Hesiod, Homeric Hymns, and Homerica
The Contest of Homer and Hesiod
The Divination by Birds (fragments)
The Precepts of Chiron (fragments)
The Idaean Dactyls (fragments)
The Catalogues of Women and Eoiae (fragments)
The Shield of Heracles (480 lines)
The Marriage of Ceyx (fragments)
Works Attributed to Homer The Homeric Hymns
XIV. To the Mother of the Gods (6 lines)
XV. To Heracles the Lion-Hearted (9 lines)
XVII. To the Dioscuri (5 lines)
XXIII. To the Son of Cronos, Most High (4 lines)
XXV. To the Muses and Apollo (7 lines)
XXX. To Earth the Mother of All (19 lines)
XXXIII. To the Dioscuri (19 lines)
The War of the Titans (fragments)
The Story of Oedipus (fragments)
Non-Cyclic Poems Attributed to Homer
The Expedition of Amphiaraus (fragments)
The Taking of Oechalia (fragments)
The Battle of Frogs and Mice (303 lines)
Of the Origin of Homer and Hesiod, and of their Contest (aka The Contest of Homer and Hesiod)
Galen, de plac. Hipp. et Plat. i. 266:
'And then it was Zeus took away sense from the heart of Athamas.'
Scholiast on Homer, Od. vii. 104:
'They grind the yellow grain at the mill.'
Scholiast on Pindar, Nem. ii. 1:
'Then first in Delos did I and Homer, singers both, raise our strain - stitching song in new hymns - Phoebus Apollo with the golden sword, whom Leto bare.'
Julian, Misopogon, p. 369:
'But starvation on a handful is a cruel thing.'
Servius on Vergil, Aen. iv. 484:
Hesiod says that these Hesperides. . . . . . . . daughters of Night, guarded the golden apples beyond Ocean: 'Aegle and Erythea and ox-eyed Hesperethusa.' 1
Plato, Republic, iii. 390 E:
'Gifts move the gods, gifts move worshipful princes.'
Clement of Alexandria, Strom. v. p. 256:
'On the seventh day again the bright light of the sun. . . . '
Apollonius, Lex. Hom.:
'He brought pure water and mixed it with Ocean's streams.'
Stephanus of Byzantium:
'Aspledon and Clymenus and god-like Amphidocus.' (sons of Orchomenus).
Scholiast on Pindar, Nem. iii. 64:
'Telemon never sated with battle first brought light to our comrades by slaying blameless Melanippe, destroyer of men, own sister of the golden-girdled queen.'