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Cornelius Nepos De Viris Illustribus Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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1001 Dion | danger on account of the disaffection of the people and the hostile 1002 Timoleo | Dionysius; but that he did not disagree with him from hatred of 1003 Hannib | you prepare war, you will disappoint yourself unless you constitute 1004 Hamilc | Carthage itself. With these disasters the Carthaginians were so 1005 Conon | choose whom be pleased to disburse the money for his army. 1006 Agesil | above all, by Xenophon, the disciple of Socrates, for he treated 1007 Iphicr | Greece were ever better disciplined, or more obedient to the 1008 Cato | that you could not easily discover anything, either in Grecian 1009 Epamin(159)| occasions; and no more are discoverable from other authors. ~ 1010 Pausan | entreat him "not to make any discovery, or to betray him who deserved 1011 Timoleo | he bore good much more discreetly than evil fortune; for when 1012 Dion | be imbued with the most disgraceful |354 propensities; for mistresses 1013 Thrasib | attempted to storm, but being disgracefully repulsed, and having lost 1014 Epamin(143)| accounted among disparagements, disgraces, or vices." ~ 1015 Attic | remained at home to his great disgust. But to Caesar the neutrality 1016 Themist | disgrace, however, did not dishearten him, but incited him to 1017 Epamin | Boeotians were somewhat disheartened; yet they did not quit the 1018 Aristid(40) | property of others; moderation; disinterestedness. ~ 1019 Datam | king, he incurred no less dislike on the part of the courtiers, 1020 Attic | thirty years, he contracted a disorder of which at first both himself 1021 Pre(6) | What Aristotle says in disparagement of the Lacedaemonian women 1022 Epamin(143)| poni.] "Is accounted among disparagements, disgraces, or vices." ~ 1023 Epamin | that to dance is accounted disparaging to the character; 143 while 1024 Eumen | only not proceed, but would disperse at the intelligence; and 1025 Eumen | as large fires and as far dispersed, as they could; to reduce 1026 Eumen | Antigonus, hearing of their dispersion, and being aware that he 1027 Agesil | and equipped with more display, he proposed rewards, with 1028 Cato | according to justice. Being displeased with the senate on this 1029 Pausan | buried, the proposal was displeasing to the majority, and they 1030 Lysand | would be entirely at his disposal. ~II. The decemviral government 1031 Cimon | home, of such as were well disposed, and obliged the disaffected 1032 Hannib | warlike merit, it is not to be disputed that Hannibal surpassed 1033 Eumen | Macedonians were nevertheless dissatisfied that he should ever be preferred 1034 Dion | the commencement of the dissension between Dion and Dionysius; 1035 Aristid(39) | according to some there were dissensions between Aristides and Themistocles 1036 Attic | party was broken by his dissent alone. Not long after, Antony 1037 Pre(5) | haberent. See Maxiinus Tyrius, Dissert, viii.----xi.; Potter's 1038 Aristid(39) | administratione Reipublicae dissidia.----Gebhard. Plutarch says, 1039 Alcib | wondered there should be such dissimilitude, and so contradictory a 1040 Alcib | was seen to be luxurious, dissolute, voluptuous, and self-indulgent, 1041 Attic | vain by endeavouring to dissuade me from executing it." | 1042 Dion | the Syracusans; but being dissuaded from his intention by the 1043 Epamin | countrymen with words, in dissuading them from war, since under 1044 Hannib | afflicted with so violent a distemper in his eyes, that he never 1045 Dion | noise ensued, so that it was distinctly heard out of doors. And 1046 Alcib(61) | quàm victu.] Bos and Boeder distinguish vita and victus in this 1047 Attic | herself, too, when she was distracted with lawsuits, and troubled 1048 Attic | always ready to succour the distressed. Servilia, for instance, 1049 Miltiad | they saw that there was no distrust of their valour, but the 1050 Frag | embarrased to confuse and disturb the republic? But if it 1051 Attic | thrown into confusion by the disturbances of Cinna, and that no facility 1052 Timoleo | restore Sicily, which had been disturbed by war for many years, and 1053 Frag(300)| From Lactantius, Inst. Div. iii.15.10. The dots indicate 1054 Alcib(60) | Dives; quum tempus posceret, & 1055 Cimon | the city and island, and dividing the lands among his own 1056 Attic | wisdom is in some degree divination, as Cicero not only predicted 1057 Attic(269)| We should rather read divinitas, as Buchner first observed. 