_
Literally
"the stall outside a shop where articles are
displayed for sale.
displayed for sale.
Satires
, iii.
, Ep.
50.
[729] _Curius_ was found by the Samnite embassadors preparing his dish
of turnips over the fire with his own hands. Cic. , de Sen. , xvi.
"Senates more rich than Rome's first senates were,
In days of yore desired no better fare. " Badham.
[730] _Vulvâ. _ "Nul vulvâ pulchrius amplâ. " Hor. , i. , Ep. xv. , 41. For
a description of this loathsome dainty, vid. Plin. , xi. , 37, 84. Cf.
Mart. , Ep. xiii. , 56.
[731] _Maturius. _
"For feasts like these would quit the mountain's soil,
And snatch an hour from customary toil. " Badham.
[732] _Fabios. _ Q. Fabius Maximus Rullianus, censor A. U. C. 449, obliged
his colleague, P. Decius, to allow him to administer his office with
all its pristine severity.
[733] _Fabricios. _ Cf. ad ix. , 142.
[734] _Testudo. _ Cf. vi. , 80, "Testudineo conopeo;" xiv. , 308, "ebore
et lata testudine. "
"Which future times were destined to employ,
To build rare couches for the sons of Troy. " Badham.
[735] _Vile coronati. _ Henninius suggests _vite_. The ass, by browsing
on the vine, and thereby rendering it more luxuriant, is said to have
first given men the idea of pruning the tendrils. Cf. Paus. , ii. , 38.
Hyg. , F. , 274. The ass is always found, too, in connection with Silenus.
[736] _Nescius. _
"Till at the soldier's foot her treasures lay,
Who knew not half the riches of his prey. " Hodgson.
[737] _Phaleris_: xvi. , 60. Florus says Phaleræ were introduced from
Etruria together with curule chairs, trabeæ, prætextæ, etc. Vid. Liv. ,
xxxix. , 31. Plin. , vii. , 28, 9, says Siccius Dentatus had 25 phaleræ
and 83 torques. Sil. , xv. , 254. Cf. Virg. , Æn. , ix. , 359. Suet. , Aug. ,
25; Ner. , 33.
[738] _Venientis. _ Supposed to be a representation of Mars hovering in
the air, and just about to alight by the sleeping Rhea Sylvia. The god
is _armed_, because the conventional manner of representing him was by
the distinction of his "framea" and "clypeus. " See Addison's note in
Gifford.
[739] _In armis. _
"Then all their wealth was on their armor spent,
And war engross'd the pride of ornament. " Hodgson.
[740] _Lividulus. _
"Yet justly worth your envy, were your breast
But with one spark of noble spleen possess'd. " Gifford.
[741] _Præsentior. _ Cf. iii. , 18, "Quanto _præsentius_ esset Numen
aquæ. " Virg. , Ec. , i. , 42, "Nec tam præsentes alibi cognoscere Divos. "
Georg. , i. , 10, "Præsentia Numina Fauni. " Hor. , iii. , Od. v. , 2,
"Præsens Divus habebitur Augustus. "
[742] _Vox. _ "M. Cædicius de plebe nunciavit tribunis, se in Novâ Viâ,
ubi nunc sacellum est, suprà sedem Vestæ vocem noctis silentio audîsse
clariorem humanâ quæ magistratibus dici juberet 'Gallos adventare. '"
"Invisitato atque inaudito hoste ab oceano terrarumque ultimis oris
bellum ciente. " Liv. , v. , 32, 3, 7, 50. Cic. , de Div. , ii. , "At
paullo post audita _vox est monentis_ ut providerent ne a Gallis Roma
caperetur: ex eo Aio loquenti aram in novâ viâ consecratam. " Cf. Plut.
in Vit. Camill.
[743] _Fictilis. _ Cf. Sen. , Ep. 31, "Cogita illos quum propitii essent
fictiles fuisse. "
[744] _Arbore. _ Cf. Mart. , xiv. , Ep. xc. , "Non sum crispa quidem nec
sylvæ filia Mauræ, sed nôrunt lautas et mea ligna dapes. " Cf. Sat.
