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Eurynome and Eurycleia in the Odyssey
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Extract
Bergk in his Griechische Litertur geschichte, Vol. I., pp. 708, 709, 710, 715, and elsewhere, rejected all verses in the Odyssey where reference is made to Eurynome, a servant or attendant in the palace of Odysseus. His comments on p. 715 concerning the first verses of the twentieth book are typical: ‘Right at the beginning of this book the appearance of Eurynome shows the activity of the imitator. This very passage proves beyond a doubt that Eurynome had no part in the original poem, and that a later bard arbitrarily used her name instead of the name of Eurycleia, who was the true female attendant in the old form of the Odyssey.’
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- Copyright © The Classical Association 1918
References
page 77 note 1 So Ebeling in Lexicon Homericum.
page 77 note 2 Suggested by Cauer in note ψ 228.