Orations: Trans. Into English; with Notes, Historical and Critical, and Arguments to Each, Volume 1T. Maiden, 1806 |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 63
Pagina iii
... Cæsar , in the two celebrated speeches which the reader will find in the first volume of this translation ; I mean that for Marcellus , and that for Ligarius . In the former , every compli- ment he bestows on the personal , is a lash ...
... Cæsar , in the two celebrated speeches which the reader will find in the first volume of this translation ; I mean that for Marcellus , and that for Ligarius . In the former , every compli- ment he bestows on the personal , is a lash ...
Pagina xxiii
... Cæsar in pardoning , that Prince . He will learn the fatal effects of pri- vate dissensions in the greatest families ; and that there is no slave so mean , who may not , some time or other , find the way to resent an injurious treatment ...
... Cæsar in pardoning , that Prince . He will learn the fatal effects of pri- vate dissensions in the greatest families ; and that there is no slave so mean , who may not , some time or other , find the way to resent an injurious treatment ...
Pagina 34
... Cæsar's own house , upon his wife Pompeia . That the reader may not be at a loss for the rea son of its being called incestuous , I must inform him , that the Romans whoredom , would grant any extraordinary com- mission for enquiring 34 ...
... Cæsar's own house , upon his wife Pompeia . That the reader may not be at a loss for the rea son of its being called incestuous , I must inform him , that the Romans whoredom , would grant any extraordinary com- mission for enquiring 34 ...
Pagina 58
... Cæsar , all envied the superior glory Cicero had acquired by putting an end to the conspiracy of Catiline ; for which reason Pompey suffered him to be banished by Clodius , when he might easily have prevented it . But when Pompey ...
... Cæsar , all envied the superior glory Cicero had acquired by putting an end to the conspiracy of Catiline ; for which reason Pompey suffered him to be banished by Clodius , when he might easily have prevented it . But when Pompey ...
Pagina 77
... Cæsar , a man of the greatest quality and courage , had been as- saulted in the night - time . Nobody had perceived any such thing happen in that frequented place ; yet still the report prevailed . I could not suspect Pompey of ...
... Cæsar , a man of the greatest quality and courage , had been as- saulted in the night - time . Nobody had perceived any such thing happen in that frequented place ; yet still the report prevailed . I could not suspect Pompey of ...
Parole e frasi comuni
accused acquitted action allies Allobroges appear Appian Archias arms army Asia assembly authority banishment brave Cæcilius Cælius Cæsar Caius called Catiline Catulus cause character charge Cicero citizens Clodius Cneius command Conscript Fathers conspiracy Consul courage court crime danger death decree defend delivered dignity dread eloquence endeavoured enemies favour Forum Gaul genius glory Gracchus greatest guilt hands honour imagine immortal gods impeached Interrex Italy judges justice killed Lanuvium learning Lentulus liberty Ligarius likewise Lilybæum lords Lucius Lucullus manner Marcellus Marius means ment Milo Milo's Mithridates murder nature never Oration person pleading Plutarch Pompey Pontus Prætor Prætorship preserved province Publius Clodius punishment Quæstor Quintus Quintus Hortensius Quintus Ligarius reason Roman knight Rome Senate Sicily slaves speak sword Sylla temple thing thou thought Tiberius Gracchus Tigranes tion translated trial Tribune Tubero Verres virtue words youth