The Life of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 1Vernor, Hood, and Sharpe, 1810 |
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Pagina xxx
... soon as I have " finished what I have in hand , I shall think it no re- " proach to me , to seek a reconciliation with my Cicero , " and renew an old acquaintance with him , which , for " many years , has been unhappily intermitted ...
... soon as I have " finished what I have in hand , I shall think it no re- " proach to me , to seek a reconciliation with my Cicero , " and renew an old acquaintance with him , which , for " many years , has been unhappily intermitted ...
Pagina xxxiv
... conduct of the senate , though it seemed necessary to the * Nihil immotum , nihil tranquillum , nihil quietum denique in eodem statu relinquebat , & c . Vell . Pat . 2. 6 . present quiet of the city , yet soon after proved AIXXX PREFACE .
... conduct of the senate , though it seemed necessary to the * Nihil immotum , nihil tranquillum , nihil quietum denique in eodem statu relinquebat , & c . Vell . Pat . 2. 6 . present quiet of the city , yet soon after proved AIXXX PREFACE .
Pagina xxxv
Conyers Middleton. present quiet of the city , yet soon after proved fatal to it ; as it taught all the ambitious , by a most sensible experi- ment , that there was no way of supporting an usurped authority , but by force : so that ...
Conyers Middleton. present quiet of the city , yet soon after proved fatal to it ; as it taught all the ambitious , by a most sensible experi- ment , that there was no way of supporting an usurped authority , but by force : so that ...
Pagina 1
... soon confirmed the " truth of the prediction : " but since we have no hint of these prodigies from Cicero himself , or any author of that age , we may charge them to the credulity or the invention of a writer who loves to 紧 says ...
... soon confirmed the " truth of the prediction : " but since we have no hint of these prodigies from Cicero himself , or any author of that age , we may charge them to the credulity or the invention of a writer who loves to 紧 says ...
Pagina 11
... soon as he was capable of a more enlarged and liberal institution , his father brought him to Rome , where he had a house of his ownt , and placed him in a public school , under an eminent Greek master , which was thought the best way ...
... soon as he was capable of a more enlarged and liberal institution , his father brought him to Rome , where he had a house of his ownt , and placed him in a public school , under an eminent Greek master , which was thought the best way ...
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