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Part Fourth
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[1] [Written, according to Neander, about a.d. 208.]
Chapter I.—Time Changes Nations’ Dresses—and Fortunes.
[2] [See Elucidation I.]
[3] Utica (Oehler).
[4] i.e., in Adrumetum (Oehler).
[5] Sæcularium.
[6] i.e., Etruscans, who were supposed to be of Lydian origin.
[7] i.e., your gown.
[8] A Roman knight and mime-writer.
[9] Virg., Æn., i. 14.
[10] Or, “attack.”
[11] Caput vindicantis. But some read capite: “which avenges itself with its head.”
[12] See Virg., Æn., iii. 415 (Oehler).
Chapter II.—The Law of Change, or Mutation, Universal.
[13] Mundus.
[14] See Adv. Herm., c. xxv. ad fin. (Oehler).
[15] As being “the ears of an ass.”
[16] Mundus. Oehler’s pointing is disregarded.
[17] Mundus. Oehler’s pointing is disregarded.
[18] Mundus. Oehler’s pointing is disregarded.
[19] Metatio nostra, i.e., the world.
[20] i.e., blind. Cf. Milton, P. L., iii. 35, with the preceding and subsequent context.
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