Page:1888 Cicero's Tusculan Disputations.djvu/302

 Beneath which is

XLIII. And truly these signs are so regularly disposed that a divine wisdom evidently appears in them:

The Charioteer

But to proceed Under his feet

his head is spangled with a number of stars;

from raining; for ὕειν is to rain: therefore they are injudiciously called Suculæ by our people, as if they had their name from ὗς, a sow, and not from ὕω.

Behind the Lesser Bear, Cepheus follows with extended hands,