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INDEX.

A.

A teneris and in teneris, 222

Ab before consonants, Wagner's doctrine
of, 83

— integro and similar phrases, 48

with ablative instead of instrumental
ablative, 168: whether equivalent to aπó,
189: of local description, 252

Abdere domo, 260

Abigei, 287

Abiungere, 'to unyoke,' 296
Ablaqueatio, 237

Ablative, material, 39, 171, 235, 274: local,
187, 274, 289, 362: of circumstance,
187, 215: modal, 39, 215, 360: two abla-
tives in one construction, 289: ablative
coupled with participle, 326

Ablative and dative, sometimes almost un-
distinguishable, 51, 76, 265
Abolere, shades of meaning of, 300
Abscindere and abscidere, 198

Abydos, famous for oysters, 165
Acalanthis, acanthis, 281

Acanthus, 206, 317

Accingi, with infinitive, 256

Accipere, correlative of dare, 22: of inire
or ingredi, 83, 343

Accusative after passive or intransitive verb
or participle, 340

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Adeo gives a rhetorical prominence to the
word after which it is used, 48, 97, 228,
273, 323

with dum, 311
Adfectare viam, &c. 364

Adjectives or participles attached contin-
tingently to substantives, 169, 216, 232

--, descriptive, converted by Hesiod
into substantives, 123
Admordere, 234

Adolescere and similar words, 86, 300, 345
Adstare, of standing up, 299
Advena, used contemptuously, 91
Adverbial substantive coupled with ad-
verbial adjective, 239
Aequare, with ablative, 316
Aerius and ἠέριος, 183

Aesculus, as the supporter of a vine, 225
Aestas, of the warm half of the year, 278,
309: of the summer sky, 309

Aestiva, of summer pastures, 292

Aestus, of summer, 176

Aetas for annus, doubtful, 268

Aether and Tellus, whether identical with
Jupiter and Juno, 228
Aevum, not old age, 103
Africa, shepherd life in, 281

Agere, of upward or downward growth, 232:
of chasing, 287

Agitare for agere or degere, 249: other
senses of, 277

Agitator aselli distinguished from asinarius,
173

Agmen and acies, 223, 282
Agriculture and division of property con-
nected, 157

Aius Locutius, 191
Albus and candidus, 259
Alcimedon, an unknown artist, 39
Alcinous, orchards of, 203
Alcon, who, uncertain, 55
Alders, river trees, 68
Alexis, whether a real person, 29
Alii, answering to pars, 27
Alio ordine, unequally,' 173
Alius, alius for alius quam, 186

Aloidae, 174

Alps, earthquakes in, 191

Altars, kindling of, part of a solemn ban-
quet, 345

Alter ab undecimo, 83

Altius repetere, 333

Arator, of a countryman, 358

Aratus, Virgil's relation to, 126 foll. ; his
literary characteristics, 127: his mate-
rials, how dealt with by Virgil, 181 foll.
Arbos, not the vine but its supporter, 57,
203, 221, 223, 225

Altus, of a river, 158: altum, the main sea, Arbos and arbor, 41

273

Alveus or alvus, for alveare, 242
Amarussalsus, 99

Amaryllis, etymology of, 23
Ambages, 200

Ambarvalia, a time of continence, 43

associated with the festival of
the Nymphs, 9, 60: time of celebration
of, 60, 180

Ambo, of parties as well as of individuals,
26

Ambrosia, 349

Amellus, flower so called, 332
Aminaean vines, 204

Amoebaean singing, principle of, 36
Amor for studium, 97

Martis, 103: habendi, 322
Amores, of love-songs, 81, 104
of the loved object, 271

Amurga (amurca), 164

Anacolutha, in Virgil, 310, 330
Anethus, 34

Angina, of swine, 294

Anima Mundi, doctrine of, 186, 326
Animi, with verbs, adjectives, &c., 277,
356

Animosus, shades of meaning of, 240, 259
Animus, of the memory, 96: inanis, 224:
animos tollere, 231

Annus, original meaning of, 237

magnus, doctrine of, 47

Arbustum, 37

Arbutus, eaten by kids, 43

Arcadia, historical and poetical characters
of, 2, 72

Arcturus, rising and setting of stormy, 165
Ardere perdite amare, with accusative,

29

Arena, of the soil of a river, 335

Arethusa, the conventional pastoral foun-
tain, 99: her union with Alpheus, ib.
Argitis, a name of wine, 204
Argutus, of form, 259

Aridus, of sounds, 182

Aristae, in the sense of messis, 27

Aristaeus, traditional account of, 146, 333 :
not originally mentioned in Georgic iv.
302

Ariusian wine, 60

Arma ferre, 194

Armare, of rigging ships, 171
Armenians, submission of, 255

Armenta and pecudes distinguished, 250 :
armenta, of horses, 277

Army, Roman, disposition of, at different
periods, 223

Arx, of a mountain, 169, 211, 250
Ascanius, river, 275
'Aokwλiaoμóc, 234

Aspice, calling attention, 97
Aspicere, of favourable regard, 303
Assaracus, ancestor of Aeneas, 255

