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John of Salisbury and the Classics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Walter C. Summers
Affiliation:
The University of Sheffield.

Extract

Not the least interesting feature in Mr. C. C. J. Webb's new edition of John of Salisbury's Policraticus are the references to the passages of Roman literature from which his author has quoted or borrowed. One cannot speak too highly of the thoroughness with which the editor has carried out this part of his task; that a few cases of borrowing should have passed unnoticed, and the sources of a few quotations evaded his inquiries, was inevitable.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1910

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References

page 105 note 1 See C. if., 11. 441.

page 105 not 2 On p. 64, 1. 2, of vol. i., should not omnia be omina ? So certainly in the Ovid passage (F.1, 178), p. 61, 11. And on p. 76, line 30, what is despicatis foribus? Should it be dissipatis ? On p. 206, 1. 21, autem is clearly needed for enim. The Irish contractions for the two words are sometimes confused with each other.