C. Sallusti Crispi Bellum Catulinae. Sallust's Catilinarian conspiracyMacmillan, 1884 - 178 sider |
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Side xi
... Cicero against Sallust , which appears in many editions of Sallust's works . 6 In what he says of himself however in the prefaces to the Catiline and Jugurtha , Sallust is thinking perhaps rather of literary ornamentation than of ...
... Cicero against Sallust , which appears in many editions of Sallust's works . 6 In what he says of himself however in the prefaces to the Catiline and Jugurtha , Sallust is thinking perhaps rather of literary ornamentation than of ...
Side xiii
... Cicero ' . All history , he says , takes its rise in annals , but in Rome it had hardly got beyond its initial stage . Some writers in the past , it is true , had recognized the difference which separates history from annals ...
... Cicero ' . All history , he says , takes its rise in annals , but in Rome it had hardly got beyond its initial stage . Some writers in the past , it is true , had recognized the difference which separates history from annals ...
Side xv
... Cicero as to make it just the theme that he wanted1 . For Sallust's rhetoric delights in strong colours without light and shade , in thick deep strokes . But that Sallust's object was only to clear the memory of Caesar from any ...
... Cicero as to make it just the theme that he wanted1 . For Sallust's rhetoric delights in strong colours without light and shade , in thick deep strokes . But that Sallust's object was only to clear the memory of Caesar from any ...
Side xvi
... Cicero that bore on the subject , but it is very doubtful whether he had them before him as he wrote . It is true that one or two phrases remind one of something very like them in Cicero , but these may well be only echoes easily ...
... Cicero that bore on the subject , but it is very doubtful whether he had them before him as he wrote . It is true that one or two phrases remind one of something very like them in Cicero , but these may well be only echoes easily ...
Side xvii
... Cicero had been successful in making the popular view , suited Sallust's taste en- tirely . But he has not been skilful enough , nor was he unscrupulous enough , to clear away the improba- bilities of a treatment which spreads the drama ...
... Cicero had been successful in making the popular view , suited Sallust's taste en- tirely . But he has not been skilful enough , nor was he unscrupulous enough , to clear away the improba- bilities of a treatment which spreads the drama ...
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C. Sallusti Crispi Bellum Catulinae: Sallust's Catalinarian conspiracy Sallust Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1888 |
C. Sallusti Crispi bellum Catilinae: Sallust's Catilinarian conspiracy Sallust Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1901 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
afterwards Asconius Assistant-Master BOOK BOOKS but it Caesar Cambridge Catiline Catiline's Cato Cicero Cicero's Classical common conspiracy construction consul course Crown 8vo cupido Dietsch Edited by Rev elsewhere ENGLISH Etruria explain Extra fcap Fellow of St first following form found Fulvia generally give given gives GRAMMAR great Greek have historical history instance JOHN Jordan Jugurtha Kortte Kritz language late Fellow LATIN Livy maxume neque New Edition Notes occurs omnibus once only Oxford passage perhaps phrase Pistoria place Plautus Pompeius preparation present probably Professor PROSE publicam quotes read reading Ready rei publicae revised right Rome Sallust Sallust's same says Schmalz School second seems senate senatus sense sentence sine speech speeches subject Suetonius Sulla surely Tacitus taken takes text think Thucydides time times Trinity College used uses variety verb Wirz word words writes year καὶ
Populære avsnitt
Side 19 - THE SEVEN KINGS OF ROME. An Easy Narrative, abridged from the First Book of Livy by the omission, of Difficult Passages ; being a First Latin Reading Book, with Grammatical Notes and Vocabulary.
Side 22 - GRAMMAR : An Attempt to illustrate some of the Differences between Elizabethan and Modern English. By the Rev. EA ABBOTT, DD, Head Master of the City of London School. New and Enlarged Edition.
Side 55 - Non divitiis cum divite, neque factione cum factioso, sed cum strenuo virtute, cum modesto pudore, cum innocente abstinentia certabat ; esse quam videri bonus malebat ; ita quo minus petebat gloriam, eo ilium magis sequebantur.
Side 17 - MAYOR (JOSEPH B.)— GREEK FOR BEGINNERS. By the Rev. JB MAYOR, MA, Professor of Classical Literature in King's College, London. Part I., with Vocabulary, is.
Side 7 - Corrections and Additions, by JOHN EB MAYOR, Professor of Latin in the University of Cambridge, and Fellow of St. John's College. New Edition.
Side 19 - White. — FIRST LESSONS IN GREEK. Adapted to GOODWIN'S GREEK GRAMMAR, and designed as an introduction to the ANABASIS OF XENOPHON. By JOHN WILLIAMS WHITE, Ph.D., Assistant-Professor of Greek in Harvard University. Crown 8vo. 4*.
Side 13 - HOMERIC DICTIONARY. For Use in Schools and Colleges. Translated from the German of Dr. G. AUTENRIETH, with Additions and Corrections, by RP KEEP, Ph.D. With numerous Illustrations.
Side 4 - ... (servilibus officiis) intentum aetatem agere ;¡ sed a quo incepto studioque me ambitio mala detinuerat, eodem regressus, statui res gestas populi Romani carptim, ut quaeque memoria digna videbantur, perscribere, — eo magis, quod mihi a spe, metu, partibus rei publicae animus liber erat.
Side 3 - Ac mihi quidem, tametsi haudquaquam par gloria sequitur scriptorem et auctorem rerum, tamen inprimis arduum videtur res gestas scribere: primum, quod facta dictis exaequanda sunt; dehinc, quia plerique, quae delicta reprehenderis, malivolentia et invidia dicta putant; ubi de magna virtute atque gloria bonorum memores, quae sibi quisque facilia factu putat, aequo animo accipit, supra ea veluti ficta pro falsis ducit.
Side 21 - Mahaffy. — Works by JP MAHAFFY, MA, Professor of Ancient History in Trinity College, Dublin, and Hon. Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford. SOCIAL LIFE IN GREECE; from Homer to Menander.