138 :-(vii. 6. $ 7). IO ; (7. 6 6),
21 ; (13. 5 61, 300; (14. S 81,
254:-(viii. I. 4 41,20; (9. $$ 1-3),
20; (,IO. 4 z), 216; (ib. $ jl, 38,
83; (!b., %6), 63; (11. 5 7J9 2;
(12. 9 7), 7 ; (16.0 31, ’47, :--(Is.
C. 8), 53 :-(~.6. 9 2),279; (Ib. 4 8),
125; (8. 5 711 254; (9- 4 I3)r 7,
294 ;. (Ib. 141, 293.
Ethiopians, I j4.
Eubulus, tyrant of Atarneus, 69.
Euripides; story of his having
Decamnichus scourged, 219 :-
quotations showing a sophistic
or humanistic feeling, 12 ; cited,
(Aeol. fr. 16), 115 ; (Andr. 595i,
80; (Bacch. 3801, 296 ; (Suppl.
23S), 168: hledea, scho!ia on
(1. 613), 165.
Europe, extent of, according to
Aristotle’s conception, 364.
Evagoras, tyrant of Salamis in
Cyprus, 218.
Exchange, Aristotle’s two kinds of,
31.
F.
Fallacy, the, of uI1uBwis and &ai-
G.
‘ Generatione Animalium, De,’
quoted (732, b. IO), 25 ; (743, b.
Genitive, the partitive, 120, 122,
150, 186, 252; the epesegetic,
126; of respect, 245 ; of value,
192 ; after +wu, 160.
Giphanius, 230.
Goethe, quoted, IO, 129.
Goods, the threefold division Of,
not peculiar to Aristotle, 252.
Gorgias of Leontini, 39, 108.
Gottling, 4, 26, 201, 230, 271, 287,
prtrls, 46.
241,. 53.
298,301.
Greeks, the, limited the divine by
the human, 7.
Grote, 67,82, 84, 101, 109,190, 229.
H.
Hallam, 228.
Hanno, conspiracy of, 24.
Harmodius and Aristogeiton, con-
spiracy of, 217.
Hehdome (the battle of), meaning
Helinea, the. at Epidnmnus. 186.
Hellas, 51 ; vil!age communities in,
5 : a federation of, why impos-
sible, 264.
Hendiadys, 25.
Heraclea (in l’ontus), 263 : revolu-
tionsnt. 196:-(?in Trachisi, 204.
Heraclcides, one of the assassins
of Cutys, 219.
Heracleides l’ontictis, 232, 242.
Hermne, the inuti1:ition of the, 77.
Hermeas. the fricnd of Aristotlc. 69.
Herodotus, asserts that Tis:imenes
and Hegi:is n-crc the nnly fnr-
eigners to \~hnm rights of citizen-
ship at Sparta were grantcti, 82 ;
is fond of geographical digres-
sions. 90 ; censureti by Aristotlc
in thc Hiatoria Ani:naIiiim, 221 :
--quntetl, li. 191 I, 111 : (ih. 1961,
67; (i:. I~z),, 38; (iii. 741, 43;
(IV. ~boi, 4s; (v. 491, 138 ; ivi.
571, 8;; (vii. 16): 43; (ib. j0),
77 : (IS. 21, 265 ; ob. 1221, 264.
Hesychius, 4, 274.
Heyne, C. ti., 271.
Hiern, tyrant of Syracuse, 230.
Hierocles (the philosophcr), quoted,
Hildenbrand, 2j9.
Hipparinus, the father of Dion, 203.
Hippodamus of hliletus, 67, 70-
74 ; pnssessed great Icgislativc
ingenuity, 7j ; not rcally the first
proposer of the latv that the
children of citizens slain in battle
should be brought up at the
public expense, 75 :-the I’rag-
ments of, not genuine, 69 ; trans-
127.
lated, 71-73.
‘Historia Anlmalium,’ quoted :489,
b. 81, 33.
Homer, quoted (11. xiii. 359), 18 ;
(Od)ssey, ii. 3651, 51 ; (Ilymn
to Apolio, z~o), 264 : - quotations
from, not found in our ‘Text, 138,
296.
Greek Poetry, 12.
79.
Humanistic or Sophistic feeling in
Hybrias the Cretan, the Scolium of,
Hyperbolus, ostracism of, 137.
I.
of the word, 191. Inconsistencies in the Poiitics, 63,