[1094]. Ibid. iii. and x.
[1095]. Ibid. x. 56–67.
[1096]. The authorities from which we derive our knowledge of the inner life and social habits and affections of the Romans are:—(1.) Ancient monuments. (2.) Cicero’s speeches and letters; Horace and the elegiac poets. (3.) The later classic poets, such as Juvenal, Martial, Statius. (4.) Gellius, Petronius, Seneca, Suetonius, the two Plinys. (5.) The grammarians. (6.) Greek authors, such as Plutarch, Lucian, Athenæus, &c. See, on this subject, Bekker’s Gallus—Preface.
[1097]. Ch. viii. v. 12.
[1098]. Suet. V. Neron. 12.
[1099]. Tac. Ann. xv. 49.
[1100]. Tac. Ann. xv. 48.
[1101]. Ibid. 57.
[1102]. Ibid. iii. 635, or v. 811.
[1103]. Ep. i. 61.