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Joseph, Avila, the first house of the Reformed Carmelites, here resumes that account broken off at the end of section 10 of ch. xxxii. Ephes. i. 14: "Pignus haereditatis nostrae." St. John iii. 34: "Non enim ad mensuram dat Deus spiritum." Ch. xxviii. sections 1-5. See ch. xl. section 24; Way of Perfection, ch. vii. section 1; but ch. iv. of the previous editions. See ch. xx. section 14.

Glanvil, however, says in terms that, if a borrowed thing be destroyed or lost in any way while in the borrower's custody, he is absolutely bound to return a reasonable price. /3/ So does Bracton, who partially repeats but modifies the language of Justinian as to commodatum, depositum, and pignus; /4/ and as to the duty of the hirer to use the care of a diligentissimus paterfamilias. /5/

In the hero of that novel people saw a portrait of the leader of the group, the Hon. George Percy Sydney Smythe, to whom also the poems now before us, parvus non parvae pignus amicitiae, were dedicated in a warm inscription.

I read, and I read from that day, for fourteen or fifteen years, till this, and now I am as convinced, upon the clearest evidence, that this book is the book of God as that I now address you.” This experience, however, instead of impressing on him the fact that doubt may be the stamp of a truth-loving mindthat sunt quibus non credidisse honor est, et fidei futuræ pignusseems to have produced precisely the contrary effect.

Among the Romans the ring was a pledge, pignus, that the betrothal contract would be fulfilled. Pliny tells us that the ring, or circle, was of iron, but the ladies speedily determined that it should be of gold, and the Church went a step farther in recognizing it as a symbol of matrimony.

She certainly had been a strong bond of union between Cæsar and Pompey; so much so that we are surprised that such a feeling should have been so powerful among the Romans of the time. "Concordiæ pignus," a "pledge of friendship," she is called by Paterculus, who tells us in the same sentence that the Triumvirate had no other bond to hold it together.