The Life of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 1Vernor, Hood, and Sharpe, 1810 |
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Pagina vii
... favor , which you have since shewn to my English Cicero , may not detract from that praise , which is due to your love of the Roman : but whatever censure it may draw upon your Lordship , I cannot prevail with myself to conceal , what ...
... favor , which you have since shewn to my English Cicero , may not detract from that praise , which is due to your love of the Roman : but whatever censure it may draw upon your Lordship , I cannot prevail with myself to conceal , what ...
Pagina xiii
... favor me , the benefit of this subscription is the chief fruit that I have ever reaped from my studies . I am indebted , for the first , to Cicero ; for the second , to your Lord- ship . It was Cicero who instructed me to write ; your ...
... favor me , the benefit of this subscription is the chief fruit that I have ever reaped from my studies . I am indebted , for the first , to Cicero ; for the second , to your Lord- ship . It was Cicero who instructed me to write ; your ...
Pagina xiv
... favors have long ago risen up , to the character of obligations , and made it my per- petual duty , as it had always been my ambition , to profess myself , with the greatest truth and respect , My Lord , Your Lordship's Most obliged ...
... favors have long ago risen up , to the character of obligations , and made it my per- petual duty , as it had always been my ambition , to profess myself , with the greatest truth and respect , My Lord , Your Lordship's Most obliged ...
Pagina xv
... favor of their subject , and to give us a panegyric instead of a history . They work up their characters as painters do their portraits ; taking the praise of their art to consist , not in copying , but in adorning nature ; not in ...
... favor of their subject , and to give us a panegyric instead of a history . They work up their characters as painters do their portraits ; taking the praise of their art to consist , not in copying , but in adorning nature ; not in ...
Pagina xviii
... favor to the particu- lar character of Cicero , than what common humanity will naturally bestow upon every character , that is found , upon the whole , to be both great and good . In drawing the characters of a number of persons , who ...
... favor to the particu- lar character of Cicero , than what common humanity will naturally bestow upon every character , that is found , upon the whole , to be both great and good . In drawing the characters of a number of persons , who ...
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