The Claudian periodHarper & brothers, 1883 |
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Página 11
... show a soldier's spirit . What- ever happens , you ought to keep your stand , help with your war - cry ; if your mouth is stopped , keep your stand and help with your silence . A good citizen always does good service : to see him , to ...
... show a soldier's spirit . What- ever happens , you ought to keep your stand , help with your war - cry ; if your mouth is stopped , keep your stand and help with your silence . A good citizen always does good service : to see him , to ...
Página 22
... shows his philosophy by insisting that there is nothing abnormal in these catastrophes ; that they come by the law of the universe , as summer and winter come . He is tempted by the theory of Berosus , that periodi- cal deluges arrive ...
... shows his philosophy by insisting that there is nothing abnormal in these catastrophes ; that they come by the law of the universe , as summer and winter come . He is tempted by the theory of Berosus , that periodi- cal deluges arrive ...
Página 26
... shows to more advantage when he remarks that the Greeks dared to show their sense of the cruelty of their chiefs while the conquered Trojans were compelled to hide their tears . Even when Seneca follows a really dramatic play like the ...
... shows to more advantage when he remarks that the Greeks dared to show their sense of the cruelty of their chiefs while the conquered Trojans were compelled to hide their tears . Even when Seneca follows a really dramatic play like the ...
Página 45
... show how much it must have cost Lucan to make his fisherman set forth a condensed summary of all the practical signs of foul weather in com- paratively simple language . When Cæsar condescends at last to recognize the danger , his first ...
... show how much it must have cost Lucan to make his fisherman set forth a condensed summary of all the practical signs of foul weather in com- paratively simple language . When Cæsar condescends at last to recognize the danger , his first ...
Página 76
... shows that the constant attitude of adoration which he had main- tained towards Domitian was somewhat burdensome ... show plenty of ingenium and yet be safe to go straight to the cooks , who bought up remainders then as trunk - makers ...
... shows that the constant attitude of adoration which he had main- tained towards Domitian was somewhat burdensome ... show plenty of ingenium and yet be safe to go straight to the cooks , who bought up remainders then as trunk - makers ...
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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
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