The Life of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 1Vernor, Hood, and Sharpe, 1810 |
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Pagina vi
... command of that mighty empire , produced a race of nobles , supe- rior even to kings . This was a prospect that filled the soul of the ambitious , and roused every faculty of mind and body , to exert its utmost force : whereas , in ...
... command of that mighty empire , produced a race of nobles , supe- rior even to kings . This was a prospect that filled the soul of the ambitious , and roused every faculty of mind and body , to exert its utmost force : whereas , in ...
Pagina 24
... command of the war against Mithridates † ; but old Marius , envious of his growing fame , and desirous to engross every commission , which offered either power or wealth , engaged Sulpicius , an eloquent and popular tribune , to get ...
... command of the war against Mithridates † ; but old Marius , envious of his growing fame , and desirous to engross every commission , which offered either power or wealth , engaged Sulpicius , an eloquent and popular tribune , to get ...
Pagina 27
... command of a difficult and desperate war : and , in truth , he twice delivered them from the most desperate , with which they had ever been threatened by a foreign enemy . Scipio , from the observation of his martial talents , while he ...
... command of a difficult and desperate war : and , in truth , he twice delivered them from the most desperate , with which they had ever been threatened by a foreign enemy . Scipio , from the observation of his martial talents , while he ...
Pagina 58
... command . Upon this he came forward into Italy at the head of a great army , and having possessed himself of Etruria without opposition , marched in an hostile manner towards the city , to the demand of a second con- sulship . He had ...
... command . Upon this he came forward into Italy at the head of a great army , and having possessed himself of Etruria without opposition , marched in an hostile manner towards the city , to the demand of a second con- sulship . He had ...
Pagina 76
... command of all the coasts of the Mediterranean : " a boundless power , " as Cicero calls itt , which gave him an opportunity of plundering the provinces , and committing all kinds of outrage on the allies . He invaded Crete without any ...
... command of all the coasts of the Mediterranean : " a boundless power , " as Cicero calls itt , which gave him an opportunity of plundering the provinces , and committing all kinds of outrage on the allies . He invaded Crete without any ...
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