INDEX.
- Academics, the, [66].
- Acatalepsy (the Pyrrhonist doctrine of agnosticism), [64].
- Accius or Attius, L. (b. 170 A.C., d. (?)), tragic poet, [326].
- Achilleid, the, [269], [410].
- Achilles Tatius (fl. c. 500 A.D. (?)), novelist, [119 note], [180].
- Acyrologia = “improper or inexact expression,” [338].
- Addison, [83], [118].
- Ad Herennium, [213], [217].
- Adrianus (d. c. 192 A.D.), rhetorician, [95].
- Æneid, the, see [Virgil].
- Ærumna, objections to, [251] and [note], [297].
- Æschylus (b. 525 A.C., d. 456), tragic poet, [22], [39], [112], [133], [155], [206], [308].
- Æsopus, (? ?), fabulist, [409].
- Æthiopica, the, [180], [181].
- Afranius, L. (fl. c. 100 A.C.), Roman comic poet, [311].
- Africa, Petrarch’s, [462].
- African euphuism, [362].
- Against the Dogmatists, [64-66].
- Agave, the, of Statius, [255] and [note].
- Agon, the contentious or argumentative part of a speech, [101].
- C (12th cent.), moralist, &c., in verse, [411], [414 note], [466].
- Albinovanus Pedo (fl. c. 1 A.D.), poet, [310], [311].
- Albinus, see [Alcuin].
- Albucius, Silius (fl. 1st cent. A.C.), declaimer, &c., [238], [360], [432].
- Alcæus (fl. c. 600), poet, [133 note].
- Alcidamas (fl. end of 5th cent. A.C.), rhetorician, [45].
- Alcuin? (or Albinus?) (b. c. 735, d. 804), theologian and rhetorician, [375-377].
- Aldhelm (b. c. 650 A.D., d. 709), poet and divine, [400 note].
- Alexander (2nd cent. P.C.?), rhetorician, [102], [105].
- Allegory, its appearances in, and influences on, Criticism, [10-12], [67-70], [300], [301], [392] sq.
- ἁμαρτία.
- Amblysia, “blunting” or “toning down,” [338].
- Ammæus (correspondent of Dion. Hal.), [129] sq.
- Amplification (auxesis), rhetorical term, sometimes for “raising,” sometimes for “varying,” the subject, [164].
- Ampulla, [271] and [note].
- Anabasis, the, [309], [318].
- Anacreon (c. 560 A.C.–480), poet. Criticism of him in the Anthology, [82].
- ἀναίσχυντος (“anæschyntos”), “the shameless one.” One of the artificial distinctions of case in which the plaintiff seems impudent, [347].
- ἀνασκευή, refutation, one of the subject divisions of the Progymnasmata, [92] sq.
- Anatomy of Melancholy, the, [144 note], [194].
- Anaxagoras (fl. 5th cent. A.C.), philosopher, criticised Homer? [11].
- Anaximenes of Lampsacus (fl. 4th cent. A.C., with Alexander, 334), historian and rhetorician, [17 note].
- ἀντέγκλημα. Acceptance and vindication: “justification,” [98].
- Anthology, the Greek, literary epigrams of, [81-86], [147].
- —— the Latin, [344], [345].
- Anti-Claudianus, [410], [414 note].
- Antimachus of Colophon (or Claros) (fl. c. 400 A.C.), poet, [20 note], [85 note], [133], [307 note].
- Antimetathesis = “putting the reader in the place of an actor or spectator by vivid narrative,” [157].
- Antiphanes (fl. 4th cent. A.C.), middle comic poet, [25] and [note].
- Antoninus Pius (Emperor, [138-161] A.D.), [272], [273].
- Aper, M. (character in Dial. de Clar. Orat.), [280] sq.
- ἀφελής, simple, plain, [99] sq.
- Aphthonius (fl. c. 315 A.D.), rhetorician, [90], [92], [93].
- Apollinaris, see [Sidonius].
- Apollodorus of Pergamus (fl. 1st cent. A.C.), rhetorician, [302].
- Apollonius, Life of, [119-121], [388].
- Apollonius Rhodius (fl. c. 200 A.C.), [307], [318], [338].
- Apology, the Platonic, [237].
- Apparebit repentina (hymn), [404].
- Appian (fl. 2nd cent. P.C.), historian, [178].
- Apsines (fl. c. 235? or c. 300?), rhetorician, [105].
- Apuleius (fl. 2nd cent. P.C., b. c. 130), novelist, &c., [151], [321], [352], [353], and note.
- Aquila Romanus, rhetorician, [346].
- Aquilius Regulus, M. (fl. c. 100), orator, [272 note], [357].
- ἀρχαῖοι, οἱ. In Arist., &c., “the early philosophers”; in Photius, &c., “the classics” generally. Uncertain when this latter use came in. MSS. of Dion. Halicarn. have in the same pass, some this word and some παλαιοί, [186].
- Archaism, [45].
- Architrenius, [410] and [note], [414].
- Arellius Fuscus (fl. just before C.), rhetorician, [236].
- Argentarius, Marcus (?), epigrammatist and declaimer, [86], [234].
- Aristarchus (fl. c. 150 A.C.), critic and grammarian, [74-76], [85], [214].
- Aristides of Smyrna (P. Aelius A. Theodorus) (b. 117 A.D., d. c. 180), rhetorician, 82(?), 105(?), [109], [113-116], [183].
- —— the Rhetoric of, [105].
- Aristophanes (b. c. 444 A.C., d. c. 380; Plays, 425-388; Frogs, 405),
- —— and Menander, Plutarch’s comparison of, [143].
- —— of Byzantium (fl. c. 264), critic, [74-76].
- —— (4th cent. A.C.) (client of Libanius), [122].
- —— the Scholiasts on, [76].
- Aristotle (b. 384 A.C., d. 322), philosopher, Bk. I. chap. [iii]. (for headings see Contents), [5], [83 note], [130], [136], [155], [166], [173], [185], [192], [193], [224], [226], [241], [290], [294], [295], [306], [309], [444].
- Armstrong, [167], [296].
- Arnold, Matthew (b. 1822, d. 1888), poet and critic, [23], [55], [62 note], [146], [320].
- Arrian (fl. 2nd cent. P.C.), historian, [178], [179], [270].
- Arruntius, L., name of two persons, father and son, one consul 22 A.C., the other 6 A.D. Either might be the person referred to by Seneca, [238].
- Ars Poetica of Horace, [221] sq.
- Arthur and Arthurian Legend, [423 note] and sq., [475], [483].
- Ascham, Roger, [213], [483].
- Ataraxia (the Epicurean calm), [63], [64].
- Athenæus (fl. c. 230 A.D.), [144], [145 note], [186].
- Athetesis = “marking as spurious,” 80.
- Atticism, [315].
- Atticus, Herodes (Tib. Claudius) (b. c. 104 A.D., d. 180), rhetorician, [323].
