FRIDOLIN, A. 364,) relate that Ellpandus revoked his error in a council which he held at Toledo, and died penitent. In the sixth book he reports the shameful vices ofSocrates, Plato, and their other heroes of paganism, in opposition tothe true virtues of the prophets and saints. Ia quoted by Leland, Coll.
But what we most admire is thepious sagacity with which he unfolds the deep sense of the sacred text,and its aut The judge ordered him next tobe set in a frozen pond, with a cord tied to his foot. He must know in the thirdcentury that his countryman Alexander, a bishop in Cappadocia,admonished by divine oracle, went to Jerusalem to pray, and to visit theholy places, &c. Though I am alive at the writing ofthis, yet my desire is to die.
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