Po´thos.
God of the amities of love;
one of the numerous attendants of Venus, [106].
Pri´am.
Same as Podarces, [152];
King of Troy, [307];
Paris received by, [310];
duel witnessed by, [320];
Hector, son of, [325];
Hector’s death seen by, [328];
Mercury leads, [329];
Polyxena, daughter of, [330];
death of, [335], [361].
Pri-a´pus.
God of the shade;
pursues the nymph Lotis, [299], [301].
Pro´cris.
Wife of Cephalus;
slain by his unerring javelin, [70], [71];
significance, [387], [389].
Pro-crus´tes (The Stretcher).
Encountered and slain by Theseus, [252].
Prϫtus.
Husband of Anteia, and kinsman of Bellerophon, [291], [292].
Pro-me´theus (Forethought).
Son of Iapetus;
man created by, [25];
Olympus visited by, [27];
chained to Caucasian Mountains, [28];
Hercules delivers, [28], [227];
Deucalion, son of, [37];
significance, [379], [398].
Pro-ser´pi-na.
Same as Proserpine and Persephone;
goddess of vegetation, [183-197];
Orpheus visits, [77];
Adonis welcomed by, [110];
Pluto kidnaps, [159];
emblem of death, [212];
significance, [396].
Pro-tes-i-la´us.
First Greek who landed on Trojan coast, [316], [317].
Pro´teus.
Inferior sea divinity;
shepherd of the deep, [156];
Menelaus consults, [336];
significance, [381].