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Minucius Felix
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[1766] [In the case of Darius Hystaspes.]
[1767] Eteocles and Polynices.
[1768] Pompey and Cæsar.
[1769] According to some, “one fate.”
[1770] These words are omitted by some editors.
[1771] Homer, Odyss., xviii. 136, 137.
[1772] Virgil, Æneid, vi. 724.
[1773] Some read, “For these things are true.”
[1774] Virgil, Georgics, iv. 221; Æneid, i. 743.
[1775] Otherwise, “Speusippus.”
[1776] The ms. here inserts, “Aristoteles of Pontus varies, at one time attributing the supremacy to the world, at another to the divine mind.” Some think that this is an interpolation, others transfer the words to Theophrastus below.
[1777] Otherwise, “Aristo the Chian.”
[1778] [See note on Plato, chap. xxvi.]
[1779] Some editors read, “mere wonders,” apparently on conjecture only.
[1780] Otherwise, “was pleased.”
[1781] Four early editions read “instantius” for “in statuis,” making the meaning probably, “more keenly,” “more directly.”
[1782] Otherwise, according to some, “of the historians.”
[1783] This treatise is mentioned by Athenagoras, Legat. pro Christ., ch. xxviii. [See vol. ii. p. 143, this series.] Also by Augustine, de Civ. Dei., lib. viii. ch. iii. and xxvii. In the fifth chapter Augustine calls the priest by the name of Leo.
[1784] This passage is very doubtful both in its text and its meaning.
[1785] Otherwise, “carried about.”
[1786] Otherwise, “his approach is drowned.”
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