Why did Quintus Metellus, Q. Caecilius Metellus Pius, consul 80 b.c. when he became pontifex maximus , with his reputation for good sense in all other matters as well as in his statesmanship, prevent divination from birds after the month Sextius, which is now called August? Is it that, even as we attend to such matters in the middle of the day or at dawn, or in the beginning of the month when the moon is waxing, and avoid the declining days and hours as unsuitable for business, so likewise did Metellus regard the period of time after the first eight months as the evening or late afternoon, so to speak, of the year, since then it is declining and waning? Or is it because we should observe birds when they are in their prime and in perfect condition? And this they are before the summer-time: but towards autumn some are weak and sickly, others but nestlings and not full-grown, and still others have vanished completely, migrating because of the time of year. Why were men who were not regularly enlisted, but merely tarrying m the camp, not allowed to throw missiles at the enemy or to wound them? This fact Cato the Elder Cf. Cicero, De Officiis , i. 11 (37). has made clear in one of his letters to his son, in which he bids the young man to return home if he has completed his term of service and has been discharged: or, if he should stay over, to obtain permission from his general to wound or slay an enemy. Is it because sheer necessity alone constitutes a warrant to kill a human being, and he who does so illegally and without the word of command is a murderer? For this reason Cyrus also praised Chrysantas Cf. Xenophon, Cyropaedia , iv. 1. 3; and the note on Moralia , 236 e (Vol. III. p. 420). who, when he was about to kill an enemy, and had his weapon raised to strike, heard the recall sounded and let the man go without striking him, believing that he was now prevented from so doing. Or must he who grapples with the enemy and fights not be free from accountability nor go unscathed should he play the coward? For he does not help so much by hitting or wounding an enemy as he does harm by fleeing or retreating. He, therefore, who has been discharged from service is freed from military regulations: but he who asks leave to perform the offices of a soldier renders himself again accountable to the regulations and to his general. Why is it not allowed the priest of Jupiter ( Flamen Dialis ) to anoint himself in the open air? Cf. Aulus Gellius, x. 15. Is it because it used not to be proper or decent for sons to strip in their father’s sight, nor a son-in-law in the presence of his father-in-law, nor in ancient days did they bathe together? Cf. Cicero, De Oratore , ii. 55 (224), with Wilkins’s note. Now Jupiter is our father, and whatever is in the open air is in some way thought to be particularly in his sight. Or, just as it is against divine ordinance to strip oneself in a shrine or a temple, so also did they scrupulously avoid the open air and the space beneath the heavens, since it was full of gods and spirits? Wherefore also we perform many necessary acts under a roof, hidden and concealed by our houses from the view of Divine powers. Or are some regulations prescribed for the priest alone, while others are prescribed for all by the law through the priest? Wherefore also, in my country, to wear a garland, to wear the hair long, not to have any iron on one’s person, and not to set foot within the boundaries of Phocis, are the special functions of an archon: but not to taste fruit before the autumnal equinox nor to prune a vine before the vernal equinox are prohibitions disclosed to practically all alike through the archon: for those are the proper seasons for each of these acts. In the same way, then, it is apparently a special obligation of the Roman priest also not to use a horse nor to be absent from the city more than three nights Livy, v. 52. 13, says not even one night. Cf. also Tacitus, Annals , iii. 58 and 71. nor to lay aside the cap from which he derives the name of flamen . Cf. Life of Numa , chap. vii. (64 c); Life of Marcellus , chap. v. (300 c); Varro, De Lingua Latina , v. 84; Festus, s.v. Flamen Dialis ; Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities , ii. 64. 2. Varro’s etymology is Flamen quasi filamen ; Plutarch must have pronounced φλᾶμεν ph(i)lamen, with ph a true aspirate as in u ph ill, else there would be no justification for the alternative derivation from pileus ( Numa , vii.). But many other regulations are revealed to all through the priest, and one of them is the prohibition not to anoint oneself in the open air. For the Romans used to be very suspicious of rubbing down with oil, and even to-day they believe that nothing has been so much to blame for the enslavement and effeminacy of the Greeks as their gymnasia and wrestling - schools, which engender much listless idleness and waste of time in their cities, as well as paederasty and the ruin of the bodies of the young men with regulated sleeping, walking, rhythmical movements, and strict diet; by these practices they have unconsciously lapsed from the practice of arms, and have become content to be termed nimble athletes and handsome wrestlers rather than excellent men-at-arms and horsemen. It is hard work, at any rate, when men strip in the open air, to escape these consequences: but those who anoint themselves and care for their bodies in their own houses commit no offence. Why did their ancient coinage have stamped on one side a double-faced likeness of Janus, on the other the stern or the prow of a ship? Cf. Athenaeus, 692 e; Ovid, Fasti , i. 229 ff.; Pliny, Natural History , xxxiii. 3 (45); Macrobius, Saturnalia , i. 7. 21-22. Is it, as many affirm, in honour of Saturn who crossed over to Italy in a ship? Or, since this might be said of many, inasmuch as Janus, Evander, and Aeneas all landed in Italy after a voyage by sea, one might rather conjecture thus: some things are excellent for States, others are necessary; and of the excellent things good government is the chief, and of the necessary things facility of provision. Since, therefore, Janus established for them an ordered government by civilizing their life, and since the river, which was navigable and permitted transportation both from the sea and from the land, provided them with an abundance of necessities, the coinage came to have as its symbol the twofold form of the lawgiver, as has been stated, 269 a, supra . because of the change he wrought, and the vessel as symbol of the river. They also used another kind of coinage, stamped with the figures of a bull, a ram, and a boar, Is Plutarch thinking of the suovetaurilia ? Mr E. T. Newell, President of the American Numismatic Society, has been kind enough to inform me that no early Roman coinage bears these symbols. because their prosperity came mostly from their live stock, and from these they also derived their affluence. This is the reason why many of the names of the ancient families are such as the Suillii, Bubulci, Porcii, Cf. Life of Publicola , chap. xi. (103 b); Varro, quoted by Nonius Marcellus, p. 189, 21 (ed. Müller). as Fenestella Peter, Frag. Hist. Rom. p. 272, Annales , Frag. 5. has stated.