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...from Livy, "Venus ei candida veste apparuit," "Venus appeared to him with a white vest on." Another from the historian, "P. Scipio equestri genere natus," "Publius Scipio was born at a horse race." Here are two renderings of apparently cognate origin: "Caesaris bonas leges," "The bony legs of Caesar." "Nune viridi membra sub arbuto stratus," "He having now stretched his green limbs under the arbutus." We could add to the catalogue, "Sed damnatio, quid confert," or, as a Hoosier Freshman rendered it, "But, damnation, what good...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Latin at Sight. | 1/20/1885 | See Source »

...benefits of travel, even while anchored in one place. We meet fellows from all parts of the country who differ from each other in ideas, in customs, in manners, and even in dialect. Our country is so large that we are like the nations of Gaul, of whom Caesar says,-what school boy will ever forget the sentence? -Hi omnes lingua institutes, legibus inter se different...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Whence we Hail. | 1/20/1885 | See Source »

Regular meeting tonight at 7.30. Reading from Julius Caesar...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Shakspere Club. | 1/6/1885 | See Source »

Everyone remembers the reply Polonius makes to Hamlet, who asked him if he did not at one time act in the University. Polonius not only admits it but is rather proud of it. "I did enact Julius Caesar, I was killed i' the capital." It is recorded that Queen Elizabeth attended amateur performances of the students at Oxford and at Cambridge, and was highly pleased with the endeavors of the striplings. At that time it was the custom, when any distinguished personage paid a visit to the Universities, to entertain him in royal style, and the representation of some...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: College Theatrical. | 12/22/1884 | See Source »

...prominence. Probably the most stupendous undertaking, and certainly the most successful in the way of college theatricals, was the presentation of the Greek play here at Harvard in the spring of 1881. There is a rumor abroad that the Shakspere Club is to play certain portions of Julius Caesar the coming spring...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: College Theatrical. | 12/22/1884 | See Source »

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