302 NOTES. 



P. 136. [n, 12] Lat. quantum obtineat imperil intellectus subtilitas et 

 acumen. [19, 20] yet men can likewise discern them personally: Lat. 

 hujus tamen discrimina in singulis personis facile internoscimus. [26] 

 incomprehensions: Lat. acatalepsies. See p. 154, 1. 4. [32] avenues: 

 printed in italics in ed. 1605 as if it were a foreign word. 



P. 137. [i] Altered from Ovid, Rem. Am. 525, the true reading being 

 Nam quoniam variant animi, variamus et artes. Some editions have 

 variabimus artes. [3-13] This paragraph is inserted in the De Aug- 

 mentis near the beginning of the chapter, after eruditus luxtis (p. 133, 

 1- 2 5)- [5] the sun: the is omitted in ed. 1605. .ffisculapius is 

 said to have been the son of Apollo and Coronis. [n] Matt. xvii. 

 27. The miracle was not wrought for the payment of the Roman 

 tribute but for the tax which was due to the Temple. [20] accidents : 

 Used here in the sense of symptoms, as in p. 12. [26] Hippocrates: 

 in his work De Epidemiis. [29] how they were judged: i.e. how the 

 cases were decided. 



P. 138. [5] and if men will intend to observe: Lat. qui autem ad 

 obscrvandum adjiciet animum. [17] being comparative and casual: Lat. 

 qucE comparativa est et casum recipit. [21] cause continent: Mr. Ellis 

 quotes the following passage from Celsus from which this phrase is 

 taken : Igitur hi qui rationalem medicinam prqfitentur hcec necessaria esse 

 proponunt : Abditarum et morbos continentium causarum notitiam, deinde 

 evidentium, &c. Celsus, Prsefatio. [31] Celsus, De Re Medica, praef. 

 Incidere autem vivorum corpora et crudele et supervacuum est. [32] the 

 great use: Some copies of ed. 1605 omit the. 



P. 139. [26] passed: So in edd. 1605, 1629, 1633. See Phineas 

 Fletcher s verses in Sorrowes loy, 1603 (Poems, ed. Grosart, iii. 268): 



Wearie of passed woe, and glad of present ioy. 



[27] Sylla: Plutarch, Sylla, c. 31. 



P. 140. [9] Suetonius: Aug. 99. [10] Antoninus Pius: See his Life 

 by Capitolinus (c. 12) in Hist. Aug. Script.: Atque ita cotwersus quasi 

 dormiret, spiritnm efflavit apud Lorium. [12] Diog. Laert. x. 15. [16] 

 From the Latin translation by Sambucus (Antw. 1566) of a Greek 

 epigram quoted by Diogenes Laertius, x. 15. [24] the receipts of 

 propriety, respecting the particular cures of diseases, i.e. medicines 

 appropriate to particular diseases: Lat. particulars tamen medicinas 

 qua ad curationes morbortim singulorum proprietate quadam spectant. 

 [31] treacle: Lat. Theriaca. [32] The Latin adds et confectione Alkermes. 

 The following is Mr. Ellis s note on the corresponding passage of the 

 De Augm. : Theriaca, from which treacle is a corruption, is the name 

 of a nostrum invented by Andromachus, who was physician to Nero. 

 For an account of the history and composition of mithridatum, see 

 Celsus, v. 23. The invention of what was palled diascordium is 



