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Clement of Alexandria

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Introductory Note to Clement of Alexandria

[3186] De Nat. Deor., ed. Delphin., vol. xiv. p. 852.

III.

[3187] Boston, 1850.

V.

[3188] In the Provincial Letters, passim.

VII.

[3189] Hippol., vol. iii. p. 200.

VIII.

[3190] Chrysostom.

[3191] Vol. iv. pp. 104-107.

IX.

[3192] Works, vol. iv. p. 205.

Chapter I.—Plan.

[3193] [On Clement’s plan, see Elucidation I. p. 342, supra.]

[3194] John vi. 27.

[3195] Isa. xxxii. 20.

[3196] Rom. xiv. 2.

[3197] Ps. cxii. 5, 9.

Chapter II.—The Subject of Plagiarisms Resumed. The Greeks Plagiarized from One Another.

[3198] Odyss., xi. 427.

[3199] Homer, Iliad, xxiii. 315: μέγ᾽ ἀμείνων is found in the Iliad as in Musæus. In the text occurs instead περιγίνεται, which is taken from line 318.

 

“By art rather than strength is the woodcutter greatly superior;

By art the helmsman on the dark sea

Guides the swift ship when driven by winds;

By art one charioteer excels (περιγίνεται) another.

 

Iliad, xxiii. 315–318.

[3200] φύλλον, for which Sylburg, suggests φῦλον.

[3201] Iliad, vi. 147–149.

[3202] Odyss., xxii. 412.

[3203] Iliad, ix. 116.

[3204] Ξυνός. So Livy, “communis Mars;” and Cicero, “cum omnis belli Mars comunis.”

[3205] Iliad, xviii. 309.

[3206] Ξυνός. So Livy, “communis Mars;” and Cicero, “cum omnis belli Mars comunis.”

 

 

 

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