Preparatory and College Latin Courses in English (condensed and Consolidated)Chautauqua Press, 1889 - 498 Seiten |
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Seite 56
... Rome , who claimed derivation from Iulus , son of Trojan . Æneas . The word Cæsar was made by Caius Julius a name so illustrious , that it came afterward to be adopted by his successors in power at Rome , and finally thence to be trans ...
... Rome , who claimed derivation from Iulus , son of Trojan . Æneas . The word Cæsar was made by Caius Julius a name so illustrious , that it came afterward to be adopted by his successors in power at Rome , and finally thence to be trans ...
Seite 212
... Rome at length adopted to carry it out with a bitter literalness never perhaps exceeded in the destruction of any ... Rome commenced , was apparently a full equal of her enemy in promised extent and duration of empire . Rome , indeed ...
... Rome at length adopted to carry it out with a bitter literalness never perhaps exceeded in the destruction of any ... Rome commenced , was apparently a full equal of her enemy in promised extent and duration of empire . Rome , indeed ...
Seite 245
... Rome ; he was now doing his utmost that Rome should yield in turn to his own valor and good fortune . He would therefore give the prisoners an opportunity of ransoming themselves ; the sum would be five hundred chariot " pieces for each ...
... Rome ; he was now doing his utmost that Rome should yield in turn to his own valor and good fortune . He would therefore give the prisoners an opportunity of ransoming themselves ; the sum would be five hundred chariot " pieces for each ...
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Preparatory and College Latin Courses in English (Condensed and Consolidated) William Cleaver Wilkinson Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2016 |
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admirable Æneas Æneid Agrippina ancient Antony Ariovistus arms army Augustus battle better Bocchus Caius called camp Carthage Carthaginian Catiline cavalry character Cicero comedy Conington consul course crime Dæmones death Demea Demosthenes Dido dreadful eloquence emperor empire enemy English eyes Fabius fame father fear feel fortune friends Gaul genius give glory gods Greek Gripus hand Hannibal heaven historian Homer honor Horace Horace's horse Jugurtha Julius Cæsar Juvenal Latin legion literary literature live Livy Lucretius Marius mind Nero Nervii never o'er once orator Ovid Palæstra passage perhaps person Plautus Pliny poem poet poetry praise present Quintilian readers Roman Rome Sallust satire seems senate Seneca sent slave soldiers speech spirit story style Tacitus tell Terence thee thing thou thought tion translation Trojans verse Virgil whole words writer youth