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Olear. Vid. viii, 7, § 9. See also ii. 37, vi. 11, viii. 5. Philostr. i. 2, and Olear. ad loc. note 3, iv. 44, v. 12, vii. 39, viii. 7; Apollon. Epist. 8 and 52; Philostr. Prooem. vit. Sophist.; Euseb. in Hier. 2; Mosheim, de Simone Mago, Sec. 13. Yet it must be confessed that the views both of the Pythagoreans and Eclectics were very inconsistent on this subject. See Brucker, vol. ii. p. 447.

Fuit inter principea adulatores et delatores. Dr. cf. Plin. Epist. 4, 22; Juv. 4, 113, seq. Massa Bebius. Primus inter pares of Domitian's tools. He began his career under Vesp. cf. His. 4, 50. He was afterwards impeached and condemned at the instance of the Province of Baetica, Pliny and Senecio advocates for the impeachment, Plin. Epist 7, 33; 3, 4; 6, 29. Jam tum.

Vossii 38. p. 142. Ep. 289. p. 105. Præst. Vir. Epist. 507. p. 766. Præs. Vir. Ep. 508. p. 567. XIII. It was on the seventeenth of March 1632 that he set out from Amsterdam on his way to Hamburg; but did not take up his residence in that City till the end of the year: the fine season he passed at an agreeable country-seat, called Okinhuse, near the Elbe, belonging to William Morth, a Dutchman.

This plea for Christian magistracy was Bishop Whitgift’s plea against the ruling elders, Answer to the Admon., p. 114. Mr Hussey, p. 22, saith, That granting the incestuous Corinthian to be excommunicated, “the decree was Paul’s and not the Corinthians’,” and that it no way appertained to them under the notion of a church. This is Saravia’s answer to Beza, de Tripl. Epist.

Brompton, p. 1062. Gervase, p. 1408. Epist. St. Thom. p. 704, 705, 706, 707, 792, 793, 794. Benedict. But the king attained not even that temporary tranquillity which he had hoped to reap from these expedients.

They declared that if the emperor refused to grant these requests, they would not furnish him with the required subsidy for the war. Maximilian replied that it was his business to repulse the Turks; the other things did not concern him, but the Pope.* * Orig. G. Epist., 6, 48 seq.

They are to be found in some of the editions printed in Holland, and are very highly commended by Vossius , who says the learned world is much obliged to their author. A letter from Grotius to his brother informs us, that the latter part of the notes of Lucan were by William Grotius. Præs. Vir. Epist. p. 377. Ep. 128. p. 792.

Romulus, et Liber pater, et cum Castore Pollux, Post ingentia facta, deorum in templa recepti; Dum terras hominumque colunt genus, aspera bella Componunt, agros assignant, oppida condunt; Ploravere suis non respondere favorem Speratum meritis. HOR., Epist. ii. 1, 5.

Modern, vol. iii. p. 346. I am here assuming that the Magyars are not of the Turkish stock; vid. Gibbon and Pritchard. Vol. v. p. 248. P. 127, ed. 1817. Travels in Syria, vol. i. p. 369, ed. 1787. Hor. Epist. ii 1, 155. Supr. p. 26. Montesquieu. Murray. Caldecott's Baber. Vid. Quarterly Review, vol. lii. p. 396-7. Univ. Hist. mod. vol. v. p. 262, etc. Ibid. vol. iv. p. 353. Meyendorff. Moorcroft.

The Roman Army, in fact, stuck to Mithra throughout, as against Christianity; and so did the Roman nobility. Epist. cvii, ad Laetam. See Robertson's Pagan Christs, p. 350. Nor was force the only method employed. IMITATION is not only the sincerest flattery, but it is often the most subtle and effective way of defeating a rival.