[150] Op. Lat. ii. 2. 333.

[151] Vide Tocco, Opere Inedite di G. B. Napoli, 1891.

[152] Op. cit. p. 77.

[153] Vide Op. Lat. iii., Introduction by Vitelli; but according to Stölzle (Archiv für Gesch. d. Phil. iii. 1890) and Tocco (Op. Ined., p. 99) they belong to the first stay in Paris. The latter adds that they may have been repeated in Wittenberg.

[154] Under the heading “Time” (de tempore) there is a short treatise on Astrology.

[155] Doc. 8: the words suggest a special training in Latin, Greek, Philosophy, and Rhetoric,—not the whole Trivium and Quadrivium of the ordinary education of the day, as Berti supposes.

[156] Cf. Op. Lat. ii. 2. 61; ii. 3; i. 4. 39, 65, 69; i. 1. 256, etc.

[157] i. 4. 21; i. 1. 223; i. 1. 231.

[158] A compendium of Aristotle’s Physics.

[159] Op. Lat. i. 4. 131 ff.