I'OKTS. 5GG rnOTAGOllAS Rent, i. 349; epic, ii. 117 seq.; epic, Homeric and Hesiodic, ii. 118; di- dactic and mystic hexameter, ii. 119; lyric and choric, intended ^or the ear, ii. 137 ; Greelt, ad- vances of, within a centui-y and a half after Terpander, iv. 77. Foets inspired by the Muse, i. 355 ; iambic, elegiac, and lyric, predom- inance of the present in, i. 363 : and logographers, their treatment of mytlies, i. 377 seq. ; earlj-, chro- nological evidence of, ii. 45 seq.; epic, and their probable dates, ii. 122 ; cyclic, ii. 123 seq ; gnomic or moralizing, iv. 91 seq. Polemarch, Athenian, iii. 74. Polemarchs, Spartan, ii. 459. Polemarchus, viii. 248. Political clubs at Athens, viii. 15. Politicians, new class of, at Athens, after Pcrikles, vi. 245 seq. Pollis, defeat of, by Chabrias, x. 130. Pollux and Castor, i. 171 seq. Polyarchus, xi. l.'>4. Polyhiades, x. 68. Polybius, his transformation of mytlies to historj', i. 412 ; perplexing state- ment of, respecting the war be- tween Sybaris and Kroton, ir. 416 ; theGreece of, xii. 318. Pdijchares, and Eutephnus, ii. 426. Polydamas of Pharsulus, x. 137 seq. Polydamas the Macedonian, xii. 197. Polifdamidas, at Mende, vi. 440 seq. Poii/lcrates of Smnos, iv. 241 seq. Poli/krates the Sophist, harangue of, on the accusation against Sokrates, viii. 478 u Polijnikes, i. 267, 269 seq., 273, 280. Poli/phron, x. 248. Poiysperchon, appointed by Antipater as his successor, xii. 339 ; plans of, xii. 340 ; edict of, at Telia, xii. 343 seq. ; Phokion and Agnonides lieard before, xii. 351 seq.; and Kassander, xii. 360, 372, 382 ; flight of, Italia, xii. 367. Poll/stratus, one of the Four Hun- dred, viii. 68 n. 1, 69 n., 78, 88. Polyxena, death of, i. 305. Polyzelus and Hiero, v. 228. Pompey in Colchis, i. 243. Pontic Greeks, xii. 458 seq. Pontic Herakleia, xii. 460-471. Pontus and Gaea, children of, i. 7, Populal hc'lief in ancient mvthes, L 424, 427. Porus, xii. 227 seq. Poseidon, i. 6, &, 56; prominence of, in JEolid legends, i. 110; Erech- theus, i. 192, 193; and Athene, i. 195 ; and Laomedon. i. 285. Positive evidence indispensable to historical proof, i. 429. Positive tendencies of the Greek mind in tl>e time of Herodotus, iv. 105 n. Post-Homeric poems on the Trojan war, i. 297. Potidcea and Artabazns, v. 149; rela- tions of, with Corinth and Athens, vi. 67 ; designs of Perdikkas and the Corinthians upon, vi. 68; re- .volt of, from Athens, vi. 69 seq.; Athenian victory near, vi. 73 ; blockade of, bv tlie Athenians, vi. 74, 140, 164, 182; Brasidas's at- tempt upon, vi. 150; capture of, bv Piiilip and the Olynthians, xi. 2.38. Prasioe. expedition of Pythodorus to, vii. 285. Praxitas, ix. 327 n. 1, 333 seq. Priam, i. 285. 292 ;i. 5. 304. Priene, iii. 172, 178, vi. 25. Priests Egyptian, iii. 314. Primitive and historical Greece, ii. 57-118. Private property, rights of. at Athens, viii. 304. Probability alone not sufficient for historical proof, i.429. Pro-Boideutic Sotate, Solon's, iii. 121 Probili, board of, vii. 362. Prodikus. viii. 370, 380 seq. Pnetos and his daughters, i. 88 seq. Prokne, i. 197 seq. Prokris,. 198. Prometheus, i. 6 ; and Zeus, i. 63, 76, 79 seq. ; and Pandora, i. 75 : and Epimethcus, i. 75 ; jEschylus's, i. 382 n. 3. Property, rights of, at Athens, iii. I'^S, 114 seq. Prophecies, Sibylline, i. 33S. Propontis, Phokion in, xi. 460. Propyhea, building of, vi. 21. 23 n. 4. Pi-ose writing among the Greeks, iv, 97. Protaqoras, viii. 376. 379 seq , 389 seq, 392 n.