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Tattooing, practised by the Scythian on
the Thracian women, 840; how con-
verted into an ornament, 840.
Taulopias, the, a fish, 513.
Teleclides cited, 92, 107, 126, 137, 145,
273, 421, 444, 529, 543, 582, 629, 689,
775, 886, 987, 1021, 1030, 1037, 1050.
Telenicus the Byzantian, a parodist,
1024.

Telephanes cited, 980.

Telesilla cited, 745, 987.

Telestagoras of Naxos, 548.

Telestes, or Telesis, the dancing master,
35.

Telestes of Selinus cited, 802, 984, 998,
1017.

Tellinæ, 150.

Temperance, praise of, 663.

Tenarus cited, 1072.

Tench, the, 485; white and black, 485.
Teneus cited, 803.

Terpsicles cited, 512, 617.
Terpsion cited, 533.
Teucer cited, 720.

Teuthis and teuthus, the difference be-
tween, 514; a cake called teuthis,
514.

Thais, a courtesan, causes the destruc-
tion of Persepolis, 922; marries Pto-
lemy, king of Egypt, 922.

Thales the Milesian cited, 119.
Thamneus, hospitality of, 412.
Thargelus, a kind of loaf, 188.
Thasian brine, 519; wine, 47, 53.

Theagenes the athlete, voracity of, 650.
Thearion the baker, 186.

Thebais, wine of the, 55; passage from
the poem so called, 735, (poetic ver-
sion, 1184.)

Themiso cited, 371.

Themiso the Cyprian, 455.

Themistagoras the Ephesian cited, 1087.
Themistocles, his life in Persia, 49;
luxury of, 854.
Theocles cited, 794.

Theocritus the Chian cited, 864.
Theocritus the Syracusan cited, 81, 138,
445, 446, 758.

Theodectes of Phaselus cited, 712, 717.
Theodoridas cited, 474. 758, 1118.
Theodorus cited, 201, 1032, 1081, 1083,
1104.

Theodorus of Hierapolis cited, 650, 651,
793.

Theodorus the Larissean, a water drinker,
72.

Theodote, a courtesan, buries Alcibiades,
919.

Theognetus cited, 173, 982, 1071.

Theognis cited, 487, 498, 676, 722, 823,
895.

Theolytus cited, 464, 749.
Theophilus cited, 9.

Theophilus the comic writer cited, 158,

537, 657, 753, 896, 900, (poetic version,
1192,) 938, 994, 1013.

Theophrastus cited, 30, 36, 52, 53, 57,
68, 72, 82, 83, 89, 91, 93, 97, 101, 102,
104, 106, 110, 112, 115, 117, 118, 122,
124, 129, 130, 137, 138, 139, 154, 174,
234, 278, 399, 429, 473, 490, 493, 499,
500, 524, 525, 548, 581, 582, 609, 614,
617, 632, 668, 669, 674, 677, 687, 688,
780, 733, 738, 750, 795, 843, 870, 900,
907, 967, 973, 995, 1041, 1046, 1084,
1085, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1093, 1101,
1107.
Theopompus the Athenian cited, 285,

414, 483, 510, 580, 589, 629, 630, 666.
768, 771, 774, 775, 1038, 1044, 1051.
Theopompus the Chian cited, 43, 56, 74,

83, 113, 130, 137, 142, 234, 235, 241,
254, 265, 267, 340, 364, 366, 391, 392,
395, 397, 399, 400, 407, 408, 410, 416,
426, 427, 432, 474, 604, 654, 687, 688,
689, 699, 702, 746, 750, 759, 802, 813,
829, 843, 844, 850, 851, 852, 853, 858,
869, 916, 949, 950, 965, 971, 983, 1001,
1039, 1051, 1080, 1120.
Theopompus the Colophonian cited,

284.

Thericlean cup, 749; distinguished from
the carchesian, 752, 756, 803.
Thericles of Corinth, 750.
Thermopotis, a kind of drinking cup,
757.

