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Lactantius
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Introductory Notice To Lactantius.
[1938] Sed ego id in eo jure ab ancipiti vindico.
[1939] ii. 991.
[1940] Et citra hoc opus homo resistit. The compound word “resistit” is used for the simple sistit—“stands.”
[1941] Sacramento
[1942] Metitur, “measures.”
[1943] Corpusculum. The diminutive appears to imply contempt.
[1944] The expression is too general, since the body as well as the soul is a true part of man’s nature. [Perhaps so; but Lactantius is thinking of St. Paul’s expression (Philipp. iii. 21), “the body of our humiliation.”]
[1945] Quem rectum rectè sortitus est. In some editions the word “recte” is omitted.
General Note by the American Editor.
[1946] Cap. xiv. (vol. i.) p. 452.
[1947] Bibliothèque Ancienne et Mod., tom. iii. p. 438.
[1948] Credib., part ii. vol. vii. p. 94.
[1949] The Père Lestocq, tom. ii. pp. 46–60.
[1950] This word is italicized by Gibbon.
[1951] Vol. ii. cap. 20.
[1952] Inst., i. 1 and vii. 27.
[1953] Vol. ii. cap. 20.
[1954] Now (1880) a thousand years old.
[1955] Diarium Italicum, p. 409.
[1956] “Except Isæus,” says Gibbon, who refers to the edition of our author by Dufresnoy, tom. i. p. 596.
Of the Manner in Which the Persecutors Died.
[1958] [Not “the persecutors,” but only some of them. This treatise is, in fact, a most precious relic of antiquity, and a striking narrative of the events which led to the “conversion of the Empire,” so called. Its historical character is noted by Gibbon, D. and F., vol. ii. 20, n. 40.]
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