Eleusinian mysteries,44,165;the Roman,59;and Psyche,133;wanderings of,152,160-165;C. and Neptune,170;Erysichthon,191,192;C. 40, 59, 114-117Çĕr-y-ne´an stag,218;C. 156-162(Interpret.)Çes-tus, the,295Çe´tō,57Ceylon,463Ceyx (se´ĭx),175-177;C. 125.SeeHalcyone[-C]ha´ŏs,3,4;C. 3[-C]ha´ris, youngest of the Charites, called also Aglaia (Aglaïa), wife of Vulcan[-C]hăr´ĭ-tēs̟. SeeGraces[-C]ha´rŏn,47,135,354,355,377;C. 44-46Charybdis (ꞓhȧ-rib´dis),255,329,330,350;C. 50-52[-C]hĭ-mæ´ra,214,215,354;C. 155[-C]hi´ŏs (Scio),122,149,452;C. 96, 107[-C]hi´rŏn,104,231,269,271,274;C. 10-15, 80, 199[-C]ho´rus,196Christ,1,181[-C]hro´nus or [-C]hro´nŏs,439;C. 4Chrysaor (ꞓhrī-sa´ŏr or ꞓhrĭs´a-ôr), son of Poseidon; sprang with Pegasus from the head of Medusa; by Callirrhoë he was father of Geryones and Echidna.See Michael Field'sCallirrhoë, a drama, 1884Chryseïs (ꞓhri-se´is),98,283,284;C. 77Chryses (ꞓhri´sēs̟),98,283,284Chrysothemis (ꞓhris-oth´e-mis), daughter of Agamemnon,275;C. 190-194(2)Cic´e-ro, references to the works of,104,196Çĭ-co´ni-ans, the,318Çi´lix, son of Agenor; brother of Cadmus and Phœnix; settled in CiliciaÇim-me´ri-an,176,338;C. 125Çim-me´ri-ans, the,47,328Çin´y-rȧs,126Çir´çē,201,318,324-330;C. 172, 231-244Cir´cus Max´i-mus,60Çĭ-thæ´rŏn, Mount,75,155,261;C. 62, 110-112Cla´rŏs,175Cle´o-bis,80,81;C. 64Cle-om´e-nēs̟, a sculptor of about 200B.C.,C. 35Cli´o, the muse of history,37;C. 38(4)Clo´tho, a Fate,38Clymene (clim´ĕ-nē),94;C. 76Cly-tem-nes´tra,237,242,275,314,315;C. 190-194(3),228-230Clytië (clĭsh´ĭ-ē or clī'tĭ-ē),116,117;Thomas Moore's verses, Believe me, if all ...,117;C. 91Clytius (clish´ĭ-us),C. 8Cnageus (na´jūs),C. 32Cnidos (ni´dŏs),32,126;C. 35, 100Cnosus (nō´sus) or Cnossus (nŏs´us).SeeGnossusCŏꞓ'ȧ-lus,247Cocytus (co-si´tus),47,327,354Cœus (se´us), a Titan,64;C. 4Col´ꞓhis,222,229,231,242;C. 156-162(Textual)Co-lo´nus,263Col´o-phŏn,452Co´mus, in later mythology a god of festivity, drunkenness, and mirth.SeeMilton's Masque of ComusCon-siv´i-us,60Con´sus,59,60,88;C. 50-52Co´ra (Ko´rē). SeeProserpinaCor´inth,32,124,169,196,214,235,252,261,453Cor-nu-co´pi-a,53,204;C. 146-147Corœbus (co-re´bus),103Co-ro´nis,104.SeeÆsculapiusCor-y-ban´tēs̟, references to,14,44;C. 16Cor´y-dŏn, an ideal singer of pastoral poetry.See Theocritus, Idyl 4;Virgil, Bucolics 7Cor´y-thus,C. 221Cŏs, an island off the coast of CariaCot´tus,C. 4Cra´nŏn or Cran´nŏn, a town in the vale of Tempe, in ThessalyCreation, Greek myths of,3;Virgil's account of,360;the Norse account of,373,374Cre´ŏn,263,266,267;C. 182-189, table NCres-phon´tēs̟,241,242Cres´sĭ-da,C. 196Cre´tan Bull, the,218,246;C. 156-162(Interpret.)Crete, Cre´ta,53,70,71,132,201,207,242,246,249,252,256,275,286,288,348;C. 59Cretheus (cre´thūs),C. 148(2), (5)Cre´us,C. 4Cre-ū´sa, mother of Ion,C. 174Cre-ū´sa, wife of Æneas,347;C. 190-194(5)Cre-ū´sa, wife of Jason,235Croc´ȧ-lē,120Cro´nus,4,5,6,8,19;rule of,5,10;in the Fortunate Isles,52;confounded with Chronos,439;C. 4Cū'mæ,352Cū-mæ´an