[314] [Claudian's famous old man of Verona, "_qui
suburbium
numquam
egressus est_.
Byron
"
For anecdotes of Can Grande, see _Commedia, etc._, by E. H. Plumptre,
D.D., 1886, I. cxx., cxxi.; and compare _Dante at Verona_, by D. G.
Rossetti, _Works_, 1886, i. 1-17.]
[313] [Ippolito Pindemonte, the modern Tibullus (1753-1828). (See
_Letters_, 1900, iv. 127, note 4.
)]
[314] [Claudian's famous old man of Verona, "_qui
suburbium
numquam
egressus est_.
"
C. Claudiani _Opera_, lii., _Epigrammata_, ii. lines 9, 10 (ed. 1821,
iii. 427).]
[315] ["In the amphitheatre ... crowds collected after the sittings of
the Congress, to witness dramatic representations.... But for the
costumes, a spectator might have imagined he was witnessing a
resurrection of the ancient Romans.