i. , 75, 137; iv. , 132. The extravagance of the Romans on their tables
is almost incredible. Pliny says that Cicero himself, who accuses
Verres of stealing a Citrea mensa from Diodorus (in Verr. , iv. , 17),
gave a million of sesterces for one which was in existence in his
time. A "Senatoris Census" was a price given. These tables were not
provided with several feet, but rested on an ivory column (sometimes
carved into the figure of animals), hence called monopodia. They were
called "Orbes," not from being _round_, but because they were massive
plates of wood cut off the stem in its whole diameter. The wood of the
_citrus_ was most preferred. This is not the _citron_-tree, which never
attains to this bulk, but a tree found in Mauritania, called the thyæ
cypressides. Plin. , xiii. , 16. Those cut near the root were most valued
from the wood being variegated: hence "Tigrinæ, pantherinæ, pavonum
caudæ oculos imitantes. " The mensæ were formerly square, but were
afterward round to suit the new fashion of the Sigma couch. The Romans
also understood the art of veneering tables and other furniture with
the citrus wood and tortoise-shell.
[745] _Porta Syenes. _ Syene, now "Assouan," is situated near the
rapids, just on the confines of Ethiopia. It was a station for a Roman
garrison, and the place to which Juvenal is said to have been banished.
Some think the island Elephantine is here meant. Cf. ad x. , 150,
"aliosque Elephantos. "
[746] _Mauro. _ Ab ἀμαυρός, vel μαυρός, "obscurus. " Cf. Lucan. , iv. ,
678, "Concolor Indo Maurus. "
[747] _Nabathæo. _ The Nabathæi, in Arabia Petræa, took their name from
"Nebaioth, first-born of Ishmael," Gen. , xxv. , 13. Elephants are said
to shed their tusks every two years.
[748] _Orexis. _ VI. , 428. _Vires. _ Henninius' suggestion. Cf. ad l. 14.
[749] _Tessellæ. _ Holyday explains this by "chess-board," from the
resemblance of the squares to the tesselated pavements. But it is a
die, properly; of which shape the separate tesseræ were. Mart. , xiv. ,
17, "Hic mihi bis seno numeratur tessera puncto: Calculus hic gemino
discolor hoste perit. " Cf. Ep. 14. Cicero considers this game to be one
of the legitimate amusements of old age. "Nobis senibus, ex lusionibus
multis, talos relinquant et _tesseras_," de Sen. , xvi. "Old Mucius
Scævola, the lawyer, was a great proficient at it. It was called Ludus
duodecim scriptorum, from the lines dividing the alveolus. On these
the two armies, white and black, each consisting of fifteen men, or
calculi, were placed; and alternately moved, according to the chances
of the dice, _tesseræ_. " Vid. Gibbon, chap. xxxi.
[750] _Pergula.
_ Literally "the stall outside a shop where articles are
displayed for sale. " Here used for the teachers of the art of carving
who exhibited at these stalls. Suet. , Aug. , 94, speaks of a "pergula
Mathematici. " Pergula, "à perga, quia extrà parietem pergit. " Facc.
[751] _Sumine. _ Cf. Mart. , Ep. xiii. , 44, "vivo lacte papilla tumet. "
[752] _Pygargus. _ "Capræ sylvestris genus, ab albis clunium pilis. "
Facc. Cf. Plin. , viii. , 53, 79, "Damæ et pygargi et Strepsicerotes. "
The "spring-bok" of the Cape.
[753] _Scythicæ. _ The pheasant (ὄρνις φασιανὸς or φασιανικός, Arist. ,
Av. , 68) takes its name from the Phasis, a river in Colchis, on the
confines of Scythia, at the mouth of which these birds congregate in
large flocks. Vid. Athen. , ix. , 37, _seq. _
[754] _Phœnicopterus. _ Arist. , Av. , 273. Cf. Mart. , xiii. , 71, "Dat
mihi penna rubens nomen. " Cf. iii. , Ep. lviii. , 14. Suetonius mentions
"linguas phœnicopterûm" among the delicacies of the "Cœna adventicia"
given by his brother to Vitellius, in Vit. , c. 13.
[755] _Capreæ. _ Cf. Mart. , Ep. xiii. , 99.
[756] _Afra avis. _ Hor. , Epod. , ii. , 53, "Non Afra avis descendat in
ventrem meum non attagen Ionicus. " The μελεαγρίς of the Greeks. Varro,
R. R. , III. , ix. , 18.
[757] _Offelæ_, the diminutive of Offa. "A cutlet or chop," generally
applied to the coarser kind of meat. Cf. Mart. , xii. , 48, "Me meus
ad subitas invitet amicus ofellas: Hæc mihi quam possum reddere cœna
placet. " Some read _furtis_ for _frustis_: which imputation against the
character of the little slave Gifford indignantly rejects.
