This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
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A38761 | May not the Muses as well delight themselves in our Rivers of Cam, Isis, and Thames; as the Sein, the Loire, and the Tiber? |
A38761 | Providence has ordain''d us all things at home necessary for our Body, and why not for our Mind? |
A38761 | Pyrrhus his Embassadour returned with this answer; whom when Pyrrhus asked, what sort of place he found Rome? |
A38761 | Quis dignus transferre tuas Dux inclyte chartas, Romanosque sonos maternâ reddere linguâ? |
A38761 | Why does the young Gentleman visit Forrein Countries, but to learn History by the eye, and to observe Actions and Places? |
A42508 | 33. that makes me inclinable to this opinion; for there Manasseh rears up Altars broken down, plants Groves for Baalim: To what purpose I pray? |
A42508 | Nec dum Laomedonteae sentis perjuria gent ● s? |
A42508 | They were but Wood, Stone, or Metal, that could neither hear, nor deliver us: and are not the Images of the Saints of the same kind? |
A42508 | Vis ne mihi esse paterfamilias? |
A42508 | What qualities do the Papists fancy in them, that do cause them to excel the Idols of the Heathens? |
A42508 | Yet these were they that all the Prophets do cry against: How can therefore the Romanists reckon themselves guiltless? |
A43431 | Are Iland Brittaines able to resist Our prowesse, that so many fields have won? |
A43431 | Have I endur''d your flatterers and flies? |
A43431 | Here Gallant men at Arms and Roman Force Are come as friends and entred in our List, Who''i st that can approve his witlesse course? |
A43431 | Is this the Guerdon I have for my paine? |
A43431 | Quid gens sine mente? |
A43431 | YOu see the end of Luxury and Riot, What meanes this flesh and blood so to Rebell? |
A67248 | 4. Who are the true Administraters of it? |
A67248 | And what doth not he deserve, who labours a Resormation of the most Ingenuous part of the Nation? |
A67248 | How a Man may do each present days work with Christian Cheerfulness? |
A67248 | How can a City be 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A67248 | How to bear each present days Cross with Christian Patience? |
A67248 | If it be enquir''d what kind of Hawking was then in use among the Romans, whether like our Modern? |
A67248 | If the Municipia Coined such, and so many that remain, why not Rome many more? |
A67248 | Then what is become of those infinite numbers of Denarii stamped before the Emperours? |
A67248 | What Water Baptism is? |
A67248 | What giveth right to it? |
A67248 | What is the end for which it was Instituted? |
A67248 | Whether all that were number''d in the Tribus Rustica were referr''d or listed in some Curia? |
A67248 | and of what Continuance that hath been? |
A67248 | ☞ Wall''s Baptism Anatomized, being propounded in Five Queries? |
A49146 | And can we think it strange, that he should exhibit the successours of the First in their lively colours? |
A49146 | And that he spake otherwise of them, than Tertullian, Eusebius, Paulus Diaconus, and some others have done? |
A49146 | Are you ignorant( say those Ambassadors to Alexander) that the tallest Trees which are so long growing, may be beat down and rooted up in an instant? |
A49146 | How can it be imagined, that such a man was a Christian, who founded his whole belief of Heavenly matters upon such erronious maxims? |
A49146 | How many Ghosts are made to appear; Armies ready to ingage in Heaven; with Lakes and Rivers of Blood; and the like? |
A49146 | Human wit knows not the things here below, how then can it be satisfied in the search after Divinity? |
A49146 | Is it not ridiculous to say upon so serious a Subject, that the Senate of Rome was composed of as many Kings, as there were Senators? |
A49146 | Was he not obliged in duty, to reproach the Children of the last, with their strange cruelties, in spilling the blood of their nearest Relations? |
A49146 | this infamous passion he had for Bagoas was not then esteemed against Nature? |
A43430 | And as for you, Gentlemen, what do you stay of? |
A43430 | And must all this be tamely suffer''d? |
A43430 | For what Army can they have to support his Pretensions, who are forc''d to make Lictors execute the Commission of Proconsul? |
A43430 | For who is a Stranger to the Fame of Albinus''s Luxury, and his Way of Living, more resembling the Brutishness of a Hog, than the Life of a Soldier? |
A43430 | Have I for this born your drunken Frollicks, and all the Affronts and Indignities you have been pleas''d to put upon me for these many Years? |
A43430 | How ought I then to resent this Behaviour? |
A43430 | Is it usual, says he, for any Man to come armed to a Collation? |
A43430 | Or, admitting they had Men, what would that avail without Arms? |
A43430 | What did all the Booty and Prisoners of War avail, if the Subject was despoil''d of all he had by Injury and Oppression? |
A43430 | Why do n''t you execute your Warrant, and dispatch me out of this wretched State of Anxiety and Misery? |
A43430 | how shall wretched I be apportion''d and carv''d between you? |
A37779 | Ah, reply''d Cassius, what generous Roman wou''d suffer you to die for his Liberty? |
A37779 | And what Countries have not we conquer''d and brought to Subjection; making the Rising and Setting of the Sun, the Bounds of our Dominions? |
A37779 | But say, That the Divine Power shou''d so protect you as to out- live such Dangers, wou''d you also out- live your Glories? |
A37779 | But, reply''d Cassius, suppose you are call''d thither? |
A37779 | Caesar struck Casca through the Arm with his Dagger, crying out, Vile Traitor, what do you mean? |
A37779 | One of the Messengers very angrily ask''d, Is this well done, Charmia? |
A37779 | Or what Benefit can the People reap from so noble a Victory, if it be us''d only as an Instrument for their greater Slavery? |
A37779 | The Romans confess''d they never met with more resolute Enemies; and demanding of''em, What made''em fly after so brave a resistance? |
A37779 | The young Men having executed their Father''s Commands, enquir''d of the Oracle, Which of them shou''d be Prince of Rome? |
A37779 | What Nation have not either begg''d Peace at our Gates, or felt the Fury of our Arms at their own? |
A37779 | You pretend ye have been affrented, but what have the Women done that they must be impoverish''d? |
A37779 | if they are as blameable as the rest, why do you not proscribe''em too? |
A14316 | As he that, whatsoever is eminent in glory, doth as if it were of his bloud thinke himselfe bound to maintaine? |
A14316 | How doth hee hold him in, honorably but yet not securely? |
A14316 | THe businesse of these sixteene yeares seeing they are fixed in the sight and mindes of all men, who would go about by parcells in wordes to deliver? |
A14316 | The magnificence whereof who will admire in Caesar, but the favour of fortune, who can but admire? |
A14316 | To whose opinion I should indeed subscribe: but how farre doth Marcus Cato differ from them? |
A14316 | WHat works hath he founded in his owne name,& in that of his family and kindred? |
A14316 | What was there worth regard among the Orators before Isocrates? |
A14316 | When was there ever a greater rarity of death? |
A14316 | Who can sufficiently admire these charges of fortune? |
A14316 | With what a gravity, as a Senator and judge, not as a Prince and President, did he heare, and expedite causes? |
A14316 | With what prudence did he call to him Rhascupolis the killer of Cotys his brothers sonne? |
A14316 | and being needy of meanes and raging within himself, his forces might decay and languish? |
A14316 | or when fortune changeth doth not also change ● is faith? |
A14316 | the adornements of his triumph being correspondent to the greatnesse of the acts which he had performed? |
A14316 | what after his auditors and their disciples? |
A14316 | what that his nephew by his sonne Drusus? |
A14316 | who doth thinke any thankes due to men in calamity? |
A14316 | who these uncertaine accidents of humaine Condition? |
A14316 | who would either hope or feare things distering from the present, or contrary to that which was expected? |
A14316 | with how great temper and with al commoditie did we see things done by the authority of the prince? |
A14316 | with how magnificent an equall temper of minde hath hee repaired the worke of Pompey which was consumed by fire? |
A14316 | with how religious a magnificence, and beyond the faith of any mortall man, doth hee now build a Temple for his father? |
A14316 | with how vaste workes was the enimie so block''t up with the guardes of our army, that hee might not breake out any way? |
A14316 | with what celerity did he ruine Libo, that ungrateful man, and one that did labour for innovations? |
A33186 | Aemilius seeing some Souldiers running after one of these unfortunate People, asked, Who the Proscribed man was? |
A33186 | And do not you stay here to sit like Mutes, and wait upon me for my guard? |
A33186 | And in another place, Is it out of fear of Octavius''s power that Cicero believes we ought to allow him these Honours? |
A33186 | And then, when he demanded of them, Who they would send? |
A33186 | And why do ye not try to persuade me by reason, without obliging me by force to follow other Opinions than those I have already? |
A33186 | And yet, Who had a mind to go into Aegypt? |
A33186 | Antonius asked Cassius, If he had not yet a concealed Dagger? |
A33186 | At last, when he saw him with his Dagger in his hand, coming towards him, he cried out, What my Son, and thou too? |
A33186 | Can I, sayes Curio, look Caesar in the Face, after having lost an Army which he hath trusted to my Conduct? |
A33186 | Do ye not believe also that my life must be in danger amongst the Relations and Friends of those who cruel ● y murthered him? |
A33186 | So he mounted upon a Tribunal, and demanding of them, What they had to say to him in relation to their rewards? |
A33186 | To which Pompey reply''d, If my Son should provoke and rebell against me, what would you advise me to? |
A33186 | What fear at present are ye in for the City, which is our common Countrey? |
A33186 | What imminent danger threatens it? |
A33186 | What is that to me if for the reward of defeating Antonius, it demanded that one succeed him? |
A33186 | What reason have we to contribute to a War wherein we have no manner of Interest? |
A33186 | What security, said he, can ye pretend to have now for those Houses, those Inheritances, and those Goods which my Father allotted you? |
A33186 | Wherefore, said he,( as if Antonius had been himself present) should thy hatred to me extend it self to Caesar, who has deserved so well of thee? |
A33186 | Who starved the People? |
A33186 | Who was the Ladies Captain? |
A33186 | may he not stifle himself, or beat out his brains against the Walls? |
A21131 | And now if it be demanded whether reading or practice haue the first place in this Arte, and serueth as a foundation to the rest of the building? |
A21131 | And to conclude, who would imagine that Ambiorix should enterprise such a matter, without any ground, or certaintie thereof? |
A21131 | As for the counsell of Cotta, and such as were of the contrarie opinion, what expectation could be had thereof? |
A21131 | But concerning the issue and euent of our deliberations, what can bee more truelie saide then that of the Poet? |
A21131 | But if he were so madde, as to make warre vpon them, why should they be affraid of him? |
A21131 | But if that may be auoided, which is easily done: shal not that disposition then, be vtterlie vnprofitable, and free from all terror? |
A21131 | Concerning the vse of this triple battell, what can be said more then Lipsius hath done? |
A21131 | For Cur desperes nunc posse fieri, quod iam toties factum est? |
A21131 | For how small is the beauty which nature hath giuen to the eie- pleasing diamond, when it is not adorned with an artificiall forme? |
A21131 | For if euery man should prescribe, who should obay? |
A21131 | For what resemblance( say they) is betweene the customs of our times,& the actions of those ancient Heroes? |
A21131 | Pulfio at a time, that the fortification was very sharply assaulted, called to Varenus, and asked him why he now stood doubtfull? |
A21131 | What shall we be able to doe in the warres, wanting the thinges that should giue vs strength and sustenance? |
A21131 | What then is the cause that the Romaines do ouercome, and that those that doe vse the phalanx are voyde of the hope of victorie? |
A21131 | What then? |
A21131 | What then? |
A21131 | cur denique fortunam periclitaretur? |
A21131 | cur vulnerari pateretur optime de se meritos milites? |
A21131 | or answerable to the report which was bruted of their valour? |
A21131 | or waied in the ballance of such false iudgmentes? |
A21131 | or what auaile all these where there wanteth an eye to admire it, a iudgement to value it, and an heart to imbrace it? |
A21131 | or what did it attempt worthy such a multitude? |
A21131 | or what good is in either of them if the light doe not illuminate it? |
A21131 | or what other place he did looke for to make triall of his manhood? |
A21131 | or what perfection can the forme giue without a foile to strengthten it? |
A21131 | or why should they despaire either of their owne prowesse, or of Caesars circumspectnesse? |
A21131 | shall a soldiour take euery place as hee findeth it, and vse no arte to qualifie the disaduantages thereof? |
A21131 | shall this defence bee generall, and not distinguished, but a confusion made of times past, and his latter actions? |
A01289 | & no way to make Caesar odious, but by incurring the same obloquie? |
A01289 | Against Rome? |
A01289 | And why were the bodies of Pansa and Hirtius solemnely and honorably enterred, and Caesar who was liuing,& partaker of the victorie nothing regarded? |
A01289 | But could their prescription& possession during the space of seauen hundred yeares be so easily dissipated? |
A01289 | But did Brutus looke for peace by bloudshed? |
A01289 | But was Iulius Caesar a tyrant? |
A01289 | But what fiends and damned spirits diddest thou inuocate Caius Caesar? |
A01289 | But what wold not Romulus do, which had the heart to shed the bloud of his owne and onely brother? |
A01289 | But why am I so earnest against thee? |
A01289 | But why do I name Calphurnia? |
A01289 | Can any man, Liuia, be of a calme and contented mind; against whom on euery side are layd the snares of treason? |
A01289 | Canst thou so dissemble Catiline that we may not discerne thy doings? |
A01289 | For how could he expect any better successe, L. Piso& A. Gabinius being Consuls, men of notorious naughtinesse, and raked out of the scum of Senators? |
A01289 | For what agreement could there be betwixt them, when their maners did so farre disagree? |
A01289 | Fulbecke, William, 1560- 1603?. |
A01289 | Fulbecke, William, 1560- 1603?. |
A01289 | Hath he not drawne bloud( trow you) of Catilines credit? |
A01289 | How lamentable was the face of things at that instant? |
A01289 | How manifest and manifold is the abuse which they offred to the Carthaginians? |
A01289 | If a man should examine from the beginning, and as they say from the roote, the degrees of their estate, what iustice shall he find? |
A01289 | Is Caesar trow you so venturous, because he warred so lōg against the vnruly French? |
A01289 | Is it possible that any thing shold amend thee? |
A01289 | VVas not Pompey made Consul without suing, without seeking, without speaking? |
A01289 | VVhat vanitie hath bene at any time absent from thine eyes? |
A01289 | VVherefore Aucus the great builder? |
A01289 | VVho more religious then Numa? |
A01289 | and can we loue the traytor when we loath his treason? |
A01289 | and shall I requesting, yea and humbly requesting suffer a repulse? |
A01289 | and when doth not fortune chaunge friendship? |
A01289 | and who will thinke himselfe beholden to one that is distressed? |
A01289 | can the Romans without blushing obiect perfidiousnesse and trecherie to the Carthaginians? |
A01289 | did he thinke to auoyd tyrannie by tumult? |
A01289 | may it be hoped for that thou wilt reforme thy selfe, that thou wilt shake off these faults? |
A01289 | nay what iniustice shall he not find? |
A01289 | or doth his bloud begin to boile within him, because the fame of his furie did suddēly driue the Senators out of their houses and harbours? |
A01289 | that thou wilt banish these enormities? |
A01289 | to what Eumenides diddest thou sacrifice, intending such a generall slaughter? |
A01289 | was there no way to wound Caesar, but by stabbing his own conscience? |
A01289 | what Stygian furies, what infernall hagges, and what nightly terrors didest thou intreat? |
A01289 | what howlings were there of them that died? |
A01289 | what president of vice frō thy person? |
A01289 | what teares of them that liued, and beheld this? |
A01289 | what villanie from thine hands? |
A55198 | Antigonus, after the Victory, ask''d the Macedonians, to try them, how it hapned the Horse had charged without order before the Signal? |
A55198 | But that which happen''d in our own Time, will make all these credible? |
A55198 | But to one who knew him, and ask''d him, If he durst not trust his native Countrey? |
A55198 | Can it pass for the property of a noble Mind and a gallant Person, to preserve the memory of Affronts and ill Vsage? |
A55198 | Charon was at first disturb''d, but presently return''d, who are they? |
A55198 | Does it become you thus to comply with Passion, and yield all things to a sense of Injuries? |
A55198 | Dost thou think that we are unwilling to requite with favour those who have well deserved, and who are honoured even by our Enemies? |
A55198 | Is it not probable therefore, that, not keeping the cold from him abroad, he wants food and other necessaries at home? |
A55198 | Putting forth his ● oe, ask''d them, Whether it was not new, and ● ell made? |
A55198 | Shall we perpetually fight with him, who both in prosperous and adverse successes hath modesty to cover his fierceness and boldness? |
A55198 | She catching him about the Neck and kissing him, said, O Father, know you not that our Perseus is dead? |
A55198 | This Person being highly ● ● am''d by his Friends, who demanded, ● as she not chaste? |
A55198 | Was she not fair? |
A55198 | When they were met, he said; What is it you intend, you Men of Sparta? |
A55198 | Whereof Hannibal being advertised, O strange saith he, what will you do with this man, who can bear neither good nor bad fortune? |
A55198 | Whether Titus were not deservedly admired by them as their Benefactour, who had unshackled the feet of Greece, and tied her up by the Neck? |
A55198 | and who conceals them? |
A55198 | do you thus take away from my Victory, and make my Conquest little, by proving your self a Coward and a Foe below a Roman? |
A55198 | what Confusion, what Envy, what mutual Jealousie appears? |
A55198 | what Venus, or what Grace divine, Touch''d the Performance here, and made it shine? |
A55198 | what is it you have done to me, and whither am I reduc''d by it? |
A55198 | — But what were these Men, and what strength had they to nourish so vain a Thought? |
A55198 | ● as she not fruitful? |
A55194 | ( for it was granted by the Platonists that there was but one:) and why should not many Jupiters or Gods be necessary, for Government of many Worlds? |
A55194 | And where was common humanity, in railing against the dead? |
A55194 | Another ask''d him why he allow''d of so mean and trivial Sacrifices to the Gods? |
A55194 | But what Plutarch can this age produce to immortallize a life so Noble? |
A55194 | Considering therefore with my self Whom with so great a man shall I compare? |
A55194 | Damaratus being ask''d, in an † abusive manner by an importunate fellow, Who was the best man in Lacedaemon? |
A55194 | For what proportion of glory is there betwixt a Roman Consul, or Proconsul of so great a Common- wealth, and a simple Citizen of Athens? |
A55194 | How''s this,( Mr. Varlet,) answered Plutarch, by what signes and tokens, can you prove I am in passion? |
A55194 | Is it by my Countenance, my voice, the colour of my face, by my words, or by my gestures, that you have discover''d this my fury? |
A55194 | Or heave up Pike? |
A55194 | Or whom oppose? |
A55194 | This done he set sail for Delphos, and having sacrific''d to Apollo, ask''d him, Whether he approv''d of the Laws he had establish''d? |
A55194 | What difference was there then between these several customs? |
A55194 | What he thought of such an action of such a man? |
A55194 | What then( may some say) hath Rome been prejudiced by her Wars? |
A55194 | What, says Croesus angry, and dost not thou reckon us amongst the happy men? |
A55194 | When one of Eretria began to oppose him, he said, Have you any thing to say of War, that are like an* Ink- Fish? |
A55194 | Where was the Morality of a Philosopher, in defaming and exposing of an harmless fool? |
A55194 | Wherein( say they) have we injured or offended you, that we formerly have, and now do suffer under these Calamities? |
A55194 | Who''s that, I pray''? |
A55194 | Why wilt not carry Lance or Spear? |
A55194 | but what was his name? |
A55194 | said he, and what does that there differ from this, onely that that which hath caused that darkness there, is something greater than a Cloak? |
A55194 | what makes thee fear, As if thou didst the Soul of Teles* wear? |
A55194 | who can the tryal bear? |
A55194 | who would cheat and circumvent, be brib''d or turn Knight of the Post to compass it? |
A55194 | who would injustly detein it? |
A55194 | with the Bones of the Fish Maena? |
A55194 | † He seems to allude to the Questions which us''d to be put to the young Lads, as, Who is the best man in Sparta? |
A55202 | And he who is brought in by Eupolis( in his Maricas) representing a good simple Poor Man: How long( Friend) since thou last saw Nicias? |
A55202 | And what the wiser he for seeing him, unless he had a Spell from him? |
A55202 | As Mithridates drew near and put out his hand, Sylla demanded, Whether he was willing or no to end the War on what Archelaus had agreed to? |
A55202 | B. VVell, And who hinders thee? |
A55202 | Being taken therewith, and understanding that they were Men of Alaeae, What, said he, be there any of Alaeae surviving? |
A55202 | But did not Cimon also suffer like him in this? |
A55202 | But they were imposed upon, by the Mithridatians; who shewing them the Romans Encamped on the Hills, Do ye see those, said they? |
A55202 | Cicero saluted him, and asked him, How he stood affected to disputing? |
A55202 | Cineas after a little Pause, and having subdu''d Italy, what shall we do next? |
A55202 | Do you think I am less provident than Cranes and Storks, not to change my habitation with the season? |
A55202 | How intolerably cold is this Bath of yours? |
A55202 | Oh Sir, you design to leave us to go home and stand for the Consulship, would not you be well enough contented to be Consul with this Boy of mine? |