- —— T. Pomponius (b. 109 A.C., d. 32), friend of Cicero, [214].
- Attius, see [Accius].
- Atys or Attis, the, [305].
- Aucassin et Nicolette, [475].
- Augustinus, Aurelius (St Augustine) (b. 354 A.D., d. 430), rhetorician, theologian, and bishop, [349], [377-380], [401], [483].
- Augustus, the Emperor (b. 63 A.C., d. 14 A.D.), his epigram on Fulvia and Martial’s praise of it, [258].
- Aulic, the, in language, [425] sq.
- Aungervyle, see [Bury].
- Aurelius, Marcus (M. A. Antoninus) (b. 121 A.D., Roman Emperor, [161], d. 180), [62] and [note], [246 note].
- Ausonius, D. Magnus (b. c. 310 A.D., consul 379, d. c. 390), poet, professor, and prefect, [342], [343], [387].
- Avienus or Avianus (fl. c. 300 A.D. ?), fabulist, [409].
- Bacchylides (fl. c. 470 A.C.), poet, [168].
- Bailiff of Love, the (Le Bailli d’Amour), [455] and [note].
- Bassus, see [Cæsius Bassus] and [Saleius Bassus].
- Bede, the Venerable (b. c. 673, d. 735), presbyter, historian, &c., [374], [375], [402-405].
- Bentley (?) on Philostratus, [119].
- Blair, Dr Hugh, vi, [154 note].
- “Blunder,” Aristides’ defence of his, [115], [116].
- Boccaccio, Giovanni (b. 1313, d. 1375), poet, tale-teller, and scholar, [417], [457-464].
- Boethius, Anicius Manlius Severinus (b. c. 470 A.D., d. c. 524), statesman and philosopher, [390], [406], [462].
- Bolognese dialect, [424], [425].
- Bossuet, [199].
- Boswell, [271 note].
- Broad Stone of Honour, the, [372].
- Browne, Sir T., quoted, [118].
- rowning, Mr, [226], [424 note].
- Brunellus, [414 note].
- Brutus, the, [218], [219].
- Burke, his “Amplification,” [164], [165].
- Burton, R., [119];
- the Anatomy, [144 note].
- Bury, Richard of, [455], [456] and [note].
- Butcher, Prof. S. H., his Aristotle’s Theory of Poetry and Fine Art, [31 note] and Bk. I. ch. [iii]. notes, passim.
- Butler, S., on Rhetoric, [43].
- Cacozelon = “affected excess,” [297] and [note].
- Cæcilius Statius (d. 168 A.C.), comic poet, [213 note], [324].
- Cæcilius (fl. c. 1 A.D. ?), rhetorician, [73], [138], [153] sq., [186 note], [302].
- Cælius, M. C. Rufus (d. 48 A.C.), orator, [312].
- Cæsar, C. Julius (b. 100 A.C., d. 44), [312].
- Cæsius Bassus (d. 78 A.D.), poet, [253 note].
- Callimachus (fl. 240-260 A.C.), poet, [273].
- Calvus, C. Licinius Macco (b. 82 A.C., d. c. 46), poet and orator, [312].
- “Cambridge the Everything,” [271] and [note].
- Campbell, George (18th cent. divine and rhetorical writer), Preface, p. vi; 295 note.
- Can Grande, Letter to, [441], [442].
- “Canons” of writers, [213 note].
- Canzone, the, Bk. III. [ch. ii]. passim.
- Capella, see [Martianus C].
- Cardinal, the, in language, [425] sq.
- Carmina Burana, [377 note], [405 note].
- Cassiodorus, Magnus Aurelius (b. c. 468 A.D., d. c. 568), statesman and polyhistor, [349], [391], [406].
- Cassius Severus (b. c. 50 A.C., d. 33 A.D.), orator and lampooner, [236].
- Castor (fl. c. 150 A.C.), rhetorician, [102].
- Cato, Dionysius (fl. 2nd cent. P.C. ?), moralist, [409].
- Catullus, Valerius (b. c. 87 A.C., d. c. 47), poet, [212], [258], [265], [267], [273], [294], [311], [317], [356].
- Causeret, M. C., [220].
- Caxton, [464], [465].
- Celtic Rhetoric, Early, [467 note].
- “Centimeters,” [404] and [note].
- Cento, the, [343], [401].
- Châtillon, Gautier of (12th cent.), poet, [410].
- Chaucer, Geoffrey (b. 1340 ?, d. 1400), poet, [5], [55], [390 note], [450-452], [470].
- Chirius Fortuniatianus, see [Curius F].
- Chœrilus of Samos (fl. 5th cent. A.C.), epic poet, [20].
- Choragia, [25 note].
- Chorus, the, Dion Chrysostom, [112-113].
- Chreia (χρεία), the Rhetorical “use” or maxim, often of a figurative character, [91] sq.
- Chrysostom, Dion, see [Dion Chrysostom].
- Cicero, M. Tullius (b. 106 A.C., d. 43 A.C.), orator, [5], [165], [186], [212], [213-221], [229 note], [270], [289], [294], [302], [312], [314], [333], [384].
- Cinna, C. Helvius (d. 44 A.C.), poet, [264], [265].
- Claudian—Claudius Claudianus (fl. c. 400 A.D.), poet, [83], [383], [393], [409] sq.
- —— (friend of Sidonius), [383].
- Cléomadès, [455] and [note].
- Cocheris, M., [414 note], [455 note].
- Coleridge, Samuel Taylor (1772-1834), “logician, metaphysician, bard,” and critic, [5], [23], [118], [174], [419 note], [436], [438].
- Comedy, Greek, Criticism of Literature in, [21-26];
- Comento, Boccaccio’s, on Dante, [458] sq.
- “Commatic,” [386] and [note].
- Commedia, Divina, La, Bk. III. ch. [ii]., passim.
- Commodianus (3rd cent. P.C.?), bishop and versifier, [364] and #note:f454.
- “Common” syllables, Martial on, [263] and [note].
- Comparison in relation to criticism, [241].
- Composition in relation to Rhetoric and Criticism, [129] sq., [304].
- Confessions, the, of St Augustine, [378-380].
- Consolatio Philosophiæ, [390].
- Constructionis Elatio, [428] sq.
- Contention of Phyllis and Flora, the, [377] and [note].
- Controversies, the, of Seneca the Elder, [334] sq.
- Convito, Dante’s, [417], [441-443].
- Cope, E.M., his ed. of the Rhetoric, [40 note], [46].
- Corax (fl. 5th cent. A.C.), traditional founder of rhetorical teaching, [16], [17 note].
- Corbinelli, Jacopo, [417].
- Corneille, Pierre (b. 1606, d. 1684), [5].
- Cornelius Severus (fl. c. 1 A.D.), poet, [235], [310] and [note].
- Courthope, Mr W. J., [457 note], [462 note].
- Cowper, [460].
- Crabbe, [166].
- Crates of Mallos (fl. 2nd cent. A.C.), grammarian and critic, [74], [85].
