Livy. Books I, XXI, and XXIIAllyn and Bacon, 1904 - 429 pagine |
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Pagina ix
... expression . This writer was praetor in 211 B.C. , and , having been taken prisoner by Hannibal , had exceptional opportunities to inform himself with regard to the facts of the Second Punic War , which was the subject of the more ...
... expression . This writer was praetor in 211 B.C. , and , having been taken prisoner by Hannibal , had exceptional opportunities to inform himself with regard to the facts of the Second Punic War , which was the subject of the more ...
Pagina xi
... expression to his own reflections and the supposed views of the actors in the story . Though there were other writers who decidedly opposed the annalistic method , yet it seems , on the whole , to have retained its popularity with both ...
... expression to his own reflections and the supposed views of the actors in the story . Though there were other writers who decidedly opposed the annalistic method , yet it seems , on the whole , to have retained its popularity with both ...
Pagina xvi
... expressions . Relation to Polybius . In this decade Livy had at his command the great Greek historian , Polybius , whose uni- versal history , in forty books , extended from the beginning of the Second Punic War to the destruction of ...
... expressions . Relation to Polybius . In this decade Livy had at his command the great Greek historian , Polybius , whose uni- versal history , in forty books , extended from the beginning of the Second Punic War to the destruction of ...
Pagina xxi
... books there are over four hundred speeches . He is a dramatist as well as an orator . In the expression of emotions , and especially of pathos , he is unequalled . " Patavinity . " . His modern admirers cannot fail LIVY . xxi.
... books there are over four hundred speeches . He is a dramatist as well as an orator . In the expression of emotions , and especially of pathos , he is unequalled . " Patavinity . " . His modern admirers cannot fail LIVY . xxi.
Pagina xxiii
... borrow of poetry some of its liberties . This theory Livy appears to have put into practice . In fact , next to the oratorical form of thought and expression , his most salient characteristic is the poetic LIVY . xxiii.
... borrow of poetry some of its liberties . This theory Livy appears to have put into practice . In fact , next to the oratorical form of thought and expression , his most salient characteristic is the poetic LIVY . xxiii.
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Parole e frasi comuni
ablative absolute acie adeo adjective adversus Aeneid agmen agrum alii animi animos apud arma army atque auctores belli bello bellum Carthaginians castra Ceterum Chapter circa clades clause consul dative deinde eius enim equites equitum erant erat esset etiam exercitus Fabius fama fortuna fuit genitive haec Hannibal Hannibali Hasdrubal haud Hispania hostem hostis hostium imperio inde inquit inter interrex ipse ipsi Italiae Itaque Latin Latium Lavinium legati line 17 Livy magis maior milia militum modo neque nihil nunc omnes omnia omnis omnium patres peditum Polybius populi postquam praetor primo primum prope pugna Punic quae quam quia quibus quid quidem quinqueremes quisque quod quoque ratus regem rerum Romam Romans Rome Romulus Sabine Saguntum satis Scipio Senate Servius Tullius Sicily subjunctive sunt tamen tantum tempus urbe urbem urbis velut
Brani popolari
Pagina xxxvi - Hoc illud est praecipue in cognitione rerum salubre ac frugiferum, omnis te exempli documenta in inlustri posita monumento intueri; inde tibi tuaeque rei publicae, quod imitere, capias, inde foedum inceptu, foedum exitu, quod vites.
Pagina xxxv - ... ego contra hoc quoque laboris praemium petam, ut me a conspectu malorum, quae nostra tot per annos vidit aetas, tantisper certe, dum prisca illa tota mente repeto, avertam omnis expers curae, quae scribentis animum etsi non flectere a vero, sollicitum tarnen efficere posset.
Pagina 147 - ... et animus suus cuique ante aut post pugnandi ordinem dabat, tantusque fuit ardor animorum, adeo intentus pugnae animus, ut eum motum terrae, qui multarum urbium Italiae magnas partes prostravit avertitque cursu rapidos amnes, mare fluminibus invexit, montes 280 lapsu ingenti proruit, nemo pugnantium senserit.
Pagina 30 - audi " inquit, " luppiter, audi, pater patrate populi Albani, audi tu populus Albanus : ut illa palam prima postrema ex illis tabulis cerave recitata sunt sine dolo malo, utique ea hie hodie rectissime intellecta sunt, illis legibus populus Romanus prior non deficiet.
Pagina 52 - Numa divini auctor juris fuisset, ita Servium conditorem omnis in civitate discriminis ordinumque, quibus inter gradus dignitatis fortunaeque aliquid interlucet, posteri fama ferrent. Censum enim instituit, rem saluberrimam tanto futuro imperio ; ex quo belli pacisque munia non viritim, ut ante, sed pro habitu pecuniarum fierent.
Pagina 11 - Rebus divinis rite perpetratis vocataque ad concilium multitudine, quae coalescere in populi unius corpus nulla re praeterquam legibus poterat...
Pagina 4 - IV. Sed debebatur, ut opinor, fatis tantae origo urbis maximique secundum deorum opes imperii principium.
Pagina 37 - ... omnia impleverat, raptim, quibus quisque poterat, elatis, cum larem ac penates tectaque in quibus natus quisque educatusque esset...
Pagina xxxvi - Datur haec venia antiquitati, ut miscendo humana divinis primordia urbium augustiora faciat; et si cui populo licere oportet consecrare origines suas et ad deos referre auctores, ea belli gloria est...
Pagina 77 - Plurimum audaciae ad pericula capessenda, plurimum consilii inter ipsa pericula erat ; nullo labore aut corpus fatigari aut animus vinci poterat ; caloris ac frigoris patientia par ; cibi potionisque desiderio naturali non voluptate modus finitus...