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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
‘He was of Rutulian blood, born of a Saguntine mother; but he had Greek blood too, and by his two parents he combined the seed of Italy with that of Dulichium’. So Duff, and Ruperti's ‘Murrus matre Graia et patre Romano progenitus’ is not the whole story. To Silius Saguntine = Greek (cf. 3. 178 Graia Saguntos) because, as Duff says, ‘men of Zacynthos had taken part in founding Saguntum’. prole = ‘with his children’—van Veen's Itala may well be right
page 173 note 1 Propertiana, pp. 268f.Google Scholar
page 174 note 1 I follow Summers's notation in Corp. Poet. Lot.
page 175 note 1 Uppsala Univ. Arsskrift, 1938, vii. 31 f.Google Scholar
page 175 note 2 Blomgren thinks collectis means that they were assembled in one house; but cf. colligere in 389.
page 176 note 1 The conjectures are all nugatory.
page 179 note 1 Heinsius' desivit is inadmissible. The form does not occur in poetry.