1058 Eumen | commanded one of the two divisions of the cavalry called Hetaeriae.189 1059 Dion | among them, a disposition docile, courteous, and adapted 1060 Attic | In the boy, too, besides docility of disposition, there was 1061 Lysand | he made an attempt upon Dodona. Being disappointed there 1062 Pelop | evening, set out with hunting dogs, carrying nets in their 1063 Cimon | allegiance. Scyros, which the Dolopes at that time inhabited, 1064 Pelop | and whose |386 imperious domination, shaken by this commencement, 1065 Attic | the consulship of Cnaeus Domitius and Caius Sosius, he died.294 1066 Attic(278)| Domum Tamphilanam.] To what Tamphilus 1067 Dion(104)| negotio Consultaret, edita domus parte utebatur.----Bos. 1068 Frag(300)| Inst. Div. iii.15.10. The dots indicate a lacuna in the 1069 Datam(135)| stout, woven of thread of a double thickness; or because it 1070 Hannib | If it be true, as no one doubts, that the Roman people excelled 1071 Aristid | country, and were married with dowries given them from the public 1072 Themist(29) | among the whole people, ten drachmae to every person of full-grown 1073 Dion | sick man, having taken the draught, ended his life like one 1074 Eumen | Macedonian phalanx was, dreading envy (which, nevertheless, 1075 Eumen(200)| had appeared to him in a dream. It is strange that the 1076 Attic | disease; as, by the food and drink that I have taken during 1077 Alcib | Thracians, who are hard drinkers and given to lewdness, he 1078 Alcib | king of the Thracians, to drive them from the land, and 1079 Attic(263)| understands with illud, has dropped out of the text, or whether 1080 Attic | Tiberius Claudius Nero, son of Drusilla, and step-son to himself; 1081 Timoth(123)| this city into the text is due to Gebhard. Previously the 1082 Datam(135)| duplici amiculo.] Called duplex because it was thick and 1083 Datam(135)| modern annotator thinks that duplica refers to the "folding" 1084 Datam(135)| Agresti duplici amiculo.] Called duplex 1085 Epamin | general, none of the Boeotians durst look upon in the field, 1086 Themist | been condemned, he went to dwell at Argos. While he was living 1087 Hannib | pleasure of another, and dwelling on the remembrance of his 1088 Miltiad | all the years that he had dwelt there, and had been called 1089 Eumen | to whom Alexander, when dying, had given his ring (a circumstance 1090 Agesil(174)| the Greek, which would be e0forei=n, the court of the Ephori. ~ 1091 Pre(6) | degree plausible, were not e0gkai/nia a word resting on scarcely 1092 Attic(265)| sin w(j turannokto&noij e0yhfi/zeto. But, as Ernstius observes, 1093 Eumen(189)| cavalry. The name is from e3tairoj, a friend or companion, 1094 Miltiad(9) | temporum. Sed potest esse eadem prudentiae definitio."---- 1095 Pausan | pleasure was, and growing more eager for the accomplishment of 1096 Miltiad(9) | of the word. "Itaque, ut eandem [eu)taci/an] nos modestiam 1097 Datam | whom the king chiefly gave ear." Datames, having read this 1098 Attic | the remotest parts of the earth, he gave Atticus precise 1099 Miltiad(9) | ut modestia sit scientia earum rerum, quae agentur aut 1100 Hannib | other projects would be easier of execution. To put an 1101 Themist(37) | word signifies all that was eaten with bread; all kinds of 1102 Pre(6) | that of the Septuagint and ecclesiastical writers; for though it occurs 1103 Cato | new regulations into his edict,248 by means of which luxury, 1104 Cato(248)| adopting what he chose from the edicts of his predecessors, and 1105 Cato(248)| Edictum.] The code of regulations 1106 Attic | was surrounded; for the edifice, constructed after the ancient 1107 Dion(104)| super negotio Consultaret, edita domus parte utebatur.---- 1108 Dion(104)| proposuisset, erat illi locus in edito sincularis. So Tacitus of 1109 Conon(85) | multùm gratia valeret----effecit.] With whom he brought it 1110 Pre(6) | state sunk into luxury and effeminacy; a condition of things which 1111 Epamin | that one man was of more efficacy than the whole people. ~ 1112 Attic | narrated, under each of their effigies, their actions and offices, 1113 Alcib | attack, and by that single effort put an end to the whole 1114 Eumen(190)| Tradita esset tuenda eidem----Perdiccae.] "Was committed, 1115 Phocion | favourable to him almost to his eightieth year, he fell, towards the 1116 Hannib(232)| ventured, somewhat boldly, to eject Clastidio from his text 1117 Lysand | Lacedaemonians. Having every where ejected those who favoured the party 1118 Cimon | behaved itself insolently, ejecting the old settlers from the 1119 Attic | supported himself on his elbow, "How much care and diligence 1120 Timoth | submit to the advice of his elders, but, as if success depended 1121 Eumen(188)| Macrini, c. 7, and by Lipsius, Elect. i. 32.