ponenda sunt. So in Virg. Ecl. 6. 53 ille latus niueum molli fultus hyacintho, where it is absurd to say a bull is propped or supported on hyacinths, but perfectly appropriate to say he presses or is pressed by them. So, too, in Lucr. 2. 100 partim interuallis magnis confulta resultant, rebound after being pressed together. So probably effulcio in Appul. Met. 2. 34 stragulis aggeratis in cumulum et effultis in cubitum. From the original meaning of 'pressing' we get two chief offshoots: A, pressing out, stuffing; B, pressing together, making firm, strengthening. The compound infulcio is particularly worthy of attention. It presents uses exactly corresponding to those of infarcio ; but uses which are apparently later for infulcio than for infarcio, and which form a passage from the original meaning to its first modification A. Compare Columella 12. 53. 2 in eas partes largum salem infarcito with Suetonius Tib. 53 rursus mori inedia destinanti per uim ore diducto infulciri cibum iussit; and in a metaphorical sense Cicero Orator 69. 231 infarciens uerba with Seneca Epist. 106. 5 aliud (uerbum) infulcire. Still nearer to the ordinary meaning of farcio is the use of offulcio in Appuleius Metam. 1. 10 uulnus spongia offulciens, Met. 4. 70 multis laciniis offulto uulnere and Persius (or Nero?) 1. 78 Antiopa aerumnis cor luctificabile fulta, stuffed with griefs' (compare cor dolis refertum1 which is the Greek κραδίη δόλοισι πεφραγμένη), not, as Gifford, 'propped with dolorifick teen.' The sense B, fortify, secure, is not, so far as I know, found in farcio. But we have it in the Greek opáσow as in Hom. Od. 5. 256 σχεδίην φράξε ῥιπέσσι (compare φάρξαι πόλισμα Aesch. Sept. 63), &c. : and in the Latin fulcio in Aen. 8. 227 fultos obice postes, Ov. A. A. 2. 244 adposita ianua fulta sera. Other meanings of fulcio need only a passing mention. They are either slight modifications of those already referred to or else of that of prop, its commonest meaning, which is derived from that of press 2, a prop being something pressed downwards and pressing upwards, and a fulcrum a point of pressure. 1 Quoted by Curtius 1. c. 2 By no means vice versa as Mr Paley, note on Propert. 1. c. APPENDIX C. COMPARISON OF THE EDITIONS OF L. MÜLLER, PALEY, BAEHRENS 18 (a) 23-end 10-12 18 (b) 19-21 13. 1-42 22. 1-42 43-end 43-end indicates that there is no change. The reckoning is inclusive. 18 (a) 18 (b) 19-21 22. 1-42 43-end INDEX TO THE NOTES. The first number gives the page, the second the verse. The a (interject.) 196 14 Abl. descriptive 130 5 Ablatives two 90 48 Abstract for concrete 95 15 Acc. 88 40 Acc. of part concerned 112 28 acta 105 6; 129 2 ad 203 39; 221 70; 226 2; 245 Aeacus 230 19 Afer (adj.) 234 30 ala, extrema 98 29 anima 119 II ante...donec 79 29 Antonius, L. 103 antrum 47 II Apelleus 56 22 Apollonius Rhodius 90 sqq. Aquilonius 97 25 Arabia 120 16 Callimachus 133 23; 145 14; 158 49; 165 46; 166 59; 188 campum dare 118 2 candor 192 8 canere 115 II capere 46 I caput 159 4; 186 26; 239 55 Catullus 160 10 cedere in astra 187 34 cera 209 3 certe 113 I certus 72 45 cessare 189 15 Chaonius 74 5 Cicero 69 27; 74 1; 107 3 4; 111 20; 218 52; 242 74 cinis 123 6 citatus 68 23 cithara 119 10 Claudia (Quinta) 238 51 cogi 47 8 cogitare 49 17 colligere 176 29 commodus 140 4 Comparative 54 10 componere 76 13 concurrere 174 17 |