Second steps to Greek prose composition. [With] Key |
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Seite 21
... rest of mankind , who , in order to protect themselves from loss of credit among men , act in any way against the direction of the divine will . 150. The oracle declared that on burying my father who was killed and carrying off this ...
... rest of mankind , who , in order to protect themselves from loss of credit among men , act in any way against the direction of the divine will . 150. The oracle declared that on burying my father who was killed and carrying off this ...
Seite 29
... rest affords protection to 3 the race of men who lived therein from the earliest time 4 : we must call happy 5 men not those who hold tyrannies nor those who have obtained greater power than is right , but those who are at once worthy ...
... rest affords protection to 3 the race of men who lived therein from the earliest time 4 : we must call happy 5 men not those who hold tyrannies nor those who have obtained greater power than is right , but those who are at once worthy ...
Seite 30
... rest I have is valueless . For how things are situate I blunder3 , and know not in what way they exist . And a sufficient proof of what I assert lies in this , that whenever I converse with any one of you who are so renowned as being ...
... rest I have is valueless . For how things are situate I blunder3 , and know not in what way they exist . And a sufficient proof of what I assert lies in this , that whenever I converse with any one of you who are so renowned as being ...
Seite 36
... rest desired to help them , but could not , driven as they were by the violent wind . All that they could do was to fling out a good many corks and some spars for them to swim on , if they could get hold of them , and at last even the ...
... rest desired to help them , but could not , driven as they were by the violent wind . All that they could do was to fling out a good many corks and some spars for them to swim on , if they could get hold of them , and at last even the ...
Seite 37
... rest of his prosperity , nor was his glory 10 published to the world as he deserved . 2 1 στρατηγίς . Repeat the kal . were being procured . 5 Id . 91 . 8 ἐς τὴν ἔπειτα μνήμην . 9 χωρίον . 7 δή . 3 πανοπλία . 4 Things which 6 Lit. into ...
... rest of his prosperity , nor was his glory 10 published to the world as he deserved . 2 1 στρατηγίς . Repeat the kal . were being procured . 5 Id . 91 . 8 ἐς τὴν ἔπειτα μνήμην . 9 χωρίον . 7 δή . 3 πανοπλία . 4 Things which 6 Lit. into ...
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Second Steps to Greek Prose Composition. [With] Key Blomfield Jackson Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2015 |
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 71 - IT had been hard for him that spake it to have put more truth and untruth together in few words, than in that speech, ' Whosoever is delighted in solitude is either a wild beast or a god.
Seite 83 - Sheriff, and said the young Pretender was so sweet a Prince that flesh and blood could not resist following him; and, lying down to try the block, he said, "If I had a thousand lives, I would lay them all down here in the same cause.
Seite 82 - We stayed till, it being darkish, we saw the fire as only one entire arch of fire from this to the other side of the bridge, and in a bow up the hill for an arch of above a mile long : it made me weep to see it.
Seite 92 - Being angry with one who controverts an opinion which you value, is a necessary consequence of the uneasiness which you feel. Every man who attacks my belief, diminishes in some degree my confidence in it, and therefore makes me uneasy. And I am angry with him who makes me uneasy.
Seite 83 - Tower, for his ill usage of him. He took the axe and felt it, and asked the headsman how many blows he had given Lord Kilmarnock ; and gave him three guineas. Two clergymen, who attended him, coming up, he said, ' No, gentlemen, I believe you have already done me all the service you can...
Seite 104 - He lay fifteen days earnestly expecting his hourly change; and in the last hour of his last day, as his body melted away, and vapoured into spirit, his soul having, I verily believe, some revelation of the beatifical vision, he said, " I were miserable if I might not die "; and after those words, dosed many periods of his faint breath by saying often, " Thy kingdom come, Thy will
Seite 89 - ... examples, that is to say, particular or individual truths. Now all the examples, which confirm a general truth, how numerous soever they may be, are insufficient to establish the universal necessity of this same truth ; for it does not follow, that what has happened will happen always in like manner. For example : the Greeks and Romans and...
Seite 82 - So near the fire as we could for smoke; and all over the Thames, with one's face in the wind, you were almost burned with a shower of fire-drops. This is very true ; so as houses were burned by these drops and flakes of fire, three or four, nay, five or six houses, one from another.
Seite 71 - Empedocles the Sicilian, and Apollonius of Tyana; and truly and really in divers of the ancient hermits and holy fathers of the church. But little do men perceive what solitude is, and how far it extendeth. For a crowd is not company; and faces are but a gallery of pictures; and talk but a tinkling cymbal, where there is no love. The Latin adage meeteth with it a little : Magna civitas, magna solitudo...
Seite 74 - Sheriff's guard of halberdiers were ranged on the floor below on the four sides to keep off the crowd. On the scaffold was the block, black like the rest; a square black cushion was placed behind it, and behind the cushion a black chair; on the right were two other chairs for the Earls. The axe leant against the rail, and two masked figures stood like mutes on either side at the back.