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Lactantius
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Introductory Notice To Lactantius.
[1351] Suspicione.
[1352] Communitatem.
[1353] [“We must wait patiently,” said Socrates, “until some one, either a god or man, teach us our moral and religious duties, and remove the darkness from our eyes.”—Alcibiad , ii., Opera, vol. v. p. 101, Bipont.]
Chap. IX.—Of the Immortality of the Soul, and of Virtue.
[1354] Appropinquante sæculorum fine.
[1355] Institutorum miracula.
[1356] Deliramenta.
[1357] De Leg., i. 8.
[1358] [Here again the reference to Ovid’s maxim. See pp. 41, 56, and 58, supra.]
[1359] θεώπιδα. Others read θεωρίαν, i.e., “a contemplation.”
[1360] [See the most instructive pages of Taylor Lewis again: Plato against the Atheists, p. 121.]
[1361] Sublime.
Chap. X.—Of Vices and Virtues, and of Life and Death.
[1362] Libidinis finis est.
[1363] Senescit.
[1364] Intervallum.
[1365] Perpetuitas.
[1366] Tusc. Disp., i. 46.
[1367] Ibid., i. 30.
[1368] [Tayler Lewis, Plato, etc., pp. 294–300; more especially, pp. 318–322.]
Chap. XI.—Of the Last Times, and of the Soul and Body.
[1369] Sine nutu et adminiculo animi.
[1370] Redundent.
Chap. XII.—Of the Soul and the Body, and of Their Union and Separation and Return.
[1371] Comprehensibile.
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