Sallust's Jugurthine war and Conspiracy of Catiline: with an English commentary, and geographical and historical indexesHarper & Brothers, 1840 - 332 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 54
Pagina 136
... Cortius reads vivere instead of jure , and makes it equivalent to viverem , regarding viderer as a mere appen- dage to the sentence , in imitation of the Greek idiom , where words that refer literally to what appears to be the case ...
... Cortius reads vivere instead of jure , and makes it equivalent to viverem , regarding viderer as a mere appen- dage to the sentence , in imitation of the Greek idiom , where words that refer literally to what appears to be the case ...
Pagina 137
... Cortius takes frequentata sunt in the sense of habitata sunt . The other meaning , however , appears , upon a careful examination of the passage , to agree better with the context . 1. De is haud facile , & c . " Of these I cannot ...
... Cortius takes frequentata sunt in the sense of habitata sunt . The other meaning , however , appears , upon a careful examination of the passage , to agree better with the context . 1. De is haud facile , & c . " Of these I cannot ...
Pagina 142
... Cortius thinks that these words are a mere gloss , and ought to be removed from the text . The opinion does not seem very probable , as a copyist would in all likelihood have added any thing else rather than these particular words ...
... Cortius thinks that these words are a mere gloss , and ought to be removed from the text . The opinion does not seem very probable , as a copyist would in all likelihood have added any thing else rather than these particular words ...
Pagina 156
... Cortius reads mutabant for mutabantur . We have given the latter form at once with Burnouf . 6. Metus atque moeror . No prince except Mithridates , gave so much employment to the army of the Romans as Jugurtha . In the Page . course of ...
... Cortius reads mutabant for mutabantur . We have given the latter form at once with Burnouf . 6. Metus atque moeror . No prince except Mithridates , gave so much employment to the army of the Romans as Jugurtha . In the Page . course of ...
Pagina 159
... Cortius regards these words as a mere gloss , in- correctly , as we conceive . - Permixtio civilis , & c . " A civil com- motion , like a parting asunder of the earth . " 9. Quorum majores . Tiberius and Caius Gracchus were grand- sons ...
... Cortius regards these words as a mere gloss , in- correctly , as we conceive . - Permixtio civilis , & c . " A civil com- motion , like a parting asunder of the earth . " 9. Quorum majores . Tiberius and Caius Gracchus were grand- sons ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Sallust's Jugurthine War and Conspiracy of Catiline: With an English ... Sallust Visualizzazione completa - 1849 |
Sallust's Jugurthine war and Conspiracy of Catiline: with an English ... Sallust Visualizzazione completa - 1852 |
Parole e frasi comuni
adesse Adherbal Africa agere alia alii alios animi animo animus antea apud archaism armis atque belli bello bellum Bocchus Caesar castra Catiline caussa Ceterum Cicero classical Compare consul copia Cortius cuncta deinde denotes editions ejus eorum erant erat esset etiam exercitu facere foret fuit Greek habere haec haud homines hostibus hostium ibique Igitur illis illo imperio imperium inter ipse jubet Jugurtha Jugurthine war Latin legatis Literally Livy magis magistratus magna manu Marius Masinissa maxume Metellus metu Micipsa mihi modo multa multis neque nihil nisi Numidia omnes omnia omnibus omnis omnium oppidum parum paucis paullo Plutarch populi postquam postremo praeterea praetor Professor Anthon quae quaestor quam quia quibus quid quis quisque quod quoniam rebus Referring rempublicam rerum Romae Roman saepe Sallust satis senate sese sestertius sibi sicuti simul sunt Sylla tamen tempus verb vero καὶ
Brani popolari
Pagina xviii - ... hopes vanish ; and throws over the decay, the destruction of existence, the most gorgeous of all lights ; awakens life even in death ; and from corruption and decay calls up beauty and divinity ; makes an instrument of torture and...
Pagina 170 - Lectisternium took place, couches being spread for the gods, as if about to feast, and their statues being taken down from their pedestals and placed upon these couches around the altars, which were loaded with the richest dishes.
Pagina xix - But ere we can say that there is no God — we must have roamed over all nature, and seen that no mark of a Divine footstep was there ; and we must have gotten intimacy with every existent spirit in the universe, and learned from each, that never did a revelation of the Deity visit him ; and we must have searched, not into the records of one solitary planet, but into the archives of all worlds, and thence gathered, that, throughout the wide realms of immensity, not one exhibition of a reigning and...
Pagina 92 - Haec mulier genere atque forma, praeterea viro liberis satis fortunata fuit; litteris Graecis et Latinis docta, psallere saltare elegantius quam necesse est probae, multa alia, quae instrumenta luxuriae sunt. Sed ei cariora semper omnia quam decus atque pudicitia fuit: pecuniae an famae minus parceret, haud facile discerneres: lubido sic accensa, ut saepius peteret viros quam peteretur.
Pagina 287 - Each legion was divided into ten cohorts, each cohort into three maniples, and each maniple into two...
Pagina 261 - Jilium, to educate; non tollere, to expose : But even when his children were grown up, he might imprison, scourge, send them bound to work in the country, and also put them to death by any punishment he pleased, if they deserved it, Sail. Cat. 89. Liv. ii. 41. viii. 7- Dionys. viii. ?9. Hence a father is called a domestic judge, or magistrate, by Seneca ; and a censor of his son, by Suetonius, Claud.
Pagina 82 - ... immutato more, annua imperia, binosque imperatores sibi fecere : eo modo minume posse putabant per licentiam insolescere animum humanum. VII. Sed ea tempestate cœpere se quisque magis extollere, magisque ingenium in promptu habere. Nam regibus boni, quam mali, suspectiores sunt, semperque his aliena virtus formidolosa est.