A55202 | Or does the defeat of Carbo and Caepio, who were vanquished by the Enemy, affright him? |
A55202 | Or they came to put again the Leontins in Possession of their Houses? |
A55202 | The Athenians presently replyed, Why then do not you go with a Squadron against them? |
A55202 | Therefore( rejoyned Onomarchus,) now you have found such a Man, why do n''t you submit quietly to his pleasure? |
A55202 | These Conquests once perfected, will any deny, even that Enemy who now pretends to despise us, dare not make any further resistance? |
A55202 | Think you( ye Sots) to take a good Man in any Crime? |
A55202 | What Effeminacy does Marius see in us, that he should thus like Women lock us up from encountering our Enemies? |
A55202 | What King more powerfull than Mithridates? |
A55202 | What happy hand the fatal Monster slew? |
A55202 | What then induced them so particularly to honor Cimon? |
A55202 | What, must we never have an end of Fighting? |
A55202 | When Cineas had lead Pyrrhus with this Argument to this Point: And what hinders us now, Sir, if we have a mind to be merry, and entertain on another? |
A55202 | Who of the Italians sturdier than Lamponius and Telesinus? |
A55202 | Who thereupon called Taxiles, and in derision said, Do you not see this invincible Army of the Romans flying? |
A55202 | Why then, replyed they, do you not lead us to them, that we may have something that is liquid though it be Bloud? |
A55202 | You speak, says Cineas, what is hugely probable, but shall the possession of Sicily put an end to the War? |
A55202 | and as to the Ships, denies he that Article? |
A55202 | and to me Roman General and Sylla dar''st talk of Treason? |
A50048 | & quis melius quàm* literatus imperat? |
A50048 | A quoi pensez vous, quand vous ne pensiez rien? |
A50048 | And being demanded why their Girdles were not put off? |
A50048 | And what a devout Oath was this, Per Genium, that is, the spirit or superintendent Angel of the Prince? |
A50048 | At least would not Deciu ● have objected this as a crime against him? |
A50048 | At tu cum fugisti, nunquam post te respexeris? |
A50048 | At what else( quoth he) but this, that with one nod of my head I can have both your throats cut immediately? |
A50048 | Being advertised also of Asias destruction, by Earthquakes and Scythian invasion; Can not we subsist( said he) without Salt- peter? |
A50048 | But saith Cappellus, if any of this had been true, would the Senate that was so set against the Christians have reckoned him among the Gods? |
A50048 | Corvos quis olim concavum salutare, Picasque docuit verba nostra conari? |
A50048 | For how was it strange to him that his Mother should be so handsome, if she had been his Concubine? |
A50048 | For when a Tribune demanded at supper, whence Regillianus was derived? |
A50048 | France being lost, he laughing said; Can not the Land stand without those Soldiers Cassocks which France sends us? |
A50048 | Having recalled one from exile which had been long banished, he demanded of him, What he was wo nt to do there? |
A50048 | He set light by the gods, and threatned the Aire if it rained upon his Game- players, Quanta dementia fuit? |
A50048 | He sitting between Virgil& Horace, being asked by one what he did? |
A50048 | He sported at death with these Verses: Animula, vagula, blandula, Hospes, comesque Corporis, Quae nunc abibis in loca? |
A50048 | He was so inured to continual action, that even at his last gasp he said; Is there any thing for me to do? |
A50048 | He was very forgetful; when Messalina was( by his own commandment) killed, within a while after he asked, Cur Domina non veniret? |
A50048 | How great madness was it to think that either Iupiter could not hurt him, or that himself could hurt Iupiter? |
A50048 | Is not Sophronia left at Six and Seven? |
A50048 | Is there any Antidote against Caesar? |
A50048 | My fleeting fond poor darling, Bodies Guest and equal, Where now must be thy lodging? |
A50048 | On what think you when you think on nothing? |
A50048 | Perceiving many of his Predecessors to be hated, asked one, how he might so rule as not to be hated? |
A50048 | Putas te assem Elephanto dare? |
A50048 | Quem honorem dicendi Magistris? |
A50048 | Qui pater patriae est, quomodo Dominus est? |
A50048 | Quid praestantius Hadriano? |
A50048 | Quid teipsum censura circumvenis? |
A50048 | Quis expedivit Psittaco suum 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A50048 | Quis non horreat in una Aegypto 144 millia mortalium caesa, 700 millia in exilium acta; praeter Africam totamque Europam in carnificinam versas? |
A50048 | Si damnas cur non& inquiris? |
A50048 | Sit Cato, dum vivit, sane vel Caesare major, Dum moritur, numquid major Othone fuit? |
A50048 | Some say, That as M. Brutus came running upon him, he said, 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉; And thou my Son? |
A50048 | Therefore when Lucius a writer of Tragedies, asked him what his Ajax did? |
A50048 | Vespasian asked Apollonius, what was Nero''s overthrow? |
A50048 | Victor writeth thus; Quid Nerva prudentius aut moderatius? |
A50048 | What an excellent Artisan do I dye? |
A50048 | What? |
A50048 | When he was but a private man, being reproved for his prodigality by a friend, who asked him, Whether he did not fear want hereafter? |
A50048 | When his Soldiers mutinyed for want of wine, he said to them, What need you wine, that have the River Nile to drink of? |
A50048 | When it was told him that Egypt rebelled, he answered, Can not we live without the linen of Egypt? |
A50048 | When the Senate chose him Emperor, they cryed out, Quis melius quàm gravis imperat? |
A50048 | Who does not Commodus and Bassian Loath? |
A50048 | Why his Lady came not to him? |
A50048 | Wouldst thou have me be in thy debt? |
A50048 | You eat your way, which way will you return? |
A50048 | but here then ariseth an objection, how Paul should suffer under him, when he saith there, that he was delivered? |
A50048 | facessere potuissent? |
A50048 | he answered; What can be better for me than to be heir to my self? |
A50048 | how many wits? |
A50048 | is he past sixty, and restrained by the Papian Law? |
A50048 | not upon my command, said Licinius? |
A50048 | quam dignationem sapientiae doctoribus babes? |
A50048 | quem interfeci? |
A50048 | quid Trajano divinius? |
A50048 | si non inquiris, cur non& absolvis? |
A50048 | | Hoc quis sine admiratione summa legat? |
A06878 | & c. And who can make exception against this Latine, Telamone& Amyntore nati? |
A06878 | * How is it then, that in the 22. booke, the Antiochians skoffed at him as one, humeros extentans angustos? |
A06878 | * I suspect this place: For what might 20. effect? |
A06878 | 1 891 Animula, vagula blandula, Hospes Comésque corporis, Quae nunc abibis in loca? |
A06878 | And calling together as well the armed souldiors as the common people, he asked, Whether they knew that visage? |
A06878 | And the Princes pleasure being asked, What should be done with him? |
A06878 | And when he was charged often thus farre, namely, Why he had calculated the constellation of the Prince? |
A06878 | As for Thebes* Hecatompylos, who knoweth it not? |
A06878 | Being demaunded of the king his master, What he thought of the Senat of Rome? |
A06878 | For, what fault committed he, if fearing a blustering wind and tempest that was up, he fled to the protection of his prince? |
A06878 | Hereupon were sundrie wayes full of those that departed, every one as they could make shift: For why? |
A06878 | How many heads, that all nations did feare, have bloudie executioners severed from their shoulders? |
A06878 | Know yee not, that flight( which never found safetie) bewrayeth the folly of a vaine attempt? |
A06878 | Or what mattereth it whether I would have a thing done, or reioyce that it is done? |
A06878 | Quis illaudati nescit Busiridis aras? |
A06878 | Then a certaine old woman that had lost both her eyes, having learned by enquirie, who came into the citie? |
A06878 | This very potentate beeing asked, What he thought of Rome? |
A06878 | What if wee read discissis? |
A06878 | What vigour can we have( seeing our bodies are enfeebled with hunger, thirst, and travaile) to make resistance? |
A06878 | Where be they? |
A06878 | Whereat Iulian being mooved, wisely replied thus ex tempore: And who( quoth he) can be unguiltie, if it will suffice to have accused? |
A06878 | Which when he saw, he sendeth for the interpreters of these and such like signes, who being demaunded, What they thought thereof? |
A06878 | Would ye not( quoth he) setting all other businesses apart, deliver the souldiors out of these instant and imminent distresses? |
A06878 | and what God they worshipped? |
A06878 | and what should the rest of the 800. doe the while? |
A06878 | or another, the principall and chiefe of his ranke? |
A06878 | or how much he had received, to helpe and further Romanus in his wicked acts? |
A06878 | or under whose roofe he lodgeth? |
A06878 | or where was such a rich man? |
A55206 | Afterwards when some accus''d Brutus to him, and advis''d him to beware of him, taking hold of his Flesh with his Hand, he said, What? |
A55206 | And another time to the Samians: Your Councils are careless, your Actions slow; what think ye will be the end? |
A55206 | And then, What he thought of Demades? |
A55206 | And when Brutus ask''d him, In how much better a Condition he hoped to be a Year after? |
A55206 | Antony seeing the heap ask''d what it meant? |
A55206 | Are you the only Person that are afraid you shall not hear the Trumpet? |
A55206 | Artosyras, that it is my master Cyrus? |
A55206 | At a Hunt Tiribazus having shew''d him that his Robe was rent, he demanded of him what he should do? |
A55206 | At length, exceedingly exasperated, he asked the Philosopher in a great rage, what business he had in Sicily? |
A55206 | At which words when Casca was surpriz''d, the other said laughing, How come you to be so rich of a sudden, that you should stand to be chosen Aedile? |
A55206 | Brutus boldly ask''d it, What art thou? |
A55206 | But Dionysodorus the Traezenian correcting him, restores the true one which is thus, Who Fathers praise except degenerate Sons? |
A55206 | But she who gave her the most disturbance was Statira, who passionately resented this War, and cry''d out; what is now become of your Promises? |
A55206 | But what, says Cass ● s, if they should send for us? |
A55206 | By which having free''d him that had been guilty of Treason against his Brother, you have embroil''d us in War and Troubles? |
A55206 | Caesar presently snatching hold of the Handle of the Dagger and crying out aloud in Latin, Villain Casca what dost thou? |
A55206 | Demosthenes being amazed to feel how heavy it was, ask''d him what price it would come for? |
A55206 | For being asked what kind of Orator he accounted Demosthenes? |
A55206 | Fortune has now given you the sole dispose of us; how will you determine concerning her in these her necessitous Circumstances? |
A55206 | Has he killed his Mother, or murdered his Wife, or disparaged the Imperial Throne, by acting the Fools part on the Stage? |
A55206 | Him Brutus visited and finding him sick, O Lygarius, says he, what a time have you found out to be sick in? |
A55206 | How entire their Satisfaction, who totally subverted the most potent Tyranny that ever was, by very slight and inconsiderable Means? |
A55206 | How seems she to you now? |
A55206 | Man or God? |
A55206 | May it be happy and propitious? |
A55206 | Or in what Relation must she salute you, as her Vncle, or as her Husband? |
A55206 | Or, upon what Business dost thou come to us? |
A55206 | They were but just escaped when the Guard press''d into the Room; asking what was become of Caesar''s Enemies? |
A55206 | Thou Son of blind Antigonus, Whither dost mean to hurry us? |
A55206 | To Demades saying Demosthenes teach me? |
A55206 | To this, Brutus, with great indignation, reply''d, Why then, Casca, do you tell me of this, and not do your self what you think fitting? |
A55206 | To which Cassius with some Concern answer''d, But what Roman will suffer you to die? |
A55206 | To whom he being a little pot- valiant, replied, What are these things Sparamixes? |
A55206 | What if Heraclides be perfidious, malicious, and base, must Dion therefore sully his Honor, or injure his Vertue by a passionate Concern for it? |
A55206 | What of your Intercessions? |
A55206 | What tho Nero''s miscarriages( says he) gave some colour to their former treachery, yet what pretence have they to betray Galba? |
A55206 | What, do you not know your self, Brutus? |
A55206 | Whence then( may some say) was it that Aeschines speaks of him as a Person so much to be wondred at for his boldness in speaking? |
A55206 | Whereupon a certain Droll stood up, saying, O ye Men of Athens, What, Will you not hear the King''s Cup- bearer? |
A55206 | do ye think that Brutus will not wait out the time of this little Body? |
A55206 | greater than doing Justice? |
A55206 | have I suffered nothing? |
A55206 | said he, are they flocking? |
A60419 | After the Death of Sylla, who impos''d that heavy Bondage, you thought that then the end of all your Mischiefs was at hand? |
A60419 | Always must Boodshed, Exile and Slaughter be our Portion? |
A60419 | And do ye now at such a time as this sit lingring and staggering what to do with Enemies apprehended within your walls? |
A60419 | And do you hesitate what to decree against the most cruel of Parricides? |
A60419 | Are these the Guerdons of our Wounds, and Blood so often shed for the Honour of our Country? |
A60419 | Be there any who for this advice will deem me a Depraver of thy Conquest, or count me a well Wisher to the Vanquish''d? |
A60419 | But by the Immortal Gods, what did that long Oration drive at? |
A60419 | But can you dream of meeting an Obstruction when unanimous and resolute, from those that fear''d ye when remiss and negligent? |
A60419 | But if it be the slighter punishment, why so observant of the Law in the Lesser Infliction, when thou hast broken it in the Greater? |
A60419 | But is this an Argument of his Amity and Verture? |
A60419 | But where should Friendship then be most sincere, if not between Brother and Brother? |
A60419 | But wherefore should I make more words as if I spoke of Men that were unknown to the World? |
A60419 | But wherefore, by the Immortal Gods, didst thou not add this farther to thy Sentence, that first they should be rigorously scourg''d? |
A60419 | But who are They, who have thus got Possession of the Commonwealth? |
A60419 | But who dares question what shall be Decreed against Parricides of the Common- wealth? |
A60419 | But why should I enumerate Battels, or winter Expeditions, Towns levell''d with the Earth, or taken by Composition? |
A60419 | But why should I talk any more of thy Insolence? |
A60419 | But why shouldst thou still load our Ears with what we hate, thy odious Name? |
A60419 | Can any Person take Compassion upon Us, who at any time was once your Enemy? |
A60419 | Can greater Abilities be ascrib''d to L. Domitius, a Man that has not a Member, but what is contaminated with Villany and lascivious Intemperance? |
A60419 | Can there be Peace and Friendship in Minds so diametrically opposite? |
A60419 | Canst thou be ignorant, that the Romans, after the Ocean had set limits to their Western Conquests, turn''d the fury of their Arms upon these parts? |
A60419 | Did it not cost thee the loss of thy Chastity to learn that Scolding Eloquence of thine from M. Piso? |
A60419 | Do the Commands of Lepidus, appease your Indignation? |
A60419 | Do ye think it fit to wait till with a new embody''d Army they once more invade the City with Fire and Sword? |
A60419 | Does there any thing then more remain for Men to act; then either to dissolve the Injustice, or to dye Couragiously? |
A60419 | Else, returning out of Exile from Dyrrachium, wherefore didst thou follow them? |
A60419 | Expect ye then great Jupiter, or some other Deity to be your Adviser? |
A60419 | For can it be imagin''d, that they who have lost their Liberty through sloth at Home, should be able to instruct others to command? |
A60419 | For setting aside the Debauch''d Pensioners of his Guard, who takes his part? |
A60419 | For what Civil Sedition and Dissention ever extirpated so many and such Illustrious Families? |
A60419 | For what hope is there either of Fidelity or Concord? |
A60419 | For what is more to be expected? |
A60419 | For wherefore should I name my self? |
A60419 | For who among ye durst refuse to be a Slave? |
A60419 | Has Oblivion cancell''d those Cruelties, that before this War were condemn''d in Pompey and Sylla''s Victory? |
A60419 | Hast thou not so liv''d from thy Childhood, as not to believe any thing a Defilement to thy Body, which another took delight in? |
A60419 | How far can such a one presume to dare, to whom the Consular Dignity, the highest of Commands was but a meer Disgrace? |
A60419 | If I accuse thee falsely, give an account how thou cam''st by such an Estate; what were thy Gettings by bawling and wrangling at the Bar? |
A60419 | In this case, shall any man talk to me Mildness and Pity? |
A60419 | Is there any Place left for my approach, where there are not more then many Hostile Monuments of my Ancestors? |
A60419 | It may be ask''d me, What is my Opinion then? |
A60419 | Must it be to the People of Rome so corrupted with Bribes and Exhibitions, that they put both themselves and all their Fortunes to Sale? |
A60419 | Nations or Princes, who all, because in League with you, detest our Family? |
A60419 | Neither Provinces nor Laws nor Houshold Gods allow thee for a Citizen? |
A60419 | Or if thou hast nothing to say, who can be so silly as to doubt, thou didst rake thy Wealth out of the Blood and Bowels but of thy fellow Citizens? |
A60419 | Or to you, most noble Conscript Fathers, whose authority is the scorn of every lewd and wicked Rakeshame? |
A60419 | Or was it because it is more grievous to be Whipt then to be put to Death? |
A60419 | Or where shall he find a Friend among Strangers, that is an Enemy to his own Relations? |
A60419 | Or whither, unhappy as I am, shall I repair? |
A60419 | Or whom did ever Victory so precipitate and render so enormously Outragious? |
A60419 | Pray, what can be too grievous or severe for men to suffer, once Convicted of so great a Crime? |
A60419 | Quite otherwise, who is there now adays that does not strive to outvie his Ancestors in Riches and Expences, rather then in Probity and Industry? |
A60419 | Rather, who does not desire a Change of all things, excepting Victory? |
A60419 | Shall our Family never be at quiet? |
A60419 | That they should have their Change of Sumptuous Houses, while we can no where find a Cottage of our own to harbour our Misery? |
A60419 | Thinkst thou, Marcus Tullius, thy Words and Actions are unknown to the World? |
A60419 | Was it because the* Porcian Law forbids it? |
A60419 | Was it with this Design the Roman People sent their Sons to War? |
A60419 | What Friends, what Enemies hast thou? |
A60419 | What are your Hopes? |
A60419 | What is there, either Human or Divine that has escap''d without Pollution? |
A60419 | What shall I do? |
A60419 | What would he have receiv''d for his good Services, whose vile misdeeds ye have so liberally rewarded? |
A60419 | What''s my Opinion, then, some one will say? |
A60419 | Where shall I complain? |
A60419 | Why sleep ye therefore? |
A60419 | Why then does he March with such a Body, and so elated in mind? |
A60419 | Wilt thou persecute us with thy presumptuous surquedry? |
A60419 | Would we therefore have the Prisoners set at Liberty to encrease the number of Catiline''s Army? |
A60419 | and so much the more eagerly, by how much the greater Ignominy it is to lose what once you have atchiev''d, then never to have won it? |
A60419 | to what Purpose the Assistance of Catulus? |
A60419 | was it to raise your Antipathy to the Conspiracy? |
A60419 | what Faction Suits with thy Humour best? |
A60419 | where thou hadst the Money to erect those sumptuous Edifices, the Tusculanum, and the Pompeianum? |
A07324 | All this before he had attain''d vnto Thy age, young Pompey, did thy father doe; Which to his future greatnesse made the way: And sleep''st thou here? |
A07324 | An vultur, pendensue silex? |
A07324 | And Cato, Scipio, Pompey''s tragicke falls Be kept with ioy as Roman Festiualls? |
A07324 | And all thy rash aduentures rectifie? |
A07324 | And art thou bound to suffer Caesar''s reigne? |
A07324 | And chuse to come to them at such a time When they no duties can returne to him? |
A07324 | And giue more power to him, whose lawlesse might Already has vsurp''d aboue his right? |
A07324 | And must I Weare this loath''d life, till Caesar bid me die? |
A07324 | And saw how easie''t was to conquer them? |
A07324 | Askes it a greater vertue to maintaine A setled fortune than at first to gaine? |
A07324 | But Caesar, maugre what the entrailes threat, Vndaunted passes on( how wondrous great Is Destiny?) |
A07324 | But Fate to vs farre greater conquests owes: How much, alas, would Cleopatra lose If Caesar stay''d at home? |
A07324 | But Oh( how blinde are mortall eyes?) |
A07324 | But must hold my hand Expecting till the Conquerour command? |
A07324 | But what are these that once againe should dare Molest our peace with vnexpected warre? |
A07324 | Can it ouerthrow His fortune to procure my safetie so? |
A07324 | Cassius replies, Could Brutus then be pleas''d, the Parthian foe Againe should triumph in our ouerthrow? |
A07324 | Did lewd Antonius put a Diadem On Caesar''s head, to be refus''d by him In publike onely, and not there to trie How we would all allow his Monarchy? |
A07324 | For what has Fate Power to bestow on such a wretched State, That can at all his minde to liue inuite? |
A07324 | For what since Marius times, since Sylla''s reigne Did they of ancient libertie retaine, But the bare name? |
A07324 | Haue not the warres by old llerda taught Our strength to Spaine? |
A07324 | Here Cato stopt and paws''d; is death( quoth he) Vnlawfull then till rude necessitie Inforce a man to taste it? |
A07324 | How different shall the Soules condition be, If this( quoth he) be true Philosophy? |
A07324 | How great a crime might mine example proue? |
A07324 | How great a wrong to Rome, and all that loue Her Lawes and liberties? |
A07324 | How much did Pompey''s honour suffer there ▪ When Caesar''s troops beheld that nations feare? |
A07324 | How oft shall Fortune more her fauour show From priuate dangers in protecting thee, Than in bestowing th''earths sole Monarchy? |
A07324 | How sadly cruell hast thou beene to me, Against thy selfe to wrong my clemency? |
A07324 | How vndeseru''d did his great triumph seeme Ore Pontus and Armenia? |
A07324 | If we so much to Elephants should giue, Why should we call them creatures sensitiue? |
A07324 | Is not the fatall ouerthrow so late In Thapsus fields, and ruine of the State, Necessitie of death enough for me? |