[758] _Plebeios calices_, cf. ad vi. , 155; v. , 46, made of glass,
which was now very common at Rome. Vid. Mart. , Ep. xii. , 74; xiv. , 94,
_seq. _, and especially the Epigram on Mamurra, ix. , 60. Strabo speaks
of them as sold commonly in Rome in his own time for a χαλκοῦς each
(not quite a farthing), lib. xvi. , p. 368, T. Cf. Bekker's Gallus, p.
303.
[759] _Mango_, cf. Pers. , vi. , 76, _seq. _, from _manu ago_, because
they made up their goods for sale, or from μάγγανον, "a trick. " Cf.
Aristoph. , Plut. , 310. Bekker's Gallus, the Excursus on "the Slaves. "
[760] _Casulam. _ Cf. ix. , 59, "Rusticus infans, cum matre et casulis et
conlusore catello. "
"Sighs for his little cottage, and would fain
Meet his old playfellows the goats again. " Gifford.
[761] _Vina. _ Cf. vii. , 96, "Vinum Tiberi devectum. " Mart. , x. , 48, 19,
"De Nomentana vinum sine fæce lagenâ. "
[762] _Iliados. _
"The tale of Ilium, or that rival lay
Which holds in deep suspense the dubious bay. " Bad.
[763] _Legantur. _ Cf. Corn. Nep. , vit. Attici, "Nemo in convivio ejus
aliud acroama audivit quam Anagnosten: quod nos quidem jucundissimum
arbitramur. Neque unquam sine aliquâ lectione apud eum cœnatum est, ut
non minus animo quam ventre convivæ delectarentur," c. xvi. Cf. Mart. ,
iii. , Ep. 50, who complains of Ligurinus inviting him to have his own
productions read to him.
[764] _Bilem. _
"Let no dire images to-day be brought
To wake the hell of matrimonial thought. " Hodgson.
[765] _Perit. _ Cf. Hor. , ii. , Ep. i. , 121, "Detrimenta, fugas servorum,
incendia ridet. "
[766] _Mappæ. _ Holyday gives the following account of the origin of
this custom. "Nero on a time, sitting alone at dinner, when the shows
were eagerly expected, caused his towel with which he had wiped his
hands to be presently cast out at the window, for a sign of his speedy
coming. Whereupon it was in after times the usual sign at the beginning
of these shows. " For the mappa see Bekker's Gallus, p. 476. --_Præda_,
because "ruined by the expense;" or _Prædo_, from his "unjust
decisions;" or _Perda_, from the "number of horses damaged. "
[767] _Totam Romam. _ See Gibbon, chap. xxxi. , for the eagerness with
which all ranks flocked to these games.
[768] _Viridis panni. _ Cf. ad vi. , 590. Plin. , Ep. ix. , 6, "Si aut
velocitate equorum, aut hominum arte traherentur, esset ratio nonnulla.
Nunc favent _panno_: _pannum_ amant," _et seq. _ Mart. , x. , Ep. xlviii. ,
23, "De Prasino conviva meus, venetoque loquatur. " XIV. , 131, "Si
veneto Prasinove faves quid coccina sumis? "
[769] _Pulvere_ is not without its force. Hannibal is said to have
plowed up the land near Cannæ, that the wind which daily rose and blew
in that direction might carry the dust into the eyes of the Romans.
"Ventus (_Vulturnum_ incolæ regionis vocant) adversus Romanis coortus,
_multo pulvere_ in ipsa ora volvendo, prospectum ademit. " Liv. , xxii. ,
46 and 43. Cf. Sat, ii. , 155; x. , 165.
[770] _Cuticula. _ Pers. , iv. , 18, "Assiduo curata cuticula sole. " 33,
"Et figas in cute solem. " V. , 179, "Aprici meminisse senes. " Mart. ,
x. , Ep. xii. , 7, "Totos avidâ cute combibe soles. " I. , Ep. 78, "Sole
utitur Charinus. " Plin. , Ep. iii. , 1, "Ubi hora balinei nuntiata est
(cf. ad Sat. x. , 216), est autem hieme nona, æstate octava, in sole, si
caret vento, ambulat nudus. " Cicero mentions "apricatio" as one of the
solaces of old age. De Sen. , c. xvi.
