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'In amore haec omnia insunt vitia: injuriae, Suspiciones, inimicitiae, induciae, Bellum, pax rursum ... Ter. Eun. Upon looking over the Letters of my female Correspondents, I find several from Women complaining of jealous Husbands, and at the same time protesting their own Innocence; and desiring my Advice on this Occasion.

Eun., Act I., Sc. 1, I. 16. You may as well pretend to be mad and in your senses at the same time, as to think of reducing these uncertain things to any certainty by reason.

Here the words used are these: "Ne corpus liberi hominis capiatur nec imprisonetur nec disseisetur nec ut1agetur nec exuletur nec aliquo modo destruatur nec rex eat vel mittat super eun vi nisi per judicium pariurn suorum vel per legem terrae." "Per legale judicium parium suorum." In giving this interpretation, I leave out, for the present, the word legale, which will be defined afterwards.

Cum milite isto praesens, absens ut sies: Dies, noctesque me ames: me desideres: Me somnies: me exspectes: de me cogites: Me speres: me te oblectes: mecum tola sis: Meus fac sis postremo animus, quando ego sum tuus. Ter. Eun. The Jealous Man's Disease is of so malignant a Nature, that it converts all he takes into its own Nourishment.

This use of et for etiam is very rare in Cic., but frequent in Livy, T. and later writers. See note, His. 1, 23. Imperatur. Imperare plus est, quam jubere. See the climax in Ter. Eun. 2, 3, 98; jubeo, cogo atque impero. Impero is properly military command. Prout refers, not to the order of speaking, but to the degree of influence they have over the people. Gr. Aetas.