----Loccenius. At 1122 Attic | he used to come to their elections, and whatever important 1123 Attic(279)| for gratia, venustas, ars, elegantia. ~ 1124 Hannib | the superiority on both elements, and Hannibal thought that, 1125 Attic | kept himself at an equal elevation in both states. He had no 1126 Miltiad | pitched their camp in an eligible place. The next day, having 1127 Alcib | went from thence first to Elis, and afterwards to Thebes. 1128 Epamin(161)| Tzschucke interprets it elogium damnationis, or scripta 1129 Epamin | serviceable than to speak eloquently; and he was an attentive 1130 | elsewhere 1131 Lysand | 333 the Thasians would elude him, and take measures for 1132 Alcib(77) | Emanus.] Bos would omit this word, 1133 Epamin | above, that |379 he should embark without molestation. Of 1134 Frag | trouble? Will we ever be embarrased to confuse and disturb the 1135 Pre(6) | authority in support of their emendations. As to the last, it would 1136 Miltiad(20) | day. Ingens die uno cursu emetientes spatium. Liv. xxxi. 24. ~ 1137 Miltiad(11) | consulerent Apollinem, might be emitted as superfluous. Bos retains 1138 Cimon(52) | Neque legibus Atheniensibus emitti poterat.] Yet by Justin, 1139 Attic | united by marriage with the emperor Julius's son, whose friendship 1140 Phocion | being led to execution, Emphyletus, a man with whom he had 1141 Alcib | the ships were left almost empty, did not neglect the opportunity 1142 Epamin | as to supposing that I am emulous of Agamemnon, you are mistaken; 1143 Miltiad(18) | Aristid.---- Van Slaver en. ~ 1144 Phocion | same little farm, which has enabled me to reach my present eminence, 1145 Pre(6) | conjecture of Withof, ad encaenia, compared with Hor. A. P. 1146 Iphicr | active in movements and encounters; he doubled the length of 1147 Miltiad | and he was represented as encouraging his men, and commencing 1148 Epamin | manners and intellectual endowments, and whatever other points 1149 Eumen(206)| begins with Sic Eumenes, and ends with talem habuit exitum 1150 Dion | he was a tyrant not to be endured." ~VIII. While he knew not, 1151 Eumen | strength sufficient for enduring fatigue; yet he was not 1152 Pausan | marriage. Should you do so, he engages, with your aid, to bring 1153 Attic | the captain of Antony's engineers, on account of his great 1154 Alcib | that a copy of the curse, engraven on a stone pillar, had been 1155 Attic | accumulation of interest. He enhanced this kindness also by other 1156 Cimon | none might be hindered from enjoying his property as he pleased. 1157 Attic | and had also been in the enjoyment of so happy a state of health, 1158 Attic | a manner, he incurred no enmities, since he neither injured 1159 Cato | he had brought Quintus Ennius, the poet, an act which 1160 Pausan | relations of life; for as he was ennobled by virtues, he was also 1161 Alcib | thinking it more glorious to enrich himself with spoils from 1162 Agesil | in any direction. After enriching his men with abundance of 1163 Attic | of the knights, had been enrolled in the number of the proscribed 1164 Chabr | anxious to be the first to enter the harbour, and ordered 1165 Alcib | had commanded in the same enterprises, and came into the Piraeeus 1166 Datam | to how inconsiderable an enterprize, he had sent the best of 1167 Alcib | his countrymen, V.----His enthusiastic reception at Athens, VI. ---- 1168 Timoth(125)| afterwards used for the entire couch, on which the statues 1169 Phocion(208)| sense to which Bos thinks it entitled. To what part of Phocion' 1170 Dion | city, induced again by the entreaties of Dion. ~In the meantime 1171 Lysand | not weary our readers by enumerating many acts of the same individual. 1172 Agesil | to convey him to Sparta, enveloped his body, as they had no 1173 Chabr | home in consequence of the envious feelings of his countrymen, 1174 Epamin(161)| passage might be interpreted "Epaminondam petiisse, ut in actis illis, 1175 Timoth | to them, as allies, the Epirots, the Athamanians, the Chaonians, 1176 Dion(98) | such ceremony. See Plato's Epist. 3 and 7; Plutarch, Vit. 1177 Epamin(147)| Hipparchus is among the Epistles of the Greeks published 1178 Pausan(50) | Vincula epistolae laxavit.] Letters were tied 1179 Themist | enclosed with walls, so that it equalled the city in magnificence, 1180 Attic(259)| the revenues were chiefly equités, but Atticus, though of 1181 Miltiad | at fifty talents, a sum equivalent to that which had been spent 1182 Pausan | lines the Lacedaemonians erased, and wrote nothing but the 1183 Dion(104)| interpellatione agere proposuisset, erat illi locus in edito sincularis. 