"
FOOTNOTES:
[1] _Iliad_ viii. 368; _Odyssey_ xi. 623.
[2] _Theogony_, 311 ff.; cf. also 769 ff.
[3] _Republic_, 588 C.
[4] Baumeister, volume I., page 620 (figure 690).
[5] Baumeister, volume I., page 379 (figure 415).
[6] Baumeister, volume I., page 653 (figure 721).
[7] Baumeister, volume I., page 663 (figure 730). See the Frontispiece
and its explanation.
[8] _American Journal of Archaeology_, volume XI., page 14 (figure 12,
page 15).
[9] _Custos opaci pervigil regni canis._ Seneca.
[10] _Inferno_, Canto vi., 13 ff.
[11] See p. 99 of the Teubner edition of his writings.
[12] Fulgentius, Liber I., Fabula VI., de Tricerbero, p. 20 of the
Teubner edition.
[13] Both Cankara, the great Hindu theologian and commentator of the
Upanishads, as well as all modern interpreters of the Upanishads, have
failed to see the sense of this passage.
[14] Cf. the notion of the sun as the "highest death" in
_T[=a]ittir[=i]va Br[=a]hmana_, i. 8. 4.
[15] See Ernst Kuhn, Festgruss an Otto von Boehtlingk, page 68 ff.
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