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"Jam fuerit, nec post unquam revocare licebit." Yet did not this thought wrinkle my forehead any more than any other.

'Sis pecore et multa dives tellure licebit, Tibique Pactolus fluat. 'Though wide thy land extends, and large thy fold, Though rivers roll for thee their purest gold. FRANCIS. Horace, Epodes, xv. 19. See Macaulay's Essays, ed. 1843, i. 404, for Macaulay's appropriation and amplification of this passage. See ante, ii. 168. Mr. Croker suggests the Rev.

Atque hoc adhuc factum non est; quum vero factum fuerit, melius de scientiis sperare licebit." A considerable portion of lead must certainly have been added to the intellect of Bacon when he wrote this Aphorism.

Licuit semperque licebit Signatum praesente nota producere nomen. Allowable? Yes! and much more than merely allowable; it is inevitable that as the ages roll we should attach new meanings to old words.

It appears, however, from a passage in the Ibis, which can apply to no other than Augustus, that Ovid was not sent into banishment destitute of pecuniary provision: Di melius! quorum longe mihi maximus ille, Qui nostras inopes noluit esse vias. Huic igitur meritas grates, ubicumque licebit, Pro tam mansueto pectore semper agam.

Only let no reader turn to it who has any invincible repugnance to that curious turn for wildbret, which Goethe has described as the secret of some arts. Dixeris hæc inter varicosos centuriones, Continuo crassum ridet Pulfenius ingens Et centum Græcos curto centusse licebit. As I have already said, it must be judged as something more than a literary diversion.