[[5]] Pæd. ii, 38, 1-3.

[[6]] Pæd. ii, 45-60.

[[7]] Pæd. ii, 61-73; Tertullian, de corona militis, 5, flowers on the head are against nature, etc.; ib. 10, on the paganism of the practice; ib. 13 (end), a list of the heathen gods honoured if a Christian hang a crown on his door.

[[8]] Pæd. ii, 129, 3; iii, 56, 3; Tertullian ironically, de cultu fem. ii, 10, scrupulosa deus et auribus vulnera intulit.

[[9]] iii, 4, 2. Cf. Erman, Handbook of Egyptian Religion, p. 22: "In the temple of Sobk there was a tank containing a crocodile, a cat dwelt in the temple of Bast." The simile also in Lucian, Imag. 11, and used by Celsus ap. Orig. c. Cels. iii, 17.

[[10]] iii, 64, 2.

[[11]] iii, 79, 5.

[[12]] iii, 50.

[[13]] iii, 59, 2.

[[14]] ii, 60, 61.