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SAEPE ENIM: enim introduces a reason, not for the words ut potero, but for faciam 'I will grant your request because I have often heard complaints about old age and therefore have thought of the matter'. PARES AUTEM etc.: parenthetical.

Habebat enim ea tabula praeter scalam graduum latitudinis per medium sui extensam, aliam praeterea praticularem Nouae Franciae littoribus adiunctam, qua deprauatae latitudines, occasione, erroris Magnetis ibi commissae, castigarentur.

"Debet enim, misere cui forti, aegreque futurum est, Ipse quoque esse in eo turn tempore, cum male possit Accidere."

Sciendum enim est, quod vbique intra terram Saracenorum, et similiter multorum Paganorum inueniuntur Christiani dispersi, habitantes sub tributo, qui licet sint baptizati omnes, et beatissimam Trinitatem credentes, diuersificantur tamen nominibus, moribus, ritibus, fide, et opinionibus: ita vt semper vel in multis vel in aliquibus dissentiant a Romanae Ecclesiae consuetudinibus. Syrij. Georgica.

Bacon at once wrote to Clement complaining of his imprisonment, and deploring to the pope the plight into which scientific education had fallen. The pope replied directing Bacon to explain his views in a treatise, but did not order his release. In response Bacon composed the Opus Majus. Duo enim simt modi cognoscendi, scilicet per argumentum et experimentum.

Let him soothe and caress himself, and above all things be sure to govern himself with reverence to his reason and conscience to that degree as to be ashamed to make a false step in their presence: "Rarum est enim, ut satis se quisque vereatur."

Hence the observation of Seneca, that the malicious attention of the envious reader dwells with no less satisfaction on a faulty than on an elegant expression, and is as anxious to discover what it may ridicule, as what it may commend; as the poet also observes: "Discit enim citius meminitque libentius illud Quod quis deridet, quam quod probat et veneratur."

2 Cor. ii. 11: "Non enim ignoramus cogitationes ejus." Ch. xxvii. section 4. See Inner Fortress, vi. ch. iv. section 12. Way of Perfection, ch. lxv. section 2; but ch. xxxvi. of the previous editions. See ch. x. section 10. Ch. xiii. section 3. Ch. xx. section 38. Ch. xxx. section 25.

Non sic causa intelligi debet, ut quod cuique antecedat, id ei causa sit; sed quod cuique EFFICIENTER antecedat. Causis enim efficientibus quamque rem cognitis, posse denique sciri quid futurum esset."

There was therein a more universal military expertness required, and that comprehended the most and the greatest qualities of a military man: "Neque enim eaedem militares et imperatorix artes sunt," as also, besides, a condition suitable to such a dignity.