bold = Main text
    Chap.        grey = Comment text

  1     Pre     |            For to Cimon, an eminent man among the Athenians, it
  2 Themist     |             with such a force as no man ever had, before or since;
  3 Themist     |      delivered by the policy of one man, and Asia succumbed to Europe.
  4 Themist     |     greatest fleet in the memory of man was conquered in like manner 32
  5 Themist     |        concern for so illustrious a man, kept the ship at anchor
  6 Themist     |     Themistocles, am come to you, a man, who, of all the Greeks,
  7 Themist     |          and wishing to have such a man attached to him, granted
  8 Aristid     |             person in the memory of man (as far at least as I have
  9  Pausan     |           Lacedaemonian was a great man, but of varied character
 10  Pausan     |           son-in-law to the king (a man, among the chief of all
 11  Pausan     |        infantry, whom he had chosen man by man, and twenty thousand
 12  Pausan     |           whom he had chosen man by man, and twenty thousand cavalry,
 13  Pausan     |             so eminent and famous a man, on suspicion only, but
 14  Pausan     |         certain Argilian,48 a young man whom, in his boyhood, Pausanias
 15  Pausan     |           not induced, even by this man's information, to seize
 16   Cimon     |            and a certain Callias, a man whose birth was not equal
 17   Cimon     |            the state than any other man, he fell under the same
 18   Cimon     |         time of peace; for he was a man of such liberality, that
 19   Cimon     |           Frequently, when he saw a man thrown in his way by chance 55
 20  Lysand     |            been a factious and bold man, allowed himself such liberty,
 21   Alcib     | contradictory a nature, in the same man. ~II. He was brought up
 22   Alcib(61) |             vita, they say, means a man's mode of living in public
 23   Alcib     |             Hipponicus, the richest man of all that spoke the Greek
 24   Alcib     |        people upon him; nor was any man in the whole city thought
 25   Alcib     |             this most active-minded man in every way, they were
 26   Alcib     |            Alcibiades; for he was a man of such sagacity that he
 27   Alcib     |           in having banished such a man from the country. Nor did
 28   Alcib     |            of troops, was the first man of any Grecian state 74
 29   Alcib(74) |        civitatis.] He was the first man of Greece that penetrated
 30   Alcib     |            by his courtesy, that no man had a higher place in his
 31   Alcib     |         would never leave him. This man he desired to follow him,
 32   Alcib     |          came to his end. ~XI. This man, defamed by most writers,
 33   Alcib     |             of the Thebans, that no man could match him in laborious
 34   Alcib     |           was regarded as a leading man, and held in the utmost
 35 Thrasib     |           hesitation, that I set no man above him in integrity,
 36 Thrasib     |           to freedom. But though no man excelled him in these virtues,
 37 Thrasib     |             the first, but the only man at the commencement, to
 38   Conon     |           the field against them, a man whom they could overmatch
 39    Dion     |             they never regarded any man that spoke the Greek tongue
 40    Dion     |          could not refuse the young man leave to send for him, as
 41    Dion     |            addressing him. The sick man, having taken the draught,
 42    Dion     |            historian to Syracuse, a man not more friendly to the
 43    Dion     |              not from hatred of the man, but for the sake of his
 44    Dion     |              in marriage to another man, and caused his son to be
 45    Dion     |           Peloponnesus to Sicily, a man of address, subtle enough
 46  Iphicr     |             by fire. ~III. He was a man of large mind and large
 47   Chabr     |        board the fleet as a private man, but had more influence
 48  Timoth     |          trial, while quite a young man, at Athens, not only his
 49   Datam     |           to the bravest and wisest man of all the barbarians, except
 50   Datam     |           first showed what sort of man he was, when engaged in
 51   Datam     |            prince of Paphlagonia, a man of ancient family, descended
 52   Datam     |          day after arrayed Thyus, a man of huge stature, and frightful
 53   Datam     |             against them. The young man fell in battle, and the
 54   Datam     |           that he was deserted by a man so intimately connected
 55   Datam     |     executed. ~VII. Yet from such a man as this his eldest son Scismas
