Page:Essays and Addresses.djvu/99

 |  |, instead of saying,. Cp. Ol. ii. 98. (2) The so-called or  (singular verb with plural subject) occurs in Ol. x. 5, (,—where, as Fennell suggests, it would be much softened if we read ,) in Pyth. x. 71 (: where W. Christ gives ); frag. 53, 15 . Similarly the grammarians gave the name of to such a structure as Odyssey x. 513,  |. (3) Zeugma. Ol. i. 88, : "he overcame mighty Oenomaus, and won the maiden for his bride." Pyth. i. 40,, "deign to lay these prayers to thy heart, and to make the land happy in her sons." (4) Cases. (i) Genitive where dative would be usual: Pyth. iii. 5,, "kindly to men." Ol. vii. 90, |, "he walks in the straight way that abhors insolence." (ii) Dative where genitive would be usual: Pyth. v. 58,, "that he might not fail to fulfil his oracles to Cyrene's lord" (instead of ). Pyth. iv. 296,, and elsewhere, (iii) Accusative after as = "to trouble": Pyth. iv. 151, . In v. 36,, W. Christ reads ( = ) with Hermann. (5) Prepositions. Ol. v. 6,, "honoured by" (dative for genitive):