- Critic, Quintilian’s sketch of the duty of the, [292], [293].
- “Cross-poems,” 396 sq.
- Crotchet Castle, [372].
- Ctesias (fl. c. 480 A.C.), physician and historian, [178].
- Cumberland on Philostratus, [119].
- Curial, the, in language, [425] sq.
- Curiatius Maternus (fl. c. 100?), [280] sq.
- Curius (or Chirius) Fortunatianus (fl. c. 450 A.D.), rhetorician and lawyer, [346], [347].
- Cynics, the, [62].
- Cyril of Alexandria (bishop 412-444 A.D.), [177].
- Cyrus (date?), rhetorician, [102 note].
- Dante, Alighieri (Dantes Aligerus) (b. 1265, d. 1321), poet. The De Vulgari Eloquio, Bk. III. chap. ii. See [Contents]. Also [5], [133], [172], [173], [354], [404], [406], [416-446], [462].
- Dares Phrygius (probably no such person, book written c. 11th-12th cent. P.C. (?)), fabulous historian of Troy, [392], [410].
- Darmesteter, Madame, [453], [454].
- De Admiranda Vi Demosthenis, [129] sq.
- De Antro Nympharum, [68-70].
- De Causis corruptæ Eloquentiæ, [280] sq.
- Declamations, [230] sq., [279] sq.
- De Compositione, [129] sq.
- De Dictamine Rhythmico, see [Dictamen].
- De Genealogia Deorum, [457] sq.
- De Herodote Malignitate, [142], [143].
- De Interpretatione, [89], [103], [104].
- De Inventione (Longinus), [105-107].
- —— (Cicero), [217].
- Deinarchus (b. c. 361 A.C., d. c. 280), Attic orator, [129] sq.
- δεινὸς and δεινὸτης, how used, [97], [129].
- Deipnosophistæ, [144], [145 note].
- Delille, [167], [296].
- Demetrius Phalereus (b. c. 345 A.C., d. (?)), statesman and orator, [71], [89], [103], [104], [196].
- Democritus of Abdera (b. c. 460 A.C., d. 361), philosopher and humourist, [14], [15].
- Demosthenes (b. c. 385 A.C., d. 322), orator, [129], [165], [166] sq., [187 note], [277], [294], [312].
- De Nuptiis Philologiæ et Mercurii, [349-354], [377].
- De Optimo Genere Oratorum, [218].
- De Oratore, [217], [218].
- De Quincey, [121 note], [244 note], [296].
- Deschamps, Eustache (b. 1328, d. 1415), poet, &c., [454].
- De Vulgari Eloquio, [406], [416-446].
- Dialogus de Claris Oratoribus, [279] sq., [317 note], [357].
- Dictamen, the, [407] sq.
- Diction, see under [Aristotle], [Dionysius], [Longinus], [Quintilian], [Dante].
- —— Poetic, see [Aristotle], [Dante], [Wordsworth].
- Diderot, [119].
- διήγημα, a story of a real event introduced into a speech, [90] sq. (διήγησις is the setting forth of the circumstances of the case).
- Diogenes Laertius (fl. 2nd cent. P.C.), historian of philosophy, [14], [15] and [notes], [89].
- Dion Cassius (b. 155 A.D.), historian, [180].
- Dion Chrysostom (b. c. 50 A.D., d. c. 117), rhetorician, [108-113], [195], [231].
- Dionysius of Halicarnassus (b. (?) came to Rome c. 29 A.C., d. 7 A.C.), rhetorician, historian, and critic, [5], [23], [70], [72], [96], [108], [127-137], [155] and [note], [156 note], [185], [195], [219], [289], [444].
- —— of Thrace (fl. c. 80 A.C.), grammarian, [65].
- Disertus, [274 note].
- Dobson, Mr Austin, [271 note].
- Domitian—Martial on his modesty, [261], [262];
- Douglas, Gavin (b. c. 1474, d. 1522), bishop, poet, and translator, [268], [406], [464-466].
- Doxopater (11th cent. (?)), rhetorician, [97];
- (13th cent. (?)), [188].
- “Drink to me only with thine eyes,” [119].
- Dryden, John (b. 1631, d. 1700), poet and critic, [5], [23], [48], [56], [156 note].
- “Earinos,” [263].
- Eberhard of Bethune (fl. c. 1200?), author of Labyrinthus (?), [406].
- Education, Plutarch on, [139] seq.
- Egger, Émile, his Essai sur l’Histoire de la Critique chez les Grecs (1st ed., 1850), [6], Bk. I., notes, passim.
- Eikones, the, of Philostratus, [119].
- εἰσφορὰ νόμου, the “introduction” and discussion of law. One of the Progymnasmata, [91] sq.
- ἔκφρασις, a set description intended to bring person, place, picture, &c., vividly before the mind’s eye. It is found largely in the Epideictic rhetoricians, and still more largely in the Greek Romances, [119 note].
- Elevation, [46].
- Empedocles (fl. c. 444 A.C.), philosopher, his fragments, [13], [14], [156].
- Empiricus, see [Sextus Empiricus].
- Ennius, Q. (b. 239 A.C., d. 169), poet, [213 note], [310], [324], [401].
- Epanodos = “deliberate repetition,” [303].
- Epicheireme (form of rhet. argument), [100] and [note].
- Epictetus (fl. c. 100 A.D.), philosopher, [62].
- Epicurean, the, [62] sq.
- Epicurus (b. c. 342 A.C., d. 270), philosopher, [63].
- Epideictic (the third kind of oratory—the rhetoric of display), Bk. I., chap, [iv]., passim.
- ἐπιμέλεια, rhetorically and critically = “exactness,” [99] and [note].
- Epistle to Can Grande, [441], [442].
- Epistola ad Pisones, [221] sq.
- Erinna (fl. c. 612 A.C.), poetess, criticisms on her “Distaff,” [82-85].
- ἑρμηνεία (interpretatio), used in Rhet. rather ambiguously. Generally, as in the treatise of Dem. Phal. (103 sq.), it is nearly equivalent to “Theory of Prose Style.” Interpretatio in Latin is also used of a particular Fig. = conduplicatio, “explaining the thing over again, in different words.”
- Espinette Amoureuse, L’, [454].
- Ethopœia, “character-drawing.” This, which was one of the subjects of the Progymnasmata, is sometimes used generally, sometimes for a special technical exercise in making speeches suited to characters and situations (Aphth. distinguishes it from eidolopœia, and includes both in prosopopœia), [90] sq. = Quintilian’s “ethology,” [292].
- Etymologiæ of Isidore, [400] sq.
- Eunapius (b. 347 A.D.), sophist, [181].
- “Euphemesis,” a Fulgentian word = “ritual” (?), [395].
- Euphues and Euphuism, [139], [389], [394].
- Eupolis (b. c. 446 A.C., d. c. 411), comic poet, [166].
- εὕρεσις = inventio, the devising of topics, arguments, &c., suitable to the case; what the orator adds of his own to the facts and the law, [99] sq.
