Nepenʹthe (3 syl.) or Nepenʹthēs,

a drug to drive away care and superinduce love. Polydamna, wife of Thoʹnis (or Thone, 1 syl.), King of Egypt, gave nepenthe to Helen (daughter of Jove and Leda). Homer speaks of a magic potion called nepenthē, which made persons forget their woes. (Odyssey, iv. 228.)

That nepenthes which the wife of Thone

In Egypt gave the Jove-born Helena.”


Milton: Comus, 695, 696.

⁂ The water of Ardenne had the opposite effect.

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Neksheb
Nell’s Point
Nem. Con
Nem. Diss
Nemean Games (The)
Nemean Lion (The)
Nemesis
Nemo Me Impune Lacessit
Neology
Neoptolemos or Pyrrhos
Nepenthe
Neper’s Bones
Nephelo-coccygia
Nephew (French neveu, Latin nepos)
Nepomuk
Nepotism
Neptune
Neptune’s Horse
Neptunian or Neptunist
Nereids
Nereus