[95] Horat. in “Arte Poet.”

[106a] Livy, Sallust, Sidney, Donne, Gower, Chaucer, Spenser, Virgil, Ennius, Homer, Quintilian, Plautus, Terence.

[110a] The interpreter of gods and men.

[111a] Julius Cæsar. Of words, see Hor. “De Art. Poet.;” Quintil. 1. 8, “Ludov. Vives,” pp. 6 and 7.

[111b] A prudent man conveys nothing rashly.

[114a] That jolt as they fall over the rough places and the rocks.

[116a] Directness enlightens, obliquity and circumlocution darken.

[117a] Ocean trembles as if indignant that you quit the land.

[117b] You might believe that the uprooted Cyclades were floating in.

[118a] Those armies of the people of Rome that might break through the heavens.—Cæsar. Comment. circa fin.