- Euripides (b. 480 A.C., d. 406), dramatist, [22], [24], [112], [133], [211], [308].
- Excellentia vocabulorum, [428] sq.
- Expositio Virgiliana, [392-396].
- Fable, the, [90], [401].
- Faultlessness, [168] sq., [285] sq.
- Favorinus (fl. c. 120 A.D.), rhetorician, [323], [327], [328].
- Ferrers-Howell, Mr, [417 note] and sq.
- “Figures,” 43, [53], [102], 103 (and Bk. I. ch. iv. passim), [156] sq., [166] sq., 291 (Bk. II. ch. iii. passim), [360] sq., [374] sq., [432].
- Filocopo, the, [457], [463].
- Filostrato, the, [457], [463].
- Flaccus (a critical friend of Martial), [260], [262].
- —— poets, see [Horace] and [Valerius].
- Floire et Blanchefleur, [463], [475].
- Florentine Dialect, [421] sq.
- Florida, the, [363] and [note].
- Foix, Gaston de, [455].
- Forms, the artificial, of French poetry, [449].
- Fortunatianus, see [Curius].
- Fortunatus, see [Venantius].
- “Four, the,” Aristides’ speech for, [115], [116].
- “Frigidity,” [43], [156].
- Frogs, The, [6], [21-23], [270 note].
- Froissart, [453-455].
- Fronto, M. Cornelius (consul, 146 A.D.), rhetorician, [288 note].
- Fulgentius, Fabius Planciades (6th cent. P.C.), [392-396], [459].
- Galliambic metre, [305] and [note].
- Garland, or de Garlandia, John, see [John of G].
- Gascoigne, George (b. 1525 (?), d. 1577), [86], [471].
- Gautier, Théophile, [62 note]
- Gellius, Aulus (fl. c. 150 A.D.), grammarian and man of letters, [186], [322-329].
- Geoffrey of Vinsauf, see [Vinsauf].
- Georgius Choeroboscus (4th and 5th cent. P.C.), rhetorician, [103].
- Georgius Pachymeres (b. c. 1242, d. c. 1310), Byzantine historian and rhetorician, [95].
- Gesta Romanorum, the, [187], [394].
- Gibbon, [384] and [note].
- Gifford on Philostratus, &c., [116].
- Gnomæ, “sentences,” “maxims,” [91] and [note], [298].
- Gorgias of Athens (fl. 1st cent. A.C.), rhetorician, [346].
- Gorgias of Leontini (fl. 5th cent. A.C. at Athens, 427), rhetorician and sophist, [16], [45], [159], [160].
- γοργότης, rhetorical and critical term = “nervousness,” “poignancy,” &c., [99].
- Gracchus, Sempronius (b. c. 160 A.C., d. 121), demagogue, his style, [229 note], [325].
- Grammar, Quintilian on, [291], [292];
- in Martianus, [353].
- Grammarians, the Greek, the Roman, [361], [362].
- Grammatica (and “grammar”), Dante’s meaning of, [419] sq.
- Grammaticus = more than mere “grammarian,” [343].
- Grand Style, the, [336].
- Graphica lexis, written as opposed to spoken style (v. Aristotle, Rhetoric, iii. 12. 1), [201], [202].
- Gryll Grange, [381 note].
- Guest’s English Rhythms, [405].
- Hall (17th cent. translator of Longinus), [154].
- Halliwell, J. O., [407].
- Hardie, Professor, Preface, [263 note], [305 note].
- Havell, Mr H. L., [153 note].
- Hawes, Stephen (fl. c. 1500), poet, [406].
- Heine, H., [202].
- Heliodorus (fl. c. 400 A.D.), bishop and novelist, [180], [181].
- Hermagoras (fl. 1st cent. A.C.), rhetorician and teacher of Cicero, [349], [377].
- Hermogenes (fl. c. 170), rhetorician, [89-92], [97-100], and Bk. I. ch. iv. passim, [196].
- Herodian (Aelius Herodianus) (2nd cent. P.C.), rhetorician and grammarian, [103].
- Herodotus (b. 484 A.C., d. c. 406), historian, [130] sq., [142], [143], [178-180], [296], [312].
- Heroica, or Heroic Dialogue of Philostratus, [120].
- Herondas (?) (“Herodes”) (? 3rd cent. A.C.), mimiambic poet, [273].
- Herrick, [324 note].
- Hildebrand of Padua, [424 note].
- Hillard, Miss K., [441 note] and sq.
- Himerius (fl. 4th cent. P.C.), sophist and rhetorician, [125 note], [183].
- Hippolytus, the Latin, [247].
- Hirsuta = “shaggy words,” Dante on, [429] sq.
- History, How to Write, [147], [148].
- Homer, Criticism of, [10-12], [27], [49], [50], [79-81], [82-87], [100], [130] sq., [156] sq., [206], [307], [343], [410], [463].
- —— and Plato, Max. Tyrius on, [117], [118].
- —— scholia on, [78-81].
- Homeric Allegories, [187].
- Homeric Problems (Aristotle’s), [49], [50], [185 note].
- Homeric Questions (Porphyry’s), [68-70].
- “Homilies” of Doxopater, [97];
- of Longinus, [187];
- Isidore’s use of the word, [402 note].
- Horace (Q. Horatius Flaccus) (b. 65 A.C., d. 8 A.C.), poet, [212], [221-230], [258], [294], [301], [311], [356], [360] sq., [432].
- Hugo, Victor, [202], [365].
- Hyperbaton = “alteration of order for rhetorical purposes,” [137].
- Hyperides (b. c. 390? A.C., d. 322), orator, [169].
- Hypodiæresis = “distribution of indictment,” [98].
- Hypotheses, not admitted, [6].
- Iamblichus the romancer (fl. c. 100 A.D.), [176], [180];
- not Iamblichus the philosopher (fl. c. 300 A.D.)
- Ideas, the Platonic, their bearing on criticism, [18] sq., [67] sq.;
- rhetorical sense of, [99] sq.
- Iliad, the scholia on, [80], [81], 474 (see also [Homer] and [Odyssey]).
- “Illustrious Vulgar Tongue,” the, Bk. III. ch. [ii]. passim.
- Impressionism, [54]. This term has as yet been very loosely defined. As used, for instance, by the late Mr R. A. M. Stevenson in his Velasquez, it carries an almost Aristotelian sense of generalisation from mere impression. But this is certainly not the general theory, and even less the usual practice, of the “Impressionist.”
- In Memoriam, [93], [94].
- Institutiones Oratoriæ, [289-321].
- Ion, the, of Plato, [19], [20]
- Isæus of Chalcis (fl. c. 420, 348 A.C.), one of the Ten Orators, [49], [129] sq.
- —— the Assyrian (fl. c. 100 A.D.), orator and rhetorical teacher, [272].
- Isidore of Seville (bishop from 600 A.D. to 636), [375], [400].
