Cicero, select orationsB.H. Sanborn & Company, 1901 - 518 pagine |
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Pagina xxxviii
... conditions sur- rounding the orator , and puts the learner in the proper environment . For Cicero's place and value as a writer , the various histories of Roman literature should be consulted . For secondary school purposes ...
... conditions sur- rounding the orator , and puts the learner in the proper environment . For Cicero's place and value as a writer , the various histories of Roman literature should be consulted . For secondary school purposes ...
Pagina xliii
... conditions at this time were such as to afford the lower classes little opportunity to rise or even to be respectable . The cen- tralization of wealth in the hands of the knights had driven the small traders out of commercial and ...
... conditions at this time were such as to afford the lower classes little opportunity to rise or even to be respectable . The cen- tralization of wealth in the hands of the knights had driven the small traders out of commercial and ...
Pagina xliv
... condition had the ordo plebeius degenerated . e . Libertini . 13. Below the three orders just mentioned , was a large class of citizens who had the right to vote and to hold property , but who were not eligible to office . These were ...
... condition had the ordo plebeius degenerated . e . Libertini . 13. Below the three orders just mentioned , was a large class of citizens who had the right to vote and to hold property , but who were not eligible to office . These were ...
Pagina l
... conditions which alone could lead to wise action . It is not strange , then , that the magistrates , who , when elected , were often new to their duties , were very glad to lean upon the senate in assuming the great responsibilities of ...
... conditions which alone could lead to wise action . It is not strange , then , that the magistrates , who , when elected , were often new to their duties , were very glad to lean upon the senate in assuming the great responsibilities of ...
Pagina lxix
... conditions were favorable to its development . Freedom , the mother of eloquence , the Romans enjoyed from the earliest times . Nature had given them an innate readiness for speaking , a strong natural vein of eloquence . And education ...
... conditions were favorable to its development . Freedom , the mother of eloquence , the Romans enjoyed from the earliest times . Nature had given them an innate readiness for speaking , a strong natural vein of eloquence . And education ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
aediles Allobroges Archias āre ārī Asia ātis atque ātus autem āvī bellum Caesar Catiline Cicero Cimbri citizens clause comitia Comitium comp conj consul consulship enim eōrum eōs erat esset etiam Forum fuit gens Greek haec hendiadys hōc hominum huius illa īre itus Julius Caesar Lentulus Lucullus magistrates Manilian Law Marcellus Marius mihi Mithradates modo neque nihil nisi nōn nunc omnes omnia omnis omnium ōnis orator ōris plur Pompey possit prae praetor prō pron quae quaestor quam quibus quid quidem Quirītēs quis quod rei publicae Roman Rome rostra sẽ senate subjv subst Sulla sunt tamen tantō tantum temple tibi tion umquam urbe urbem urbis verb vērō vērum vōbīs vōs word
Brani popolari
Pagina 133 - Series contains the Latin authors usually read in American schools and colleges, and also others well adapted to class-room use, but not heretofore published in suitable editions. The several volumes are prepared by special editors, who aim to revise the text carefully and to edit it in the most serviceable manner. Where there are German editions of unusual merit, representing years of special study under the most favorable circumstances, these are used, with the consent of the foreign editor, as...
Pagina 43 - Itaque, quod plerumque in atroci negotio solet, senatus decrevit, darent operam consules, ne quid respublica detrimenti caperet. Ea potestas per senatum, more Romano, magistratui maxuma permittitur ; exercitum parare, bellum gerere, coercere omnibus modis socios atque civis; domi militiaeque imperium atque judicium summum habere : aliter, sine populi jussu, nulli earum rerum consuli jus est.
Pagina 136 - A FIRST BOOK IN LATIN. By HIRAM TUELL, AM, late Principal of the Milton High School, Mass., and HAROLD N. FOWLER, Ph.D., Western Reserve University. Ready. A BEGINNER'S BOOK IN LATIN.
Pagina 136 - VERGIL, The Story of Turnus from Aen. VII-XII, for rapid reading. By MOSES SLAUGHTER, Ph.D., Professor in the University of Wisconsin. Ready. VIRI ROMAE, Selections. With Prose Exercises. By GM WHICHER, AM, Teachers' Normal College, New York City.
Pagina 135 - SALLUST, Catiline, based upon the edition of Schmalz. By CHARLES G. HERBERMANN, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor in the College of the City of New York. Ready. SENECA, Select Letters.
Pagina 133 - Some will contain in the introductions and commentary such a careful and minute treatment of the author's life, language, and style as to afford the means for a thorough appreciation of the author and his place in Latin literature.
Pagina 133 - The latter are particularly acceptable for sight reading, and for rapid reading after the minute study of an author or period in one of the fuller editions. For instance, after a class has read a play or two of Plautus and Terence carefully, with special reference to the peculiarities of style, language, metres, the methods of presenting a play, and the like, these editions will be admirably suited for the rapid reading of other plays.
Pagina 134 - LIVY, Books XXI and XXII, based upon the edition of Wolfflin. By JOHN K. LORD, Ph.D., Professor in Dartmouth College.
Pagina 136 - Claremont (NH) High School. Ready. ATLAS OF THE GEOGRAPHY AND HISTORY OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. Edited by JOHN K. LORD, Ph.D., Professor in Dartmouth College. CAESAR, Gallic War, Books IV. By HAROLD W. JOHNSON, Ph.D., Professor in the Indiana University, and FREDERICK W. SANFORD, AM, Professor in Illinois College. CICERO, Pro Ligario. By CLARENCE H. WHITE, Latin Master, Worcester (Mass.) Academy.
Pagina 65 - Sullanae victoriae, quod ex gregariis militibus alios senatores videbant, alios ita divites, ut regio victu atque cultu aetatem agerent, sibi quisque, si in armis foret, ex victoria talia sperabat. praeterea iuventus, quae in agris manuum mercede inopiam toleraverat, privatis atque publicis largitionibus excita urbanum otium ingrato labori praetulerat. eos atque alios omnis malum publicum alebat. quo minus mirandum est homines egentis, malis moribus maxuma spe, rei publicae iuxta ac sibi consuluisse....