Their marriage customs, [277].
Women in the poetic age, [278].
Peculiarity of Greek feelings on the position of women, [280], [281].
Unnatural forms assumed by vice amongst them, [294]
Gregory the Great, his contempt for Pagan literature, ii. [201], note.
His attitude towards Phocas, [264]
Gregory of Nyssa, St., his eulogy of virginity, ii. [322]
Gregory of Tours, manner in which he regarded events, ii. [240-242], [261], [277]
Grotesque, or eccentric, pleasure derived from the, compared with that from beauty, i. 85
Gundebald, his murders approved of by his bishop, ii. [237]