Sallust's Jugurthine War and Conspiracy of Catiline: with an English commentary, and geographical and historical indexesHarper & Bros., 1838 - 332 pagine |
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Pagina x
... Rome , cannot but be struck by the singular fact , that so many of the distinguished individuals who grace the literary annals of the empire - city , were born , not in Rome itself , but either in foreign lands , or in the prov- inces ...
... Rome , cannot but be struck by the singular fact , that so many of the distinguished individuals who grace the literary annals of the empire - city , were born , not in Rome itself , but either in foreign lands , or in the prov- inces ...
Pagina xi
... Rome may be said to have acquired her literary , as she did her martial , fame , by the exertions of her allies , the provincials of Italy . H. Yes , Doctor , and it is only transferring to the operations of intel- lect the old proverb ...
... Rome may be said to have acquired her literary , as she did her martial , fame , by the exertions of her allies , the provincials of Italy . H. Yes , Doctor , and it is only transferring to the operations of intel- lect the old proverb ...
Pagina xiv
... Rome , surrounded by delightful pleasure - grounds , afterwards well known and celebrated by the name of the Gardens of Sallust . Possessed of every attraction , the Sallustian palace and gardens became , after the death of their ...
... Rome , surrounded by delightful pleasure - grounds , afterwards well known and celebrated by the name of the Gardens of Sallust . Possessed of every attraction , the Sallustian palace and gardens became , after the death of their ...
Pagina xvii
... Rome , particularly Cato the censor ; and it is here that he laid himself open to attack from Pollio in his letters to Plancus . His style , on the whole , indicates too much study and careful pruning , and is deficient in gracefulness ...
... Rome , particularly Cato the censor ; and it is here that he laid himself open to attack from Pollio in his letters to Plancus . His style , on the whole , indicates too much study and careful pruning , and is deficient in gracefulness ...
Pagina xx
... Rome , and the habits and manners of its people , from the 1. Dunlop's Roman Lit. , vol . ii . p . 155 , Lond . ed . 2. Dunlop's Roman Lit. , vol . ii . p . 156 . earliest period to the commencement of the civil wars ; IX LIFE AND ...
... Rome , and the habits and manners of its people , from the 1. Dunlop's Roman Lit. , vol . ii . p . 155 , Lond . ed . 2. Dunlop's Roman Lit. , vol . ii . p . 156 . earliest period to the commencement of the civil wars ; IX LIFE AND ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Sallust's Jugurthine War and Conspiracy of Catiline: With an English ... Sallust Visualizzazione completa - 1836 |
Sallust's Jugurthine War and Conspiracy of Catiline: With an English ... Sallust Visualizzazione completa - 1837 |
Sallust's Jugurthine War and Conspiracy of Catiline: With an English ... Sallust Visualizzazione completa - 1837 |
Parole e frasi comuni
adesse Adherbal Africa agere alia alii alios animi animo animus antea apud archaism armis atque belli bello bellum Bocchus Caesar castra Catiline caussa Ceterum Cicero Compare consul copia Cortius cujus cuncta deinde denotes editions ejus eorum equivalent erant erat esset etiam exercitu facere foret fuit Greek habere haec haud homines hostibus hostium ibique Igitur illis illo imperio imperium inter ipse jubet Jugurtha Jugurthine war legatis Literally magis magistratus magna manu Marius Masinissa maxume Metellus metu Micipsa mihi modo multa multis neque nihil nisi Numidae Numidia omnes omnia omnibus omnis omnium oppidum parum paucis paullo Plutarch populi postquam postremo praelio praeterea praetor primum quae quaestor quam quia quibus quid quis quisque quod quoniam rebus Referring rempublicam rerum Romae Roman saepe Sallust satis senate sese sestertius sibi sicuti simul spes sunt tamen tempus verb vero
Brani popolari
Pagina 331 - Sallust's Jugurthine War and Conspiracy of Catiline, with an English Commentary, and Geographical and Historical Indexes. By Charles Anthon, LL.D. Sixth Edition, corrected and enlarged. 12mo. With a Portrait. Select Orations of Cicero, with an English Commentary, and Historical, Geographical, and Legal Indexes.
Pagina 331 - Latin Grammar, Part I. Containing the most important Parts of the Grammar of the Latin Language, together with appropriate Exercises in the translating and writing of Latin.
Pagina 285 - Each legion was divided into ten cohorts, each cohort into three maniples, and each maniple into two...
Pagina 331 - Commentaries on the Gallic War, and the First Book of the Greek Paraphrase ; with English Notes, Critical and Explanatory, Plans of Battles, Sieges, &c., and Historical, Geographical, and Archaeological Indexes.
Pagina 105 - De poena possum equidem dicere, id quod res habet, in luctu atque miseriis mortem aerumnarum requiem, non cruciatum esse; eam cuncta mortalium mala dissolvere; ultra neque curae neque gaudio locum esse.
Pagina 248 - In point of effect, this oration must have been perfectly electric. The disclosure to the criminal himself of his most secret purposes : their flagitious nature, threatening the life of every one present ; the whole course of his villanies and treasons, blazoned forth with the fire of incensed eloquence ; and the adjuration to him, by fleeing from Rome, to free his country from such a pest, were all wonderfully calculated to excite astonishment, admiration, and horror.
Pagina 168 - Lectisternium took place, couches being spread for the gods, as if about to feast, and their statues being taken down from their pedestals and placed upon these couches around the altars, which were loaded with the richest dishes.
Pagina 242 - It was the part of the Patron to advise and to defend his client, to assist him with his interest and •substance, in short to do every thing for him that a parent uses to do for his children. The Client was obliged to pay all kind of respect to his patron, and to serve him with his life and fortune in any extremity, Dionys.
Pagina 332 - From WILLIAM A. DUER, LL.D., President of Columbia College, in the City of New-York. From the manner in which this undertaking has been so far executed, as well as from the established character and reputation of Professor Anthon as a scholar, his experience as an instructer, and the accuracy and judgment previously evinced by him as an editor and commentator, I can entertain...
Pagina xix - But ere we can say that there is no God — we must have roamed over all nature, and seen that no mark of a Divine footstep was there ; and we must have gotten intimacy with every existent spirit in the universe, and learned from each, that never did a revelation of the Deity visit him ; and we must have searched, not into the records of one solitary planet, but into the archives of all worlds, and thence gathered, that, throughout the wide realms of immensity, not one exhibition of a reigning and...