hets; gives name of friendship to sexual love; quoted;
on bravery; unmetrical line of; on man's wretched lot; on modesty; on
advantages of music; order of different kinds of exercises according to;
on intercourse between men and their wives; calls salt divine; epithets
applied to liquids by; a moot point in third book of Iliad; essay on
life and poetry of; biographical sketch of; the two works of; metre and
dialects used by; epithets used by; tropes found in; figures of speech
in; various styles used by; on constitution of the universe; natural
philosophy of; on God and the gods; on the human soul; places emotions
about the heart; on virtue and vice; mention of arithmetic and music in;
philosophies which found their origin with; sayings of, paraphrased by
later writers; rhetorical art of; types represented in his speakers;
knowledge of laws; civil polity in; experience of, in warlike affairs;
heroes described by; knowledge of medicine, diet, wine, surgery,
etc.; of divination and omens; of tragedy and comedy; mastery of
word-painting.
Homoioptelon in Homer.
Homoioteleuton, Homer's use of.
Honor, the god so called.
Honor to parents, in Homer.
Horatius and Horatia, and Greek parallel.
Horse, cure of a stumbling.
Horse-races, rites of.
Horses called [Greek].
Horta, temple of.
Hostages, Roman virgins as.
Hunger, causes of; allayed by drinking.
Hurricanes, causes of.
Hybristica, rites of.
Hydaspes, river.
Hyperbole in Homer.
Hyperides, Greek orator.
Hysteropotmi.
Ibis, worship of the; use of physic by; figure of, first letter in
Egyptian alphabet.
Ibycus, story of murderers of.
Icarius, story of.
Icebergs, tradition of.
Ichneumon, armor of the; outmatched by the trochilus.
Ida, Mount.
Idathyrsus, sayings of.
Ideas, defined.
Idleness, a gentlemanly crime; and health.
Idola of Democritus originate with Homer.
Imagination, defined.
Immortality of the soul.
Impotency in men.
Inachus, river.
Incense used by Egyptians.
Inclination of the world.
Incongruous, a figure of speech.
India, river and mountain of; Alexaiider the Great in.
Indus, story of the.
Ino.
Inquisitiveness.
Intemperance in eating.
Intercourse between men and their wives.
Interpreters of oracles.
Intoxication, signs of. See Drunkenness. Introductions, Homer's.
Ion the poet, cited.
Iphicrates, sayings of.
Ireland, mention of.
Iris-struck trees.
Iron
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