Footnotes
[13]
Aristotle, "Politics," ii. 10.
[14]
They always united immediately against foreign enemies, which
was called Syncretism. — Plutarch "Mor.," p. 88.
[16]
Plutarch's "Morals," treatise "Whether a Man Advanced in Years Ought to Meddle with
Public Affairs."
[18]
The Gymnic art was divided into two parts, dancing and
wrestling. In Crete they had the armed dances of the Curetes; at Sparta
they had those of Castor and Pollux; at Athens the armed dances of
Pallas, which were extremely proper for those that were not yet of age
for military service. "Wrestling is the image of war," said Plato "Laws,"
vii. He commends antiquity for having established only two dances, the
pacific and the Pyrrhic. See how the latter dance was applied to the
military art, Plato, ibid.
[19]
Aut libidinoscæ. Ladæas Lacedæmonis palæstras. — Mutual, iv, 55.
[20]
Plutarch's "Morals," in the treatise entitled "Questions Concerning the
Affairs of the Romans," question 40.
[22]
Plutarch's "Morals," "Table Propositions," book ii, question 5.