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INDEX.

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A character so exalted, so strenuous

ABOUT ten miles from Ariminum.

About thirty-two years before that event, the Emperor
According to some speculators, those seas

A celebrated ancient orator, of whose poems

Afric is indeed a country of wonderful fertility
Against all these accomplishments of a finished orator
Agrigentum excels all other cities

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All composure of mind was now for ever fled
All this in effect, I think, but I am not sure
All this is true. A number of nations

Almost all poets, except those who were not able to eat.
A long conference ensued, from which the Spanish general.
A man of moderate desires hath infinitely fewer wants
A miserable village still preserves the name of Salona
A modern tyrant, who should find no resistance
Ancient lawgivers studied the nature of man

30

65

322

276

138

105

132

92

71

196

117

275

66

269

95

114

289

And now, gentlemen, on this serious day, when I come
And now, having done my duty to the bill

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And now, my lords, in what a situation are we all placed

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As soon as the approach of the troops was announced

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At the sight of his father's spirit, Hamlet was struck
At the sight of the enemy those who had not already passed
Augustus pointed to the sacrifice he had made.

A wise man places his happiness as little as possible.
A year had hardly elapsed when arrangements were made

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347

30

91

78
89

BANNER at length terminated his career at Halberstadt
Before the sweeping pursuit of his Numidians
Beside the principles of which we consist . .
Be this as it may, it remains an unquestionable
Briefly, the Oracles went out-lamp after lamp

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56

234

319

261

But all feeling or remembrance of this loss and danger

39

But all these things are inconsiderable.

But as the Stoics exalted human nature too high
But flushed with victory, impatient for the slaughter.

232

261

14

But further, Hamilcar was not only a military chief
But if he was a bountiful master

But if I profess all this impolitic stubbornness
But if there are yet existing any people like me
But if they will still be meddling with atoms
But if we lift our eyes and minds towards heaven.
But in opposition to them, Bonnivet, whose destiny
But nothing could reconcile the haughty spirit
But since civilization has connected all the nations.
But the Americans must now be heard.

But the garrison, fearing that they should not be able

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126

176

164

258

260

61

63

316

205

3

But there must still be a large number of the people
But the tears that were shed for Pompey.
But they tell us that those fellow-citizens

197

144

198

But under the English government all this order is reversed
But while Cicero stands justly charged

210

147

But while Lorenzo seemed to be sunk in luxury

48

But while we thus control even our feelings by our duty

168

But who gave Robespierre the power of being a tyrant.
By a series of criminal enterprises

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ELATE with their own escape, they deemed themselves
England, as you know, is governed by Pitt

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For two centuries, the history of the British possessions
From the time of the consul Mummius, who
From what has now been said, gentlemen

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Full of knowledge and wisdom, tried in the great struggles

GENERAL LABOISSIERE, who led the van

Gentlemen, I stand up in this contest against the friends

HARD by the banks of the Tiber

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113

113

179

186

33

153

He held likewise the immortality of the soul

Hence that unexampled unanimity which distinguishes
Here at our feet lay the Trasimene .

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He sketched his various wars, victories, and treaties of peace

He was an honourable man, and a sound politician
He was deeply learned, without possessing useful knowledge.
He was slenderly furnished with fancy

His mind was in a painful state of perplexity

His powerful intellect was ill supplied with knowledge
His splendid military successes, so gratifying to Castilian
Horace is the poet who is most frequently in our hands.
How much he lived in Homer's poetical world. .
How to negotiate with a perfect skill never degenerating

96

239

162

15

167

200

79

285

67

134

121

136

80

138

140

314

82

135

329

184

152

264

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336

241

190

166

189

224

288

163

312

327

156

338

333

338

281

283

I AM at this present moment writing in a house

I am convinced that just laws.

I am not, nor did I ever pretend to be, a statesman

I am very sorry to hear you treat philosophy

I annex a long thought in verse

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I believe since my coming into this world.
I believe the duties of the Governor-General
I call heaven and earth to witness, gentlemen

I confess my notions are widely different.

If he who was long the accepted champion

If, in the first formation of a civil society

If liberty, after being extinguished on the Continent

If tears are arguments of cowardice

I have always been an idle man

I have not been considering it

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I have now changed the scene from the town

I have often been astonished.

I have often been thinking that this voyage to Italy.

I have often thought with myself, that I went on too far

I have perused many of their books

In almost all the other trades and professions

In another kingdom indeed the blessings. .
In Cicero's extant correspondence we seem to be present
In consequence of this double game

In England we have not yet been completely embowelled
In order to prove to any one the grandness

I now proceed, my lords, to the next

In proportion as the years both lessen and shorten
Instead of a monarch, jealous, severe, and avaricious.
In such a predicament braver soldiers might well .
In summer, when the road is well cleared

In that part of Upper Saxony beyond the Elbe

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274

213

85

207

187

252

228

337

150

17

31

102

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In the first stages of the decline and fall of the Roman empire

115

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In this person were collected the most opposite defects

In truth his Grace is somewhat excusable for his dislike

I purpose to write the history of England

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177

105

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It is very hard that because you do not get my letters
It took two days of disorder, suffering and death

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17

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MADAME,-For your sake I have examined the Valentin
Man was ever a creature separated from all others
Meanwhile the curia was abandoned by the living
Meanwhile Titus advanced his engines

Monmouth had hitherto done his part.

Moreover, brutes differ from men in this

Mr. Grenville was bred to the law

Mr. Sheridan saw nothing great, nothing magnanimous
Much of the subsequent clamour in England
Mucian's speech in Tacitus contains many important
My Dear Friend,-You have my hearty thanks
My dream commenced with a music
My Lords, His Majesty succeeded to an empire
My Lords, I do not disguise the intense solicitude

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NATURE and education had done their best
Nero had his social hours, and the temper
Never was a nobler spectacle witnessed
No man, O Anacreon, can rest anywhere
Nor is it less easy to develop the character
"No, sir," replied I, "I am for liberty"
No sooner did he hear of the intended address
Not all that is optically possible to be seen
Nothing is more evident than that, besides life
Nothing that I can say, or that you can say
Notwithstanding the vigour with which the siege
Now a multitude bounded up the great breach
Now for the services of the sea

Now if Nature should intermit her course

Of all the men that live in history, there is none
Of those who wish for peace, there are two classes
One great cause of our insensibility to the goodness.
One hundred and fifty years after the reign of Honorius
One of the best methods of rendering study agreeable
One of these explosions of entire summits

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One would not indeed covet any satisfactions in this life
On the other hand, if, leaving the works of nature
On the other side, the king's men were not wanting
On the second day after his landing

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