[164]. Sc. the planet Jupiter; Joyus, MS.; de iouis les condicions, H.
[165]. Jābir ibn Aflah, an Arab astronomer of uncertain date, whose work on Astronomy was published in Latin, in nine books, at Nuremberg in 1534. A 15th century MS. of it is in the British Museum, Harley MS. 625.
[166]. Perhaps Nicholas of Lynne, a Carmelite who lived in the latter part of the 14th century, and whose astronomical tables were used by Chaucer in his “Astrolabe.” Among other works he wrote tracts “de natura Zodiaci” and “de Planetarum domibus” (Tanner, Bibliotheca, p. 346).
[167]. Et est figuree a la compleccion sanguine, H.
[168]. Sc. Pythagoras.
[169]. Doulce et humaine, H.
[170]. A Nepocian, H. The passage does not appear to be among the works of St. Gregory, nor in St. Jerome’s epistle to Nepotianus.
[171]. Matt. v. 7.
[172]. Traueilleux, H.
[173]. Sc. Hermes Trismegistus.