- Isocrates (b. 436 A.C., d. 338), orator or rhetorician, [17], [6-28], [129] sq., [160], [169], [182], [190], [214], [312].
- Italian Dialects, the, [423] sq.
- Jerome, St, [462].
- Jevons, Mr F. B., [144 note].
- John of Garlandia (12th cent.), metrical writer, [407] sq.
- John of Hauteville (12th cent.), poet, [410] sq.
- John of Salisbury (12th cent.), philosopher, &c., [414 note].
- John of Sicily (13th cent.), scholiast on Hermogenes, &c., [102 note], [106], [171 note], [175], [187-190], [432].
- John Philoponos (fl. c. 600 A.D.), grammarian, [177].
- John Tzetzes (12th cent.), grammarian, &c., [102].
- Johnson, Dr, [467 note], [472].
- Jonson, Ben (1573-1637), poet and critic, [86], [119], [120], [236 note], [244 note], [263 note].
- Josephus, Flavius (b. 37 A.D., d. c. 100), soldier and historian, [177].
- Josephus Rhacendyta (13th cent.), rhetorician, [101].
- Julian (the Apostate) (b. 331 A.D.; Emperor, [361-363], d. 363), [109], [125], [126].
- Juvenal (Dec. Junius Juvenalis) (fl. late 1st cent. P.C.), satiric poet, [252-250], [409].
- κάθαρσις, purgation or purification, [38].
- κατεστραμμένη (= periodic), [48 note].
- Keats, [252].
- Keil, Herr, [403].
- Kingsley, C., [270].
- Labyrinthus, [406] sq.
- Lampridius (friend of Sidonius), [388], [389].
- Lang, Mr Andrew, [153 note].
- Language, European, Dante on, [421] sq.
- Latro, M. Porcius (d. 4 A.C.), rhetorician, [236] sq.
- Laws, the, of Plato, [19], [20].
- λήκυθος and ληκύθιον, [270 note].
- Letters, the, of Philostratus, [119].
- —— of Libanius, [121 note], [123], [124].
- —— of Pliny, [270-279].
- —— of Seneca, [247].
- Lexiphanes, [148], [149].
- Lexis (meaning varies from “diction” to “style”), see [Diction].
- Leyser, Polycarp (1690-1728), motto on reverse of half-title, [403], [407] sq.
- Libanius (b. c. 314 A.D., d. c. 395), rhetorician, [109], [121-124], [181].
- Lives, Plutarch’s, [137], [138];
- Livy (T. Livius) (b. 59 A.C., d. 17 A.D.), historian, [212], [306], [312].
- Longinus, Cassius (assumed as the author of the Περὶ Ὕψους) (b. c. 213 A.D., d. 273), statesman, rhetorician, and critic. Bk. I. ch. v. (for headings see Contents), [5], [23], [25], [61], [72], [73], [96], [105-107], [113], [120], [131], [136], [138], [150], [151], [152-174], [185], [187 note], [190 note], [197], [219], [226], [241], [285], [290], [296], [301], [306], [320], [431], [432], [438], [444].
- Lubrica = “slippery” words, [429] sq., [439] sq.
- Lucan (M. Annæus Lucanus) (b. 39 A.D., d. 65), poet, [265 note], [269], [311], [410].
- Lucian (b. c. 120 A.D., d. c. 200), satirist, [105], [108], [146-152], [181], [182], [195], [294], [321].
- —— (4th cent. P.C.), subject of a speech of Libanius, [123].
- Lucilius, C. (b. 148 A.C., d. 103), satiric poet, [229] and [note], [230].
- Lucius of Patræ (?), romancer, [181].
- Lucretius (T. L. Carus) (b. 95 (?) A.C., d. 51 (?) 52 (?)), poet, [13], [212], [214-217], [267], [268], [269], [310], [318], [356].
- Lullius, Lully, or Lull, Raymond (b. 1235, d. 1315), scholastic philosopher, [371 note], [446 note].
- Lupus, see [Rutilius].
- Luxorius (6th cent. P.C.), African epigrammatist, [344].
- Lycophron (rhetorician of 5th cent. B.C., not Alexandrian poet of 3rd), [45].
- Lyly, [139].
- Lyrical Ballads, preface to, Pref., vii, [436].
- Lysias (b. 458 A.C., d. 378), [21 note], [99], [129] sq.
- Macer, Æmilius (d. 16 A.C.), didactic poet, [310], [410].
- Macrobius, Ambrosius Aurelius Theodorius (fl. c. 400 A.D.), grammarian, [329-334].
- “Maidens in the Eyes,” the, [160], [161].
- Malatesta, Sig. Pand., [123 note].
- Mallius Theodorus, F. (fl. c. 400 A.D.), metrical writer, [404]. His definition of rhythm is that it appears in those places of the lyric and tragic poets where certa pedum conlatione neglecta, sola temporum ratio considerata sit.
- Malory, Sir T., [453].
- Map or Mapes, Walter (12th cent.), poet, &c., [405], [407] sq., [470].
- Mari, Signor G., [407] sq.
- Marius Victorinus, C. (fl. c. 350 A.D.), grammarian and rhetorician, [348], [380].
- Marlowe, [252].
- Marsus, Domitius (fl. c. 1 A.D.), poet, &c., [262], [264], [295].
- Martialis, M. Valerius (b. 43 A.D., d. 104(?)), poet, [256-268], [269], [272], [273], [285], [294], [356].
- Martianus Capella (M. Minneius Felix C.) (fl. c. 450 (?)), grammarian, &c., [349-354], [377], [406].
- Master of the Orators, Lucian’s, [150], [151].
- Maternus, see [Curiatius Maternus].
- Matius or Mattius, C., mimiambic poet, [324 note].
- Matthias, Vindocinensis (12th cent.?), poet, [411] and [note].
- Maximianus (fl. 5th or 6th cent. P.C.), elegiac poet and epigrammatist, [409].
- Maximus Tyrius (fl. c. 170 A.D.), rhetorician and philosopher, [109], [117], [118], [457 note].
- Meiosis, “passing reference,” [297] and [note].
- Meleager (fl. 1st cent. A.C.), poet, [83].
- Méliador, [453].
- Menander the dramatist (b. 342 A.C., d. 291), [82];
- Menander the rhetorician (fl. end of 5th cent. P.C.), his book on Epideictic, [104], [105].
- Menelaus (mentioned by Longinus, therefore before 3rd cent. (?)), poet, [189].
- Messal(l)a (M. Valerius M. Corvinus) (b. c. 70 A.C., d. c. 1 A.D.), soldier, statesman, poet, and orator, [239].
- —— L. Vipstanus, [282] sq.
- Metalepsis = “exchange of words,” one of the most difficult of these figure-terms. Sometimes it is mere metonymy, as “Hephæstus” for “fire”: sometimes it expresses a much more complicated and arbitrary process, [300].
- Metaplasm = “change of letters or syllables,” [400].