A07324 | May I not thinke the gods in that decree The death of Cato? |
A07324 | Nay more, haue louers in impatience Forc''d out their liues, and violently fled Into the other World, to finde their dead Deare loues? |
A07324 | Num rota, num saxum, num stagna fugacia vexant? |
A07324 | Oh superi, cruciat quae poena Neronē? |
A07324 | Oh why From Thapsus fatall battell did I flie, And not in height of all mine honour fall, Fighting for Rome to die her Generall? |
A07324 | Oh why should vertue be Iudg''d, by the wisest, true felicitie Before wealth, honour, pleasure? |
A07324 | Or begge for life, acknowledging him so My Lord, whom iustly I adiudg''d Romes foe? |
A07324 | Or giue fame To Thapsus fatall field? |
A07324 | Or is it easier to the powers on high To giue, than to preserue prosperitie? |
A07324 | Or must moe lands behold her fall? |
A07324 | Or that so often vanquish''d runnagate False Labienus, long mainteine the Fate Of his young Generall? |
A07324 | Or vnto thee can Caesar''s fauour seeme A greater bond than nature was to him? |
A07324 | Or what could he by law alleage Against their persons sacred priuilege? |
A07324 | Or what should Rome now in a State so blest Suppose can rend her peace, or reaue her rest? |
A07324 | Or what vnfain''d affection can they owe To Pompey''s side? |
A07324 | Poore boy, what fatall freedome hast thou gain''d? |
A07324 | Should he, That euery day did striue in some degree To gaine this freedome, feare it at the time When nature has allotted it to him? |
A07324 | So saue my life by sinning, or el ● e die With one sinne more, if mercy he deny? |
A07324 | TOO cruell Sisters, why againe am I Enforc''d to weepe, and tax your tyranny? |
A07324 | True grounds( quoth he) diuine Philosopher: Else what were vertue, or true knowledge here But waking dreames? |
A07324 | Vnhappie Ptolomey, how short a date Haue Fates allotted to thy kingly State? |
A07324 | Was it cause one, though ne''re so great a blow, The Roman Empire could not ouerthrow? |
A07324 | Was not my Orpheus death( though long agoe) Enough for me to beare, for you to doe? |
A07324 | What can these barbarous halfe- arm''d Nations doe? |
A07324 | What can this Senate, or the people feare From Caesar''s power, whose mercy euery where So many pardon''d enemies haue try''d? |
A07324 | What doubts can shake my long securitie? |
A07324 | What end haue these our armes? |
A07324 | What helpe in Affrica Lend''st thou to Rome more than one priuate hand? |
A07324 | What ill successe Can shake so strong a grounded happinesse? |
A07324 | What more than names, poore boy, dost thou obtaine? |
A07324 | What now should Caesar feare? |
A07324 | What power aboue Suffer''d so much against Alcides loue? |
A07324 | What power( quoth he) controules my wish, what fame? |
A07324 | What sauage bird of prey, what murdring Kite Could, in the mid''st of that melodious lay, Rauish the charming Nightingall away? |
A07324 | What should they doe? |
A07324 | What stay on Fortunes restlesse wheele? |
A07324 | What strange rewards haue all my mercies got, That greatest Romans rather chose to flie To death it selfe, than to my clemency? |
A07324 | What tongue, what pen can at the height relate Each sumptuous part of that so enuy''d State? |
A07324 | What would old Brutus doe, if here againe? |
A07324 | What would the sowrest seeming vertue doe Arm''d with a power like me, and tempted so? |
A07324 | Why doe we make Tumults in stead of warres? |
A07324 | Why should I feare the peoples discontent, Who now enioy vnder my gouernment More wealth, more safetie, and prosperitie Than by my death they could? |
A07324 | Why should this god his knowledge then declare To men, when men least fit for knowledge are? |
A07324 | Why were the Tribunes else, for taking downe From Caesar''s Statue, late, a golden Crowne, Depos''d? |
A07324 | Why, more than beasts, should we Oblige our selues to Lawes of pietie, Or curbe our lusts? |
A07324 | Would birds incag''d, that with all motions trie, And seeke all wayes to gaine their libertie, The cage set ope, refuse to flie from thence? |
A07324 | Yet who''gainst Sylla''s life attempted then? |
A07324 | an feruet in vnda? |
A07324 | moe grounds Drinke in the blood of her vnnaturall wounds? |
A07324 | or doe they feare his name, And haue not heard enough of Caesar''s fame? |
A07324 | what Roman powers are brought Thither, but young raw Souldiers, and vnskill''d In Military arts, that nere beheld A foe before? |
A25723 | And if he were( said he) in love with the Queen, would you quit her to him? |
A25723 | And is there any appearance he that has done no private Wrong, should attempt Publick? |
A25723 | And were Women ever made contribute to it, whom Nature dispenses with by the general Consent of all Nations upon Earth? |
A25723 | And what Applause did Cicero himself give him? |
A25723 | At last the Soldiers began to gather in Companies, and to ask one another, Why has our General so ill an opinion of us? |
A25723 | But granting we take the City of Carthage, what shall we do with it? |
A25723 | But he never abused that Power and Charge of the Consulship: How so? |
A25723 | But how is this to be done? |
A25723 | But if he were a faithful friend indeed what help could he bring to me towards the safety of his Country? |
A25723 | But it is because you have War you inflict this on us: Was the World ever without War? |
A25723 | But pray Cicero, when was this done? |
A25723 | But say they upon what Oaths can we be assured the peace now to be made shall not be violated? |
A25723 | But who am I that write all these things? |
A25723 | C ● cceius answered; Is it so you call your Friends Enemies, and take away their Provinces and Armies? |
A25723 | Can you believe any of them will suffer what they possess to be taken away, at any less rate than blowing up the Flames of War in all parts? |
A25723 | Can you make so little account, not only of Antiochus, but of Seleucus himself? |
A25723 | Did you expect other Judgment against Publick Criminals? |
A25723 | Do we not seem worthy of your compassion, after the so late loss of fifty thousand men by famine? |
A25723 | Do you think there are none but Tavern- People and Artificers that put Writings on your Tribunal? |
A25723 | Had he not a fair apportunity upon the death of Caesar his Friend, his Benefactor, beloved by all the People? |
A25723 | Has he chased out of the City, or calumniously accused any Person before you? |
A25723 | Has he put any one to death without due Process, as Tyrants use to do; he, who is himself in danger of being condemned without being heard? |
A25723 | Has not he alone governed the Commonwealth, Dolobella being gone for Syria? |
A25723 | Have we not paid you your Tribute? |
A25723 | Here Scipio interrupting these Bravadoes, told him smiling; And in what degree would you have placed youy self, if I had not overcome you? |
A25723 | How many swore Fidelity to him without being required? |
A25723 | How often did they provoke to Battel this last Roman General, besieging them with threescore thousand men? |
A25723 | How often upon good terms did they enter into Leagues, which the Romans would not afterwards ratifie or maintain? |
A25723 | How then after Indemnity did they obtain Governments? |
A25723 | In short spare so many things that are both pleasant and precious in the eyes of the whole earth; for what can you fear from us? |
A25723 | In what can you be serviceable to us? |
A25723 | Is it not likewise by your consent that Decimus, one of the Murderers of my Father, as well as the rest, holds the hither Gaul? |
A25723 | Kept he not a Guard by Night in the City, even about his own House; which yet was only done to warrant him from the Ambushes of his Enemies? |
A25723 | Kept he not armed Men about him for his security, which you your selves appointed? |
A25723 | Or, in fine, was it when he passed that Decree, by which it is prohibited to make Dictators? |
A25723 | Perhaps this time they will keep their Faith, but what Faith, what Treaties, what Oaths have they not violated? |
A25723 | Pray, wherein do we imitate them? |
A25723 | Scipio approved not this so well, yet he asked him again, To whom he gave the third place? |
A25723 | Shall we give it to Masanissa? |
A25723 | They faithfully kept the Peace they granted, after long Wars; and you, against whom we never took up Arms, what is it you complain of? |
A25723 | To whom he answered, We would with all our hearts; but what peace can we make? |
A25723 | WIll you that love the Greeks, ruin a Greek City; and that fight for Liberty, take it from Rhodes that is a Free City? |
A25723 | Were the Women confederate in the Conspiracy, those whom they have taxed with such immense Contributions? |
A25723 | What Impiety, what furious hate against us? |
A25723 | What Inhumanity did you not manifest in this occasion? |
A25723 | What Peace or what Favour have they not repaid with Injury? |
A25723 | What cruelties have you not acted? |
A25723 | What shall I say of the Tribunes of the people, Caesctius and Marullus? |
A25723 | What will the people of Rome? |
A25723 | Whereupon, Cassius embracing him, said; And what Persons of Quality will you take for Companions in so brave an Attempt? |
A25723 | Whereupon, the other again demanded, What if they summon ● s as Pretors, what shall we do then, my Friend? |
A25723 | Whither was the wealth and riches of the Empire brought? |
A25723 | Why did not you head them with Sword and Torch in your Hand? |
A25723 | Why did you not do Justice your self? |
A25723 | Why do we not then with Alacrity declare Anthony our Enemy, who already makes War upon us? |
A25723 | Why expose himself to so many dangers, to raise him to this high Authority? |
A25723 | Why so many Auxiliary Troops of Thracians, Scythians, and so many other Neighboring Nations? |
A25723 | Will they wait for other Colonies and other Lands? |
A25723 | Would you then have these famous Inhumans for your Friends and Allies? |
A25723 | You may if you please wait for the effects; for what mean his great preparations as if the War were already Declared? |
A25723 | and who threatened a Tribune with death that opposed it? |
A25723 | did he not shamefully drive away those Magistrates holy and inviolable? |
A25723 | have we any Elephants? |
A25723 | have we any Ships? |
A25723 | have we not beaten and put to flight our Enemies, cut in pieces their best Companies, and forced their Camp? |
A25723 | or to what end are your Assemblies or your Votes, since they can cancel what you do; and you your selves so easily change your minds? |
A25723 | or when he caused to be arrested and put to death the false Marius, who troubled our Peace; for which he was praised by all the Senate? |
A25723 | or why should I implore his help who has no power to give any? |
A25723 | shall we utterly ruine and raze it, because they took some of our Corn and Shipping, which they are ready to pay for with interest? |
A25723 | to whom did the Receivers give their Accounts? |
A25723 | what fault have we committed? |
A25723 | what part of the Treaty has not been observed, that you so suddenly decreed this War, and bring it to our doors before you declare it? |
A25723 | what will all the people of Italy do? |
A25723 | who broke up the Treasury against our will? |
A25723 | who laid hands on a Fond never any before durst touch? |
A31706 | An quisquam amplissimus Galliae, cum insimo Cive Romano comparandus est? |
A31706 | And if he would let passe former insolencies, could he forget those late and fresh injuries? |
A31706 | And to conclude, who would imagine that Ambiorix should enterprise such a matter without any ground or certainty therof? |
A31706 | And to what tended all this, but his destruction? |
A31706 | And when he that question''d him thus, said, What think you of taking use? |
A31706 | And why should I omit the diligence which I have already used, and how the business hath hitherto proceeded? |
A31706 | And why then should be lose a man, although it were to gain a victory? |
A31706 | As for the counsell of Cotta and such as were of the contrary opinion, what expectation could be had thereof? |
A31706 | But concerning the issue and event of our deliberations, what can be more truly said then that of the Poet? |
A31706 | But did you forsake L. Domitius, or did he forsake you? |
A31706 | But how powerfull it was to take away fear by retorting danger upon the Oppressour, could there be a presenter example then Hannibal? |
A31706 | But if he were so mad as to make war upon them, why should they fear him? |
A31706 | But if that may be avoyded, which is easily done, shall not that disposition then be utterly unprofitable, and free from all terrour? |
A31706 | But if then he did allow and like of it, what reason had he to hinder him from enjoying a benefit which the people of Rome had bestowed upon him? |
A31706 | But what are these to Aristotle or Plato? |
A31706 | CUr creperos motus,& aperto praelia Marte Edmondus nobis pace vigente refert? |
A31706 | Concerning the removing of our Camp, what doth it inferre but a shamefull retreat, a despair in all men, and an alienation of the Army? |
A31706 | Concerning the use of this triple battel, what can be said more then Lipsius hath done? |
A31706 | Cur sensus mentesque Ducum rimatur,& effert ▪ Diserteque Anglos bellica multa docet? |
A31706 | Did he not seek to save himself by flight, without your knowledge or privity? |
A31706 | Did not he thrust you out, and expose you to all extremity of fortune? |
A31706 | Do you doubt of their faith and constancy, because they came not by a day? |
A31706 | Do you think they make them for exercise, or to passe away the time? |
A31706 | Doth it offend you, that I transported the Army over in safety, without losse of any one ship? |
A31706 | Et cum ille qui quaesierat dixisset, Quid foenerari? |
A31706 | For Cur desp ● res nunc posse fieri, quod jam totie ● factum est? |
A31706 | For do we doubt, but that the Romans, having begun so wickedly, will run presently upon us to take away our lives? |
A31706 | For how small is the beauty which Nature hath given to the eye- pleasing Diamond, when it is not adorned with an artificiall form? |
A31706 | For if every man should prescribe, who should obey? |
A31706 | For the Romans, what is it they desire? |
A31706 | For what greater violences in the State of Rome, then those concerning Tributes and Impositions? |
A31706 | For what resemblance( say they) is between the customs of our times, and the actions of those antient Heroes? |
A31706 | For what warre was like this? |
A31706 | For why should the Hedui rather dispute of their customes and laws before Caesar, then the Romans come before the Hedui? |
A31706 | For with what hope( saith he) can we assault a Camp so fortified, both by Nature and Art? |
A31706 | Have ye not heard, that the Cohorts which are now at Brundusium, are made and raised of such as remained behind there to recover their healths? |
A31706 | Have you not understood what Caesar hath done in Spain? |
A31706 | Howbeit, Cato condemned all kind of usury: for, being demanded, Quid maxime in re familiari expediret? |
A31706 | IF it be now demanded, Where was Caesar''s desire of Peace? |
A31706 | If it be now demanded, as formerly it was, Quis furor, o Cives? |
A31706 | In hanc rem jocatus est ipse; Ego, inquit, quenquam feram, qui vinum ferre non possum? |
A31706 | Is the best man of Gallia( saith Tully) to be compared with the meanest Citizen of Rome? |
A31706 | Or rather, what hath learning to do with a Roman Generall? |
A31706 | Or shall a man forgo the benefit of a place of advantage, rather then he will relieve with industry the discommodity of some particular circumstance? |
A31706 | Or what have we gained, if with great losse and damage, we shall go away and give it over? |
A31706 | Or why should he put the matter to the hazard of Fortune? |
A31706 | Quid dignum memorare tuis Hispania terris Vex humana valet? |
A31706 | Quid hominem inquit occidere? |
A31706 | Shall we take the meaning to be, that the first legion stood in front, and the other stood for succours behind? |
A31706 | So he asked him, What is he that is dead, and buried there? |
A31706 | That I drew two hundred Ships of burthen out of the Road and Port of the Enemy? |
A31706 | That at my coming, I beat and dispersed at the first onset the whole fleet of the Adversaries? |
A31706 | That twice, in two daies, I overcame them onely with the Cavalry? |
A31706 | Ut jugule ● ● homines surgunt de nocte latrones: Non experg ● scer ● s, ut te ● psum serves? |
A31706 | Valour or Craft, who cares which in a Foe? |
A31706 | WHo, Edmonds, reads thy book, and doth not see What th''antique Souldiers were, the modern be? |
A31706 | Was it Pompey''s Ambition, or Caesar''s high Thoughts, that bereft the State of liberty, with the losse of so many Romans? |
A31706 | Were you not preserved and kept alive by Caesar''s clemency, when you were abandoned and betraied by him? |
A31706 | What do the Romans then mean in these outward works? |
A31706 | What else mean these new Tables, but that you shall buy a piece of ground with my money, and keep it to your self, whilst I go without my money? |
A31706 | What fury''s this? |
A31706 | What shall we be able to do in the wars, wanting the things that should give us strength and sustenance? |
A31706 | What then is the cause that the Romans do overcome, and that those that do use the phalanx are voyd of the hope of victory? |
A31706 | What then? |
A31706 | What then? |
A31706 | What then? |
A31706 | What use or need have I( saith he) either of my life, or of the City, when I shall be thought to enjoy it by Caesar''s favour? |
A31706 | Whereunto Cn: Piso replied; What place wilt thou take to declare thy self, Caesar? |
A31706 | Who can this endure to see, But must a wanton glutton be, That Mamurra should have all Fetch''d from Britan and from Gall? |
A31706 | Who looks at fraud or valour in a foe? |
A31706 | Why should he lose any of his souldiers in battel, though he got the day? |
A31706 | Why should he suffer his valiant and well- deserving souldiers, to be so much as hurt or wounded? |
A31706 | Wilt not thou then arise to save thy self? |
A31706 | and have brought them to that extremity, that they can be supplied by provision neither by sea nor by land? |
A31706 | bene vestire: quid quartum? |
A31706 | cur denique fortunam periclitaretur? |
A31706 | cur vulnerari pateretur optime de se meritos milites? |
A31706 | he replyed, What is it to kill a man? |
A31706 | in subsidiis; Afranius his army was in a double battel; the fifth legion, and the third for succours? |
A31706 | it is decem habere lectas quidem legiones populum Romanum, quae non ● olum vobis obsistere, sed etiam coelum diruere possent? |
A31706 | or answerable to the report which was bruted of their valour? |
A31706 | or contrariwise, who will blame a mercenary Pilot for making peace with death, with the losse of other mens merchandise? |
A31706 | or what avail all these, where there wanteth an eye to admire it, a judgement to value it, and an heart to imbrace it? |
A31706 | or what could he elsewhere expect of that which these refused him? |
A31706 | or what did it attempt worthy such a multitude? |
A31706 | or what good is in either of them, if the light do not illuminate it? |
A31706 | or what perfection can the form give, without a foile to strengthen it? |
A31706 | or what would they have? |
A31706 | or why should he hazard his good fortune? |
A31706 | or why should they despair either of their own prowesse, or of Caesars diligence? |
A31706 | quae tanta licentia ferri? |
A31706 | respondit, bene pascere: quid secundum? |
A31706 | satis bene pascere: quid tertium? |
A31706 | shall a souldier take every place as he findeth it, and use no Art to qualify the disadvantages thereof? |
A31706 | shall this defence be generall, and not distinguished, but a confusion made of times past and his later actions? |
A31706 | the answer is already made in the beginning of this? |
A31706 | two Armies beaten; two Generalls defeated; two Provinces taken; and all within forty daies, after he came in view of the Enemy? |
A31706 | what these licentious arms? |
A31706 | why should he suffer those to be wounded who had deserved so highly at his hands? |
A31706 | — Dolus an virtus quis in hoste requirit? |
A31706 | — What noted thing in Spain can man commend? |
A15803 | A Gods name what Armes were these? |
A15803 | About that time, Clearchus asked Cyrus, Doe you thinke( Cyrus) your Brother will hazard a battell? |
A15803 | Admit now we come safe to the Sea, how g ● eat a Forrest is the Sea? |
A15803 | After Clearchus heard this, he asked, what quantitie of Land lay betwixt Tygris and the Draine? |
A15803 | Alas of what should I make comparison? |
A15803 | All these things being so, is any man so simple to conceiue, that wee sh ● ll haue the vpper hand? |
A15803 | And doe not Darts outreach them? |
A15803 | And for ouer- plus, had you not that, which was giuen you by Seuthes? |
A15803 | And had these Darts any force? |
A15803 | And if we were in any thing to trust the guide, that Cyrus should giue vs, why commanded we not Cyrus to take the top of the Hils for vs? |
A15803 | And the stoners of the Ambassadors what haue they done? |
A15803 | And what is mine opinion? |
A15803 | And when they accused me of these gifts, do you thinke, they saw in me an ill affection toward you, or rather a desire to do you seruice? |
A15803 | And why haue I done this? |
A15803 | And yet who is so haire- braind that dares controll them? |
A15803 | And yet why is entrenching of the Campe altogether cast off? |
A15803 | Are these things to be laughed at, or pitied? |
A15803 | Are you one of the Peltasts? |
A15803 | Birds? |
A15803 | But how much? |
A15803 | But if they had fallen into the enemies hands, what remedie could they haue had of their sufferings, were they neuer so grieuous? |
A15803 | But now how depart you? |
A15803 | But seeing I can not depart hence without danger, is it not better to stay here, and take heed of stones? |
A15803 | But went they neere the marke? |
A15803 | But what answer made I at Selymbria? |
A15803 | But what need is of them in the Roman manner of arming? |
A15803 | But when the Souldier bowed his legge in all our presences, did not all cry out, He liues? |
A15803 | But when the stones are spent, quoth Xenophon, what other impediment shall we haue? |
A15803 | But whom doe I exhort? |
A15803 | But whom doe they terrifie? |
A15803 | But whose? |
A15803 | But why brought you not your Targetiers with you? |
A15803 | But why speake you these things to me? |
A15803 | Can any man then deceiue you, as though the Sunne should arise and set in a contrary quarter of heauen? |
A15803 | Doe I oppose against any man in the election of Commanders? |
A15803 | Doe you not happily credit Poets? |
A15803 | Doe you not know, that they, who are now your subiects, obey you at this time not for friendship, but for necessitie? |
