Ode 12 Τεισίᾳ Ἀιγινήτῃι Παλαιστῇ Νέμεα
ὡσεὶ κυβερνήτας σοφός, ὑμνοάνασ-
σʼ εὔθυνε Κλειοῖ
νῦν φρένας ἁμετέρας,
εἰ δή ποτε καὶ πάρος· ἐς γὰρ ὀλβίαν
5 ξείνοισί με πότνια Νίκα
νᾶσον Αἰγίνας ἀπάρχει
ἐλθόντα κοσμῆσαι θεόδματον πόλιν·
τάν τʼ ἐν Νεμέᾳ γυιαλκέα μουνοπάλαν
ξεινου̣ [!!!!]νιοι αστ[ׯ˘¯
35 ἀμφικ[τιόν]ω̣ν ἐν ἀέθλοι̣[ς
σὺν τρι[άκο]ντʼ ̣γλααῖσιν
νίκαις [ἐκ]ωμάσθησαν οἱ μει̣[¯˘¯,
οἱ δʼ ἐν Πέλοπος ζ̣α̣θέας
νάσου π[ι]τυώδεϊ δείρᾳ,
40 οἱ δὲ φοινικοστερόπα τεμένει
Ζηνὸς Νεμ εαί ου·
. . . (.)] ταύτας̣ καὶ ἐπʼ ἀργυροδίνα
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An open-access project
Jebb 1905
Cambridge
Jebb, Cambridge, 1905 · 1905
The Editor

Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb (1841–1905) was one of the greatest Greek scholars in the English-speaking world. Regius Professor of Greek at Cambridge and Member of Parliament for the University, Jebb produced monumental commentaries on Sophocles (7 volumes, 1883–1896) that remain indispensable. His editions combined minute textual criticism with a profound sensitivity to Greek poetry and dramatic art.

About This Edition

Jebb's editions of Sophocles, published by Cambridge University Press, set a new standard for Greek dramatic commentary. Each play received a critical text, prose translation, and detailed commentary that addressed textual, linguistic, dramatic, and archaeological questions. Jebb's texts are conservative, preferring the manuscript tradition where defensible, and his commentary remains the starting point for serious study of each play. While the OCT by Lloyd-Jones and Wilson (1990) now provides the standard critical text, Jebb's commentary is still regularly consulted.

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