Sibyl,352-361Cū'pid or Cū-pi´dō (Eros), attributes of,35,36,126;Edmund Gosse's Eros,36;Lyly's Cupid and Campaspe,C. 38;in the story of Apollo and Daphne,112,113;C. and Psyche,128-139,457;extracts from Wm. Morris' Earthly Paradise,131,135;from Bridges' Eros and Psyche,132;from Pater's Marius,133;T. K. Hervey's Cupid and Psyche,136,137;Keats' Ode to Psyche,137-139;in the story of Hero and Leander,142-144;Pluto and Proserpine,159;C. 38(1),101-102Cū-re´tēs̟, inhabitants of Crete, noisy worshipers of Jupiter; later identified with the Corybantes (worshipers of Cybele)Cy´ȧ-nē river,160,162;C. 114-117Cy´ȧ-nē, a Sicilian nymphCybele (sib´e-lē) or Cybebe (si-be´bē), attributes and worship of,44,141;the Roman Magna Mater,59;C. 16, 41.See alsoRheaCyclic (sik´lik) Poets, the,452Çy-clo´pēs̟, Çy´clŏps,4,6,7,53,122,170,185,198-200,332;and Apollo,104;and Ulysses,320-323;and Æneas,349;C. 4, 141Çyꞓ'nus. (1) Son of Apollo. With his mother, Thyriȧ, he leaped into lake Canope, where both were changed into swans.(2) Son of Poseidon, a king of Colonæ in Troas. He assisted the Trojans, but was killed by Achilles; changed into a swan.(3) Son of Ares, killed by Hercules; changed into a swan.(4) A friend of Phaëthon. While lamenting his friend's fate, Cycnus was changed by Apollo into a swan, and placed among the stars.Çy-dip´pē and her sons,80,81;quotation from Edmund Gosse's The Sons of Cydippe,81;C. 64Çyl-le´nē, Mount,34,150;C. 109Cynosure (sī'no-shōōr or sĭn´o-shōōr), the,C. 58Çyn´thĭ-a (Diana),31,118,125,139;C. 32Çyn´thus, Mount, in Delos,C. 32, 78Çyp´ri-an, the,85;C. 68Çyp´ri-an Lays,452Çy´pris (Venus),68,69,126,127,133,140;C. 34, 59Çy´prus, island of,31,32,140,145,314,432;C. 34Çyp´se-lus,241Çy-re´nē,112,202,203;C. 145Çy-the´ra, island of,31,32;C. 100Çyth-ẽr-e´a (Venus),127,128,134;C. 34, 100Çyz´ĭ-cus, King of Cyzicus on the Propontis. Received the Argonauts, but by mistake was slain by Hercules or Jason.Dædalus (dĕd´ȧ-lus or dē'dȧ-lus) and Icarus,246-248;C. 85-86, 173Da´gŏn,432Damœtas (dȧ-me´tȧs), a herdsman in pastoral poetry.SeeVirgil, Bucolics 3Da´mŏn, an ideal singer of love in pastorals.SeeVirgil, Bucolics 8Dan´a-ȧns or Dan´a-ī,98,99Dan´a-ē,64;myth of,208,213;woven by Arachne,84;Lamentation of Danaë,454;C. 149-154Dan´a-ĭds or Da-na´ĭ-dēs̟,207;C. 149-154Dan´a-us, daughters of,166,170;house of,206-228;C. 57, table D,148(1)149-154Daphne (daf´nē), myth of,112-114;explanations of myth,437;C. 89Daph-ne-pho´rĭ-a,C. 30Daphnis (daf´nis),185,222,223-225,240;lines from M. Arnold's Thyrsis,224,225;C. 129-130, 156-162Där´dȧ-nus,124,348;C. 190-194(5)Darkness,3,4Daughter of the Skies, story of;analogy of incident,C. 101-102Dau´lis,249,250Dawn, goddess of,C. 36.SeeAuroraDay,4Death (Than´a-tos),54,298;Hercules' struggle with,107-110;C. 49De-ĭd-ȧ-mi´a. (1) Also called Laodamī'a, daughter of Bellerophon, and mother of Sarpedon.(2) Daughter of Lycomedes of Scyros, and mother of Pyrrhus by Achilles.