7.
"For thither the tribes went up" (ver. 4). We were asking whither he ascendeth who hath fallen; for we said, it is the voice of a man who is ascending, of the Church rising. Can we tell whither it ascendeth? whither it goeth? whither it is raised? "Thither," he saith, "the tribes went up." Whither? To "partaking in the Same." But what are the tribes? Many know, many know not. For if we use the word "curies" in its proper sense, we understand nothing, save the "curies" which exist in each particular city, whence the terms "curiales" and "decuriones," that is, the citizens of a curia or a decuria; and ye know that each city hath such curies. But there are, or were at one time, curies of the people in those cities, and one city hath many curies, as Rome hath thirty-five curies of the people. 1 These are called tribes. The people of Israel had twelve of these, according to the sons of Jacob.
Thirty, according to Liv. i. 13, Cic. De Rep. ii. 8; thirty-five afterwards, according to Sext. Pomp. in v. Curia, who seems to confound them with the "Tribes." See Pollet, Hist. For. Rom. in Poleni Supplem. t. i. p. 516. ↩
