[64] Sicarius.
[65] The Gallic sun-god.
[66] See Plato's "Theætetus," 174.
[67] A Lydian king whose wealth was placed on a par with that of the better known Croesus.
[68] Such alterations were actually made in Rome.
[69] To whose mysteries only women were admitted.
[70] Cattle-market.
[71] She was a sister of Clodius, a famous demagogue, and was a brilliant though abandoned woman.
[72] Without the imperium—so long as a Roman official held this he was above prosecution.
[73] Contemptuous diminutive for Greek.