1184 Alcib(63) | and therefore they used to erect his statues before their 1185 Agesil | to Ephesus to winter, and erecting forges for arms there, made 1186 Miltiad(18) | with some Athenians and Eretrians, had burned Sardis. This 1187 Timoth(123)| Previously the common reading was Ericthonem, of which nobody knew what 1188 Pausan | the same place on such an errand, had returned, loosed the 1189 Cimon(55) | and Freinshemius. Lambinus erroneously interpreted it cui fortuna 1190 Hamilc(227)| Erycem.] Not the mountain, as Bos 1191 Hannib(230)| Rubro Mari.] It is the Mare Erythraeum that is meant, lying between 1192 Agesil(186)| Cyrenae, -arum, or Cyrene, -es, but the latter is the far 1193 Datam | sent against him, VIII.----Escapes a plot formed against him 1194 Attic | may be concluded that, in establishing friendship, similarity of 1195 Attic | effects of time. He kept an establishment of slaves of the best kind, 1196 Miltiad | his conduct. But all are esteemed and called tyrants, who 1197 Timoleo | kindness to be preserved, esteeming that victory noble, in which 1198 Alcib | Lacedaemonians, in whose estimation the highest virtue is placed 1199 Hannib | directing his course towards Etruria. During this march he was 1200 Miltiad(9) | word. "Itaque, ut eandem [eu)taci/an] nos modestiam appellemus, 1201 Cato | severity as censor, II.----His eulogy; his studies and writings, 1202 Eumen | opposed him alone to his European adversaries. 195 Perdiccas 1203 Themist | would be the case he assured Eurybiades, king of the Lacedaemonians, 1204 Themist(27) | a Carian, and called her Euterpe. See Plutarch. Themist, 1205 Pelop | the sky was obscured by evening, set out with hunting dogs, 1206 Hannib | that should happen which eventually came to pass. When the Roman 1207 Datam | that he had undertaken an everlasting war against the king, while 1208 Chabr(117)| Egyptians by agreement, or exacted from them, so that it might 1209 Hamilc(226)| Nunquam hosti cessit.] Not exactly true; but he doubtless resisted 1210 Attic | other, was in the greatest exaltation or in the greatest peril;) 1211 Dion | whom she had just before exalted. In the first place she 1212 Alcib | done concerning him, an examination should rather be held upon 1213 Datam | of them brought people to examine the place, and to search 1214 Phocion | greater number were violently exasperated against him, from the suspicion 1215 Epamin(147)| Diod. Sic. lib. vi. in Exc. Peiresc. p. 247; Pausanias, 1216 Epamin | he would in like manner excel them all in other pursuits. 1217 Attic | him immediately; as he had excepted him and Gellius Canus, for 1218 Frag | FRAGMENTS 296 ~I. Words excerpted from the letter of Cornelia, 1219 Epamin | riches of the whole world in exchange for my love for my country. 1220 Eumen | all the officers, in great excitement, expressed their surprise 1221 Phocion | intimate, met him, and having exclaimed, with tears, "O what unworthy 1222 Hannib | fact, and found himself excluded from the privy council, 1223 Miltiad | enriched them by frequent excursions. Nor was he less aided, 1224 Conon(86) | strong efforts to justify or excuse his statement. Thirlwall, 1225 Eumen | as there was no room for exercising them, he adopted an ingenious 1226 Chabr(115)| every other kind of public exhibitors. ~ 1227 Miltiad | opposed by Histiaeus, III.----Exhorts his countrymen to meet Darius 1228 Attic | he relieved their public exigencies from his own property; since, 1229 Agesil(179)| Quo ne proficisceretur----exire noluit.] The conclusion 1230 Themist(35) | there was no such relation existing between them, for he speaks 1231 Eumen(206)| and ends with talem habuit exitum vitae, a fault similar to 1232 Thrasib | increased in proportion to his expectations; for even in those times 1233 Agesil | all unprepared, and |389 expecting nothing of the kind. But 1234 Dion | deliverer of his country and the expeller of a tyrant. So suddenly 1235 Pelop | from the Lacedaemonians, expelling their garrison, III.---- 1236 Attic(282)| month would be a very small expenditure for a man of such income 1237 Attic | states. He had no gardens, no expensive suburban or maritime villa, 1238 Pausan | barbarians from those parts. Experiencing equal good fortune in this 1239 Miltiad(14) | for his absence, on the expiration of which the guardians of 1240 Agesil | period of the truce was expired, the barbarian, not doubting 1241 Themist | to be done, and readily explained it in his speeches. Nor 1242 Cimon(55) | by chance," as Heusinger explains it in his note on the passage.---- 1243 Pre(6) | Buchner. But with all such explanations the passage is still difficult 1244 Epamin | the embassies, so clearly exposed the tyranny of the Lacedaemonians, 1245 Themist | bestowed upon him this city, expressing himself in these words, 1246 Datam(136)| tantum dum, being a form of expression similar to vixdum, nondum. 