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Water is the same every where. "Una est injusti caerula forma maris ." I told him the port here was the mouth of the river or water of Leith. 'Not Lethe; said Mr. Nairne. The riches of Glasgow shew how much there is in the west; and perhaps we shall find trade travel westward on a great scale, as well as a small. We talked of a man's drowning himself.

Juv. 13, 164: Caerula quis stupuit Germani lumina? flavam Caesariem, et madido torquentem cornua cirro? Nempe quod haec illis natura est omnibus una. Magna corpora. "Sidonius Apollinaris says, that, being in Germany and finding the men so very tall, he could not address verses of six feet to patrons who were seven feet high: Spernit senipedem stilum Thalia, Ex quo septipedes vidit patronos." Mur.

When sheriff depute of Perthshire, he found upon reflection, that he had decided a poor man's case erroneously; and as the only remedy, supplied the litigant privately with money to carry the suit to the supreme court, where his judgment was reversed. Croker's Boswell, p. 280. 'Non illic urbes, non tu mirabere silvas: Una est injusti caerula forma maris. Ovid. Amor. L. II. El. xi.

I was apprehensive the rope might break, and then there would have been every chance of going down to the regions under water with the cayman. That would have been more perilous than Arion's marine morning ride: Delphini insidens vada caerula sulcat Arion. The people now dragged us above forty yards on the sand: it was the first and last time I was ever on a cayman's back.

That mastery of phrase is astonishing. From the silver beauty of the moonlit line from his Melanippe Lumine sic tremulo terra et cava caerula candent, to the thunderous oath of Achilles Per ego deum sublimas subices Umidas, unde oritur imber sonitu saevo et spiritu they give examples of almost the whole range of beauty of which the Latin language is capable.

"Caerula quis stupuit lumina? flavam Caesariem, et madido torquentem cornua cirro? Nempe quod haec illis natura est omnibus una," writes Juvenal of their resemblance to one another. By the year 1411 long strides had been made toward other forms of social, political, religious, and commercial life, due to the German grip upon Europe.