See particularly vi. 87 and seqq. 364 and seqq.
444
Possibly one of these is νόθος, illegitimate: for they are together in the same chariot, as Antiphus and Isus were. One of the two would be the charioteer; who was commonly, though not always, an inferior.
445
Il. xxii. 51, 3.
446
Il. xx. 407. xxi. 79, 95.
447
Il. xxi. 88.
448
Il. v. 71.
449
Il. vii. 298. xi. 224.
450
Tac. Germ. c. 18.
451
Od. i. 35.
452
Od. xxii. 37.
453
Il. xxii. 370.
454
Il. xxiv. 632.
455
Il. xii. 94. and Od. iv. 276. See also the case of Euphorbus, Il. xvii. 51.
456
The sense of ἄριστος in Homer, though emphatic, is not absolute.
457
Il. iii. 106.
458
See Il. v. 482.
459
Il. xii. 319.
460
Il. vi. 207.
461
Il. vi. 193.
462
On the ἄναξ ἀνδρῶν, see Achæis, sect. ix.
463
xx. 180.
464
Idyll. xv. 139.
465
Il. xxiv. 496. vi. 252.
466
Il. xx. 240.
467
Il. xxii. 56, 433, 507. xxiv. 29.
468