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ANF Introductory Material Book 6
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[1] See the Edinburgh series.
[2] See p. 3, ed. of 1861.
[3] “Hinter dem Berge sind auch Leute.”
[4] Late editions are cheap in the market. It is filled with the author’s idiosyncrasies, but it is brilliant and suggestive.
[5] Lect. vii. p. 268. On the verse of Horace (Ep., i. book ii. 155), see Dacier’s note, vol. ix. 389.
[6] He adds: “Alexandria, till the rise of Constantinople, was the most powerful city in the East. The prestige of its founder still clung to it.”
[7] That is, of “the pope,” as Wellington was called “the duke.” But Cyprian was called papa, even by the Roman clergy.
[8] He owes his own introduction to a just view of these facts to a friend of his boyhood and youth, the late Rev. Dr. Hill of the American Mission in Athens. He was penetrated with love for Greek Christians.
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