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Preface

IX

The episodical character of the book with its sections and
subsections is due, at least in part, to the circumstances in which
it has been composed. I have throughout been in full work as
College Lecturer in Classics and University Reader in Classical
Archaeology, responsible therefore for a good deal of teaching,
examining, and organisation. Such a life, however congenial, tends
to produce a certain mental attitude, the habit of thinking in
compartments. Term-time leaves but scanty scraps of leisure for
research, and the mind is more or less jaded when vacation is
reached. Under such conditions anything like sustained flight or
long-continued effort becomes doubly difficult. And I do not
doubt that a better book on the same subject will some day be
written by a man with larger leisure and clearer outlook.

But I do not wish to leave the impression that I have found
the writing of Zeus irksome or unduly fatiguing. On the contrary,
it has been a perpetual delight to come back and back again to a
central theme, which so obviously serves to illuminate a dozen
departments of classical study and in turn receives much illumina-
tion from them. A task of this kind, though it can never be other
than a financial failure, carries with it its own reward.

Not the least pleasurable part of the undertaking has been my
growing sense of indebtedness to many friends. Some, alas, I can
no longer thank as I should wish to do for their inspiration and
their help. Of those whose names appeared in the Preface to
Volume I six have since died. James Hope Moulton, a greater
man even than Cambridge knew him to be, lived a life of self-
sacrifice and in April 1917 died a heroic death—or rather, as he
hi mself phrased it in those dark days, et? rrjv Xa/jL-rrpav airrfK-Oev:
I count myself lucky to be able to include a passing reference to
his name. C. H. XV. Johns, learned and lovable to the last, was
taken from us in August 1920: I shall not soon forget how, shortly
before the end, he sat propped in his study-chair and bidding me
hold up the big folio—for his own arm was half-paralysed—read
aloud to me a cuneiform text (p. 482 f.) and furnished it there and
then with an ample commentary out of the depths of his know-
ledge. Otto Gruppe too is gone—a grave loss to learning—leaving
as one of his latest writings a brief but masterly paper on ' Die
Anfange des Zeuskultus' (Neue Jahrb. f. klass. Altertum 1918
xli—xlii. 289—302). E. Babelon, J. R. McClean, A. Wright—the
list lengthens. But it is a list which, happily, is balanced and
more than balanced by an increasing number of scholars able and
 
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