- Pierre de la Brosse was the secretary of Philip le Bel of France, and suffered at his hands a fate similar to that which befell Pier della Vigna at the court of Frederick the Second. See note 185 . Being accused by Marie de Brabant, the wife of Philip, of having written love-letters to her, he was condemned to death by the king in 1276. Benvenuto thinks that during his residence in Paris Dante learned the truth of the innocence of Pierre de la Brosse. ↩
- In Aeneid , VI :— “Cease to hope that the decrees of the gods are to be changed by prayers.” ↩
- The apex juris , or top of judgment; the supreme decree of God. Measure for Measure , II 2:— “How would you be, If He who is the top of judgment should But judge you as you are?” ↩
- Virgil’s Bucolics, Eclogue I :— “And now the high tops of the villages smoke afar, and larger shadows fall from the lofty mountains.” ↩
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