[1921] Cadi.
[1922] Ground, perhaps, into a kind of flour.
[1923] Opsonii vicem. “Opsonium” was anything eaten with bread, such as vegetables, meat, and fish, for instance.
[1924] De Re Rust. c. 56.
[1925] Because they would be sure, under any circumstances, to eat plenty of them.
[1927] These were so called from Caunus, a city of Caria, famous for its dried figs. Pronounced “Cavneas,” it would sound to the superstitious, “Cave ne eas,” “Take care that you go not.”
[1928] At Brundisium.
[1929] A.U.C. 801.
[1930] Alba Longa. See B. iii. c. 9.