Æschylos Tragedies and Fragments. Aeschylus
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We are carried back again from the fabled West to the fabled East. The Arimaspians, with one eye, and the Grypes or Gryphons (the griffins of mediæval heraldry), quadrupeds with the wings and beaks of eagles, were placed by most writers (Herod. iv. 13, 27) in the north of Europe, in or beyond the
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The name was applied by later writers (Quintus Curtius, iv. 7, 22; Lucretius, vi. 848) to the fountain in the temple of Jupiter Ammon in the great Oasis. The “river Æthiops” may be purely imaginary, but it may also suggest the possibility of some vague knowledge of the Niger, or more probably of the Nile itself in the upper regions of its course. The “Bybline hills” carry the name Byblos, which we only read of as belonging to a town in the Delta, to the Second Cataract.
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Comp. Sophocles,
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The Adriatic or Ionian Gulf.
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In the
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See the argument of the
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Argos. So in the
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Hypermnæstra, who spared Lynceus, and by him became the mother of Abas and a line of Argive kings.
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Heracles, who came to Caucasos, and with his arrows slew the eagle that devoured Prometheus.
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The word is simply an interjection of pain, but one so characteristic that I have thought it better to reproduce it than to give any English equivalent.
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The maxim, “Marry with a woman thine equal,” was ascribed to Pittacos.
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The Euhemerism of later scholiasts derived the name from a king Adrastos, who was said to have been the first to build a temple to Nemesis, and so the power thus worshipped was called after his name. A better etymology leads us to see in it the idea of the “inevitable” law of retribution working unseen by men, and independently even of the arbitrary will of the Gods, and bringing destruction upon the proud and haughty.