78. Habeat scabiem quisquis ad me venerit novissimus.

79. Rex erit qui recte faciet, qui non faciet non erit.

80.

Gallos Cæsar in triumphum ducit, idem in curiam;

Galli bracas deposuerunt, latum clavom sumpserunt.

81.

Brutus quia reges eiecit, consul primus factus est;

Hic quia consoles eiecit, rex postremo factus est.

82. Salva Roma, salva patria, salvus est Germanicus.

83. Cf. Schmid, "Der griechische Roman," Neue Jahrb., Bd XIII (1904), 465-85; Wilcken, in Hermes, XXVIII, 161 ff., and in Archiv f. Papyrusforschung, I, 255 ff.; Grenfell-Hunt, Fayûm Towns and Their Papyri (1900), 75 ff., and Rivista di Filologia, XXIII, I ff.

84. Some of the important late discussions of the Milesian tale are by Bürger, Hermes (1892), 351 ff.; Norden, Die antike Kunstprosa, II, 602, 604, n.; Rohde, Kleine Schriften, II, 25 ff.; Bürger, Studien zur Geschichte d. griech. Romans, I (Programm von Blankenburg a. H., 1902); W. Schmid, Neue Jahrb. f. d. klass. Alt. (1904), 474 ff.; Lucas, "Zu den Milesiaca des Aristides," Philologus, 61 (1907), 16 ff.

85. On the origin of the prosimetrum cf. Hirzel, Der Dialog, 381 ff.; Norden, Die antike Kunstprosa, 755.