[393] Erl. ed., 59, p. 337.
[394] Ib., 57, p. 65.
[395] Ib., 60, p. 108.
[396] Ib., 58, p. 128 f. Cp. above, vol. v., p. 286 f.
[397] In Aurifaber’s edition, 1568, Bl. 91, 92. Stangwald, who as a rule eliminates, as he assures us, all that was not Luther’s very own, has retained it in his edition of the Table-Talk (1571); likewise Selnecker (1577). For this reason we also find it in Förstemann’s 1st ed., 1844, p. 400. It is not given in the Latin Table-Talk, but, as a comparison with Bindseil’s “Tabellen,” 3, p. 471, shows, we miss in the Latin a whole number of unquestionably authentic Luther conversations occurring in the German editions. It is to be found in “Werke,” Erl.
[398] Köstlin-Kawerau, 2, p. 517.
[399] Erl. ed., 58, p. 128.
[400] Kolde, “Anal. Lutherana,” p. 72.
[401] Ib., p. 71.
[402] Schlaginhaufen, “Aufzeichn.,” p. 39, Jan. to March, 1532. The passage commences: “Tanta spectra vidi,” seemingly referring to the ghosts at the Wartburg.