Page:Munera pulveris.djvu/268

230 * Homer, quoted or referred to:—


 * Arete, 134.
 * Circe and the swine, 91,
 * Hephæstus and Venus, its meaning, 101.
 * Phæacia, meaning of, 101.
 * Scylla and Charybdis, meaning of, 93-4.
 * Ulysses' shipwreck, App. V.
 * Sirens, 90, 92.
 * , &c. See, 124 n.


 * Honesty, the best policy, truth of, 104.
 * Horace, quoted:—


 * pinguis Phæaxque, 101.
 * odi profanum, 109 n.
 * vaga arena—numero carentis, animo rotundum percupisse? 134 (orig. ess.).
 * Si quis emat citharas. &c., App. III.


 * Horse-mania, English, why no word for, as for biblio-mania, 65.


 * Idolatry, of things and of the phantasm of good, App. II.
 * Ignorance, no science of, 34.
 * Ill-th and health, 37.
 * Indignation, true punishment and just, 120-1.
 * Influence of men, invisible, 122.
 * Iniquity, its general meaning, 110 n.
 * Injury, defined, the worst, unconscious and due to indolence, 117-8.
 * Instinct of reverence and wrath, 121.
 * Instruments, their value in what, 17.
 * International fears—one nation of another, App. I.
 * values, and their one law, 96 n. 97.
 * Inundation, as illustrating political economy and wages, 141.
 * of the Arve (Savoy), scheme to check, 147.


 * , English, at work on London house, useless precision, 151.
 * Judge, his offices of reward and punishment, 111.
 * Justice, personal and purchased, 116.
 * principles of, and education, App. I.


 * as lawgivers, 111.
 * can do no wrong (in what sense true), 113.
 * "divine right" of, 113 (orig. ess. n.).
 * "rex eris si recte facies," 105.


 * , capital limits, untrue, 50.
 * defined as the contest of man with an opposite, 59.
 * is not effort, but suffering in effort, 59.
 * "that quantity of our toil which we die in," 59.