[359] Pompeios Juvenes Asia atque Europa, sed ipsum Terra tegit Libyes.
[360] Don Sebastian de Covarrubias, writ 3 Centuries of moral Emblems in Spanish. In the 88th of the second Century he sets down two Faces averse, and conjoined Janus-like; the one a Gallant Beautiful Face, the other a Death’s-Head Face, with this Motto out of Ovid’s Metamorphosis, Quid fuerim quid simque vide.
[361] A Book so intitled wherein are sundry horrid accounts.
Tu miser exclamas, ut Stentora vincere possis,
Vel potius quantum Gradivus Homericus. Juvenal.
[363] A soft tongue breaketh the bones. Proverbs 25. 15.
[364] Which after many hundred years was found burning under ground, and went out as soon as the air came to it.
[365] Jovem lapidem jurare.
[366] See the oath of Sultan Osman in his life, in the addition to Knolls his Turkish history.