The History of Rome, Volume 4Bell, 1850 - 2278 pages |
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Page 1675
... honour accept terms of peace ? Or to whom shall that treaty be valid , which we shall conclude , without the presence of the consul , without a vote of the senate , and without an order of the Roman people ? For , let me ask , supposing ...
... honour accept terms of peace ? Or to whom shall that treaty be valid , which we shall conclude , without the presence of the consul , without a vote of the senate , and without an order of the Roman people ? For , let me ask , supposing ...
Page 1677
... honour for the Achæan nation ; for not only the men , but also the women , had been spectators from the walls of Pergamus . 21. Next day the enemy's guard , in more regular and or- derly condition , pitched their camp five hundred paces ...
... honour for the Achæan nation ; for not only the men , but also the women , had been spectators from the walls of Pergamus . 21. Next day the enemy's guard , in more regular and or- derly condition , pitched their camp five hundred paces ...
Page 1712
... honour . Masinissa was your enemy before he became your ally ; nor did he repair to you with his auxiliaries when his kingdom was safe ; but dethroned , exiled , and stripped of all his forces , he fled for refuge to your camp with one ...
... honour . Masinissa was your enemy before he became your ally ; nor did he repair to you with his auxiliaries when his kingdom was safe ; but dethroned , exiled , and stripped of all his forces , he fled for refuge to your camp with one ...
Page 1713
... honour could be otherwise paid to the king , your friend and ally , who has merited highly in this very war , and concerning whose reward the consideration is , unless you should deliver free states into his power , the deliberation ...
... honour could be otherwise paid to the king , your friend and ally , who has merited highly in this very war , and concerning whose reward the consideration is , unless you should deliver free states into his power , the deliberation ...
Page 1714
... honour and esteem by you as if they were inhabitants of the very centre of Greece . For they have preserved , not only the sound of the language , the mode of dress , and the habit ; but , above all , the manners , the laws , and a mind ...
... honour and esteem by you as if they were inhabitants of the very centre of Greece . For they have preserved , not only the sound of the language , the mode of dress , and the habit ; but , above all , the manners , the laws , and a mind ...
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Common terms and phrases
Achæans Africanus afterwards allies ambassadors Ambracia Antiochus Antonius Appius arms army arrived Asia Athamania attack Attalus Aulus battle besieged BOOK brother brought Cæsar Caius camp carried Carthaginians cavalry Celtiberians censors Claudius Cneius command consul Cornelius death decree Demetrius elected embassy enemy enemy's Etolians Eumenes Fabius father favour fight Flaccus fleet force garrison Gauls Gentius given gods Gracchus Greece guard honour hostages hundred horse Illyria infantry Italy killed king Eumenes king's kingdom Lacedæmonians land Latin legions Licinius Ligurians Livy Lucius Æmilius Lucius Paullus Lucius Scipio Macedon Macedonians Manlius Masinissa nation ordered party passed Paullus peace Perseus person Philip Pompeius Popilius Postumius prætor prisoners proconsul province Publius Scipio Quintus Fulvius Flaccus received returned Rhodians river Romans Rome sailed Sardinia Sempronius senate sent ships side siege soldiers Spain taken temple Thessaly thing thousand foot Thrace Thracians Tiberius Titus town treaty triumph troops Valerius victory voted walls
Popular passages
Page 2081 - That commanders should be counselled, chiefly, by persons of known talent ; by those who have made the art of war their particular study, and whose knowledge is derived from experience ; from those who are present at the scene of action, who see the country, who see the enemy...
Page 1808 - How often in the ages of our fathers was it given in charge to the magistrates, to prohibit the performance of any foreign religious rites ; to banish strolling sacrificers and soothsayers from the forum, the circus, and the city ; to search for, and burn, books of divination ; and to abolish every mode of sacrificing that was not conformable to the Roman practice...
Page 1652 - MUDIE'S British Birds ; or, History of the Feathered Tribes of the British Islands. Revised by W. CL Martin. With 52 Figures of Birds and 7 Coloured Plates of Eggs. 2 vols.
Page 1694 - While they were employed in measuring and fortifying the camp, a body of the king's troops, consisting of three thousand chosen horse and foot, approached with great rapidity and violence. The party on guard, though much inferior in number, (being only two thousand,) without *. B, 862.] THE HISTORY OP ROME.
Page 2080 - In every circle, and, truly at every table, there are people who lead armies into Macedonia; who know where the camp ought to be placed; what posts ought to be occupied by troops; when and through what pass that territory should be entered; where magazines should be formed; how provisions should be conveyed by land and sea; and when it is proper to engage the enemy, when to lie quiet.
Page 1809 - During the night, which succeeded the day in which the affair was made public, great numbers, attempting to fly, were seized, and brought back by the triumvirs, who had posted guards at all the gates ; and informations were lodged against many, some of whom, both men and women, put themselves to death. Above seven thousand men and women are said to have taken the oath of the association.