| William Shepard Walsh - 1892 - 1114 páginas
...Montaigne will be recognized as the famous "Suave mari magno" of Lucretius (De Kerum Natura, ii. I) : How sweet to stand, when tempests tear the main. On the firm cliff and mark the seaman's toil I Not that another's danger soothes the soul, But from such toil how sweet to feel secure ! How sweet,... | |
| William S. Walsh - 1892 - 1116 páginas
...Montaigne will be recognized as the famous "Suave mari magno" of Lucretius (De Rerum Naturci, ii. i): ssion, as * at Corinth, beheld this flight of cranes hovering above them, and one said scof 1 Not that another's danger soothes the soul, But from such toil how sweet to feel secure 1 How sweet,... | |
| Dante Alighieri - 1893 - 844 páginas
...Francis by Thomas Aquinas, a Dominican. 4. Lucretius, Nature of Things, Book II. I, Good's Tr. :— " How sweet to stand, when tempests tear the main. On the firm cliff, and mark the seaman's toil ! Not thatanother's danger soothes the soul. But from such toil how sweet to feel secure ! How sweet, at... | |
| Titus Lucretius Carus - 1898 - 592 páginas
...obstruct ; but Nature's utmost depths Shine as the day : so tilings irradiate things. 117$ BOOK II. How sweet to stand, when tempests tear the main, On...soul, But from such toil how sweet to feel secure ! How sweet, at distance from the strife, to view • Contending hosts, and hear the clash of war !... | |
| Titus Lucretius Carus - 1898 - 574 páginas
...obstruct ; but Nature's utmost depths Shine as the day : so things irradiate things. 1 1 T.5 BOOK II. How sweet to stand, when tempests tear the main, On...soul, But from such toil how sweet to feel secure ! How sweet, at distance from the strife, to view «. Contending hosts, and hear the clash of war !... | |
| 1906 - 646 páginas
...RE-GENERATION IS CONTINUALLY BEING WORKED OUT IN ME. I GROW TOWARD THE STATURE OF THE CHRIST MAN. 15-28. "How sweet to stand, when tempests tear the main,...soul, But from such toil how sweet to feel secure! How sweet, at distance from the strife, to view, Contending hosts, and hear the clash of war! Yet sweeter... | |
| William S. Walsh - 1909 - 1116 páginas
...Montaigne will be recognized as the famous " Suave mari magno" of Lucretius (Dc Rcrum Natura, ii. l) : How sweet to stand, when tempests tear the main, On...soul, But from such toil how sweet to feel secure 1 How sweet, at distance from the strife, to view Contending hosts, and hear the clash of war ! The... | |
| Franklin D. Rast - 1999 - 404 páginas
...Chapter 10 379th TRANSPORTATION COMPANY How sweet to stand, when teinpest tear the main, On theflnn diff, and mark the seaman's toil! Not that another's danger...soul, But from such toil how sweet to feel secure! How sweet, at distance from the strife, to view Contending hosts, and hear the clash of war! But sweeter... | |
| Epiphanius Wilson - 2007 - 481 páginas
...upon the plain." This reminds us of Lucretius, " How sweet to stand, when tempests tear the main, Oa the firm cliff, and mark the seaman's toil ! Not that...soul, But from such toil how sweet to feel secure ! How 'sweet, at distance from the strife, to view Contending hosts, and hear the clash of war ! But... | |
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