Anser, a poet contemporary with Virgil, 95 Asses, flesh of, 287
Ante exspectatum, 282

omnia, intensive with adjective, 244
quam, with subjunctive, 336

Antes, 238

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Assyrius, used loosely, 243

At non, in elliptical expressions, 282, 360
Ater, of noxious things, 157, 208, 288, 348
Athens, plague of, 292

"Αθος, supposed form of "Αθως, 179
Atmosphere, diseases connected with, 293
Atque—atque, like et—et, 56

in an apodosis, 165

-, trajection of, 66

Auctor, used in its etymological sense, 147
Autos, an epithet of the evening star, 71
Avoç, kappaλéos, Enpós, of sounds, 182
Aures, of the plough, 161
Aureus, epithet of Saturn, 250
Auritus, by whom used, 177

Aut, introducing a new question, 339
Autobiographical introductions and conclu-
sions to poems, 362

Autumnus (auctumnus), perhaps of the
fruits of autumn, 196

Avernus, lake of, 210

Avertere, of derangement, 86

Averti, with accusative, 294

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Bonum sit or bene sit, in ejaculations, 90
Bos locutus, 191

Bov-, prefix denoting magnitude, 205
Bovλurós, poetical descriptions of, 35
Branding cattle, how and when performed,
171

Bridges, courage of colts shown in passing,
258

Britanni sued for peace to Augustus, 254
Brundisium, peace of, the occasion of the
fourth Eclogue, 46
Bruttian pitch, 240

Bubulcus, a ploughman, not a herdsman,
101

Bucolic Caesura not much attended to by
Virgil, 13

Bufo, only found in Virgil, 163

Balance, in the Zodiac, sometimes placed in Bull, zodiacal sign of, rising of, 167

the scorpion's claws, 148

Balantes, use of, for sheep, 173, 291
Balsam, 206

Bulls with gilded horns in triumphal pro-
cessions, 167, 209, 344

Bumastus, 205

Barbarians introduced into the Roman ar- Buris, 161
mies, 28

Barley supposed to degenerate into darnel
and wild oats, 57

Basket-work, one of the husbandman's home

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Bee, queen, supposed by the ancients to be
a male, 310: clipping or cutting off of its
wings, 313 regulates the working bees,
326.

Bees make holes for themselves, 307: dis-
like strong smells, 308, 327: whether
pleased by the tinkling of metal, 310:
why they fight, ib.: Virgil's magnilo-
quence about, ib., 312, 321: frightened
by dust, 312: two varieties of, ib. : le-
gend concerning, 319: division of labour
among, ib.: commence their work in the
top of the hive, 320: avoid rain, ib.:
ballast themselves with stones, 323: ge-
neration of, ib.: duration of their life,
324 symptoms of disease among, 331:
produced from oxen, 333 foll.
Bidens, a hoe, 231, 236

Bird-catching, how far allowed on holy-
days, 172

Birds, loves of, 228

Birthday, a time of merry making, 43
Bisaltae or Bisaltae, 291

Biting and stinging confounded, 311, 328

Black sheep sacrificed to the dead, 361
Blandus,caressing,' 267, 294

Blatta, 329

Buskins worn by Bacchus, 196

C.

Cacumen, a cutting from the top of a tree,
198

Cadere, of being left to fall, 31: of winds,
97

Cadit aliquid in aliquem, 93

Caeli orbis, of a planet, 180: caeli menses,
&c., 179, 280

Caeruleus, meanings of, 169, 346, 355
Caesar the dictator, omens connected with
his death, 56, 96, 190 foll.: his birth-
day, when kept, 59
Calabria, Cilician pirates transplanted by
Pompey into, 315
Calathus, for a cup, 60
Calcare, of other kinds of pressure than
treading, 218

Calliopea, other form of Calliope, 53
Calor, neuter, 230
Calpurnius (T. Siculus), early editions of his
Bucolics, 108: whether the author of
those inscribed to Nemesianus, 108 foll.:
does not elide long vowels at all, 109:
probable date of, 110: contents and cha-
racter of his work, 110 foll.

Caltha, not fragrant, 34

Calves taught to step together, 266
Campi natantes, 269: patentes, 311
Camurus, 257

Canalis, 331

Candidus, of beauty, 58

Canor, 310

Blood, coldness of, connected with slowness Cantabri, victory over, 255

of intellect, 245

Bloodshed, fertilizing effect of, 193

Boats on the Nile, 334

Capere ingressus, 338

Capi, captus, of injury or loss, 163
Capistrum, 268, 286

Caput, both of the root and of the top Color, of beauty, 31,

branches, 231: of a river, 338

Carceres, 194, 261

Carchesium, 345
Carenum, 175

Carmen, of a magic song, 86
Carpere, of spinning, 339
Casia, 34, 243

Castella, of Alpine forts, 292
Castoreum, where produced, 150
Caucasus covered with woods, 240
Caurus (Corus), 276

