[1123]. Nihil aliud sunt Daemones quam nudae animae quae corpore deposito priorem miserati vitam, cognatis succurrunt commoti misericordia, &c.
[1124]. De Deo Socratis. All those mortals are called Gods, who, the course of life being prudently guided and governed, are honoured by men with temples and sacrifices, as Osiris in Aegypt, &c.
[1125]. He lived 500 years since.
[1126]. Apuleius: spiritus animalia sunt animo passibilia, mente rationalia, corpore aeria, tempore sempiterna.
[1127]. Nutriuntur, et excrementa habent, quod pulsata doleant solido percussa corpore.
[1128]. Whatever occupies space is corporeal:—spirit occupies space, therefore, &c. &c.
[1129]. 4 lib. 4. Theol. nat. fol. 535.
[1130]. Which has no roughness, angles, fractures, prominences, but is the most perfect amongst perfect bodies.
[1131]. Cyprianus in Epist. montes etiam et animalia transferri possunt: as the devil did Christ to the top of the pinnacle; and witches are often translated. See more in Strozzius Cicogna, lib. 3. cap. 4. omnif. mag. Per aera subducere et in sublime corpora ferre possunt, Biarmanus. Percussi dolent et uruntur in conspicuos cineres. Agrippa, lib. 3. cap. de occul. Philos.
[1132]. Agrippa, de occult. Philos. lib. 3. cap. 18.