1247 Timoleo | sufficient proof, that after the expulsion of Dionysius he was unwilling 1248 Dion(98) | Ambitione.] Exquisito apparatu et ambitioso comitatu.---- 1249 Attic | written to Atticus, which extend from his consulship to his 1250 Hamilc | with these successes, but extended even the bounds of the Carthaginian 1251 Attic | its utility, but if by its external show, scarcely coming up 1252 Epamin(147)| 17; Porphyr. Vit. Pythag. extr.; Jamblich. Vit. Pythag. 1253 Epamin | The iron head being then extracted, he immediately died. ~X. 1254 Attic | without interruption, to the extremity of old age, the good will 1255 Hannib | had the use of his right eye so well afterwards. But 1256 Iphicr(110)| by the gallantry of the Fabian family, that undertook to 1257 Iphicr(110)| Fabiani.] If the Roman soldiers 1258 Attic | Maximus, of that of the Fabii and Aemilii; than which 1259 Miltiad(18) | ad Aelian. V. H. xii. 53; Fabric. ad Oros. ii. 8; and Plut. 1260 Chabr(117)| proedas Agesilaus rex eorum faciebat.] Attempts to interpret 1261 Attic | disturbances of Cinna, and that no facility was allowed him of living 1262 Aristid(42) | make it begin with Quos quo facilius repellerent, &c. ~ 1263 Attic(259)| neque praes, neque manceps factus est.] The farmers, mancipes, 1264 Attic(253)| contained six modii, Manutius, Faernus, and Ursinus, following 1265 Phocion(208)| accomplish what Chares had failed in doing. But no mention 1266 Lysand(57) | them a speech full of the fairest promises of mercy and clemency. 1267 Lysand | Pharnabazus promised him fairly, and wrote a long and full 1268 Hannib | himself in his way in the Falernian territory. Here, though 1269 Iphicr(112)| noticed by Aeschines de Fals. Leg. haud longe à principio."----- 1270 Timoth(132)| De famâ.] For his honour as a citizen. 1271 Epamin(148)| Tristem et severum senem in familiaritate antepossuerit.] "He preferred 1272 Epamin(148)| grave and austere old man in familiarity," i. e. as an associate. ~ 1273 Timoleo(216)| Fana deserta.] Bos retains deserta, 1274 Alcib(65) | but, as I suppose, from a fancy of the transcriber, who 1275 Attic(259)| manceps factus est.] The farmers, mancipes, of the revenues 1276 Cimon | liberality, that though he had farms and gardens in several parts, 1277 Pausan | of his country, but its fashions and dress. He adopted regal 1278 Eumen | Craterus were said to be fast approaching, and to have 1279 Hannib | the senate. The conscript fathers, who thought that they would 1280 Eumen | sufficient for enduring fatigue; yet he was not so much 1281 Attic | inclinations of leading men, the faults of the generals, and the 1282 Cato(249)| This passage is in some way faulty. Bos thinks that the number 1283 Alcib | power of the people, but a favourer of the aristocracy. Though 1284 Dion | assassinated in his own house on a feast-day, IX.----Change of feeling 1285 Attic | and on the last day of February, in the consulship of Cnaeus 1286 Kings(222)| libra quem separatim de eo fecimus.----Bos. ~ 1287 Iphicr(106)| Peltam pro parmâ fecit.] The pelta, was smaller 1288 Attic | determined on ceasing to feed the disease; as, by the 1289 Attic | which they would afterwards feel for him. ~V. He had an uncle, 1290 Pelop | the struggle was between fellow-citizens, in his own house. The glory 1291 Timoleo | sight of his ungrateful fellow-creatures. ~II. In the meantime, after 1292 Attic | when the temple of Jupiter Feretrius, built in the Capitol by 1293 Iphicr(113)| Diod. Sic. xv. 78; xvi. 7, Ferizon. ad Aelian. Var. Hist. ii. 1294 Pre(6) | compared with Hor. A. P. 232, Festis matrona moveri jussa diebus, 1295 Attic(252)| Versura, according to Festus süb voce, properly signifies 1296 Frag | care that I should have the fewest anxieties in my old age; 1297 Themist(35) | Admetus as o!nta au)tw~| ou) fi/lon. ~ 1298 Dion | for fortune, through her fickleness, endeavoured to sink him 1299 Hannib(243)| Illud recusavit, ne id a se fieri postularent.] "He refused 1300 Dion | died at the age of about fifty-five years, four years after 1301 Miltiad | portico called Poecile,22 his figure was placed first in the 1302 Kings | resentment so far only, that filial duty overcame it.224 Of 1303 Pre(6) | unsound. Goerenz, ad Cic. de Fin. ii. 20, would read quae 1304 Hannib(237)| have been in a great degree financial; but judicial duties were 1305 Datam | Aspis of Cappadocia, IV.----Finds that the courtiers are plotting 1306 Datam | pointing this out with his finger, and the other was looking 1307 Attic(253)| Rigaltius among the Auctores Finium Regundorum, p. 335, five 1308 Attic(276)| fortunam, quàm se ipse, finxit.] A very inapplicable observation. 