The last two are,—
"Vota Cano: hæC LeVIbus qUamVIs nUnC InCLyte prInCeps.
VersICULIs InCLUsa, fLUent in sæCULa CentUm."
All the numeral letters are printed in capitals, and the whole is to be found in the Parnassus Poeticus Societatis Jesu (Francofurti, 1654), at pp. 445-448. of part i. In the same volume there is another example of the chronogram, at p. 261., in the "Septem Mariæ Mysteria" of Antonius Chanut. It occurs at the close of an inscription:
"StatUaM hanC—eX Voto ponIt
FernanDUs TertIUs AUgUstUs."
The date is 1647.
"Henriot, an ingenious anagrammatist, discovered the following anagram for the occasion of the 15th:
'Napoleon Bonaparte sera-t-il consul à vie,
La [le] peuple bon reconnoissant votera Oui.'
There is only a trifling change of a to e."—Gent. Mag., Aug. 1802, p. 771.
The following is singular:
"Quid est veritas? = Vir qui adest."