298 
beginning on fol. 3, verso, with the words :— 
i. in apostolo 
Primum queritur quare post euangelia que 
supplementum legis sunt, et in quibus nobis 
exempla et precepta uiuendi plenissime 
digesta sunt.* 
and ending, at foot of fo. 5 fac., in the 85-86 line, with the words :— 
Cognoscentes uos habere meliorem 
ad, premiorum in futuro 
et manentem substantiam. 
Denis remarks that in the glossed Bible, which he has quoted before, 
this passage is unhesitatingly attributed to St. Jerome, and inquires, 
‘¢ What if it should really be from the pen of Pelagius ?” 
VII°. Explicit argumentum. Incipit prologus 
Ambrosii in apostolum,t 
beginning :— 
Ut rerum notitia habeatur principia 
rerum requirenda sunt— 
and ending on fol. 6 verso, with line 59-60, as follows :— 
servum autem Jesu Christi se 
profitens exutum a lege ostendit. 
VIIL°. Incipit argumentum epistole ad Romanos,{ 
which runs as follows :— 
Romani sunt in partibus Italie. et hi preventi 
sunt a falsis apostolis. et sub nomine dom- 
ini nostri Jesu Christi in legem et prophe- 
tas erant inducti. Et hos revocat apostolus 
ad ueram et euangelicam fidem, scribens 
eis a, corintho. 
These are the last words upon this page, which was not quite filled up. 
Previous to the time when the pagination was last marked, four folia 
were cut out here, that is, between the present ff. 6 and 7; and cut out 
so heedlessly, or so hurriedly, that the knife nearly detached the present 
fo. 6 along with them. 
On fo. 7 begin the Epistles in the usual series, as has previously 
been observed; each preceded by a summary like those already noticed. 
The number of verses contained in each Epistle is set down at the end 
of each: thus, in that to the Romans are reckoned vy. 911; in the 
1 Corinthians, vv. 980; im 2 Corinthians, vy. 292; and so forth. Divi- 
* Book of Armagh, fo. 105 ba. 
+ In the Book of Armagh this is ascribed to Hilary, fo. 105 aa. 
t Aseribed to Pelagius in Book of Armagh, fo. 107 0. 
