| Karl Knortz - 1891 - 518 pages
...entbectt. Xer ©pradje ift (Camcett mächtig, raie menige feiner Gotlegen; bic ^oraäifcfie ßeijre : .... „Cui lecta potenter erit res Nee facundia deseret hunc nee lucidus ordo" Ijat er roo^í beíjerjigt. Seine ©ebidjte, bie er 1878 ju üßofton unter bem îitei „Fantasy and... | |
| George Bainton - 1891 - 380 pages
...thoroughly studied and mastered so far as your forces go. Or as Horace puts it in the well-known words, ' Cui lecta potenter erit res, nee facundia deseret hunc, nee lucidus ordo.' " Dr. HARVEY GOODWIN, Lord Bishop of Dr. H. Carlisle, the author of many theological works, . ' and... | |
| Charles Adolphus Buchheim - 1891 - 308 pages
...vestris, qui scriItitis, cequam Viribus; et iiersate diu quid, ferre recusent, Quid valeant humeri. Cui lecta potenter erit res, Nee facundia deseret hunc nee lucidus ordo. (Epist. ii. 3,v. 38.) 9 The idiomatic phrase it strikes me may be rendered here by tt Will mir fcfycinen.... | |
| Albert Stanburrough Cook - 1892 - 378 pages
...conception of the subject, and on the dependence of the method of treatment on that conception — Cui lecta potenter erit res, Nee facundia deseret hunc, nee lucidus ordo — as well as the technical precepts on the functions of the chorus, the division of the play into... | |
| 1892 - 826 pages
...genehmen Stoff zur Behandlung gewählt hat. Daher die Klarheit und das Lebenalmende dieses Buches. Cui lecta potenter erit res, nee facundia deseret hunc, nee lucidus ordo. Nur wer neben einem gründlichen und vielseitigen philologischen Wissen auch ästhetische und philosophische... | |
| Rev. James Wood - 1893 - 694 pages
...Think of many things, do only one. Port. Pr. Cuidar nao he saber — Thinking is not knowing. Port. Pr. _ H , He who has chosen a theme suited to his powers will never be at a loss for felicitous language or lucid... | |
| Henry Nettleship - 1895 - 336 pages
...of this period applied to eloquent writers as well as eloquent speakers or declaimers : Horace AP 41 Cui lecta potenter erit res, Nee facundia deseret hunc nee lucidus ordo. Statius Silv. i. 4. 28-30 seu plana solutis Cum struts orsa modis, seu cum tibi dulcis in artum Cogitur,... | |
| Thomas Gray - 1895 - 190 pages
...fills its votaries with a complacency more full and complete even than that which reason can supply.' ' Cui lecta potenter erit res Nee facundia deseret hunc nee lucidus ordo,' he has to take the exact measure of his own powers. How many a poet has failed for want of judgment... | |
| Gustav Körting - 1896 - 678 pages
...Beherzigung des horazischen Spruches: „versate diu, quid f'erre reeusent, quid valeant umeri", denn nur „cui lecta potenter erit res, nee facundia deseret hunc nee lucidus ordo". Der Wahlende hat also vor Allem seine eigene Leistungsfähigkeit gewissenhaft zu prüfen , hat namentlich... | |
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