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NOTES

p. 219, l. 16. he assures the reader, &c., p. 33 of Boyle's Examination.

P. 220, l. 10. three-threads, &c., see note on p. 192, l. 2.

P. 220, l. 16. Sir Edward Sherburn, see pp. 15-16 of Boyle's Examination, pp. xliii.-lvi. and lx.-lxiii. of Bentley's second Dissertation (1699), pp. 27-28 and p. 134 of the Short Account, and p. 207 of Whateley's Answer.

P. 220, l. 21. In the imperious style of Festus. Acts xxv. 12.

P. 221, l. 14. throughly. Cf. Hamlet, IV. 5. 136.

P. 222, l. 10. a view of the Doctor's picture, see pp. 80 and 59 of Jebb's Bentley.

P. 223, l. 4. miseranda vel hosti, Ovid, Met. vi. 276.

P. 224, l. 23. Thomas Magister (fl. c. 1310) a rhetorician and grammarian. He appears to have been a native of Thessalonica and to have lived at the court of Andronicus Palaeologus I.

P. 228, l. 4. Gruter, Inscriptiones Antiquae totius orbis Romani (1602-3): edited by Gruter.

P. 229, l. 10. I would ask him, &c., see p. 144 of Boyle's Examination.

P. 230, l. 3. as I have proved already, see note on p. 110, l. 9.

P. 232, l. 16. Diogenianus, writer of a Greek Lexicon, of which part is still extant.

P. 232, l. 18. Polyaenus, author of a work, still extant, on Stratagems in War.

P. 232, l. 20. Diodorus Siculus, author of a universal history, of which a large part is still extant.

P. 235, l. 2. Zaleucus, see p. 338 of Bentley's second Dissertation (1699).

P. 237, l. 7. compliment to Queen Elizabeth, see p. 160 of Boyle's Examination.