Caves, poets placed in, 358
Carus of a river, 178, 350

Cedar and cypress, durability of, 241
Celeus, 160

Cella (vinaria), 204

Centaurs and Lapithae, 242

Centaury, 332

Coloratus, of dark colour, 335
Colorem ducere, 96

Columella, his poem on gardening, 318
Columnae rostratae, 254

Coma, of a flower, 317

Commodus, of human qualities, 316
Comparative particles, meaning of, in dif-
ferent languages, 325
Compitalia, 234

Concidere, 220

Concilium,company' or 'society,' 147
Condere, of passing time, 96
Condere in locum, 188

Congerere for nidum congerere, 42
Coniugis amor, love felt as for a wife, 81
Conjunctive, see Subjunctive.
Conon, 39

Consortes, 319

Ceos, its connexion with Aristaeus, 146: Constituere, statuere, a sacrificial word, 361

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Certamen ponere, 249

Certe, at any rate,' 103

-, equidem, 92

Consumere in aliquem (aliquid), 267
Contemplator, 163

Continere, of confinement to the house, 171
Contingere and continguere, 286, 290

Continuo, 150, 161, 258, 276, 330

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Contrarius, unfavourable,' 174

Contubernales, given to slaves, 23, 42, 73

Challenger in singing had the right of be- Copper vessels split by cold, 283

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Cogere in ordinem, &c., 201: cogere, of Credere aliquid, 104

gathering produce, 328

Cognoscere

audire, 65

Cohortes villaticae, 281

Cold, said to burn, 153

Colere vitam, aevum, &c., 249

Coleridge referred to, 14

Colligere sitim, 280

Colocasia, 49

Crescere, Döderlein's etymology of, 229: in
ventrem, &c., 315

Creta for argilla, 162, 212, 216

Crocus, colour of, 322

Crops, charming away of, 89
Cross-ploughing, 154

Crown, rising and setting of the stars so
called, 167

Crowning a bowl, Virgil's notion of, 249
Crustumerium or Crustumium, 203
Cubilia, for those that lie in them, 329
Cuius as an adjective archaic, 36
Culpa, of disease, 292

Cultus, in the sense of cura, 144

Cum, of close connexion, e.g. of causation,
239

primis and cumprimis, 162

Deerunt, deesse, disyllables, 214
Deficere, with accusative, 159, 175
Defigere, with dative, 225

Defluere, of floating or swimming down,
290

Defringere and deplantare, 226
Defrutum, 175, 332

Dehinc, disyllable, 266

Deification of the sons of gods, 339

Cumulus, of the earth at the top of the Deiicere, in hunting, 288
ridges, 155

Cur non with present indicative, 54
Cura, of the object of care, 26, 101

Curare, of vine-dressing, 236

Curculio, 163

Curetes, 319

Deiopea (Δηιόπεια), 341
Delectus and dilectus, 258

Demittere and subducere, of a slope differ-
ently regarded, 92

Dens, of any curved implement, 237, 239
Densare and densere, 186

Currus, of a thing in motion, 162: for equi, Densus, of soil, 223
260

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Dentale, 161

Depasci, with accusative, 291
Depellere, senses of, 22, 43
Deprendi, of being overtaken in a storm,
349

Dercylos the Arcadian, inventor of springes,
&c., 371

Deripere and diripere confounded, 196
Despicere and dispicere confounded, 213
Destiny, accusation of, 297

Detexere, of completing work, 36
Detrectare and detractare, 257
Devolvere, of spinning, 341

Di patrii distinguished from indigetes, 193
Diana assists the shepherd in hunting, 42,
75: Arician, festival of, 372

Didactic poetry, brief sketch of the history
of, 119 foll.

Diducere, to break and loosen, 231
Dies, archaic inflexions of, 165: feminine
and masculine in close connexion, 173
Differre, of transplanting, 317
Difficilis, metaphorical use of, 212
Digging and ploughing in vineyards, 231,
236 in oliveyards, 239
Dignus, shades of meaning of, 161
Dionysiac festivals, 234
Dirigere aciem, 224

Dis in composition, intensive, 38
Dium (divum), 289

Diversus, of things locally separated, 343
Dodona, oracles of, whence drawn, 197
Dog-star, setting of, 167

Dogs, Molossian, 286: Spartan, 256, 282,
286 food for, 286

Domare, uses of, 242

Donarium, of a temple, 298

Decedere, of stars or sun setting, 167: with Donec, with indicative and subjunctive, 300

dative, 88, 306

Decurrere, of ships, 199

Doors and gates, ornaments of, 254
Doris put for the sea, 99

Dorsum nemoris, 289

Drains to be half filled with small stones or
gravel, 156

Deducere, metaphorical use of, 63: its dif-
ferent uses in connexion with water, 156,
172 of ships, 171: and diducere con-
founded, 231: of leading in triumph, 253 | Drinking did not begin till after the first
Deerro, disyllable, 73

course, 205

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