[323] Cyropaedeia, viii. 3, 10.

[324] It must be observed that although we are obliged in the engraving to bisect this relief, it is really continuous. The head of the lion in the upper line fits on to the body of the lion in the lower line.

[325] It is figured not only in the works already cited, but also in Overbeck’s Geschichte der Plastik, ii. p. 403, and in other works.

[326] As to this and all other details, see the valuable remarks of M. Reinach, op. cit. p. 325.

[327] Robert, Die antiken Sarkophag-Reliefs, ii. pl. 27.

Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber: can scarely have aimed=> can scarcely have aimed {pg 81}

in Attica, at Spata, and at Menidi=> in Attica, at Sparta, and at Menidi {pg 105}