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Lucrine Bay, a lake in Campania, famed for oysters Lyceus, a mountain in Arcadia Lyones, Lyonesse, a British name for Cornwall, or for Leon in Brittany

Machabeus. The redoubtable family of the Maccabees, first of whom was Judas Maccabæus, headed a patriotic revolt, won several great battles against Antiochus Epiphanes, and held out against them for many years. They were priests. See Book of the Maccabees

Macharus, a city in Peræa Maander, a river in Asia Minor

Manalus, a mountain in Arcadia

Mæonides, Homer
Mæotis, Sea of Azof
Magellan's Straits, off S.
America

Magnetic, magnet, P.R. ii. 168
Mahanaim, E. of Jordan, where
Jacob, after parting with
Laban, saw heavenly hosts
encamped

Maia, mother of Hermes, the messenger of Zeus. Raphael is compared to Hermes because sent as a messenger from Jehovah

Malabar, the S.-W. coast of India

Mammon, a personification of filthy lucre

manure, attend to, P.L. iv. 628 marasmus, consumption, P.L. xi. 487

Margiana, a province near to Sogdiana

marle, earth, P.L. i. 296 Mars, god of war in Roman mythology

mask or masque, a dramatical fantasia, with songs and dances, P.L. iv. 768 maugre, in spite of, P.L. iii. 255; P.R. iii. 368

meath, to press so as to make

mead, P.L. v. 344

Medusa, a Gorgon whose face turned into stone all that looked upon it. Perseus

slew her and cut off her head; from the blood-drops, as they fell, sprang serpents Megara, a name of one of the Furies, who were described as having snakes entwined in their hair Melesigenes, a title given to

Homer, by those who thought he was born on the banks of the Meles. Homer was wrongly derived by some from ὁ μὴ ὁρῶν, “he who sees not " Melibrea, in Thessaly, famous for its purple dye

Melinda, a haven near Zanzibar Memnon, an Ethiopian prince,

who fought in the Trojan War. He was renowned for his beauty

Memnonian, Susa was founded by the father of Memnon, who built its fortress

Memphian, of Memphis, a famous city of Egypt

Merce, a district of Ethiopia, between two rivers; called an island because formed by two branches of the Nile Michael, "who is like God?" an Archangel

Midas, King of Phrygia, judged that Pan sang sweeter than Apollo, and had his ears changed into asses' ears for his pains

middle (air), i.e. between earth and heaven, P.L. i. 516 middle (shore), of the Mediter

ranean, P.L. v. 339 Mincius, now Mincio, a river in N. Italy, flowing through Lake Garda, and passing into the Po

minim, minute thing, P.L. vii. 482

missive, projectile (adj.) P.L. vi. 519 Modin, the district from whence came Judas Maccabæus

Mogul, a dynasty of Moslem En perors, reigning at Agra first, then Lahore, then Delhi mole, mass, P.L. x. 300 Moloch, an Ammonite fire-god, to whom human sacrifice was

done, and other hideous rites

moly, a herb potent
magic charms, C. 636
Mombasa,

Mombaza,
Zanzibar
Mona, Anglesey

against

near

monostrophic, having one stanza Montalban, a town in the S. of France

Montezuma, emperor of Mexico, subdued by Cortes Morocco, in N. Africa Morpheus, god of sleep morrice, or morris, a dance

(originally Moorish), C. 116 Moses' chair, see Matt. xxiii. 2 Mountain, the Mount of Temptation cannot be Quarantaria, near Jericho, as the prospect shows. It may be one of the mountains of Armenia; or perhaps M. had no special mountain in his mind, but chose a central position and imagined one Mozambic, Mozambique, in E. Africa

Mulciber, Vulcan, god of fire and smith-craft Musacus, an early Greek poet must, new wine, P.L. v. 345 myrrhine, made of baked clay or some such substance, probably porcelain

