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Part Fourth

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I. On the Pallium.

[327] Comp. the note above on “publicato bono suo.”

Chapter XV.—Of Fascination.

[328] Comp. Psa. 147.6; Luke 1.52.

Chapter XVI.—Tertullian, Having Shown His Defence to Be Consistent with Scripture, Nature, and Discipline, Appeals to the Virgins Themselves.

[329] See 1 Cor. xi. 14, above quoted.

[330] See 1 Thess. v. 21.

[331] See 1 Cor. xi.

Chapter XVII.—An Appeal to the Married Women.

[332] 1 Cor. xi. 6, etc.

I. (Vicar of the Lord, p. 27.)

[333] The Christian Life, vol. iii. p. 64.

III. (These crimes, p. 36.)

[334] Tertullian speaks of the heathen as “decimated by abortions.” See ad Uxor., p. 41, infra.

[335] Lippincotts, Philadelphia, 1868.

[336] Bunsen, vol. i. p. 134.

IV. To His Wife.

[337] [Written circa a.d. 207. Tertullian survived his wife; and we cannot date these books earlier than about the time of his writing the De Pallio, in the opinion of some.]

Chapter I.—Design of the Treatise. Disavowal of Personal Motives in Writing It.

[338] Jam hinc.

[339] Sæculo.

[340] Fidei.

[341] Sæcularibus.

[342] Posteritati; or, with Mr. Dodgson, “our future.”

[343] Deputantur.

[344] Solidum; alluding to certain laws respecting a widow’s power of receiving “in its entirety” her deceased husband’s property.

[345] Fidei commissum.

[346] Sæculo.

[347] Luke xx. 36.

 

 

 

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