- Metaphor, Aristotle on, [43] sq.;
- Metre, definition of, [47 note].
- Metrodorus (b. c. 330 A.C., d. 277), Epicurean philosopher, [63].
- “Milesian Tales,” the, [21].
- Milton, [50], [286], [404].
- Mimes, the prose Greek, [21] note, [22].
- Mimesis, “Imitation,” Bk. I. ch. [iii]., passim.
- Mimiambic poetry, [208], [276], [324].
- Minucianus (date?), rhetorician, [105].
- Moore, Dr, [417 note] and sq.
- Moore, T., [199], [315].
- Moralia, Plutarch’s, [63], [137] sq.
- Morley, Prof. H., [455 note].
- Moyen de Parvenir, the, [243].
- Munro, Mr H. A. J., [229 note].
- Murredius, a foolish declaimer in Seneca the Elder, [233] sq.
- Mycterism = “suppressed sneering,” [301] and #note:f396.
- Nævius, Cn. (b. c. 270 A.C., d. c. 200), poet, [471].
- Neo-Platonists, the, [66-70].
- Neoptolemus of Parium (?), [221 note].
- Nero’s poetry, [250] sq.
- Nettleship, Mr Henry, [61 note], [211 note], [213 note], [218], [219], [221 note], [229 note], [230] and [note], [240], [283] sq., [288 note], [320].
- Nicephorus (11th cent.), rhetorician, [95].
- Nicolaus or Nicolas (fl. c. 900 A.D.?), rhetorician, [95].
- Noctes Atticæ, [241 note], [322-329].
- Nova Poetria, [406], [412] sq.
- Oc, oil, and si, Dante on, [422], [423].
- Octavia, the Senecan, [247].
- Odyssey, the, scholia on, [69], [70];
- οἰκεῖα ἡδονή, Aristotle’s doctrine of, [55].
- Oil, oc, and si, Dante on, [422], [423].
- “Olympic,” Dion Chrysostom’s, [112].
- Orator, Cicero’s, [218].
- Origines of Isidore, [400] sq.
- Orithyia, the, of Æschylus, [155], [159], [187], [190].
- Orosius, Paulus (fl. c. 413 A.D.), historian, [386], [391], [429].
- Oscus (?), declaimer, [234], [235].
- Ovid, P. Ovidius Naso (b. 43 A.C., d. 18 A.D.), poet, [212], [216 note], [230 note], [310].
- Pacuvius, M. (b. c. 220 A.C., d. 130), tragic poet, [326].
- Pæan or pæon (foot, 3 short 1 long), [47], [305].
- Palæmon, Q. Remmius (fl. 1st cent. P.C.), schoolmaster and rhetorician, [387] and [note].
- Pamphilus (d. 307 A.D.), scholar, book collector, and martyr, [401], [409].
- Pange Lingua (hymn), [396].
- Panther, note on the, [425].
- Paradiastole = “antithetic distinction,” [303].
- “Parallel Passage,” the, [322 note], [331] sq.
- Parasiopesis = “affected reticence,” [303].
- Parenthesis, [178 note], [296].
- παρένθυρσον, τὸ, [156], [160].
- Paris, M. Paulin, [415 note].
- Parmenides (fl. 5th cent. A.C.), Eleatic philosopher, his fragments, [13].
- Paromologia = “insidious concession,” [303].
- “Passions,” Longinus’s lost treatise on, [150].
- Pasti Cadaveribus, [232].
- “Patavinity,” 235 note, [296].
- Patristic view of Criticism, [380-382].
- Phantasia, [119].
- Phidias, Dion Chrysostom’s discourse for, [112].
- Philippus of Thessalonica (fl. c. 100 A.D.), epigrammatist, [85], [86].
- Peacock, T. L., [381 note].
- Periodic Style, [48].
- Periphrasis, [167].
- περὶ μιμησέως, [133 note].
- Περὶ Ὕψους, the, [106], [146], [151], [152-174], [197].
- Persius (A. P. Flaccus) (b. 34 A.D., d. 62), satiric poet, [247-253], [409].
- Perspicuity, [296].
- Petrarch, Francis (b. 1304, d. 1374), poet, &c., [432 note], [456], [462].
- Petronius Arbiter, C. or T. (?) (b. (?), d. 66 A.D.), [242-245], [246].
- Pexa = “combed-out words,” 429 sq., [439] sq.
- Phædrus, the, [18-21].
- Pherecrates (1st prize 438 A.C.), comic poet, [13 note].
- Philobiblion or Philobiblon, the, [414 note], [455], [456] and [note].
- Philoctetes, Dion Chrysostom on plays about, [109], [110].
- Philodemus of Gadara (fl. 1st cent. A.C.), epicure and philosopher and poet (?), [63], [64].
- Philological Homilies, the, of Longinus, [171 note], [187].
- Philosophy of Rhetoric, Campbell’s, [295 note].
- Philostratus, Flavius (son of a Lemnian professor of the same name in the 2nd century, and grandfather of a third Philostratus, who, like him, wrote Imagines in the late 3rd cent.) (b. c. 182 A.D., d. c. 250), rhetorician and miscellanist, [109], [118-121], [147].
- Phœbammon (fl. c. 400 A.D.?), rhetorician, [103].
- Photius (fl. 9th cent. P.C., Patriarch of Constantinople, 858-886, with interval), lexicographer and literary historian, [121 note], [175-186].
- Phrynichus (fl. 2nd cent. P.C.), sophist and grammarian, [183].
- Physiologus, the, [411] and [note].
- Pindar (b. c. 522 A.C., d. c. 442), poet, [131], [132], [308], [327], [333].
- Piron, [260].
- Pisistratean redaction of Homer, the, [6], [9].
- Pistis, [41], [58].
- “Placing” in Criticism, [291].
- Plato (b. c. 429 A.C., d. 347), philosopher, [5], [7], [13], [17-21] and note, [51], [66], [83], [108], [112], [145 note], [188], [192], [299], [305], [309], [462].
- —— and Homer, Max. Tyrius on, [117], [118].
- Plautus, T. Maccius (b. c. 254 A.C., d. 184), [213 note], [240], [294], [311], [356].
- Pliny the Elder (C. Plinius Secundus) (b. 23 A.D., d. 79), encyclopædist.
- Pliny the Younger (C. Plinius Cæcilius Secundus) (b. 61 A.D. d. (?)), advocate, statesman, and letter-writer, [264], [270-279], [357], [358].
- Plotinus (b. c. 203 A.D., d. 262), philosopher, [67], [68].
- Plutarch (fl. c. 90 A.D.), biographer and moral philosopher, [63], [66], [108], [137-146], [153], [195].
- Poema del Cid, [422].
- Poetic Diction, [436].
- Poetics, the, [32-39], and Bk. I. ch. [iii]. passim, [432].
- Poetry and Philosophy, Max. Tyrius on, [117], [118];
- Boccaccio on, [457].
- Pollio, C. Asinius (b. 76 A.C., d. 4 A.D.), orator, poet, &c., [235] and [note], [237], [238], [239].
