Select Essays of Dio ChrysostomR. Phillips, 1800 - 256 psl. |
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97 psl.
... equally unable to account for their expenditure of time , for the days and months and years of their existence . Yet the lapses of life and the consumption of time are indeed of no trivial value to mankind , nor of less account , in my ...
... equally unable to account for their expenditure of time , for the days and months and years of their existence . Yet the lapses of life and the consumption of time are indeed of no trivial value to mankind , nor of less account , in my ...
112 psl.
... equally troublesome with the litigious and abusive . Others , of a morose complexion , and mighty pretenders to sobriety , disgust by their uncompliant humours : neither taking their proportion of wine , nor mixing in the general ...
... equally troublesome with the litigious and abusive . Others , of a morose complexion , and mighty pretenders to sobriety , disgust by their uncompliant humours : neither taking their proportion of wine , nor mixing in the general ...
124 psl.
... equally " holden by the same constringency : so in fortune , and reputation , and honour , men 66 surpass each other , as in size . Some are << kings , some in a private station ; some rich , " and others indigent all , however , be ...
... equally " holden by the same constringency : so in fortune , and reputation , and honour , men 66 surpass each other , as in size . Some are << kings , some in a private station ; some rich , " and others indigent all , however , be ...
181 psl.
... equally mis- trustful admiration , if you had told them , with respect to the Persian emperour , that you were acquainted with a certain king , who rode about in his chariot , and went whithersoever his in- clination led him . But you ...
... equally mis- trustful admiration , if you had told them , with respect to the Persian emperour , that you were acquainted with a certain king , who rode about in his chariot , and went whithersoever his in- clination led him . But you ...
190 psl.
... equally ready to depose on oath , that each of them were the children of two slaves ; and so upwards to their remoter an- cestors ? Because it is manifest , that a single free - man in a series of progenitors redeems in- contestibly ...
... equally ready to depose on oath , that each of them were the children of two slaves ; and so upwards to their remoter an- cestors ? Because it is manifest , that a single free - man in a series of progenitors redeems in- contestibly ...
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able Achilles acquainted admiration Agamemnon Alexander ancient animals antagonists Antisthenes Athenians Athens beasts beauty body calamities character Charidemus chastised Chrysostom cloaths conduct Corinth Dæmon death denominated desire DIO CHRYSOSTOM Diogenes DIOGENES of Sinope discourse divine dogs eloquence enemy enquired esteemed Euripides excellence excessive exhibited fable father fear Games garland Gods Græcian Greece Greek Hercules Herodotus heroes Hesiod Homer honour Horace horse human ignorant Iliad indulge intemperate Isthmian Games ject Jupiter king kingly labour Lacedæmonians less liberty live Lucretius mankind manner master ment monarch nature ness objects occasion orator passage Peloponnesus Persian persuasion Philip philosophers physician Pindar pleasure poem poetry poets Pope's Iliad presume propriety reader reason replied resemblance respect says sentiments servant sion slave slavery soul sovereign Sparta spirit Stesichorus style superiour suppose Themistocles Theocritus Theogony ther tion tyrant Ulysses uneasiness verse victory vigour virtue whilst
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