[287] "Inopinabili."
[288] Dante does not quote St. Augustine's words, but gives his meaning, xvii. 2.—(W.)
[289] I. 36, 37. Dante writes: "per gyrum." The Benedictine text has: "per agrum."
[290] As quoted by Aristotle, Ethics, vi. 3.—(W.)
[291] Arist. Anal. Prior., or rather, the Summulæ Logicæ, l. iv., of Petrus Hispanus.—(W.)
[292] Peter Lombard, "magister sententiarum," iv. dist. 5, f. 2.—(W.)
[293] "Archimandrita nostro." Cf. Parad. xi. 99, of St. Francis.—(W.)
[294] On the Donation of Constantine, Witte refers to Inf. xxxviii. 94; xix. 115; Purg. xxxii. 124; Parad. xx. 35; suprà ii. 12.
[295] Each side in the controversy used the type of the "seamless robe," one of the Empire (suprà i. 16), the other of the Church; e.g., in the Bull of Boniface VIII., "Unam Sanctam."
[296] 1 Cor. iii. 11.—(W.)