- Polus (fl. 5th cent. A.C.), rhetorician and sophist, [16].
- Polybius of Sardis (date?), rhetorician, [103].
- Polyptoton = “variation of rhetorical effect by using different cases,” 157.
- Porphyry (-ius) (b. 233 A.D., d. c. 306), philosopher and commentator, [68-70], [80].
- Prior, Mat., [259].
- Prison Amoureuse, La, [454].
- Pro Archia, [221 note].
- Procatastasis = “introduction to narrative,” 98.
- Proclus (b. 412 A.D., d. 485), philosopher, [67].
- Prodiegesis = “preliminary statement,” 98.
- Progymnasmata, partial declamations: preliminary exercises in the chief parts of a speech, [89] sq.
- Pro Juvene contra Meretricem, [232], [233].
- Prometheus Es, the, of Lucian, [149].
- Prompt, Dr, 417 and [note].
- Propriety, [46].
- Prose Rhythm, see [Rhythm].
- Prosody, Greek, [201], [202].
- Protagoras (fl. 5th cent. A.C., at Athens), 430, rhetorician and sophist, [14], [15].
- Provençal arts of Poetry, [407 note].
- ——, Dante on, [422] sq.
- Prudentius, Aurelius Clemens (b. c. 350 A.D., d. c. 420), [364], [365] and [note], [471].
- Psellus (one in 9th, another in 11th cent.), rhetorician, [102].
- Psychagogia, [66] and [note].
- Puritanism and Literature, [380] sq.
- “Purity,” 46.
- Puttenham, G., List of Figures in his Art of Poetry, [44].
- Pyrrhonists, the, [62] sq.
- Quadrivium, the, [351], [366], [367], [432].
- Questions, Roman, Plutarch’s, [144].
- Quintilian (M. Fabius Quintilianus) (b. 40 A.D., d. c. 118), advocate and Professor of Oratory.
- Rabelais, [168], [190], [249], [394].
- Rabirius (fl. 1st cent. A.C.), [310].
- Rajna, Signor P., [417 note].
- Rapin, [173] and [note].
- Reading, Plutarch on, [139] sq.
- Rebecca and Rowena, [451 note].
- Reburra ( = “words with hair the wrong way”), [429] sq., [439] sq.
- Reliquiæ Antiquæ, [407] and [note], [411 note].
- Republic, the, of Plato, [18-21] and [note].
- Rex æterne domine, hymn, [404].
- Rhetoric, Aristides’ defence of, [115], [116];
- Rhetoric, the, of Aristotle, Bk. I. chap. [iii]. passim.
- —— of Dionysius, [129] sq.
- —— of Hermogenes, [90] sq.
- Rhetorica ad Alexandrum, [17 note].
- Rhétoriqueurs, the French, [467], [483].
- Rhythm, prose, Aristotle on, [47];
- Richard of Bury (Aungervyle), [455], [456].
- Roberts, Prof. Rhys, [9 note], [153 note], [171 note].
- Roman dialect, the, [423].
- Roman Questions, The, [144].
- Romance, [379 note], [474] sq.
- —— languages, Dante on, [422] sq.
- Romance of the Rose, the, [187], [393].
- Romantic Criticism, [172], [286].
- Ruskin, Mr, [305], [424 note].
- Rutherford, Mr, [74 note].
- Rutilius (P. R. Lupus) (fl. c. 1 A.D.), rhetorician, [346].
- Rymer, [173].
- Saint Augustine, see [Augustine].
- Saleius Bassus (fl. c. 80 A.D.), poet, [281].
- Salimarius or Solinarius (date ?), poet, [410].
- Sallust (C. Sallustius Crispus) (b. 86 A.C., d. 34), historian, [212], [305], [306], [312].
- Sappho (fl. c. 600 A.C.), poetess: the Anthology on her, [81-87];
- Satirists, Roman, and Criticism, [247-268].
- Saturnalia, the, [329-334].
- Satyricon, the, [242-245].
- Scandinavian Rhetoric, Early, [467 note].
- Scholastic Philosophy and Criticism, [446 note].
- Scholiasts, the Greek, [73-81].
- Scott, Sir Walter, [121].
- Seneca, the Father (M. Annæus S.) (b. c. 61 A.C., d. c. 35 A.D. (?)), rhetorician, [230-240].
- Seneca, the Son (L. Annæus S.) (b. c. 10 A.C., d. 65 A.D.), statesman and philosophical writer, [62], [245-247];
- Seneca, the Tragedian (?), [245] sq.
- “Sentences,” Quintilian on, [298], [299].
- Servius, Marius or Maurus Honoratus (fl. c. 400 A.D.), grammarian and Virgilian commentator, [334-340], [459].
- Severus (fl. 5th cent. P.C.), rhetorician, [95].
- —— Cassius, see [Cassius Severus].
- —— Cornelius, see [Cornelius Severus].
- Sextilius Ena (fl. just A.C.), poet, [235].
- Sextus Empiricus (fl. c. 225 A.D.), physician and Pyrrhonist, [64-66].
- Shakespeare, [39], [118], [120 note], [173], [286], #389 note;f491#, [404].
- Shelley, [199], [215].
- Si, oil, and oc, Dante on, [422], [423].
- Sicilian School of Greek rhetoric, [16], [41];
- of Italian poetry, [423] sq.
- Sidonius Apollinaris (C. Sollius S.A.) (b. c. 431 A.D., bishop 472, d. 482 (?), 484 (?)), [344 note], [383-389], [404 note].
- “Sieve, the Chapter of the,” [439] sq.
- Silius Italicus, C. (b. c. 25, consul, 68 A.D., d. 100), poet, [258].
- Simonides (fl. c. 664 A.C.), poet, [308].
- Simylus (fl. c. 355 A.C.), middle comic poet, [25] and [note], [51], [54], [198].
- Sinonis and Rhodanes, [176].
- Sir Thopas, [450-452].
- Snorri Sturluson, [467 note].
- Somnium Scipionis, [329].
- Sopater (6th cent. P.C. ?), rhetorician, [102 note].
- Sophocles, (b. 495 A.C., d. 406), tragic poet, [112], [133], [169], [200], [308].
- ——, scholia on, [77], [78].
- Speculum Stultorum, [414 note].
- Stasis and staseis = “states of case,” [72], [97] sq.
- Statius (P. Papinius) (b. c. 61 A.D., d. c. 96), [216 note], [255], [268-270];
- Stesichorus (fl. c. 600), [308].
- Stilo, L. Ælius Præconinus (fl. c. 100 A.C.), [240].
- Stohæus, John (fl. c. 500 A.D.), compiler, &c., [183], [185].
- Stoics, the, [62], [246].
- Style, Aristotle on, [42] sq.
- Suasoria, [234] sq.
- “Sublimity” and the Sublime, [153] sq.;
- sources of, [161] sq.
