ven in this life miseries will be the wages of their sin and folly,and their eternal portion will be the second death. tate, by an express book, entitled, Traite Historique et Moral de l'Abstinence de la Viande, 1731. He was a native of Egypt. wns inFlanders, afterwards at Pisa, and lastly, at Bononia, where he died in1625) in his Etruria Regalis, t.
Vossius, Dupin, and some others, on this account, will have him called Severus Sulpicius, with Eugippius and St. St Chrysostom wrote comments on the whole scripture, as Cassiodorus andSuidas testify; but of these many, with a great number of sermons, &c. Thetyrant became almost distracted with fury, and commanded Diodorus to beburned alive, Serapion to be beheaded, and Papias to be drowned. {431}FEBRUARY XIX.