ADDENDA, &c. P. 49, note on E. 4. 4. It is right to mention that the Third Sibylline Book, minus a few interpolations, is supposed by modern critics to have been written about 170 B.C., so that Virgil may have actually known it. I do not however find in it any such resemblance to the language of the Fourth Eclogue as to necessitate the supposition that the one must have been the model of the other. I wish to say that the Introduction to the Georgics had passed through the press before the publication of Mr. Munro's edition of Lucretius. It would be difficult otherwise to excuse the absence there of any allusion to that most important work. In the subsequent Commentary I have fortunately been able to introduce an occasional reference to it, though not so frequently as I might have done had I had the advantage of consulting it earlier. [On Georg. 4. 132 it should be added that Seneca Ben. 1. 7. 1 quotes this line with the reading animo: "qui dedit parva magnifice, qui regum aequavit opes animo."H. N.] INDEX. A. A teneris and in teneris, G. ii. 272 Ab before consonants, Wagner's doctrine of, E. viii. 41 integro and similar phrases, E. iv. 5 with ablative instead of instrumental ablative, G. i. 234: whether equivalent to anó, ib. 457: of local description, iii. 2 Abdere domo, G. iii. 96 Abigei, G. iii. 408 Abiungere, 'to unyoke,' G. iii. 518 Ablative, material, E. iii. 39: G. i. 262; ii. 387; iii. 256: local, G. i. 430; iii. 256, 439; iv. 557: of circumstance, G. i. 431; ii. 206: modal, E. iii. 31: G. ii. 206; iv. 528: two ablatives in one construction, G. iii. 439: ablative coupled with participle, G. iv. 219 Ablative and dative, sometimes almost undistinguishable, E. iv. 41; vii. 47: G. iii. 140 Abolere, shades of meaning of, G. iii. 560 Abscindere and abscidere, G. ii. 23 Abydos, famous for oysters, G. i. 207 Acalanthis, acanthis, G. iii. 338 Acanthus, G. ii. 119; iv. 137 Accingi, with infinitive, G. iii. 46 Accipere, correlative of dare, E. i. 18: of inire or ingredi, E. viii. 40: G. iv. 362: in sense of initiation, E. iv. 15 Accusative after passive or intransitive verb or participle, G. iv. 337 cognate, E. vi. 63: G. ii. 39; iii. 41: factitive, E. vi. 63 Acer equis, G. iii. 8. Acervi, of corn, G. i. 263 Achelous, supposed the oldest of rivers, G. i. 9: connexion of with the discovery of wine, ib. Acheron, called palus, G. iv. 479 Acorns given to cattle in winter, E. x. 20: how made characteristic of the golden age, G. i. 148 Adeo = besides, G. i. 287: gives a rhetorical prominence to the word after which it is used, E. iv. 11; ix. 59: G. ii. 323; iii. 242; iv. 197 with dum, G. iv. 84 Adfectare viam, &c., G. iv. 562 Adjectives or participles attached contingently to substantives, G. i. 239; ii. 217 descriptive, converted by Hesiod into substantives, Georg. Introd. p. 137 Admordere, G. ii. 379 Adolescere and similar words, E. viii. 66: G. iii. 560; iv. 379 Adstare, of standing up, G. iii. 545 Advena, used contemptuously, E. ix. 2 Adverbial substantive coupled with adverbial adjective, G. ii. 428 Aeneid, the composition of, p. xxv.: management of story in, p. xxxv. foll. Aeneidomastix, the, pp. xxix., li. foll. Aequare, with ablative, G. iv. 132 Aerius and néptos, G. i. 375 Aesculus, as the supporter of a vine, G. ii. 291 Aestas, of the warm half of the year, G. iii. 296: of the summer sky, iv. 59 Aestiper, G. ii. 353 Aestiva, of summer pastures, G. iii. 472 Aetas, for annus, doubtful, G. iii. 190 G. ii. 364: of chasing, G. iii. 412 Agitare for agere or degere, G. ii. 527: other senses of, G. iii. 287 Agitator aselli distinguished from asinarius, G. i. 273 Agmen and acies, G. ii. 280; iii. 