S 34 INDEX Adam, Mr., on Plato's attitude to doctrine | Allegory of Castle of Medina, Spenser's, of Immortality of the Soul, 71 on circle of the Same and the Other, on the position of the Throne of 257 in Purgatorio, xxix., 257 of the Cave, Plato's, 250 ff. of the Disorderly Crew, Plato's, 253 ff. 'Aváμvnois, doctrine of, 343 ff. Adam Smith, Dr. G., on allegorical inter- Angels, Jewish doctrine of, and Greek pretation, 236, 237 Aeschylus, attitude of, to doctrine of Agyrtae, 70 doctrine of Daemons, 450 Apocalypse of Paul, Dr. M. R. James on, Apocalypse, the astronomical, 361 ff. Aionp, in Epinomis, de Coelo, Meteorol., Apuleius, his interpretation of the Ulysses 438, 439 Albertus, on the Earthly Paradise, 105 Allegorical interpretation, Dr. G. Adam Smith on, 236, 237 Dr. Bigg on, 236 Hatch on, 236 of Myths, by Plotinus and Neo-Plato- St. Paul authorises, 237 of Myths, Plato's judgment on, 20, 242 Allegorical tales deliberately made, 16 by the Stoics, 233, 234 Plutarch on, 231, 232 by Stoics, Cicero on, 233 Mr. Adam on, 233 Myth, 241, 242 Aquinas, St. Thomas, on the Earthly Archer-Hind, Mr., his Timaeus quoted, Aristippus, Henricus, translated Phaedo Aristotle, misapprehends the Timaeus, 269 poetised astronomy, 163, 164 his poetised astronomy, influence of, his supposed tomb near Chalcis, 153 gives up ideas of a Personal God and Allegorisation of Old Testament, Philo's, Aristotelian astronomy, 354 234 ff. by Christian Fathers, 236, 237 Astronomy, part played by, in Poetry, 468 Atlantis Myth and maritime discovery, Callaway, on one-legged people; cf. Myth Axiochus, the, date and characteristics of, places the world of the departed in the singular in its localisation of the rediov Bacon, his allegorical interpretation of his definition of Poetry, 387 Bernard, his translation of Kant's Kritik d. Urtheilskraft quoted, 222 ff. on allegorical interpretation, 236 Book of the Dead, 130 66 Bosanquet, Prof. B., on "present" as Brownell, C. L., quoted for Japanese Buddhism, attitude of, to belief in Im- Budge, Dr., on Book of the Dead, 66 on a prehistoric form of burial in Bunbury, on the geography of the Atlantis Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, an allegory Poetry and Fine Art referred to, 391 Caird, Dr. E., on Kant's Ideas of Reason, Callaway, Nursery Tales of the Zulus, Cambridge Platonists, their learning, influenced in two directions, by Philo their enthusiasm for the new astronomy, their science, 486 ff. their central doctrine, the Doctrine of go back to Plato the mythologist rather their discussion of the relation of God's their doctrine of Categorical Imperative, enable us to connect the "formalism of Kant and Green with the "myth- Campbell, Prof., on Protagoras Myth, Carus, his Gesch. d. Zoologie referred to, 17 Categorical Imperative, doctrine of, in Kant's doctrine of, criticised by Categories of the Understanding and Moral Virtues, Plato's mythological Categories of the Understanding, mytho- the Forms seen in the Super-celestial Schwanitz on, 252 his version of the Timaeus, how far Charles, Prof. R. H., his editions of Choice of Hercules, 2, 245 regards the Platonic doctrine of Pre- Dante, Letter to Kan Grande, quoted for existence as mythical, 344 holds that Poetry may exist without Comparetti, on gold tablets of Thurii and on the Kalewala, 204 necting principle between creature Guardian Daemon as, 447, 448 templativa, referred to, 234 Cook, Mr. A. B., on the Sicilian triskeles, and the Myth told by Aristophanes Cornford, Mr. F. M., on the púλakes of the Republic and the Hesiodic Courthope, Mr., his definition of Poetry Couturat, on doctrine of Immortality of holds that the whole doctrine of lôéai Cratylus, the, on the Philosopher Death, on the Sirens, 128 Creuzer, Plotinus de Pulchritudine, quoted, Cudworth, his criticism of Descartes com- Dante, his mythology of Lethe and Eunoè | Dill, Professor, quoted on Macrobius' Com- compared with the Platonic ȧvá- and the Timaeus, 210 his allegorisation of the story of the Inferno, iv. 46-43, and Plato's Cave, Coleridge on, 258 "suppressed" symbolism in, 258 compares the Platonic idéal to "Gods," on the number of Beatrice, 350 on influence of Planets in producing mentary on the Somnium Scipionis,359 Dramatists, the Athenian, their attitude take the Family, rather than the In- "Dream-thing," the, illustrated Düring, holds that the Phaedrus Myth is a Earth, rotundity of, recognised by Plato central position of, in Phaedo, 94 of Dante and medieval belief, 104 ff. Earthquake and thunder accompany new regards his vision of Paradiso as having Ecstasy, Plotinus quoted on, 385 sacramental value, 367 theory in the de Monarchia compared his knowledge of the Timaeus through Darwin, on the feebleness of imagination his Expression of the Emotions in Man Dead, Book of the, Egyptian, 66 as understood by Cambridge Platonists, "Empirical" distinguished from "Tran- allegory of Disorderly Crew, 254 ff. Epimetheus, contrasted with Prometheus, Epinomis, demonology of, 445 Delphi, place assigned to, by the side of Er, Myth of, place of, in the Republic, 64, |