<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0548.tlg001.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div subtype="book" type="textpart" n="3"><div subtype="chapter" type="textpart" n="12"><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="6"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Now Hector married Andromache, daughter of Eetion,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">See <bibl n="Hom. Il. 6.395">Hom. Il. 6.395ff.</bibl>, where it is said that Eetion was king of Thebe in <name type="place" key="tgn,7002470">Cilicia</name>.</note> and Alexander married Oenone, daughter of the river Cebren.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">For the loves of Paris and Oenone, and their tragic end, compare <bibl>Conon 23</bibl>; <bibl>Parthenius, Narrat. 4</bibl>; <bibl>Ovid, Her. v</bibl>.</note> She had learned from Rhea the art of prophecy, and warned Alexander not to sail to fetch Helen; but failing to persuade him, she told him to come to her if he were wounded, for she alone could heal him. When he had carried off Helen from <name type="place" key="perseus,Sparta">Sparta</name> and <name type="place" key="perseus,Troy">Troy</name> was besieged, he was shot by Philoctetes with the bow of Hercules, and went back to Oenone on Ida. But she, nursing her grievance, refused to heal him. So Alexander was carried to <name type="place" key="perseus,Troy">Troy</name> and died. But Oenone repented her, and brought the healing drugs; and finding him dead she hanged herself. <milestone unit="para"/>The Asopus river was a son of Ocean and Tethys, or, as Acusilaus says, of Pero and Poseidon, or, according to some, of Zeus and Eurynome. Him Metope, herself a daughter of the river Ladon, married and bore two sons, Ismenus and Pelagon, and twenty daughters, of whom one, Aegina, was carried off by Zeus.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">As to the river-god Asopus and his family, see <bibl>Diod. 4.72.1-5</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 2.5.1">Paus. 2.5.1ff.</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 5.22.6">Paus. 5.22.6</bibl>. According to Diodorus, Asopus was a son of Ocean and Tethys; he married Metope, daughter of the Ladon, by whom he had two sons and twelve daughters. Asopus, the father of Aegina, is identified by Diodorus and Pausanias with the Phliasian or Sicyonian river of that name; but the patriotic Boeotian poet Pindar seems to claim the honour for the Boeotian Asopus (<bibl n="Pind. I. 8">Pind. I. 8.16(35)ff.</bibl>, and he is naturally supported by his Scholiast (<bibl>Scholiast on Pind. I. 8.17(37)</bibl>), as well as by Statius vii.315ff.) and his Scholiast, <bibl>Lactantius Placidus on Statius, Theb. vii.424</bibl>. The Phliasians even went so far as to assert that their Asopus was the father of Thebe, who gave her name to the Boeotian Thebes; but this view the Thebans could not accept (<bibl n="Paus. 2.5.2">Paus. 2.5.2</bibl>).</note> In search of her Asopus came <pb n="53"/>to <name type="place" key="perseus,Corinth">Corinth</name>, and learned from Sisyphus that the ravisher was Zeus.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare above, <bibl n="Apollod. 1.9.3">Apollod. 1.9.3</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 2.5.1">Paus. 2.5.1</bibl>.</note> Asopus pursued him, but Zeus, by hurling thunderbolts, sent him away back to his own streams;<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl>Callimachus, Hymn to Delos 78</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Ap. Rhod., Argon. i.117</bibl>.</note> hence coals are fetched to this day from the streams of that river.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">According to <bibl>Lactantius Placidus on Statius, Theb. vii.315</bibl>, live coals were to be found in the Asopus, and Statius, in his windy style (<bibl>Statius, Theb. vii.325ff.</bibl>), talks of the “brave river blowing ashes of thunderbolts and Aetnaean vapours from its panting banks to the sky,” which may be a poetical description of river-mists. But both the poet and his dutiful commentator here refer to the Boeotian Asopus, whereas Apollodorus probably refers to the Phliasian river of that name.