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[3]

Going forward from here you will come to a road called the Cleft Road, the very road on which1 Oedipus slew his father. Fate would have it that memorials of the sufferings of Oedipus should be left throughout the length and breadth of Greece. At his birth they pieced his ankles with goads and exposed him on Mount Cithaeron in Plataean territory. Corinth and the land at the Isthmus were the scene of his upbringing. Phocis and the Cleft Road received the pollution of his murdered father's blood. Thebes is even more notorious for the marriage of Oedipus and for the sin of Eteocles.

1 With the proposed emendation: “on this road.”

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    • W. W. How, J. Wells, A Commentary on Herodotus, 8.35
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