No More Learning
{110a} The
interpreter
of gods and men.
Ben Jonson - Discoveries Made Upon Men, and Some Poems
Sebast.
de Venet.
Julio Romano.
Andrea Sartorio.
{94} Plin.
lib.
35.
c.
2, 5, 6, and 7.
Vitruv.
lib.
8 and 7.
{95} Horat.
in "Arte Poet.
"
{106a} Livy, Sallust, Sidney, Donne, Gower, Chaucer, Spenser, Virgil,
Ennius, Homer, Quintilian, Plautus, Terence.
{110a} The
interpreter
of gods and men.
{111a} Julius Caesar.
Of words, _see_ Hor.
"De Art.
Poet.
;" Quintil.
1.
8, "Ludov.
Vives," pp.
6 and 7.
{111b} A prudent man conveys nothing rashly.
{114a} That jolt as they fall over the rough places and the rocks.
{116a} Directness enlightens, obliquity and circumlocution darken.
{117a} Ocean trembles as if indignant that you quit the land.
{117b} You might believe that the uprooted Cyclades were floating in.
{118a} Those armies of the people of Rome that might break through the
heavens.
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