</note> And having conveyed Aegina to the island then named Oenone, but now called <name type="place" key="perseus,Aegina City">Aegina</name> after her, Zeus cohabited with her and begot a son Aeacus on her.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl>Diod. 4.72.5</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 2.29.2">Paus. 2.29.2</bibl>; <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 52</bibl>. As to Oenone, the ancient name of <name type="place" key="perseus,Aegina City">Aegina</name>, compare <bibl n="Pind. N. 4">Pind. N. 4.46(75)</bibl>; <bibl n="Pind. N. 5">Pind. N. 5.16(29)</bibl>; <bibl n="Pind. N. 8">Pind. N. 8.7(12)</bibl>; <bibl n="Pind. I. 5">Pind. I. 5.34(44)</bibl>; <bibl n="Hdt. 8.46">Hdt. 8.46</bibl>; <bibl n="Strab. 8.6.16">Strab. 8.6.16</bibl>; <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 52</bibl>. Another old name for <name type="place" key="perseus,Aegina City">Aegina</name> was Oenopia. See <bibl n="Pind. N. 8">Pind. N. 8.21(45)</bibl>; <bibl n="Ov. Met. 7.472">Ov. Met. 7.472ff.</bibl> </note> As Aeacus was alone in the island, Zeus made the ants into men for him.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">As to the transformation of the ants into men see Hesiod, quoted by the <bibl>Scholiast on Pind. N. 3.13(21)</bibl>; and by <bibl>Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron 176</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Hom. Il. i.180</bibl>; <bibl n="Strab. 8.6.16">Strab. 8.6.16</bibl>; <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 52</bibl>; <bibl n="Ov. Met. 7.614">Ov. Met. 7.614ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Scriptores rerum mythicarum Latini, ed. Bode, i. pp. 23, 142 (First Vatican Mythographer 67; Second Vatican Mythographer 204)</bibl>. The fable is clearly based on the false etymology which derived the name Myrmidons from <foreign xml:lang="grc">μύρμηκες</foreign>, “ants.” <bibl n="Strab. 8.6.16">Strab. 8.6.16</bibl> attempted to rationalize the myth.</note> And Aeacus married Endeis, daughter of Sciron, by whom he had two sons, Peleus and Telamon.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl n="Plut. Thes. 10">Plut. Thes. 10</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 2.29.9">Paus. 2.29.9</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Eur. Andr. 687</bibl>. According to another account, Endeis, the mother of Telamon and Peleus, was a daughter of Chiron. See <bibl>Scholiast on Pind. N. 5.7(12)</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Hom. Il. xvi.14</bibl>; <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 14</bibl>.</note> But Pherecydes says that Telamon was a friend, not a brother of Peleus, he being a son of Actaeus and Glauce, daughter of Cychreus.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">This account of the parentage of Telamon, for which we have the authority of the old writer Pherecydes (about <date when="-0480">480</date> B.C.), is probably earlier than the one which represents him as a son of Aeacus. According to it, Telamon was a native, not of <name type="place" key="perseus,Aegina City">Aegina</name>, but of <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name>, his mother Glauce being a daughter of Cychreus, king of <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name> (as to whom see below, <bibl n="Apollod. 3.12.7">Apollod. 3.12.7</bibl>). It is certain that the later life of Telamon was associated with <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name>, where, according to one account (<bibl>Diod. 4.72.7</bibl>), he married Glauce, daughter of Cychreus, king of <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name>, the very woman whom the other and perhaps later version of the legend represented as his mother. See <bibl>Jebb, <title>Sophocles, Ajax</title> (Cambridge, 1896), Introduction, Section 4, pp. xviiff.</bibl> </note> Afterwards <pb n="55"/> Aeacus cohabited with Psamathe, daughter of Nereus, who turned herself into a seal to avoid his embraces, and he begot a son Phocus.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl n="Hes. Th. 1003">Hes. Th. 1003ff.