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cedaemon would not do well at Syracuse, unless it be tasted by a Spartan's palate."--Cicero, _Tusc. D._ v. Sec. 98. Stob. _Flor. Tit._ 29. n. 100. Plut. _Inst. Lac._ 2. [these have been already referred to in "NOTES AND QUERIES"]: and compare Plutarch (_Vit. Lycurgi_, c. 12.). Part II. _Ad_ sect. 12. Sec. 4. p. 394.--"If a man throw away his gold, as did Crates the Theban."--Diog. Laert. vi. Sec. 87. Ibid. Sec. 7. p. 395. note _b_.--"Gaudet patientia duris."--Lucan. ix. 403. Ibid. Sec. 16. p. 404. note _y_.--"Plato vocat puritatem [Greek: apokrisin cheironon apo beltionon.]" _Definit._ p. 415. D. Ibid. Sec. 41. (on the tenth commandment) p. 446. note _z_.--"Non minus esse turpe oculos quam pedes in aliena immittere, dixit Xenocrates."--AElian. _Var. Hist._ xiv. 42. Plutarch _de Curiositate_, c. 12. Part II. Sect. 12. Discourse xi. Sec. 5. p 451.--"Harpaste, Seneca's wife's fool."--Seneca, _Epist_. 50. Part II. Sect. 12. Discourse xiv. Sec. 8. p. 496.--"Vespasian, by the help of Apollonius Tyaneus, who was his familiar."--See Philostratus (_Vit. Apollon._ v. 28. Sec. 1.). Part III. Sect. 13. Discourse xv. Sec. 11. p. 526.--"What the Roman gave as an estimate of a rich man, saying, 'He that can maintain an army, is rich.'"-Cicero _Off_. I. Sec. 25. Plutarch _Vit. Crassi_, c. 2. Part III. Sect. 13. Discourse xvi. Sec. 8. p. 554. note _e_.--"Hic felix, nullo turbante Deorum; Is, nullo parcente, miser."--Lucan, viii. 707. NOTES ON JEREMY TAYLOR'S SERMONS. (_Eden's Edit_.) Serm. XVIII. Part I. sect. 2. Sec. 2.--"Alexander, that wept because he had no more worlds to conquer."--Plutarch _de Tranquillitate Animi_, c. 4. Serm. XXIII. Part I. p. 613.--"[Greek: ophrus hepaerkotes, kai to phronimon zaetountes en tois peripatois.]"--Plato _Comicus apud Athenaeum_, p. 103. _d_. Lib. iii. c. 23. Sec. 61. Cfr. Bato _Comicus apud eundem_, p. 163. _b_. Lib. iv. c. 17. Sec. 55. Serm. XXIV. Sec. 5. p. 625.--"Lysander was [Greek: panourgos]."--Plutarch, _Lysand_. c. 7. NOTE ON TAYLOR'S HOLY DYING. (_Eden's Edit_.) Cap. III. Sect. 7. Sec. 7. p. 340.--"When men saw the graves of Calatinus, of the Servilii, the Scipios, the Metelli, did ever any man amongst the wisest{6} Romans think them unhappy?" Translated from Cicero (_Tusc. Disc_. 1. c. 7. Sec. 13.) Cap. III. Sect. 8. Sec. 6. p. 345.--"Brutus, ... when Furius came to cut his throat, after his defeat by Anthony, he ran from it like a girl."--
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