[289] Auris pars pendula Lobus dicitur, non omnibus ea pars est auribus; non enim iis qui noctu nati sunt, sed qui interdiu, maxima ex parte. Com. in Aristot. de Animal. lib. 1.

[290] According to the Egyptian Hieroglyphick.

[291] Turkish History.

[292] In the Poet Dante his Discription.

[293] De Morbis Puerorum.

[294] Morta, the Deity of Death or Fate.

[295] When Men's Faces are drawn with Resemblance to some other Animals, the Italians call it, to be drawn in Caricatura.

[296] Ulmus de usu barbæ humanæ.

[297] The Life of a Man is threescore and ten.

[298] See Picotus de Rheumatismo.