Classical Philology, Volume 5

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, 1910
 

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 93 - And then how I shall lie through centuries, And hear the blessed mutter of the mass, And see God made and eaten all day long, And feel the steady candle flame, and taste Good, strong, thick, stupefying incense smoke.
Page 350 - RETRIBUTION Though the mills of God grind slowly, yet they grind exceeding small; Though with patience he stands waiting, with exactness grinds he all.— Longfellow.
Page 210 - of which Heaven is the father alone, neither did the race of mortal men beget them, nor shall oblivion ever put them to sleep. The power of God is mighty in them, and groweth not old.
Page 32 - Tu cave ne tristi cupias pugnare puellae, Neve superba loqui, neve tacere diu: Neu, si quid petiit, ingrata fronte negaris, Neu tibi pro vano verba benigna cadant. Irritata venit quando contemnitur ilia, Nee meminit iustas
Page 227 - A Mexican-Aryan Comparative Vocabulary. The Radicals of the Mexican or Nauatl Language with Their Cognates in the Aryan Languages of the Old World, chiefly Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, and Germanic. By TS DENISON, AM, Author of Mexican in Aryan Phonology,
Page 190 - country lifeto such unknown, Whose lives are others', not their own. But serving courts and cities be Less happy, less enjoying thee.
Page 221 - As it stands, it is merely an attempt to supply an educational want. At our schools and universities we read the great writers of the last age of the Republic, and learn something of its political and constitutional history; but there is no book in our language which supplies a picture of life and manners, of education, morals, and religion in that intensely interesting period.
Page 92 - How touching, when at midnight sweep Snow-muffled winds and all is dark, To hear and sink again to sleep.
Page 30 - Non me Chaoniae vincant in amore columbae Dicere, quos iuvenes quaeque puella domet. Me dolor et lacrimae merito fecere peritum : Atque utinam posito dicar amore rudis
Page 176 - in his etiam somnus reponatur. Effinge aliquid et excude quod sit perpetuo tuum, nam reliqua rerum tuarum post te alium atque alium dominum

Bibliographic information