Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 4.djvu/635

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

10* s. iv. DKC. so, 1905.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 525 P. 20, 1. 7: 6, 33, " scribimus indocti doctique" is quoted by King in the margin of ITS verso, while on IT recto "£ccles vlt." is given as a marginal note to "much reading •is but a wearinesse to the flesh, and there is no ende of making or perusing many boo fees." Of. Burton's marginal reference " Eccl. ult." (u. p, p. 6) to " there in no end," &c. The precise degree of Burton's indebtedness, con- scious or unconscious, for suggestions to the various writers whom he "tumbled over" is in many instances extremely hard to determine, and probably of more absorbing interest to the minute student of 'The Ana- tomy' than to the general reader. Sliilleto has disguised the ref. " Eccl. ult." King was Dean of Ch. Cli. 1605-11, and his third son, Robert (admitted student 1612), played Desi- derius Dux in Burton's 'Philosophaster'in 1617. See the Actorum Nomina, p. xxxiii of Buckley's ed. with the editor's notes. P. 20, 9 and n. 7 ; 6, 35 and n. t, "Be- witched with this desire of fame, etiam mediis in morbis, Effa[scinati etiam laitdis amore, <kc., Justus Baronius." See his ' Vindicise' against John Rainolds (ante, p. 26), cap. i. p. 2, 1. 26, "Sed ita miser prophanai hcereseos araore effascinatus es, vt vel in raedio morboruin sestu a pestilentibus libris confer- ruminandis non cesses." Justus Baronius (formerly Justus Calvin), who is ignored by the " new and very full index " of Shilleto's edition, gives marginal references to various •works of Rainolds for his statement. P. 20, n. 11; 7 n. a, " Omnes sibi famam qucerunt," etc. The passage in Gesner runs : "< > s. f. q., & si non cum gloria, quouis tamen modo in orbem gpargi contendunt, ui nouae alicuius rei habeantur authores" (' Biblioth.,' 1545, sign. *3 verso, 1. 35). P. 21, 2; 7, 9, "Castrant w/tirciant." Not from Jovius, as Burton says, but from Alciatus's Ep. to Jovius at the beginning of the Paris ed. (1553) of vol. i. of the 'Historise suiTemporis': "Sed te incursurum prouideo in quosdara criticos maligne curiosos qui te castrasse historias tuas dicant, ut Vitas per se graciles. alieno adipe suffarcires, quod & mini accidit." P. 21, 3 ; 7. 10, " lard their lean books." Cf. ' K. Hen. I.,' Pt. I.. Act II. sc. ii. ad Jin. P. 21, n. 14; 7 n. I, "Lib. 5. de sap." See pp. 266-7 (about three-fourths through lib. 5) of the 1544 (Niirnberg) ed. of the ' De Sap.,' dec.: "Storaachum mouent eruditis multi, qui uix priroa elementa rerum percipientes in quo genere Germani Gallique pec- cant, non uitupero gloriee stimulos, non deterreo ab sedendo, modo aliquid uouum inueniant." Cardan quotes "Scribimus in- docti, doctique poemata passim," a line or two lower. P. 22, n. 1 ; 7, n. n, " Cardan prcef. ad consol." Fol. 2 recto of the 1542, Venice, ed., " qua propter diuites opes suas, reges poten- tiam, milites robur ostentant: eruditi nil gas suas, etiam audire nolentibus effutiunt." P. 22, 12; 7, 47, " our Frank-furt Marts ...... Twice a year." Cf. ' Philosophaster,' IV. ii. 31,"bisannoquolibet, | Et ad Francofurtanas plerumque nundinas," and IV. ii. 83, " Prosta- bunt Francofurti, proximis nundinis." P. 22, 15 and n. 6 ; 8, 2 and n. b, " Gesner:' See 'Bibl.' (1545), ep. nunc., sign. *3 verso, 1. 39, "Sed quomodo fieri possit ut ...... arguan- tur authorurn furta, ac millies repetita, tol- lantur : deniquein posterum temere scribendi libido coerceatur, aliter in infinitum pro- gressura : doctioribus deliberandum, regibus deinde et principibus perficiendum relinquo." P. 22, n. 8; 8, n. c, " Onerabuntur ingenia, nemo legendis sufficit." See Gesner, ' Pandectse,' De Ratione Operis Prsef., *2 verso, l._ 20 (1548), " Ne quis igitur per querimoniam multos magnosque indies libros edi, quibus nemo legendis sufficiat, onerari ingenia, sumptus augeri, hoc etiam Volumen accuset, sic habeto." P. 23, 15 and n. 7 ; 8, 29 and n. g, " Wecker ...... Pra-f. ad Syntax, nied.," i.e., 'Medicinse Utriusque Syntaxes,' Prsef. (dated 1 Jan., 1576), sign, a 3, 1. 26 (ed. 1582), "Etsiuero nihil dici potest, ut quidara ait, quod non sit dictum prius ...... tamen dicendi forma atque modus sermones de iisdem rebus eosdem, diuersos uideri facit." The reference to Terence was given at 9th S. xii. 443. P. 23, 27 and n. 10 ; 8, 40 and n. h, "Didacus Stella.. .In Luc. 10. Tom. 2." See the second vol. of Didacus Stella's 'In Sanctum Jesu Christi Evangelium secundum Lucam Com- menCaria' (Lyons, 1583), p. 24, col. 1, 1. 40, "Absit ut ego velim condeninare quod tot tantique sapientes siraul & docti affirmarunt: iii'iii' tamen scimus, Pygmeos gigantum humeris irapositos, plusquam ipsos gigantes videre." The notes on chap. x. occupy 113 folio columns of smallish print ! Stella is here commenting on confiteor (f£o/ioAoyov/iai) in verse 21. P. 24, 16; 9,11. "presjdents for it, which Isocrates cals perfugium Us qui peccant." See ' Busiris,' cap. ^45, 230A, " Ou yfy oijroA.v«is auroi' riav airiiov, dA.A.' airo^xit'fct ii.A Ainr Tivts Tovra irtTTOi^KOcri, TOIS a/jLaprdvova-iv fvpia-Ktav xoToc^uyiji'." The reference which Shilleto gives (' Ad Demoni- cum,' § 34) has nothing to do with the case. P. 24, 18 ; 9, 12, " Nonnulli alii idem fece- runt." See the passage of Isocrates. <os xat T<av