M.T. Ciceronis Oratio Pro L. MurenaUniversity Press, 1874 - 111 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 25
Page 8
... Rome , Eng . tr . 15. Huschke's iurisprudentiae anteiustinianae quae supersunt . Lord Mackenzie's Roman Law . 16 . 17 . 18 . Forsyth's Life of Cicero . Cicero , ed . Klotz . 19. Gellius , ed . Hertz . 20 . Plutarch's Lives , ed ...
... Rome , Eng . tr . 15. Huschke's iurisprudentiae anteiustinianae quae supersunt . Lord Mackenzie's Roman Law . 16 . 17 . 18 . Forsyth's Life of Cicero . Cicero , ed . Klotz . 19. Gellius , ed . Hertz . 20 . Plutarch's Lives , ed ...
Page 8
... Rome , Eng . tr . 14 . 15 . 16 . Huschke's iurisprudentiae anteiustinianae quae supersunt . Lord Mackenzie's Roman Law . 17. Forsyth's Life of Cicero . 18. Cicero , ed . Klotz . 19. Gellius , ed . Hertz . 20. Plutarch's Lives , ed ...
... Rome , Eng . tr . 14 . 15 . 16 . Huschke's iurisprudentiae anteiustinianae quae supersunt . Lord Mackenzie's Roman Law . 17. Forsyth's Life of Cicero . 18. Cicero , ed . Klotz . 19. Gellius , ed . Hertz . 20. Plutarch's Lives , ed ...
Page 10
... Rome so far as to dance like a harlequin in the company of his dissolute young companions , charges which it is true his defender repels as utterly unfounded ( §§ 11 , 12 , 13 ) . On his return from Asia , L. Murena became , along with ...
... Rome so far as to dance like a harlequin in the company of his dissolute young companions , charges which it is true his defender repels as utterly unfounded ( §§ 11 , 12 , 13 ) . On his return from Asia , L. Murena became , along with ...
Page 11
... Rome to accompany the triumph of Lucullus , and stand for the consulship ( § 89 , Sall . Cat . 42 ) . It having become no- torious that Catiline's band of conspirators had decided to carry through this election with violence , and to ...
... Rome to accompany the triumph of Lucullus , and stand for the consulship ( § 89 , Sall . Cat . 42 ) . It having become no- torious that Catiline's band of conspirators had decided to carry through this election with violence , and to ...
Page 12
... Rome seemed to have chosen rather to take the first place among jurists than the second among orators ( ib . § 151 ) . He is compared with Cicero himself , and the pair are matched with Scaevola and Crassus ; for while Sulpicius , like ...
... Rome seemed to have chosen rather to take the first place among jurists than the second among orators ( ib . § 151 ) . He is compared with Cicero himself , and the pair are matched with Scaevola and Crassus ; for while Sulpicius , like ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accused Algebra Asia been better book brought called candidates case Catil Cato causa charges Cicero Cicero's cloth Cluent consul consulatus consulem consulship couches Crown Octavo Demy Octavo doubt Edited edition election English Ennius Examination first foll found friend Gaia Gaius generally given gladiator good great have history Introduction Italy iudices iure jury know known late Fellow latter legal life London Warehouse made Madv make mihi Mithridates Murena Murena's neque Notes office omnibus opposed PAPERS passage Paternoster Row people perhaps Planc Pompeius praetor Press Price probably Professor property publica Quint quoted reading rei publicae remarks right Roman Rome Rosc same says school seems Senate senatus sense sine speech Stoic Sulla Sulpicius taken tamen thing think time tion trial Trinity College University of Cambridge used Verr Verres word words year καὶ
Popular passages
Page 7 - NALOPAKHYANAM, OR, THE TALE OF NALA ; containing the Sanskrit Text in Roman Characters, followed by a Vocabulary...
Page 5 - Mathematical and Physical Papers. By Sir W. THOMSON, LL.D., DCL, FRS, Professor of Natural Philosophy, in the University of Glasgow. Collected from different Scientific Periodicals from May, 1841, to the present time.
Page 3 - SCRIPTURES, &c. The Cambridge Paragraph Bible of the Authorized English Version, with the Text revised by a Collation of its Early and other Principal Editions...
Page 9 - M. MINUCII FELICIS OCTAVIUS. The text newly revised from the original MS., with an English Commentary, Analysis, Introduction, and Copious Indices. Edited by HA HOLDEN, LL.D. Head Master of Ipswich School, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Crown 8vo. js. 6d. THEOPHILI EPISCOPI ANTIOCHENSIS LIBRI TRES AD AUTOLYCUM edidit, Prolegomenis Versione Notulis Indicibus instruxit GULIELMUS GILSON HUMPHRY, STB Collegii Sanftiss.
Page 6 - FGS, Hon. FCPS, Professor of the Natural Sciences in the University of Melbourne ; formerly Professor of Geology and Mineralogy in the Queen's University in Ireland; author of "Characters of the Carboniferous Limestone Fossils of Ireland;" "Synopsis of the Silurian Fossils of Ireland;" " Contributions to British Palaeontology,
Page 3 - Apart from its religious importance, the English Bible has the glory, which but few sister versions indeed can claim, of being the chief classic of the language, of having, in conjunction with Shakspeare, and in an immeasurable degree more than he, fixed the language beyond any possibility of important change. Thus the recent contributions to the literature of the subject, by such workers as Mr Francis Fry and Canon...
Page 7 - Greek and English Testament, in parallel columns on the same page. Edited by J. SCHOLEFIELD, MA late Regius Professor of Greek in the University. New Edition, with the marginal references as arranged and revised by DR SCRIvENER, js.
Page 7 - Morgan's Investigation of the Trinity of Plato, and of Philo Judaeus, and of the effects which an attachment to their writings had upon the principles and reasonings of the Fathers of the Christian Church. Revised by HA HoLDEN, LL.D. Head Master of Ipswich School, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Crown Octavo.
Page 3 - Students of the Bible should be particularly grateful to (the Cambridge University Press) for having produced, with the able assistance of Dr Scrivener, a complete critical edition of the Authorized Version of the English Bible, an edition such as, to use the words of the Editor, 'would have been executed long ago had this version been nothing more than the greatest and best known of English classics.