[208] As to Bruno’s own claim in the Eroici Furori, cp. Whittaker, Essays, p. 90. [↑]
[209] Documents in Berti, pp. 407–18; McIntyre, p. 75 sq. [↑]
[210] See the document in Berti, p. 398 sq.; Frith, pp. 270–81. [↑]
[212] See Berti, p. 396; Owen, pp. 285–86; Frith, pp. 282–83. [↑]
[213] The controversy as to whether Galileo was tortured leaves it clear that torture was common. See Dr. Parchappe, Galilée, sa vie, etc., 1866, Ptie. ii, ch. 7. [↑]
[214] Spaccio della bestia trionfante, ed. Wagner, ii, 120. [↑]
[215] Prof. Carriere has contended that a transition from pantheism to theism marks the growth of his thought; but, as is shown by Mr. Whittaker, he is markedly pantheistic in his latest work of all, though his pantheism is not merely naturalistic. Essays and Notices, pp. 72, 253–58. [↑]
[216] Italian versions differ verbally. Cp. Levi, p. 379; Berti, p. 386. That inscribed on the Bruno statue at Rome is a close rendering of the Latin: Majori forsan cum timore sententiam in me fertis quam ego accipiam, preserved by Scioppius. [↑]