6803. Olem. Alex.
6804. Paulus Jovius Elog. vir. Illust.
6805. Non homines sed et ipsi daemones aliquando servandi.
6806. Vid Pelsii Harmoniam art. 22. p. 2.
6807. Epist. Erasmi de utilitate colloquior.
ad lectorem.—Let whoever
wishes dispute,
I think the laws of our forefathers should be
received with
reverence, and religiously observed, as coming from
God; neither is
it safe or pious to conceive, or contrive, an
injurious suspicion
of the public authority; and should any tyranny,
likely to drive
men into the commission of wickedness, exist, it is
better to endure
it than to resist it by sedition.
6808. Vastata conscientia sequitur sensus irae
divinae. (Hemingius)
fremitus cordis,
ingens animae cruciatus, &c.
6809. Austin.
6810. “Not from pleasures to pleasures.”
6811. Super Psal. lii. Convertar ad liberandum
eum, quia conversus est ad
peccatum suum
puniendum.
6812. Antiqui soliti sunt hanc herbam ponere in coemiteriis ideo quod, &c.
6813. Non desunt nostra aetate sacrificuli, qui
tale quid attentant, sed a
cacodaemone irrisi
pudore suffecti sunt et re infecta abicrunt.
6814. Done into English by W. B., 1613.
6815. Tom. 2. cap. 27, num. 282. “Let
him avert his thoughts from the
painful object.”
6816. Navarrus.
6817. Is. l. 4.

