[11] Supremum laborem, its destruction, as “dies supremus” is the day of death, and “sors suprema” (5. 190) the final doom. Claud. Eutrop. 2. 289, “Phrygiae casus venisse supremos.” ‘Labor’ by itself means no more than πόνος or μόχθος in Greek, sorrow or suffering, 1. 597., 2. 362., 4. 78., 9. 202. ‘To hear the brief tale of Troy's last agony.’
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