1309 Lysand | those were wont to be the firmest friends who had been steady 1310 Chabr | enemy with the knee placed firmly against the shield, and 1311 Kings | nothing but absolute and firmly-established sovereignty; and to attain 1312 Thrasib | above him in integrity, firmness, greatness of mind, and 1313 Dion | and that, if he found him fit for the undertaking, he 1314 Eumen | Thus Eumenes, at the age of five-and-forty years, after having attended 1315 Hannib | commander-in-chief, at the age of five-and-twenty, subdued in war, during 1316 Miltiad | the night; and when the flame of it was seen by the townsmen 1317 Hannib | litter, he cut off Caius Flaminius the consul at the lake Trasimenus, 1318 Attic | accordingly solicited by Caius Flavius, an intimate friend of Brutus, 1319 Dion | vessel in which he might flee to a place of safety. He 1320 Thrasib(78) | Matrem timidi flere non solere.] I have translated 1321 Timoleo | law, and several persons, flocking about him, would have curbed 1322 Kings | with his dominions in a flourishing condition. Nor in the course 1323 Eumen(189)| or twelve hundred of the flower of the Macedonian cavalry. 1324 Hamilc | contrary, often attacked the foe when occasion presented 1325 Datam | consequence would be that their foes would be unable to resist, 1326 Datam(135)| that duplica refers to the "folding" of the cloak as it was 1327 Pausan | immediately blocked up the folding-doors of the temple, and pulled 1328 Eumen | got in readiness; and then forage and dressed provisions for 1329 Epamin | glory of Agamemnon in war, "Forbear," he rejoined, "Meneclidas, 1330 Frag | abandoned and deserted? Jupiter forbid you to persist in that, 1331 Hamilc | happened that Hasdrubal was forbidden by the censor of public 1332 Eumen | touch the ground with its fore-feet; he then forced it, by lashing 1333 Eumen(199)| round the body behind the fore-legs. ~ 1334 Eumen(199)| head, however, but all the fore-part of the body must have been 1335 Attic | persons by letter, he not only forebore to trouble Atticus, but 1336 Eumen | escape), if he, being a foreigner, should have the chief authority 1337 Epamin | took his stand among the foremost. ~Of his merits and his 1338 Alcib | the Lacedaemonians, and foresaw that, if he gave him information 1339 Hannib | made his way through the forests of the Pyrenees,231 he engaged, 1340 Lysand(58) | Quàm verè de eo foret judicatum.] That is, how 1341 Attic | place during his life, but foretold, like a prophet, the things 1342 Attic | the citizenship of Rome is forfeited by taking that of another 1343 Agesil | to winter, and erecting forges for arms there, made preparations 1344 Epamin | I do not wonder; and I forgive you: but quit the city at 1345 Datam | pretending that he had forgotten something at their conference. 1346 Phocion | sentenced to death, after some formalities of law had been despatched, 1347 Frag | place.~I intend to swear formally that, apart from those who 1348 Agesil | unpropitious with regard to the formation of his body; for he was 1349 Pelop(169)| quemque ex proximo locum fors obtulisset, eo patriam recuperare 1350 Phocion | was granted him, but being forthwith sentenced to death, after 1351 Summ | on the Lacedaemonians to fortify Decelia. Ib.~411. ------------- 1352 Cimon | had submitted, with great fortitude, to the ill-feeling of his 1353 Cimon(55) | That is, casu obvium, fortuito oblatum, "thrown in his 1354 | forty 1355 Timoleo | might have been thought the founder of those cities. The citadel 1356 Cato | of them Origines; in the fourth is related the first Carthaginian 1357 Pre(5) | Graecos, says Cic. de Rep. fragm. lib. iv., opprobrio fuit 1358 Frag(296)| kindly made a translation of fragment V, which I have also consulted.~ 1359 Cato(245)| not far from the modern Frascati. ~ 1360 Timoleo | against him, called him a fratricide, and destitute of natural 1361 Agesil | observe the truce without fraud; to which engagement Agesilaus 1362 Eumen(188)| honorificentius.] Because freedmen and slaves, for the most 1363 Themist | people, slaves as well as freemen, should carry on the work, 1364 Hannib | hostages might reside at Fregellae,236 and that their prisoners 1365 Dion | in the city, in the most frequented part of it, after having 1366 Datam(140)| Quibus fretus.] I have given the quibus 1367 Aristid(42) | text, and followed that of Freund and others, who make it 1368 Datam | man of huge stature, and frightful aspect, being of a black 1369 Miltiad(18) | This is alleged among the frivolous reasons for the Persian 1370 Eumen(203)| Fructum oculis capere.] "To gain 1371 Hannib(241)| Antiocho fugato.] Viz., in the battle near 1372 Agesil(180)| fuisset, Spartam futuram non fuisse.] "Unless he had been, Sparta 1373 Agesil(180)| Nisi ille fuisset, Spartam futuram non fuisse.] " 1374 Attic(286)| religiously determined to fulfil it. ~ 1375 Themist(29) | drachmae to every person of full-grown age.