|
nel from the Rhine to the
Danube. Bil. Pirkimerus descript. Ger. the ruins are yet seen about
Wessenburg from Rednich to Altimul. Ut navigabilia inter se Occidentis
et Septentrionis littora fierent.
593. Maginus Georgr. Simlerus de rep. Helvet. lib. 1. describit.
594. Camden in Lincolnshire, Fossedike.
595. Near St. Albans, "which must not now be whispered in the ear."
596. Lilius Girald. Nat. comes.
597. Apuleius, lib. 4. Flor. Lar. familiaris inter homines aetatis suae
cultus est, litium omnium et jurgiorum inter propinquos arbitrer et
disceptator. Adversus iracundiam, invidiam, avaritiam, libidinem,
ceteraque animi humani vitia et monstra philosophus iste Hercules
fuit. Pestes eas mentibus exegit omnes, &c.
598. Votia navig.
599. Raggnalios, part 2, cap. 2, et part 3, c. 17.
600. Velent. Andreae Apolog. manip. 604.
601. Qui sordidus est, sordescat adhuc.
602. Hor.
603. Ferdinando Quir. 1612.
604. Vide Acosta et Laiet.
605. Vide patritium, lib. 8. tit. 10. de Instit. Reipub.
606. Sic Olim Hippodamus Milesius Aris. polit. cap. 11. et Vitruvius l. 1.
c. ult.
607. With walls of earth, &c.
608. De his Plin. epist. 42. lib. 2. et Tacit. Annal. 13. lib.
609. Vide Brisonium de regno Perse lib. 3. de his et Vegetium, lib. 2. cap.
3. de Annona.
610. Not to make gold, but for matters of physic.
611. Bresonius Josephus, lib. 21. antiquit. Jud. cap. 6. Herod. lib. 3.
612. So Lod. Vives thinks best, Comineus, and others.
613. Plato 3. de leg. Aediles creari vult, qui fora, fontes, vias, portus,
plateas, et id genus alia procurent. Vide Isaacum Pontanum de civ.
Amstel. haec omnia, &c. Gotardum et alios.
614. De Increm. urb. cap. 13. Ingenue fateor me non intelligere cur
ignobilius sit urbes bene munitas colere nunc quam olim, aut casae
rusticae praesse quam urbi. Idem Urbertus Foliot, de Neapoli.
615. Ne tantillum quidem soli incultum relinquitur, ut verum sit ne
pollicem quidem agri in his regionibus sterilem aut infoecundum
reperiri. Marcus Hemingias Augustanus de regno Chinae, l. 1. c. 3.
616. M. Carew, in his survey of Cornwall, saith that before that country
was enclosed, the husbandmen drank water, did eat little or no bread,
fol. 66, lib. 1. their apparel was coarse, they went bare legged,
their dwelling was correspondent; but since enclosure, they live
decently, and have money to sp
|