Miscellaneous Works of Edw. Gibbon: With Memoirs of His Life and Writings, Composed by Himself, Volumen71797 |
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Página 45
... gates to the triumphal car ; but the people were entitled to ftop its career . Upon entering the Ponorium , all military command ceased ; and the confuls , who were generals abroad , became fimple magiftrates in Rome ; which acknow ...
... gates to the triumphal car ; but the people were entitled to ftop its career . Upon entering the Ponorium , all military command ceased ; and the confuls , who were generals abroad , became fimple magiftrates in Rome ; which acknow ...
Página 62
... gates of Rome . It is time to conduct them into the city , and to examine the road which they followed in afcending ... gate through which they entered into the city , as well as the ftreets through which they passed to the foot of the ...
... gates of Rome . It is time to conduct them into the city , and to examine the road which they followed in afcending ... gate through which they entered into the city , as well as the ftreets through which they passed to the foot of the ...
Página 63
... gate . " Pifo foolishly enough inter- rupted him , " You are mistaken ; I entered by the Ef & C quiline . " " What matters that , " rejoined the orator , provided you did not enter by the porta triumphalis , a gate always open to your ...
... gate . " Pifo foolishly enough inter- rupted him , " You are mistaken ; I entered by the Ef & C quiline . " " What matters that , " rejoined the orator , provided you did not enter by the porta triumphalis , a gate always open to your ...
Página 65
... gate of which we are inqueft ought to be found within thefe limits . A chain of conjectural evidence leads me to ... gate . The place of his fepulchre was already fixed . The citizens conftantly beheld before their eyes that lofty ...
... gate of which we are inqueft ought to be found within thefe limits . A chain of conjectural evidence leads me to ... gate . The place of his fepulchre was already fixed . The citizens conftantly beheld before their eyes that lofty ...
Página 66
... gate between the capitol'and the Tiber , traverfed the place called the Velabrum , as well as the whole length of the Circus Maximus , and completed the circuit of the Palatine Mount by defcending through the Via Sacra into the Forum ...
... gate between the capitol'and the Tiber , traverfed the place called the Velabrum , as well as the whole length of the Circus Maximus , and completed the circuit of the Palatine Mount by defcending through the Via Sacra into the Forum ...
Términos y frases comunes
admiration Æneid againſt alfo almoſt alſo ancient Appian Argiletum Auguftus becauſe Beneventum Cæfar Campus Martius caufes cauſe Cicero circumftances confequence confuls defcribe defign deities difcover difplay diftinction diſtinguiſhed eſtabliſhed exerciſe exiſtence faid fait fame fatire feems fenate fenfe fentiment fhall fhould fince firft firſt fituation fome fometimes ftate ftill fubject fuch fufficient fuperior fuppofed fyftem gate Gauls genius Gibbon Greeks Hift Hiftory himſelf honor Horace Ibid Ibidem inftitution intereſting itſelf j'ai Janus Jupiter leaſt lefs letters Livy Mezentius miles moft moſt muft muſt myſelf nature neceffary obfervations Ovid paffage paffed paffions philofophical pleaſed pleaſure poet Polybius Pompey prætor prefent qu'il qu'on raiſed reafon refpect religion reprefented republic Romans Rome Romulus Rutuli ſcience ſmall ſpeak ſtate ſtudy Tacitus taſte thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand Tiber tion triumph triumphal triumphal honors underſtanding uſe victory Virgil whofe whoſe worſhip
Pasajes populares
Página 18 - ... him in the night. The maxim that every thing in great men is interesting, applies only to their minds, and ought not to be extended to their bodies. What unworthy objects for the attention of Horace, when the face of the country and the manners of its inhabitants in vain offered to him a field of instruction and pleasure! Perhaps this journey, which our poet made in company with...
Página 207 - They fee with great clearnefs whatever is too remote to be difcovered by the reft of mankind, but are totally blind to all that lies immediately before them, They difcover in every...
Página 114 - I conceive, however, that the Study of Literature, the habit of becoming by turns, a Greek, a Roman, the difciple of Zeno and of Epicurus, is extremelyproper to exercife its powers and difplay its merit.
Página 201 - ... praeterea cui non animus formidine divum contrahitur, cui non correpunt membra pavore, fulminis horribili cum plaga torrida tellus contremit et magnum percurrunt murmura caelum...
Página 136 - Love, an amiable, voluptuous goddefs, all charm and caprice : fubtlety and low cunning diftinguifhed the God of Trade; and the cries of the unhappy were fuppofed to pleafe the ear of the inexorable tyrant o'er the dead, the gloomy Monarch of the infernal fhades. LXXV. A God, the Father of man- Thefedei-: ties rekind, is equally fo to every individual offpecters ofperfonse the fpecies.
Página 161 - That respectable body, of which I have the honour of being a member, affords every evening a sight truly English. Twenty or thirty, perhaps, of the first men in the kingdom in point of fashion and fortune, supping at little tables covered with a napkin, in the middle of a coffeeroom, upon a bit of cold meat, or a sandwich, and drinking a glass of punch. At present we are full of king's counsellors and lords of the bed-chamber, who, having jumped into the ministry, make a very singular medley of their...
Página 135 - ... so generalized and personated, had only a metaphysical existence, too occult for the generality of mankind. It became necessary, therefore, to incorporate them with the physical deities; in doing which, allegory has imagined a thousand fantastical relations; for the mind always requires at least the appearance of truth. It was natural enough for the God of the sea to be also that of the sailors. The figurative expression of the eye, that sees every thing at one view; of those rays, which dart...
Página 134 - The latter notion might be suggested to the minds of a people little removed from a primitive state. Little instructed in the movements of so complicated a machine, they saw with admiration the great virtues, the atrocious crimes, the useful inventions of a few...
Página 135 - ... planet Venus be the mother and goddess of love? Why must she take her rise out of the foam of the ocean? But we must leave these enigmas to such as may be able to interpret them. No sooner were these moral deities assigned their several departments, than, it is natural to conceive, they engrossed the homage of mankind. They had to do immediately with the heart and the passions, whereas the physical divinities, to whom no moral attributes had been given, fell insensibly into contempt and oblivion....
Página 88 - ... sublimest flights become puerile on such a subject. The almighty Fiat of Moses strikes us with admiration; but reason cannot comprehend, nor imagination describe, the operations of a deity, at whose command alone millions of worlds are made to tremble: nor can we read with any satisfactory pleasure of the devil, in Milton, warring for two whole days in heaven against the armies of the Omnipotent.^ * The golden compasses, with which the Creator, in Milton, measure!