[Meaning] keep guard.[1]
"But beware, lest he escape you; for he knows the ways that
Eucrates fled straight for the bran-sacks." In reference to those who are fleeing.
Aristophanes [sc. writes this].[2]
Also [sc. attested is]
eu)labou=mai; [used] with an accusative. But [sc. also used] with a genitive; "I beware of inanimate things."[3] "For if I will baptize you [...]".[4]
*eu)labou=: fula/ssou. eu)labou= de/, mh\ e)kfu/gh| se. kai\ ga\r oi)=de ta\s o(dou/s, a(/sper *eu)kra/ths e)/feugen eu)qu\ tw=n kurhbi/wn. e)pi\ tw=n feugo/ntwn. *)aristofa/nhs. kai\ *eu)labou=mai: ai)tiatikh=|. genikh=| de/: a)yu/xwn eu)labou=mai. ei) ga\r bapti/sw se.
[1] Likewise in
Photius and other lexica. The headword is present imperative, second person singular, of the verb
eu)labe/omai (cf.
epsilon 3553,
epsilon 3554). It is perhaps, though not demonstrably, extracted from the Aristophanic quotation which follows here; there are other instances in (e.g.)
Aeschylus,
Sophocles and
Euripides.
[2]
Aristophanes,
Knights 253-254 (web address 1), with scholion; cf.
tau 145 and
tau 154. On
Eucrates, an Athenian demagogue, see
sigma 1248 and
sigma 1257; cf.
Knights 129 (web address 2),
Lysistrata 103 (web address 3) and fr. 716 Κ.-Α.
[3] Quotation unidentifiable. (Adler notes Bernhardy's proposed supplement,
e)pi\ a)yu/xwn.)
[4] cf. Romanus Melodus,
Cantica 16.7-8, referring to Jesus' christening by John the Baptist; two lines later Jesus says to John
kalw=s eu)labh/qhs e)me/ "you did well to be cautious of me."
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