
First chorus, line 65.
Atalanta in Calydon (1865)
Canto 8, stanza 11
The Faerie Queene (1589–1596), Book I
First chorus, line 65.
Atalanta in Calydon (1865)
As quoted "John von Neumann (1903 - 1957)" by Eugene Wigner, in Year book of the American Philosophical Society (1958); later in Symmetries and Reflections : Scientific Essays of Eugene P. Wigner (1967), p. 261
“This dumb ox will fill the world with his bellowing.”
Attributed to Albertus Magnus in: Anne Jackson Fremantle (1962) The Great Ages of Western Philosophy : The Age of Belief : The Medieval Philosophers
Albertus Magnus, in response to other of his students calling Thomas Aquinas a "dumb ox" because of his quietude.
"A Complaint by Night of the Lover Not Beloved", line 11.
"Lettre du Provincial" (21 December 1899)
Basic Verities, Prose and Poetry (1943)
“A Nemean steed in terror of the fight bears the hero from the citadel of Pallas, and fills the fields with the huge flying shadow, and the long trail of dust rises upon the plain.”
Illum Palladia sonipes Nemeaeus ab arce
devehit arma pavens umbraque inmane volanti
implet agros longoque attollit pulvere campum.
Source: Thebaid, Book IV, Line 136 (tr. J. H. Mozley)
Letter to Gerrit Smith, (Feb. 7, 1835), The Letters of William Lloyd Garrison, vol. 1, Walter M. Merrill, edit., Belknap Press-Harvard University Press, 1971, p. 445
“I am she, O most bucolical juvenal, under whose charge are placed the milky mothers of the herd.”
The Betrothed, Chap. xxviii.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)