</bibl>; <bibl n="Pind. N. 5">Pind. N. 5.12(21)</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Eur. Andr. 687</bibl>, who mentions the transformation of the sea-nymph into a seal. The children of Phocus settled in Phocis and gave their name to the country. See <bibl n="Paus. 2.29.2">Paus. 2.29.2</bibl>, <bibl n="Paus. 10.1.1">Paus. 10.1.1</bibl>, <bibl n="Paus. 10.30.4">Paus. 10.30.4</bibl>. Thus we have an instance of a Greek people, the Phocians, who traced their name and their lineage to an animal ancestress. But it would be rash to infer that the seal was the totem of the Phocians. There is no evidence that they regarded the seal with any superstitious respect, though the people of <name type="place" key="tgn,7018000">Phocaea</name>, in <name type="place" key="tgn,7002294">Asia Minor</name>, who were Phocians by descent (<bibl n="Paus. 7.3.10">Paus. 7.3.10</bibl>), put the figure of a seal on their earliest coins. But this was probably no more than a punning badge, like the rose of <name type="place" key="tgn,7011266">Rhodes</name> and the wild celery (<foreign xml:lang="grc">σέλινον</foreign>) of <name type="place" key="perseus,Selinus">Selinus</name>. See <bibl>George Macdonald, <title>Coin Types</title> (Glasgow, 1905), pp. 17, 41, 50</bibl>.</note> <milestone unit="para"/>Now Aeacus was the most pious of men. Therefore, when <name type="place" key="tgn,1000074">Greece</name> suffered from infertility on account of Pelops, because in a war with Stymphalus, king of the Arcadians, being unable to conquer <name type="place" key="tgn,7002735">Arcadia</name>, he slew the king under a pretence of friendship, and scattered his mangled limbs, oracles of the gods declared that <name type="place" key="tgn,1000074">Greece</name> would be rid of its present calamities if Aeacus would offer prayers on its behalf. So Aeacus did offer prayers, and <name type="place" key="tgn,1000074">Greece</name> was delivered from the dearth.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl n="Isoc. 9.14">Isoc. 9.14ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Diod. 4.61.1ff.</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 2.29.7">Paus. 2.29.7ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Clement of Alexandria, Strom. vi.3.28, p. 753</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Pind. N. 5.9(17)</bibl>. Tradition ran that a prolonged drought had withered up the fruits of the earth all over <name type="place" key="tgn,1000074">Greece</name>, and that Aeacus, as the son of the sky-god Zeus, was deemed the person most naturally fitted to obtain from his heavenly father the rain so urgently needed by the parched earth and the dying corn. So the Greeks sent envoys to him to request that he would intercede with Zeus to save the crops and the people. “ Complying with their petition, Aeacus ascended the Hellenic mountain and stretching out pure hands to heaven he called on the common god, and prayed him to take pity on afflicted <name type="place" key="tgn,1000074">Greece</name>. And even while he prayed a loud clap of thunder pealed, and all the surrounding sky was overcast, and furious and continuous showers of rain burst out and flooded the whole land. Thus was exuberant fertility procured for the fruits of the earth by the prayers of Aeacus” (<bibl>Clement of Alexandria, Strom. vi.3.28, p. 753</bibl>). In gratitude for this timely answer to his prayers Aeacus is said to have built a sanctuary of Zeus on Mount Panhellenius in <name type="place" key="perseus,Aegina City">Aegina</name> (<bibl n="Paus. 2.30.4">Paus. 2.30.4</bibl>). No place could well be more appropriate for a temple of the rain-god; for the sharp peak of Mount Panhellenius, the highest mountain of <name type="place" key="perseus,Aegina City">Aegina</name>, is a conspicuous landmark viewed from all the neighbouring coasts of the gulf, and in antiquity a cloud settling on the mountain was regarded as a sign of rain (<bibl>Theophrastus, De signis tempestat. i.24</bibl>). According to Apollodorus, the cause of the dearth had been a crime of Pelops, who had treacherously murdered Stymphalus, king of <name type="place" key="tgn,7002735">Arcadia</name>, and scattered the fragments of his mangled body abroad. This crime seems not to be mentioned by any other ancient writer; but Diodorus Siculus in like manner traces the calamity to a treacherous murder. He says (<bibl>Diod. 4.61.1</bibl>) that to punish the Athenians for the assassination of his son Androgeus, the Cretan king Minos prayed to Zeus that <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name> might be afflicted with drought and famine, and that these evils soon spread over <name type="place" key="tgn,7002681">Attica</name> and <name type="place" key="tgn,1000074">Greece</name>. Similarly Alcmaeon's matricide was believed to have entailed a failure of the crops. See above, <bibl n="Apollod. 