A15803 | Encamped you not in the field? |
A15803 | Exhort I then to the vse thereof? |
A15803 | For after you were assisted with them, found you not more plentie of come in the villages, because the Thracians were driuen to a speedie flight? |
A15803 | For if we yeeld and subiect our selues vnto the Kings power, what hazard shall we not incur? |
A15803 | For it fell out, that, straight after that he awaked, he entred into this cogitation with himselfe: Why lie I here? |
A15803 | For we must all die, quoth Xenophon, must we therefore be throwne into a hole aliue? |
A15803 | For who will goe as a Herald, that hath himselfe beene murderer of Ambassadors? |
A15803 | From whence are so many Rebellions and Mutinies, Threatnings and Weapons bent against their owne Commanders? |
A15803 | From whence, I pray, are deriued our Motions, and whole manner of exercise now in vse, but from Antiquitie? |
A15803 | Goe to then, quoth Xenophon, wherein will yo ● imploy vs, if we become your conf ● derates? |
A15803 | Goe to, say the whole Band of the Velites is defeated and of no vse, what inconuenience is it? |
A15803 | Haue you none, or few? |
A15803 | He added, Was there any thing, Orontes, I wronged you in after this? |
A15803 | Heraclides answered, Yes ▪ Will he not then oppose against vs, if we seeke to lead the Souldiers away? |
A15803 | How can I then either compell you against your will, or lead you on by deceiuing you? |
A15803 | How many of our owne and stranger- armies haue beene cut in peeces, or put to flight by carelesnesse herein? |
A15803 | How many riuers are there, where we may make choice, and, as it were, cull out that number of you, with which we list to fight? |
A15803 | How much doe Slings differ in effect and force( for their forme is verie different) from our smal shot? |
A15803 | How shall we then assemble them, quoth they? |
A15803 | How then can any one man cast himselfe into more certaine danger, then by such counsell about himselfe and about you? |
A15803 | If he ouercome, what need the Bridge be broken? |
A15803 | If some little aduantage were adioined to their places, how would it inflame the lower sort of Souldiers? |
A15803 | If we hope for praise, who will praise vs, that carry our selues in this manner? |
A15803 | If you were disposed to goe into Perinthus, did not Aristarchus the Lacedemonian shut the gates against you, and keepe you out of the Citie? |
A15803 | Imagine you, we wanted fit ground to fall vpon you? |
A15803 | Is it not then manifest, that if Seuthes haue giuen me any thing, he hath so giuen it, that hee meant not to lose it, and yet pay you your due? |
A15803 | Is it not therefore better to fight with the enemy now we haue dined, than to morrow fasting? |
A15803 | My fellow, art thou ashamed to doe that, which many excellent men, yea Senators haue done? |
A15803 | Nay who Murther? |
A15803 | Now for the fashion of arming the Romans, what can be alleaged, why it should not be the best of all other? |
A15803 | Now what thinke you of these men? |
A15803 | O how good was this amongst the Romans in all respects? |
A15803 | Or what age doe I looke to attaine vnto? |
A15803 | Otherwise how shall we with a good heart sacrifice to the gods, when we commit such impieties? |
A15803 | Passe you not with much labour many plaines, that are friend to vs? |
A15803 | Say I beseech you if the Roman Campe and Guards had beene there, would this haue happened? |
A15803 | Say hereunto, I pray, whether you will stay, and haue truce, or else I shall carry tidings of warre vnto the King? |
A15803 | Say then, wherein I haue wronged you, hauing led you to the place, whither you all desired to goe? |
A15803 | See you not, what mountaines you are to march ouer, which if we take before hand, your passage is shut vp? |
A15803 | Seuthes asked: Episthenes will you die for him? |
A15803 | Shamefastnesse and honour, whither are you gone? |
A15803 | Should I praise, or exhort men to the Roman discipline? |
A15803 | Should a Souldier put his hand to the Spade? |
A15803 | Some will say: Shame you not to be so childishly deceiued? |
A15803 | Spent you not the Winter in plentie of all things? |
A15803 | Surely the most of our men are vnarmed, and what else, but to be compared to velitarie bands? |
A15803 | That also is neglected of vs. Where are our Field- teachers? |
A15803 | The market, you had, how was it furnished? |
A15803 | The third Halis two Furlongs broad, which can not be passed without shipping, and who will furnish you with Ships? |
A15803 | Then Cyrus asked him againe, will you henceforward then be enemie to my Brother, and friend, and trustie to me? |
A15803 | Then Xenophon smiling, said: If these suffice not to make vp the pay, whose Talent shall I say I haue? |
A15803 | Then who shall be our guide? |
A15803 | Therefore when I sent you before, comming vp with the Reare, did I not finde you digging of a pit, as though you meant to burie the man? |
A15803 | They asked, whether it were Xenophon the Athenian, and whether he came from the Armie? |
A15803 | They replied: But is he not one, that can sway the Souldiers, which way he thinketh best? |
A15803 | They replyed: Who can wrestle in so rough and wooddie a ground? |
A15803 | This being so, who would be so senselesse not to desire your friendship? |
A15803 | Those that you haue are they voide, and without effect? |
A15803 | Was it not the middest of Winter? |
A15803 | Well then, shall not I saile in one ship, you in a hundred at least? |
A15803 | What Commander therefore doe I expect out of any other Citie to direct vs? |
A15803 | What can I bring more wise, or more sound, than is by him alleaged? |
A15803 | What monie had you wherewith to buy? |
A15803 | What more common in Writings and Bookes? |
A15803 | What need words? |
A15803 | What opinion is that, quoth Phalinus? |
A15803 | What profit is more apparant, than of these Workes? |
A15803 | What should I then compare? |
A15803 | What then would I haue you doe? |
A15803 | What then, quoth Xenophon, can you giue the army, the Captaines and the Coronels, if we come? |
A15803 | What then, quoth he, did he not die ▪ after I shewed him to you? |
A15803 | What? |
A15803 | When Orontes confessed, he was not wronged; Cyrus asked him, Doe you confesse then, you haue done me wrong? |
A15803 | When we might haue cut you off, why did we not? |
A15803 | Where is our daily meditation of Armes? |
A15803 | Wherein then( quoth Cyrus) haue I wronged you, that you sought to betray me the third time? |
A15803 | Whether then is it not much easier now to take it vp and pay it, than it was to take vp the tenth part of it before we came vnto your seruice? |
A15803 | Which of our small Peeces carrieth his force point blanke, aboue 200. or 300. foot? |
A15803 | Who Rapes? |
A15803 | Who at this day punisheth Theft? |
A15803 | Why are you so silent? |
A15803 | Will you heare of another kinde? |
A15803 | Xenophon here remembred him and said: Are you he, that caried the sicke man? |
A15803 | Yet, I pray tell me, vpon what occasion were you beaten? |
A15803 | and did not I commend you therefore? |
A15803 | and you, what aide can you giue vs to further our passage? |
A15803 | how growne in strength either by Nature, or by Skill gotten through exercise? |
A15803 | or did I abuse you, when I was in Wine? |
A15803 | or fight with our enemies, when we kill our selues? |
A15803 | or fought with you about loue matters? |
A15803 | or what Citie, as friend, will receiue vs, when they see such lewdnesse in our conuersation? |
A15803 | or who dares furnish vs with prouision, when we are found in such horrible crimes? |
A15803 | whether did I aske you any thing, and because you gaue it not, did I beat you, or required I againe any thing of mine owne, that you had? |
A15803 | will you say not by the Parthians? |
A01818 | & 120 Adijcialis coena quae? |
A01818 | & eorum numerus initio, ac deinceps quātus? |
A01818 | & quare dicta? |
A01818 | & vnde dictus? |
A01818 | & vndè dicta? |
A01818 | & vndè dictum? |
A01818 | & vndè dictum? |
A01818 | & vndè dictum? |
A01818 | 1 Atri dies qui? |
A01818 | 10 Aediles vnde dicti? |
A01818 | 100 Causae capitales 117 Celebaris hasta 87 Celeres qui& vnde? |
A01818 | 100 Coena vnde dicta? |
A01818 | 104 Comitia,& comitium quomodo differunt? |
A01818 | 11 Circum venire quid signif ●? |
A01818 | 114 Custodes qui? |
A01818 | 116 Ara quid,& vnde dicta? |
A01818 | 119 Addicta bona quae? |
A01818 | 12 Agere forum quid? |
A01818 | 12 Candida toga 79 Candidatus vnde? |
A01818 | 120 Addicti servi qui? |
A01818 | 128 Accumbendi ratio apud Romanos qualis? |
A01818 | 128 Aediles Curules qui,& vnde dicti? |
A01818 | 13 Fratres arvales qui, quot,& vnde dicti? |
A01818 | 131 Aere diruti qui,& quare dicti? |
A01818 | 134 Agere de plano quid? |
A01818 | 137 Circenses ludi 68 Circus Maximus 13 Circus, quare dicitur fallax? |
A01818 | 14 Caudex quid? |
A01818 | 14 ● Adulterium quid? |
A01818 | 149 Auctor quis? |
A01818 | 154 Haeres in totum assem institutus, quomodo differat ab Haerede ex toto Asse? |
A01818 | 155 Biclinium vndè dictum? |
A01818 | 159 Antiquo quid significet? |
A01818 | 160 Campus sceleratus 11 Campus Martius quare Tiberin dict? |
A01818 | 165 Calumniari, praevaricari, tergiversari quomodo differūt? |
A01818 | 165 Effari templa quid? |
A01818 | 166 Abdicere quid? |
A01818 | 166 Ampliari quid? |
A01818 | 166 sub Iugum quid? |
A01818 | 169 An sponderet? |
A01818 | 17 Basilicae Romanae quae? |
A01818 | 174 Axare quid? |
A01818 | 176 Ceratae tabulae 99 Cereales ludi 73 Ceres quomodo effingi solita? |
A01818 | 178 Ante- signani qui? |
A01818 | 178 Carceres in circo quid,& vnde? |
A01818 | 178 Corona quid? |
A01818 | 178 Cunei in theatris quid? |
A01818 | 179 Barritum tollere 174 Basilica quae pars templi? |
A01818 | 179 Extispices qui,& vnde dicti? |
A01818 | 18 Elephantini libri qui? |
A01818 | 181 A BAND of souldiers cur sic dict? |
A01818 | 184 Corybantes vnde? |
A01818 | 185 Delubrum quid& vnde? |
A01818 | 186 Decumanus idem quod maximus& quare? |
A01818 | 191 Forum quotmodis sumitur? |
A01818 | 192 Adscriptus civis quis? |
A01818 | 193 sub Corona quid? |
A01818 | 20 Arae quare gramineae dictae? |
A01818 | 33 Genialis quid sig? |
A01818 | 36 Feretrius quare Iupiter dictus? |
A01818 | 37 Cereris sacra apud Romanos quo tempore facta? |
A01818 | 38 Histrio vnde dictus? |
A01818 | 39 Actiones redhibitoriae quae? |
A01818 | 39 Aruspices vnde dicti? |
A01818 | 41 Avibus malis quid? |
A01818 | 42 Laevum in rebus sacris quid? |
A01818 | 43 Aurea corona 192 Aurum coronarium quid? |
A01818 | 44 Auxilia quae? |
A01818 | 45 Extra- muraneus Mars quare dictus? |
A01818 | 45 Fanum quid,& vnde dictum? |
A01818 | 46 Albi dies qui? |
A01818 | 46 Flamines quot,& vnde dicti? |
A01818 | 49 Agones qui,& vndè dicti? |
A01818 | 50 B. BAlista quid? |
A01818 | 50 Benignitas in candidatis 109 Berecynthia vndè dicta? |
A01818 | 50 vnde dicti? |
A01818 | 50 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 quid? |
A01818 | 51 E. EDictum vnde? |
A01818 | 51 Foedus quid? |
A01818 | 54 Bessis quid? |
A01818 | 54 Coactum auspicium 44 Codex vnde? |
A01818 | 55 Aerarij qui? |
A01818 | 56 Adorea quid? |
A01818 | 56 Coenae caput 78 Cognoscere pronunciare quomodo diff ●? |
A01818 | 6 Agere pro Tribunali quid? |
A01818 | 60 Cuneus militū quid& quare? |
A01818 | 61 Devovere dijs inferis quid? |
A01818 | 63 Bissextus dies qui? |
A01818 | 65 Clarigatio quid? |
A01818 | 65 Dimicare quid? |
A01818 | 66 Altare quid,& vnde dictum? |
A01818 | 66 Attellanae vnde dictae? |
A01818 | 67 Apex quid? |
A01818 | 67 Ex iure manu consertum te voco 168 Exaggero vnde? |
A01818 | 68 Bellum quomodò indici solitum? |
A01818 | 69 Comoediae& Tragoed differentiae quaedam 72 Comessatio 76 Comitium quid,& vnde? |
A01818 | 7 Hostia vnde dicta? |
A01818 | 70 Auctio quid? |
A01818 | 73 Focus quid,& vnde dictus? |
A01818 | 74 Arvales fratres qui, quot,& vnde dicti? |
A01818 | 74 Bustum quid? |
A01818 | 75 Convivarum quantus numerus? |
A01818 | 76 Acerra quid? |
A01818 | 76 Ante- pilani qui? |
A01818 | 76 Bissextilis annus qui? |
A01818 | 78 Acca Laurentia quae,& ei cur sacra instituta? |
A01818 | 79 Amphitheatrum quid? |
A01818 | 8 Bellare coestu quid? |
A01818 | 8 Cohors 175 Coire quid signif ●? |
A01818 | 8 locus quis? |
A01818 | 81 Emancipati qui? |
A01818 | 85 Gallicinium 65 Gemoniae scalae vbi 5 Genialis arbor quae? |
A01818 | 97 Aerarium vnde dictum? |
A01818 | ? |
A01818 | ? |
A01818 | A A. Litera in tabulâ scripta quid significet? |
A01818 | Addicere quid significet? |
A01818 | Aediles plebeij qui? |
A01818 | Aera Corybantia,& vndè dicta? |
A01818 | Aerarium quomodò differat à fisco? |
A01818 | Ampliatio quid? |
A01818 | An auctor esset? |
A01818 | An satisdaret? |
A01818 | Anniversariae feriae quae? |
A01818 | Ante coenium quid,& vnde dictum? |
A01818 | Apollinares ludi qui? |
A01818 | Archi- gallus quis,& vnde dictus? |
A01818 | At quid tibi cum foeneratione? |
A01818 | Augurandi ceremoniae 42 Auguria prospera& adversa quā do dicta? |
A01818 | Augurum collegium 40 Augures vndè dicti? |
A01818 | Augustus Octavius Caesar dictus 120 Avibus bonis quid? |
A01818 | Auspicari rem quid? |
A01818 | Auspicium coactum quid? |
A01818 | Avis sinistra quid significet? |
A01818 | Bustuarij qui? |
A01818 | Bustuarij vndè dicti? |
A01818 | Capitolinus mons 2 Capitolium vnde? |
A01818 | Castoris templum 9 Castrenses ludi 75 Catapulta quid,& vnde? |
A01818 | Cavea quid? |
A01818 | Centum viri 117 Centuria quid? |
A01818 | Cervi, pars aggeris quare dicti? |
A01818 | Cinctutus 174 Cimiliarchium quid? |
A01818 | Civilis dies quomodo dividitur? |
A01818 | Clientes qui? |
A01818 | Comperendinari quid propriè? |
A01818 | Conticinium 65 Contubernium: Contubernij caput 175 Convivia Romanorum quàm varia? |
A01818 | De Senatu,& quis Princeps Senatus,& qui Senatores Pedarij? |
A01818 | Dij animales qui? |
A01818 | Forum transitorium,& cur sic dictum? |
A01818 | Funalia vnde? |
A01818 | Furcifer vnde? |
A01818 | G. GAlli Cybelles sacerdotes 54 Gallica quid? |
A01818 | GODWINE noli, pergis? |
A01818 | Haeres sextulâ aspersus Helepolis machinae genus, quid& vnde? |
A01818 | How he scoffeth me? |
A01818 | King art thou awake? |
A01818 | L. LAcerna quid? |
A01818 | Must I be whipped for thy fault? |
A01818 | O yee Romanes is it your wil and pleasure that this law shall passe or no? |
A01818 | So that if any made this question, whether there was a God, or no? |
A01818 | THis word Ludus hath diverse acceptions, sometimes it is takē for a iest or scoffe, as vt me ludos facit? |
A01818 | The right of the Lordship or owning any thing was sued for in this maner: The plainteiffe did question with the defendant thus; first An auctor esset? |
A01818 | The solemne forme of words vsed in the first demande, is thus to be seene in ſ Tully, Quando in Iure te conspicio, postulo ann ● e sies auctor? |
A01818 | To him once every yeare the Vestall Nunnes repaired, u and vsed this forme of words, Vigilasne Rex? |
A01818 | Tu verò spondesne idem, ni sim? |
A01818 | Vtpote qui foenerari beneficium non soles, sed illud pulchrè foeneratum putes quo qui accepit rectè vtitur:& quid mihi cum solutione? |
A01818 | i56 Decurio quot signif? |
A01818 | must I to my work?) |
A01818 | quid? |
A01818 | quot? |
A01818 | who is here? |
A09833 | And by consequence how can any man resolue of succours, if he knowes not the multitude of the Enemies, and the place where they are? |
A09833 | And if any one kils a Traytor to his Country, or a Tyrant, shall he not be commended by all the World, held deare and honoured? |
A09833 | And if any one strikes a free man to punish and amend him, shall wee not hold him an honest man and praise worthy? |
A09833 | And if that hapned, to what Gods would they make their prayers and vowes? |
A09833 | And if thou knowest not in what part, to what purpose, and the cause why thou wilt make it? |
A09833 | And if you haue formerly preuented, and giuen order for those, what meanes can there remaine? |
A09833 | And that now againe they declared themselues our Enemies, inviolating their oath and Faith? |
A09833 | Are there not many Etoliens in Greece? |
A09833 | Are you angry with me that I haue not deliuered you Victualls? |
A09833 | Are you ignorant that their forces are call''d in against your selues and all Greece? |
A09833 | As for his Successours, how dares he presume to speake? |
A09833 | But had it not beene much better to say thus? |
A09833 | But how can it bee that from a false beginning the end should bee true? |
A09833 | But how many Armies? |
A09833 | But how may a man finde aide and succours to defend himselfe, being wronged in his owne Countrey? |
A09833 | But if they can diuert or turne it,( which is an easie thing) of what amazement and great terrour will this Ordonance be? |
A09833 | But out of what Greece would you haue me depart? |
A09833 | But to what end doe I vse these words? |
A09833 | But to what end tend our words? |
A09833 | But was there euer Nation more hardie, nor more warre- like, nor that more carefully obserued the ordinances of warre than the Romanes? |
A09833 | But what can be spoken more vnreasonable? |
A09833 | But what can bee spoken more vnreasonably? |
A09833 | But what can you finde more disloyall then a neighbour enemy? |
A09833 | But what neede is there to relate in particular the Deeds of those which haue succeeded them, and how ill they haue intreated Greece? |
A09833 | But what? |
A09833 | But who can prescribe an order to a multitude, who spoile all where they come? |
A09833 | But who hindred him? |
A09833 | But why haue wee brought these things from so farre? |
A09833 | But would Darius suddainly shew himselfe against the Enemy? |
A09833 | Cianeins, and Abydeins done? |
A09833 | Either in regard of the outrage of the Etoliens, or the bounty of the Macedonians, or for any other thing which hath beene auaileable vnto them? |
A09833 | Finally, to what end doe wee vse this discourse of Fabius or of his writings? |
A09833 | Finally, what neede is there to declare that, which since hath beene done vnto you? |
A09833 | For how can wee otherwise call this kind of Malice? |
A09833 | For making Warre onely against the Etoliens, hee could neuer subdue them, how then will hee support this present Watre? |
A09833 | For this cause some one will demaund with reason, what portion of the Common- weale remaines to the people? |
A09833 | For what a multitude of Grecians are there in Thrace, whereof the Athenians and Calsidonians haue planted Collonies? |
A09833 | For who would not be encouraged, to see the Images of men whom they honour in regard of vertue, and as it were aliue? |
A09833 | From whence shall I say they take their first growth and being? |
A09833 | Had you all the Grecians? |
A09833 | Haue I opprest you more with toiles and dangers then the rest, giuing them more Commodities and profites then vnto you? |
A09833 | Hauing these, whom else doest thou feare? |
A09833 | How can a man worke safely, or otherwise? |
A09833 | How can the course and perfections of the Day and Night be knowne without the consideration of the said difference? |
A09833 | How do you limit it? |
A09833 | How hath Tymeus sackt the Temple of Neptune in Tasmare, that of Artimedes at Luses? |
A09833 | How many Forts? |
A09833 | How many and what Citties haue fallen into the Enemies hands thereby? |
A09833 | In regard of the executions done by Cassander, Demetrius, and Antigonus, Gonas, who is ignorant of them? |
A09833 | In regard of the iniquity of Philip, what neede is there to vse any long discourse? |
A09833 | In what Language would they speake, to mooue the Victors to a Commiseration of their calamitie? |
A09833 | In what place then hath he ordered the multitude of Souldiers, but in the Reare of the Horse- men? |
A09833 | Is it Andobale and Mandonin? |
A09833 | Is it not of Barbarians? |
A09833 | Is there any thing more foolish, then to thinke long to couer with words things that are plaine and euident? |
A09833 | Is there nothing more easie then a Battalion broken and scattred in Front? |
A09833 | Is this an Act worthy of reproach and reprehension? |
A09833 | It is the errour of the Romans which haue not yeilded that vnto you now, which hath beene formerly due vnto you? |
A09833 | Matters standing in this estate, who will not thinke but wee had reason to say that which wee haue formerly spoken? |
A09833 | Moreouer vpon what colour he detained Escheins, Thebes, Phthie, Pharsalia, and Larrisse? |
A09833 | Moreouer, for what reason did the Company which was slaine with Leonides, cast themselues vppon the Enemy in view of all the World? |
A09833 | Moreouer, hee sayth, that after his death his Wife lamented him in this manner: Why haue not I thee, nor thou mee? |
A09833 | Moreouer, who will doubt but the Gaules had the worst, being chargd as well in the Reare as in the Front? |
A09833 | Moreouer, who will take compassion of those which degenerating lose their principalities? |
A09833 | Murther in a Cittizen is likewise forbidden, and seuerely punisht: But if any one kils a Thiefe or an Adulterer, is hee not held for innocent? |
A09833 | Nor a Warre more dangerous then with a barbarous Nation? |
A09833 | Or assure the hearts of his men when Fortune fauours him, if hee haue not a true particular knowledge of the deedes of his Ancestors? |
A09833 | Or draw all the VVorld vnto his owne opinion, making a new enterprize? |
A09833 | Or else hauing obtained that which you demaund you should not be bound vnto vs? |
A09833 | Or how can hee plot any Enterprize, which knowes not the number of the Enemies, nor the quantity of Corne which is come vnto them from their Allies? |
A09833 | Or to what league doe you inuite these men? |
A09833 | Shall it not be great and ample? |
A09833 | Shall they be sold with their wiues and Children? |
A09833 | Shall we not with reason be destitute and voide of many things by our owne fault, if wee disdaine those which wee may fore see? |
A09833 | Tell mee, how canst thou make a good beginning, if thou hast not first comprehended in thy vnderstanding the end of thy Enterprize? |
A09833 | That which they vsually say, I did not thinke it: and who would euer haue thought that should haue happened? |
A09833 | The Companions of the Warre of Syrria and Caria? |
A09833 | The Consuls being in one Campe, they doe alwaies thus: But if they be separated, they obserue the first order? |
A09833 | Then Philip returning to Arate, art thou of this aduice? |
A09833 | Thinke you that right and equitie, ought to bee preserued to Friends? |
A09833 | Thinke you this present warre is like vnto the precedent, and not different? |
A09833 | This Warre is altogether infamous, full of ignominy, and cursed, is it not necessary to stay and deferre it? |
A09833 | To what end doe we propound vnto you precedent actions to consider on, but that in regard of them you should fight more confidently? |
A09833 | VVhat must they attend that doe such vnlawfull things? |
A09833 | VVhat punishment may wee ordayne for so foule an outrage? |
