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1 "cum tempestatibus confici sidus intelligimus."
2 "afflantur." On this term Hardouin remarks, "Siderantur. Sideratio morbi genus est, partem aliquam corporis, ipsumque ssepe totum corpus percutientis subito: quod quum repentino eveniat impetu, e cœlo vi quadam sideris evenire putatur." Lemaire, i. 317.
3 Cicero alludes to these opinions in his treatise De Divin. ii. 33; see also Aul. Gellius, ix. 7.
4 The heliotropium of the moderns has not the property here assigned to it, and it may be doubted whether it exists in any plant, except in a very slight and imperfect degree: the subject will be considered more fully in a subsequent part of the work, xxii. 29, where the author gives a more particular account of the heliotrope.
5 "conchyliorum;" this term appears to have been specifically applied to the animal from which the Tyrian dye was procured.
6 "soricum fibras;" Alexandre remarks on these words, "fibras jecoris intellige, id est, lobos infimos.....;" Lemaire, i. 318; but I do not see any ground for this interpretation.
7 It does not appear from what source our author derived this number; it is considerably greater than that stated by Ptolemy and the older astronomers. See the remarks of Hardouin and of Brotier; Lemaire. i. 319.
8 The Vergiliæ or Pleiades are not in the tail of the Bull, according to the celestial atlas of the moderns.
9 "Septemtriones."
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- Lewis & Short, ambāges
- Lewis & Short, fămĭlĭāris
- Lewis & Short, sīdus