----Bos. But the division 1376 Attic | projected by some that a private fund should be formed by the 1377 Attic | had directed, without any funereal pomp, all the respectable 1378 Eumen | he replied, "As the most furious lion, or the most savage 1379 Hannib | Marcus Claudius and Lucius Furius were consuls, ambassadors 1380 Attic | profusion. His household furniture was moderate, not superabundant, 1381 Agesil(180)| Nisi ille fuisset, Spartam futuram non fuisse.] "Unless he 1382 Themist | shrewdest conjectures as to the future. Hence it happened that 1383 Iphicr(108)| Schol. Smith's Dict. of G. and R. Ant. art. Army, 1384 Agesil | said that "he was a great gainer by doing so, for Tissaphernes, 1385 Attic(253)| stand. The modius was 1 gal. 7.8576 pints English. ~ 1386 Cato | the praetorship of Lucius Galba, who spoiled the Lusitanians. 1387 Iphicr(110)| it was occasioned by the gallantry of the Fabian family, that 1388 Alcib | multitude flocked to his galley as if he had come alone; 1389 Hannib(232)| at Clastidium (a town of Gallia Cispadana, at no great distance 1390 Kings | he was going to see the games. Of Epirus, the only great 1391 Cimon | consequently died in the public gaol, Cimon was kept in prison, 1392 Datam | it, unsheathed, under his garment, and observed to Datames, 1393 Pausan | Hellespont, to expel the garrisons of the barbarians from those 1394 Hannib | him to go round to all the gates of the castle, and bring 1395 Frag(300)| from Nepos may be found, I gather, in Suetonius and Aulus 1396 Hannib | which separate Italy from Gaul, and which no one had ever 1397 Eumen | classes of people crowded to gaze upon Eumenes, those who, 1398 Datam | While the people were all gazing at him, on account of the 1399 Attic(265)| from. Appian, 9H boulh_ ge/ra toi=j a)nelou~sin w(j 1400 Alcib(62) | Val. Max, iii. 1, and Aul. Gell. xv. 17. Pericles appears, 1401 Hannib | among them Cnaeus Servilius Geminus, who had been consul the 1402 Hannib | when Hasdrubal was made general-in-chief, he had the command of all 1403 Thrasib | issue is transferred from generalship to the strength and fury 1404 Attic(273)| judicii must be taken as a genitive of the quality, Ille autem, 1405 Epamin | master of his passions, gentle in disposition, and patient 1406 Pre(2) | Hoc genus scriptures.] These brief 1407 Datam(139)| Captianorum. A people unknown to geographers. Schottus suggested that 1408 Attic(253)| and Ursinus, following Georg. Agricola de Mens. et Pond. 1409 Pre(4) | Sororem germanam.] A half-sister by the mother' 1410 Cato | was even then beginning to germinate, might be repressed. For 1411 Dion | fate of his son, IV.----Gets possession of Syracuse, 1412 Pausan | the temple, he gave up the ghost. When some said that his 1413 Frag(297)| This comes from the Codex Gif., according to Savaro and 1414 Attic(253)| manuscripts of Manutius, Gifanius, Schottus, Leid, and Medic. 1415 Kings(224)| Parysatis, and put to death Gingis, who had merely been her 1416 Agesil(178)| Ab insolentia gloriae.] "From the presumptuousness 1417 Timoth | pulvinar 125 decreed to that goddess. And that the remembrance 1418 Pre(6) | generally been thought unsound. Goerenz, ad Cic. de Fin. ii. 20, 1419 Pausan | He sent with them, also, Gongylus of Eretria, to carry a letter 1420 Themist | and carried off all their goods that could be moved, partly 1421 Hannib | went off to the people of Gortyn, in Crete, that he might 1422 Hannib | at his own residence. The Gortynians, meanwhile, guarded the 1423 Hannib(242)| of the old editions have Gortyniis praesentibus, a manifest 1424 Hannib(232)| preposition or any word to govern it, cannot be right. It 1425 Miltiad | would be deprived of their governments, and suffer punishment at 1426 Attic(253)| Agricola de Mens. et Pond. Gr. et Rom. lib. ii., substituted 1427 Frag | Cornelia, mother of the Gracchi, from the book of Cornelius 1428 Dion | of knowledge, and extreme grace of person, which is no small 1429 Eumen | was a man not only of a graceful 205 and dignified bearing, 1430 Pre | accomplishments, that he danced gracefully, and played skilfully on 1431 Attic | make it evident that the graces of it were natural, not 1432 Attic | regain his authority. But he gradually incurred blame from some 1433 Kings(221)| Graecae gentis.] All the preceding 1434 Alcib(74) | Primus Graeciae civitatis.] He was the first 1435 Pre(5) | of Alcibiades, c. 2. Apud Graecos, says Cic. de Rep. fragm. 