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Cyprian
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Introductory Notice to Cyprian.
[4883] [“Kalendarium cujusvis excedunt.” The kalendaria were tablets of monthly accounts, in which the monthly interest due, etc., were set down. “Exceed the entire monthly income” would be better. Tertullian uses the same word, “exhaust thekalendarium,” rendered by our Edinburgh translator (vol. iv. p. 18), a “fortune.” In this treatise Tertullian is constantly copied and quoted.]
[4884] [Laughter, vol. ii. p. 249, and contact p. 291.]
[4885] [Everything in antiquity breathes this spirit of “searching the Scriptures.” Compare Hippol., p. 219, note 4, supra.]
[4886] [Almost wholly made up of Scripture, and useful in any age to all Christians. Whatever its origin, it breathes a truly primitive spirit. Compare Tertullian, vol. iii. p. 657.]
[4888] Isa. xxx. 15, LXX.
[4889] Isa. xxx. 1, LXX.
[4890] Jer. ii. 25, LXX.
[4891] Isa. xxxi. 6, LXX.
[4892] Isa. xliii. 25, LXX.
[4893] Non multum remittit—probably a misprint for “permultum.”
[4894] Isa. lv. 6, 7, LXX.
[4895] Isa. xliv. 21, 22, LXX.
[4896] Isa. xlvi. 8, LXX.
[4897] Isa. liv. 7, 8, LXX.
[4898] Isa. lvii. 15 et seq., LXX.
[4899] It is taken for granted that the “ut” of the original is a misprint for “aut.”
[4900] Otherwise, “has forgotten me days without number.”
[4901] Jer. ii. 32, LXX.
[4902] Here also the emendation of “quæ” for “quod” is obviously necessary.
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