Cicero's Cato major, and Lælius, with notes by E.H. Barker. [Followed by] An essay on the respect paid to old age, by the Egyptians [&c. By E.H.Barker]. |
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Seite 97
... time for the service and benefit of his country : " If I am not mistaken , I have somewhere read that the Chinese also pronounce funeral harangues over their dead . We are told in Ogilby's Japan ( p . 67. ) that the priests , " among ...
... time for the service and benefit of his country : " If I am not mistaken , I have somewhere read that the Chinese also pronounce funeral harangues over their dead . We are told in Ogilby's Japan ( p . 67. ) that the priests , " among ...
Seite 99
... time of their respective deaths . " Nihil habeo quod incusem senectutem . Palairet , Lat . Ellip . p . 205. " Plaut . Menæch . 4. 3. 3. Scin ' quid est , quod ego ad te venio ? for quid est , ob quod , or propter quod . Id . Epidic . 3 ...
... time of their respective deaths . " Nihil habeo quod incusem senectutem . Palairet , Lat . Ellip . p . 205. " Plaut . Menæch . 4. 3. 3. Scin ' quid est , quod ego ad te venio ? for quid est , ob quod , or propter quod . Id . Epidic . 3 ...
Seite 107
... times , therefore , directed their wit against his poetical effu- sions . I am persuaded that , if the verses of Cicero be com- pared with those of his predecessors , they will not be found deficient in merit , but , if they are to be ...
... times , therefore , directed their wit against his poetical effu- sions . I am persuaded that , if the verses of Cicero be com- pared with those of his predecessors , they will not be found deficient in merit , but , if they are to be ...
Seite 116
... times , who are prejudiced in favor of modern manners , have charged Virgil and Theocritus with giving a false account of rural life , whereas they have actually described it , as it was in their times : can we suppose that the ...
... times , who are prejudiced in favor of modern manners , have charged Virgil and Theocritus with giving a false account of rural life , whereas they have actually described it , as it was in their times : can we suppose that the ...
Seite 121
... escaped my notice at the time when I was composing that essay . I shall take this op portunity of making some additional remarks to it . I have ob- Cic . Sen. F served in p . 474. that a man was called ON THE DE SENECTUTE . 121.
... escaped my notice at the time when I was composing that essay . I shall take this op portunity of making some additional remarks to it . I have ob- Cic . Sen. F served in p . 474. that a man was called ON THE DE SENECTUTE . 121.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adolescentes æquitas ætas ætate ætatis aged Aldus Manutius amici amicitiæ animus antè Aulus Gellius called Cato causâ Cicero cited consul cujus cùm custom Egyptians ellipse Ennius ergò Ernesti Ind Essay esset expression first fuisse Gesner Grævio Grævius great habet hâc hæc haud scio hence igitur illud informs instances Læli Lælius Langius Latin laws life Lycurgus Lysandrum Manut maximè Melmoth mihi modò multò natura nec verò neque nihil NOTES numquam observed omnibus paid to age Palairet passage Pelias Pericles pilam Plutarch potest potiùs præsertim primùm Pythagoras quâ quæ quæque quàm quidam quò quòd rebus rerum Roman sæpe same says Scævola Scipio seems senectus senectute senectutis senes senex senibus sine solùm Sparta tamen tanquam Tarentum Thes Tusc understood used vitâ vitæ words Xenophon years young youth γὰρ δὲ καὶ μὲν τὴν τὸ τὸν ὡς
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 138 - And say, without our hopes, without our fears, Without the home that plighted love endears, Without the smile from partial beauty won, Oh ! what were man * a world without a sun.
Seite 140 - For, lo, I will command, and I will sift the house of Israel among all nations, like as corn is sifted in a sieve, yet shall not the least grain fall upon the earth.
Seite 14 - Appius regebat et senex, et cxcus : intentum enim animum, tamquam arcutn, habebat, nee languescens succumbebat senectuti ; tenebat non modo auctoritatem, sed etiam Imperium in suos ; metuebant servi, verebantur liberi ; carum omnes- habebant 4 vigebat in illa domo patrius mos, et disciplina.
Seite 38 - Est enim amicitia nihil aliud nisi omnium divinarum humanarumque rerum cum benevolentia et caritate consensio, qua quidem haud scio an excepta sapientia nil quicquam melius homini sit a dis immortalibus datum.
Seite 164 - Thou shalt rise up before the hoary head, and honour the face of the old man, and fear thy God : I am the LORD.
Seite 123 - Quomodo fabula, sic vita non quam diu, sed quam beiie acta sit, refert. Nihil ad rem pertinet, quo loco desinas. Quocumque voles desine ; tantum bonam clausulam inpone.
Seite 100 - Hitherto I have regarded my blindness as a misfortune, but now, Romans, I wish I had been as deaf as I am blind ; for then I should not have heard of your shameful counsels and decrees, so ruinous to the glory of Rome.
Seite 99 - If we consider these ancient Sages, a great part of whose Philosophy consisted in a temperate and abstemious Course of Life, one would think the Life of a Philosopher, and the Life of a Man, were of tv\-o different Dates. For we find that the generality of these wise Men were nearer an hundred than sixty Years of Age at the time of their respective Deaths.
Seite 146 - When thou shall be old, thou, shall stretch forth thy hands, and another shall gird thee.] It was customary in the ancient combats for the vanquished person to stretch out his hands to the conqueror, signifying that he declined the battle, acknowledging that he was conquered, and submitting to the direction of the victor. Thus Theocritus : And hands uprais'd with death-presaging mind. At once the fight and victory declin'd.