The twenty-first book of Livy. With explanatory and grammatical notes and a vocabulary of proper namesLongmans, Green, and Company, 1887 - 141 pages |
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Results 1-5 of 14
Page 70
... important to make secure of the first tribe ; and thus their vote came to be regarded as an indication of the final result . Then prærogativa came to be used in a general sense of a ' sign ' or ' probable indication . ' We must not ...
... important to make secure of the first tribe ; and thus their vote came to be regarded as an indication of the final result . Then prærogativa came to be used in a general sense of a ' sign ' or ' probable indication . ' We must not ...
Page 78
... importance of artillery in ancient warfare , and the perfection to which it was brought . The balista threw stones , the catapulta darts . The baliste threw stones from 2lbs . to 336lbs . in weight , and the more powerful had a range of ...
... importance of artillery in ancient warfare , and the perfection to which it was brought . The balista threw stones , the catapulta darts . The baliste threw stones from 2lbs . to 336lbs . in weight , and the more powerful had a range of ...
Page 84
... important than the first . We might paraphrase thus : " This course was more in accordance with Roman honour from the first , but we won't go into that , but most certainly after the attack on Saguntum , ' & c . Excisa agrees in gender ...
... important than the first . We might paraphrase thus : " This course was more in accordance with Roman honour from the first , but we won't go into that , but most certainly after the attack on Saguntum , ' & c . Excisa agrees in gender ...
Page 109
... important or more legitimate than to the consul himself . ' tior , a victory fairly won according to the rules of war . • Jus- Restitutos , & c . ] That the spirits of the soldiers had been raised and cheered . He uses the dative ...
... important or more legitimate than to the consul himself . ' tior , a victory fairly won according to the rules of war . • Jus- Restitutos , & c . ] That the spirits of the soldiers had been raised and cheered . He uses the dative ...
Page 116
... important public transaction , and frequently employed this power as a political engine to vitiate the election of persons objectionable to the aristocratic wire - pullers . Latinarum feriarum mora . ] ' By putting off the Latin holi ...
... important public transaction , and frequently employed this power as a political engine to vitiate the election of persons objectionable to the aristocratic wire - pullers . Latinarum feriarum mora . ] ' By putting off the Latin holi ...
Other editions - View all
The Twenty-First Book of Livy: With Explanatory and Grammatical Notes and A ... Livy No preview available - 2009 |
The Twenty-First Book of Livy: With Explanatory and Grammatical Notes and A ... Livy No preview available - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
Africa agmen agmine Alps animi animos Apennines apud arma army atque battle belli bello bellum Boii Carthage Carthaginians castra cavalry certamen circa Cisalpine Gaul consul crossed dative deinde ejus elephanti enim equites equitibus equitum erant erat esset etiam exercitus extemplo fama ferme flumen fuit Gallis Gauls hæc Hamilcar Hamilcar Barca Hannibal Hannibalem Hannibali Hasdrubal haud Hispania Hispania Tarraconensis hominum hostem hostis hostium Iberum inde Insubres inter ipse ipsi Italiam Italy Itaque legati legions Lilybæum Livy magis maxime millia modo neque nihil omnes omnia omnium orum peditum Phoenician Placentia populi præsidio prætor primo prope pugna Punic quæ quam quia quibus quid quinque quinqueremes quod quoque quum Rhone Roman Rome Saguntinis Saguntum satis Scipio Second Punic War Sempronius senate Sicily socii Spain sunt tamen Taurini tempus Ticinus Trebia tribes urbem velut viginti vobis
Popular passages
Page 3 - Missus Hannibal in Hispaniam primo statim adventu omnem exercitum in se convertit. Hamilcaren juvenem redditum sibi veteres milites credere, eundem vigorem in vultu vimque in oculis, habitum oris lineamentaque, intueri. Dein brevi effecit ut pater in se minimum momentum ad favorem conciliandum esset.
Page 127 - Iberus as the boundary between the Carthaginian and Roman dominions. He was assassinated by a slave, whose master he had put to death (221), and was succeeded in the command by HANNIBAL.
Page 37 - ... detruncatisque struem ingentem lignorum faciunt, eamque, cum et vis venti apta faciendo igni coorta esset, succendunt, ardentiaque saxa infuso aceto putrefaciunt. ita torridam incendio rupem ferro pandunt molliuntque anfractibus modicis clivos, ut non iumenta solum sed elephanti etiam deduci possent.
Page 4 - ... labore aut corpus fatigari, aut animus vinci poterat. Caloris ac frigoris patientia par : cibi potionisque desiderio naturali, non voluptate, modus finitus : vigiliarum somnique nec die, nec nocte, discriminata tempora.
Page 32 - ... frigore, homines intonsi et inculti, animalia inanimaque omnia rigentia gelu, cetera visu quam dictu foediora, terrorem renovarunt.
Page 93 - barbarians being quite beaten off, the army wound its way out of the defile in safety, and rested in the wide and rich valley which extends from the lake of Bourget, with scarcely a perceptible change of level, to the Isere at Montmeillan. Hannibal meanwhile attacked and stormed the town, which was the barbarians...
Page 135 - ... barbarians, and, under the training of such generals as Hannibal and his brother, equal to the best soldiers in the world, the Romans would hardly have. been able to maintain the contest. Had not P. Scipio then despatched his army to Spain at this critical moment, instead of carrying it home to Italy, his son in all probability would never have won the battle of Zama.
Page 93 - Carthaginian army winding along the steep mountain side, and the cavalry and baggage cattle struggling at every step with the difficulties of the road, the temptation to plunder was too strong to be resisted; and from many points of the mountain, above the road, they rushed down upon the Carthaginians. The confusion was terrible ; for the road or track was so narrow, that the least crowd or disorder pushed the heavily loaded baggage cattle down the steep below ; and the horses, wounded by the barbarians...
Page 2 - ... alio, quam si evasisset, vultu, tormentis quoque quum laceraretur, eo fuit habitu oris, ut superante laetitia dolores ridentis etiam speciem praebuerit.
Page 1 - IN parte operis mei licet mihi praefari quod in principio summae totius professi plerique sunt rerum scriptores, bellum maxime omnium memorabile quae unquam gesta sint me scripturum, quod Hannibale duce Carthaginienses cum populo Komano gessere.