The Life of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 1Vernor, Hood, and Sharpe, 1810 |
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Pagina viii
... manner of treating them all in their own way , by introducing questions of literature , and varying them so artfully , as to give every one an opportunity , not only of bearing a part , but of leading the conversation in his turn . In ...
... manner of treating them all in their own way , by introducing questions of literature , and varying them so artfully , as to give every one an opportunity , not only of bearing a part , but of leading the conversation in his turn . In ...
Pagina ix
... manners would permit me to attempt a visit any where else ; where I have found you commonly engaged with the classical writers of Greece or Rome ; and con- versing with those very dead , with whom Scipio and Lælius used to converse so ...
... manners would permit me to attempt a visit any where else ; where I have found you commonly engaged with the classical writers of Greece or Rome ; and con- versing with those very dead , with whom Scipio and Lælius used to converse so ...
Pagina xiii
... - tude to you both , in the most effectual manner that I am able , by celebrating the memory of the dead , and acknowledging the generosity of my I have received great civilities , on several occa sions living benefactor . DEDICATION .
... - tude to you both , in the most effectual manner that I am able , by celebrating the memory of the dead , and acknowledging the generosity of my I have received great civilities , on several occa sions living benefactor . DEDICATION .
Pagina xxiii
... manner , yet dwells upon his dreams . and his jests , which , for the greatest part , were probably spurious ; and in the last scene of his life , which was of all the most glorious , when the whole councils of the em- pire , and the ...
... manner , yet dwells upon his dreams . and his jests , which , for the greatest part , were probably spurious ; and in the last scene of his life , which was of all the most glorious , when the whole councils of the em- pire , and the ...
Pagina xxxii
... manner in all the affairs of the Republic * : when , to convince the citizens that nothing was sought by the change , but to secure their common liberty ; and to estab- lish their sovereignty again on a more solid basis ; one of the ...
... manner in all the affairs of the Republic * : when , to convince the citizens that nothing was sought by the change , but to secure their common liberty ; and to estab- lish their sovereignty again on a more solid basis ; one of the ...
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