Gor´gons, three monstrous females, with huge teeth, brazen claws and snakes for hair, sight of whom turned beholders to stone; Medusa, the most famous, slain by Perseus (which See), [115].
Gor´lois, Duke of Tintadel, [397], [398].
Gou-ver-nail, squire of Isabella, queen of Lionesse, protector of her son Tristram while young, [449], and his squire in knighthood, [463].
Graal, the Holy, cup from which the Saviour drank at Last Supper, taken by Joseph of Arimathea to Europe, and lost, its recovery becoming a sacred quest for Arthur’s knights, [392], [475], [487].
Graces, three goddesses who enhanced the enjoyments of life by refinement and gentleness; they were Aglaia (brilliance), Euphrosyne (joy), and Thalia (bloom), [4], [8].
Gra-das´so, king of Sericane, [672], [700], [702], [737], [740], [765], [768]-[769], [784]-[788].
Græ´æ, three gray-haired female watchers for the Gorgons, with one movable eye and one tooth between the three, [115]-[116].
Grand La´ma, Buddhist pontiff in Thibet, [327].
Great Bear, constellation, [32]-[33], [36], [42].
Gren´del, monster slain by Beowulf, [635].