19 Virgil, Aen. 7, 338.

20 Virgil, Aen. 4. 492, 493.

21 Virgil, Ec. 8. 99.

22 Pliny (Hist. Nat. xxviii. 2) and others quote the law as running: Qui fruges incantasit, qui malum carmen incantasit...neu alienam segetem pelexeris.

23 Before Claudius, the prefect of Africa, a heathen.

24 Another reading, whom they could not know, though near to themselves.

25 These quotations are from a dialogue between Hermes and Aesculapius, which is said to have been translated into Latin by Apuleius.

26 Rom. i. 21.

27 Jer. xvi. 10.

28 Zech. xiii. 2.

29 Isa. xix. 1.

30 Matt. xvi. 16.

31 Matt. viii. 29.

32 Ps. xcvi. 1.

33 Ps. cxv. 5, etc.

34 1 Cor. x. 19, 20.

35 Ps. xcvi. 1-5.

36 Jer. xvi. 20.

37 Ornamenta memoriarum.

38 Comp. The Confessions, vi. 2.

1 See Plutarch, on the Cessation of Oracles.

2 The De Deo Socratis.

3 De Fin. iii. 20; Tusc. Disp. iii. 4.

4 The distinction between bona and commoda is thus given by Seneca (Ep. 87, ad fin.): Commodum est quod plus ususest quam rnolestioe; bonum sinecrum debet esse et ab omni parte innoxium.

5 Book xix. ch. 1.

6 See Diog. Laert. ii. 71.

7 Virgil, Aen. iv. 449.

8 Seneca, De Clem. ii. 4 and 5.

9 Pro. Lig. c. 12.

10 De Oratore, i 11, 47.

11 De Deo Soc.