Chapter 13: Herakles
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♠ Xenophanes 1.21 W – Iambi et Elegi Graeci, vol. 2, p. 164 ed. M. L. West. Oxford 1972.
♠ Σ AR 1.554 – Scholia to Apollonios of Rhodes, Argonautica – Scholia in Apollonium Rhodium vetera, pp. 47-48, ed. C. Wendel. Berlin 1935
♠ Titanomachia fr 11 PEG – Poetae Epici Graeci 1, p. 15, ed. A. Bernabé. Leipzig 1987.
♠ Σ Od 7.59 – Scholia to Homer, Odyssey – Scholia Graeca in Homeris Odysseam 1, p. 326, ed. W. Dindorf. Oxford 1855.
♠ Ibykos 192 SLG – Supplementum Lyricis Graecis, ed. D. Page, p. 57. Oxford 1974.
♠ Nem 7.90 – Pindar, Nemean Odes
Heracles, you who subdued the Giants Greek Text
♠ Nem 1.67-69 – Pindar, Nemean Odes
For he said that when the gods meet the giants in battle on the plain of Phlegra, the shining hair of the giants will be stained with dirt beneath the rushing arrows of that hero. Greek Text
♠ Py 8.12-18 – Pindar, Pythian Odes
Porphyrion did not know your power, when he provoked you beyond all measure. Gain is most welcome, when one takes it from the home of a willing giver. [15] Violence trips up even a man of great pride, in time. Cilician Typhon with his hundred heads did not escape you, nor indeed did the king of the Giants. One was subdued by the thunderbolt, the other by the bow of Apollo. Greek Text
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Edited by Elena Bianchelli, Retired Senior Lecturer of Classical Languages and Culture, Univ. of Georgia, November 2023.
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