his vision of the glories of Rome, ii. 178;

his disappearance in a thunderstorm, ii. 181;

worshipped after death as Jupiter Indiges, ii. 181;

and the Game of Troy, iv. 76

—— and Dido, iii. 312, 313, v. 114 n. 1

Aeolus, King of the Winds, i. 326

Aeschines, spurious epistles of, ii. 162 n. 2

Aeschylus, on Typhon, v. 156

Aesculapius brings Hippolytus or Virbius to life, i. 20, iv. 214;

horses dedicated by Hippolytus to, i. 21 n. 2, viii. 41 n. 5;