identified with “perfect charity” by S. Ignatius, [217];

termed “the chalice of Christ” by S. Polycarp, [300].

Maximus of Tyre, a teacher of Marcus Aurelius, his notions of God, [293].

Merivale, History of the Romans, [19], [203], [210].

Möhler, [59], [132], [135], [159].

Nero, importance of his act in raising the first persecution, [191].

Newman, Dr., the natural beauty of Greece, [381];

the martyrs soldiers of Christ, [185].

Oral teaching, viewed as the only adequate instrument for conveying doctrine by Pythagoras, Plato, Aristotle, and all subsequent Greek philosophers, [411-425];

the means by which the Word of God declared that His kingdom should be propagated for ever, [166];