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Quare sonuerunt nisi ut audiantur? Again, commenting on psalm 146, he writes, "David teaches that we sing wisely; let us not seek the mere sound for the ear, but a light for the soul." St. Nam, ille qui intelligit reficitur quantum ad intellectum et quantum ad affectum; sed mens ejus qui non intelligit est sine fructu refectionis."

Lindley considers this one of the most interesting plants brought home by me, and has described it as follows: Capparis Mitchellii, Lindley manuscripts; stipulis spinosis, foliis obovatis supra glabris, pedunculis floris solitariis clavatis foliis brevioribus, fructu sphaerico tomentoso. August 19.

Arcturum cum Britannis exspectatis. For another allusion to Arthur, see Pace, De Fructu, p. 83. One September morning, when the dew was still heavy, Ellenbog went out with some brethren to gather apples.

See the well-known passages, Orat. 81 and De Or. 3, 155. VESTITA PAMPINIS: 'arrayed in the young foliage'. FRUCTU ... ASPECTU: ablatives of respect, like gustatu above. CAPITUM IUGATIO: 'the linking together of their tops'; i.e. the uniting of the tops of the stakes by cross-stakes. So the editors; but Conington on Verg.

He saw in this inflammable concentration of power, which must ever be pregnant with great evils, one of the causes why the revolutions of that powerful and polished people are so incomplete and unsatisfactory, why, like Cardinal Fleury, system after system, and Government after Government . . . "floruit sine fructu, Defloruit sine luctu."*

I. Aquifolium fructu albo has white berries; in I. Aquifolium fructu luteo they are yellow and very abundantly produced; and in I. Aquifolium fructu nigro they are black. I. Aquifolium handsworthensis has elliptic-oblong spiny leaves, with a creamy-white margin and marbled with gray. Grafted trees bear berries in great profusion from the time they are only a foot high, and are highly ornamental.

If this made him a superficial statesman, it made him a prompt one; and there was never so lucky a minister with so little trouble to himself.* * At his death appeared the following pnnning epigram: "/Floruit/ sine fructu; /Defloruit/ sine luctu." "He flowered without fruit, and faded without regret." As we approached the end of our destination, we talked of the King.

ORDINIBUS: cf. 59 ordines. De Or. 1, 34 ne plura consecter comprehendam brevi. USU UBERIUS: cf. 53 fructu laetius ... aspectu pulchrius. AD QUEM ... RETARDAT: some have thought that there is zeugma here, supposing ad to be suited only to invitat, not to retardat. That this is not the case is clear from such passages as Caes. Sull. 49 nullius amicitia ad pericula propulsanda impedimur.

If this made him a superficial statesman, it made him a prompt one; and there was never so lucky a minister with so little trouble to himself.* * At his death appeared the following pnnning epigram: "Floruit sine fructu; Defloruit sine luctu." "He flowered without fruit, and faded without regret." As we approached the end of our destination, we talked of the King.

He saw in this inflammable concentration of power, which must ever be pregnant with great evils, one of the causes why the revolutions of that powerful and polished people are so incomplete and unsatisfactory, why, like Cardinal Fleury, system after system, and Government after Government ... "floruit sine fructu, Defloruit sine luctu."*