[159] Ennius, Fragmenta, ed. Hesselius, 1707, pp. 1, 4–7; Horace, Epist. ii, 1, 52; Persius, Sat. vi. [↑]
[160] Grote, History, iv, 97. [↑]
[161] Scholiast on Iliad, xx, 67; Tatian, Adv. Græcos, c. 48 (31); W. Christ, Gesch. der griech. Literatur, 3te Aufl. p. 63; Grote, ch. xvi (i, 374). [↑]
[163] K. O. Müller, Dorians, Eng. tr. ii, 365–68; Mommsen, Hist. of Rome, Eng. tr. ed. 1894, iii, 113. [↑]
[164] Grote. i, 338, note. [↑]
[165] Cicero, De natura Deorum, i, 22. [↑]
[166] Philolaos, as we saw, is said to have been prosecuted, but is not said to have been condemned. [↑]
[167] Fairbanks, pp. 245, 255, 261; Diog. Laërt. bk. ii, ch. iii, 4 (§ 8). [↑]
[168] Fairbanks, pp. 230–45. Cp. Grote, Plato, i, 54, and Ueberweg, i, 66, as to nature of the Nous of Anaxagoras. [↑]