Caii Sallustii Crispi Catilina et Jugurtha, an ed. for schools by C. Merivale |
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Page xv
... time when great innovations in that respect were taking place , and even affected to recur to modes of spelling which were becoming obsolete . Some of the best MSS . continue to present antique forms of many words , and these we may ...
... time when great innovations in that respect were taking place , and even affected to recur to modes of spelling which were becoming obsolete . Some of the best MSS . continue to present antique forms of many words , and these we may ...
Page xvi
... times in one sentence : Tum lex Porcia aliæque leges paratæ sunt quibus legibus , etc. But the fact is , that unless we are to suppose that his MSS . , many of them very excellent ones , have been corrupted by officious transcribers ...
... times in one sentence : Tum lex Porcia aliæque leges paratæ sunt quibus legibus , etc. But the fact is , that unless we are to suppose that his MSS . , many of them very excellent ones , have been corrupted by officious transcribers ...
Page xvii
... times of Jane Grey and Elizabeth . The annotations here offered to the student have been principally drawn from the variorum notes of Havercamp's edition , from Gerlach , and from Kritz . Much novelty of illustration is hardly to be ...
... times of Jane Grey and Elizabeth . The annotations here offered to the student have been principally drawn from the variorum notes of Havercamp's edition , from Gerlach , and from Kritz . Much novelty of illustration is hardly to be ...
Page xix
... time divided were four : 1. The Senatorial , above described as the ruling class , comprising the greater number of the highest nobility , numbering perhaps an hundred or more great families , and constituting an oligarchy , powerful ...
... time divided were four : 1. The Senatorial , above described as the ruling class , comprising the greater number of the highest nobility , numbering perhaps an hundred or more great families , and constituting an oligarchy , powerful ...
Page xxi
... account of the affair , or indeed those of some other writers , we should doubtless be disposed to rate the consul's importance at this time much higher than Sal- lust himself would allow us to understand . This is INTRODUCTION . xxi.
... account of the affair , or indeed those of some other writers , we should doubtless be disposed to rate the consul's importance at this time much higher than Sal- lust himself would allow us to understand . This is INTRODUCTION . xxi.
Common terms and phrases
ætatem Africa afterwards animus armis authority belli bello bellum Bocchus Cæs Cæsar called Cambridge case Catil Catilina Ceterum Cicero Cimbri Cirta citizens city cloth Comp construction consul consulship cujus cuncta death equites erant esset exercitum facere first form found generally good great hæc Hence Hist hostes hostibus hostium Italy jubet Jugur Jugurtha Livy Lucan made magis Marius means Metellus military milites name neque nobles Numidæ Numidarum Numidia office omnibus opposed order party passage Patres conscripti paullo people perhaps person phrase place Plutarch Pompeius postquam postremo power præ prælio prælium præter præterea properly province public quæ read reading reipublicæ rempublicam republic right Romæ Roman Rome sæpe Sallust same says scil seems senate senatus sense sese sestertius sicuti simul sine Sulla tamen their time tion used Vell Virg vitæ word words year years Zama καὶ
Popular passages
Page 83 - Omnis homines, patres conscripti, qui de rebus dubiis consultant, ab odio, amicitia, ira atque misericordia vacuos esse decet.
Page 17 - Igitur primo pecuniae, deinde imperi cupido crevit; ea quasi materies omnium malorum fuere. Namque avaritia fidem, probitatem ceterasque artis bonas subvortit; pro his superbiam, crudelitatem, deos neglegere, omnia venalia habere edocuit. Ambitio multos mortalis falsos fieri subegit, aliud clausum in pectore, aliud in lingua promptum habere, amicitias inimicitiasque non ex re, sed ex commodo aestumare, magisque voltum quam ingenium bonum habere.
Page 8 - ... statui res gestas populi Romani carptim, ut quaeque memoria digna videbantur, perscribere, — eo magis, quod mihi a spe, metu, partibus rei publicae animus liber erat.
Page 15 - Romano numquam ea copia fuit, quia prudentissumus quisque maxume negotiosus erat; ingenium nemo sine corpore exercebat; optumus quisque facere quam dicere, sua ab aliis benefacta laudari quam ipse aliorum narrare malebat.
Page 119 - ... eorum famam atque gloriam adaequaverit. At contra, quis est omnium his moribus, quin divitiis et sumptibus, non probitate neque industria cum majoribus suis contendat 1 etiam homines novi, qui antea per virtutem soliti erant nobilitatem antevenire, furtim et per latrocinia potius [quam bonis artibus] ad imperia et honores nituntur...
Page 18 - Putares Sullam venisse in Italiam non belli vindicem, sed pacis auctorem: tanta cum quiete exercitum per Calabriam Apuliamque cum singular! cura frugum, agrorum, hominum, urbium perduxit in Campaniam...
Page 181 - ... ferre plus dimidiati mensis cibaria ; ferre, si quid ad usum velint ; ferre vallum. Nam scutum, gladium, galeam in onere nostri milites non plus numerant, quam humeros, lacertos, manus. Arma enim membra militis esse dicunt.