Volume Iii Part 153 (1/2)

470. MART. 2 Epig. lx.x.xvi.

' 'Tis folly only, and defect of sense, Turns trifles into things of consequence.'

471. EURIPID.

'The wise with hope support the pains of life.'

472. VIRG. aen. iii. 660.

'This only solace his hard fortune sends.'

(Dryden).

473. HOR. 1 Ep. xix. 12.

'Suppose a man the coa.r.s.est gown should wear, No shoes, his forehead rough, his look severe, And ape great Cato in his form and dress; Must be his virtues and his mind express?'

(Creech).

474. HOR. 1 Ep. xviii. 6.

'Rude, rustic, and inelegant.'

475. TER. Eun. Act i. Sc. 1.

'The thing that in itself has neither measure nor consideration, counsel cannot rule.'

476. HOR. Ars Poet. 41.

'Method gives light.'

477. HOR. 3 Od. iv. 5.

'--Does airy fancy cheat My mind well pleased with the deceit?

I seem to hear, I seem to move, And wander through the happy grove, Where smooth springs flow, and murm'ring breeze, Wantons through the waving trees.'