A09833 | VVhat shall I then say? |
A09833 | VVhat should you then doe? |
A09833 | Was it not to the end they might see them vndergoe the danger, not only for their owne liberty, but also for the rest of Greece? |
A09833 | Was there euer any thing done that was more rare and excellent? |
A09833 | Were it not an honest and commendable thing, that in giuing them your Faith, you should become Enemies to your owne Country? |
A09833 | What City hath had a greater estate and power then that of the Olynthiens? |
A09833 | What Principles then shall I assigne for gouernment? |
A09833 | What can he answere? |
A09833 | What could he say worse, or more pernitious? |
A09833 | What doe wee then see in this violence? |
A09833 | What hath Lattabe and Nicostrates done? |
A09833 | What is hee that would willingly follow vnexpected accidents, and without reason? |
A09833 | What is hee who considering these things can without compassion heare the relation? |
A09833 | What man is he that would not eyther vanquish in fighting, or die in the Combat, then to liue in misery, and attend so great a storme and pouerty? |
A09833 | What man of iudgement will make choice of the danger which is neare him, if hee obserue it well? |
A09833 | What other spectacle can wee finde more beautifull? |
A09833 | What profit can a Prince or Commander reape, which hath not the knowledge of dangers which hee must auoide, lest the whole Army perish with him? |
A09833 | What reason is there then that you should feare the same men, with whom you are to enter into an equall Combate? |
A09833 | What reason were there that the Wicked should be equall in Honour with the Good? |
A09833 | What remaines now to be done? |
A09833 | What shall the Romans haue remaining after your defeat? |
A09833 | What shall wee thinke to be the cause of this accident? |
A09833 | What the Etoliens require now of you? |
A09833 | What? |
A09833 | When as Darius was in the middest of his Mercenaries, how hath he call''d them? |
A09833 | When as Philip laboured to let him vnderstand that the Rhodiens had beene the first Assailants, Marcus interrupting him said; What haue the Athenians? |
A09833 | When was there euer greater abundance of all things, nor more prerogatiues of the Citty of Rome? |
A09833 | When was there euer greater hope for Souldiers then there is at this day? |
A09833 | Whence comes it that Macedonian Battallions, are frustrated of their Hope of Victory? |
A09833 | Whereon then doe these men ground an accusation against me? |
A09833 | Whereto then did you aym ●? |
A09833 | Whereunto then should an Historiographer make his Auditours more attentiue? |
A09833 | Which are they? |
A09833 | Which of you doth not know that as they first falsified their Faith with the Carthaginians comming to vs? |
A09833 | Who are they moreouer which haue made a League, and sworne it with Alexander the Epirote to ruine Acarnania, and to diuide it: Haue not you done it? |
A09833 | Who are they which haue called Antigonus the sonne of Demetrius to subuert the Acheins? |
A09833 | Who hath defeated and quite ruinated them in a short time, but their owne Consideration, and an ouer- weaning confidence in their force and courage? |
A09833 | Who hath sent such Commaunders contrary vnto the publique good, as you haue done? |
A09833 | Who knowes not that if necessity doth force them to attempt a thing, that a great part of the Troupes must perish before the Commanders feele it? |
A09833 | Who will not say but they haue beene the cause of their owne miseries? |
A09833 | Why hee had spoiled the Cyaneins, of the Etolien Burgeoiship, being a friend to the Etoliens? |
A09833 | With whom at this day haue you communication of your hope? |
A09833 | ward? |
A09833 | what affection shall wee beare vnto them? |
A09833 | which of them hath first assailed you? |
A36161 | & audes Fatidicum verbis fallere velle Deum? |
A36161 | & ultra Limites clientium Salis avarus? |
A36161 | 27. asks Why the Ancients consecrated the walls of their Cities, and not the Gates thereof? |
A36161 | Ac non antè malis dementem actum Furiis, quàm In matris jugulo ferrum tepefecit acutum? |
A36161 | Addis, ait, culpae mendacia, Phoebus? |
A36161 | An Infant do this, who is yet in Swadling- Clouts? |
A36161 | An tu reris cum occissâ insenuisse parente? |
A36161 | An vellet eum quem adoptaturus esset, justum sibi filium esse? |
A36161 | And did he after this Action get the Applause of Greece, and win the Victory? |
A36161 | And do you think that she will mind you, or be able to know you? |
A36161 | And grant I did know it, could I hinder dying? |
A36161 | And has he taken nothing away? |
A36161 | And of the Son, An i d fieri pateretur? |
A36161 | And thou Saturn and Japetus, must I suffer so much for nothing? |
A36161 | And what would you have? |
A36161 | And will not one Night be sufficient? |
A36161 | And would you on your part have Vulcan forsake the Son of a Goddess he is in Love with? |
A36161 | Apollo, Have you seen little Mercury? |
A36161 | Are you afraid to die of Thirst, as if there were another Death after this? |
A36161 | Are you celebrating the Marriage of Ceres? |
A36161 | Are you lame as well as blind? |
A36161 | Are you satisfied, do you acquit me of it? |
A36161 | Are you so lazy, that you can not stoop to drink, or as much as take up some Water in the Hollow of your Hand? |
A36161 | At canis ante Pedes saxo fabricatus eodem Stabat, quae standi cum Lare causa fuit? |
A36161 | Aurelius Victor mentions a certain Game amongst the Romans, by tossing up a piece of Janus''s Money, saying Navi an Dii? |
A36161 | Ay, to be beaten by Aeacus, I thank ye? |
A36161 | But how came it to pass that this fair one fell off the Ram she was riding upon, and her Brother did not? |
A36161 | But how can she be good, if she befals without distinction both good and bad Men? |
A36161 | But how did you bear Death after you had left Life for it? |
A36161 | But how do they do to enter the Lists with him? |
A36161 | But there is yet a middle pronounciation between the E and the I. Wherefore Varro observes that they said veam instead of viam? |
A36161 | But were you not satisfied and pleased to see the Light? |
A36161 | But what Art or Trade do they profess? |
A36161 | But what harm would that do thee? |
A36161 | But what moved you to relinquish your Dominion? |
A36161 | But why would you meddle with Achilles? |
A36161 | By chance, says Horace, he meets his Adversary, and crys to him with a loud voice, Whither art thou flying, thou infamous Fellow? |
A36161 | Can any man want a penny? |
A36161 | Cererine, mi Strobile, has sunt facturi nuptias? |
A36161 | Cernis odoratis ut luceat ignibus aether, Et sonet accensis spica Cilissa focis? |
A36161 | DICITO, si pascuntur Aves? |
A36161 | Did not this Design seem to have somewhat in it of the Air of Greece, which this Prince affects so much? |
A36161 | Do not pretend to tell us what to do? |
A36161 | Do they do nothing, but eat and drink? |
A36161 | Do we repent to have been seeking for the Family of the Balbi in Spain, or others no less illustrious in Gallia Narbonensis? |
A36161 | Do you call him a Child? |
A36161 | Dost thou know Io? |
A36161 | Dost thou remember it still? |
A36161 | Et quò tu, turpissimè? |
A36161 | From whence sent he you on this Errand? |
A36161 | Ga, and be happy in thy Amour; but tell me when hast thou seen her, thou being in Arcadia, and she in Sicily? |
A36161 | Go and teach Craesus his Son; I''ll continue to be a Man, and not become a Statue: But yet, what will you perform after so long Silence? |
A36161 | Good- morrow, Son, but who are you that call me so? |
A36161 | Have not you drunk of the Waters of Lethe, as others have done? |
A36161 | Have the Air and Fire any Form? |
A36161 | He then commanded the Sacrificer, who asked him Agon'', Shall I strike? |
A36161 | Here are great Promises, indeed, and the Person looks with a good Aspect; but what does he chiefly know? |
A36161 | Here is a Coelestial and Divine Life; who will buy it? |
A36161 | Here is a very sharp Axe, I bring you; what am I to do with it? |
A36161 | How can Goddess Fortune be sometimes good, and sometimes bad? |
A36161 | How can one distinguish them, seeing they are so like? |
A36161 | How can you discern them, they being so like one another? |
A36161 | How could he think that one blind as I am, could find out a meritorious Person which is so rare a Thing? |
A36161 | How do you reckon? |
A36161 | How is that? |
A36161 | How long say they, will you lament the dead? |
A36161 | How so? |
A36161 | How was that, we know nothing of it? |
A36161 | How was that? |
A36161 | I believe it, but what do you do then? |
A36161 | I believe it, since you say it, but tell me what is it you fear? |
A36161 | I have heard, O Chiron, that tho''you were Immortal you wished for Death, how could you desire a Thing so little to be loved? |
A36161 | I shall then at this rate be immortal: But enough of these Things: What do you live upon? |
A36161 | I would fain know? |
A36161 | If I become a Chapman, what will you teach me? |
A36161 | If I tell you whither you are going, will you believe me? |
A36161 | If he could be sensible of what they do, doubtless he would say, why do ye lament me so much, and torment your selves for me, who am happier than you? |
A36161 | Is it because the Darkness wherein I am frights you, or because you think I am smothered with the Weight of my Tomb? |
A36161 | Is it that you impos''d upon us? |
A36161 | Is not this Great and Worthy of Jupiter? |
A36161 | Is there ever a God in Heaven more unhappy than I? |
A36161 | Is this little Thief already so expert? |
A36161 | It must be so in spight of me; But who would do it? |
A36161 | It s very pleasant, indeed, a Man must be a Fidler before he is a Philosopher: And what will you teach me after that? |
A36161 | Laban pursued Jacob, and complained of his being robbed of his Gods: Cur furatus es Deos meos? |
A36161 | Let us go, why do you halt? |
A36161 | Lo, I bring thee a very sharp Hatchet; What wouldst thou have us do with it? |
A36161 | May one ask him a Question? |
A36161 | Mercury, What do you laugh at? |
A36161 | Mihi non liceat meas Ancillas Veneris dè arâ abdacere? |
A36161 | Pan, You reflect upon your self more than I, in saying so; Do you no longer remember that pretty Woman whom you ravish''d in Arcadia? |
A36161 | Plautus mentions them in his Bacchides; Ducentos nummos auros Philippeos probos dabin''? |
A36161 | Plautus, in his Curculio, makes Phoedromus say, Quo me vertam nescio? |
A36161 | Plutarch proposes this Question, Why at Rome many rich Persons consecrated to Hercules the tenth part of their Estate? |
A36161 | Pray, where is he? |
A36161 | Pull then thy Boat ashore; but what course canst thou take to make me pay thee, seeing I have no Money-? |
A36161 | Qui sunt qui Imperatores inter duas lauros obsident? |
A36161 | Quid jurem? |
A36161 | Quid quod usque proximos Revellis agri terminos? |
A36161 | Quî? |
A36161 | Redde pilam: sonat aes thermarum: ludere pergis? |
A36161 | See, here are Buyers enough, we must not let them cool: With whom shall we begin? |
A36161 | Shall I strike? |
A36161 | Shall I tell thee my opinion in this matter? |
A36161 | Shall you be the only person to boast having passed in Charon''s Ferry for nothing? |
A36161 | Suppose it be already purified; how will you instruct me? |
A36161 | Suppose it should be so? |
A36161 | Tantalus, why do you weep, and what Torment do you endure in this Lake where you dwell? |
A36161 | Tell me, whether the Birds eat or no? |
A36161 | Tertullian speaks of these Laurels, when he said, Who should be bold enough to besiege the Emperours between two Laurels? |
A36161 | That I lay with him? |
A36161 | That happens frequently, but when you go alone, how can you find the Way seeing you are blind? |
A36161 | That would be a fine thing indeed? |
A36161 | The manner of doing this was by a certain Form of Words used by both Parties, Quod ego promisi facisne, or habesne acceptum? |
A36161 | There are other Waters to be met with, which percolate through Veins of unctuous Earth, and which seem as if mixt with Oil? |
A36161 | This is confirm''d by Tully, in his first Book de divinatione; and? |
A36161 | Tho''I should have been so cruel as to devour my Children, could I eat a Stone without being choaked, or breaking my Teeth? |
A36161 | Tully agrees with Plato''s opinion: Cur autem Arcûs species non in Deorum numero reponatur? |
A36161 | Two Greeks and as many Gauls? |
A36161 | Villain, shall I set you at Liberty? |
A36161 | Vis antestari? |
A36161 | What Cheat can there be in such things as are so manifest and certain? |
A36161 | What Harm could he do? |
A36161 | What good will it do you to see her again for a Moment, and then lose her for ever? |
A36161 | What has he done? |
A36161 | What makes you bite your Fingers? |
A36161 | What say you, that I am not the same Person that speaks to you? |
A36161 | What, are not Heaven and Earth sufficient for this service? |
A36161 | Where did you study? |
A36161 | Where were you born? |
A36161 | Where will you find a noble Tomb either for Orestes or Pylades in Argos and Messena; whereas they are adored by the Scythians? |
A36161 | Wherefore he inriches but very few just men; for being blind, how can he find a just man, who is a thing so scarce to meet with? |
A36161 | Whether he consented to do it? |
A36161 | Whether he would submit to it? |
A36161 | Who are you in love with, is it with a Woman, a Nymph, or any one of the Nereides? |
A36161 | Who are you that talk thus? |
A36161 | Who do you think was Ixion? |
A36161 | Who has a mind to be more than a Man? |
A36161 | Who, the Daughter of Inachu ●? |
A36161 | Why ask you that? |
A36161 | Why did not the Magicians of Persia make use thereof against Lucullus, when the said General cut their Armies in pieces without Mercy? |
A36161 | Why do these young Men give one another the Foyl, and tumble in the Dirt like Swine, endeavouring to Stifle, and hinder each other to take breath? |
A36161 | Why dost thou weep poor Fool, says Diogenes, did not Aristotle teach thee, that all this is but Vanity? |
A36161 | Why have then Men consecrated them several Temples, Altars and Ceremonies? |
A36161 | Why is it that you run so fast in your Return, since you do not know the Way? |
A36161 | Why not? |
A36161 | Why not? |
A36161 | Why not? |
A36161 | Why should not I laugh, Apollo, at so pleasant an Adventure? |
A36161 | Why so? |
A36161 | Why will not you eat Beans? |
A36161 | Will not you teach me to know Castor from Pollux; for I am continually mistaken because of their Likeness to one another? |
A36161 | Will you bear Witness? |
A36161 | Will you kill your selves with Despai ● for your Friends, and leave your Children Orphans? |
A36161 | With what Fountain pray? |
A36161 | Would you appear before her in this Condition, which will make her die for very fear? |
A36161 | Would you have me betray the People that revered me? |
A36161 | You ca n''t recall them to Life again, by all your Tears? |
A36161 | You have a mind to see whether I am mad or no, I warrant: but tell me in good earnest, what will you imploy it about? |
A36161 | aut ubi? |
A36161 | must I have nothing then for ferrying you over? |
A36161 | or are you willing to conceal your secret? |
A36161 | or else are not your Prophecies transmitted down to us? |
A36161 | quae? |
A36161 | said the Debtor; Do you acknowledg that you have received that which I promis''d you? |
A36161 | say ye, for nothing; have I not drudged and tugged at the Oar and Pump, without molesting thee with my lamentations as others have done? |
A36161 | what will become then of the definition of Fortune? |
A36161 | which will you have, a God or a Ship? |
A36161 | would''st thou have Money from one that has none? |
A36161 | — Amphora cepit Institui, currente rotâ cur urceus exit? |
A36161 | — Sola insuperabile fatum, Nata, movere pavas? |
A36161 | — — Quid ultrà tendis? |
A55203 | ( said he) does he come against us, as against men? |
A55203 | ( said they) and who is it we refuse to obey? |
A55203 | After him Hyperides set upon him, demanding of Phocion when the time would come, he would advise the Athenians to make War? |
A55203 | Agesilaus in scorn asked, Why they were not ready to receive them? |
A55203 | Agis answering He was: And when did Lycurgus( reply''d Leonidas) cancel Debts, or admit of Strangers? |
A55203 | Alexander enquired, To whom the Woman belong''d? |
A55203 | And Cleomenes guessing at his meaning, reply''d, What do you say, Lysandridas, sure you will not advise me to restore your City to you again? |
A55203 | And because the Person who made the Reflections, had been suspected for Sodomy, With what face, said he, can you compare Cornelia with your self? |
A55203 | And do you sit silent here to watch me? |
A55203 | And had I not been miserable with less dishonour, if I had met with a more severe and inhumane Enemy? |
A55203 | And if you do not, said Philip, what will you forfeit for your Rashness? |
A55203 | And in Utica declare War against him, from whom Cato and Pompey the great fled out of Italy? |
A55203 | And the last being ask''d, How long he thought it decent for a Man to live? |
A55203 | And when the King ask''d her, Who she was? |
A55203 | And which of us is a Scipio, a Pompey, or a Cato? |
A55203 | And who is it that scratcheth his Head so nicely with one Finger? |
A55203 | And you, young man, why do n''t you bind your Fathers Hands behind him, that when Caesar comes, he may find me unable to defend my self? |
A55203 | Are we not still Masters of our own Swords? |
A55203 | Are ye still to learn, said he, the End and Perfection of our Victories is to avoid the Vices and Infirmities of those whom we subdue? |
A55203 | At last Cleomenes venturing to tell her, she laugh''d heartily, and said, Was this the thing that you had often a mind to tell me; and was afraid? |
A55203 | But must I be disarm''d, and hindred from using my own Reason? |
A55203 | But now that all Men make their Honour give way to their Fear; shall we alone engage for the Liberty of Rome? |
A55203 | But when they began to reason among themselves, the Fear they had of Coesar soon overcame the Reverence they bore to Cato: For who are we? |
A55203 | Caesar ask''d him, Whether he saw any thing in the Entrails, which promis''d an happy Event? |
A55203 | Caesar call''d him by his Name, and said, What hopes, C. Crassinius, and what grounds for encouragement? |
A55203 | Caesar presently ask''d him, Why do n''t you then out of the same fear keep at home? |
A55203 | Cleomenes seeing him landing,( for he was then walking upon the Key) kindly saluted him, and ask''d, What Business brought him to Aegypt? |
A55203 | Do n''t you remember, saith he, you are Caesar; and will you abate any thing of that Honor which is due to your Dignity? |
A55203 | Do not you know, said he, that Jupiter is represented to have Justice and Law on each Hand of him? |
A55203 | Do you think People, if they had receiv''d no Injury, would come such a Journey only to calumniate your Father? |
A55203 | Epaminondas again asked him, What grounds he had for demanding liberty for Sparta? |
A55203 | Epaminondas briskly returned the Question, Whether it were sit that Sparta should live by hers? |
A55203 | For how is it probable that he would have been tender of his Life, who was so bitter against his Memory? |
A55203 | Have I not suffer''d something more injurious and deplorable in her Life- time? |
A55203 | He answered, His Brother: And being asked, Whom next? |
A55203 | He ask''d him then before them all, Whether Lycurgus were not in his opinion a vast and a wise Man? |
A55203 | He ask''d them to whom they were carrying the Water? |
A55203 | He bid the fourth tell him, What Arguments he us''d to Sabbas to perswade him to Revolt? |
A55203 | He refus''d to comply; but the presently pull''d him forward, and ask''d him, who he was, and whence? |
A55203 | He was scarce suffer''d to be heard, when he demanded, if they intended to put them to death by form of Law or not? |
A55203 | His Question to the third was, Which was the craftiest Animal? |
A55203 | How much better might my Lot have fall''n among the inglorious Crowd, unknown or unregarded? |
A55203 | I see thou rejoycest in thy Conquest, and for what cause I pritthee? |
A55203 | If there shall be no end of this Warfare but with that of my Life? |
A55203 | Is it not that Caesar, to whom all the Power of Rome has submitted? |
A55203 | Is it that instead of one, we might appear meaner than two, whilst we fly Antigonus, and flatter Ptolomy? |
A55203 | Menander, in one of his Comedies, alludes to this wonderful Event, when he says, How this Resembles Alexander''s high Exploits? |
A55203 | Nor was Caesar without suspicions of him, so that he took occasion to say to his Friends, What do you think Cassius drives at? |
A55203 | Of the fifth he ask''d, Which was eldest, Night or Day? |
A55203 | Of the second, he desir''d to know, Whether the Sea or Land produc''d the largest Beasts? |
A55203 | One of his Friends that stood by, askt him, if he would have any thing to his Son? |
A55203 | One of the Rabble who saw him there, ask''d another, Who that was? |
A55203 | Or can you bring any Reason to prove, that it is not base, and unworthy Cato, when he can find his Safety no other way, to seek it from his Enemy? |
A55203 | Or, is it for your Mother''s sake that you retreat to Aegypt? |
A55203 | Or, shall we sit lazily in Aegypt enquiring what News from Sparta? |
A55203 | Others again affirm, that she wholly declin''d this Vanity, and was wo nt to say, Will Alexander never leave making Juno jealous of me? |
A55203 | Others say, he only adk''d him the Reason, Why Alexander undertook so long a Voyage to come into those Parts? |
A55203 | Phocion taking notice of a poor old Fellow in a tatter''d Coat passing by, asked them, If they thought him in worse condition than that poor Wretch? |
A55203 | Shall we set free our Slaves against Caesar, who have our selves no more Liberty than he is pleas''d to allow? |
A55203 | She being amazed, answer''d, but why so suddenly? |
A55203 | So that at last he had wasted or engag''d almost all the Crown- Lands, which giving Perdiccas an occasion to ask him, What he would leave himself? |
A55203 | Some answer''d, According to Law: He reply''d, How should that be done, except we have a fair Hearing? |
A55203 | The Answer of the seventh to his Question, How a Man might be a God? |
A55203 | The ancient Leonidas( as Story saith) being ask''d, What manner of Poet he thought Tyrtoeus? |
A55203 | The day before this Assassination, he supp''d with M. Lepidus; as he was signing some Letters, there arose a Dispute what sort of Death was the best? |
A55203 | The first being ask''d, Which he thought most numerous, the Dead or the Living? |
A55203 | The old Man charm, d with his Magnanimity and Courtesie ask''d him, What his Countreymen should do to merit his Friendship? |
A55203 | Then he first seem''d to have recover''d his senses; and when he had said to himself, What, into my Camp too? |
