3420 Matt. v. 28.

3421 Prov. xx. 9.

3422 Job xxv. 5, Job xxv. 6.

3423 Isa. xxxiv. 5, R.V.

3424 Gen. iii. 18.

3425 Acts ix. 15.

3426 1 Cor. ix. 27.

3427 Rom. vii. 24.

3428 Prov. iv. 23.

3429 Luke viii. 21.

3430 1 Sam. i. 27, 1 Sam. i. 28.

3431 Jer. xxxv. 6. Jer. xxxv. 7.

3432 See Letter LVIII. and note there.

3433 An allusion to the word `monachus,0' `solitary0' or `monk.0'

3434 Acts vii. 29, Acts vii. 30.

3435 Matt. iv. 19.

3436 Rom. xii. 1.

3437 Letter LII.

3438 Cf. Letter CXXX.

3439 Rom. xiv. 4.

3440 2 K. vi. 5, 2 K. vi. 6.

3441 Ex. xv. 23, Ex. xv. 27.

3442 1 Sam. xxv. 38.

3443 Luke xii. 20.

3444 1 Thess. v. 17.

3445 Ps. xix. 13.

3446 1 Cor. ix. 14.

3447 1 Thess. ii. 9.: 1 Cor. iv. 12.

3448 1 Cor. ix. 11.

3449 Virg., G. i. 108-10.

3450 Prov. vi. 8, LXX.

3451 Prov. xiii. 4, LXX.

3452 Ezek. xvi. 25

3453 Cf. Letter XXII.

3454 In Letter XVIII. Jerome speaks of his teacher as one so learned in the Hebrew language that the very scribes regarded him as a Chaldaean (i.e., as a graduate of the Babylonian school of Rabbinic learning).

3455 2 Cor. ii. 7.

3456 Cic., T. Q. iv. 35.

3457 Esth. ii. 1-4.

3458 Ps. xxxiv. 14.

3459 Phil. iv. 7.

3460 Ps. lxxvi. 2, LXX.

3461 Rom. xii. 13, R.V. marg.

3462 Pliny, N. H. x. 32.

3463 Romulus and Remus, the first of whom slew the second.

3464 Gen. xxv. 22.

3465 When Jerome wrote, these terms had but recently come into use in the West i no doubt, however, the offices described by them were of older date. Archpresbyters seem to have been the forerunners of those who are now called "rural deans."

3466 1 Cor. xiv. 15.

3467 Eph. v. 19.

3468 Ps. xlvii. 7.

3469 Deut. xxvii. 9, R.V.

3470 Cic., Off. 1. 36.

3471 Caninam exercent facundiam. The phrase recurs in Letter CXXXIV.

3472 See also Lactantius, vi. 18.

3473 The most celebrated physician of antiquity.

3474 1 Tim. vi. 8.

3475 'agoranmoi.

3476 Phil. iii. 13.

3477 Imitated from Persius (I. 58-60).

3478 i.e., Rufinus who was now dead. The nickname is taken from a burlesque very popular in Jerome's day entitled "The Porker's Last Will and Testament." In this the testator's full name is set down as Marcus Grunnius Corocotta, i.e., Mark Grunter Hog. In the beginning of the twelfth book of his commentary on Isaiah Jerome mentions the "Testament" as being then a popular school book.

3479 Plautus, Aulularia, I. 1. 10.

3480 A Platonist of the third century after Christ, much celebrated for his learning and critical skill. "To judge like Longinus" became a synonym for accurate discrimination.

3481 A martinet of the old school, who did his utmost to oppose what he considered the luxury of his age. He was censor in 184 b.c.

3482 Lucr. V. 905, Munro. The words come first from Homer, Il. vi. 181.

3483 Ps. cxli. 4, Vulg.

3484 Ps. l. 20.

3485 Ps. lvii. 4.

3486 Ps. lv. 21.

3487 Eccl. x. 11, R.V. marg.

3488 Ps. cxli. 4.

3489 Gal. vi. 7.

3490 1 Sam. xvi. 7.

3491 Prov. xxv. 23.

3492 Ps. lxxviii. 57.

3493 Ecclus. xxvii. 25.

3494 Isa. xxxiii. 15.

3495 Prov. xxiv. 21, Prov. xxiv. 22 Vulg.

3496 1 Tim. v. 19, 1 Tim. v. 20 (inexact).

3497 Ps. cxli. 5. LXX.

3498 Heb. xii. 6.

3499 Isa. iii. 12. LXX.



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