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Arnobius

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Introductory Notice to Arnobius.

[4156] i.e., incestorum appetitorem.

Chapter XV

[4157] So Cicero (iii. 23); but Clemens [vol. ii. p. 179] speaks of five, and notes that a sixth had been mentioned.

Chapter XVI

[4158] Lit., “by the violence of your terror.” The preceding words are read in the ms. ideo motos—“so moved by authority,” and were emended idonea, as in the text, by Gelenius.

[4159] Lit., “to what parts shall we transfer the duties of pious service.”

[4160] The ms. reads cum numen; Rigaltius, followed by Oehler emending, as above, meum; the first four edd., with Oberthür, tum—“then the deity is mine;” while the rest read cum numine—“with the deity.”

[4161] So LB., Orelli, and Oehler, reading tu tinnisfor the ms. tutunis.

[4162] Capitoliis. In the Capitol were three shrines,—to Jove, Juno, and Minerva; and Roman colonies followed the mother-state’s example. Hence the present general application of the term, which is found elsewhere in ecclesiastical Latin.

[4163] Lit., “Nor are the forms of married persons given to these by all artists;” nec read in all edd. for the ms. et—“and of married,” etc., which is opposed to the context.

[4164] Lit., “not of your own right.”

[4165] Concretione roris—a strange phrase. Cf. Her., iv. 180: “They say that Minerva is the daughter of Poseidon and the Tritonian lake.”

[4166] St. p. 21. The ms. reads quorum Nili lingua latonis; the two Roman edd. merely insert p., Plat.; Gelenius and Canterus adding dicor—“in whose language I am called the Nile’s,” Nili being changed into Neith by Elmenhorst and later edd.

[4167] Lit., “take account of herself.”

[4168] So Ursinus suggested in the margin for the ms. si verum.

[4169] The third Minerva now addresses the fourth.

[4170] Lit., “approaching the duties of religion.”

[4171] According to the ms. sic—“for so (i.e., as you do) yielding,” etc.

Chapter XVIII

[4172] So all the edd., though Orelli approves of fictione (edd. -em), which is, he says, the ms. reading, “set forth with wanton fiction.”

[4173] The ms. and earlier edd., with Hild. and Oehler, read ex hominum de scriptis; LB. and Orelli inserting his after de, as above.

[4174] The ms. and both Roman edd. read esse, which is clearly corrupt; for which LB. gives scripsisse (misprinted scripse), as above.

[4175] i.e., “speak of them at all.”

[4176] Lit., “an idea of no writing.”

 

 

 

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