A55203 | They ask''d him, Whether now at least he did not repent his Rashness? |
A55203 | They asked him, Who he was? |
A55203 | This looking like a Paradox, the Accusers ask''d him, why he parted with his Wife? |
A55203 | This nettled Alexander so, that throwing one of the Cups at his Head, You Villain, said he, what am I then, a Bastard? |
A55203 | This sawcy Companion asking Phocion, if he durst presume to perswade the Athenians to Peace now their Swords were in their hands? |
A55203 | What Man is that, that is to seek for a Man? |
A55203 | What an endless Train of War is here? |
A55203 | What( said the King) art thou Callipides the Scaramonchio? |
A55203 | When Porus was taken Prisoner, and Alexander ask''d him, How he expected to be us''d? |
A55203 | When all that failed, he boldly accosted him, and asked him, Whether he knew him not? |
A55203 | When at last, and where will this Caesar let us be quiet? |
A55203 | When he had said this, he ask''d Crassus and Pompey, who sat on each side of him, Whether they consented to the Bills he had propos''d? |
A55203 | While he was yet very young; to some that asked him, Whom he loved best? |
A55203 | Whither do we madly sail, flying that which is near, and seeking that which is far removed? |
A55203 | Who had taken away his Sword? |
A55203 | Why do not you put me on ship board, and send this Carkase where it may be most servicable to Sparta, before Age wastes it unprofitably here? |
A55203 | Why does no body persuade me by Reason, or teach me what is better, if I have design''d any thing that''s ill? |
A55203 | and how prudent, if I had follow''d his Destiny, as I design''d? |
A55203 | and if he had not, why did he take her again? |
A55203 | and if not one, why the other? |
A55203 | and when he would come? |
A55203 | and whom Antigonus hath been pleas''d to make Governour of Lacedaemon? |
A55203 | have you brought forth such Children as she has done? |
A55203 | how great is the Calamity of the Persians? |
A55203 | in Greece how ill Affairs are govern''d? |
A55203 | into the very Camp? |
A55203 | or what means this hast? |
A55203 | or who could with any patience hear his Friends, if they should pretend to defend his Government as not Arbitrary and Tyrannical? |
A55203 | what dost thou mean? |
A55203 | will not you, as well as your Brother, intercede with your Vncle in our behalf? |
A55203 | will you ne''r leave prating of Laws to us that have Swords by our sides? |
A64912 | 5. Who is ignorant how highly the Authority of Q. Gatulus was advanc''d, at that very time when there was a crowd of famous men living? |
A64912 | 5. Who more powerful, who more opulent than L. Sylla? |
A64912 | After he had shed the blood of others, did he not shed his own? |
A64912 | Afterwards being asked by the same God in his sleep, Whether be thought himself punished enough for the neglect of his Command? |
A64912 | Again, Q. Fabius Maximus the Son of Q. Fabius Maximus, sirnamed Allobrogicus, what a luxurious and dissolute life did he lead? |
A64912 | Again, said Calatinus, if the Consuls and your Omens were different, which were first to be follow''d? |
A64912 | Also when the Senate sent to him to come into Court; Rather; said he, why doth not the Senate come to the Hostilia to me? |
A64912 | And he, Dost thou not know, that they are not yet p ● st? |
A64912 | And how much, think you, said the other, if I should cut te ● little shr ● bs out of it? |
A64912 | And now the Clemency of M. Marcellus, how famous and how memorable an Example ought we to accompt it? |
A64912 | And therefore what matters it, whether we put Riches in the highest part of Felicity, or Poverty in the lowest degree of Misery? |
A64912 | And what wonder if all the Conscript- Fathers made this decree? |
A64912 | And where shall I sooner begin, than from the most sacred memory of Divine Augustus? |
A64912 | And where were these things? |
A64912 | Are we not to believe that there are certain Mockeries of Nature in the Bodies of Men? |
A64912 | Being astonish''d, he asked, What that Monster meant? |
A64912 | But how can we express in words, what so many have testified at the expence of their own Lives? |
A64912 | But in what retirement are some to be avoided, with what allurements of kindness canst thou restrain their inveteracy? |
A64912 | But now to what a height are we grown, that Servants refuse to make use of that Houshold- stuff, which would serve a Consul before? |
A64912 | But sure he spar''d the shades of the Dead? |
A64912 | But the Campanian Luxury, how profitable was it to our Country? |
A64912 | But to whom? |
A64912 | But what Satyr can be sharp enough, what words severe enough to express the Ingratitude of P. Sexillius? |
A64912 | But what are become of all those great Men that did these great things? |
A64912 | But what do I talk any more of Women? |
A64912 | But what imports it to reprehend the Fate of those, whom not their Lust, but the condition of human ● frailty brought to an end? |
A64912 | But what wonder, that due honour was given to Metellus by his Fellow- citizens, which an enemy did not refrain to render to the Elder Africanus? |
A64912 | But where shall I better begin than from Tullia? |
A64912 | But who could imagine, but that the Gauls, now Victors, would soon have turn''d their admiration into Laughter, and into all manner of Con ● umely? |
A64912 | But who may endure a Souldier correcting the Decrees of the Commonalty with the Death of Legate? |
A64912 | But why do I mention Forreigners, having first to do with our own Countrymen? |
A64912 | But why do I stay upon these Examples, when I see all Villanies exceeded by the thought of one Parricide? |
A64912 | But why should I insist longer upon the praise of Men, though most couragious in this kind of prudence? |
A64912 | But why should I rummage Asia, why the immense Solitudes of Barbarous Countries, why the lurking Holes of the Pontic Sea? |
A64912 | But why should we wonder at a thing as not usual with those people? |
A64912 | By the Sentence against P. Clodius, what strange Luxury appeared in him, what a savage Lust? |
A64912 | Caius Julius Caesar, said he, I took up money upon my b ● il for Pompey the Great, thy Son in Law, in his third Consulship: What shall I do? |
A64912 | Can Anger be denied to be of force, when it sets the Souldier above the General? |
A64912 | Can this man be thought blinde, by whom his Countrey purely discerning that which was honourable, was compell''d to open its eyes? |
A64912 | Consider but the bitterness of the Calamity, and what could be more miserable? |
A64912 | Could such a Court as that be said to be a Council of mortal Men, and not rather the Temple of Faith? |
A64912 | Could the people then deny the Consulship to him, to whom they owed, or were likely to owe two most famous Provinces? |
A64912 | Could there be any person thought more constant than this man? |
A64912 | Could this Continence of Xenocrates be more truly demonstrated, more truly or properly by any one than by the expression of the Curtesan her self? |
A64912 | Did not the va ● ● ness of Crassus Wealth give him the Sirname of Rich? |
A64912 | Didst thou not murther Caesar, O Cassius? |
A64912 | Dionysius Tyrant of Syracuse, how long a story might he make of this fear? |
A64912 | For how can we in this place pass over Scipio Nasica, illustrious for his magnanimous Mind and Saying? |
A64912 | For how can we think the Crime less, where the hands is only absent? |
A64912 | For how could they shew themselves more shameless than they did? |
A64912 | For how great ought he to be, who was Umpire of the publick Safety? |
A64912 | For how shall she set bounds to her self, unless she were recall''d by the bridle of reprehension? |
A64912 | For what avails it to be couragious abroad, and live ill at home? |
A64912 | For what avails it to indulge Human Passion, or to envy the Gods, because they would not share their Immortality with us? |
A64912 | For what could be more like a Monster than the Son of the Elder Scipio Africanus? |
A64912 | For what meant C. Fabius, that most noble Commonwealths man? |
A64912 | For what meant that Prince of his time, Metellus Pius, when he suffer''d himself to be received at his first coming, with Altars and Frankincense? |
A64912 | For what more horrid than this? |
A64912 | For what more unusual, what more unheard- of, than that a Mother should be nourished by the Breasts of a Child? |
A64912 | For what need of Liberty, if they that will kill themselves with Luxury, may not? |
A64912 | For what wise men could be angry with the People of Rome? |
A64912 | For which reason being ask''d by one of his intimate friends, why he made such a loose and scatter''d kind of War? |
A64912 | For who but meanly prudent would bewail that he was born mortal? |
A64912 | Fulvius Flaccus, who when the Senate had decreed him th ● Honour of Triumph, so much coveted by others, yet contemn''d and refus''d it? |
A64912 | Had he not ensnar''d the Roman Army in many intanglements of subtle Stratagem, before he went to fight? |
A64912 | How constant and resolute a Genius had that man? |
A64912 | How far did this dissimulation extend? |
A64912 | How little an accession of knowledge was that to Socrates? |
A64912 | How much more religious toward the Gods did our Senate shew themselves? |
A64912 | How often the vanquisher of Victory? |
A64912 | How sacred then ought we to think Chastity was, in our City, where the Procurers of Lust, did so cruelly chastise it? |
A64912 | How subtily did Anacharsis compare the Laws to Spider Webs? |
A64912 | How ● ic ● were they? |
A64912 | However, what can be more famous than the Tragedies of the one, and the Orations of the other? |
A64912 | I ● Justice her self had given sentence in this case, could she have pronounc''d a juster Sentence? |
A64912 | If the voice of a private person was so heavy, what would the Fasces of the Consul have bin? |
A64912 | If to secure all these, he thought nothing more powerful than the barking and biting of Dogs? |
A64912 | If you consider their Constancy, what greater mark of Fidelity? |
A64912 | In his managing the War, was not his Constancy the same? |
A64912 | In how few words was the Domicil of the future Empire of the World designed? |
A64912 | L. Quinctius Cincinna ● us, what a Consul was he? |
A64912 | Maenius? |
A64912 | Must I suffer? |
A64912 | Must thou needs rage with a publick Impiety, that art fallen from private Charity? |
A64912 | Now what a most execrable Rashness was that of the Souldiers? |
A64912 | Now what shall I adde more in this place, but that the ● were Wives worthy for the Minyans to marry? |
A64912 | Now what was the event of Continence restored, and Industry revived? |
A64912 | Or what was the issue of it? |
A64912 | Or while thou wert so mad, could be world have remained steady? |
A64912 | Or whither do thy foolish desires carry thee? |
A64912 | That the companion of their Victory should not live? |
A64912 | The Ass- driver thereupon besought him, whe ● e ● ore he went about to put an innocent person to death, that had done him no offence? |
A64912 | The Informer very seriously asked him, Why he did not believe him? |
A64912 | Themistocles was a notable example of all that had experience of the Ingratitude of their Countrey? |
A64912 | Think you it would be an exhortation prevalent enough in the field, to exhort such Souldiers to fight for the safety of their Wives and Children? |
A64912 | This Modesty among Wives, is it not necessary among other Relations? |
A64912 | Thus lower in his house, did he not appear higher in his glory? |
A64912 | Thus to carry themselves in Adversity, what was it else, but to compel Fortune, overcome with shame, to return to their side? |
A64912 | To take Cities ▪ conquer Nations, and lay violent hands on Kingdoms, unless there be Reverence, Justice and Honour in the Courts of Law and Council? |
A64912 | To what Riches, to what Power, to what Triumphs, was this priviledge granted before? |
A64912 | Varius Suetonensis says that M. Scaurus brib''d by the King, has betray''d the Commonwealth: Whom of the two do you believe? |
A64912 | W ● at put of this Woman can any one say was in the pow ● r of the Enemy, but h ● r Body? |
A64912 | WHerefore do I delay to commemorate the force of Industry? |
A64912 | Were the people safe from the assaults of Liberty? |
A64912 | What Athens, what School, what forraign Education may I pr ● ● er to this Domestick Discipline? |
A64912 | What can we do here but praise the Modesty of that Age, wherein such minute excesses from Honesty were punished? |
A64912 | What can we think was the zeal of Anaxagoras for Learning? |
A64912 | What can we think, but that the stings of his Conscience moved him to finish the act of Parricide which he began? |
A64912 | What can we think, but that too much Joy was the cause of his Death? |
A64912 | What could be longer or more happy than such a tract of Life? |
A64912 | What could be more dishonest or more unseasonable at this time and place? |
A64912 | What could be more noble than this effect and fruit of Majesty? |
A64912 | What did Hannibal at the Battle of Cannae? |
A64912 | What dost thou go about to do, Madman, said he? |
A64912 | What greater wealth, than so much felicity, which neither the rage of the Sea or Land could take from him? |
A64912 | What has a Woman to do with publick Orations? |
A64912 | What is then the profit of Learning? |
A64912 | What m ● re splendid or more profitable than this kind of Combat? |
A64912 | What may we think of the Eloquence of Hegesias the Cyrenian? |
A64912 | What meant so large an Empire? |
A64912 | What more miserable than Condemnation and Exile? |
A64912 | What more mutable or inconstant than his condition? |
A64912 | What more pl ● asing to behold or enjoy? |
A64912 | What more powerful than this Moderation, that could so overcome his Fatherly affections, which are generally so strong in Parents? |
A64912 | What more unworthy the necessity which they put him to, what more just than his complaint, or more moderate than his revenge? |
A64912 | What more? |
A64912 | What more? |
A64912 | What renowned Souldiers might the Gracchi have had, would they have followed the courses which their Fathers or Mothers Father had done? |
A64912 | What say ye to the Assistance of Mars, which facilitated the Victory of the Romans, is it not worthy of lasting memory? |
A64912 | What shall I say of M. Perpenna? |
A64912 | What shall I say of Quinctius Crispinus, whose Gentleness and mild Disposition, the potent Affections of Anger and Glory could not disturb? |
A64912 | What shall I say of the Aelian Family? |
A64912 | What shall I say to the Servant of Vrbi ● ius Panopio ▪ how admirable was his Faith? |
A64912 | What shall we say of that most memorable Institution among the A ● benians? |
A64912 | What so great a number of Children? |
A64912 | What the Roman Friendship so strictly allied to him? |
A64912 | What therefore is Liberty without Cato? |
A64912 | What think ye of King Alexander? |
A64912 | What was the aim of so much Villany? |
A64912 | What will not Piety invent, that for the preservation of a Parent in prison, found out so strange a means as this? |
A64912 | What? |
A64912 | When he beh ● ld the walls of the Rooms spread with Attalican Tapestry, as a sight that pleased him? |
A64912 | When he permitted long Plays at tedious Festivals? |
A64912 | Where are all their Armies? |
A64912 | Where are now the proud Walls of Carthage? |
A64912 | Where is t ● eir Navy, so terrible upon every shore? |
A64912 | Where is the Maritime Glory of that Port? |
A64912 | Where their numerous Squadrons of Horse? |
A64912 | Where those Souls that were not satisfied with the vast tract of Africa? |
A64912 | Where were now those many Quarrels in the Court? |
A64912 | Whether shall we say the best deserved the Pontic punishment, or the Roman Empire? |
A64912 | Which when the Tyrant understood, admiring her undeserved kindness, he sent for her, and enquired of her what merit of his made her so careful of him? |
A64912 | Who can be ignorant that Scipio Nasica was as famous for Counsel, as the other two Scipio''s were for War? |
A64912 | Who could have thought he had been so wicked, had he held his peace? |
A64912 | Who could now judge him an Exile, but rather a Triumpher in such a place? |
A64912 | Who therefore open''d the way to the Greek Pleadings that now deafen our ears? |
A64912 | Who would have thought again, that from the Punic chains he should have advanc''d himself to the highest degrees of Honour? |
A64912 | Who would have thought he should have been brought from the Fasces to the Fetters of the Carthaginians? |
A64912 | Who would not have accounted him wise, had he been less free in his speech, considering the necessity of the time? |
A64912 | Who would not run to embrace that hand, which now opprest by Fate, sufficed to embrace an Army, with an Humanity as vivacious as his Courage? |
A64912 | Whom Crassus immediately ask''d, what he valued his own House at? |
A64912 | Whom shall we congratulate? |
A64912 | Why do we therefore with continual reproaches torment a mean Fortune, as the chief evil of human kind? |
A64912 | Why should I mention the Censorship of Fabricius Luscinus? |
A64912 | Why then should we complain of her, when she spares not the associates of her Divinity? |
A64912 | Yet I have not been over- desirous to comprehend all: For who in a small Volume is able to set down the Deeds of many Ages? |
A64912 | could he tempt him with his Riches? |
A64912 | from what Thunder die ye suffer so much Darkness to proceed? |
A64912 | him that said it, or him that heard it? |
A64912 | made this answer, What need I of thine, if for thy sake I should do any unhandsome action? |
A64912 | said he, had ● t thou rather I should have died on offender? |
A64912 | those many dissentions before the Pulpits for Orations? |
A64912 | where the Gown- co ● tests of so great Leaders and Commonwealths- men? |
A18424 | 2 What? |
A18424 | A Priest? |
A18424 | A Summer? |
A18424 | A good one; and has Fronto liu''d thus long In Rome? |
A18424 | A peace? |
A18424 | A woman, losing greatnesse, still as good, As at her greatest? |
A18424 | Againe, Sir; Is not our free soule infus''d To euery body in her absolute end To rule that body? |
A18424 | Against the gods? |
A18424 | And being Empresse, may she not dispose It, and the life in it, at her iust pleasure? |
A18424 | And dost breathe? |
A18424 | And euery true soule should be here so feuer''d From loue of such men, as here drowne their soules As all the world does? |
A18424 | And is''t not great, to turne griefes thus to ioyes, That breake the hearts of others? |
A18424 | And shall my comforts in my well- knowne selfe Faile me for their false fires, Demetrius? |
A18424 | And therefore tell me what abodes thou buildst on In an spirit to act, enflam''d in thee, Or in our Souldiers seene resolu''d addresses? |
A18424 | And what is this but euen the gods deterring My iudgement from enforcing fight this morn ●? |
A18424 | And what may that presage? |
A18424 | And what needed you Vrge my kinde care of any charge that nature Imposes on me? |
A18424 | And wherefore liu''st thou? |
A18424 | And would not take his leaue of his poore friend? |
A18424 | Archflamen? |
A18424 | Are not the liues of all men bound to iustice? |
A18424 | Are you Augures? |
A18424 | Are you empair''d to liue, and ioy my loue? |
A18424 | Are you of Thessaly? |
A18424 | Are you th''obserued rule, and voucht example; Who euer would commend Physitians, That would not follow the diseas''d desires Of their sick patients? |
A18424 | Arm''d men? |
A18424 | Aske what''s his owne? |
A18424 | Augures, madam? |
A18424 | Away Statilius; how long shall thy loue Exceede thy knowledge of me, and the Gods? |
A18424 | Away; Companion and friend, giue me thy Hand; say, dost not loue me? |
A18424 | Before the morning Made such amazes ere one stroke was struck? |
A18424 | Borne the plagues of virtue How durst ye poyson thus my thoughts? |
A18424 | Brutus? |
A18424 | But might we not win Cato to our friendship By honoring speeches, nor perswasiue gifts? |
A18424 | But what alas, Sir, can the weaknesse doe Against our whole State of vs only two? |
A18424 | By death must they enlarge their liues? |
A18424 | Can this be answer''d? |
A18424 | Can you doe that? |
A18424 | Cate? |
A18424 | Cities, kingdomes falling, And all on me? |
A18424 | Come they apace? |
A18424 | Conquerd by Caesar? |
A18424 | Consuls? |
A18424 | Cornelia? |
A18424 | Crassineus? |
A18424 | Deuices of a new fordge to entrap me? |
A18424 | Domitius, Spinther, Your father Scipi ● new preparing friends For Caesars place of vniuersall Bishop? |
A18424 | Dumb to? |
A18424 | Dumb? |
A18424 | Encrease with little, and enforce with none? |
A18424 | Excellent; was euer great office better supplied? |
A18424 | For hell? |
A18424 | From whence presage you this? |
A18424 | Fronto? |
A18424 | Haue you already bought the peoples voices? |
A18424 | Hold Rascall, hang thy selfe in these dayes? |
A18424 | Hold you our bodies shall reuiue, resuming Our soules againe to heauen? |
A18424 | How canst thou? |
A18424 | How censure ● Brutus his sterne fathers fact? |
A18424 | How chance I can not liue then? |
A18424 | How dangerous to his soule i ● such a feare? |
A18424 | How insolent a part was this in you, To offer the imprisonment of Cato? |
A18424 | How shall I helpe it? |
A18424 | How shall we rise( my Lord) but all in vproares, ● eing still pursude? |
A18424 | How the deuill knowes he all this? |
A18424 | I aske my life of him? |
A18424 | I beare the touch of feare for all their safeties, Or for mine owne? |
A18424 | I haue done; what deuill art thou? |
A18424 | I rest in Caesars shades? |
A18424 | I would then, not honor, but adore her: could you Submit your selfe chearefully to your hu ● band, Supposing him falne? |
A18424 | I ● he rule well with his greatnesse; wherein is he ill? |
A18424 | I, madam, you haue no worke for vs, haue you? |
A18424 | If I were mad, must hee his army venture In my engagement? |
A18424 | If t were his souldiers safeties he so tenders, Were it not better they should sinke by sea, Then wrack their number, King and cause ashore? |
A18424 | In any number on this Lesbian shore? |
A18424 | In reason shall it? |
A18424 | Is it possible? |
A18424 | Is it then your wils That Pompey shall cease armes? |
A18424 | Is supper ready? |
A18424 | Is''t not a manly truth, and mere diuine? |
A18424 | Is''t possible? |
A18424 | Is''t possible? |
A18424 | It made great Pompey mad, which who could mend? |
A18424 | Knowne how to conquer? |
A18424 | Lead? |
A18424 | Long train''d ▪ long foughten? |
A18424 | Lou''d they their Country better then her Brutus? |
A18424 | Man? |
A18424 | Master? |
A18424 | Mother? |
A18424 | Murthering thy brother, and so forth? |
A18424 | Must I not hold my selfe, though lose the world? |
A18424 | Must a man goe to law then, when he may Enioy his owne in peace? |
