The Iliad of Homer: Literally Translated, With Explanatory Notes (Classic Reprint)

The Iliad of Homer: Literally Translated, With Explanatory Notes (Classic Reprint)
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Excerpt from The Iliad of Homer: Literally Translated, With Explanatory Notes

An epithet derived from cpivooc, the Phrygian name for a mouse. Either because Apollo had put an end to a plague of mice among that people, or because a mouse was thought emblematical of augury. - Gmts, Hist. Of Greece, vol. I. P. 68, observes that this worship of Sminthian Apollo, in various parts of the Tread and its neighbouring territory, dates before the cal-list period of Eolic colonization. On the Homeric description of Apollo, see Miiller, Dorians, vol. I. P. 315.

Not crowned, as Heyne says; for this was a later custom - See Anthon and Arnold.

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