LECTOR was developed to retrieve the Greek and Latin texts available on the CD-ROMs by the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae and the Packard Humanities Institute.
The search for a single word in some authors is too complicated in LECTOR, because the ability to “click on” authors (as one can do in Musaios or Pandora) is not available. One has to search in one author or in all authors. The results can be exported in ASCII, RTF or Wordperfect-Format. Searching with LECTOR for “?e?i???” in the historian Sallust gives 15 results: deditus (1x), desidia (2x), delicta (1x), fecisse (3x), legibus (3x), miseram (1x), regibus (1x), sedibus (1x) and relicui (2x). Pandora finds the same passages, but Musaios finds also two other passages: ne illi (Cat. 11,8) and venisse (Cat. 20,1,2). The second one is false (it’s con-venisse), but the first one shows an interesting feature of Musaios: also spaces are included in the search, which is perhaps useful for epigraphic questions (filling of gaps in recently found inscriptions). In contrast with Musaios LECTOR has better printing capabilities, that are as good as in Pandora. But the Greek truetypefont delivered with LECTOR (for additional $ 35) has some ugly characters, e.g. eta with circumflex and spiritus.
It is also possible with LECTOR to search for alliterations, which could be important for the study of the interdependencies between poets. There are some epics with an impair filenumber, e.g. Ennius (LAT0043.TXT) and Lucan (LAT0917.TXT). For Lucan, if all alliterations with three repetitions or more are retrieved, then the list looks like this: C: 0917/001/BC/Luc / 0 0 0 0 1 1 a per Emathios plus quam ciuilia campos iusque datum sceleri c
P: 0917/001/BC/Luc / 0 0 0 0 1 13 heu, quantum terrae potuit pelagique parari hoc quem ciuiles hause
C: 0917/001/BC/Luc / 0 0 0 0 1 87 concordes nimiaque cupidine caeci, quid miscere iuuat uires orbem
P: 0917/001/BC/Luc / 0 0 0 0 1 125 rre potest Caesarue priorem Pompeiusue parem. quis iustius induit arm This is a useful function, but it is also possible to get such a list with Pandora, if single lines with “c*” and “c*” and “c*” are searched.
NOTES [1] There are, of course, some other retrieval programs available for PCs: Musaios (1.0d for Windows and Windows 95), Lbase and View & Find. Chr. Schaefer, Computer und antike Texte, St. Katharinen 1993, compares the facilities of Lbase and View & Find intensively. (For Macintosh “Pandora” is wide spread. It was developed for the Perseus Project, but works also separately.) An actual list of all software is available on Internet: gopher://tlg.cwis.uci.edu:7011/11/. [2] Musaios can only search two words at the same time. [3] Concordantia omnium vocum novi testamenti Graeci, cura Caroli Hermanni Bruder, Göttingen 7.ed. 1913. [4] For philological purposes one should have a look at View & Find, which has more searching facilities (Schaefer (note 1) p. 156-165). The program is of course much more expensive (800 DM, round about $500). [5] For my personal retrievals Musaios has proved successful, but printing facilities are lacking. If I need a list of the found passages, I use Pandora on Macintosh.