35 



PHYSICAL SCIENCE 



IV. 1 86, i, no one . . . virtuous. 



VI. 232, 2, and, generally speak- 

 ing ... 



244, (c. xv.) to hurry 

 straight forward. 



258, 2, philosophers. 



265, 2, (c. xxxi.) soft mate- 

 rials . . . hard. 



VII. 296, 4, every star cannot but 

 touch . . . zodiac. 



by which one may become 

 only more lettered and 

 not more virtuous. 



if the boats are unduly 

 sunk, the water uses the 

 whole force of the bur- 

 thens it upbears, in order 

 either to pour over them, 

 or at any rate to rise to 

 an unwonted height to 

 right and left. 



to blow where it lists. 



scholars, [or philologists]. 



walls undergo more frequent 

 but more gentle shocks 

 than the nature of hard 

 material allows. 



no star can traverse its 

 course without touching 

 the zodiac, then I say a 

 comet may have a differ- 

 ent kind of orbit and yet 

 some point in it may co- 

 incide with the zodiac. 



