Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Volume 45

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Beginning with v. 31, the proceedings and papers of the Philological Association of the Pacific Coast are included.

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Page 40 - ... et libella aliqua si ex parti claudicat hilum, omnia mendose fieri atque obstipa necesse est prava cubantia prona supina atque absona tecta...
Page 117 - O navis, referent in mare te novi Fluctus; o quid agis? fortiter occupa Portum,' totusque ille Horatii locus, quo navem pro re publica, fluctus et tempestates pro bellis civilibus, portum pro pace atque concordia dicit.
Page 46 - Splendidam quamdam, minimeque veteratoriam rationem dicendi tenet, voce, motu, forma etiam magnifica et generosa quodammodo.
Page 39 - Quid agitis commilitones? ego vester sum, et eos mei! donativum etiam pollicitum. Plures autem prodiderunt, optulisse ultro iugulum et ut hoc agerent, ac ferirent, quando ita videretur, hortatum.
Page 143 - Id quoque vitandum, in quo magna pars errat, ne in oratione poetas nobis et historicos, in illis operibus oratores aut declamatores imitandos putemus. Sua cuique 22 proposito lex, suus decor est : nee comoedia in cothurnos adsurgit, nee contra tragoedia socco ingreditur.
Page 36 - Demonstrasse vobis memini me hanc domum in ea parte Palatii esse quae, cum ab Sacra via descenderis et per proximum vicum qui est a sinistra parte prodieris, posita est.
Page 112 - As figures be the instruments of ornament in euery language, so be they also in a sorte abuses or rather trespasses in speach, because they passe the ordinary limits of common vtterance, and be occupied of purpose to deceiue the eare and also the minde...
Page 112 - This ornament we speake of is giuen to it by figures and figuratiue speaches, which be the flowers as it were and coulours that a Poet setteth vpon his language by arte...
Page 164 - Quapropter, ut non abrupte cadere in narrationem, ita non obscure transcendere, est optimum. — iv, i, 78 f. It should be noted that Davus' introductory sentence differs from that quoted from Aeschines in that it is broken and elliptical.
Page 122 - Puttenham's theorization of the "fareffet" in The Arte of English Poesie: as when we had rather fetch a word a great way off then to use one nerer hand to expresse the matter as wel and plainer. And it seemeth the deviser of this figure, had a desire to please women rather than men, for we use to say by manner of Proverbe: things farrefet and deare bought are good for Ladies...

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