160 
plint's natueal histoet. 
[Book VII. 
the habit of calling them 'Acra^g/g.^' A very remarkable 
thing, too, is the fact, that among these persons are to be found 
some of the greatest masters of philosophy. Diogenes the 
Cynic, for instance, Pyrrho, Heraclitus, and Timon, which last 
allowed himself to be so entirely carried away by this spirit, 
as to become a hater of all mankind. Less important pecu- 
liarities of nature, again, are to be observed in many persons ; 
Antonia,^^ for instance, the wife of Drusus, was never known 
to expectorate ; and Pomponius, the poet, a man of consular 
rank, was never troubled with eructation. Those rare instances 
of men,^^ whose bones are naturally solid and without marrow, 
are known to us as men of horn.''^* 
CHAP. 19. (20.) — INSTANCES OF EXTEAOEDINAEY STEENGTH. 
Varro, speakiiig of persons remarkable for their strength, 
gives us an account of Tributanus, a celebrated gladiator, 
and skilled in the use of the Samnite arms he was a 
man of meagre person, but possessed of extraordinary strength. 
Varro makes mention of his son also, who served in the 
army of Pompeius Magnus. He says, that in all parts of his 
body, even in the arms and hands, there was a network of 
sinews,^^ extending across and across. The latter of these men, 
having been challenged by an enemy, with a single finger of 
the right hand, and that unarmed, vanquished him, and then 
31 " Without passion ;" equivalent to our English word " apathetical." — B. 
'^2 The daughter of M. Antony by Octavia. She was the mother of Ger- 
m aniens Caesar, and the grandmother of the emperor Caligula, whom she 
lived to see on the throne, and who is supposed to have hastened her death. 
She was celebrated for her beauty and chastity — a rare virtue in those 
days. 
33 Pliny, B. xxxi. c. 45, says, that this state of the bones is found in 
fishermen, from their being exposed to the action of the sea and salt water ; 
but both the fact and the supposed cause are without foundation. — B. 
31 ^'Cornei." 
35 It would appear that the Samnites were not only one of the most 
warlike people, with whom the Romans had to contest in the infancy of their 
state, but that they were particularly celebrated as gladiators. — B. 
36 The gladiators, called Samnites, were armed with the peculiar " scu- 
tum,** or oblong shield, used by the Samnites, a greave on the left leg, a 
sponger on the breast, and a helmet with a crest. 
3' The term *'nervus" was generally applied by the ancients to the 
sinews or tendons ; they had a very indistinct knowledge of what are pro- 
perly called the nerves." — B. 
38 Pintianus suggests another reading here, which would appear to bo 
