The History of the Progress and Termination of the Roman Republic, 4 tomasBell & Bradfute, 1825 |
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... enemy . - Post at Ruspina . - Siege of Uzita . - Battle of Thapsus . - Death of Cato Page 1 CHAP . XXIX . Arrival of Cæsar at Utica.- Wreck of the republican party- Servility of the Roman people . - Magnificence and adminis- tration of ...
... enemy . - Post at Ruspina . - Siege of Uzita . - Battle of Thapsus . - Death of Cato Page 1 CHAP . XXIX . Arrival of Cæsar at Utica.- Wreck of the republican party- Servility of the Roman people . - Magnificence and adminis- tration of ...
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... enemy . — Advance of Hirtius and Oc- tavius to raise the siege of Mutina . - Brutus and Cassius confirmed in the command of all the eastern provinces . — Pro- gress of the war in Gaul . - Siege of Mutina raised . - Junction of Antony ...
... enemy . — Advance of Hirtius and Oc- tavius to raise the siege of Mutina . - Brutus and Cassius confirmed in the command of all the eastern provinces . — Pro- gress of the war in Gaul . - Siege of Mutina raised . - Junction of Antony ...
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... enemy . — Post at Ruspina . - Siege of Uzita . - Battle of Thapsus . - Death of Cato . IN the famous battle of Pharsalia , Cæsar lost no more , by his own account , than two hundred men , among whom were thirty Centurions , officers of ...
... enemy . — Post at Ruspina . - Siege of Uzita . - Battle of Thapsus . - Death of Cato . IN the famous battle of Pharsalia , Cæsar lost no more , by his own account , than two hundred men , among whom were thirty Centurions , officers of ...
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... enemy any where appear . ed to disturb the ordinary course of affairs , were all of them , except that of the Tribunes , entirely suspend- ed or laid aside . All government centered in the person of Antony , and the administration of ...
... enemy any where appear . ed to disturb the ordinary course of affairs , were all of them , except that of the Tribunes , entirely suspend- ed or laid aside . All government centered in the person of Antony , and the administration of ...
22 psl.
... enemy whom he respected and feared , was not to be publicly avowed or rewarded by him . They dreaded , therefore , the interposition of this dangerous man in their affairs , even more than they had dreaded the usurpation of Pompey . The ...
... enemy whom he respected and feared , was not to be publicly avowed or rewarded by him . They dreaded , therefore , the interposition of this dangerous man in their affairs , even more than they had dreaded the usurpation of Pompey . The ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
The History of the Progress and Termination of the Roman Republic, 4 tomas Adam Ferguson Visos knygos peržiūra - 1791 |
The History of the Progress and Termination of the Roman Republic, 4 tomas Adam Ferguson Visos knygos peržiūra - 1791 |
The History of the Progress and Termination of the Roman Republic, 4 tomas Adam Ferguson Visos knygos peržiūra - 1791 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
accordingly action Adrumetum affairs Africa alarm already Antony appeared Appian arms army arrived Asia assembled attended battle Bell body Brundisium Brutus and Cassius camp Cass Cato Cicero Cilicia citizens civil coast command commonwealth Consul continued death Decimus Brutus declared Dolabella effect Egypt empire employed endeavoured enemy execution favour fleet force friends Fulvia Gaul gave Hirtius honours horse intended Italy joined Julius Cæsar king land late leader legions Lepidus Lilybæum Lucius Antonius Macedonia magistrates Marcus Brutus military numbers occasion Octavius officers Pansa party passed person Plut Plutarch Pompey possession Prætor present pretence province rank received remained republic resolution restored Roman Roman Senate Rome Ruspina Scipio secure Senate sent Sextus Pompeius ships Sicily soldiers soon Spain station suffered supposed Sylla Syria thence tion took town Tribunes Triumvirs troops usurpation Utica veterans victory ving
Populiarios ištraukos
125 psl. - The applause of listening senates to command, The threats of pain and ruin to despise, To scatter plenty o'er a smiling land, And read their...
133 psl. - ... that you're no composer, nor know no more of music than you do of algebra. — Arbuthnot's Harmony in an Uproar. Nor. is danger ever apprehended in such a government from the violence of the sovereign, no more than we commonly apprehend danger from thunder or earthquakes. — -Hume's Essays. Among them the people were obliged to consider, not what was safe, but what was necessary ; and could not always defend themselves against usurpations, neither by legal forms, nor by open war, — Ferguson's...
150 psl. - This left the conspirators no longer in doubt that they were discovered ; and they made signs to each other, that it would be better to die by their own hands than to fall into the power of their enemy. But they...
84 psl. - ... entire thought or mental proposition ; and different thoughts ought to be separated in the expression, by being placed in different periods. It is improper to connect in language things which are separated in reality. Of errors against this rule I shall produce a few examples. Cato died in the full vigour of life, under fifty ; he was naturally warm and affectionate in his temper ; comprehensive, impartial, and strongly possessed with the love of mankind.
325 psl. - Cesar led the armies ot" the republic against the enemies of Rome, we took part in the same service with him; we obeyed him; we we're happy to serve under his command. But when he declared war against the commonwealth, we became his enemies; and when he became an usurper and a tyrant, we resented, as an injury, even the favours which he presumed to bestow upon ourselves. Had he been to fall a sacrifice to private resentment, we should not have been the proper actors in the execution of the sentence...
150 psl. - Her spiri^ at last sunk under the effect of such violent emotions ; she fainted away, and was carried for dead into her apartment. A message came to Brutus in the Senate with this account. He was much affected, but kept his place. Popilius Laenas, who a little before seemed, from the expression he had dropped, to have got notice of their design, appeared to be in earnest conversation with Caesar, as he lighted from his carriage. This left the...
151 psl. - ... a facrifice to their juft indignation ; a ftriking example of what the arrogant have to fear in trifling with the feelings of...
136 psl. - Many of them affected servility, in conferring the extravagant honours which had been decreed to Caesar, as the mark of a sullen displeasure, which, conscious of a tendency to betray itself, took the disguise of the opposite extreme. " The question respecting the expedience of a monarchical government, did not enter into the deliberations of any one. If it had been urged that a King was necessary ; it would have been asked, who gave the right to...
325 psl. - ... honours ; but, we were not willing to accept, as the gift of a master, what we were entitled to claim as free citizens. We conceived, that, in presuming to confer the honors of the Roman Republic, he encroached on the prerogatives of the Roman people, and insulted the authority of the Roman senate. Cesar cancelled the laws, and overturned the constitution of his country ; he usurped all the powers of the commonwealth, set up a monarchy, and himself affected to be a king. This our ancestors, at...
151 psl. - And thus having employed the greatest abilities to subdue his fellow citizens, with whom it would have been a much greater honour to have been able to live on terms of equality, he fell, in the height of his...