[36.] Anac. Carm. p. 35.
[37.] Anac. p. 87.
[38.] This appears remarkably in that piece, where he gives so ingenuous a character of himself.
Ὁν μοι μελει Γυγου
Του Σαρδεων Ανακτος, &c.
Το σημερον μελει μοι.
p. 28.
[39.] The reader will find a striking example of this beauty, in the Ode addressed to a swallow, where he runs a comparison betwixt the liberty of that bird and his own bondage.
Συ μεν φιλη χελιδων, &c. p. 60.
[40.] Thus Horace represents her
Æoliis fidibus quærentem