[376]. Athen. viii. 59.
[377]. Athen. viii. 60. In the warmer atmosphere of the volcanic islands of Lipari, the swallow has, by modern naturalists, been found stationary. Spallanzani, Travels in the Two Sicilies, i. Introd. p. 32.
[378]. Athen. ii. 56.
[379]. Cf. Foës. Œconom. Hippoc. v. μαζα. This bread, we find, was sometimes leavened. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 557. Athen. xiv. 83.
[380]. Mention is made of some poor philosophers of this sect, who used to chew the plant called ἄλιμα to allay hunger, and might be seen wandering about torrent beds, collecting this and similar herbs in their wallets. Athen. iv. 52. According to the comic poets, the Pythagorean sect allowed its disciples a loaf of pure bread and a cup of water per diem, which constituted the ordinary prison allowance. Id. ibid.
[381]. Aristoph. Equit. 420.
[382]. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 445.
[383]. Athen. xiii. 22.
[384]. Id. ii. 44.
[385]. Lucian. Amor. § 33.