SearchGodsWord logo Sunday, November 22, 2009   
 
Home > History > AD > Early Church Fathers > Ante-Nicene >
Hippolytus - Page 1

Hippolytus

Search This Resource
  
 
 
Buy This Resource
10 Volumes
HardCover
$275.00
10 Volumes
Library Binding
$299.00
 Show me more …
 
Note Note

[On p. 43 supra I omitted to direct attention to the desirable enlargement of(167) by a reference to Homer's Hymn of Mercury and its minute description of the invention of the Lyre. The passage is given in Henry Nelson Coleridge's Introduction, etc., p.202. The versified translation of Shelley is inimitable; in ottava rima, but instinct with the ethos of the original.]


FOOTNOTES:
  1. "Pierced it through," i.e., bored the holes for the strings, or, in other words, constructed the instrument. The Latin version in Buhle's edition of Aratus is ad cunam (cunabulam) compegit, i.e., he fastened the strings into the shell of the tortoise near his bed. The tortoise is mentioned by Aratus in the first part of the line, which fact removes the obscurity of the passage as quoted by Hippolytus. The general tradition corresponds with this, in representing Mercury on the shores of the Nile forming a lyre out of a dried tortoise. The word translated bed might be also rendered fan, which was used as a cradle, its size and construction being suitable. [See note, p. 46, infra.]
 

 · Abilene Christian University
 · IBS Direct
 · Sponsor a Child

 

Subscribe
Find out what's new, what's coming and how you can enhance your studies by subscribing to the SearchGodsWord Update FREE by email:

 

This site made possible by YOUR donations...
Click Here to Donate Securely!
  HOME    TOPDead links, typos, or HTML errors should be sent to .
Suggestions about making this resource more useful should be sent to .
 

Copyright © 2001-2009, Heartlight, Inc.