3.7.5">Apollod. 3.7.5</bibl> with the note.</note> Even after his death <pb n="57"/> Aeacus is honored in the abode of Pluto, and keeps the keys of Hades.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">In some late Greek verses, inscribed on the tomb of a religious sceptic at <name type="place" key="perseus,Rome">Rome</name>, Aeacus is spoken of as the warder or key-holder (<foreign xml:lang="grc">κλειδοῦχος</foreign>) of the infernal regions; but in the same breath the poet assures us that these regions, with all their inmates, were mere fables, and that of the dead there remained no more than the bones and ashes. See <bibl><title>Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum</title>, vol. iii. p. 933, No. 6298</bibl>; <bibl>G. Kaibel, <title>Epigrammata Graeca ex lapidibus conlecta</title> 646</bibl>. Elsewhere Pluto himself was represented in art holding in his hand the key of Hades. See <bibl n="Paus. 5.20.3">Paus. 5.20.3</bibl>. According to <bibl n="Isoc. 9.15">Isoc. 9.15</bibl>, Aeacus enjoyed the greatest honours after death, sitting as assessor with Pluto and Proserpine. Plato represents him as judging the dead along with Minos, Rhadamanthys, and Triptolemus (<bibl n="Plat. Apol. 41a">Plat. Apol. 41a</bibl>), it being his special duty to try the souls of those who came from <name type="place" key="tgn,1000003">Europe</name>, while his colleague Rhadamanthys dealt with those that came from <name type="place" key="tgn,1000004">Asia</name> (<bibl>Gorgias 79, p. 524A</bibl>); apparently no provision was made for African ghosts. Lucian depicts Aeacus playing a less dignified part in the lower world as a sort of ticket-collector or customhouse officer (<foreign xml:lang="grc">τελώνης</foreign>), whose business it was to examine the ghostly passengers on landing from the ferryboat, count them, and see that they had paid the fare. See <bibl>Lucian, Cataplus 4; Charon 2</bibl>. Elsewhere he speaks of Aeacus as keeping the gate of Hades (<bibl>Lucian, Dialog. Mort. xx.1</bibl>).</note> <milestone unit="para"/>As Phocus excelled in athletic sports, his brothers Peleus and Telamon plotted against him, and the lot falling on Telamon, he killed his brother in a match by throwing a quoit at his head, and with the help of Peleus carried the body and hid it in a wood. But the murder being detected, the two were driven fugitives from <name type="place" key="perseus,Aegina City">Aegina</name> by Aeacus.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">As to the murder of Phocus and the exile of Peleus and Telamon, see <bibl>Diod. 4.72.6ff.</bibl> (who represents the death as accidental); <bibl n="Paus. 2.29.9">Paus. 2.29.9ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Pind. N. 5.14(25)</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Eur. Andr. 687</bibl> (quoting verses from the Alcmaeonis); <bibl>Scholiast on Hom. Il. xvi.14</bibl>; <bibl>Ant. Lib. 38</bibl>; <bibl>Plut. Parallela 25</bibl>; <bibl>Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron 175 (vol. i. pp. 444, 447, ed. Muller)</bibl>; <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 14</bibl>; <bibl n="Ov. Met. 11.266">Ov. Met. 11.266ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Lactantius Placidus on Statius, Theb. ii.113, vii.344, xi.281</bibl>. Tradition differed on several points as to the murder. According to Apollodorus and Plutarch the murderer was Telamon; but according to what seems to have been the more generally accepted view he was Peleus. (So Diodorus, Pausanias, the Scholiast on Homer, one of the <bibl>Scholiast on Eur. Andr. 687</bibl>, Ovid, and in one passage Lactantius Placidus). If Pherecydes was right