The Life of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 1Vernor, Hood, and Sharpe, 1810 |
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Pagina vi
... me , in the front of such a work , to expose my veracity to any hazard : and my head indeed is now so full of antiquity , that I could wish to see the dedicatory style reduced to that classical sim- plicity , vi DEDICATION .
... me , in the front of such a work , to expose my veracity to any hazard : and my head indeed is now so full of antiquity , that I could wish to see the dedicatory style reduced to that classical sim- plicity , vi DEDICATION .
Pagina xxvii
... head , whence ' they had all drawn their materials , so the chief benefit that I received from them was , to make me review with stric- ter care the particular passages in which I differed from them , as well as to remind me of some few ...
... head , whence ' they had all drawn their materials , so the chief benefit that I received from them was , to make me review with stric- ter care the particular passages in which I differed from them , as well as to remind me of some few ...
Pagina xxx
... head of the Republic ; to be their leader in war , the guardian of the laws in peace ; the senate was his council , chosen also by the people , by whose advice he was obliged to govern himself in all his measures : but the sovereignty ...
... head of the Republic ; to be their leader in war , the guardian of the laws in peace ; the senate was his council , chosen also by the people , by whose advice he was obliged to govern himself in all his measures : but the sovereignty ...
Pagina xxxiii
... head , being now the first movers and administrators of all the deliberations of the state , had a great advantage over the people ; and within the compass of sixteen years , became so insolent and oppressive , as to drive the body of ...
... head , being now the first movers and administrators of all the deliberations of the state , had a great advantage over the people ; and within the compass of sixteen years , became so insolent and oppressive , as to drive the body of ...
Pagina 8
... head of a party in Arpinum , in opposition to a busy turbu- lent man , M. Gratidius , whose sister he had mar- ried , who was pushing forward a popular law , to oblige the town to transact all their affairs by ballot . The cause was ...
... head of a party in Arpinum , in opposition to a busy turbu- lent man , M. Gratidius , whose sister he had mar- ried , who was pushing forward a popular law , to oblige the town to transact all their affairs by ballot . The cause was ...
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