347 ([return])
[ “Quasi pueros primae teneritudinis, quos ‘pisciculos’ vocabat, institueret, ut natanti sibi inter femina versarentur, ac luderent: lingua morsuque sensim appetentes; atque etiam quasi infantes firmiores, necdum tamen lacte depulsos, inguini ceu papillae admoveret: pronior sane ad id genus libidinis, et natura et aetate.”]

[ [!-- Note --]

348 ([return])
[ “Foeminarum capitibus solitus illudere.”]

[ [!-- Note --]

349 ([return])
[ “Obscoenitate oris hirsuto atque olido.”]

[ [!-- Note --]

350 ([return])
[ “Hircum vetulum capreis naturam ligurire”]

[ [!-- Note --]

351 ([return])
[ The Temple of Vesta, like that dedicated to the same goddess at Tivoli, is round. There was probably one on the same site, and in the same circular form, erected by Numa Pompilius; the present edifice is far too elegant for that age, but there is no record of its erection, but it is known to have been repaired by Vespasian or Domitian after being injured by Nero’s fire. Its situation, near the Tiber, exposed it to floods, from which we find it suffered, from Horace’s lines—

“Vidimus flavum Tiberim, retortis
Littore Etrusco violenter undis,
Ire dejectum monumenta Regis,
Templaque Vestae.”—Ode, lib. i. 2. 15.