While right and wrong stand separate forever."

238. See the original in Herder's Greek text, Hellenische Blumenlese, and in Cudworth's Intellectual System.

239. Welcker, Grieschische Gotterlehre, § 25.

240. Ottfried Müller, History of Greek Art, §§ 115, 347.

241. Oxford Prize Poems, Poem for 1812.

242. Ὁ μέν θεὸς εις· κοὗτος δὲ οὐκ, ὡς τινὲς ὑπονοῦσιν, ἐκτὸς τὰς διακοσμήσεας· ἀλλ ἐν αὐτᾷ, ὅλος ἐν ὅλῳ τῷ κύκλῳ, ἐπίσκοπος πάσας γενέσες και κράσεως τῶν ὅλων.—Clem. Alex. Cohort. ad gentes.

243. Monotheism among the Greeks, translated in the Contemporary Review, March, 1867. Victor Cousin, Fragments de Philosophie Ancienne.

244. Quotations from Aristotle, in Rixner, I. § 75.

245. See Rixner, Zeller, and the poem of Empedocles on the Nature of Things (περὶ φάσεως), especially the commencement of the Third Book.

246. His famous doctrine, that "man is the measure of all things," meant that there is nothing true but that which appears to man to be so at any moment. He taught, as we should now say, the subjectivity of knowledge.