vat 
that becauge the aogier toke the: wax al- 
waye, he pre’ ‘the tree-(wvood) beneath, 
that the people should not dyminish the 
“substance of the taper ; otherwise he as- 
sefiteth aud agreeth i m ‘all things with the 
‘prior,’ 
Frjunctions dire 
and, V, Mare, 
: In primis;thatthe sayd prior and. vie 
_eare sliall preach and declare thagospeilon 
the epistle; reade- upon that daye, In- ke 
wicshint tongue; expounding thesame sin- 
eerely,;'as farre-as their, lernynge wilhex~ 
tende, ees ing tothe people the abomi- 
fable jdolatte Bid’ deseattull jugglinge of 
their * predicessors there, in worshippinge, 
aud caysige to be worshipped, a pece 
of old rotten timber, pyllihge the people 
= belefethe same'to be-a holy relique, 
and a tapey which, had burned, without 
Consumynge oxaxayst, &c. 
«Tim, he sayd-pryor and vicar shall 
‘96 preaclevery sundaye and holyday, be- 
twyxte this and - - - = -.mualbis. 
“Tim. The said prior and vicar shall do 
‘adwaye or cause “tO “BE OHE ‘awaye, all 
‘ananner of clothes, figured wax, -Gelusions 
of m yradlés, ‘shrowdes, ane pbk entyse- 
ments of the ignorante peoples to piigrés.. 
muge dud ydolatry.': 
> Bene Bhat they: shall take. an. ynven- 
tory of al! and every such clothes, .wax, 
shrowdes; and. other entysemenis; ‘and 
the sante shall converte ‘into: the use, of 
tlie pure people, of otherwise to, some. 
Other good-use,’ making thereof a récks 
pynge mM writinge,. “ declaryinge the - true: 
bestowing and usimes of thesame, - 
_ ©86Tom? ‘Phat: all aud : syngular these 
_intonetyous shall be unsrolabl yc obserued 
ify payne of eontempte,” esc 
; YOHN? ABO NPE—COLOSSUS OF RHODES. 
gpa author (tn Conven..utn: Monarch. 
Bb. BC15:* pliged%) says,. that the Co- 
‘aes of Rhodes fell down, hike the-ces+ 
cation ofthe 6f facies; through the coming 
of Citi: Ha Sepa 9yi4/ gba ad pai 
Et UCANON HERTS. if. 
ey his” pi a t poh: Hippocrat pagal 
6282 seg? hétakeés great pains to ‘eile 
his'readérs,that thedhanges ofikingdoms, 
are not to- be ascribed: tov the: powers: of 
the starsy but to Seer hod. ) 
10 | -7EMPLE OF JERUSALEM |: 
“Brothels for the indulgence of a-most 
execrable appetite were: built. all round 
Fa 
0:2. Et pueris alienis adheserunt; by. Bo- 
zius de signis Eccles. l. 7. €. 4,3aGusp. 
Sanctiis, “ibid. M: 1223 from 4 fing, 
i. « ot aad c. 4. Sten | A 
\ 3 4 <j 5 
Baitract rom the Poitt -folia of a Alun of Letters. 
ek to the said Pride 
his 1s Bfitaved by. Jecom upon Isa,- 
- 
[Feb: if, 
x MAPPEIUS:—MotINa. uaey 
The formen, lib: 25. Hist. Md; p. 3603 
the fatter, De justit et jure tract. 2. disp. 
34. p. 167. say, 
who were cannibals, declared, that the, 
human flesh lost much of its, fat our by: 
the baptism of the persons. ~ 
‘SIMON MAIOLUS, 
In his. Dies. Canicul. collog.7. de quae, 
ae p ATA. v4. says, that certain 
Indians gavea great deal fys.gn. ape’s 
sakes in order to. worslipiite: os 96.6 
) Ug PED. ; GRBGOR BIS atau o tye 
ho his wouk De Repub. hs A4.Qy 0. Be n, £0 
he says, that every Line hasiitsown vale 
ners, to whieh the laws’are to be accom- 
imodated, hoth those in the Old and those 
in the New Covenant, &e. 
“NAVARRUS, © 
‘He says, cup. dé Judes,’ 45, distinet. 
that aa orphan Jew child. ou bt not to, b 
christened, because such cluldren, are: tp 
be left to. divine Providence. ., 
J BWi. WORE 
. The Jews in every modern country, 
follow-the lowest occupations. They were 
forced upon them by the following rea- 
“son, says. Star, MuiolustCollog, de perfid. 
dud. p. 256. seq. that it was a Era ills 
_ strument of conver sion. 
rs 
1 teen RAG ANes (40 ENE} 
Tore “has, ec much | controveisy 
about the origin, of this, words. . Prateius, 
Brissonius, Berucius, Hormannus, Cali-, 
us de-eerejur.,oerb. Paganus.. Beda iz, 
Canticn-L. 6, ¢, 30. et tm Mane. cx dds et 
py: Luc. ‘dich. be 6«€».23, el homil. in, Fe~ 
rign. 3 Psalin. Jean, oF ung,. im Jotymol, 
sub. eod.. verb, Stephan dg urbib, ., Las. 
TANS» ‘i Acta, én aoe Grasp. ‘Sdnet. 
an, Feat. c. 42. Num.45.p, 445. maine 
tain: from. Sérsius,,-and. others, that the: 
word was- derived. from .the, Greek biases 
a village, so named-from the springs 3. 
as, ‘others, : the, hills around «which: 
“were, always used. to build their, pn ae 
Philaster(, Heres. c..3.) thinks, that they: 
were called so, trom, a certain Paganusy 
- who, he, says, was.the son of Deucalion: 
and Pysrha, and. a powerful and famnaus, 
king, and. afterwards, worshipped as a.god,. 
The writer, of this article can. find no. such, 
name in the-Mytholegig. of Jo, Natalis, 
&e. ner Lempriere’s, morenn, work, - If 
the story, as: therefore: any: foundation, 
it;may, probably supply a. desideratum in 
mythology. Isidore €. Liye, L.Biic« 70.) 
says, that they were so called :freny. the 
Athenian pagi, from whence. they sprung. 
For there, 1n,cquntiy places, aud towns, 
i age Ere oh 
‘that, “the Brasilians, — 
Pi Gentiles bau ee ee | 