in denying any relationship between Telamon and Peleus, and in representing Telamon as a Salaminian rather than an Aeginetan (see above), it becomes probable that in the original tradition Peleus, not Telamon, was described as the murderer of Phocus. Another version of the story was that both brothers had a hand in the murder, Telamon having banged him on the head with a quoit, while Peleus finished him off with the stroke of an axe in the middle of his back. This was the account given by the anonymous author of the old epic <title>Alcmaeonis</title>; and the same division of labour between the brothers was recognized by the Scholiast on Pindar and Tzetzes, though according to them the quoit was handled by Peleus and the cold steel by Telamon. Other writers (Antoninus Liberalis and Hyginus) lay the murder at the door of both brothers without parcelling the guilt out exactly between them. There seems to be a general agreement that the crime was committed, or the accident happened, in the course of a match at quoits; but Dorotheus (quoted by <bibl>Plut. Parallela 25</bibl>) alleged that the murder was perpetrated by Telamon at a boar hunt, and this view seems to have been accepted by Lactantius Placidus in one place (<bibl>Lactantius Placidus on Statius, Theb. ii.113</bibl>), though in other places (<bibl>Lactantius Placidus on Statius, Theb. vii.344 and xi.281</bibl>) he speaks as if the brothers were equally guilty. But perhaps this version of the story originated in a confusion of the murder of Phocus with the subsequent homicide of Eurytion, which is said to have taken place at a boar-hunt, whether the hunting of the Calydonian boar or another. See below, <bibl n="Apollod. 3.13.2">Apollod. 3.13.2</bibl> with the note. According to Pausanias the exiled Telamon afterwards returned and stood his trial, pleading his cause from the deck of a ship, because his father would not suffer him to set foot in the island. But being judged guilty by his stern sire he sailed away, to return to his native land no more. It may have been this verdict, delivered against his own son, which raised the reputation of Aeacus for rigid justice to the highest pitch, and won for him a place on the bench beside Minos and Rhadamanthys in the world of shades.</note> </p></div><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="7"><p> And Telamon <pb n="59"/>betook himself to <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name>, to the court of Cychreus, son of Poseidon and <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name>, daughter of Asopus. This Cychreus became king of <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name> through killing a snake which ravaged the island, and dying childless he bequeathed the kingdom to Telamon.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl>Diod. 4.72.4</bibl>; <bibl>Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron 110, 175, 451</bibl>. In the second of these passages (<bibl>175, vol. i. p. 444, ed. Muller</bibl>) Tzetzes agrees closely with Apollodorus and probably follows him. A somewhat different version of the legend was told by Hesiod. According to him the snake was reared by Cychreus, but expelled from <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name> by Eurylochus because of the ravages it committed in the island; and after its expulsion it was received at <name type="place" key="perseus,Eleusis">Eleusis</name> by Demeter, who made it one of her attendants. See <bibl n="Strab. 9.1.9">Strab. 9.1.9</bibl>. Others said that the snake was not a real snake, but a bad man nicknamed Snake on account of his cruelty, who was banished by Eurylochus and took refuge at <name type="place" key="perseus,Eleusis">Eleusis</name>, where he was appointed to a minor office in the sanctuary of Demeter. See <bibl>Stephanus Byzantius, s.v. <foreign xml:lang="grc">Κυχρεῖος πάγος</foreign> </bibl>; <bibl>Eustathius, Commentary on Dionysius Perieg. 