IIUSICAL. 553 NAUPAKTUS. ilve meaning of, among t lie ancient Greeks, viii. 349. Musical modes of tlie Greeks, iii. 212. Musicians, Greek, in the seventh cen- tury B. c, iv. 76 n. MfitJof, i. 356, 432 ti.. 458. Mutilated Grecian captives at Perse- polis. xii. 173. Mutilation o(' dead bodies in legen- dary and historical Greece, ii. 92; of i3essus, xii. 206. Mntini/ at Atliens immediately be- fore Solon's legislation, iii. 93. Mijcidonia, iii. 210. Mj/icale, Pan-Ionic festival at, iii. 177 ; the battle of, v. 191 seq. Mt/kalessus, massacre at, vii. 357 seq. Mifknce, i. 90 seq. Mi/riandrus, Alexander's march from Kilikia to, xii. 114; Alexanc'er's return from, xii. 117. Mj/rkinus, iv. 273, 296. Mijrmidons, origin of, i. 184. Ahron, iii. 32. ^^l/r^n:de.% v. 323, 331. Mi/rtilus, i. l.'>9. Mi/sia, the Ten Thousand Greeks in, ix. 172 seq. Mysians, iii. 196, 205 seq., 200. Mysteries, principal Pan-Hellenic, i. 28, 38, 41, 43, v. 209 n. ; and my- thcs, i. 496. Mastic legends, connectir:i of, with Egypt, i. 32 ; legends, contrast of, with Homeric hymns, i. 34 ; bro- therhoods, iii. 87. Mjjthe of Pandora and Prometheus, liow used in " VVorkf and Days," i. 71 ; meaning of the word, i. .356. Mijthes, how to be told, i. 2 ; Hesiodic, traceable to Krete and Delphi, i. 15 ; Grecian, origin of, i. 4, 52, 61 seq.. 340 seq. ; of the gods, discre- pancies in, i. 53 n., 54 ; contain gods, heroes and men, i. 64 ; formed the entire mental stock of the early Greeks, i. 340, 359 ; dif- ficulty of regarding them in the same light as the ancients did, i. 341 ; Grecian, adapted to the per- sonifying and patriotic tendencies of the Greeks, i. 344 seq. ; Grecian, beauty of. i. 351 : Grecian, liow to understand properly, i. 351 seq.; bow regarded by superior men in VOI,. XII. 47 the age of Thucydidds, i. 375 ; a©. commodated to a more advanced age, i. 376 seq.; treatment of, by poets and logographers, i, 377 seq ; treatment of, by historians, i. 391 seq; historicised,i.409 seq. ; treat- ment of, by philosophers, i. 418 seq.; allegorized, i. 419 seq. ; semi- historical interpretation of, i. 433 ; allegorical theory of, i. 436 ; con- nection of, with mysteries, i. 436 ; supposed ancient meaning of, i. 438; Plato on, i. 441 seq., 420; recapitulation of remarks on, i, 450 seq.; famiMarityof the Greeks with, i. 456 seq. ; bearing of, on Grecian art, i. 459 seq.; German, i. 363; Grecian, proper treatment of, i. 487 seq. ; Asiatic, iii. 221. Mythical vord, opening of, i. 1 ; sen- timent in " Works and Days, i. 68 seq.; geography, i, 246 seq.; faith in the Homeric age, i. 357 : genealogies, i. 445 seq. : age, gods and men undistinguishahle in, i. 449 ; events, relics of, i. 457 ; ac- count of the alliance between the Ilerakleids and Dorians, ii. 2 ; ra- ces of Greece, ii. 19. Mythology, Grecian, sources of cnr information on, i. 106, German, Celtic, and Grecian, i. 462, 46.1, Grecian, how it would have been affected by the introduction of Christianity, b. c. 500, i. 467. Mythopceic faculty, stimulus to, i. 351 ; age, the, i. 361 ; tendencies, by what causes enfeebled, i. 301 seq."; tendencies in modern Europe, i, 469 seq. Myus, iii. 172. N. Napoleon, analogy between his rela- tion to the confederation of the Rhine, and that of Alexander to the Greeks, xii. 51. Nature, first regarded as impersonal, i. 368. Naukraries, iii. 52, 65. Naukratis, iii. 327, 335 seq. Naupaktus, origin of the name, ii. 3 ; Phormio's victory near, vi. 206 seq. ; Eurylochus's attack upon, vi. 301 J Demosthenes at, vi. 301