[323]. Cf. Poll. vi. 7. Cœl. Rhodig. xvii. 24.

[324]. Plut. Paral. Vit. § 3.

[325]. Odyss. β. 337, 345. χ. 442. Schol. 459. 466. Poll. vii. 397.

[326]. Xen. Memorab. iii. 8, 9.

[327]. Anaxand. ap. Athen. ii. 29.—So also thought Socrates, who observes, that in winter every one will have a fire who can get wood. And, though he himself wore the same garments all the year round, he considered it, apparently, a judicious practice in others to put on warm clothing.—Xen. Œcon. xvii. 3. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 716. When the dining-room was not furnished with a chimney, braziers were kindled outside the door, and carried in when the worst fumes of the charcoal had evaporated.—Plut. Symp. vi. 7.

[328]. Etym. Mag. 186, 8. Athen. i. 18. Phot. Bib. 60. b. Hesiod. Frag. 53. Baths, at Sparta, were common to both sexes.—Goguet, v. 428. Cf. Pashley, Travels. i. 183.

[329]. Baccius, de Thermis, p. 365. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 1034.

[330]. Cf. Etymol. Mag. 151, 52, seq. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 1055.

[331]. Baccius, de Therm. p. 399.

[332]. Athen. xi. 104.