507 (Geographi Graeci Minores, ed. C. Müller, vol. ii. p. 314)</bibl>. Cychreus was regarded as one of the guardian heroes of <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name>, where he was buried with his face to the west. Sacrifices were regularly offered at his grave, and when Solon desired to establish the claim of <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name> to the possession of the island, he sailed across by night and sacrificed to the dead man at his grave. See <bibl n="Plut. Sol. 9">Plut. Sol. 9</bibl>. Cychreus was worshipped also at <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name> (<bibl n="Plut. Thes. 10">Plut. Thes. 10</bibl>). It is said that at the battle of <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name> a serpent appeared among the Greek ships, and God announced to the Athenians that this serpent was the hero Cychreus (<bibl n="Paus. 1.36.1">Paus. 1.36.1</bibl>). The story may preserve a reminiscence of the belief that kings and heroes regularly turn into serpents after death. The same belief possibly explains the association of Erichthonius or Erechtheus and Cecrops with serpents at <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name>. See <bibl><title>The Dying God</title>, pp. 86ff.</bibl> On account of this legendary serpent Lycophron called <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name> the Dragon Isle (<bibl>Lycophron, Cassandra 110</bibl>).</note> And <pb n="61"/> Telamon married Periboea, daughter of Alcathus,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl>Xen. Cyn. i.9</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Hom. Il. xvi.14</bibl>. According to <bibl>Diod. 4.72.7</bibl>, Telamon first married Glauce, daughter of Cychreus, king of <name type="place" key="perseus,Salamis, Cyprus">Salamis</name>, and on her death he wedded the Athenian Eriboea, daughter of Alcathous, by whom he had Ajax. Pindar also mentions Eriboea as the wife of Telamon: see <bibl n="Pind. I. 6">Pind. I. 6.45(65)</bibl>.</note> son of Pelops, and called his son Ajax, because when Hercules had prayed that he might have a male child, an eagle appeared after the prayer.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">As to the prayer of Herakles and the appearance of the eagle in answer to the prayer, see <bibl n="Pind. I. 6">Pind. I. 6.35(51)ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron 455-461</bibl>. Pindar followed by Apollodorus and Tzetzes, derived the name Ajax from <foreign xml:lang="grc">αἰετός</foreign> “an eagle.” A story ran that Herakles wrapt the infant Ajax in the lion's skin which he himself wore, and that Ajax was thus made invulnerable except in the armpit, where the quiver had hung, or, according to others, at the neck. Hence, in describing the suicide of the hero, Aeschylus told how, when he tried to run himself through the body, the sword doubled back in the shape of a bow, till some spirit showed the desperate man the fatal point to which to apply the trenchant blade. See <bibl>Scholiast on Soph. Aj. 833</bibl>; <bibl>Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron 455-461</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Hom. Il. 23.821</bibl>. Plato probably had this striking passage of the tragedy in his mind when he made Alcibiades speak of Socrates as more proof against vice than Ajax against steel (<bibl n="Plat. Sym. 219e">Plat. Symp. 219e</bibl>).</note> And having gone with Hercules on his expedition against <name type="place" key="perseus,Troy">Troy</name>, he received as a prize Hesione, daughter of Laomedon, by whom he had a son Teucer.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">See above, <bibl n="Apollod. 2.6.4">Apollod. 2.6.4</bibl>. As Hesione, the mother of Teucer, was not the lawful wife of Telamon, Homer speaks of Teucer as a bastard (<bibl n="Hom. Il. 8.283">Hom. Il. 8.283ff.</bibl>, with the <bibl>Scholiast on Hom. Il. 8.284</bibl>). According to another account, it was not Telamon but his brother Peleus who went with Herakles to the siege of <name type="place" key="perseus,Troy">Troy</name>. The poets were not consistent on this point. Thus, while in two passages (<bibl n="Pind. N. 4">Pind. N. 4.25(40)</bibl>; <bibl n="Pind. I. 6">Pind. I. 6.27(39)ff.</bibl>) Pindar assigns to Telamon the glory of the adventure, in another he transfers it to Peleus (quoted by the <bibl>Scholiast on Eur. Andr. 796</bibl>; <bibl n="Pind. Fr. 172">Pind. Fr. 172</bibl>). Euripides was equally inconsistent. See his <bibl n="Eur. Tro. 804">Eur. Tro. 804ff.