Page:A Brief Outline of the Histories of Libraries.djvu/80

74 by this same Augustus, the Palatine, so called because it was in the royal palace itself. Suetonius says, "He built the temple of Apollo in that part of his house on the Palatine Hill which had been struck by lightning, and was thereby, as the priests interpreted the fact, marked out as a spot dear to God. To the temple he added porticoes, in which he placed a library of books in Latin and in Greek." This happened in the seven hundred and twenty-sixth year of the city, as one may learn from the opening lines of Dion's History, book.

It seems, then, that Ovid followed the order of the dates of their establishment in his reference to the libraries of Rome,