The National Quarterly Review, المجلد 4Edward Isidore Sears, David Allyn Gorton, Charles H. Woodman Pudney & Russell, 1862 |
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الصفحة 177
... Livy or Sallust , who would find little difficulty in understanding the Latin of Bacon . It presents fewer difficulties to the learner than the most flowing ordo to a classical work ; in short , it is English Latin . Thus , we take a ...
... Livy or Sallust , who would find little difficulty in understanding the Latin of Bacon . It presents fewer difficulties to the learner than the most flowing ordo to a classical work ; in short , it is English Latin . Thus , we take a ...
الصفحة 226
... Livy is the proudest and most patriotic , the most unwilling to admit the possibility of defeating his countrymen ; but he is everywhere obliged to acknowledge the fierce and terrible prowess of the Gauls . Not only does he give this ...
... Livy is the proudest and most patriotic , the most unwilling to admit the possibility of defeating his countrymen ; but he is everywhere obliged to acknowledge the fierce and terrible prowess of the Gauls . Not only does he give this ...
الصفحة 227
... Livy . They tried to disguise their resentment , however , and demanded the privi- lege of entering the city as mediators . They found the Clusians deliberating on terms of peace - intending to cede some of their lands to the Gauls ...
... Livy . They tried to disguise their resentment , however , and demanded the privi- lege of entering the city as mediators . They found the Clusians deliberating on terms of peace - intending to cede some of their lands to the Gauls ...
الصفحة 234
... Livy tell us that the Gauls were the first to offer any resistance , worthy of the name , to the triumphant march of Hannibal over the Alps . They had been favorable to his cause until they learned that he had at- tacked and routed ...
... Livy tell us that the Gauls were the first to offer any resistance , worthy of the name , to the triumphant march of Hannibal over the Alps . They had been favorable to his cause until they learned that he had at- tacked and routed ...
الصفحة 235
... Livy , that when the Roman senate sent ambassadors to the Gauls to solicit their aid against the Car- thaginians , they were assailed with hisses and derisive laugh- ter , when they boasted of the glory and greatness of Rome ; so that ...
... Livy , that when the Roman senate sent ambassadors to the Gauls to solicit their aid against the Car- thaginians , they were assailed with hisses and derisive laugh- ter , when they boasted of the glory and greatness of Rome ; so that ...
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