"While we, my friend, whose skin grows old and dry,
Court the warm sunbeam of an April sky.
[729] _Curius_ was found by the Samnite embassadors preparing his dish
of turnips over the fire with his own hands. Cic. , de Sen. , xvi.
"Senates more rich than Rome's first senates were,
In days of yore desired no better fare. " Badham.
[730] _Vulvâ. _ "Nul vulvâ pulchrius amplâ. " Hor. , i. , Ep. xv. , 41. For
a description of this loathsome dainty, vid. Plin. , xi. , 37, 84. Cf.
Mart. , Ep. xiii. , 56.
[731] _Maturius. _
"For feasts like these would quit the mountain's soil,
And snatch an hour from customary toil. " Badham.
[732] _Fabios. _ Q. Fabius Maximus Rullianus, censor A. U. C. 449, obliged
his colleague, P. Decius, to allow him to administer his office with
all its pristine severity.
[733] _Fabricios. _ Cf. ad ix. , 142.
[734] _Testudo. _ Cf. vi. , 80, "Testudineo conopeo;" xiv. , 308, "ebore
et lata testudine. "
"Which future times were destined to employ,
To build rare couches for the sons of Troy. " Badham.
[735] _Vile coronati. _ Henninius suggests _vite_. The ass, by browsing
on the vine, and thereby rendering it more luxuriant, is said to have
first given men the idea of pruning the tendrils. Cf. Paus. , ii. , 38.
Hyg. , F. , 274. The ass is always found, too, in connection with Silenus.
[736] _Nescius. _
"Till at the soldier's foot her treasures lay,
Who knew not half the riches of his prey. " Hodgson.
[737] _Phaleris_: xvi. , 60. Florus says Phaleræ were introduced from
Etruria together with curule chairs, trabeæ, prætextæ, etc. Vid. Liv. ,
xxxix. , 31. Plin. , vii. , 28, 9, says Siccius Dentatus had 25 phaleræ
and 83 torques. Sil. , xv. , 254. Cf. Virg. , Æn. , ix. , 359. Suet. , Aug. ,
25; Ner. , 33.
[738] _Venientis. _ Supposed to be a representation of Mars hovering in
the air, and just about to alight by the sleeping Rhea Sylvia. The god
is _armed_, because the conventional manner of representing him was by
the distinction of his "framea" and "clypeus. " See Addison's note in
Gifford.
[739] _In armis. _
"Then all their wealth was on their armor spent,
And war engross'd the pride of ornament. " Hodgson.
[740] _Lividulus. _
"Yet justly worth your envy, were your breast
But with one spark of noble spleen possess'd. " Gifford.
[741] _Præsentior. _ Cf. iii. , 18, "Quanto _præsentius_ esset Numen
aquæ. " Virg. , Ec. , i. , 42, "Nec tam præsentes alibi cognoscere Divos. "
Georg. , i. , 10, "Præsentia Numina Fauni. " Hor. , iii. , Od. v. , 2,
"Præsens Divus habebitur Augustus. "
[742] _Vox. _ "M. Cædicius de plebe nunciavit tribunis, se in Novâ Viâ,
ubi nunc sacellum est, suprà sedem Vestæ vocem noctis silentio audîsse
clariorem humanâ quæ magistratibus dici juberet 'Gallos adventare. '"
"Invisitato atque inaudito hoste ab oceano terrarumque ultimis oris
bellum ciente. " Liv. , v. , 32, 3, 7, 50. Cic. , de Div. , ii. , "At
paullo post audita _vox est monentis_ ut providerent ne a Gallis Roma
caperetur: ex eo Aio loquenti aram in novâ viâ consecratam. " Cf. Plut.
in Vit. Camill.
[743] _Fictilis. _ Cf. Sen. , Ep. 31, "Cogita illos quum propitii essent
fictiles fuisse. "
[744] _Arbore. _ Cf. Mart. , xiv. , Ep. xc. , "Non sum crispa quidem nec
sylvæ filia Mauræ, sed nôrunt lautas et mea ligna dapes. " Cf. Sat.