348 Agriculture and division of property connected, G. i. 126 Ahenum, aenum, G. i. 296 Aius Locutius, G. i. 476 Albus and candidus, G. iii. 82 Ante omnia, intensive with adjective, G. ii. 475 quam, with subjunctive, G. iv. 306 Antes, G. ii. 417 Antilochus, G. iv. 477 Antonius, M., G. ii. 505 Alcimedon, an unknown artist, E. iii. 37 Aonius, of Helicon, G. iii. 11 Alcinous, orchards of, G. ii. 87 Alexis, whether a real person, E. ii. Pref. Alps, earthquakes in, G. i. 475 Apium, E. vi. 68 Apollo Nomios associated with Pales, Aptus = aptatus, G. iii. 168 Altars, kindling of, part of a solemn ban- Aquilices, G. i. 109 quet, G. iv. 379 Alter ab undecimo, E. viii. 40 Altus, of a river, G. i. 142: altum, the Alveus, or alvus, for alveare, G. ii. 453 Ambarvalia, a time of continence, E. iii. associated with the festival of the Nymphs, Bucol. Introd. p. 9: E. v. 70: time of celebration of, ib.: G. i. 340 Ambo, of parties as well as of individuals, E. i. 61: for ambos, E. vi. 18 Ambrosia, G. iv. 415 Amellus, flower so called, G. iv. 271 Amor, for studium, E. ix. 56 Martis, E. x. 44: habendi, G. iv. 177 Angina, of swine, G. iii. 497 Anima mundi, doctrine of, G. i. 415; iv. 219 Animi, with verbs, adjectives, &c., G. iii. 289; iv. 491 Animosus, shades of meaning of, G. ii. Animus, of the memory, E. ix. 51: inanis, Ante exspectatum, G. iii. 348 Aquosus, of an Italian winter, E. x. 66 Arbutus, eaten by kids, E. iii. 82 perdite amare, with accusative, Arethusa, the conventional pastoral foun- Argitis, a name of wine, G. ii. 99 Aristae, in the sense of messis, E. i. 69 14; iv. 283: not originally mentioned Armare, of rigging ships, G. i. 255 Armenians, submission of, G. iii. 31 Armenta and pecudes distinguished, G. iv. 223: armenta, of horses, G. ii. 195; iii. 129, 286 Army, Roman, disposition of, at different periods, G. ii. 279 Ara, of a mountain, G. i. 240; ii. 172, 535 Ascanius, river, G. iii. 270 Asconius Pedianus, pp. xxix., liii. Ασκωλιασμός, G. ii. 384 Asper, Aemilius, pp. lxii. foll. Assyrius, used loosely, G. ii. 465 At non, in elliptical expressions, G. iii. 349; iv. 530 Ater, of noxious things, G. i. 129; ii. 130; iii. 430; iv. 407 Athens, plague of, G. iii. 478 Atos, supposed form of 'A0ws, G. i. 332 Atmosphere, diseases connected with, G. iii. 479 Atque atque, like et-et, E. v. 23 in an apodosis, G. i. 203 -, trajection of, E. vi. 38 Auctor, used in its etymological sense, G. i. 27 Autos, an epithet of the evening star, E. Αὖος, καρφαλεός, ξηρός, of sounds, G. i. 358 Aures, of the plough, G. i. 172 324 Autobiographical introductions and con- Avertere, of derangement, E. viii. 67 Axis, the north pole, G. ii. 271 B. Bacae, of the acacia, G. ii. 119 Barley supposed to degenerate into darnel and wild oats, E. v. 37 Basket-work, one of the husbandman's Beans, when sown, G. i. 215 Bees make holes for themselves, G. iv. 42: Birds, loves of, G. ii. 328 77 Bisaltae or Bisaltae, G. iii. 461 Biting and stinging confounded, G. iv. 74, 237 Black sheep sacrificed to the dead, G. iv. Blandus, 'caressing,' G. iii. 185, 496 Blood, coldness of, connected with slow- Bloodshed, fertilizing effect of, G. i. 492 Bonum sit or bene sit, in ejaculation, E. Bacchus and Ceres worshipped together Bos locutus, G. i. 478 Bacchus identified with the sun, G. i. 6: Balance, in the Zodiac, sometimes placed Balsam, G. ii. 119 Barbarians introduced into the Roman armies, E. i. 71 Bov-, prefix denoting magnitude, G. ii. 102 BouAUTÓs, poetical descriptions of, E. ii. 66 Branding cattle, how and when performed, Bridges, courage of colts shown in pass- Britanni sued for peace to Augustus, G. Brundisium, peace of, the occasion of the |