an ancient waxed Table-book. 
=-T 
scolari adnararet quid quid siret ad inter 
garet quid nesiret vt inteligeret bona 
vt proberet mala hoe gier tacra vicer 
vescors fancriac boc 
vecors fancriac gier tacra 
minac fatigatus at iric significat mo 
tum ure significat quietem 
quod sibi deterius patris at filius 
eius papina leacoc rubina 
This also appears to have been some grammatical exercise. The words 
at mirum” and “canenum” in the first and second lines, if they have been 
rightly deciphered, are not very intelligible: the next words are evidently 
intended for “silva gerit fructum ; depellit frigus vestimentum.”” Then a ques- 
tion is asked, “De quo, vel de qua causa, datur lingua scholari ?”—to which the 
answer is “ad [for wf] narraret quicquid sciret, ad [again for wf] interrogaret 
quid nesciret, ut intelligeret bona, ut probaret mala.” The words which follow 
are not now intelligible. All we can gather from this part of the document 
is, that it seems to tell us that the word tric signified motus, and that wre sig- 
nified quies. 
The first page of the third leaf is much injured: the wax in many places has 
fallen off, and displays the wood beneath (see Plate I. fig. 1); but the following 
words are still visible : 
ut serues uisum fiat sibi tra 
nsuina cruoris 
alliquis nequis. .. . Nun... . 
siquis Quilibet. . . . rivis undam 
.. inque quis . . qui que @iUS ool We 
quis p. . am quispidas quis quis que 
..u.c... da breuis male seloc 
sect ha aceon linga leuis 
p Sivas hated (efnle: ils) sik a ote can Ta 
