Page:The Theatre of the Greeks, a Treatise on the History and Exhibition of the Greek Drama, with Various Supplements.djvu/465

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INDEX. 439 D. Dactyls in Anapaestic verse, 391 Dances — Gymnopaedic, Pyrrhic, Hyporche- matic, 33 ; those of scenic poetry, 35 Dante, 103, 136 Days of the Week, 14 Demeter, 19 Averts Kal Avais, 339 Arjfxiovpyos, 32 Aiaypd,u/jLaTa, of the chorus, 267 Aid^(!}fjLa, 227 AioLKpioi, 57 Didascaliae, 219 Ai5dcrK€iv dpdfjLa, 217 Dinolochus, the comedian, 167 Dionysia, number of, 211; account of, 211 sqq. Dionysius, 135, 163 DiphOus, the comedian, 202 Aia-Teyia, 230 DithjTamb, explanation of the vord, 36, note 2 ; nature of, 36 ; gave birth to tra- gedy, 325 Doors in the scene, their number and desti- nation, 231 Dorians adopted the religion of conquered countries, 21; claimed the invention of the drama, 321 Doric forms in the di-amatists, 370 Drama, origin of, 2 Drama, Greek, religious reference of, 2 sqq. ; choral element of, 2 7 sqq. ; rhapsodical element of, 50 sqq.; an union of the rhapsody with the cyclic chorus, 56 sqq.; arose in the Dorian states, 27; at the beginning extemporaneous, according to Aristotle, 39, 325; its first metre trochaic, 323 ; essentially different from the modern in its mode of representation, 210; its time of performance, 211 — 213; its means of performance, 213 sqq.; its place of per- formance, 220 sqq.; its manner of per- formance, 242 sqq. Drama, Lyrical, 42 sqq. Dramatists originally their own actors, 59. note 10 Dress of the actors, 252 hpbfxo$, 230 Duplicate divinities, 21 E. Ecphantides, 168 El'XwTcj ol iirl Taivdpo}, 75 EipKTrj, 231 EiVo5oi, 232 ^'EKKVKXrifj.a, 238 Elementary woi-sbip, 13 Eleusinian mysteries, language of, 122, note 7 "Efx^Sarai, 247 Emendations of Strabo, 4, note 4 ; of Pau- sanias, 25, note 4 ; of Diphilus, 104, note i ; of Euripides, 28, note 6, 138, note 8; 150, note I ; of Aristotle, 345, note i 'E/u/xe'Xcta, 35 ^H/xiv et r/,u?{/, 400, 412 Ennius, 309 'HuottXlos pvdpios, 33 EireLaKup.d^'jj, 71 'Fj7ri^3T]/j.a, iTmropva/JLa, 257 'E(pT]3iK6v, 228, note 4 Epicharmus, inventor of Comedy, life and account of, 165 Epic poetry compared with tragedy, 347 — 351 Epic forms in the dramatists, 369 Epigenes, the Sicyonian, 42 Epirrheraa. and antepirrliema, 268 Episodic plots, the worst, 331 Episcenui, 230 Eubulus, the comedian, 197 Euphorion, the tragedian, 162 Eupolis, the comedian, 171: relations with Aristophanes, 173 Euripides, time and place of his birth, 130; rank of his parents, 132; his education, ih.; his exile, 133; his death, 134; his Electra, 147, 148, 293; Alcestis, 75, 142, 299; Iphigenia in Aulis, 149; Ion, 144; Hippolytus, 143; Medea, 142; Troades, 147; Hecuba, 144, 145; Hercules Fu- rens, T45 ; Phoeniss£e, 148; Orestes, ih., 292; Iphigenia in Tauris, 146; Andro- mache, ih., 292; Bacchae, 149, 293 sq. Suppliants, 146, 293; Heraclidae, 142; Helen, 147; Ehesus, 141; Cyclops, 143, 297; said to have been assisted by So- crates, 137; his character as a dramatist, 139; his relation to ^schylus and So-