Cato major de senectute: Laelius de amicitiaEldredge & Brother, 1872 |
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Pagina 50
... . Quamobrem , si cadit in sapientem animi dofor , ( qui profecto cadit , nisi ex ejus animo exstirpatam humani- Mum affection Spuned hames mental rebuse for virtue ѝ we are Wither tatem arbitramur , quae 50 M. TULLII CICERONIS.
... . Quamobrem , si cadit in sapientem animi dofor , ( qui profecto cadit , nisi ex ejus animo exstirpatam humani- Mum affection Spuned hames mental rebuse for virtue ѝ we are Wither tatem arbitramur , quae 50 M. TULLII CICERONIS.
Pagina 51
Laelius de amicitia Marcus Tullius Cicero Henry Bullard Richardson, Edward Payson Crowell. for virtue ѝ we are Wither tatem arbitramur , quae causa est cur amicitiam fun- ditus tollamuse vita , for fear of aliquas propter eam heart ...
Laelius de amicitia Marcus Tullius Cicero Henry Bullard Richardson, Edward Payson Crowell. for virtue ѝ we are Wither tatem arbitramur , quae causa est cur amicitiam fun- ditus tollamuse vita , for fear of aliquas propter eam heart ...
Pagina 75
... age are occasioned by faults of character , not by length of life , and that , except in the extremest poverty , wisdom and virtue cannot but render the decline of life happy . In compliance with their request DE SENECTUTE . 75.
... age are occasioned by faults of character , not by length of life , and that , except in the extremest poverty , wisdom and virtue cannot but render the decline of life happy . In compliance with their request DE SENECTUTE . 75.
Pagina 126
... virtues and the illustrious career of his friend , by the belief that death was no evil to him , and by the remem- brance of their friendship . Chapters v . - xxvii . contain the discourse of Laelius , which may be divided as follows ...
... virtues and the illustrious career of his friend , by the belief that death was no evil to him , and by the remem- brance of their friendship . Chapters v . - xxvii . contain the discourse of Laelius , which may be divided as follows ...
Pagina 127
... virtue ; and with the exception of virtue , friendship the highest good . Page Chap . I. 1. Q. Mucius , sc . Scaevola . See Introduction , p . 35 125. He was praetor and governor of Asia in 121 B. C. , and consul in 117 B. C. , and was ...
... virtue ; and with the exception of virtue , friendship the highest good . Page Chap . I. 1. Q. Mucius , sc . Scaevola . See Introduction , p . 35 125. He was praetor and governor of Asia in 121 B. C. , and consul in 117 B. C. , and was ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
aetas aetate Africani aliquid amici amicitia amico amicorum animi animo animus atque autem bonis Cato causa Chap Cicero clause consul cujus denotes dicere Dict dixi ejus enim Ennius esset friendship fuisse fuit Greek haec hendiadys idem igitur illa illud inter ipsa ipse ipsi ista Itaque Laelius legatus line 14 line 16 line 23 line 31 magis maxime mihi modo mortem multa multis multo natura Nec vero neque nihil nisi Numantine war numquam omnes omni omnia omnino omnium possit potest publica quae quam Quamobrem Quamquam quibus quid quidem quis quisque quod quum reading rebus refers rerum Roman saepe Scaevola Scipio Scipio Africanus Major Scipionis sed etiam senectute senectutem seqq sibi sint solum sub voce subjunctive sunt tamen tamquam Tarentum Tusc verb videri virtue vita voluptates
Brani popolari
Pagina 114 - Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting; The soul that rises with us, our life's star, Hath elsewhere had its setting, And cometh from afar: Not in entire forgetfulness, And not in utter nakedness, But trailing clouds of glory, do we come From God, who is our home.
Pagina 155 - Though planted in esteem's deep-fixed soil, The gradual culture of Kind intercourse Must bring it to perfection.
Pagina 112 - Monomachus and Mago the Samnite, were guilty of doing in his name, nothing occurs in the accounts regarding him which may not be justified in the circumstances, and according to the international law, of the times ; and all agree in this, that he combined in rare perfection discretion and enthusiasm, caution and energy.
Pagina 122 - In this select circle the master-works of Greek literature were read and criticised ; the problems of Greek philosophy were discussed ; and the highest interests of human life became the subject of thoughtful conversation. Though no poet of original genius arose from this society, it exercised a most powerful influence on the progress of Roman literature. It formed a tribunal of good taste ; and much of the correctness, simplicity, and manliness of the classical Latin is due to that " Cosmopolitan...
Pagina 120 - ... of the crime. The history of Rome presents various men of greater genius than Scipio Aemilianus, but none equalling him in moral purity, in the utter absence of political selfishness, in generous love of his country, and none, perhaps, to whom destiny has assigned a more tragic part. Conscious of the best intentions and of no common abilities, he was doomed to see the ruin of his country carried out before his eyes, and to repress within him every earnest attempt to save it, because...
Pagina 84 - Nate 1.— It is, however, remarkable that the plural of abstract nouns is much more common in Latin than in our own language, to denote a repetition of the same thing, or its existence in different objects.
Pagina 124 - bridgebuilders" (pontifices) derived their name from Pontiflccs. . . „ . i ,. . ,1 their function, as sacred as it was politically important, of conducting the building and demolition of the bridge over the Tiber.
Pagina 111 - Romans, behold old Ennius ! whose lays Built up on high your mighty fathers' praise ! Pour not the wail of mourning o'er my bier, Nor pay to me the tribute of a tear: Still, still I live ! from mouth to mouth I fly ! Never forgotten , never shall I die ! The works of Ennius are believed to have existed entire so late as the thirteenth century (A.