- Sulpicia (fl. c. 100 A.D.), poetess, [265] and [note].
- Super Thebaiden, [394].
- Superbia Carminum, [428] sq.
- Sylvæ of Statius, [268], [269].
- Symmachus, Q. Aurelius (præf. urb., [384] A.D.), [330] sq.
- Symposiacs, Plutarch’s, [144-146].
- Synesius (fl. c. 400), bishop, poet, and philosopher, [176], [177].
- Tacitus, C. Cornelius (b. (?), consul, 97 A.D., d. c. 120 (?)), historian, [212], [219], [270], [271], [274 note]:, [277], [280-284] (?), [312], [387].
- Taine, M., [241], [283 note].
- Tapeinosis = “mean language,” [297] and [note].
- Tennyson, [241], [252], [326].
- Terence (P. Terentius Afer), (b. 195 A.C., d. 159), comic poet, [213 note], [311], [387].
- Terentianus Maurus (fl. c. 100 A.D.), metrical writer, [404 note].
- Thackeray, [266], [338].
- Thebaid, the, [269], [394], [410].
- Themistius (fl.. 4th cent. P.C., prefect of Constantinople, 384), rhetorician, philosopher, and statesman, [109], [123].
- Theocritus (fl. 3rd cent. A.C.), poet, [307].
- Theodolus (12th cent.), writer, [409].
- Theodorus (author of phrase parenthyrson) = probably Th. of Gadara, very famous as rhetorician just before and about the Christian era (there was another Th. of Byzantium in Plato’s time), [156 note].
- Theon, Aelius (3rd cent. A.D. (?)), rhetorician, [93-95].
- Theophrastus (b. (?) d. in very old age, 287 A.C.), philosopher, [61] and [note], [235 note], [296], [309].
- Théry, Augustin François (b. 1796, d. 1878), Histoire des opinions Littéraires, [vi note], [9 note], [320 note].
- Thomson, James, [296].
- Thucydides, son of Olorus (b. 471 A.C., d. c. 401), [111], [129] sq., [190], [305], [312].
- Tiberius (date ?), rhetorician, [103].
- Timæus (fl. c. 350-250 A.C.), historian, [160].
- Tisias (fl. 5th cent. A.C.), rhetorician, [16].
- Translation, Dante on, [442], [443].
- “Transport,” Longinus on, [155] sq.
- Trattatello, Boccaccio’s, on Dante, [457] sq.
- Trench, Archbishop, [68], [69].
- Trissino, [417].
- Tristram Shandy, [243].
- Trivium, the, [351], [366], [367], [432].
- “Trojan Oration,” Dion Chrysostom’s, [111].
- Trope, distinction of, from Figure, [301 note].
- Troy, the Tale of, [120].
- Tuscan Dialect, [420] sq.
- Twelve Wise Men, the, [344].
- Twice Accused Man, Lucian’s, [150], [151].
- Tynnichus of Chalcis (fl. 5th cent. A.C. (?)), poet, [20] and [note].
- Tzetzes, John (12th cent.), grammarian, [175].
- Umbraticus doctor, [244 note].
- Unity of Action the only true Aristotelian “Unity,” [37].
- Valerius Flaccus (fl. 1st cent. P.C.), poet, [310].
- Varro, Terentius (b. 116 A.C., d. 28), grammarian and miscellaneous writer, [240], [241].
- —— P. V. Atacinus (b. 82 A.C.), poet, [310].
- Venantius Fortunatus (V. Honorius Clementianus F.) (b. 530 A.D., d. c. 610), presbyter and poet, [396-399], [406].
- Vergilius Romanus (fl. c. 100), comic and mimiambic poet, [276].
- Vexilla Regis, hymn, [396].
- Victor, Sulpicius (?), rhetorician, [349].
- Victorinus (Marius) (fl. 4th cent. P.C.), rhetorician, [348], [349], [380], [405].
- Vinsauf, Geoffrey of (fl. c. 1200), poet, [406].
- Virgil (P. Virgilius or Vergilius Maro) (b. 70 A.C., d. 19), [212], [214], [216] note, [248], [269], [310], [324-340] passim, [344], [377], #378 note:f465:, [465], [466].
- Volcatius Sedigitus (fl. c. 100 A.C.), poet (?), [213 note], [241].
- Walpole, Horace, [271 note].
- Wireker, Nigel (d. 1188), monk and poet, [414 note].
- Wit, Quintilian on, [293-295].
- Wordsworth, W., [39], [296], [436].
- Wright, Thomas, [377 note], [405 note], [410 note].
- Xenophanes of Colophon (fl. 6th cent. A.C.), philosopher, [11];
- Xenophon (b. c. 444 A.C., d. c. 354), historian, historical novelist, and miscellaneous writer, [161], [309].
- Youthfulness, mediæval, [470] sq.
- Zenodotus (fl. c. 208), grammarian and critic, [74], [75].
- Zoilus (fl. 4th cent. A.C.), [75], [79], [302].
- Zonæus (date?), rhetorician, [103].
- ζῷον, meaning of, in the Poetics, [33 note].
Transcriber’s Note
There was no opening half-title in the source used to prepare this text.
No attempt was made to check the validity of each index entry’s references, however several of them seem spurious:
- “Antimachus” is referred to a note on p. 20, but it is unclear which note that may be. He is mentioned by name on the page itself.
- “Mimes, the prose Greek”, is not mentioned either in a note on p. 21, nor on p. 22 itself.
- “Plato” is not mentioned in any note on p. [145].
Notes
[49.20]: The word ‘curial’ on p. 49 (“a curial instance of that commentatorial lues...”) seems odd. ‘Crucial’ may have been intended, but seems more likely to have been ‘curious’.
Corrections
Errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected, and are noted here. The references are to the page and line in the original.
| [109.24] | He travelled over[ a] great part | Added. |
| [158.note] | Longi[un/nu]s | Transposed. |
| [195.32] | Sword of Sharpness itself[,] but he is | Added. |
| [201.6] | to so much advantage as with Greek[.] | Added. |
| [203.26] | oratory in Greece is not[,] nor is | Restored. |
| [205.25] | for personal genealogy[;] | Added. |
| [209.3] | Quintil[l]ian | Removed. |
| [212.note] | in reference to Latin Criticism[.] | Added. |
| [215.3] | is very unlikely[.] | Added. |
| [229.note] | Satires (second series[)], | Added. |
| [234.11] | “Suasories[’/”] | Replaced. |
| [237.22] | seemed to Aristotle himself himself[.] | Added. |
| [251.note] | the confusion of tragic and epic style[.] | Added. |
| [266.8] | by no means i[n/m]maculate | Replaced. |
| [267.11] | every kind of poetry[.] | Added. |
| [307.note] | a substantial portion of Antimachus[.] | Added. |
| [406.28] | of the present chapter[.] | Added. |
| [457.11] | is not yet there[.] | Added. |
| [462.note] | when he [(denied /denied (] (loc. cit.) | Moved parenthesis. |