Stoic habit of cutting the hair, 3. 54; doctrine of fame, 1. 47; prayer, 2 passim; the aim of life, 3. 60; ethics as depending on metaphysics, 3. 66; the universe as a móλis, 3. 72; freedom, 5. 73 foll.; law of Nature, 5. 98; life as an art, 5. 105.
Stoicism, its contact with Rome, p. xviii; change of, from a philosophy into a religion, p. xix; fall of, p. xx; religious development of, not antici- pated by Persius, p. xxii.
Strigil, 5. 126.
Stringere, 2. 66.
Stuppa, 5. 135.
Subaeratus, 5. 106.
Subducere costam Appennino, 1. 95.
Subiit, 2. 55.
Subplantare, 1. 35.
Suflare, 4. 20. Sumen, I. 53. Summa boni, 4. 17.
Summa saliva, labra, 1. 104. Supellex, 4. 52. Supponere, 5. 36. Surdus, 6. 35.
Surrentina, 3. 93.
Suscipere, 5. 36.
Vapidus, 5. 117. Vappa, 5. 77. Varicosus, 5. 189. Varus, 4. 12., 6. 18. Vastus, 5. 141. Vegrandis, 1. 97. Veientanum, 5. 147. Velina, 5. 73.
Venas tangere, 3. 107. Vendere, I. 122. Venosus, 1. 76. Veratrum, I. 51. Verba dare, 3. 19. Verrucosus, I. 77. Vertere, 5. 137. Vertigo, 5. 76. Vetavit, 5. 90. Vettidius, 4. 25. Viatica, 5. 65.
Vibix, 4. 49. Vide sis, I. 108. Vindicta, 5. 88.
Vin tu, 6. 63. Violae, 5. 182.
Viridis limus, 3. 22.
Virtue as a mean, doctrine of, 4. II. Vivere, 6. 2, 25.
Vivere cum Iove, 5. 139.
Vocative for nominative, 1. 123., 3. 28.,
Washing in the Tiber, habit of, 2. 15.
Y, letter, symbol of the two ways, 3. 56.
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