Naiades, water-nymphs Namancos, marked in Mercator's Atlas near Cape Finisterre Narcissus, a beautiful youth, cold to a nymph Echo, who loved him and died of love. Nemesis made N. fall in love with his own image in a fountain; and he pined away and became the flower called by his name

nathless, nevertheless, P.L. i. 299

Nazarites, a sect who abstained

from all intoxicants and kept the hair unshorn Nebaioth, used for Ishmael in P.R. ii. 309, but really the name of Ishmael's eldest son (Gen. xxiii. 13). See Gen. xxi. 17

Nebo, the mountain from which Moses surveyed the Promised Land

nectar, the mythical drink of the gods, P.L. iv. 240

Negus, title of the King of Abyssinia

nepenthes, an opiate given by Helen to Menelaus. She got it from Polydamna, wife of Thone Neptune, Roman God of the sea, incensed against Ulysses, as described in the Odyssey Nereus, the "wise old man of the sea," father of fifty Nereides

nice, fastidious, P.L. v. 433; P.R. iv. 157 night-foundered, lost in the night, P.L. i. 204

Nineveh, a city on the Tigris, founded by Ninus

Niphates, a mountain in Ar

menia

Nisibis, in Mesopotamia Nisroch, a deity of Nineveh Norumbega, a part of N. America

Notus, the S. wind

numbering Israel, 1 Chron. xxi.

I

numerous, metrical, P.L. v. 150 Nymphs, guardian beings who inhabited trees, springs, and mountains Nyseian isle, Nysa in Libya, connected with Bacchus

Ob, a river of Siberia obdured, hardened, P.L. ii. 568 obnoxious, exposed, S.A. 106 obsequious, obedient, P.L. vi. 10 obtain, hold, P.R. i. 87 obvious, in the way, P.L. vi. 69 Echalia, probably in Thessaly,

whence Hercules was returning when he received the poisoned robe

Eta, a mountain in S. Thessaly, which Hercules, finding himself doomed to die, ascended, and burnt himself on a pyre

officious, subservient, P.L. viii.

99

Og, a giant, King of Bashan, Deut. iii. II

Olympian, at Olympia in Elis were held the most famous athletic contests of Greece Olympias, mother of Alexander the Great

Olympus, a mountain in Thessaly, where the Greeks supposed their gods to dwell; also used as a synonym for the sky

omnific, all-creating, P.L. vii. 217

Ophion, a Titan, driven from

Olympus by Kronos Ophir, the land whence Solomon got his gold

Ophiuchus, a northern constellation

Ophiusa, an island full of serpents opposition, an astrological term, used when the earth lies between two bodies and in one straight line with them, P.L. ii. 803

opprobrious, infamous, P.L. i. 403

Ops, wife of Saturn

optic glass, telescope, P.L. i. 288 orc, a sea-monster, P.L. xi. 835 Orcus, a Latin name of the king of the infernal regions Oread, a mountain nymph Oreb or Horeb, which properly means a dry place,' later used of the Sinaitic region

66

was

orient, bright, like the sunrise, P.L. xi. 205 Orion, a constellation figured

as an armed man, which was supposed to bring storms Ormus, Hormuz, a rich city on the Persian Gulf

Orontes, a river to the N. of Svria

Orphean, Orpheus was a mythi

cal musician, who played so beautifully that beasts and trees and rocks listened and followed him

Orpheus, a mythical singer, who went to Hades in order to recover his dead wife, Eurydice. He so charmed Pluto that Pluto consented, condition Orpheus should not look back upon her until

on

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Palatine, a hill of Rome where stood the palace of the later Emperors. M. anticipates in P.R. iv. 50, for then the buildings were more modest Pales, a Roman deity of flocks and shepherds

pampered, leafy (Lat. pampinus, "vine"), P.L. v. 214 Pan, the rural god of the Greeks, patron of flocks and shepherds; a kind of personification of nature. The word Tây means everything," and M. plays on this word in P.L. iv. 266, though there is no real connection between the two Pandemonium, the place of

All-Devils. A word coined on the analogy of Pantheon Pandora, a woman made by the gods to do mischief to

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paragon (vb.), to compare, P.L. | Phlegeton (Phlegethon), river of x. 426

a

parallax, an astronomical term, used metaphorically for strange effect of vision, P.R. | iv. 40

paramount, chief, P.L. ii. 508 paranymph, bridesman, S.A.

