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Seite 64
As a result the unremittingly negative way into the discussion of Horace's merits in chapter 5 now creates an odd perspective ( a good counteractive in West's Reading Horace ) . Much the same is true in chapter 3 , where the account of ...
As a result the unremittingly negative way into the discussion of Horace's merits in chapter 5 now creates an odd perspective ( a good counteractive in West's Reading Horace ) . Much the same is true in chapter 3 , where the account of ...
Seite 86
He had cited and echoed them earlier in that chapter for the rise of Clovis ( DF II , pp . 124 , 127 ; cf. also p . 61 ) ; more significantly , in the next chapter ( 39 ) he combined Variae IV . 51 , V. 42 and VII .
He had cited and echoed them earlier in that chapter for the rise of Clovis ( DF II , pp . 124 , 127 ; cf. also p . 61 ) ; more significantly , in the next chapter ( 39 ) he combined Variae IV . 51 , V. 42 and VII .
Seite 88
In chapter 37 he had dealt firstly with the triumph of the Christian religion as displayed in monasticism , its most barbarous form ; then with its conquest of the barbarians themselves . In chapter 38 he prolonged the theme with the ...
In chapter 37 he had dealt firstly with the triumph of the Christian religion as displayed in monasticism , its most barbarous form ; then with its conquest of the barbarians themselves . In chapter 38 he prolonged the theme with the ...
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Inhalt
distinguish himself from the Oxford scholar J U Powell 18651932 see Cosgrave op cit p | 41 |
JHS Journal of Hellenic Studies | 159 |
A Lexicon to Herodotus Cambridge 1938 2nd edn Hildesheim 1960 | 10 |
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