.    .    .    .    .    .    .    .; et altae

Per noctem resonare lupis ululantibus urbes. Geo., Bk. I., l. 486.

[51].

Siluisque feras sub nocte relictis

Audaces media posuisse cubilia Roma. Phar., Bk. I, ll. 559–60.

[52]. Translation by Marlowe.

[53]. Falls of Princes, Bk. VI.

[54]. Julius Obsequens, CXV., mentioned by Sykes in op. cit.

[55]. Neither does Appian.

[56]. Shakespeare’s Plutarch. Ed. by W. W. Skeat, page 164.