Two Essays on Old Age & FriendshipMacmillan, 1900 - 210 pages |
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Page 2
... object , of his political life , —were nearly all gone , dead on the bloody fields of Pharsalia , Thapsus , and Munda , ar living in obscure exile in distant islands . The men with whom he was now forced to live were of a new genera ...
... object , of his political life , —were nearly all gone , dead on the bloody fields of Pharsalia , Thapsus , and Munda , ar living in obscure exile in distant islands . The men with whom he was now forced to live were of a new genera ...
Page 81
... object of pity who found their pleasure in the cultivation of the land ? In my opinion , scarcely any life can be ... objects of desire to certain people , let us make our peace with pleasure . For the good and hard - working farmer's ...
... object of pity who found their pleasure in the cultivation of the land ? In my opinion , scarcely any life can be ... objects of desire to certain people , let us make our peace with pleasure . For the good and hard - working farmer's ...
Page 90
... object of senile avarice may be I cannot con- ceive . For can there be anything more absurd than to seek more journey money , the less there remains of the journey ? 19. There remains the fourth reason , death ; but which more than ...
... object of senile avarice may be I cannot con- ceive . For can there be anything more absurd than to seek more journey money , the less there remains of the journey ? 19. There remains the fourth reason , death ; but which more than ...
Page 106
... object of my reverence and affection . Nor is it only those whom I knew that I long to see ; it is those also of whom I have been told and have read , whom I have myself recorded in my history . When I am setting out for that , there is ...
... object of my reverence and affection . Nor is it only those whom I knew that I long to see ; it is those also of whom I have been told and have read , whom I have myself recorded in my history . When I am setting out for that , there is ...
Page 135
... objects of ambition serve for particular ends -riches for use , power for securing homage , office for reputation , pleasure for enjoyment , health for freedom from pain and the full use of the functions of the body . But friendship ...
... objects of ambition serve for particular ends -riches for use , power for securing homage , office for reputation , pleasure for enjoyment , health for freedom from pain and the full use of the functions of the body . But friendship ...
Other editions - View all
Two Essays on Old Age & Friendship Marcus Tullius Cicero,Evelyn S. 1843-1906 Shuckburgh No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
affection Age and Friendship Atticus augur better bodily strength body Book brought BUCHHEIM C. M. YONGE called Cato character Cicero consul consulship course Cyrus delight discourse eager Edited by F. T. enjoy Ennius essay F. T. PALGRAVE fact feeling flatterer fortune FRANCIS TURNER PALGRAVE friends Gaius Fannius Gaius Laelius give happen happy honour horse immortal intellect intimacy Laelius live look LORD TENNYSON Lucius Lyrical Poems Lysander man's Manius Curius Marcus Cato Maximus means memory mind mortal nature never noble old age Omar Khayyám once opinion Paulus philosophers Plato Poets Publius Publius Rupilius Pyrrhus Quintus regard remember Rupilius Scaevola Scipio Selected and arranged Senate shew ship Sir NOEL PATON soul speak speech Spurius Spurius Maelius Tarentum things thought Tiberius Coruncanius Tiberius Gracchus tion Titus Flamininus told Translated true truth virtue warmth weak wisdom wise wish word young youth
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Page 93 - Again, just as apples when unripe are torn from trees, but when ripe and mellow drop down, so it is violence that takes life from young men, ripeness from old. This ripeness is so delightful to me, that, as I approach nearer to death, I seem as it were to be sighting land, and to be coming to port at last after a long voyage.
Page 60 - For he kept his mind at full stretch like a bow, and never gave in to old age by growing slack. He maintained not merely an influence but an absolute command over his family: his slaves feared him, his sons were in awe of him, all loved him. In that family, indeed, ancestral custom and discipline were in full vigour. The fact is that old age is respectable just as long as it asserts itself, maintains its proper rights, and is not enslaved to any one. For as I admire a young man who has something...