[[10]] vi, 10. Clem. Alex. Strom. ii, 8, "The Greeks think Faith empty and barbarous, and revile it," but (ii, 30) "if it had been a human thing, as they supposed, it would have been quenched."
[[11]] iii, 62.
[[12]] iii, 62.
[[13]] iii, 65, toùs hamartangin pephykótas te kaì eithismenous.
[[14]] iii, 71.
[[15]] Clement of Alexandria, Protr. 92, uses this simile of worms in the mud of swamps, applying it to people who live for pleasure.
[[16]] iv, 23.
[[17]] iv, 74.
[[18]] So Lucian Icaromenippus, 19, explicitly.
[[19]] iv, 88. Cf. Clem. Alex. Pædag. i, 7, tò phíltron éndon estìn en tô anthrópô toûth' óper emphysema légetai theoû.