Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 3.djvu/333

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12 S. III. JrxE, 1917,1


NOTES AND QUERIES.


327


Atropatene, greatest part of Mesopotamia, &c: he also deprived Artanes, K: of Sophene, his Neighbour, of his Country ; & passing the Euphrates became Master of all Syria <fe Phoenicia: at his Death he was succeeded by Artavasdes, one of his Sons, of whom see the Life of M: Antony.

P. 368. Opp. " Metrodorua of Scepsis " : Me- trodorus was a Philosopher, that had a great Reputation for Eloquence. He married a rich Carthaginian Lady ; <fc growing into the Friend- ship of Mithridates, became supreme Judge of ivil Affairs in his Kingdom, from whose Deci- sions lay no Appeal : but being traduced by many powerful Men. whom his Justice had made his Enemies, he took the Opportunity of an Embassy he was sent on to Tigranes, & stayed at that Court ; till being sent back with a Com- mission to Mithridates, about the time, that King was obliged to abandon his hereditary Dominions ; & obliged to go much against his Will, he died in the Journey either of Illness, -or by the King's Mean*, for both are reported. Strab: L: 13. de Scepsi.

P. 376. Opp. " out of Cilicia " : Chiefly from Mazaca at the Foot of M: Arga3Us, whither they -afterwards return'd. Strabo. L: 12.

Vol. v. p. 16, Nicias. Opp. " seizing on the Haven of Xiscea " : Ol: 89. 1. Thucyd: 4. 67. ^Nicias had no hand in takeing Nisaea.

P. 35. Opp. " was sold among other Cap- tives " : The Slaves were sold for 120 Talents.

P. 39. Opp. " eight times " : 1. Near the Olympieum. 2. Near the R: Tereas. 3. On the Epipolaa. 4. At Syca. 5. At their Cross-Wall. . At the Marsh under Epipolae. 7. With Gylippus between the Walls. At Sea. 8. In the Mouth of the Great Harbour, when Plemmyrium was lost. Thucyd: mentions no other Trophies -erected by them than these eight.

P. 235, Agesilaus. Opp. " the Pythian Games " : Dodwell thinks they were celebrated some Months before, toward the end of the 2 d Olympic Year.

P. 239. Opp. " besieged it by Sea " : This Jiappen'd not till the following Year. Dodwell.

P. 269. Opp. " where he expired " : Diodorus places this Ol: 104. 3. but if so he had reign'd only 36 Years at most.

P. 325, Pompey. Opp. " half a Mina " : Strabo says 150 Drachma? (or about 4. 16. 10J).

Opp. " a Talent " : 1000 Drachma?. Strab: L: 11.

Vol. vii. p. 279, M. Antonius. Opp. " Ar- tnasdes King of Armenia " : Son of the famous Tigranes. Strab: 11. in fine.

P. 293. Opp. " carried him to Alexandria " : Be remain'd in Prison, till a little before the Battle of Actium, when he was slain by Antony's Order. Strabo. 11.

P. 390, Cicero. Opp. ' ; he travelled into Greece " : He however stayed at Rome a Year after, & continued pleading without apprehen- sion. Brut: p: 434.

P. 447. Opp. " Cccsar being alarmed at this " : -It is certain from Cicero's Letters, that he con- stantly opposed Octavius' Demand of the Consul- ship. Ep: 10: ad Brut:

Vol. viii. p. 11, Dion. Opp. " Four by Aris- lomache " : The Sons were call'd Hipparinus & Nysaeus. They both reign'd afterwards in Syracuse by the Assistance of Dion's Friends. The first, Olymp: 106. 4. & was murthep'd


2 Years afterwards. Nysaeus succeeded him, <fc was dispossess'd by his half- brother, Diony- sius, who resumed his Tyranny, Ol: 108. 2, & continued in it, till he was obliged to surrender himself to Timoleon. Ol: 109. 1. See Plato's Epist: to the Friends of Dion, Diodorus Sic: L: 16, C: 36. Theopompus apud Athenaeum, L: 10, p: 436. Polyaenus. L: 5. 4.

P. 12. Opp. Dion discoursed": Dion was then 40 Years of Age.

P. 20. Opp. " when Dion essayed " : This happen'd not 4 Months after Plato's Arrival. See Epist: 7. Ol: 105. 3. as Diodorus says. But it is clear from Plato's own Letters, & from Plutarch's Account here that it was much earlier, & but a few Years after the elder Dionysius' Death, about Ol: 103, 2, or 3 : & consequently that Dion resided 9 or 10 Years in Greece.

P. 26. Opp. " Dion's Estate " : Which Plato says was worth about 100 Talents (which is above 19000) a noble Fortune in those Days.

Opp. "with Messengers": The Epistle is preserved by Diog: Laertius, & seems genuine.

P. 27. Opp. " a Letter to Dionysius " : See the 13 th Epist: of Plato.

P. 28. Opp. " when Philoxenus " : Read Polyxenus : & see Diod: Sic: L: 13: C: 96.

P". 43. Opp. " This Heraclides " : He was forced to fly, while Plato was at Syracuse for the last time. See the History of it in Plato's 7th Letter.

P. 178, Artaxerxes. Opp. " a Peace more inglorious " : See the State of Greece after this Peace described in Isocrates' Panegyric, p: 66 &68.

P. 194. Opp. " reigned Sixty too " : It is agreed that Darius Xothus died Ol: 95. 4. so that his Son could not have reign'd above 40 Years.

A list of Gray's other marginalia, so far as they have been published, will be found in my forthcoming Bibliography of Gray (Yale University Press).

I conclude this paper with such notes as I have been able to gather respecting the whereabouts of Gray MSS. These notes make no pretence to completeness.

Pembroke College possesses Gray's Com- monplace Books, including a ISIS, of the ' Elegy ' (cf. Bradshaw's introduction, 1891, and Gosse's ed., i. 225-32). Eton has another MS. (the Fraser MS.) of the ' Elegy ' and the original MS. of the Eton Ode. A third copy of the ' Elegy ' and many letters are in MS. Egerton 2400 of the British Museum. The following Add. MSS. at the Museum also contain Gray matter : 5821, 5833, 5842, 15000, 19918, 24503, 26889, 27637, 32329, 32561-2 (Mitford's valuable collection), 36270, 36359, 36817-8, 37683. Stowe 865 contains Robert s's Latin version of the ' Elegy.' Gray's nine volumes of MS. music are now owned by Mr. Henry E. Krehbiel, 152 West 105th Street, Xew York. The late John Morris of 13 Park Street, Grosvenor Square, London, possessed a valuable collection of Graiana, described