[520] Ibid.

[521] North Brit. Rev., vol. 47.

[522] Browning’s Parleyings, p. 44.

[523] Cato, De re Rustica, c. 2.

[524] Sat. vi.

[525] Prescott says, Conquest of Mexico, chap, ii., that among the Aztecs, “Hospitals were established in the principal cities for the cure of the sick, and the permanent refuge of the disabled soldier; and the surgeons were placed over them, ‘who were so far better than those in Europe,’ says an old chronicler, ‘that they did not protract the cure, in order to increase the pay.’”

[526] Ecclesiastical History, lib. vi. ch. xlii.

[527] Butler’s Lives of the Saints. St. Basil the Great.

[528] Ibid., loc. cit.

[529] p. 153.