INDEX.


1. Von der Nachahmung der griechischen Werke in der Malerei und Bildhauerkunst, p. 21, 22.

2. Brumoy Théât. des Grecs, T. ii. p. 89.

3. Iliad v. 343. Ἡ δὲ μέγα ἰάχουσα.

4. Iliad v. 859.

5. Th. Bartholinus. De Causis contemptæ a Danis adhuc Gentilibus Mortis, cap. 1.

6. Iliad vii. 421.

7. Odyssey iv. 195.

8. Chateaubrun.

9. See Appendix, note 1.

10. See Appendix, note 2.

11. Aristophanes, Plut. v. 602 et Acharnens. v. 854.

12. Plinius, lib. xxx. sect. 37.

13. De Pictura vet. lib. ii. cap. iv. sect. 1.

14. Plinius, lib. xxxiv. sect. 9.

15. See Appendix, note 3.

16. See Appendix, note 4.

17. Plinius, lib. xxxv. sect. 35. Cum mœstos pinxisset omnes, præcipue patruum, et tristitiæ omnem imaginem consumpsisset, patris ipsius vultum velavit, quem digne non poterat ostendere.

18. Valerius Maximus, lib. viii. cap. 2. Summi mœroris acerbitatem arte exprimi non posse confessus est.

19. Antiquit. expl. T. i. p. 50.

20. See Appendix, note 5.

21. Bellorii Admiranda, Tab. 11, 12.

22. Plinius, lib. xxxiv. sect. 19.

23. See Appendix, note 6.

24. Philippus, Anthol. lib. iv. cap. 9, ep. 10.

Ἀιεὶ γὰρ διψᾷς βρέφεων φονον. ἦ τις Ἰήσων
Δεύτερος, ἤ Γλαύκη τις πάλι σoὶ πρόφασις;
Ἐῤῥε καὶ ἐν κηρῷ παιδοκτόνε....

25. Vita Apoll. lib. ii. cap. 22.

26. See Appendix, note 7.

27. Mercure de France, April, 1755, p. 177.

28. “The Theory of Moral Sentiments,” by Adam Smith, part i. sect. 2, chap 1. (London, 1761.)

29. Trach. v. 1088, 1089:

ὅστις ὥστε παρθένος
Βέβρυχα κλαίων....

30. Topographiæ Urbis Romæ, lib. iv. cap. 14. Et quanquam hi (Agesander et Polydorus et Athenodorus Rhodii) ex Virgilii descriptione statuam hanc formavisse videntur, &c.

31. Suppl. aux Ant. Expliq. T. i. p. 242. Il semble qu’Agésandre, Polydore, et Athénodore, qui en furent les ouvriers, aient travaillé comme à l’envie, pour laisser un monument qui répondait à l’incomparable description qu’a fait Virgile de Laocoon, &c.

32. See Appendix, note 8.

33. Paralip. lib. xii. v. 398–408.

34. Or rather serpent, for Lycophron mentions but one:

καὶ παιδοβρῶτος πορκέως νήσους διπλᾶς·

35. See Appendix, note 9.

36. See Appendix, note 10.

37.

Their destined way they take,
And to Laocoon and his children make;
And first around the tender boys they wind,
Then with their sharpened fangs their limbs and bodies grind.
The wretched father, running to their aid
With pious haste, but vain, they next invade.—Dryden.

38. See Appendix, note 11.

39. With both his hands he labors at the knots.

40.

Twice round his waist their winding volumes rolled,
And twice about his gasping throat they fold.
The priest thus doubly choked,—their crests divide,
And towering o’er his head in triumph ride.—Dryden.

41. See Appendix, note 12.

42. See Appendix, note 13.

43. His holy fillets the blue venom blots.—Dryden.

44. See Appendix, note 14.

45. See Appendix, note 15.

46. See Appendix, note 16.

47. The first edition was issued in 1747; the second, 1755. Selections by N. Tindal have been printed more than once.

48. Val. Flaccus, lib. vi. v. 55, 56. Polymetis, dial. vi. p. 50.

49. See Appendix, note 17.

50. See Appendix, note 18.

51. See Appendix, note 19.

52. Tibullus, Eleg. 4, lib. iii. Polymetis, dial. viii.

53. Statius, lib. i. Sylv. 5, v. 8. Polymetis, dial. viii.

54. See Appendix, note 20.

55. Æneid, lib. viii. 725. Polymetis, dial. xiv.

56. In various passages of his Travels [Remarks on Italy] and his Dialogues on Ancient Medals.

57. Polymetis, dial. ix.

58. Metamorph. lib. iv. 19, 20. When thou appearest unhorned, thy head is as the head of a virgin.

59. Begeri Thes. Brandenb. vol. iii. p. 242.

60. Polymetis, dial. vi.

61. Polymetis, dial. xx.

62. Polymetis, dial. vii.

63. Argonaut. lib. ii. v. 102–106. “Gracious the goddess is not emulous to appear, nor does she bind her hair with the burnished gold, letting her starry tresses float about her. Wild she is and huge, her cheeks suffused with spots; most like to the Stygian virgins with crackling torch and black mantle.”

64. Thebaid. lib. v. 61–64. “Leaving ancient Paphos and the hundred altars, not like her former self in countenance or the fashion of her hair, she is said to have loosened the nuptial girdle and have sent away her doves. Some report that in the dead of night, bearing other fires and mightier arms, she had hasted with the Tartarean sisters to bed-chambers, and filled the secret places of homes with twining snakes, and all thresholds with cruel fear.”

65. See Appendix, note 21.

66. See Appendix, note 22.

67. See Appendix, note 23.

68. Polymetis, dial. vii.

69. See Appendix, note 24.

70. See Appendix, note 25.

71. Lipsius de Vesta et Vestalibus, cap. 13.

72. Pausanias, Corinth. cap. xxxv. p. 198 (edit. Kuhn).

73. Pausanias, Attic. cap. xviii. p. 41.

74. Polyb. Hist. lib. xvi. sect. 2, Op. T. ii. p. 443 (edit Ernest.).

75. See Appendix, note 26.

76. See Appendix, note 27.

77. Polymetis, dial. viii.

78. Statius, Theb. viii. 551.

79. Polymetis, dial. x.

80. See Appendix, note 28.

81. See Appendix, note 29.