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  1.  11
    A Note on Aeneid 5. 326.A. S. Mcdevitt - 1967 - Classical Quarterly 17 (02):313-.
    The statement of Heinsius that was the reading of all his manuscriptsis described by Henry2 as a mere blunder, and it must surely be so regarded.Henry claims to have examined seventy-four manuscripts, in none of whichdid he find , and more recent commentators and editors, though some3 prefer to adopt the emendation , are unanimous in acknowledging thelack of manuscript support for the change.
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  2.  2
    A Note on Aeneid 5. 326.A. S. Mcdevitt - 1967 - Classical Quarterly 17 (2):313-315.
    The statement of Heinsius that was the reading of all his manuscriptsis described by Henry2 as a mere blunder, and it must surely be so regarded.Henry claims to have examined seventy-four manuscripts, in none of whichdid he find, and more recent commentators and editors, though some3 prefer to adopt the emendation, are unanimous in acknowledging thelack of manuscript support for the change.
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  3.  16
    Hysteron Proteron in the Aeneid.A. S. Mcdevitt - 1967 - Classical Quarterly 17 (02):316-.
    ‘Putting the cart before the horse is folly, even when disguised under one ofthose Greek phrases which are so often employed-in grammar, in medicine,and in theology-to cloak ignorance. No writer of sense puts that last whichshould come first, and to accuse a great writer of doing so is mere impertinence.’1.
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