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Men." p. 71 E. [322] Quoted more fully by our author, "De Fraterno Amore," Sec. iii. [323] "Eadem comparatione utitur Lucianus in Toxari T. ii. p. 351: [Greek: hostis an polyphilos he homoios hemin dokei tais koinais tautais kai moicheuomenais gynaixi; kai oiometh' ouketh' homoios ischyran ten philian autou einai pros pollas eunoias diairetheisan]."--_Wyttenbach._ [324] From the "Hypsipyle" of Euripides. [325] A well-known proverb for beginning at the beginning. Aristophanes, "Vespae." 846; Plato, "Euthryphro," 3 A; Strabo, 9. [326] An allusion to the well-known proverb, [Greek: koloios poti koloion]. See Erasmus, "Adagia," p. 1644. [327] The paronomasia is on [Greek: hetairos, heteros]. [328] "Iliad," ix. 482; "Odyssey," xvi. 19. [329] Cf. Cicero, "De Amicitia," xix. [330] Sophocles, Fragm. 741. Quoted again by our author, "On Love," Sec. xxiii. [331] For the image compare Lucio's speech, Shakspere, "Measure for Measure," A. iv. Sc. iii. 189, 190: "Nay, friar, I am a kind of burr; I shall stick." [332] "Iliad," xxiii. 77, 78. [333] "Odyssey," iv. 178-180. [334] "Iliad," v. 902, altered somewhat. [335] Bergk. p. 1344^3. [336] Sophocles, "Oedipus Tyrannus," 4, 5. Quoted again "On Moral Virtue," Sec. vi. [337] A line from Menander. Quoted again "De Fraterno Amore," Sec. xx. [338] Reading with Halm and Hercher [Greek: en toi pollois philois chresthai.] [339] Euripides, "Hippolytus," 253-257, where Dindorf and Hercher agree in the reading. [340] Compare "On Education," Sec. xvii. [341] Chilo was one of the Seven Wise Men. See Pausanias, iii. 16; X. 24. [342] For the circumstances see Euripides, "Medea," 1136 sq. [343] For the friendship of Theseus and Pirithous, see Pausanias, i. 17; x. 29. The line is from Euripides, "Pirithous," Fragm. 591. Cf. "On Shyness," Sec. x. [344] Thucydides, ii. 51. [345] Bergk. p. 500^3. [346] On Proteus, see Verg. "Georg." iv. 387 sq.; Ovid, "Art." i. 761; "Met." ii. 9; "Fasti," i. 367 sq., and especially Horace, "Epistles," i. i. 90: "Quo teneam vultus mutantem Protea nodo?" [347] Literally, "having no hearth of character," the hearth being an emblem of stability. Compare "How One may Discern a Flatterer from a Friend," Sec. vii
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