P. 196.—“Dædˈa-lus.” Fabled to have been an Athenian architect who, for murder, was condemned to death. He fled to Crete, where he constructed among other works a labyrinth at Gnosˈsus, or Cnossus, in which to confine the monster Minotaur. The caves and quarries in Mount Ida probably led to this legend.
P. 197.—“Aˌri-adˈne.” The daughter of Minos, the king of Crete.
P. 201.—“Mōˈly.”
“That Moly,
That Hermes once to wise Ulysses gave.”—Milton.
(See page 231 of “Preparatory Greek Course.”)
P. 202.—“Euˈry-tus.” A legendary hero of Thessaly, said to have been a famous archer. He instructed Hercules in this art, and even boasted to be equal to Apollo.
P. 208.—“Dyˈmas.”
P. 210.—“Er-y-manˈthi-an.” Pertaining to a mountain in Arcadia, famous as the scene of the hunt by Hercules of the Erymanthean boar.
“Ta-ygˈe-tus.” A range of mountains between Laconia and Messuria.