Theseus, enigmatic description of the
letters forming the word, 717.
Thesmophorius of Trozene cited, 48.
Thessalians, notorious gluttons, 223,
408, 659; extravagant, 844, 1059.
Thin people, list of, 882.

Thracians, dances of the, 25; banquets,
243, 250; tattooing, how introduced
among the women, 840.

Thrasylaus, pleasant madness of, 888.
Thrasyllus, conduct of Alcibiades to,
856.

Thrasymachus of Chalcedon cited, 655.
Thratta, the, a sea fish, 519.
Thrissa, the, a fish, 518.
Thronus, a kind of loaf, 184.
Thrushes, 107.

Thucydides cited, 37, 180, 299, 302, 763.
Thunnis and thunnus distinguished, 476.
Thursio, what, 487.

Thys, the Paphlagonian king, a great
eater, 654.
Tibur, wine of, 43.

Tilphossa, fountain of, 66.
Timachidas the Rhodian cited, 52, 87,

138, 189, 445, 581, 739, 1081, 1082,
1090, 1093, 1118.

Timæus cited, 56, 61, 263, 297, 393, 415,
427, 428, 513, 540, 690, 751, 829, 831,
836, 837, 838, 866, 916, 940, 961.
Timæus of Cyzicus, his history, 814.
Timagoras the Athenian offers adoration
to the king of Persia, 79.
Timagoras the Cretan, his favour with
Artaxerxes, 79.

Timarchus cited, 802.

Timea, wife of Agis of Sparta, seduced

by Alcibiades, 856.
Timocles cited, 180, 198, 266, 353, (poetic
version, 1136,) 355, (1137,) 374, (1150,)
378, 379, 382, 385, 387, 462, 470, 501,
536, 539, 605, 642, 680, 720, 908, (1194,)

940.

Timocrates, a friend of Athenæus, 1.
Timocreon the Rhodian, his epitaph,
655.

Timolaus the Theban, his intemperance,
688.

Timomachus cited, 1019.

Timon the Phliasian cited, 86, 254, 257,

258, 262, 394, 439, 442, 532, 641, 668,
703, 831, 938, 959, 973, 1115.

Timon and Lacydes at a drinking match,
691.

Timotheus of Athens, the son of a
courtesan, 922.

Timotheus of Miletus cited, 202, 382,

734; accused of corrupting the ancient
music, 1017.

Tinachidas of Rhodes wrote on feasts,
7.

Tindium, temple of, in Egypt, 1085.
Tirynthians, the, incapable of serious
business, 410.

Tithenidia, festival of, 225.

Titormus, a great eater, 650.

Torches, 1119.

Torpedo, the, 493.

Towels, 647.

Trachurus, the, 513.

Tragedy, invention of, 65.

Tragelaphus, a drinking cup, 742, 800.
Trebellian wine, 44.
Trefoils, 1094.

Trichias, or trichis, a fish, said to be at-
tracted by music, 518.
Trifoline wine, 43.

Trinkets, golden, proscribed by Lycur-
gus and by Plato, 367.
Tripe, 157.

Tripod, the cup of Bacchus, 62; a musi-
cal instrument, 1018.

Trireme, house at Agrigentum, why so
called, 61; a kind of drinking cup, 800.
Træzenian wine, 52.

Trojan war, its cause, 896.
Tromilican cheese, 1052.
Truffles, 102.

Trumpeter, Herodorus, the, 653.
Tryphon cited, 86, 131, 180, 188, 189,
279, 283, 468, 627, 630, 806, 986, 1024.
Tunnies, 436, 473, 518; thunnis and
thunnus distinguished, 576.

Turnips, 581; the food of Manius Cro-
rius, 660.

Turtle-doves, 620, 622.
Tyron bread, 182.

Tyrrhenians, luxury of the, 829.

UDDER, a dish made of, 629, 1050.
Ulban wine, 44.

Ulysses, voracity of, 649; his love of
pleasure, 822.

Umbrians, the, given to luxury, 844.
Unguents, where the best are brought
from, 1099; prices of some, 1104;
supposed to produce grey hair, 1106.
Unmarried men, how treated in Sparta,
889.

