Hermathena, Volume 11University of Dublin, 1901 |
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Page 4
... sense, instrumental ablatives. Again, on 600, ajrtpmrof (ouic, one might have wished for a detailed discussion, such as few could have given more learnedly than Dr. Blaydes, of the remarkable variant antpwiroi-, which the scholiast read ...
... sense, instrumental ablatives. Again, on 600, ajrtpmrof (ouic, one might have wished for a detailed discussion, such as few could have given more learnedly than Dr. Blaydes, of the remarkable variant antpwiroi-, which the scholiast read ...
Page 3
... sense held in honour in the subterranean realm . Our new editor omits all notice of Lachmann's réλt , TEEL ( adopted by Peile ) , yet , feeling the want of an im- perative , writes the verse thus- χειρί , τοκεῦσι δίκαν τέλεσσον . But ...
... sense held in honour in the subterranean realm . Our new editor omits all notice of Lachmann's réλt , TEEL ( adopted by Peile ) , yet , feeling the want of an im- perative , writes the verse thus- χειρί , τοκεῦσι δίκαν τέλεσσον . But ...
Page 4
... sense , instrumental ablatives . Again , on 600 , àπéρwτus ows , one might have wished for a detailed discussion , such as few could have given more learnedly than Dr. Blaydes , of the remarkable variant ȧπεрwπóg , which the scholiast ...
... sense , instrumental ablatives . Again , on 600 , àπéρwτus ows , one might have wished for a detailed discussion , such as few could have given more learnedly than Dr. Blaydes , of the remarkable variant ȧπεрwπóg , which the scholiast ...
Page 9
... sense , = with the lint in it , i.e. still unstaunched ( SvσKATάTAVσTOV ) . 470-472 . " To those that are here ( primarily Orestes and Electra , but also including the Chorus ) belongs the cure ( akos , Schütz , for ekàs of M ) brought ...
... sense , = with the lint in it , i.e. still unstaunched ( SvσKATάTAVσTOV ) . 470-472 . " To those that are here ( primarily Orestes and Electra , but also including the Chorus ) belongs the cure ( akos , Schütz , for ekàs of M ) brought ...
Page 18
... sense that Eusebius understood the puzzling words of Hegesippus , καὶ εὐθὺς Οὐεσα πασιανὸς πολιορκεῖ αὐτούς ; for he im- mediately afterwards paraphrases them , τῆς παραχρῆμα μετὰ τὸ μαρτύριον αὐτοῦ πολιορκίας τῆς Ἱερουσαλήμ . A and B ...
... sense that Eusebius understood the puzzling words of Hegesippus , καὶ εὐθὺς Οὐεσα πασιανὸς πολιορκεῖ αὐτούς ; for he im- mediately afterwards paraphrases them , τῆς παραχρῆμα μετὰ τὸ μαρτύριον αὐτοῦ πολιορκίας τῆς Ἱερουσαλήμ . A and B ...
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Popular passages
Page 170 - If I may trust the flattering truth of sleep My dreams presage some joyful news at hand. My bosom's lord sits lightly in his throne, And all this day an unaccustom'd spirit Lifts me above the ground with cheerful thoughts.
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Page 182 - Since, therefore, unity, ie any finite line divided by o, gives the asymptote of an hyperbola, ie a line infinitely long, it necessarily follows that a finite line divided by an infinite gives o. in the quotient, ie that the pars infinitesima of a finite line is just nothing. For by the nature of division the dividend divided by the quotient gives the divisor. Now a man speaking of lines infinitely small will hardly be suppos'd to mean nothing by them, and if he understands real finite quantitys...
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Page 180 - I am bold to think might easily be brought to an end by the sole consideration of one passage in the incomparable Mr. Locke's Treatise of Humane Understanding, b. 2. ch. 17, sec. 7, where that authour, handling the subject of infinity with that judgment and clearness which is so peculiar to him, has these remarkable...
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Page 373 - They also ordered the arrest of the printer, and appointed a committee to inquire who was the author, but apparently in vain. As Swift's views concurred with the decision of Parliament, it is impossible that he could have penned this sheet, which is besides obscure and dull. A private letter to Knightley Chetwode, dated December 12th, 1721, and published by G.
Page 275 - King of righteousness, and then also King of Salem, which is, King of Peace; without father, without mother, without genealogy, having neither beginning of days, nor end of life, but made like unto the Son of God), abideth a priest continually.
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Page 181 - ... tis evidently impossible there should be any such thing ; for every line, how minute soever, is still divisible into parts less than itself; therefore there can be no such thing as a line quavis data minor or infinitely small.