(3) Also called Hippodamī'a, wife of Pirithoüs, and daughter of AtraxDeimos (dī'mŏs), Dread, a son and attendant of Mars,24De´ĭ-ŏn,C. 123-124; genealogy,148(2), (5)Deïphobus (de-if´o-bus),280,302;C. 190-194(5)De-jȧ-ni´ra or Deianira (de-yȧ-ni´ra),203,225,227,237,275;C. 146-147, 168De´lĭ-a, a name for Diana of DelosDe´lŏs,29,247,347;C. 32Del´phi,5,113,169,262;oracle of,27,268,315,317,442;center of the world,42;C. 30, 38(4),89Del-phin´i-a,C. 30Del-phy´nē,C. 30Delusion of Gylfi (ḡil´fē),459De-me´ter,263,442;and Pelops,434;and Springtide,434;C. 40.SeeCeresDemigods and Heroes, age of,16,17;in the Theban and Trojan Wars,17De-mod´o-cus of Phæacia,337,450Destinies. SeeFatesDeterioration, theory of,436-440Deucalion (dū-ca´lĭ-ŏn), with Pyrrha repeoples the world,16;descendants of,16,206,207,229;interpretation of myth,440;C. 19-20, 148(2), (5)Devas (dā'vȧs̟). SeeHindu divinities(1)Di´a, island of,154,254;old name for Naxos,C. 110-112Di-ā'na, usually pronounced Di-ăn´a (Artemis), moon-goddess,2,432;daughter of Latona,19,29;meaning of names,29;attributes,29-31;identified with Selene,29,39,117;her vengeance on Agamemnon, Orion, and Niobe,30,117, andad loc.;favorite animals,31;Ben Jonson's Hymn to Cynthia (Diana),31;among the Romans,59;Lucina,61;D. and Syrinx,66;punishes Niobe,99-103;myths of,117-125;Tityus, Python, Daphne, Callisto,117andad loc.;Œneus,117,237;Alpheüs and Arethusa,117-120;the fate of Actæon,120-122;of Orion,122,123;the Pleiads,123,124;Endymion,124,125;Procris,172;Echo,188;the Naiads,189-191;Hippolytus,260;Agamemnon and Iphigenia,280,281,316;Æneas,290;Camilla,364,372;C. 32, 58, 95-98Diꞓ'tē,C. 5Diꞓ-tyn´na: Diana (Artemis) as protectress of fishermenDiꞓ'tys, a fisherman of Seriphus who rescued Danaë and Perseus from the waves, and intrusted them to Polydectes, his brotherDi´dō,114,346,350-352,356;C. 89, 245-254Dietrich (de´triG),409;C. 282-283Di´kē, personification of justiceDin-dy-me´nē, a surname of Cybele;from Mount Dindymus in Phrygia;C. 41Di´-o-mēde, son of Tydeus;contest with Mars,84-86;in Trojan War,280,289,290,297,309,310,314;C. 68Di-o-me´dēs̟, son of Mars, owner of the man-eating mares,218Di-o´nē, mother of Venus (Aphrodite),19,290;C. 26, 34Dionysia (di-o-nish´ĭ-a),C. 42, 110-112Dionysus (di-o-ni´sus). SeeBacchusDi-os-cū'rī. SeeTyndaridæDi´ræ. SeeFuriesDir´çē,75Dĭs,83. SeePlutoDiscord, Dis-cor´dĭ-a (Eris),24,41;apple of,277,278Dith´y-ramb, of Arion,454Division of the world among Greek gods,6Do-do´na, oracle of,19,20;C. 24-25, 30Dol´phin and Apollo,C. 30Dṓn´nẽr, Thôr,412,415Do´ris,55,97,198,269Do´rus, Do´rĭ-an,16,119,120;C. 93; genealogy,103, table G,148(2), (5)Drä´pȧs̟, the,458Dreams, gates of,54;C. 49Dry´ads, the,45,138,186;myths of,191-195;C. 131Dry´o-pē,191,192;C. 137Dwarfs,401Dyaus (cf.Zeus, Jupiter). SeeHindu divinities(1)Dy´nast, the (Pluto),167;C. 118Earth,3,4,5,8,97;Greek gods of,42-46;Greek conception of world,42,43;myths of great divinities of,152-158;of divinities of earth and the underworld,159-168;