1020

pardon, dispensation or indulgence, P.L. iii. 492 peal, fill with noise, P.L. ii. 920 Pegasus, the winged horse of Greek mythology; in later times associated with the Muses, because with his hoof he struck, and forth came the inspiring fount called Hippocrene

Pellean, of Pella in Macedonia; used of Alexander the Great, who was born there. At the battle of the Issus, he captured, when he was twentythree years old, the wife and daughters of Darius, with other ladies not a few; but dismissed them free Pelleas, a Knight of the Round Table

Pellemore, a Knight of the

Round Table

Pelops' line, the Thyestiada, whose story was the theme of many Greek tragedies Pelorus, the N.-E. promontory of Sicily

Peor, i.e. Baal-peor, a licentious deity

Perca, a district E. of the Jordan

perfet, perfect (older and correct spelling), P.R. iv. 468 Persepolis, ancient capital of Persia

person, character, P.L. x. 156 Petsora, Petchora on the Arctic

ocean

Pharphar, a river flowing near Damascus

Philip, father of Alexander the Great. Alexander began his reign at twenty, conquered Persia when not yet twentyfive, and died at thirty-three Philomel, the nightingale Phineus, a blind soothsayer of old Greece

fire, one of the rivers of the infernal regions in Greek mythology

Phlegra, the battle-field of the gods and giants in Greek mythology

phoenix, a fabulous bird, supposed to live a thousand years, and then to burn itself, on which another would rise from the ashes Pindarus, a great Greek lyric poet

pinnacle, Matt. iv. 5 platane, plane-tree, P.L. iv. 478 Plato, most famous of the Greek philosophers

Pluto, king of the underworld poise, weigh down, P.L. ii. 905 Pomona, the Roman goddess

of fruit trees, wedded by Vertumnus

Pompey, Cn. Pompius Magnus, distinguished himself before he was twenty-three, but did not obtain a triumph so early as M. states ponent, from the W. or sunsetting, P.L. x. 704 Pontic King, Mithradates pontifical, bridge-making, P.L. x. 313

Pontus, the Black Sea; famed for its fish; also a district in Asia Minor southward of the

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stronghold E. of Jordan. See 1 Kings xxii. 34 ramp, jump, P.L. iv. 343 Raphael, an archangel. See Asmodeus

realty, royalty, P.L. vi. 115 rebeck, a kind of violin, P. R. p. 401

recorder, a wind instrument, P.L. i. 551

redound, overflow, P.L. ii. 889 Regulus, M. Atilius Regulus was taken prisoner at Carthage. He was sent home on parole, and bidden to persuade the Romans to make peace; but, on the contrary, he is said to have told them to hold out, and then he returned to his death

reluctant, struggling, P.L. x. 515 result, rebound, P.L. vi. 619 Rhea, wife of Jupiter Ammon Rhea, wife of Kronos (Saturn) Rhene, the Rhine Rhodope, a mountain

range

between Thrace and Macedonia. Here was the oracle of the Thracian Dionysus. The "Thracian bard" Orpheus did not honour Dionysus, who sent upon him the Bassaridæ (a rout of Mænad women), and they tore him to pieces, nor could his mother Calliope aid him rhomb, wheel, P.L. viii. 134 Rimmon, a Syrian deity rined, rinded, P.L. v. 342 ruin, fall, P.L. vi. 868 Rutupina æquora, Rutupiæ is the modern Richborough

Sabean, Arabian

sad, serious, P.L. vi. 541 Salem, properly Salim, P.R. ii. 21. See John iii. 23 Salmanassar,

Shalmanezer, King of Assyria. See 2 Kings xvii. I

salve, save, P.R. iv. 12 Samoed shore, in Siberia Samos, an island off the coast of Asai Minor near Ephesus (not in the Cyclades) sapient king, Solomon Sarra, Tyre, famous for its purple dye

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