On the Eight Lines Usually Prefixed to Horat. Serm. 1. 10;

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I. 3, 9.
"^Epod. 4, 3.
^Rhein. Mus. XLI. P. 552.
31 A similar use of ' exorare, ' which he might have quoted, is found in Hor. Epp. 1. 1, 6, 'latet abditus agro, ne populum extrema toties exoret harena. ' With this meaning of ' exoret, ' ' toties ' may be taken literally.
22 An easy change paleographically.
10 Colorado College Studies.
for a finite verb of ' striking' or ' cutting. ' This, he thinks, is lurking in 'udis, ' which is certainly very weak and has never been well explained. The verb
... is probably ' ussit. ' It should be noticed that the word 'udis' appeals Hn ras. /?, ' and that very often in mss. The termination '-it' shows a medial 'd. ' ^^ For similar uses of the verb ' urere ' cp. Horace, Epp. I. 16, 47, 'loris non ureris'; Epod. 4, 3, 'Hibericis peruste funibus'; Sat. II. 7, 58, 'virgis uri. ' The conjec- ture 'quo melior versu est' in the fourth line he puts for- ward with less confidence.
Marx then refers his new reading, 'qui multum puerum . . . Ussit exoratus, ' to Vettius Philocomus, Cato's teacher, who was one of the first to revise the work of Lucilius.^* This man, as being 'Lucilii familiaris, ' and possibly th« same person who was censured by the poet 'propter sermonem parum urbanum, '^^ may have been like Aelius Stilo and Servius Clodius, a Roman knight.


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