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Anti-Marcion

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Introduction, by the American Editor.

[2327] [Euxine=hospitable. One recalls Shakespeare:

—“Like to the Pontick Sea

Whose icy current and compulsive force

Ne’er feels retiring ebb.”—Othel.]

[2328] Cruda.

[2329] De jugo. See Strabo (Bohn’s trans.), vol. ii. p. 247.

[2330] Duritia.

[2331] Libens.

[2332] Exaggerantur.

[2333] Calet.

[2334] [Iphigenia of Euripides.]

[2335] [See the Medea of Euripides.]

[2336] [Prometheus of Æschylus.]

[2337] Hamaxobio. This Sarmatian clan received its name ῾Αμαξόβιοι from its gypsy kind of life.

[2338] [I fancy there is point in this singular, the sky of Pontus being always overcast. Cowper says:

“There is but one cloud in the sky,

But that doth the welkin invest,” etc.

[2339] Quidni.

[2340] Lancinatur.

[2341] Castrator carnis. See Pliny, N. H. viii. 47 (Bohn’s trans. vol. ii. p. 297).

[2342] Ipsius litteris.

[2343] Jam.

[2344] Hinc.

[2345] Retro.

[2346] He alludes to his book De Præscriptione Hæreticorum. [Was this work then already written? Dr. Allix thinks not. But see Kaye, p. 47.]

[2347] Interdum. [Can it be that when all this was written (speaking of ourselves) our author had fully lapsed from Communion with the Catholic Church?]

Chapter II.—Marcion, Aided by Cerdon, Teaches a Duality of Gods; How He Constructed This Heresy of an Evil and a Good God.

 

 

 

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