[22] i.e. oeneus. "il." ix. 535.
[23] or, "may not be laid to his charge."theseus[24] single-handed destroyed the enemies of collective hellas; and in that he greatly enlarged the boundaries of his fatherland, is still to- day the wonder of mankind.[25]
[24] see "mem." ii. i. 14; iii. v. 10; cf. isocr. "phil." 111; plut.
"thes." x. foll.; diod. iv. 59; ov. "met." vii. 433.
[25] or, "is held in admiration still to-day." see thuc. ii. 15; strab. ix. 397.
hippolytus[26] was honoured by our lady artemis and with her conversed,[27] and in his latter end, by reason of his sobriety and holiness, was reckoned among the blest.
[26] see the play of euripides. paus. i. 22; diod. iv. 62.
[27] al. "lived on the lips of men." but cf. eur. "hipp." 85, {soi kai xeneimi kai logois s' ameibomai}. see frazer, "golden bough," i. 6, for the hippolytus-virbius myth.
palamedes[28] all his days on earth far outshone those of his own times in wisdom, and when slain unjustly, won from heaven a vengeance such as no other mortal man may boast of.[29] yet died he not at their hands[30] whom some suppose; else how could the one of them have been accounted all but best, and the other a compeer of the good? no, not they, but base men wrought that deed.
[28] as to palamedes, son of nauplius, his genius and treacherous death, see grote, "h. g." i. 400; "mem." iv. ii. 33; "apol." 26; plat.
"apol." 41; "rep." vii. 522; eur. fr. "palam."; ov. "met."xiii. 56; paus. x. 31. 1; ii. 20. 3.
[29] for the vengeance see schol. ad eur. "orest." 422; philostr. "her." x. cf. strab. viii. 6. 2 (368); leake, "morea," ii. 358;baedeker, "greece," 245.
[30] i.e. odysseus and diomed. (s. 11, i confess, strikes me as somewhat in xenophon's manner.) see "mem." iv. ii. 33; "apol." 26.
menestheus,[31] through diligence and patient care, the outcome of the chase, so far overshot all men in love of toil that even the chiefs of hellas must confess themselves inferior in the concerns of war save nestor only; and nestor, it is said,[32] excelled not but alone might rival him.