 56   Datam     |             with a brave and active man, who, when he had conceived
 57   Datam     |          for him; but he selected a man closely resembling himself
 58   Datam     |             to attack. ~X. Yet this man, crafty as he was, was at
 59   Datam     |           to his assistance. Thus a man who had gained the mastery
 60  Epamin     |             a grave and austere old man 148 before that of all those
 61  Epamin(148)|             a grave and austere old man in familiarity," i. e. as
 62  Epamin     |            required, he brought the man who wanted it to those who
 63  Epamin     |      brought over Micythus, a young man for whom Epaminondas had
 64  Epamin     |            a native of Thebes,152 a man well skilled in speaking,
 65  Epamin     |           whom one was Pelopidas, a man of valour and activity;----
 66  Epamin     |             be understood, that one man was of more efficacy than
 67   Pelop     |      Grecian literature how great a man he was, I will therefore,
 68  Agesil     |             interest of Lysander, a man, as we have already stated,
 69  Agesil     |        person. ~VIII. As this great man had found nature favourable
 70  Agesil     |         suspicion that he must be a man not very rich. The news
 71   Eumen     |         indeed, have been a greater man (for we estimate great men
 72   Eumen     |             and to see what sort of man he was whom they had feared
 73   Eumen     |       assertion false; for he was a man not only of a graceful 205
 74   Eumen     |         been already inflicted on a man by whom they had been harassed
 75   Eumen     |         often reduced to despair, a man who had cut off leaders
 76   Eumen     |           no personal violence to a man who had once been his friend."
 77 Phocion     |            execution, Emphyletus, a man with whom he had been very
 78 Timoleo     |       Corinth was doubtless a great man in the opinion of everybody,
 79 Timoleo     |         death by a certain augur, a man connected with them both,
 80 Timoleo     |     Mamercus, an Italian general, a man of great valour and influence,
 81 Timoleo     |        ascertained. Not only was no man's advice ever preferred
 82 Timoleo     |            preferred to his, but no man's was even compared to it;
 83 Timoleo     |         curbed the insolence of the man by laying hands upon him,
 84 Timoleo     |           would be lawful for every man to say what he wished of
 85   Kings     |             armies in the memory of man. Macrochir is greatly celebrated
 86  Hamilc     |             accompanied him a young man named Hasdrubal, a person
 87  Hamilc     |            becoming; for so great a man could not fail to have slanderers.
 88  Hannib     |           even to this day, that no man ought to doubt but that
 89  Hannib     |        where previously one unarmed man could scarcely crawl. Along
 90  Hannib     |      Baebius Tamphilus. ~This great man, though occupied in such
 91    Cato     |          resided, when a very young man, and before he turned his
 92   Attic     |            was great for so young a man, he relieved their public
 93   Attic     |        being charmed with the young man's politeness and knowledge;
 94   Attic     |           good feeling of the young man, directed, at his departure,
 95   Attic     |             Lucius Lucullus, a rich man, but of a very morose temper,
 96   Attic     |            forming the connexion, a man with whom Atticus had lived
 97   Attic     |         such a way, that that young man was not in more familiar
 98   Attic     |             confer or join with any man." Thus that combination
 99   Attic     |            Quintus Gellius Canus, a man of the same age, and of
100   Attic     |            Lucius Julius Mocilla, a man of praetorian rank, and
101   Attic     |             truly said, that "Every man's manners make his fortune."
102   Attic(276)|             Nepos first says that a man's manners fashion his fortune,
103   Attic     |          and Catullus, as well as a man of high character, and distinguished
104   Attic     |         though he was very rich, no man was less addicted to buying
105   Attic     |           by many, gives proof of a man's moderation; and to procure
106   Attic(282)|             small expenditure for a man of such income as Atticus.
107   Attic     |      liberal, but of a light-minded man, to promise what he would
108   Attic     |          above) "it is in general a man's manners that bring him
109    Frag     |        Cicero.  For he was the only man who could or sought to produce
110    Frag     |           to give every gift to one man, nor further to deny every
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License