Appearance      Marker   

 

<<  Contents  >>

Lactantius

Footnotes

Show All Footnotes

Show All Footnotes & Jump to 986

Introductory Notice To Lactantius.

[976] Patientia.

[977] Pati.

[978] Caput obvolutum. This appears to be the title of a lost declamation of Quintilian.

Chap. VIII.—Of Justice Known to All, But Not Embraced; Of the True Temple of God, and of His Worship, that All Vices May Be Subdued.

[979] Inanem.

[980] [This is not consistent with the Church’s allowance of matrimony to women past child-bearing, nor with the language of the Apostle, 1 Cor. vii. 2-7. See my note (2), vol. ii. p. 262.]

[981] Si ab omnibus in legem Dei conjuraretur. The word “conjuro,” contrary to its general use, is here employed in a good sense.

[982] [See ed. Klotz, vol. ii. p. 403, Lips., 1869.]

Chap. IX.—Of the Crimes of the Wicked, and the Torture Inflicted on the Christians.

[983] Virg., Æn., ii. 355.

[984] Ter., Andr., i. 1, 41.

[985] The Jewish people. Thus St. Paul speaks, Acts xxvi. 6: “I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our fathers.”

[986] i.e., the Christian religion.

[987] Mactant.

[988] Desperati, equivalent to παράβολοι, a word borrowed from combats with wild beasts, and applied to Christians as being ready to devote their lives to the cause of God.

[989] There is an allusion to the punishment of parricides, who were enclosed in a bag with a dog, a serpent, an ape, and a cock, and thrown into the sea.

[990] Patientia, in a bad sense. [The text of the translator gives “endurance,” for which I venture to substitute as above.]

[991] Contra fas omne.

[992] Induforo.Indu” and “endo” are archaisms, used by Lucretius and other writers in the same sense as “in.”

[993] i.e., Christians. [See vol. i. pp. 26, 27.]

[994] Eoque fieri non potest. Others read “æque fieri,” etc.

Chap. X.—Of False Piety, and of False and True Religion.

[995] Virg., Æn., i. 544.

[996] Ibid., xi. 81.

 

 

 

10 per page

 

 

 Search Comments 

 

This page has been visited 0404 times.

 

<<  Contents  >>