illustrations in, cited,74-5,77.Pindar, follows Ionian traditions,26;on Pegasus,176;adopts Eumelian account of Medea,178;belittles Odysseus,189;does not rejectmärchenhaft,264.Pins, long, use of, in female costume,84,86-7,90,91.Pinza cited on Homeric female costume,91,93.Pisistratus (Nestor's son) sacrifices to Athene,129;(Athenian) alleged founder of Homeric recitations at Athens,270;reputed connection of, with Homeric poems,281-3,284,286.Plato, cited on purification by blood,134;cited on the Homeric view of Minos,155;his reference to Palamedes, and Aias,192,194.Polydamus, advice of, to Trojans in battle,52-3.Polydeuces, un-Homeric legends of,207-8,215.Polygnotus, his decoration of the Lesche,66,274.Polynices,31; burial of,158-9. ?Polyxena, traditions of,195-6,216-7.Poseidon, r.,18,34,162;rallies the Achaeans,52,53,59;wreaks his grudge on Odysseus,124;and Periclymenus,136,168;patron of Ionian league of cities,144;doings of, perplexing,251.Priam, attitude of, towards Helen,35;pays no bride-price,38;excusable petulance of,43;attitude of, towards Aeneas,216,251;Achilles' reception of,239,249; r.,131,192.Proclus, Epitome of, cited,204,205,214.Protesilaus,54,137,211.Purification by swine's blood unknown to Homer but familiarto Ionians,29,30,133-4,135-6,198,212-3;no Northern example of,266,267.Quintus Smyrnaeus,215,276.Reichel Dr., his criticism of Homeric armourcited,65,68-70,72-3,76,80.Rhadamanthus,16,156.Ridgeway, William, his theory of Homer,102,136;his theory of prehistoric language in Greece,151,152-3.Roncevaux, the,291.Ruined City(Anglo-Saxon poem),33.Sacrifice, human,210-1,216-8,272,279.Sacrificial rites, Homeric treatment of,128-30,131."Saga," growth of,166-7.Saint Aignan, patron of Orleans,126.Sainte-Beuve, cited on theOdyssey,252.Sarpedon,13,17.Saul, King, treatment of his corpse,108."Schiltrom," formed by Achaeans in battle,53;cavalry powerless against,55.Scholiast, the, cited,204-5,213,241,244.Scotland, method of war in, in Roman times,48;Highland clans in action,52;fabulous genealogy of kings,138-9.Scott, Sir Walter, works of, r.,41-2,162,293-4.Semele, mother of Dionysus,118-9.Shakespeare,Troilus and Cressida,41,194,274;Macbeth,233,234;his method of construction compared with Homer's,254,255;King Lear,277.Shewan, Mr., cited on Nestor and Thrasymedes,252.Sicyon,174.Sidney, Sir Philip, hisArcadiacited,254,277.Sinon,214,276.Sisyphus,17,123.Solon,90; connection of, with the Athenian Recension ofHomer,270,281,283,286,287.Sophocles, r.,37;on Hector,46;hisOedipous,159;belittles Odysseus,188,189.Spata, relics found in tombs of,145-6.Stasinus,200,205.Stawell, Miss F. Melian, her "Homer and the Iliad" cited,72,77,224-6,234,236,244.Stesichorus,210,213,217.Stichios,138,184.Studniczka F. K., cited,83,87,183.Tantalus, punishment of,123.Telegonia, thedénouementof,182.Telemachus, quoted on the marriage of Penelope,39;bidden to hide the weapons,100,102,103;un-Homeric traditions of,182,208;journey of, to Pylos,257; r.,31,42,128.Telephus, un-Homeric legend of,209,220.Teucer,43,49.Theano, wifely tenderness of,36,43,161;sacrifices to Athene,131,161.Thebans, the, show the tomb of Hector,183.Thebes, wealth of,18-9;Tale of, Athenian version,158-9.Themis,205,206.Theocritus,276.Thersites, un-Homeric traditions of,133,180-2,189,198,212-3.Theseus, prowess of, not dwelt upon by Homer,15,16;un-Homeric legends of,154-5,157-9,199-200,210,214-5,216,221;Ionian legends of, never introduced intoIliadandOdyssey,218.Thesmophoria,117.Thessaly, civilisation in, dissimilar from Southern Greece,10-11.Thetis, maternal love of,34,36;prayer of,54,195,235,236;advice of, to Achilles,132;un-Homeric legends of,168,205,211,213;and the armour of Achilles,244-5;love of Achilles for,247-8.Thrasymedes,129,252.Thucydides, cited on the Ionian Migration,143;on the deaths of Hipparchus and Aristogeiton,271;on the history of Pisistratus,281,284,287.Tirynthian art, female costume, in,81-6.Tityus, punishment of,123.Tlepolemos of Rhodes,14.Tribal History, attempt to extract, from names of heroesinIliad,182-3,185,180.Troy, siege of,45-9,51-4,58-9,132,162-3.Tyro, punishment of,34,42.Tyrtaeus,286.Tzetzes, on the parentage of Iphigeneia,210;on Polyxena,217.Vases:Black Figure,5,6,48,67,74,75.François, the,86-90,93.Panathenaic,79.Red Figure,5,67,74,75,77.Tirynthian,67.Warrior, the,56.Verrall, A. W., on Mr. Lang's defence of Homeric unity,226-8;a reply to,229-31;on the "multiple authorship,"245;on the Athenian Recitations,274;on the customary manner of criticising Homer,284-8.Virgil, r.,9,160,192,193,214,215-6,261.Volsunga Saga,36,253.Wace, Mr., cited on Greek female costume,94.Walters, H. B., cited on the François Vase,86,90;on Ionic female costume,94.Waterloo, battle of, cited,55,57.Weapons.SeeArmour.Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. von, cited on the relation of Homerto the mass of ancient epic poetry,200-1,203;on theCypria,219.Wolf, C. W. F. A., his criticism of the Homeric Poems,41,222,223,224,246,250,281,284.Wooers, the,100,101,103,104,111,129,132,133,252.Writing, in Minoan Age,3.Xuthus marries the daughter of Erechtheus,139-40.Zedekiah, King, cremation of,108.Zerelia, result of excavations at,11.Zeus, and Minos,16,155,156;Homeric conception of,43,116,118,120-1,122,124,162,174;prayer of Thetis to,54,235;birth-myth of,115;promises of, fulfilled,123,235-6,237;un-Homeric conceptions of,190,195,204,206,209,211.Zulus, belief of, in incarnations of the dead,275.