Page:Hesiod, The Homeric Hymns, and Homerica.djvu/541

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THE EPIGONI

5.

"But when the seven dead had received their last rites in Thebes, the Son of Taläus lamented and spoke thus among them: 'Woe is me, for I miss the bright eye of my host, a good seer and a stout spearman alike.'"


6.

Oeneus married Periboea the daughter of Hipponoüs. The author of the Thebais says that when Olenus had been stormed, Oeneus received her as a prize.


7.

Near the spring is the tomb of Asphodicus. This Asphodicus killed Parthenopaeus the son of Talaus in the battle against the Argives, as the Thebans say; though that part of the Thebais which tells of the death of Parthenopaeus says that it was Periclymenus who killed him.


THE EPIGONI


1.

Next (Homer composed) the Epigoni in seven thousand verses, beginning, "And now, Muses, let us begin to sing of younger men."


2.

Teumesia. Those who have written on Theban affairs have given a full account of the Teumesian fox.[1]

  1. So called from Teumessus, a hill in Boeotia. For the derivation of Teumessus cp. Antimachus, Thebais fr. 3 (Kinkel).
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