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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Pliny the Elder, The Natural History (ed. John Bostock, M.D., F.R.S., H.T. Riley, Esq., B.A.). Search the whole document.

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olent end, about B.C. 30. He is supposed to have written tragedies, epigrams, and other works. See Horace, Epist. B. i. Ep. 4, 1. 3. of Parma, Cicero,See end of B. vii. Mucianus,See end of B. ii. Cælius,Cælius Antipater. See end of B. ii. Celsus,See end of B. vii. Trogus,See end of B. vii. Ovid,See end of B. xviii. Polybius,See end of B. iv. Sornatius.This personage is entirely unknown. It may possibly be a corruption for Soranus, a poet of that name (Q. Valerius Soranus) who flourished about 100 B.C. See also B. xxxii. c. 23. FOREIGN AUTHORS QUOTED.—Callimachus,See end of B. iv. Ctesias,See end of B. ii. Eudicus,Beyond the mention made of him in c. 9 of this Book, nothing whatever is known of him. Theophrastus,See end of B. iii. Eudoxus,See end of B. ii., and end of B. vi. Theopompus,See end of B. ii. Polycritus,See end of B. xii. Juba,See end of B. v. Lycus,See end of B. xii. Apion,See end of B. xxx. Epigenes,See end of B. ii. Pelops,He is also mentioned in B. xxxii. c. 16, but b
hese fine sponges, suspended over a patient's bed, will ensure him additional repose at right.An absurdity, of course. We will now turn to the remedies derived from the marine and aquatic animals. SUMMARY.—Remedies, narratives, and observations, nine hundred and twenty-four. ROMAN AUTHORS QUOTED.—M. Varro,See end of B. ii. CassiusCalled C. Cassius Severus Parmensis, according to some authorities. H was one of the murderers of Cæsar, and perished, the last of them by a violent end, about B.C. 30. He is supposed to have written tragedies, epigrams, and other works. See Horace, Epist. B. i. Ep. 4, 1. 3. of Parma, Cicero,See end of B. vii. Mucianus,See end of B. ii. Cælius,Cælius Antipater. See end of B. ii. Celsus,See end of B. vii. Trogus,See end of B. vii. Ovid,See end of B. xviii. Polybius,See end of B. iv. Sornatius.This personage is entirely unknown. It may possibly be a corruption for Soranus, a poet of that name (Q. Valerius Soranus) who flourished about 100 B.C. See also B. xxxi