[668]. Fragm. Γεωργ. iv. t. ii. p. 268. Bekk.

[669]. Athen. iii. 7.

[670]. See Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 707.

[671]. Athen. iii. 19.

[672]. Stesich. ap. Athen. iii. 20.

[673]. Athen. iii. 21.

[674]. Antigonos Carystios, ap. Athen. iii. 22.

[675]. Vict. Var. Lect. p. 892.

[676]. Hist. Plantarum, iv. 4. 2. The orange attains great perfection in Crete. Mr. Pashley speaks of twelve different kinds, and nearly as many sorts of lemons. Travels, i. 96, seq.

[677]. Ap. Athen. iii. 27. Mitford, Hist. Greece, i. 154, note 59, misled by Barthelemy (Anacharsis, ch. 59) confounds Antiphanes, the comic poet, born B. C. 407 (Clinton, Fast. Hellen. ii. 81) with Antiphon, the master of Thucydides, born B. C. 479, and who died in the year 411, four years before the birth of Antiphanes.—Clinton, ii. 31, 37.