Unmixed wines, 673, 1107.

Uppianus the Tyrian, a Deipnosophist, 2.
Uria, a bird, 623.

VARRO cited, 258.
Veliternian wine, 44.
Venafrum, wine of, 44.

Venus Callipyge, temple dedicated to,
887.

Venus Hetæra, 913.

Venus the Prostitute, 915.
Vetches, 89; how used, 90.
Vinegar, 111.

Voracity ascribed to Hercules, 648.

WALNUTS, 138.

Wars, the greatest, occur on account of
women, 896, 911.

Washing hands, 644; use of perfumes,
645.

Water and water-drinkers, 66; various
kinds of water, 68; weight of water,
70, 75; boiled water, 201.
Water-drinkers, list of, 73.

Willow, or osier, garlands of, 1072,
1074.

Wine, origin of the name, 57; praises of,
65; different kinds, 43 to 57; Homer
dissuades from the free use of, 16;
evils of drunkenness, 672; pure wine
only to be used for religious purposes,
1107; mixed wine, 667; unmixed
wine, 673; sweet wine, 207; scented
wine, 53; spiced wine, 52.

Wives, doubtful whether Socrates had
two, 889; concubines tolerated by,
890; many wives of Hercules and of
Theseus, 891; of Philip, 892; com-
plaints against, 894.

Women said to be fond of drinking, 696;
wine forbidden to them by the Ro-
mans, 696; restraints on, in Syracuse,
835; liberty of, among the Sybarites,
835; among the Tyrrhenians, 829; in-
famous treatment of, 702, 826, 827,
840, 849, 866; ruin of states attributed
to, 896; many beautiful, mentioned,
971.

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sion, 1141,) 501, 578, 659, 671, 680, 696,
697, 755, 894, 910, 1085, 1107.
Xenarchus the Rhodian, a drunkard,
689.

Xenocrates cited, 288.

Xenocrates the Chalcedonian, his lazi-
ness, 849.

Xenophanes of Chalcedon wrote drinking
songs, 5,

Xenophanes of Colophon cited, 89, 580,
652, 669, 729, (poetic version, 1182,)
737, 843.

Xenophon cited, 25, 34, 37, 48, 80, 118,
157, 200, 205, 224, 233, 234, 254, 274,
275, 279, 289, 299, 344, 346, 347, 350,
395, 428, 436, 579, 580, 588, 614, 626,
630, 631, 647, 663, 668, 675, 685, 734,
743, 759, 770, 793, 807, 818, 825, 871,
939, 978, 980, 1041, 1045, 1096.

YOUNG wives, caution against marrying,
895.

ZACYNTHIAN wine, 54.

Zacynthians, the, inexperienced in war,
846.

Zaleucus, his law against drunkenness,
677.

Zariadres and Odatis, story of, 919.
Zeneus, or Zenis, cited, 960.

Zeno the Citiæan, his excuse for bad
temper, 91; his reproof of gluttony,
544; cited, 254, 261, 367.

Zenodotus cited, 19, 20, 159, 513, 649.
Zenophanes cited, 921.

Zoïlus the grammarian, a Deipnoso-
phist, 2.

Zopyra, a drunken woman, 697.

THE END.

R. CLAY, PRINTER, BREAD STREET HILL.

AN

ALPHABETICAL LIST

OF BOOKS CONTAINED IN

BOHN'S LIBRARIES.

Detailed Catalogue, arranged according to the various
Libraries, will be sent on application.

ADDISON'S Works. With the Notes of Bishop Hurd, Portrait, and 8 Plates of Medals and Coins. Edited by H. G. Bohn. 6 vols. 3s. 6d. each.

ÆSCHYLUS, The Dramas of. Translated into English Verse by Anna Swanwick. 4th Edition, revised. 5s.

The Tragedies of. Newly translated from a revised text by Walter Headlam, Litt. D., and C. E. S. Headlam, M.A. 3s. 6d. The Tragedies of. Translated into Prose by T. A. Buckley, B.A. 3s. 6d.

