Livy, Books I. and II.Ginn & Company, 1891 - 270 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 45
Pagina vii
... probably as a branch of rhetoric that he took up the composition of history . He appears in no public capacity , but he enjoyed the friendship of the imperial family , and lived a quiet literary life , engaged in the composition of his ...
... probably as a branch of rhetoric that he took up the composition of history . He appears in no public capacity , but he enjoyed the friendship of the imperial family , and lived a quiet literary life , engaged in the composition of his ...
Pagina viii
... probably was intended to be continued to the death of Augustus . There were originally one hundred and forty - two books . These were divided into series of fives and tens , each series embracing some marked epoch of history . Thus , at ...
... probably was intended to be continued to the death of Augustus . There were originally one hundred and forty - two books . These were divided into series of fives and tens , each series embracing some marked epoch of history . Thus , at ...
Pagina x
... probably blackmailers ) , who could by means of it control all commerce with the interior , whence the raw materials wanted by the foreigners must come . Hence Rome , from being a station of shepherds , became a centre of commerce . The ...
... probably blackmailers ) , who could by means of it control all commerce with the interior , whence the raw materials wanted by the foreigners must come . Hence Rome , from being a station of shepherds , became a centre of commerce . The ...
Pagina xi
... probably ever be a mystery . Many indications point to a conquest of the city at an early time by its Etruscan neighbors , and a long occupation , from which the Romans finally succeeded in freeing themselves , living there- after under ...
... probably ever be a mystery . Many indications point to a conquest of the city at an early time by its Etruscan neighbors , and a long occupation , from which the Romans finally succeeded in freeing themselves , living there- after under ...
Pagina 5
... probably say nec ulla civitas in quam . The change is irregular , but natural in a careless writer . serae : a somewhat poetical use of adjective for adverb ; Gr . 290 . -immigraverint , gainea an en- trance ; as if they were of foreign ...
... probably say nec ulla civitas in quam . The change is irregular , but natural in a careless writer . serae : a somewhat poetical use of adjective for adverb ; Gr . 290 . -immigraverint , gainea an en- trance ; as if they were of foreign ...
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