A18424 | My Lord: Cat, Who tooke my sword hence? |
A18424 | My fame affirme my life receiu''d from him? |
A18424 | My friends? |
A18424 | No Clerke? |
A18424 | No forges but their throats to vent our breaths? |
A18424 | No ill to turne good, I meane? |
A18424 | No man? |
A18424 | No stay but their wilde errors, to sustaine vs? |
A18424 | No? |
A18424 | No? |
A18424 | No? |
A18424 | Nod onely? |
A18424 | Nor by enforciue vsage? |
A18424 | Not for hell? |
A18424 | Not your husband then? |
A18424 | Nothing Sir? |
A18424 | O Vibius, welcome, what a prisoner? |
A18424 | O gods how iustly Ye laugh at all things earthly? |
A18424 | O gods, was I euer Great till this minute? |
A18424 | O gods, who euer saw me thus contemn''d? |
A18424 | O is it found? |
A18424 | O saue vs; Pompey? |
A18424 | One onely ship? |
A18424 | Ophioneus? |
A18424 | Our selues, and all our rights in God and goodnesse? |
A18424 | Our whole contents and freedomes to dispose, All in the ioyes and wayes of arrant rogues? |
A18424 | Particular men particular fates must beare, Who feeles his owne wounds lesse, to wound another? |
A18424 | Please you receiue your ayde, Sir? |
A18424 | Po ● re slaues, how terrible this death is to them? |
A18424 | Pompey? |
A18424 | Return''d not yet our trumpet, sent to know Of Vibius certaine state? |
A18424 | Say all men so? |
A18424 | Say( sacred Southsayer) and informe the truth, What liking hast thou of our sacrifice? |
A18424 | Seest thou no fleet yet( Sentinell) nor traine That may be thought great Pompeys? |
A18424 | Seest thou no trauellers addrest this way? |
A18424 | Shall Caesar cease his armes? |
A18424 | Shall I be thy learn''d Counsaile? |
A18424 | Shall I yet shrinke for all? |
A18424 | Shall now our purpose hold? |
A18424 | Shall we thrust through it all? |
A18424 | Since their applauses faile me? |
A18424 | Sleepe in his quiet waues? |
A18424 | So Pompeys army entred Italy, Yet Pompey''s not in Rome; but Pompey''s beames Who sees not there? |
A18424 | Stay cowherd, fly ye Caesars fortunes? |
A18424 | Submission? |
A18424 | Suspected? |
A18424 | Take griefe for them, as if The rotten- hearted world could steepe my soule In filthy putrifaction of their owne? |
A18424 | Take him without his Addition( great) what is he then? |
A18424 | That threats the wrack of nature? |
A18424 | The only time that euer was for a Rascall to liue in? |
A18424 | Their iustice, and integrity included, In what I stand for? |
A18424 | Their stay is worth their ruine, should we liue, If they in fault were? |
A18424 | Then wherefore is there law for death? |
A18424 | Thinke you my Lord afflicted? |
A18424 | Thinkst thou earths great Potentates haue gotten their places there with Any single act of murther, poysoning, adutery, And the rest? |
A18424 | To forme our liues in, and repose our deaths? |
A18424 | To what vse take you that( my Lord?) |
A18424 | Too low foole? |
A18424 | Very good, wilt thou shew thy selfe deepely learn''d too, And to liue licentiously here, care for nothing hereafter? |
A18424 | Vibius? |
A18424 | Vndanted spirits? |
A18424 | Vnreclaimed man? |
A18424 | Vnsheath; is''t sharpe? |
A18424 | Was euer soueraigne Captaine of so many Armies and Nations, so opprest as I, With one hosts headstrong outrage? |
A18424 | We were so; and yet haue the rule of earth; and cares Any man for the worst of hell then? |
A18424 | We? |
A18424 | Well said; what''s thy name now? |
A18424 | Were there euer Such monstrous confidences, as last night Their Cups and musique shew''d? |
A18424 | What arm''d men are they? |
A18424 | What art thou? |
A18424 | What call you wrong? |
A18424 | What else? |
A18424 | What feares fly here on all sides? |
A18424 | What glory is it to haue my hand hurle So vast a volley through the groning ayre? |
A18424 | What haue I now to thinke on in this world? |
A18424 | What maist thou be then? |
A18424 | What newes, my friends? |
A18424 | What outrage shew you? |
A18424 | What proportion then Hath an immortall with a mortall substance? |
A18424 | What rests then, this of all parts being disclaimd? |
A18424 | What should one say to him? |
A18424 | What suddaine Shade is this? |
A18424 | What thinke my Lords our Consuls, and friend Brutus? |
A18424 | What thinks my Brutus? |
A18424 | What''s his wrong? |
A18424 | What''s she? |
A18424 | What''s the reason of thy desperation? |
A18424 | What? |
A18424 | When there is right in him( were forme so answer''d With termes and place) to send vs both to prison? |
A18424 | Where''s Statilius? |
A18424 | Where''s he I sent to fetch and place my sword Where late I left it? |
A18424 | Where''s my sword hung here? |
A18424 | Where''s the sword I charg''d you To giue his place againe? |
A18424 | Wherein is he great? |
A18424 | Who more thirsts The Conquest, then resolues to beare the foile? |
A18424 | Who''s there? |
A18424 | Whose rights tho ● wrongst for my right? |
A18424 | Why draw they? |
A18424 | Why fled his sonne and friend Statilius? |
A18424 | Why is my Lord wrong''d? |
A18424 | Why should he? |
A18424 | Why should men Tempt fate with such firme confidence? |
A18424 | Why was man euer iust, but to be free,''Gainst all iniustice? |
A18424 | Why will you leaue vs? |
A18424 | Why write great learned men? |
A18424 | With mighty Caesar, and so quickly ransom''d? |
A18424 | With vs, madam? |
A18424 | Would you? |
A18424 | Y''are come to the vse of our Profession, madam, Would you haue that ill turnd good? |
A18424 | Yet fals not heauen? |
A18424 | Your Lord? |
A18424 | Your selfe might haue it then, if those faults cause it; But deales this man ingeniously, to tax Men with a frailty that the gods inflict? |
A18424 | a Pander? |
A18424 | a Sergeant? |
A18424 | able, nim ● le, perfect To turne and winde aduantage euery way? |
A18424 | an Intelligencer? |
A18424 | and at last Hang thy selfe? |
A18424 | and to beare about him As well all meanes to freedome euery houre, As euery houre he should be arm''d for dea ● h, Which only is his freedome? |
A18424 | art not enamourd Of my acquaintance? |
A18424 | as if there were a dearth Of hangmen in the land? |
A18424 | at all feares That rise not from your iudgements? |
A18424 | beene a Promoter ▪ a Puruey or? |
A18424 | brought against your will? |
A18424 | enlarge with twice as many Selfe- liues, selfe- fortunes? |
A18424 | had euer men Such outrage of presumption to be victors Before they arm''d? |
A18424 | hast thou not heard of Vulcans falling Out of heauen? |
A18424 | haue I euer showne Loues least defect to you? |
A18424 | haue not I Their powers to guard me, in a cause of theirs? |
A18424 | honor''d Cato? |
A18424 | if I can vse Mine owne my selfe, must I of force, reserue it To serue a Tyrant with it? |
A18424 | in which absolute rule Is she not absolutely Empresse of it? |
A18424 | inexorable fate And all feare treading on? |
A18424 | like messengers with newes? |
A18424 | lost his state at dice? |
A18424 | men merely rapt With sacred rage, of confidence, beleefe? |
A18424 | murther''d his Brother for his meanes? |
A18424 | my Lord? |
A18424 | not a word daigne? |
A18424 | of armies Terribly ioyning? |
A18424 | or any dues The most iddulgent father( being discreet) Could doe his dearest blood? |
A18424 | or to raise my fortunes By creeping vp in Souldierly degrees? |
A18424 | prou''d sleepe, not twin to death, But to me, death it selfe? |
A18424 | run thorow worse Offices since? |
A18424 | seeking places Before the power that should dispose could grant them? |
A18424 | shall I suffer this Torment of his delay? |
A18424 | soft Sir; hop''st thou to purchase hell With only dicing or whoring away thy liuing? |
A18424 | spent all? |
A18424 | that Sorrow turnd comfort? |
A18424 | that are hisses To euery sound acceptance? |
A18424 | that nere was Clerke? |
A18424 | walke his strow''d paths? |
A18424 | were all, yet more? |
A18424 | what a countenance he puts on? |
A18424 | what are these? |
A18424 | what art thou? |
A18424 | what saist thou to a rich office then? |
A18424 | what then? |
A18424 | what''s that? |
A18424 | what''s that? |
A18424 | which we intend you? |
A18424 | whither will you goe To keepe your worthyest person in more safety Then in my army, so deuoted to you? |
A18424 | with drum, and colours? |
A56530 | Affairs then standing upon this foot, who can praise the advice taken by the confederates, of fighting the French? |
A56530 | Alas, how hard is it to serve two Masters, God and the World? |
A56530 | And a Spartan being demanded by an Athenian, what he thought of the walls of Athens? |
A56530 | And did not they themselves give over all hopes of defending them? |
A56530 | And hath not this last Age seen one of the most signal and illustrious Naval victories that was ever heard of? |
A56530 | And having won these Islands, what way would he have made for the enterprise of Italy? |
A56530 | And how can it be expected therefore that many great victories should be won, since they meet with so many rubs by means of these strong Holds? |
A56530 | And how can it be said that the City of Rome was ruined by Peace since she never tasted thereof? |
A56530 | And if I spend all, how can I, according to humane respect, be blamed? |
A56530 | And if they have any thing of good in them, why dost thou not call to mind how soon thou art to forgo them? |
A56530 | And to say truth, to what purpose could such a Law or Custom serve, unless it were the more to exasperate Civil diffention? |
A56530 | And to speak only of things of more recent memory, how great a desire hath this Commonwealth shewn to the common good? |
A56530 | And when the Laws are trampled under foot, what State can be free from the snares of the Enemy? |
A56530 | And who can doubt but that the true end of a City is to have her Citizens live vertuously, not the inlarging of her Empire? |
A56530 | And why should the Carthaginians rather fear Pyrrhus his Greatness, then that of the Romans? |
A56530 | And yet what was this banishment but a kind of Ostracism? |
A56530 | But how could Hannibal hope to tarry long in Italy, and to be able to receive such succors and supplies as he must of necessity stand in need of? |
A56530 | But how could a City be long preserved, which was wholly bent upon those things which were the means to bring her to her end? |
A56530 | But how famous did they prove in matter of War, and worthy of that praise which is given to excellent Commanders? |
A56530 | But how far different from these are Gods waies? |
A56530 | But how long were we able to keep it, though it were strongly garrisoned? |
A56530 | But how much did Pompey enlarge the bounds of the Roman Empire in Asia? |
A56530 | But in Scipio''s Victories, what can be desired to make them greater or more glorious? |
A56530 | But let us argue the business in general; if the place were weak which they should assault, what honor should they win thereby? |
A56530 | But on the contrary, who does not know how very opportune this situation was for many other things, and of what use for the Commonwealth? |
A56530 | But say what thing it is, which of all humane operations, wherein such certainty and constancie is to be found? |
A56530 | But say, I beseech you, was th ● re not forty three years between the first and second Carthaginian war? |
A56530 | But say, I pray you, who could assure the Imperialists, that they should avoid the hazard of a Battel? |
A56530 | But since experience proved the contrary, how can the increasing of danger at home, to carry it abroad, be praised? |
A56530 | But to proceed to the other heads: What situation could there be chosen which was not disadvantagious for the Imperialists? |
A56530 | But what Friendship is more firm then that which is bound with the Tye of great Benefits? |
A56530 | But what Princes envy ought the Commonwealth to have feared? |
A56530 | But what greater misery is there then this humane felicity? |
A56530 | But what greater thing could be expected from any League, then from that which God blest with the famous victory at the Curz ● la ● ● Islands? |
A56530 | But what proportion can the good reward which I hoped for thereby, bear with the pains I took, which was truly very great? |
A56530 | But what shall I say more? |
A56530 | But what shall I say of the rest? |
A56530 | But what shall be said of him, whose worth and vertue doth exceed that of all others? |
A56530 | But what shall we say of things that happened afterwards, when their Fame grew greater? |
A56530 | But what shall we ● ay of the French, who boast so much of their valor, and glory in War? |
A56530 | Charls the Emperor led sundry times puissant Armies upon several undertakings; but what was the fruit that he reaped by his most famous Expeditions? |
A56530 | Could he shew that constancy and generosity which he had many times before publickly boasted of? |
A56530 | Did not the Cities belonging to their friends and confederates rebel every where? |
A56530 | Did not the Romans lose possession of all Italy, after the rout given them by Hannibal at Cannae? |
A56530 | Did not the Turks soon repossess themselves of those places from whence they were driven? |
A56530 | Did they not preserve their own honor, and do service to all Christendom? |
A56530 | Do I peradventure hope, that whilst I my self do not change, the nature of those things wherein I am verst should alter? |
A56530 | For were not the French a valiant and stout Nation? |
A56530 | For what gives the true Form to a City, but the communication of Government? |
A56530 | Had not Caesar the like obligations to the Venetians, as the King of France had, which should have kept him from such a confederacie? |
A56530 | Have not the Imperialists and Spaniards made oft- times many attemp ● s in Africa, and had good success therein? |
A56530 | He who should have asked Fabius, what the signs were, what the fruits of his Victories; what could he have shewn? |
A56530 | How can he who lives in the worlds Militia, taste of these fruits of true peace? |
A56530 | How can that Government then be termed good, which is so ill disposed towards the attainment of a Cities chief end? |
A56530 | How is it then given out, that peace and idleness was the ruine of that City? |
A56530 | How many Cities and Provinces did Pompey and Caesar bring under the Roman Empire? |
A56530 | How many Princes, how many several Nations join''d together in the time of Pope Urban the Second, for the recovery of the Holy Land? |
A56530 | How many rare Artificers have there likewise been of Grecians in all the most noble Arts, particularly in Sculpture and Picture- drawing? |
A56530 | How many years were there between the second and third Carthaginian war? |
A56530 | How often did the Saxons, Bavarians and other people of Germany take up Arms to molest the States of the Empire? |
A56530 | How often hath she maintained Wars, to the end that there might be a right, and an Italian Governor in the Dukedom of Milan? |
A56530 | If a day of Battel be ever to be had, what else was there to be done to keep off the ruine which doth threaten Christendom every day more and more? |
A56530 | If all Princes and Countries were become Enemies, who were to be trusted? |
A56530 | If they be not of great worth, as truly they are not, why dost thou so much love them? |
A56530 | In what place should the Imperial Army have incamped, which would not have been very incommodious for them, and far off? |
A56530 | Nay, had he not peculiar respects which counsell''d him to the contrary? |
A56530 | Old Age which useth to dead the affections of the flesh, ought now to quicken the zeal of the Spirit? |
A56530 | Or what reason have others to complain more of me, then I have of my self? |
A56530 | Or would the advantage of such an acquisition have been answerable to the expence, and to the expectation had of such an Army? |
A56530 | Ought not they to have been judged worthy of excuse, and their Commonwealth free from the imputation that their Orders were no ways good? |
A56530 | Should they perhaps have stood idly expecting the shock of the Turkish Army, if it should advance towards them? |
A56530 | Since so little a part of my life remains, or almost none at all, wherein I may recollect my thoughts, what time have I to think of my end? |
A56530 | So full of cares, and destracted with so many thoughts? |
A56530 | That the Affairs of the world, so full of anxious cares, should turn to the peace and solace of the soul? |
A56530 | That trouble should turn to delight? |
A56530 | That worldly good shall assume a new vertue of makeing their possessors well apaid and satisfied? |
A56530 | The last Carthaginian war being hardly ended, did not they wage war in Spain with the Numantines for the space of fourteen years? |
A56530 | The other part remains now to be discussed; Whether the City of Rome might have received a better Form of State? |
A56530 | Then what courage, or what hope of succour would those French- men have, who were left behind for the defence of the Kingdom of Naples? |
A56530 | To pass by so many oth ● r glorious Victories and Triumphs, who can choose but admire the great deeds of ● ● mpey and of Caesar? |
A56530 | To say truth, what can be said of Fabius, save that he did not lose? |
A56530 | WHAT do I do? |
A56530 | Was it that so strong and flourishing an Army should rot and moulder away about the walls of Vienna? |
A56530 | Was not Pyrrhus invited into Italy for this purpose by the S ● mniti and Tarentini? |
A56530 | Was there any such thing in Alexander, in whom supreme Authority and Empire did consist? |
A56530 | Were not Modon ● and Corone recovered from the Turks by the Imperial Forces, under the Ensigns of the same Charls? |
A56530 | What a voyage did Pompey the Great make in the pursuit of Mithridates? |
A56530 | What appearance was there in her of any fear, or rather what greater sign could be desired in her of generous confidence and most noble daring? |
A56530 | What can be alleadged on the behalf of these modern Princes, which may compare with these for military glory? |
A56530 | What could I answer, if I should be asked what fruit I reaped by these my studies? |
A56530 | What danger can ensue unto, or can harm the common liberty or authority of Citizens either in War or in Peace, whilst the Laws are observed? |
A56530 | What did Francis King of France leave unattempted to get footing in Italy? |
A56530 | What did she resolve to yield up of free- will? |
A56530 | What do I expect? |
A56530 | What do I look for? |
A56530 | What do I then do? |
A56530 | What do I think? |
A56530 | What had the Parthians of common with the Commonwealth of Rome? |
A56530 | What had the Venetian Senate reason to fear at this time less then this? |
A56530 | What is then to be resolved upon in this diversitie of allegations? |
A56530 | What is there then 〈 ◊ 〉 like, not to name equal, between these two, which may make them contend for military glory? |
A56530 | What more proper to produce and preserve this, then Magnificence, Grace and Affability? |
A56530 | What noise, what complaints were heard, which shewed that she would terminate that contention with vain words, which could not be ended but with Arms? |
A56530 | What other Commander was ever more highly esteemed, and dearly beloved by his Soldiers? |
A56530 | What should move him thereunto? |
A56530 | What thing is there so good, as may not be abused by wicked men? |
A56530 | What think I? |
A56530 | What though Darius his men may be said to have been rude and base? |
A56530 | What was it that Charls with his undaunted and dreadless spirit did not undertake? |
A56530 | What was then to be done? |
A56530 | What ● esolution shall then be given in this so doubtful question, in which so many reasons may be alleaged on al ● sides? |
A56530 | When were the whole Forces of Germany seen so united, as they were at this time? |
A56530 | Where the majesty of her Empire? |
A56530 | Where the pomp of so many Triumphs? |
A56530 | Where will you find a mind so constant; as will not be much disturbed at such an advertisement as this? |
A56530 | Whether Citadel ● and Strong Holds, much used by our modern Princes, be commodious, and of true safety to a State, or no? |
A56530 | Who can consider them without endeavoring to know the reasons thereof? |
A56530 | Who can praise the suffering of danger to increase at home, out of hopes of purchasing abroad? |
A56530 | Who had his share in more Battels then he? |
A56530 | Who knows not that in the Naval fight at Salamina, it was necessity that made the Grecians so couragious? |
A56530 | Who shewed more boldness in undertaking enterprises, greater constancie in prosecuting them, more hopes in effecting them? |
A56530 | Who was more famous then for dexterity of wit for the managing of weighty affairs, then Lodorica Sforza Duke of Milan? |
A56530 | Who will not then admire these so great and unparellel''d things? |
A56530 | Why dost thou dread the loss of them so much? |
A56530 | Why endeavorst thou so much to be master of them? |
A56530 | Yet in whose possession are these very places now, which were gotten with so much charge and danger? |
A56530 | and in thou shall be fixt in heavenly bliss, what need in that abode hath he of worldly glory, who is glorified with eternal glory? |
A56530 | and yet when was the Commonwealth of Rome free from Foreign war, though these her Enemies did not appear to be so? |
A56530 | and you Princes, how vain are all your Forces to maintain your Lordships and States? |
A56530 | by what pretence can a just Prince, or a well- governed Commonwealth humble such a man, or keep him low, or aloof from partaking of their Councels? |
A56530 | how many Armies did he lead thither? |
A56530 | how much treasure did he spend in those attempts? |
A56530 | or if Solyman should not have advanced, but have shunned the encounter, should they have marched on and forced him to fight? |
A56530 | over how many conquered Kings and Provinces did he triumph? |
A56530 | the memory of so many victories? |
A56530 | to repent me of my sins? |
A56530 | to what danger would the Dukedom of Milan and Tuscany have been exposed? |
A56530 | to whom was any recourse to be had? |
A56530 | what injury had they then done her, to make the Romans take up arms against them? |
A56530 | when was he ever weary or satisfied with warfaring? |
A56530 | who is satisfied, who is content, who is for ever blessed? |
A56530 | why such expence? |
A56530 | why such preparation for War? |
A56530 | yet when a great deluge of War came upon him, what use could he make of all his Artifices? |
A06415 | ''T was winter at Cyrene when we lay: Is the yeares course chang''d in so small a way? |
A06415 | Ah Caesar art thou not asham''d That civill war by thine owne souldiers damn''d Should be allow''d by thee? |
A06415 | Ah foole what god but death could set thee free Out of the world''s generall calamity, And war? |
A06415 | Alas in just and noble mindes how farre Prevailes true loue? |
A06415 | Alas what could posterity deserue To be in thraldome bone? |
