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 like Numa a peace-lover, II. 209; spurious archaism of, II. 139* saying attributed to him by M. in apocryphal letter, II. 311; also mentioned in apocryphal letter by M., II. 315; a writing of his found, beginning Faustis ominibns, beneath the Fronto script on Ambr. p. 251 (Hauler Versam. 41 d. deut. Phil. etc., 1895), II. 209; sitting in court, II. 250

Hannibal, his duritia, II. 149; Cannae, II. 21, 29

Helios, from Homer, I. 92

Heno. Codex for Ino (Peerlkamp)

Hephaestus (Homer), child of Hera, I. 1 35; lame, ibid.

Heraclitus, the philosopher of Ephesus, his obscurity, II. 49 f.

Hercules, Ms armour-bearer, Philoctetes, I. 167; labours of, II. 107

Hernicans, the word samentum from their dialect, I. 175

Hera, mother or Hephaestus (Homer), I. 135

Hero (and Leander), I. 223

Herodes Atticus, the famous Athenian rhetor, brought up with P. Calvisius, M.'s grandfather, I. 61; friend of M., I. 65; trial of and speech of F. against, I. 61-71; II. 221; on friendly terms with F., II. 221, 235; M. writes three letters a day to him, II. 297; second trial of, II. 295*.; as letter-writer, II. 289; death of his infant son, I. 163; letter of M. to, II. 297; letter of F., to, I. 168

Herodotus, his Ionian Ftyle, I. 43

Hesiod, became a poet in sleep, I. 94; elegiac quotation referring to, ibid.; quoted (Theog. 22 f.), I. 95; reference to introduced by emendation (Jacobs), I. 278 (Naber)

Hiberi, type of barbarians, I. 303

Homer, Calliope instructress of, II. 67; instructor of Ennius, ibid.; historian of Achilles, II. 199; quoted, Iliad, i. 24, ii. 223, I. 94; iii. 112 (eloquence of Menelaus and Ulysses), u. 59; vi. 236 (Glaucus;, I. 279; vi. 334 408 (Menelaua at the banquet), II 50; viii. 311 (Apollo deflects Teucer's arrow), I. 133; ix. 203; (Patroclus and the banquet), II. 175; Lx. 312 (sincerity in word), I. 149; xiv. 350 Uove and Juno couching), I. 45; xxiii. 282 quoted by Favorinus (in Gellius), II. 269; Patroclus, armour-bearer to Achilles, I. 167

Odyssey, i. 58 (smoke of one's fatherland) I. 94, 192; vi. 106, ytyy)9e Se re tftpeva Aijto>, II. 36; iii 117, x. 29, 31. 46, xi. 108, xii. 338, 359, 364, 370, 372 (the wanderings of Ulysses), I. 92 f.; called Graius (emend, for Caius) poeta, I. 192

Horace memorabilia poela, I. 122; Sat. ii. 3. 254 If. (Polemo). I. 123; dead for M„ I. 139; Od. ii. 10, 20 (no bow for ever strung), II. 8; Od. i. 2, 31 (Gods clothed in clouds), i. 44; Ep i. 7, 59 (decisa negotia), II. 211; Od. i. 17, 32; quoted by M. in apocryphal letter, II. 319, see II. 293; imitated (?), I. 8n.; see also Hertz, Renaissance und Rococo, pp. 44, 47 and especially note 77; cp. I. 198, quid me facere oportet and passage with Hor. Ep. I. 6, 17; crassa Minerva, I. 206 (Hor. Sat. II. 2. 3)

Hymettus and its thyme, I. 305

Ialysus, picture by Protogenes, I. 135

Iberians, see Hiberi

Ilissus, a stream in Attica, flower on banks of, I. 31

Ino (Cod. Heno), name of a harper's song, II. 107

Isidorus Lysias, case of. decided by the Imperial Brethren, II. 181

Isidore of Seville, quotes (?), Fronto, II. 284n.

Jews, fast of atonement, I. 145 Jugurtha, from Sallust, II. 161 ff. 334