The Classics, Greek & Latin: The Most Celebrated Works of Hellenic and Roman Literatvre, Embracing Poetry, Romance, History, Oratory, Science, and Philosophy, Bind 6V. Parke, 1909 |
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Side 99
... never received gifts that were sent him , no not from kings and princes . Furthermore , he did disburden the provinces of the feasts and banquets they were wont to make other governors before him . On the other side also , he would ever ...
... never received gifts that were sent him , no not from kings and princes . Furthermore , he did disburden the provinces of the feasts and banquets they were wont to make other governors before him . On the other side also , he would ever ...
Side 220
... never to be gratified , and with armaments never to be raised . And while he diverted your attention from his fraud , while he kept you in suspense by his flattering as- surances , he seized the favourable moment to make his grand ...
... never to be gratified , and with armaments never to be raised . And while he diverted your attention from his fraud , while he kept you in suspense by his flattering as- surances , he seized the favourable moment to make his grand ...
Side 344
... never once sup- ported . And surely the ingenuous and honest citizen never could expect that his private quarrels , his particular animosi- ties , should be gratified by judges who are to determine for the public ; never could be ...
... never once sup- ported . And surely the ingenuous and honest citizen never could expect that his private quarrels , his particular animosi- ties , should be gratified by judges who are to determine for the public ; never could be ...
Indhold
PAGE | 13 |
TO THE READERS LIFE OF PLUTARCH | 27 |
THE DEBATE OF ESCHINES AND DEMOSTHENES ON | 183 |
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accused Æschines affairs Alexander alliance ambassadors Amphictyons Amphissa Antonius appointed Asia assembly Athenians Athens Attica barbarians battle better Boeotia bribes brought Cæsar calamities called Catiline cause Charidemus Cicero citizens Clodius command conduct conferred Consul crown Ctesiphon danger death decree defence Demades Demosthenes Dinarchus earth eloquence enemies Eratosthenes Eschines Euboea favour fellow-citizens force fortune friends gave gods Grecian Greece Greeks hath Hellas Hellenes Hippocrates honour Howbeit Hyperides impeachment Isocrates judges justice king Lacedaemonians laws lives Macedon Macedonian manner matter means Menippus MERC nature never oath occasion orations peace Peloponnesus Persian person Philip Philocrates philosopher Phocians pleading Plutarch Pompey Poseidonius possessed Prætor praise present proclamation prosecution prove received Rome Senate sent shew Sparta speak speaker speech Strabo suffer temple Thebans Thebes Thermodon things thou thought tion transactions treaty trierarch truth unto whole words