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Sic constituunt, sic condicunt: nox ducere diem videtur. Illud ex libertate vitium, quod non simul, nec ut jussi conveniunt, sed et alter et tertius dies cunctatione coeuntium absumitur. Ut turbae placuit, considunt armati. Silentium per sacerdotes, quibus tum et coercendi jus est, imperatur.

Brevi amisit, he lost shortly after; though R. takes amisit as perf. for plup. and renders lost a short time before. Mox inter, etc., sc. annum inter, supplied from etiam ipsum ... annum below. Tenor et silentium. Hendiadys for continuum silentium, or tenorem silentem. Jurisdictio. For the administration of justice in private cases had not fallen to his lot.

It was only the children who asked a thousand questions, and got never an answer from the cautious descendants of a Hanseatic people. "Is it the French or the Russians that are coming?" asked a child near to Desiree. "Both," was the answer. "But which will come first?" "Wait and see silentium," replied the careful Dantziger, looking over his shoulder.

Small patch, this of Moyland, size not given; "was bought," says he, "in 1695, by Friedrich afterwards First King, from the Family of Spaen," we once knew a Lieutenant Spaen, of those Dutch regions, "and was named a Royal Mansion ever thereafter." Who lived in it; what kind of thing was it, is it? ALTUM SILENTIUM, from Busching and mankind.

Id sibi maxime formidolosum, privati hominis nomen supra principis attolli: frustra studia fori et civilium artium decus in silentium acta, si militarem gloriam alius occuparet: et cetera utcumque facilius dissimulari: ducis boni imperatoriam virtutem esse.

Cassiod, var. 1. 20. Loquacissimas manus, linguosos digitos, silentium clamosum, expositionem tacitam.

To keep love in breath, Lycurgus made a decree that the married people of Lacedaemon should never enjoy one another but by stealth; and that it should be as great a shame to take them in bed together as committing with others. The difficulty of assignations, the danger of surprise, the shame of the morning, "Et languor, et silentium, Et latere petitus imo Spiritus:"

"His toothache has begun to bother him again." "'Ich weiss nicht, was soll es bedeuten," sang Franck. "But I do!" cried Willy. "Silentium! When Franck begins to sing and Lobkowitz to yawn and Ritter empties his first glass on the table-cloth, we'll soon be lying stretched out under the table." The cook had seated himself decorously and was holding the mandolin in position.

It was a long straight blade with a plain iron guard, or cage, for the hands, and on it, in old letters, was engraved one Latin word, Silentium, "Silence." "Why is it called 'Silence, Martin?" "Because it makes people silent, I suppose, master." "What is its history, and how did you come by it?" asked Foy in a malicious voice. He knew that the subject was a sore one with the huge Frisian.

Harry jumped up, thinking for certain it was a robber, or hoping perhaps for a ghost, and, flinging open his own door, saw a light inside Father Holt's room, and a figure standing in the doorway, in the midst of a great smoke which issued from the room. "Who's there?" cried out the boy. "Silentium!" whispered the other; "'tis I, my boy!" holding his hand out, and Harry recognised Father Holt.