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1 These chaplets, we learn from Festus, were called "pancarpiæ." The olive, oak, laurel, and myrtle, were the trees first used for chaplets.
2 See B. xxxv. c. 40.
3 The "Chaplet-weaver." Sec B. xxxv. c. 40.
4 B.C. 380.
5 From Athenæus, B. xv. c. 2, et seq., we learn that the Egyptian chaplets were made of ivy, narcissus, pomegranate blossoms, &c.
6 "Corolla," being the diminutive of "corona."
7 Or tinsel.
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