[241]. Paus. i. 1, 2.
[242]. Strab. ix. 1. t. ii. p. 239.
[243]. Xen. Hellen. ii. 4, 11.
[244]. Thucyd. viii. 93. Lys. in Agorat. § 7.
[245]. Of which there were three. Plat. Gorg. t. iii. p. 22. Wordsworth, Athens and Attica, p. 187. Dr. Cramer, Desc. of Greece, ii. 346, seq. understands the long walls to have been but two in number.
[246]. Marin. vit. Procl. p. 74. ed. Fabric.
[247]. Boeckh, Pub. Econ. of Athens, i. 88. seq.
[248]. Suid. in v. t. ii. p. 611. d. Harpocrat. in v. p. 254. Paus. i. 22. 4. Leake, Topog. p. 177. Wordsworth, Athens and Attica. p. 112.
[249]. Up this road goats were never allowed to ascend (Athen. xiii. 51). Even crows were said never to alight on the top of the sacred rock; and Chandler (ii. 61) remarks, that although he frequently saw these birds flying about the Acropolis, he never observed one on the summit. “The hooded crow, which retires from England during the summer, is a constant inhabitant of Attica, and is probably that species noticed by the ancients under the name of κορώνη. It is the word applied at present to it by the Greek peasants, who are the best commentators on the old naturalists.” Sibthorp in Walp. Mem. l. 75.
[250]. Wordsworth, Athens and Attica, p. 114.