[[64]] Cic. de Div. ii, 72, 149, 150. Cf. de Legg. ii, 13, 32. Plutarch also has the same remark about sleep and superstition.

[[65]] Cf. Odes, iii, 27.

[[66]] Tusculans, i, 21, 48.

[[67]] Hor. Ep. ii, 2, 208; Howes.

[[68]] Tertullian, de Idol. 9, seimus magiæ et astrologiæ inter se societatem.

[[69]] Pliny the elder on Magic, N.H. xxx, opening sections; N.H. xxviii, 10, on incantations, polleantne aliquid verba et incantamenta carminum.

[[70]] Livy, xxix, 11, 14; Ovid, fasti, iv, 179 f. The goddess was embodied in a big stone.

[[71]] Lucretius, ii, 608 f.

[[72]] Cf. Strabo, c. 470; Juvenal, vi, 511 f.

[[73]] See Ramsay, Church in the Roman Empire, p. 397. The Latins used the word divinus in this way—Seneca, de teata vita, 26, 8.