[[24]] Quintilian, i, 6, 40. See specimen in Varro, L.L. vii, 26.
[[25]] Epp. ii, 1, 20-27, 86.
[[26]] Cicero, ad fam. xiv, 4, 1.
[[27]] Hor. Sat. i, 9, 69: Porphyrion is the authority for the comedies.
[[28]] Prudentius, contra Symmachum, i, 197-218.
[[29]] Tibullus, i, 10, 15.
[[30]] C.D. iv, 8. "To an early Greek," says Mr Gilbert Murray, "the earth, water and air were full of living eyes: of theoi, of daimones, of Kêres. One early poet says emphatically that the air is so crowded full of them that there is no room to put in the spike of an ear of corn without touching one."—Rise of Greek Epic, p. 82.
[[31]] de Spect. 5; cf. de Idol. 16; de cor. mil. 13, gods of the door; de Anima, 39, goddesses of child-birth.
[[32]] Lucr. iv, 580 f. Virg. Æn. viii, 314.
[[33]] Cic. N.D. ii, 2, 6: cf. De Div. i, 45, 101. Warde Fowler, Roman Festivals, pp. 256 ff. on the Fauni.