Studia Scenica. Part I. Section I: Introductory Study On the Text of the Greek Dramas. the Text of Sophocles' Trachiniae, 1-300
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Mid. § 129, 29 § 45. (I may just observe that in this fragment, 1. 9, Meineke should not have accepted Bentley's correction ri-xy'^v for rvxiiv, which spoils the sense of the passage; the poet means to say, 'if a person gets by his own exertions into the haven of fortune,' and not by a mere windfall. On Bentley's powers as a critic I am inclined to think Dr. Eobinson Ellis was a little severe in his elaborate and excellent joke, 'Academy,' Aug. 4, 1883.) Of the three passages of Herodotus I do ...not know what to say; they are all obscurely worded, and may be taken with a double or a single negative in force, and the best known of them, 6. 106, was read with a single negative by Plutarch, and interpreted with a double one by the Herodotean Pausanias. Polybius deals most largely in this idiom, (though not consistently; ix. 14. 8, x. 45. 5), as may be seen from Schweighauser's Lexicon ; but Casaubon justly remarked that it was a 'male cordatus homo' who went to Polybius to learn grammar instead of politics.
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