[245]. Plut. Lyc. § 16. Inst. Lac. § 5.
[246]. Xenoph. de Rep. Laced. iii. 4. Of Phocion, an imitator of Spartan manners, the same thing is related.—Plut Phoc. § 4.
[247]. Herod. vii. 208, with the notes of Valckenaar and Wesseling.
[248]. Plut. Instit. Lacon. § 5.
[249]. Thucyd. i. 6. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 167. Tim. Lex. 188. Aristoph. Eccles. 332. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 879. Lucian. Amor. § 3.
[250]. Aristoph. Concion. 60, et Schol.
[251]. Athen. v. 49.—Even slaves were in the habit of wearing rings set with precious stones, sometimes of three colours, of which several specimens are found in the British Museum. Thus, in Lucian, we find Parmenon, the servant of Polemon, with a ring of this kind on his little finger.—Diall. Meret. ix. 2. Cf. Hemster. ad Poll. ix. 96. t. vi. p. 1193.
[252]. Poll. vii. 92, seq.
[253]. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 329.
[254]. Athen. xii. 5. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 1328. Nub. 971.