Encyclopædia metropolitana; or, Universal dictionary of knowledge, ed. by E. Smedley, Hugh J. Rose and Henry J. Rose. [With] Plates, Volume 10Fellowes, 1845 - Encyclopedias and dictionaries |
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Page 37
... mind possessed in the manage- ment of affairs , and at the same time gave proof of the follies of mankind in the errors which they commit in order to obtain dominion for , utterly regardless of future consequences , if she could but ...
... mind possessed in the manage- ment of affairs , and at the same time gave proof of the follies of mankind in the errors which they commit in order to obtain dominion for , utterly regardless of future consequences , if she could but ...
Page 59
... mind proved unequal to the mighty contest in which he was about to engage ; and his weakness nowhere shewed itself with more fatal effects than in his contemptible jealousy of Han- nibal , who still administered to him the most valuable ...
... mind proved unequal to the mighty contest in which he was about to engage ; and his weakness nowhere shewed itself with more fatal effects than in his contemptible jealousy of Han- nibal , who still administered to him the most valuable ...
Page 74
... mind is fraught , and which , so far from being acquired in this life by any collection from particulars , are the tests which the mind from our earliest infancy applies in the arrangement of particulars ; that inborn and inherent ...
... mind is fraught , and which , so far from being acquired in this life by any collection from particulars , are the tests which the mind from our earliest infancy applies in the arrangement of particulars ; that inborn and inherent ...
Page 77
... mind to consider the dialogue as a serious and solemn discussion ; and the most ridiculous among the etymons have been quoted by grave authors * with particular approbation . 3656 . B. C. 348 . • The Io is throughout a banter on the ...
... mind to consider the dialogue as a serious and solemn discussion ; and the most ridiculous among the etymons have been quoted by grave authors * with particular approbation . 3656 . B. C. 348 . • The Io is throughout a banter on the ...
Page 81
... mind , originating in some delusion or misapprehension of our proper interests if that the real freedom of a rational being consists in See his Epistola Critica ad Van Heude , prefixed to Van Heude's Specimen Criticum in Platonem . Lugd ...
... mind , originating in some delusion or misapprehension of our proper interests if that the real freedom of a rational being consists in See his Epistola Critica ad Van Heude , prefixed to Van Heude's Specimen Criticum in Platonem . Lugd ...
Common terms and phrases
Achæan afterwards Alexander allies amongst Antigonus Antiochus Antonius appears Appian Aratus Aristocratical Aristotle Aristotle's arms army arrived Asia attack attempt Atticum Augustus authority battle Biography Brutus Cæsar Caius camp Cato cause cavalry character Cicero Cisalpine Gaul citizens civil Cleomenes Clodius command Commonwealth conduct Consul Consulship Crassus death defeated Demetrius Dion Cassius Domitius enemy epist Epitome favour followed force friends Gaul Gracchus Greece Greek History honour Hyrcanus Ibid Italy Judæa King legions Lepidus Livy Lucullus Macedon Macedonian Marius ment Metellus military Mithridates murder nature occasion Octavius officers Orat Parthians party person Philip Plato plunder Plutarch Polyb Pompey Pompey's popular possession Prætor Princes probably proposed Province Ptolemy received Roman Rome Scipio seems Senate sent siege slaves soldiers soon Spain Strabo success Suetonius Sylla Syria tion town Tribunes Triumvirs troops Valerius Maximus Velleius Paterculus victory whilst whole καὶ περὶ
Popular passages
Page 293 - It is not uncommon for those who have grown wise by the labour of others to add a little of their own, and overlook their masters. Addison is now despised by some who perhaps would never have seen his defects but by the lights which he afforded them.
Page 27 - So he and his sons fled into the mountains, and left all that ever they had in the city. Then many that sought after justice and judgment went down into the wilderness, to dwell there: both they, and their children, and their wives, and their cattle; because afflictions increased sore upon them.
Page 95 - Albeit in these days, the depths of that old learning are rarely fathomed, and yet it were happy for these lands, if our young nobility and gentry, instead of modern maxims, would imbibe the notions of the great men of antiquity. But in these freethinking times many an empty head is shook at Aristotle and Plato, as well as at the Holy Scriptures. And the writings of those celebrated ancients are by most men treated on a foot with the dry and barbarous lucubrations of the schoolmen.
Page 27 - Ananias, Azarias, and Misael, by believing were saved out of the flame. Daniel for his innocency was delivered from the mouth of lions.
Page 32 - Judas' friends came together, and said unto Jonathan, since thy brother Judas died, we have no man like him to go forth against our enemies, and Bacchides, and against them of our nation that are adversaries to us.
Page 275 - Urbanus for the year 709 ; and he was holding that office when he resolved to become the assassin of the man whose government he had twice acknowledged, by consenting himself to act in a public station under it. Sir Matthew Hale did well to accept the place of judge during the usurpation of Cromwell ; but what should we think of him if, whilst filling that office, he had associated himself with Colonel Titus, and other such wretches, in their plans to remove the protector by assassination ? C. Cassius...
Page 95 - It might very well be thought serious trifling to tell my readers that the greatest men had ever a high esteem for Plato ; whose writings are the touchstone of a hasty and shallow mind...
Page 277 - Plin., 7, 25), and to have made prisoners a million more, many of whom were destined to perish as gladiators, and all were torn from their country and reduced to slavery. The slaughter which he occasioned in...
Page 274 - Cloditis to annex that island to the Roman Empire. It appears, however, that he did not copy the example of Cato's integrity ; for having become the creditor of the citizens of Salamis to a large amount,§ he employed one M.
Page 285 - These sceptical topics, indeed, are only sufficient to prove, that the senses alone are not implicitly to be depended on ; but that we must correct their evidence by reason, and by considerations derived from the nature of the medium, the distance of the object, and the .disposition of the organ, in order to render them, within their sphere, the proper criteria of truth and falsehood.