1436 Kings | three wives, and several grand-children had been born to him. ~III. 1437 Attic | to attain. Atticus had a granddaughter, the daughter of Agrippa, 1438 Alcib | surpassed all the Athenians in grandeur and magnificence of living; 1439 Timoth | changeableness of fortune; for the grandson was obliged, to the great 1440 Epamin | as long as 150 he could grapple, and contend standing, with 1441 Eumen | encountered, and as they grappled with one another, and fell 1442 Attic(288)| Nunquam cum matre in gratiam rediisse.] Never having 1443 Attic | might find their intellect gratified no less than their appetite, 1444 Lysand(59) | Librum graveni multis verbis.] "A heavy 1445 Aristid(39) | communications, whether on graver or lighter topics, the one 1446 Attic | to veracity, just as his gravity was mingled with affability; 1447 Epamin | and had come to those two grounds of reproach, said that " 1448 Miltiad | point of taking the town, a grove on the main land, which 1449 Pausan | king's pleasure was, and growing more eager for the accomplishment 1450 Dion | a power of fifty years' growth, defended by five hundred 1451 Alcib | favour; for he gave him Grunium, a strong-hold in Phrygia, 1452 Pausan(47) | not actually a king, but guardian to the young prince Pleistarchus, 1453 Frag(298)| the Codex Guelferbytanus Gudianus 2788, saec. xiii, of Cicero' 1454 Frag(298)| first page of the Codex Guelferbytanus Gudianus 2788, saec. xiii, 1455 Timoth | having such value for his guest-friend, that he chose to hazard 1456 Cimon | it. But as he enjoyed the guest-friendship 54 of the Lacedaemonians, 1457 Attic | citizens. ~X. Being under the guidance of his own judgment, however, 1458 Themist | and not suspecting any guile to be hidden under it, engaged, 1459 Epamin | began to apply himself to gymnastic exercises, he studied not 1460 Pre | house,8 which is called the gynaeconitis, and into which nobody goes 1461 Pre(5) | adolescentibus, si amatores non haberent. See Maxiinus Tyrius, Dissert, 1462 Themist | into Asia Minor, fixed his habitation at Magnesia. For the king 1463 Eumen(206)| Eumenes, and ends with talem habuit exitum vitae, a fault similar 1464 Datam | complexion, and having long hair and a long beard, in a splendid 1465 Miltiad(10) | Stesagoras, the son of his half-brother Cimon, and brother to Miltiades 1466 Pausan | soon as he was carried, half-dead, out of the temple, he gave 1467 Themist(27) | to change Acharnanam into Halicarnassiam, from having read in Plutarch 1468 Eumen | head 199 so high with a halter, that it could not quite 1469 Summ | 229. -----------'s death. Ham. 3.~221. Hannibal becomes 1470 Pelop(169)| locus in this passage, as in Hamilc. c. 1, locus nocendi. Quemque 1471 Timoth(119)| Many editions, for id, have hanc, sc. pecuniam, but "id" 1472 Eumen | him, after being severely handled, to return into Media to 1473 Eumen | tallness of person as for handsomeness of shape. ~XII. As Antigonus 1474 Conon | from Pharnabazus. ~V. What happens to other men happened to 1475 Alcib | into the sea. ~VII. This happiness of Alcibiades proved by 1476 Attic | been in the enjoyment of so happy a state of health, that 1477 Conon | enemy, desired Conon to harass the Lacedemonians with war, 1478 Thrasib(79) | One of the minor harbours of Athens. ~ 1479 Epamin | the support of all Greece, hardly took one city in ten years; 1480 Alcib | so resigned himself to a hardy way of life, that he surpassed 1481 Epamin | taught to play upon the harp, and to sing to the sound 1482 Attic(258)| in the proscriptions. A hasta, or spear, set up, was the 1483 Attic(258)| Ad hastam publicam nunquam, accessit.] 1484 Iphicr(112)| Aeschines de Fals. Leg. haud longe à principio."----- 1485 Pausan | conduct himself still more haughtily, and to aim at still higher 1486 Pausan | those who sought it; he gave haughty replies and severe commands. 1487 Attic | and we relate this, not as hearsay, but as what we know, for 1488 Lysand(59) | graveni multis verbis.] "A heavy letter in many words." ~ 1489 Eumen | leap up and throw back its heels; which motions excited perspiration 1490 Pausan | the Greeks account it a heinous crime to profane. To this 1491 Attic | by his will, and made him heir to three-fourths of his 1492 Pausan | certain class of men called Helots, of whom a great number 1493 Cato | the commons 246 with Caius Helvius. As praetor he had the province 1494 Miltiad | courier of the class called hemerodromoi,20 to Lacedaemon, to acquaint 1495 Eumen | taken by manoeuvring, he was hemmed in by numbers; still he 1496 Attic(289)| others, prefer ordinavit. But Hensinger thinks ornavit may very 1497 Eumen | of him, were absent, and Hephaestion, for whom Alexander, as 1498 Hannib | letter-carrier in a boat with a herald's staff; who, when he reached 1499 Alcib(63) | Omnes Hermae.] Mercury was reckoned the 1500 Alcib(64) | these words, Andocidisque Hermes vocatus est. ~