Curtius leaps into the gulf to save his country and, as a Cynthus, a mountain in Delos, Diana's native island Cytorus, a mountain of Paphlagonia PAGE Decii described as dwelling, with other illustrious Romans, in the Deiphobus, Priam's son, who married Helen after Paris's death Demophoon, grief of Phyllis for v. 1, Æ. 97 v. 3, cu. 347 PAGE Deputation from Latinus to Æneas to lay the dead bodies of their Dictamnus, Dittany, which grows in Crete entertains him and his Trojans in a splendid manner desires him to relate the history of his adventures discovers to her sister Anna her passion for Æneas, which 59 she and Æneas separated from the hunters by a heavy storm repairs to the same cave with Æneas v. 1, E. 217 v. 1, E. 217 her amour with Æneas carried by Fame through all the cities makes use of all the arguments she can devise to persuade v. 1, Æ. 229 at last looks with aversion on Eneas while he is answer- ... becomes quite furious, and threatens that her ghost shall falls into tears once more, and prays him to stay, but in vain VOL. III. v. 1, Æ. 237 PAGE Dido prays her sister to go and persuade him at least to delay his ... ... v. 1, Æ. 239 all her sister's remonstrances draw only a few tears from ... v. 1, Æ. 241 contrives the manner of her death, but conceals it from v. 1, Æ. 243 love takes place once more, which puts her in suspense whether ... v. 1, Æ. 249 blames her sister for advising her to love Æneas ... v. 1, Æ. 249 mounts the funeral pile, utters her last words, and falls upon on her death are heard the groans and shrieks of her servants her sister, in great grief and confusion, embraces expiring her soul is separated from her body by Iris, whom Juno PAGE v. 1, E. 201 Drepanum, a maritime town in Sicily Dryopes, a people who lived at the foot of Mount Parnassus East, the, nor burns the Erichthonian towers v. 1, Æ. 215 Echo, repeats the various sounds described by the poet ... v. 3, cu. Employments peculiar to each season Entellus vanquishes Dares at the gauntlet fight... Entrance into hell described ... ... 349 Ephialtes, one of the twin giants Aloïde, whom Neptune begot on v. 1, Æ. 387 confined in Tartarus for threatening the Gods with war, and Erymanthus, a famous forest-clad mountain in Arcadia ... Eurydice doomed, by the imprudent eagerness of Orpheus, to Fabii, the, represented as inhabiting after death the Elysian Fields Friendship, the great force of it in Nisus and Euryalus Gallus, a remarkable and noble compliment made him by Virgil Virgil pities his hard usage by Lycoris, and consoles his |