The Claudian periodHarper & brothers, 1883 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 90
Página xxvi
... hand which subsequently developed into the Lombardic . This was copied from an uncial written in a country where the language was full of corruptions . Third panegyric of Eumenius . Fourth panegyric of Eumenius . the battle of Saxa Ru ...
... hand which subsequently developed into the Lombardic . This was copied from an uncial written in a country where the language was full of corruptions . Third panegyric of Eumenius . Fourth panegyric of Eumenius . the battle of Saxa Ru ...
Página 4
... hand , he was much better informed . It is only fair to his memory to remember that , if Agrippina was really danger- ous , the safest and easiest precaution was to put her to death . It is easier to prove that no perfectly virtuous man ...
... hand , he was much better informed . It is only fair to his memory to remember that , if Agrippina was really danger- ous , the safest and easiest precaution was to put her to death . It is easier to prove that no perfectly virtuous man ...
Página 15
... hand , he is more occupied than we have reason to think his predecessors were with the physical side of philosophy . He seeks communion between the spirit of man and the higher spirit of nature in knowledge : he echoes the tone of ...
... hand , he is more occupied than we have reason to think his predecessors were with the physical side of philosophy . He seeks communion between the spirit of man and the higher spirit of nature in knowledge : he echoes the tone of ...
Página 16
... hands with Bacon . He feels strongly that the human mind has never had fair play ; that it is only in a civilized ... hand , Seneca is given to moralize in season and out of season : he has no conception of disinterested knowledge ...
... hands with Bacon . He feels strongly that the human mind has never had fair play ; that it is only in a civilized ... hand , Seneca is given to moralize in season and out of season : he has no conception of disinterested knowledge ...
Página 17
... hand , it seems a good thing that we should be acquainted with our own appearance , and it is clear ( though Seneca thinks it necessary to prove it from the poets ) that , without natural mirrors , at any rate this would be impossible ...
... hand , it seems a good thing that we should be acquainted with our own appearance , and it is clear ( though Seneca thinks it necessary to prove it from the poets ) that , without natural mirrors , at any rate this would be impossible ...
Contenido
75 | |
87 | |
141 | |
179 | |
220 | |
233 | |
241 | |
248 | |
324 | |
331 | |
337 | |
353 | |
383 | |
393 | |
425 | |
436 | |
258 | |
264 | |
272 | |
289 | |
304 | |
316 | |
449 | |
459 | |
461 | |
471 | |
472 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
admirable Annals Apuleius Arnobius Augustan History Augustin Augustus Aurelius Cæsar Catullus Christian Cicero Claudius Constantine consul contemporary course curious death Diocletian Domitian elder eloquent emperor empire epigrams explain father Favorinus feeling Fronto Galba Gaul give gods Greek hand honor Horace instance Jerome Julian Juvenal kind Lactantius Latin learned less letters literary literature live Lucan Martial Maximian ment nature Nero never orator Otho pagan panegyric passion perhaps peror Persius philosopher Piso Pliny Pliny's poem poet poetry Pompeius prætorian praise prefect probably Quinctilian reign rhetoric Roman Rome Satire seems senate Seneca Severus Silius slave speaks speech spirit Statius Stilicho Stoic story style Suetonius Tacitus tells Tertullian things thought Tiberius tion Trajan treated treatise Trimalchio turn Valentinian Valerius Vergil verses Vespasian virtue Vitellius whole wished writer wrote
Pasajes populares
Página 483 - GEBLER (Karl Von). Galileo Galilei and the Roman Curia, from Authentic Sources. Translated with the sanction of the Author, by Mrs. GEORGE STURGE. Demy 8vo. Cloth, price i2,$. GEDDES (James). History of the Administration of John de Witt, Grand Pensionary of Holland.
Página 433 - Ibi vacabimus et videbimus, videbimus et amabimus, amabimus et laudabimus. Ecce quod erit in fine sine fine. Nam quis alius noster est finis nisi pervenire ad regnum cuius nullus est finis ? Videor mini debitum ingentis huius operis adiuvante Domino reddidisse.