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Homer, Hymn To Apollo 402-3

Homer, Hymn To Apollo 402-3 MISCELLANEA HOMER, HYMN TO APOLLO 402-3 The situation of the passage in which the two lines quoted above occur is on the whole clear: Apollo has seen a ship arriving from Cnossus, on its way to Pylus; because he is looking for 'Opytoveq (389) for his temple in Delphi, he decides to bring this crew there. In order to realize this he takes the form of a dolphin, jumps into the ship 2), and while he is lying there, a mysterious force drives the terror-stricken defenceless crew into the Corinthian gulf to Delphi. Even so the two lines still offer difficulties. We take it that the version of the often exceptional Mosquensis (M), the authority of which is not longer as strong as it used to be during the first century after its discovery by Chr. Fr. Matthaei in 1777 3), is wrong. For demands a further correction of the tradition, e.g. ' ou e 0 (A. Matthiae, Hermann, Abel, Baumeister) or 1) The text is Allen's (Homer, O.C.T., vol. V), adopted in T. W. Allen - W. R. Halliday-E. E. Sikes, The Homeric Hymns, Oxford 19362 (quoted as A.-S.); in the O.C.T. is a printer's error. 2) http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Mnemosyne Brill

Homer, Hymn To Apollo 402-3

Mnemosyne , Volume 21 (2-3): 283 – Jan 1, 1968

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
© 1968 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0026-7074
eISSN
1568-525X
DOI
10.1163/156852568X00888
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

MISCELLANEA HOMER, HYMN TO APOLLO 402-3 The situation of the passage in which the two lines quoted above occur is on the whole clear: Apollo has seen a ship arriving from Cnossus, on its way to Pylus; because he is looking for 'Opytoveq (389) for his temple in Delphi, he decides to bring this crew there. In order to realize this he takes the form of a dolphin, jumps into the ship 2), and while he is lying there, a mysterious force drives the terror-stricken defenceless crew into the Corinthian gulf to Delphi. Even so the two lines still offer difficulties. We take it that the version of the often exceptional Mosquensis (M), the authority of which is not longer as strong as it used to be during the first century after its discovery by Chr. Fr. Matthaei in 1777 3), is wrong. For demands a further correction of the tradition, e.g. ' ou e 0 (A. Matthiae, Hermann, Abel, Baumeister) or 1) The text is Allen's (Homer, O.C.T., vol. V), adopted in T. W. Allen - W. R. Halliday-E. E. Sikes, The Homeric Hymns, Oxford 19362 (quoted as A.-S.); in the O.C.T. is a printer's error. 2)

Journal

MnemosyneBrill

Published: Jan 1, 1968

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