"ἐξ ἀνεμων δὲ θάλασσα ταράσσεται· ἢν δέ τις αὐτὴν
μὴ κινῇ, πάντων ἐστι δικαιοτάτη."
Fragm. i. 8., ed. Gaisford.
And to a passage of Livy (xxviii. 27.):
"Multitudo omnis, sicut natura maris, per se immobilis est, venti et auræ cient."
Compare Babrius, fab. 71.
P. 165. "Did not one of the Fathers, in great indignation, call poesy vinum dæmonum?"
The same citation recurs in Essay I., "On Truth:"
"One of the Fathers, in great severity, called poesy vinum dæmonum."
Query, Who is the Father alluded to?