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70. Cestius.-Cicero.-Heath.-Taylor.-Spenser
71. De Shakspeare nostrat.-Augustus in Hat..
72. Ingeniorum discrimina. Not. I
Page
154
155
156
157
158
76. Stili eminentia.-Virgil.-Tully.-Sallust.-Plato
160
161
162
St. Alban
81. De Corruptela Morum
82. De Rebus Mundanis .
83. Vulgi Mores.-Morbus comitialis
85. De eodem.-Orpheus' Hymn
163
80. De Augmentis Scientiarum.-Julius Cæsar.-Lord
164
165
166
der.-Cyrus
88. De Malign. Studentium
clausis oculis pugnant
90. Morbi
91. Jactantia intempestiva
84. Princeps
86. De opt. Rege Jacobo.
87. De Princ. adjunctis.-Lycurgus.-Sylla.-Lysan-
89. Controvers. Scriptores.-More Andabatarum, qui
92. Adulatio
93. De vitâ humanâ .
170
94. De Piis et Probis
95. Mores Aulici
96. Impiorum querela.-Augustus.-Varus.-Tiberius
97. Nobilium ingenia
171
172
126. Fals. querel. fugiend.-Platonis peregrinatio in
Italiam
194
127. Præcept. element.
195
196
198
199
200
201
202
128. De orationis dignitate.-'Evkuкλoπαideiα.—Meta-
phora
129. Consuetudo.-Virgil.-Lucretius.-Chaucerism
130. De Stylo.-Tacitus.-Suetonius.-Seneca, and Fa-
bianus
131. Periodi.-Obscuritas offundit tenebras.-Superlatio
132. Oratio imago animi
133. Structura et statura, sublimis, humilis, pumila
134. Mediocris plana et placida.
135. Vitiosa oratio, vasta, tumens, enormis-affectata,
136. Figura
abjecta
137. Cutis sive cortex. Compositio
138. Carnosa, adipata, redundans
139. Jejuna, macilenta, strigosa-Ossea, et nervosa
140. Notæ domini Sti. Albani de doctrin. intemper.-
Dictator.-Aristoteles
141. De optimo scriptore.-Cicero
142. De stylo epistolari.-Inventio
i. Brevitas
Quintilian
ii. Perspicuitas
iii. Vigor .
iv. Discretio
143. De Poetica
144. D. Hieronymus
145. Remedii votum semper verius erat, quàm spes.—
Sexus fœmin.
146. What is a Poet?.
147. What mean you by a Poem?
148. Horatius.-Lucretius.
149. Epicum.-Dramaticum.-Lyricum.-Elegiacum.-
Epigrammat.
150. But how differs a Poem from what we call Poesy?
i. Ingenium.-Seneca.-Plato.-Aristotle, &c.
Lipsius.-Petron. in Fragm.
ii. Exercitatio.-Virgil.-Scaliger.-Euripides, &c.
iii. Imitatio.-Horatius.-Virgil, &c. .
216
iv. Lectio.-Parnassus.-Helicon, &c.
151. Virorum schola respub.-Lysippus.-Apelles, &c.
218
166. What we understand by whole
167. What is the utmost bounds of a Fable.
168. What by one and entire
224
225
226
169. Hercules.-Theseus.-Achilles.-Ulysses.-Ho-
mer and Virgil, Æneas.-Venus
170. Theseus.- Hercules.-Juvenal.-Codrus.-Sopho-
cles.-Ajax.-Ulysses
171. The conclusion concerning the Whole and the
227
Parts
228
THE ENGLISH GRAMMAR
229
The First Book, ETYMOLOGY, the true Notation of
The Second Part, SYNTAX, the right Ordering of Words.
Chapter 1. Of Apostrophus
291
II. Of the Syntax of one Noun with Another
III. Of the Syntax of a Pronoun with a Noun
IV. Of the Syntax of Adjectives.
293
297
303
Epitaph on the Lady Jane.
I could begin with that grand form Here lies.
326