The haunt of Diana the goddess of the hunt and her virgin companions.

HQDORV��0DHQDOD Bk I:199-243. A mountain range in Arcadia. (Pausanias, VIII xxxvi, says it is sacred to Pan, and the people living there hear him piping.) Bk II:401-416. Bk II:441-465. The haunt of Diana the goddess of the hunt and her virgin companions. Bk V:572-641. Passed by Arethusa in her flight.

0DHRQLDV��0DHRQLD Bk II:227-271. An ancient name for Lydia. BkVI:1-25. The country of Arachne. Bk VI:146-203. The country of Niobe, and Mount Sipylus.

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0DHRQLV Bk VI:103-128. An epithet of Arachne, as a native of Maeonia.

0DHUD Bk VII:350-403. Hecuba, changed into a black bitch of Hecate, in Thrace, where she was taken by Ulysses after the fall of Troy. She murdered Polymestor her son-in-law, who had killed her son Polydorus. She terrified the Thracians who tried to kill her, by her howling.

0DJQHWHV Bk XI:346-409. The inhabitants of Magnesia in Thessaly.

0DLD Bk II:676-701. The daughter of Atlas, a Pleiad, and mother of Mercury by Jupiter. Bk XI:266-345. The mother of Mercury.

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0DQWR A Theban prophetess, the daughter of Tiresias. Bk VI:146-203. Calls the women of Thebes to the worship of Latona and her children, Apollo and Diana.

0DUDWKRQ A town and plain on the east coast of Attica. Site of the famous Greek victory in the war against Persia. Bk VII:425-452. Theseus overcame a white bull of Poseidon there, brought by Hercules from Crete. He then sacrificed it at Athens on the Acropolis.

0DUHRWLFXV Bk IX:764-797. Of Mareota, a lake and city in Lower Egypt. (See Shelley ‘The Witch of Atlas) Protected by Isis.

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0DUPDULGHV From Marmarica, in Egypt. Bk V:107-148. Corythus comes from there.

0DUV��0DYRUV The war god, son of Jupiter and Juno. An old name for him is Mavors. Bk III:1-49. The snake killed by Cadmus is sacred to him. Bk IV:167-189. Venus commits adultery with him and he is caught in a net with her by her husband Vulcan. Bk XII:64-145. His armour is decorative only. Bk XIV:772-804. The father of Romulus. Bk XIV:805-828. He asks for Romulus’s deification.

0DUV\DV A Satyr of Phrygia who challenged Apollo to a contest in musical skill, and was flayed alive by the God when he was defeated. (An analogue for the method of making primitive flutes,

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