"Te colui Virtutem."—Who is the author of the line—
"Te colui virtutem ut rem ast tu nomen inane es?"
It is a translation of part of a Greek tragic fragment, quoted, according to Dio Cassius, by Brutus just before his death. As much as is here translated is also to be found in Plutarch De Superstitione.
E.
"Illa suavissima Vita."—Where does "Illa suavissima vita indies sentire se fieri meliorem" come from?
E.
Christianity, Early Influence of.—"The beneficial influence of the Christian clergy during the first thousand years of the Christian era."
What works can be recommended on the above subject?
X.Y.Z.
Wraxen, Meaning of.—What is the origin and meaning of the word wraxen, which was used by a Kentish woman on being applied to by a friend of mine to send her children to the Sunday-school, in the following sentence?—"Why, you see, they go to the National School all the week, and get so wraxen, that I cannot send them to the Sunday School too."