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[532] κείων, a fut. participle, always construed, as the Homeric rule requires (H. G. § 244), with a verb of motion: cp. 18. 428., 19. 48., 23. 292, Il.14. 340, and the recurring “κακκείοντες ἔβαν κτλ.”; also Od.7. 342ὄρσο κέων”. In 18. 408 “ἀλλ᾽ εὖ δαισάμενοι κατακείετε οἴκαδ᾽ ἰόντες” (=7. 188) we have the corresponding indicative (not an imperative, see the note a. l.); and the infiniti e in 8. 315 “οὐ μέν σφεας ἔτ᾽ ἔολπα . . . κειέμεν”. The fut. may also be seen in “κείω” (19. 340) and “κατακείομεν” (18. 419); but in both these places Homeric usage points rather to the subj. of an aorist “ἔκεια”, of which Hesychius has preserved the inf. (“κακκεῖαι: κοιμηθῆναι”). For the formation cp. “ἔχευα”: also “δέατοseemed, which is for “δεί-ατο”. There is no good evidence in Homer of a pres. “κείω” or “κέω”: hence the hypothesis of a Desiderative “κείω” (for “κει-ψω”) seems unnecessary (see however Schulze, Quaest. Ep. p. 246).

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