i. , 75, 137; iv. , 132. The extravagance of the Romans on their tables
is almost incredible. Pliny says that Cicero himself, who accuses
Verres of stealing a Citrea mensa from Diodorus (in Verr. , iv. , 17),
gave a million of sesterces for one which was in existence in his
time. A "Senatoris Census" was a price given. These tables were not
provided with several feet, but rested on an ivory column (sometimes
carved into the figure of animals), hence called monopodia. They were
called "Orbes," not from being _round_, but because they were massive
plates of wood cut off the stem in its whole diameter. The wood of the
_citrus_ was most preferred. This is not the _citron_-tree, which never
attains to this bulk, but a tree found in Mauritania, called the thyæ
cypressides. Plin. , xiii. , 16. Those cut near the root were most valued
from the wood being variegated: hence "Tigrinæ, pantherinæ, pavonum
caudæ oculos imitantes. " The mensæ were formerly square, but were
afterward round to suit the new fashion of the Sigma couch. The Romans
also understood the art of veneering tables and other furniture with
the citrus wood and tortoise-shell.
[745] _Porta Syenes. _ Syene, now "Assouan," is situated near the
rapids, just on the confines of Ethiopia. It was a station for a Roman
garrison, and the place to which Juvenal is said to have been banished.
Some think the island Elephantine is here meant. Cf. ad x. , 150,
"aliosque Elephantos. "
[746] _Mauro. _ Ab ἀμαυρός, vel μαυρός, "obscurus. " Cf. Lucan. , iv. ,
678, "Concolor Indo Maurus. "
[747] _Nabathæo. _ The Nabathæi, in Arabia Petræa, took their name from
"Nebaioth, first-born of Ishmael," Gen. , xxv. , 13. Elephants are said
to shed their tusks every two years.
[748] _Orexis. _ VI. , 428. _Vires. _ Henninius' suggestion. Cf. ad l. 14.
[749] _Tessellæ. _ Holyday explains this by "chess-board," from the
resemblance of the squares to the tesselated pavements. But it is a
die, properly; of which shape the separate tesseræ were. Mart. , xiv. ,
17, "Hic mihi bis seno numeratur tessera puncto: Calculus hic gemino
discolor hoste perit. " Cf. Ep. 14. Cicero considers this game to be one
of the legitimate amusements of old age. "Nobis senibus, ex lusionibus
multis, talos relinquant et _tesseras_," de Sen. , xvi. "Old Mucius
Scævola, the lawyer, was a great proficient at it. It was called Ludus
duodecim scriptorum, from the lines dividing the alveolus. On these
the two armies, white and black, each consisting of fifteen men, or
calculi, were placed; and alternately moved, according to the chances
of the dice, _tesseræ_. " Vid. Gibbon, chap. xxxi.
[750] _Pergula.
_ Literally "the stall outside a shop where articles are
displayed for sale. " Here used for the teachers of the art of carving
who exhibited at these stalls. Suet. , Aug. , 94, speaks of a "pergula
Mathematici. " Pergula, "à perga, quia extrà parietem pergit. " Facc.
[751] _Sumine. _ Cf. Mart. , Ep. xiii. , 44, "vivo lacte papilla tumet. "
[752] _Pygargus. _ "Capræ sylvestris genus, ab albis clunium pilis. "
Facc. Cf. Plin. , viii. , 53, 79, "Damæ et pygargi et Strepsicerotes. "
The "spring-bok" of the Cape.
[753] _Scythicæ. _ The pheasant (ὄρνις φασιανὸς or φασιανικός, Arist. ,
Av. , 68) takes its name from the Phasis, a river in Colchis, on the
confines of Scythia, at the mouth of which these birds congregate in
large flocks. Vid. Athen. , ix. , 37, _seq. _
[754] _Phœnicopterus. _ Arist. , Av. , 273. Cf. Mart. , xiii. , 71, "Dat
mihi penna rubens nomen. " Cf. iii. , Ep. lviii. , 14. Suetonius mentions
"linguas phœnicopterûm" among the delicacies of the "Cœna adventicia"
given by his brother to Vitellius, in Vit. , c. 13.
[755] _Capreæ. _ Cf. Mart. , Ep. xiii. , 99.
[756] _Afra avis. _ Hor. , Epod. , ii. , 53, "Non Afra avis descendat in
ventrem meum non attagen Ionicus. " The μελεαγρίς of the Greeks. Varro,
R. R. , III. , ix. , 18.
[757] _Offelæ_, the diminutive of Offa. "A cutlet or chop," generally
applied to the coarser kind of meat. Cf. Mart. , xii. , 48, "Me meus
ad subitas invitet amicus ofellas: Hæc mihi quam possum reddere cœna
placet. " Some read _furtis_ for _frustis_: which imputation against the
character of the little slave Gifford indignantly rejects.
