[995]. Ibid., ll. 13 ff.

[996]. Ibid., pp. 36 f., a comparison of Aristides and Callias.

[997]. Fr. iv. A, p. 28, purporting to be the answer of Crates as to what he would gain by being a philosopher.

[998]. Cf. infra; also Cic. De fin. iii. 10. 33 f.; Zeller, op. cit., III, 1, 214.

[999]. Cic. Paradox. 6, on the thesis that only the wise are rich.

[1000]. Seneca Benef. vii. 3. 2 f.; 6. 3; 8. 1.

[1001]. Diog. L. vii. 125. On both the citations above, cf. Zeller, III, 1, 251.

[1002]. Called Citieus, born 320 B.C., of Semitic descent.

[1003]. Stoic Vet. Fr., ed. Arnim, 1905, I, 47, fr. 190 (Stob. Ecl. ii. 7. 5, pp. 57 f., ed. Wachs.); Diog. L. vii. 101 f., 103-5.

[1004]. Von Arnim, op. cit., p. 53, fr. 220; Cic. De fin. v. 84: “At Zeno eum (mendicum) non beatum modo, sed etiam divitem dicere ausus est.”