The Study of Roman History |
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Page 21
... remained one people which not even Rome could assimilate or absorb . But that elusive and dis- turbing Greek superiority of thought and intellect she had the grace to acknowledge , and , however clumsily , to imitate , to admire , and ...
... remained one people which not even Rome could assimilate or absorb . But that elusive and dis- turbing Greek superiority of thought and intellect she had the grace to acknowledge , and , however clumsily , to imitate , to admire , and ...
Page 30
... remained independent , each on its own hill . There were settlements of Latins from the Alban Hills , of kindred Sabellian and Sabine men from the eastern mountains , possibly of strange Etruscans from beyond the river . But when all ...
... remained independent , each on its own hill . There were settlements of Latins from the Alban Hills , of kindred Sabellian and Sabine men from the eastern mountains , possibly of strange Etruscans from beyond the river . But when all ...
Page 31
... remained of wood even when the city had become the Augustan monument of marble . The Janiculum on the western bank was the " bridge - head . " So long as a Roman garrison held this hill , Rome was safe from attack from the north . The ...
... remained of wood even when the city had become the Augustan monument of marble . The Janiculum on the western bank was the " bridge - head . " So long as a Roman garrison held this hill , Rome was safe from attack from the north . The ...
Page 42
... remained in Roman hands . Another such horde marched down the western road and was with difficulty crushed at Telamon some six years before Hannibal crossed the Alps . The Gallic tribes in Italy welcomed both Hannibal and his brother ...
... remained in Roman hands . Another such horde marched down the western road and was with difficulty crushed at Telamon some six years before Hannibal crossed the Alps . The Gallic tribes in Italy welcomed both Hannibal and his brother ...
Page 52
... remained for the most part content with the comfortable precision and luminous conciseness of the lectures of their Oxford Master . The very liberty to differ reduced itself to some scrupulous examination of minute details . Two other ...
... remained for the most part content with the comfortable precision and luminous conciseness of the lectures of their Oxford Master . The very liberty to differ reduced itself to some scrupulous examination of minute details . Two other ...
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agrarian army August Strindberg Augustus authority bestowed Cambridge chief Christian Cicero Civil civilisation Cloth binding conquest Constitution D.Litt defence early Principate Eden Phillpotts Elinor Glyn Emperor Nero Essays Etruscan examination fact Ford Madox Hueffer frontier Gracchus Greek City Greenidge H. W. Nevinson HENRIETTA STREET hills historian honourable Imperial interest Italian Italy John Galsworthy Julius Cæsar King land Latin least lectures Letters London ment military modern Mommsen never Oxford perhaps period plates PLAYS plebeians political Polybius Prince problem Professor province R. B. Cunninghame Graham religion remained Republic Republican rival river Roman citizens Roman Empire Roman History Roman world Rome Rome's seems Senate Series soldier statesmen Stoic story student study of Roman Tacitus Tchekoff Testament texts Theology thought tion town Trajan tribe tribune tutor University victory vols volumes vote W. H. Hudson W. K. Clifford Warde Fowler whole writer
Popular passages
Page 75 - ... tum vos, o Tyrii, stirpem et genus omne futurum exercete odiis, cinerique haec mittite nostro munera. nullus amor populis, nec foedera sunto. exoriare aliquis nostris ex ossibus ultor, qui face Dardanios ferroque sequare colonos, nunc, olim, quocumque dabunt se tempore vires. litora litoribus contraria, fluctibus undas inprecor, arma armis ; pugnent ipsique nepotesque.
Page 158 - James Orr, DD, Professor of Apologetics in the Theological College of the United Free Church, Glasgow. A CRITICAL INTRODUCTION TO THE NEW TESTAMENT. By Arthur Samuel Peake, DD, Professor of Biblical Exegesis and Dean of the Faculty of Theology, Victoria University, Manchester ; sometime Fellow of Merton College, Oxford.
Page 75 - Ah me, when the mallows wither in the garden, and the green parsley, and the curled tendrils of the anise, on a later day they live again, and spring in another year ; but we men, we, the great and mighty, or wise, when once we have died, in hollow earth we sleep, gone down into silence ; a right long, and endless, and unawakening sleep.
Page 158 - H. Wheeler Robinson, MA, Tutor in Rawdon College; sometime Senior Kennicott Scholar in Oxford University. TEXT AND CANON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. By Alexander Souter, MA , D.Litt., Professor of Humanity at Aberdeen University. CHRISTIAN THOUGHT TO THE REFORMATION. By Herbert B. Workman, MA, D.Litt., Principal of the Westminster Training College. DUCKWORTH & Co.'s Two SHILLING NET SERIES Stiff Covers, Crown Bvo.
Page 131 - And as, year after year, Fresh products of their barren labour fall From their tired hands, and rest Never yet comes more near, Gloom settles slowly down over their breast. And while they try to stem The waves of mournful thought by which they are prest, Death in their prison reaches them, Unfreed, having seen nothing, still unblest.