The Correspondence of M. Tullius Cicero: Arranged According to Its Chronological Order, Volumen1Hodges, Figgis & Company, 1904 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 58
Página 1
... feelings not different that we regard that Republic which had developed such great vital forces , such a disciplined subordination of imagination to logic , and of the individual to the State , slipping into a despotism through the ...
... feelings not different that we regard that Republic which had developed such great vital forces , such a disciplined subordination of imagination to logic , and of the individual to the State , slipping into a despotism through the ...
Página 4
... feeling which Cicero desired to evoke . He spoke for Cornelius as he spoke against Verres , as Whiteside spoke for O'Connell , in the pursuit of professional distinction , and to estab- lish his growing fame as an unrivalled speaker and ...
... feeling which Cicero desired to evoke . He spoke for Cornelius as he spoke against Verres , as Whiteside spoke for O'Connell , in the pursuit of professional distinction , and to estab- lish his growing fame as an unrivalled speaker and ...
Página 6
... feelings towards his old enemy Clodius . In his private letters , however , we expect to find his real opinions . But his private letters , though a fountain of light to those who read them with intelligence and without a theory , may ...
... feelings towards his old enemy Clodius . In his private letters , however , we expect to find his real opinions . But his private letters , though a fountain of light to those who read them with intelligence and without a theory , may ...
Página 10
... feeling towards Cicero : but he does so , as Professor Gudeman ( The Sources of Plutarch's Life of Cicero , Philadelphia , 1902 , p . 41 ) has shown , not because he disliked Cicero less , but because he disliked Clodius more . He more ...
... feeling towards Cicero : but he does so , as Professor Gudeman ( The Sources of Plutarch's Life of Cicero , Philadelphia , 1902 , p . 41 ) has shown , not because he disliked Cicero less , but because he disliked Clodius more . He more ...
Página 11
... feeling at Rome ) , congratulating Cicero on the supplicatio which he himself had felt bound to oppose ; see Fam . xv . 5 , 1 ( 266 ) . + The magnanimity of Caesar a few years later sometimes wrings from Cicero an almost involuntary ...
... feeling at Rome ) , congratulating Cicero on the supplicatio which he himself had felt bound to oppose ; see Fam . xv . 5 , 1 ( 266 ) . + The magnanimity of Caesar a few years later sometimes wrings from Cicero an almost involuntary ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Correspondence of M. Tullius Cicero; Arranged According to Its ... Marcus Tullius Cicero Sin vista previa disponible - 2013 |
Términos y frases comunes
aliquid animo Antonius apud Asconius atque Atticus autem Bährens Boot Bosius Brundisium Büch Caesar Catiline causa CICERO ATTICO SAL Clodius codd comitia Commentariolum Commentariolum Petitionis consul dett eius enim Epirus epistula erat erit esset etiam Eussner fuit haec homines hominum illa illo illud illum ipse Klotz letters litteras Madvig magis magistratus Marcus means meis Metellus mihi modo multa Muretus neque nihil nisi nobis nulla nunc omnia omnis omnium passage Plutarch Pompey posse potest praetor probably publicani quae quaestor quam quibus quid quidem Quintus quod quoniam rebus refers rei publicae Reid Rome satis scribis senatus Sest sibi sine Sternkopf sunt tamen tantum Terentia Thessalonicae Thurii tibi tribunes tuae tuis University of Dublin velim vero Vide Comm vulg words καὶ