40
See Commentary.
41
For references to poetry and works of art, see corresponding sections in Commentary.
42
According to Thomas Moore's Song of a Hyperborean.
43
From Alexander's Feast.
44
For interpretation and illustration, see corresponding sections of Commentary.
45
Iliad, 22, 482; 9, 568; 20, 61.
46
Odyssey, 10, 508; 11, 20; 24, 1.
47
Sophocles, Œdipus Rex, 177.
48
Æneid, 6, 295.
49
From The Garden of Proserpine, by A. C. Swinburne.
50
Æneid, 6.
51
Odyssey, 4, 561.
52
Hes. Works and Days, 169.
53
From The Fortunate Islands, by Andrew Lang.
54
Iliad, 14, 231; 16, 672.
55
Odyssey, 24, 12; 19, 560. Æneid, 6, 893. Ovid, Metam. 11, 592.
56
For genealogical table, see Commentary.
57
For references to poetry and works of art, see corresponding sections of Commentary.
58
Iliad, 14, 303.
59
Iliad, 18, 30-50.
60
For genealogical table, see Commentary.
61
Wordsworth, Miscellaneous Sonnets.
62
Names of the corresponding Greek divinities are in parentheses.
63
For illustrative material, see Commentary.
64
Gellius, 5, 12. Ovid, Fasti, 1, 179. Macrobius, Sat. 1, 9-15.
65
From Macaulay's Prophecy of Capys.
66
Ovid, Metam. I, 700
67
Ovid, Metam. 2, 410
68
Translated by Andrew Lang: Theocritus, Bion, and Moschus, London, 1880.
69
§ 70.
70
Ovid, Metam. 3, 260
71
§§ 42, 110-113.
72
From E. R. Sill's Semele.
73
Commentary, §§ 118, 255.
74
Ovid, Metam. 7, 172
75
Roscher, Ausf. Lex. Lfg. 3, 379 [Schirmer]. Originals in Pausanias, Apollodorus, and Hyginus.
76
From Tennyson's Amphion. See Horace, Ars Poet. 394.
77
Ovid, Metam. 8, 620-724.
78
From The Sons of Cydippe, by Edmund Gosse in his On Viol and Flute.
79
§ 27, and Commentary.
80
From Ovid.
81
From Spenser's Muiopotmos.
82
Ovid, Metam. 6, 1-145.
83
§ 200.
84
Iliad, 5, 850
85
Iliad, 21, 390 (Lang, Leaf, and Myers' translation).
86
Ovid, Metam. 3, 1-137; 4, 563-614.
87
Iliad, 2, 1335.
88
Ovid, Metam. 6, 313-381.
89
§ 30.
90
Roscher, Ausf. Lex. Lfg. 2, 254, Article
91
Ovid, Metam. 10, 162-219.
92
Ovid, Metam. 2, 1-400.
93
§ 44.
94
95
96
Iliad, 1, 43-52 (Lang, Leaf, and Myers' translation).
97
Ovid, Metam. 6, 165-312.
98
From W. S. Landor's Niobe.
99
See Commentary, §§ 64, 80.
100
Iliad, 18, 564 (Lang, Leaf, and Myers' translation).
101
Cicero, Natura Deorum, 3, 22.
102
See Commentary.
103
From Browning's Balaustion's Adventure. The Greek form of the proper names has been retained.
104
Proserpine.
105
For the originals, see Iliad, 2, 715, and the Alcestis of Euripides.
106
Ovid, Metam. 11, 146-193.
107
§ 118.
108
§ 145.
109
Ovid, Metam. 1, 452-567.
110
From the Fable for Critics.
111
Iliad, 9, 561; Apollodorus, 1, 7, § 8.
112
Stephen Phillips, Marpessa.
113
Ovid, Metam. 4, 256-270.
114
§ 196.
115
§ 168.
116
Ovid, Metam. 5, 585-641.
117
Ovid, Metam. 3, 138-252.
118
Apollodorus, 1, 4, § 3.
119
Ovid, Fasti, 5, 537; Iliad, 18, 486, and 22, 29; Odyssey, 5, 121, 274.
120
The story is told by Hyginus in his Fables, and in his Poetical Astronomy.
121
Authorities are Pausanias, 5, 1, §§ 2-4; Ovid, Ars. Am. 3, 83; Tristia, 2, 299; Apollonius, and Apollodorus.
122
From the Endymion, Bk. 3.
123
§ 194.
124
Ovid, Metam. 10, 503-559, 708-739.
125
From an elegy intended to be sung at one of the spring celebrations in memory of Adonis. Translated from Bion by Andrew Lang.
126
Apuleius, Metam. Golden Ass, 4, 28, etc.
127
William Morris, The Story of Cupid and Psyche, in The Earthly Paradise.