[758] _Plebeios calices_, cf. ad vi. , 155; v. , 46, made of glass,
which was now very common at Rome. Vid. Mart. , Ep. xii. , 74; xiv. , 94,
_seq. _, and especially the Epigram on Mamurra, ix. , 60. Strabo speaks
of them as sold commonly in Rome in his own time for a χαλκοῦς each
(not quite a farthing), lib. xvi. , p. 368, T. Cf. Bekker's Gallus, p.
303.
[759] _Mango_, cf. Pers. , vi. , 76, _seq. _, from _manu ago_, because
they made up their goods for sale, or from μάγγανον, "a trick. " Cf.
Aristoph. , Plut. , 310. Bekker's Gallus, the Excursus on "the Slaves. "
[760] _Casulam. _ Cf. ix. , 59, "Rusticus infans, cum matre et casulis et
conlusore catello. "
"Sighs for his little cottage, and would fain
Meet his old playfellows the goats again. " Gifford.
[761] _Vina. _ Cf. vii. , 96, "Vinum Tiberi devectum. " Mart. , x. , 48, 19,
"De Nomentana vinum sine fæce lagenâ. "
[762] _Iliados. _
"The tale of Ilium, or that rival lay
Which holds in deep suspense the dubious bay. " Bad.
[763] _Legantur. _ Cf. Corn. Nep. , vit. Attici, "Nemo in convivio ejus
aliud acroama audivit quam Anagnosten: quod nos quidem jucundissimum
arbitramur. Neque unquam sine aliquâ lectione apud eum cœnatum est, ut
non minus animo quam ventre convivæ delectarentur," c. xvi. Cf. Mart. ,
iii. , Ep. 50, who complains of Ligurinus inviting him to have his own
productions read to him.
[764] _Bilem. _
"Let no dire images to-day be brought
To wake the hell of matrimonial thought. " Hodgson.
[765] _Perit. _ Cf. Hor. , ii. , Ep. i. , 121, "Detrimenta, fugas servorum,
incendia ridet. "
[766] _Mappæ. _ Holyday gives the following account of the origin of
this custom. "Nero on a time, sitting alone at dinner, when the shows
were eagerly expected, caused his towel with which he had wiped his
hands to be presently cast out at the window, for a sign of his speedy
coming. Whereupon it was in after times the usual sign at the beginning
of these shows. " For the mappa see Bekker's Gallus, p. 476. --_Præda_,
because "ruined by the expense;" or _Prædo_, from his "unjust
decisions;" or _Perda_, from the "number of horses damaged. "
[767] _Totam Romam. _ See Gibbon, chap. xxxi. , for the eagerness with
which all ranks flocked to these games.
[768] _Viridis panni. _ Cf. ad vi. , 590. Plin. , Ep. ix. , 6, "Si aut
velocitate equorum, aut hominum arte traherentur, esset ratio nonnulla.
Nunc favent _panno_: _pannum_ amant," _et seq. _ Mart. , x. , Ep. xlviii. ,
23, "De Prasino conviva meus, venetoque loquatur. " XIV. , 131, "Si
veneto Prasinove faves quid coccina sumis? "
[769] _Pulvere_ is not without its force. Hannibal is said to have
plowed up the land near Cannæ, that the wind which daily rose and blew
in that direction might carry the dust into the eyes of the Romans.
"Ventus (_Vulturnum_ incolæ regionis vocant) adversus Romanis coortus,
_multo pulvere_ in ipsa ora volvendo, prospectum ademit. " Liv. , xxii. ,
46 and 43. Cf. Sat, ii. , 155; x. , 165.
[770] _Cuticula. _ Pers. , iv. , 18, "Assiduo curata cuticula sole. " 33,
"Et figas in cute solem. " V. , 179, "Aprici meminisse senes. " Mart. ,
x. , Ep. xii. , 7, "Totos avidâ cute combibe soles. " I. , Ep. 78, "Sole
utitur Charinus. " Plin. , Ep. iii. , 1, "Ubi hora balinei nuntiata est
(cf. ad Sat. x. , 216), est autem hieme nona, æstate octava, in sole, si
caret vento, ambulat nudus. " Cicero mentions "apricatio" as one of the
solaces of old age. De Sen. , c. xvi.
"While we, my friend, whose skin grows old and dry,
Court the warm sunbeam of an April sky.
