The satires of A. Persius FlaccusClarendon Press, 1872 - 129 strán (strany) |
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... perhaps the most generally popular of all that he gave during his tenure of the chair of Latin at Oxford , owing to the sympathetic humour with which he caught the peculiar force and flavour of his author's manner , as well as to the ...
... perhaps the most generally popular of all that he gave during his tenure of the chair of Latin at Oxford , owing to the sympathetic humour with which he caught the peculiar force and flavour of his author's manner , as well as to the ...
Strana xv
... perhaps be regarded as significant when we contrast it with the language in which he speaks of the next stage in his education . It was , he tells us , when he first laid aside the emblems of boyhood and assumed the toga - just at the ...
... perhaps be regarded as significant when we contrast it with the language in which he speaks of the next stage in his education . It was , he tells us , when he first laid aside the emblems of boyhood and assumed the toga - just at the ...
Strana xvi
... ( perhaps a record of one of his tours with Thrasea , whose favourite and frequent companion he was ) in imitation of Horace's Journey to Brun- dusium , and of a similar poem by Lucilius ; and a few verses commemo- rative of the elder ...
... ( perhaps a record of one of his tours with Thrasea , whose favourite and frequent companion he was ) in imitation of Horace's Journey to Brun- dusium , and of a similar poem by Lucilius ; and a few verses commemo- rative of the elder ...
Strana xvii
... perhaps , as Jahn supposes , the fragment of a new satire . They were ultimately edited by Caesius Bassus , at his own request , and acquired instantaneous popularity . The memoir goes on to tell us that Persius was beautiful in person ...
... perhaps , as Jahn supposes , the fragment of a new satire . They were ultimately edited by Caesius Bassus , at his own request , and acquired instantaneous popularity . The memoir goes on to tell us that Persius was beautiful in person ...
Strana xix
... perhaps deforming , the footsteps of his father - in - law Thrasea , ignored the political existence of the emperor in his edicts as praetor , and asserted his own equality repeatedly by a freedom of speech amounting to personal insult ...
... perhaps deforming , the footsteps of his father - in - law Thrasea , ignored the political existence of the emperor in his edicts as praetor , and asserted his own equality repeatedly by a freedom of speech amounting to personal insult ...
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