</bibl> (Telamon), contrasted with his <bibl n="Eur. Andr. 796">Eur. And. 796ff.</bibl> (Peleus).</note> </p></div></div><div subtype="chapter" type="textpart" n="13"><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="1"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Peleus fled to <name type="place" key="perseus,Phthia">Phthia</name> to the court of Eurytion, son of Actor, and was purified by him, and he received from him his daughter Antigone and the third part of the country.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl>Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron 175 (vol. i. pp. 444ff., 447, ed. Muller)</bibl>; <bibl>Ant. Lib. 38</bibl>; <bibl>Diod. 4.72.6</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Aristoph. Cl. 1063</bibl>; <bibl>Eustathius on Hom. Il. ii.684, p. 321</bibl>. There are some discrepancies in these accounts. According to Tzetzes and the Scholiast on Aristophanes, the man who purified Peleus for the murder of Phocus was Eurytus (not Eurytion), son of Actor. According to Antoninus Liberalis, he was Eurytion, son of Irus. According to Diodorus, he was Actor, king of the country, who died childless and left the kingdom to Peleus. Eustathius agrees that the host of Peleus was Actor, but says that he had a daughter Polymela, whom he bestowed in marriage on Peleus along with the kingdom. From <bibl>Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron pp. 444ff.</bibl> we learn that the purification of Peleus by Eurytus (Eurytion) was recorded by Pherecydes, whom Apollodorus may here be following.</note> And a daughter Polydora was born <pb n="63"/>to him, who was wedded by Borus, son of Perieres.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">See <bibl n="Hom. Il. 16.173">Hom. Il. 16.173-178</bibl>, who says that Polydora, daughter of Peleus, had a son Menesthius by the river Sperchius, though the child was nominally fathered on her human husband Borus, son of Perieres. Compare <bibl>Heliodorus, Aeth. ii.34</bibl>. Hesiod also recognized Polydora as the daughter of Peleus (<bibl>Scholiast on Hom. Il. xvi.175</bibl>). Homer does not mention the mother of Polydora, but according to Pherecydes she was Antigone, daughter of Eurytion (<bibl>Scholiast on Hom. Il. 16.173-178</bibl>). Hence it is probable that here, as in so many places, Apollodorus followed Pherecydes. According to Staphylus, in the third book of his work on <name type="place" key="tgn,7001399">Thessaly</name>, the wife of Peleus and mother of Polydora was Eurydice, daughter of Actor (<bibl>Scholiast on Hom. Il. 16.173-178</bibl>). A little later on (Apollod. 3.13.4) Apollodorus says that Peleus himself married Polydora, daughter of Perieres, and that she had a son Menesthius by the river Sperchius, though the child was nominally fathered on Peleus. In this latter passage Apollodorus seems to have fallen into confusion in describing Polydora as the wife of Peleus, though in the present passage he had correctly described her as his daughter. Compare <bibl>Hofer, in W. H. Roscher, <title>Lexikon der griech. und röm. Mythologie</title>, iii.2641ff.</bibl> </note> </p></div><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="2"><p> Thence he went with Eurytion to hunt the Calydonian boar, but in throwing a dart at the hog he involuntarily struck and killed Eurytion. Therefore flying again from <name type="place" key="perseus,Phthia">Phthia</name> he betook him to Acastus at Iolcus and was purified by him.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">As to this involuntary homicide committed by Peleus and his purification by Acastus, see above, <bibl n="Apollod. 1.8.2">Apollod. 1.8.2</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Aristoph. Cl. 1063</bibl>; <bibl>Ant. Lib. 38</bibl>; <bibl>Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron 175 (vol. i. p. 447, ed. Muller)</bibl>. The Scholiast on Aristophanes, calls the slain man Eurytus, not Eurytion. Antoninus Liberalis and Tzetzes describe him as Eurytion, son of Irus, not of Actor. They do not mention the hunt of the Calydonian boar in particular, but speak of a boar-hunt or a hunt in general.</note> </p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>