the father of dew, vi. 137;

the Saviour of the City, at Magnesia on the Maeander, vi. 238;

his intrigue with Persephone, vii. 12;

father of Dionysus by Demeter, vii. 12, 14, 66;

said to have transferred the sceptre to the young Dionysus, vii. 13;

said to have swallowed the heart of Dionysus, vii. 14;

his intrigue with Demeter, vii. 66;

his temple at Olympia, viii. 85;

his appearance to Hercules in the shape of a ram, viii. 172;

cake with twelve knobs offered to, ix. 351;