ALLEN'S (Joseph, R. N.) Battles of the British Navy. Revised Edition, with 57 Steel Engravings. 2 vols. 5s. each.

AMMIANUS MARCELLINUS. History of Rome during the Reigns of Constantius, Julian, Jovianus, Valentinian, and Valens. Translated by Prof. C. D. Yonge, M.A. 7s. 6d.

ANDERSEN'S Danish Legends and Fairy Tales. Translated by Caroline Peachey. With 120 Wood Engravings. 5s. ANGLO-SAXON CHRONICLE. Edited by J. A. Giles, D.C.L. With a Map. 35. 6d. ANTONINUS (M. Aurelius), The Thoughts of. Trans. literally, with Notes and Introduction by George Long, M.A. 35. 6d. APOLLONIUS RHODIUS. 'The Argonautica.' Translated by E. P. Coleridge, B.A. 5s. APPIAN'S Roman History. Translated by Horace White, M.A., LL.D. With Maps and Illustrations. 2 vols. 6s. each. APULEIUS, The Works of Comprising the Golden Ass, God of Socrates, Florida, and Discourse of Magic. 5s.

ARGYLL (Duke of). The Life of Queen Victoria. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. ARIOSTO'S Orlando Furioso. Translated into English Verse by W. S. Rose. With Portrait, and 24 Steel Engravings. 2 vols. 5s. each.

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History of Animals. Trans. by Richard Cresswell, M.A. 5s.

Organon; or, Logical Treatises, and the Introduction of Porphyry. Translated by the Rev. O. F. Owen, M.A. 2 vols. 3s. 6d. each.

Rhetoric and Poetics. Trans. by T. Buckley, B.A. 55.

ARRIAN'S Anabasis of Alexander, together with the Indica. Translated by E. J. Chinnock, M.A., LL.D. With Maps and Plans. 55.

ATHENAUS. The Deipnosophists; or, the Banquet of the Learned. Trans. by Prof. C. D. Yonge, M.A. 3 vols. 5s. each.

BACON'S Moral and Historical Works, including the Essays, Apophthegms, Wisdom of the Ancients, New Atlantis, Henry VII., Henry VIII., Elizabeth, Henry Prince of Wales, History of Great Britain, Julius Cæsar, and Augustus Cæsar. Edited by J. Devey, M.A. 3s. 6d.

Novum Organum and Advancement of Learning. Edited by J. Devey, M.A. 5s.

BASS'S Lexicon to the Greek Testament. 21.

BAX'S Handbook of the History of Philosophy, for the use of Students. By E. Belfort Bax. 5s. BEAUMONT and FLETCHER, their finest Scenes, Lyrics, and other Beauties, selected from the whole of their works, and edited by Leigh Hunt. 3s. 6d. BECHSTEIN'S Cage and Chamber Birds, their Natural History, Habits, Food, Diseases, and Modes of Capture. Translated, with considerable additions on Structure, Migration, and Economy, by H. G. Adams. Together with SWEET BRITISH WARBLERS. With 43 coloured Plates and Woodcut Illustrations. 5s.

BEDE'S (Venerable) Ecclesiastical History of England. Revised Translation. With Introduction, Life, and Notes by A. M. Sellar, late Vice-Principal Lady Margaret College, Oxford. 5s.

BELL (Sir Charles). The Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression, as connected with the Fine Arts. By Sir Charles Bell, K.H. 5s.

BERKELEY (George), Bishop of Cloyne, The Works of, Edited by George Sampson. With Biographical Introduction by the Right Hon. A. J. Balfour, M.P. 3 vols. 5s. each. BION.

See THEOCRITUS. BJÖRNSON'S Arne and the Fisher Lassie. Translated by W. H. Low, M.A. 35. 6d.

BLAIR'S Chronological Tables Revised and Enlarged. Compre. hending the Chronology and History of the World, from the Earliest Times to the Russian Treaty of Peace, April 1856. By J. Willoughby Rosse. Double vol. 10s.

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