLEPIUS

HYMN TO THE DIOSCURI

HYMN TO HERMES

HYMN TO PAN

HYMN TO HEPHAESTUS

HYMN TO APOLLO

HYMN TO POSEIDON

HYMN TO ZEUS

HYMN TO HESTIA

HYMN TO THE MUSES AND APOLLO

HYMN TO DIONYSUS

HYMN TO ARTEMIS

HYMN TO ATHENA

HYMN TO HESTIA

HYMN TO EARTH THE MOTHER OF ALL

HYMN TO HELIOS

HYMN TO SELENE

HYMN TO THE DIOSCURI


Funded by The Annenberg CPB/Project

HYMN TO THE DIOSCURI

 
Commentary on line 16

*po/nou sfisin: one of these words is necessarily corrupt; Matthiae's πλόου σφισιν fails to account for σφισιν satisfactorily, so that the latter word seems to require emendation. The substitution of κρίσιν, λύσιν, σχέσιν, or σβέσιν (Oxford Text) has been suggested; of these only the last two are graphically probable. Bury's πόνου ἀπονόσφισιν (C. R. 1899, p. 183) is also formally good (omitting ναύταις, which might have been inserted metrically when ἀπονο- had been dropped after πόνου).