Studies of Roman ImperialismUniversity Press, 1906 - 281 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 42
Pagina xxi
... seem to touch nearly upon your own experience and thoughts , and doesn't have the effect of making you look upon your life as a problem to be studied , and a history to be acted ; doesn't in fact make you understand that there is a ...
... seem to touch nearly upon your own experience and thoughts , and doesn't have the effect of making you look upon your life as a problem to be studied , and a history to be acted ; doesn't in fact make you understand that there is a ...
Pagina xxii
... rightly or well without taking trouble and thinking . When you hear a clever person saying what seem fine things , be sure that in nine cases out of ten those thoughts do not , as seems to you , rise at xxii . ROMAN IMPERIALISM.
... rightly or well without taking trouble and thinking . When you hear a clever person saying what seem fine things , be sure that in nine cases out of ten those thoughts do not , as seems to you , rise at xxii . ROMAN IMPERIALISM.
Pagina xxiii
... seems to you , rise at once in his mind , and are then spoken - but are the result of previous meditation and argument with others , and again meditation . Clever talkers hardly ever come across a really new subject . Almost all ...
... seems to you , rise at once in his mind , and are then spoken - but are the result of previous meditation and argument with others , and again meditation . Clever talkers hardly ever come across a really new subject . Almost all ...
Pagina xxiv
... those delicious autumn days , with all the sweet scents and sounds of autumn in the warm air , which seem almost better than midsummer . About five miles from Oxford , we got to the top of a slight eminence , xxiv . ROMAN IMPERIALISM.
... those delicious autumn days , with all the sweet scents and sounds of autumn in the warm air , which seem almost better than midsummer . About five miles from Oxford , we got to the top of a slight eminence , xxiv . ROMAN IMPERIALISM.
Pagina xxxi
... seem natural that Arnold should have remained at Oxford , and become the " student and bookworm " he had foreseen as a boy . But other chances opened . In 1879 the editor of the Manchester Guardian , Mr. C. P. Scott , came to Oxford in ...
... seem natural that Arnold should have remained at Oxford , and become the " student and bookworm " he had foreseen as a boy . But other chances opened . In 1879 the editor of the Manchester Guardian , Mr. C. P. Scott , came to Oxford in ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Studies of Roman Imperialism William Thomas Arnold,Mrs. Humphry Ward,Charles Edward Montague Visualizzazione completa - 1906 |
Studies of Roman Imperialism William Thomas Arnold,Mrs. Humphry Ward,Charles Edward Montague Visualizzazione completa - 1906 |
Parole e frasi comuni
Achæa administration Agrippa ancient Aquitania Armenia army Arnold Arverni Asia Minor Augustus Bætica became Belgica C. E. MONTAGUE Cæsar Cantabrians Celtiberia Celtic centre century chief civilisation Claudius coast cohorts command course death doubt early Empire East Egypt Emperor English fact Fledborough French frontier Gaius Galatia Gallic Gallus Gaul Gaulish German governed governor Greece Greek hand Helvetii Iberian Imperial provinces important Italy journalist Julia Julius Cæsar later Latin legions letters Lugdunensis Lusitania Lyons magistrates Manchester military mind modern Mommsen Narbonensis natural never Nicopolis Octavian official once organisation Oxford Patræ perhaps political reign Republic Rhine road Roman citizens Roman colony Roman history Romanisation Rome Senate senatorial provinces side Spain Spanish speaking Strabo Syria Tarraco Tarraconensis territory things Three Gauls Tiberius tion took town Treveri tribunician power Triumvirate Vocontii whole writes young καὶ τε τῆς τῶν
Brani popolari
Pagina lxxxiv - ... My lips, drawn in, said not Alas ! My hair was over in the grass, My naked ears heard the day pass. My eyes, wide open, had the run Of some ten weeds to fix upon; Among those few, out of the sun, The woodspurge flowered, three cups in one. From perfect grief there need not be Wisdom or even memory: One thing then learnt remains to me, — The woodspurge has a cup of three.
Pagina lxxiv - Too terrible for the ear : the time has been, That, when the brains were out, the man would die, And there an end ; but now they rise again, With twenty mortal murders on their crowns, And push us from our stools : this is more strange Than such a murder is.
Pagina 190 - Gallus at the time he was prefect of Egypt, and accompanied him as far as Syene and the frontiers of Ethiopia, and I found that about...