A06415 | Alas, we wish not for our countrey deare, Europe, nor Asia ▪ different Sunnes which see: Vnder what pole, oh ● ffricke, left we thee? |
A06415 | Alas, what Seas, what Lands might you haue tane, With that bloods losse, which ciuill hāds haue drawne? |
A06415 | Ambition blinded Lords, what''s th''happinesse To mixe your powers, and ioyntly th''earth possesse? |
A06415 | And beg of Caesar he no odds would make Betweene his slaues, and at his hands d ● sire Your Captaines liues? |
A06415 | And from the temples Alexander take, To drowne his hearse in Marcotis lake? |
A06415 | And me so lightly fall''n will fortune keepe? |
A06415 | And will you now, when liberty''s so high, To ai ● le of Rome your swords, and throates deny? |
A06415 | Are Pharian swords admitted, and a roome For Aegypt left into this war to come? |
A06415 | Are Pirates,( t) Pompey, worthier of Land? |
A06415 | As if in civill war we were not able To know what treason is most profitable? |
A06415 | Banisht, and flying vertue''s onely hold, And refuge, which no storme of fortune could Ere reaue thee off? |
A06415 | Base souldier, answeres he, in thy poore thought Seem''d I alone so worthlesse? |
A06415 | Brutus we taxe; fortune, why did we frame Our freedomes, lawes, or yeare ● by Consuls name? |
A06415 | But oh how shamelesse is our thirst of gaine? |
A06415 | But what vertue could long be safe in such a Court? |
A06415 | But why speake I more? |
A06415 | Caesar thy wicked prayers''gainst mine prevaile: We fight: how dismall to all people shall This day appeare? |
A06415 | Can Caesars fortune feele the losse of you? |
A06415 | Can he downe from the starry sky behold Thessalia''s slaughter, and his thunder held? |
A06415 | Can he with thunder cleaue a sencelesse tree, Pholoe, Oete, harmelesse Rhodope? |
A06415 | Can hee triumphant Charriots mount before The Year''s appointed,( ●) and let goe no more Honours( o) vsurp''t? |
A06415 | Can such base aide be worth so long a flight? |
A06415 | Canst thou delight from farthest parts to come Leading fierce nations''gainst the walls of Rome, Following those Eagles, that slaine Crassus lost? |
A06415 | Could Marius after all his miseryes In Libya, rise to a seaventh Consulship? |
A06415 | Could Pompey thinke, when erst he clear''d the seas Of Pirates rage, it purchas''d his owne ease? |
A06415 | Depend not we Vpon one chance? |
A06415 | Did I for this, husband, deserue to be Left safe aboord? |
A06415 | Did she ere suffer sence of death t''affect? |
A06415 | Doe they obey vpon necessity, Or pleasure? |
A06415 | Doth that one battell our whole cause decide, And no cure left to helpe our wounded side? |
A06415 | Driue you? |
A06415 | Embrew''d with blood from dire Pharsalias field Could he vnto adultrous Venus yeild? |
A06415 | Fear''st thou my campe? |
A06415 | Feares not Ptolomey The ruine of that name? |
A06415 | For this did Silla merit to be stil''de Happy, and( t) saviour, and in Mars his field To be interr''de? |
A06415 | For to the happyer fighting Souldiers What toiles through all the world, what doubtfull fields Remaine to fight? |
A06415 | For what can civill wars conclusion be, If not Pharsaliaes field, nor Pompeys death? |
A06415 | For who can call That place a campe, where all Romes Fasces were, And axes borne? |
A06415 | For who ere fear''d the monsters mouth, and face? |
A06415 | Fought you, yong men, with Caesars armyes hopes( No more true Roman, but Pompey an troopes) To gaine a Lord? |
A06415 | Has civill war deprest the world so low? |
A06415 | Has one dayes fate the world so low declin''d? |
A06415 | Has the Pharsalian losse so broke thy minde? |
A06415 | Haue Cleopatra''s sorcerves beguild Old Caesars breast, and shall we trust a childe? |
A06415 | Haue I committed thee to vnknowne seas, Or sent thee on vntryed casualtyes? |
A06415 | Haue not the gods this mischiefe yet decree''d? |
A06415 | He cryes be faithfull to the Conquerer: What should the conquer''d doe with townes and men? |
A06415 | He yet vnfear''d, his anger doth retaine, Speakes thus t''himselfe: Wilt thou, base man, againe See Rome, or seeke peacefull retirements? |
A06415 | Heere both Romes Consuls, heere her Senate stands Shall Caesar then subdue the Senate? |
A06415 | His passage lost by bridge, enraged cry''de, Can not your walles, base cowards, shelter you Enough, but that the fields and rivers too Must helpe? |
A06415 | How are despairing states most free and bold? |
A06415 | How great beyond Maeotis haue I bin; Into what lands did my victorious name More sound, or whence in greater triumph came? |
A06415 | How great has Easterne Tanais me seene? |
A06415 | How many neere the Colline port were kill''d, How many Carcasses on heapes were pil''de At Sacriportum? |
A06415 | How shall I curse thee for this impious deed? |
A06415 | How strange a looke Had Gorgons head cut off by Perseus stroke, And towring blade? |
A06415 | I brook''d not Pompey to beare share with me In rule of Rome, and shall I Ptolomey? |
A06415 | If I had rather dye in armes, then bow Vnto a Lord? |
A06415 | If any force can hurt men vertuous? |
A06415 | If fortune loose, when vertue doth oppose, Her threats if good desires be happinesse, And vertue grow not greater by successe? |
A06415 | If the fierce Gaules our flying backes pursu''de, That dare now wrong vs; when our warres conclude Successefully, and friendly Gods vs call? |
A06415 | If thou to them Canst sue, why, Pompey, doest thou scorne to pray To Caesar sitting in Thessalia? |
A06415 | In a Plebejan helme disguised there What weapon, noble( d) Bru ● us, didst beare? |
A06415 | In civill war is Conquest so impure? |
A06415 | Is Pompey''s flight so small a victory? |
A06415 | Is there a seate of god, saue earth, and sea, Aire, heaven, and vertue? |
A06415 | Ist nought for civill war to ruinate Me, and my house? |
A06415 | Let me redeeme the people: let my Fate What ere Romes manners merit, expiate, Why should the easily conquer''d people die, That can endure a Lord? |
A06415 | Mak''st thou a doubt of our necessity To kill thee now we may? |
A06415 | Must Cassius hand rather this tyrant slay? |
A06415 | Must he with Forreigne, and bought clients be Glutted with still continuing soueraignty? |
A06415 | Never reclaim''d Cilician, wouldst thou goe To thy old theft at sea? |
A06415 | No difference betwixt long life, and small? |
A06415 | No rockes, nor mountaines stand opposed there To breake his force, and turne him into aire? |
A06415 | Nor once alone doe you your safety ow To me; who after Crassus overthrow, Appeas''d the just incensed wrath of Rome? |
A06415 | O gods, what stars, what influence of the sky Has given so great a power to Thessaly? |
A06415 | O greatest Lord, worthy of better fate Then my sad marriage: had dire fortunes hate Such power on thee? |
A06415 | Oh frantike violence, did Caesar stand Quiet, and was there a more forward( b) hand? |
A06415 | Oh gods, durst Nile, Durst barbarous Memphis, and th''effoeminate men Of soft Canopus harbour such a spleene? |
A06415 | Oh safe blest poore mans life, oh gift of all The gods, not yet well knowne; what city wall, VVhat temple had not fear''d at Caesar''s stroke? |
A06415 | Oh wickednesse, within what land has not Our Empires wretched fate found civill war? |
A06415 | Or are the Roman fates dejected so? |
A06415 | Or are you not asham''d not to be found Among the heape of men? |
A06415 | Or by the nations blood so great a name? |
A06415 | Or fear''st thou to commit into their hand The Senates cause? |
A06415 | Or haue they jurisdiction over all The gods? |
A06415 | Or hid''st thou, fortune, to effect more sure Our liberties revenge, and Brutus cure Of monarchy againe? |
A06415 | Or shall the waters poyson''de be? |
A06415 | Or stay those fates, whilest planets are at strife And doubt about condemning Pompey''s life? |
A06415 | Or swells he cause all Rome, though arm''d, forsake The Citie, hearing his fierce troops are nigh? |
A06415 | Or think''st thou it a happy state for me( While thy chance yet does doubtfull stand) to dye For feare of future ill? |
A06415 | Or thought''st thou life( thou dying) fit for me? |
A06415 | Phoebus, and Hermes? |
A06415 | Pompey esteem''st thou so My faith, or think''st thou any thing can be Safer to me then thee? |
A06415 | Remoov''d from Thessaly, must I againe Be left? |
A06415 | Shall Caesar''s Souldiers damn''d obedience hold Bound by a wicked oath, and you make light Your faith, because in a good cause you fight? |
A06415 | Shall I a conquerer now rob Rome of rest, VVho fled, lest she should be with war opprest? |
A06415 | Shall slaues so proud of Pompey''s, slaughter be, Threatning the same( which fates avert) to thee? |
A06415 | Shall th''execution of Romes tirant be Base Aegypts crime, and that example dy? |
A06415 | Shall vnknowne Nations in our Roman war Engage themselues? |
A06415 | Shall we, that did not in the war adhere To Pompey, now provoke the Conquerer? |
A06415 | She hasten''d doubting fate, preventing dread; Their bodyes dy''d before their soules were fled? |
A06415 | Since Pompey''s murder he Counts nought a crime? |
A06415 | Spar''d we our throates? |
A06415 | Stand''st thou in such great feare of him whom thou Thy selfe mak''st dreadfull? |
A06415 | Still shall my woes appeare In the same shape? |
A06415 | Strange turne of fate, Weep''st thou for him, whom thou with impious hate Caesar, so long pursu''dst? |
A06415 | The Captaine first of all Vulteius offring his bare throte gan call Seeking for death, is there no Souldier here VVorthy to shed my blood? |
A06415 | The Senates highest hope, R ● mes greatest grace, The last of all thy ancient honour''d race? |
A06415 | The Venus of those barbarous courts who heares not? |
A06415 | The house excell''d those temples, which men build In wicked''st times, the high- arch''d roofes were fill''d With wealth? |
A06415 | The master then of his Praetorian ship Brutus be spake, why doest thou let them slip? |
A06415 | Therefore how much liues he, that''s truely poore, Safer then Kings? |
A06415 | These aspects ce ● se; but thou that burn''st the clawes, And fir''st the tayle of threatning Scorpion, VVhat great thing breedst thou Mars? |
A06415 | Think''st thou them men, Pompey, that dare not stand Without such helpes, the hazard of a fight? |
A06415 | Thinke you that such as ye Can any moment to my fortunes be? |
A06415 | This is but small I speake; burnt bodyes run Melted by fire in filth, but what fire ere Dissolv''d the bones? |
A06415 | This vse doest thou make Of the gods favour to escape a wracke, Rather then gaine the worlds sole soveraignety? |
A06415 | Thou that deny''st these nations funerall, VVhy dost thou fly these slaughter smelling fields? |
A06415 | Though potent Sylla, and fierce Marius, Cinna, and Caesars line got rule ore vs By sword: to whom did such power ever fall? |
A06415 | Thought you me like your selues, fearefull, and base? |
A06415 | VVas it too great a trouble to haue kept The carcasse whole for Caesar? |
A06415 | VVhat fame shall future time Giue thee Septimius? |
A06415 | VVhen wilt thou end thy too long tiranny, VVhere bound thy( r) guilt? |
A06415 | VVhere Apenine rais''d somewhat higher fills The midd''st of Italy with shady hills? |
A06415 | VVhere am I carried now? |
A06415 | VVhere''s now thy spirit, thy confidence of fate? |
A06415 | VVhether this powerfull god barely relate The fates, or his relation make them fate? |
A06415 | VVho thence to th''left hand plyes( Pharos ore past) into the Syrtes falls But whither now shall we direct our sailes? |
A06415 | VVho would not dye vpon that sword, and be Cato''s offence, though slaine by another hand? |
A06415 | VVhoo''ll feare that graue? |
A06415 | VVhy does thy misery choose our land alone To bring Pharsalias fortune, and thine owne Fear''d punishment into? |
A06415 | VVhy hold''st thou the worlds swords from Caesar''s throat? |
A06415 | VVhy is thy noble strength of courage broke( VVoman descended from so great a stocke) By the first wound of fate? |
A06415 | VVhy mourn''st thou foole? |
A06415 | VVhy now lament''st thou not, thus loosing time? |
A06415 | VVhy with light darts, and arrowes doe you striue( Vaine fooles) such wounds, as can not kill, to giue? |
A06415 | VVhy with thy sword our bowells doest thou wound? |
A06415 | VVill you obey, or shall I him invoke, VVhose name the earths foundations ever shooke? |
A06415 | VVith how great valour, wretch, hast thou procur''d A lord? |
A06415 | Vnhappy Thessaly, what hast thou done T''offend the angry gods, that thee alone So many deaths, and impious fates should staine? |
A06415 | Was this the cause that thy pursuite did draw Ore land, and sea, to saue thy sonne in law? |
A06415 | Was this the cause thou went''st to Italy? |
A06415 | We to no side, before the battell, clest; Shall we now cleaue to Pompey''s, which is left By the whole world? |
A06415 | What age, what length of time can purge againe The gu ● lt that thou hast wrought? |
A06415 | What bargaine has thus ty''d the gods to them? |
A06415 | What can be wickednesse to him, that may Defile his mother? |
A06415 | What crime had lnfants done to merit death? |
A06415 | What durst the house of Lagus venture more Had they receiv''d great Pompey? |
A06415 | What fury, Countreymen, what madnesse cou''d Moove you to feast your fo ● s with Roman blood? |
A06415 | What generall would not such a tumult scarre? |
A06415 | What help''d it wretched Murrus that he did Kill a fierce Basiliske? |
A06415 | What more( had wee beene vanquisht) would they do? |
A06415 | What need''st thou tombe, or any instrument Of sorrow, wretch? |
A06415 | What plow share, but some Roman ghost shall wound? |
A06415 | What power ore him had any misery? |
A06415 | When Pompey in a narrow place had shut Your helpelesse valour vp, how did he glut His sword with blood? |
A06415 | When Rome we tooke, and made the Senate flye, What spoiles from Men or Temples gathered we? |
A06415 | When thou the cold Araxis streams hast crost, Shall not the slaughter''d Crassus mourning ghost Vpbraide thee? |
A06415 | Where shall they plow? |
A06415 | While life- bloud keepes this breathing body warme, While brandisht Darts fly from this agile arme, Wilt thou weake gownes, and Senates raigne endure? |
A06415 | Who can the causes of this flowing yeild? |
A06415 | Who could deserue in prosperous war such fame? |
A06415 | Who could haue thought, but that the gods aboue Had now begun to favour Rome, and loue Her liberty againe? |
A06415 | Who could look on, when heaven should fal, earth faile, And the con ● usde world perish, and not waile? |
A06415 | Who now has time to waile Plebejan fates? |
A06415 | Who would haue thou ● ht so great a fleete had held All flying men? |
A06415 | Who would haue thought the knotty Scorpion had Such power in killing, or a sting so bad? |
A06415 | Who, small Solpu ● a, from thy hole would flee? |
A06415 | Whom, that had view''d her with an eye direct? |
A06415 | Why are the gods thus troubled to fulfill, And fearefull their enchantments to contemne? |
A06415 | Why doe the powers Caelestiall labour so, To be vnjust againe? |
A06415 | Why doe you hinder my desired fate? |
A06415 | Why doest thou spread her losse, and wounds so far As Scythia, and teach Parthia to goe Beyond her bound? |
A06415 | Why hop''st thou, Roman, truth should here be showne? |
A06415 | Why in a roome So small, rash hand, includ''st thou Pompey''s tombe, And shutt''st vp his great ghost? |
A06415 | Why in this war pretend''st thou liberty? |
A06415 | Why is the wretched world deceiv''d by thee, If thou canst serue? |
A06415 | Why should not I th''Aegyptians towers destroy? |
A06415 | Why should we dy, whose liues devoted were, And sworne to war, the death of cowards here? |
A06415 | Why speake I more? |
A06415 | Why to these wars Doest thou enforce vnwilling souldiers? |
A06415 | Why wag''d he secret war, or why durst he Thus thrust his sword into our worke? |
A06415 | Why would you not more then your liues deserue, And pardons? |
A06415 | Wilt thou keepe peace, and in this doubtfull age Vnshaken stand? |
A06415 | With least bloods losse would the Barbarians gaine A soveraignety for Pompey? |
A06415 | Would''st thou so wound our shame, that not from Rome, But Parthia the revenge of Rome should come? |
A06415 | againe take care To saue that life they had expos''d so far That now the danger even in Caesars eye, Might cleare their doome of partiality? |
A06415 | and at full v ● nes lament? |
A06415 | and forreine Kings from far Crossing the Seas? |
A06415 | and shall I nere interre My slaughter''d Lords? |
A06415 | and shall I rest alone? |
A06415 | and telling people sure Vouchsafes the touch of woman to endure? |
A06415 | and that the fate Of Pompey''s sons, of Cato, and the state''Gainst Caesars fortune had prevailed now? |
A06415 | are we a losse so small VVithout the world? |
A06415 | because from Germany He fled; and calling a small streame a sea On the sought Brittaines turn''d his flying backe? |
A06415 | can you retire without one wound? |
A06415 | canst cruell thou command Thy absent wife this ruines shocke to stand? |
A06415 | could not the loue Of Daughter, Nephew, not aliance mooue? |
A06415 | did we By our Pharsalian victory afford Your King this power, or license Aegypts sword? |
A06415 | doth not thy breast containe Thy Pompey, and his image still remaine VVithin thee? |
A06415 | false Lord, why spar''st thou me? |
A06415 | false earth her seedes deny? |
A06415 | fought we with feare? |
A06415 | how crimson shall Enipeus run With Roman bloud? |
A06415 | how many lands vndone Shall be? |
A06415 | how swift flew cruell death? |
A06415 | if life be nought at all? |
A06415 | intemperately Shall ayre grow hot? |
A06415 | is Pompey slaine, And thou return''d to Pyracy againe? |
A06415 | oh whither yet Am I distracted? |
A06415 | or dar''st thou come To stir the ashes of Pharsalia, And such a war vpon thy kingdome draw? |
A06415 | or does one certaine deity feare Their most imperious charmes, who, what so ere Himselfe is forc''d too, can the world compell? |
A06415 | or how stile thy crime, That Brutus act as parricidall blame? |
A06415 | or mingling with the rage Of the mad rout, this civill war approue? |
A06415 | or some secret threats prevaile? |
A06415 | or some vnknowne piety Deserues it? |
A06415 | or when the sky Thunders, dar''st thou, effoeminate Ptolomey, Insert thy profane hands? |
A06415 | provoking the knowne fates, And feared strength of Caesar? |
A06415 | replyes my sence What gods but those of arts, and eloquece? |
A06415 | shall Cornelia Metellus noble progeny be led The thousand''th wife to a Barbarians bed? |
A06415 | shall they first be Weary of blood, and hate impiety, Whilest thou runn''st headlong on through wrong and right? |
A06415 | speake( quoth he) Liues the worlds head, and honour, or are we Vndone, and Pompey to the shades below Has borne Romes fate? |
A06415 | that conquer''d ships had fill''d The straitned seas? |
A06415 | thou, whom our vnbury''d ghosts Long since expected with revenging hosts, Com''st thou to sue for peace? |
A06415 | to what destiny Didst thou leaue vs poore soules, venturing vpon Th''vnwilling seas, and stormes thy selfe alone? |
A06415 | what corne in thee And grasse with blood discolour''d shall not be? |
A06415 | what death shot from her eyes? |
A06415 | what deity Shot downe from heaven vouchsafes to dignify This caue? |
A06415 | what heavenly god dwells heere below, That does the fates aeternall courses know, And things to come? |
A06415 | what kinde Of ruine is it, gods, what mischiefes finde Your cruelties? |
A06415 | what lands shall my old Soldiers share? |
A06415 | what poyson did arise In her blacke mouth? |
A06415 | what strength haue we For thee to trust, wretch''d man? |
A06415 | where leau''st thou me, Paean, already rapt aboue the Sky? |
A06415 | where shall their City stand? |
A06415 | whoo''ll feare to take from thence Ashes deserving temples? |
A06415 | why did I marry thee To make thee wretched? |
A06415 | why doe it thou beat thy breast, And weepe in vaine? |
A06415 | why does the side Of sword- bearing Orion shine too bright? |
A06415 | why for god should we Seeke further? |
A06415 | why hast thou now confest Thou''gainst thy will to wicked war doest goe? |
A06415 | why should I now complaine Of the lawes breach, and famine( p) made for gaine? |
A06415 | why wouldst thou ruine all Fortune? |
A06415 | with bones, and ashes hot To fi ● l my lap, and in the temples put The sad remainder of his funerall? |
A06411 | ( quoth he) what should a man Whom Fates from victory do ban, The aid of men or Townes receaue? |
A06411 | A few with speed away did flye, For shelter in some harbours nye; But now what tongue can well expresse The Cities fright and heauinesse? |
A06411 | And Rhodops groue, so free from blame? |
A06411 | And are so many Fates obscur''d, As though the starres were not assur''d That Pompey''s head is doom''d to dye, Or else doe these things silent lye? |
A06411 | And can you with your faiths dispence, That is engag''d with iust pretence? |
A06411 | And did not this vile tyrant hate His sister, partner of his state? |
A06411 | And didst not meane withall, that hee In any place should ruin''d be? |
A06411 | And disobeyd that proud decree, Made against right in wrong of me? |
A06411 | And doth thy case thee so constraine, That thou wouldst worthlesse aid retaine? |
A06411 | And euermore, as new yeares came, Did stile them by the Consuls name? |
A06411 | And held in awe them to disdaine? |
A06411 | And how will Enipheus flood Her Chrystall streames pollute and staine With purple gore of Romans slaine? |
A06411 | And like the base Plebeian rout, From thee I should be so cast out It grieues my soule; what must our foe With his approch worke me such woe? |
A06411 | And make all those their buried Kings To swim in midst of Nylus springs? |
A06411 | And must we( that command in chiefe) Of Caesar seeke our liues reliefe? |
A06411 | And nations so remote wouldst trie, And out of thine owne countrey die? |
A06411 | And not this noble warre pursue, That wisht for death, so lately due? |
A06411 | And of their tombes a ruine make? |
A06411 | And on my garments cast at once The hot burnt cinders of his bones? |
A06411 | And on the cold limbes of my spouse To stretch my armes with latest vowes? |
A06411 | And raze to ground the Pyramis, Their monument of Amasis? |
A06411 | And shall I hold an idle place? |
A06411 | And stars that vs no good lucke bods Wilt thou adore Chaldean Gods? |
A06411 | And that I might powre floods of teares Into those wounds his body beares? |
A06411 | And that the Gaules( to venge their wrackes) With furious swarmes come on our backes? |
A06411 | And that the Gods their grace inclines Our glory higher to aduance? |
A06411 | And then this Peasant said againe, What dost thou Hectors Tombe disdaine? |
A06411 | And thinke you I through Fortunes spight Will be supprest with lesser might? |
A06411 | And thinke you that my victory VVill not my campe with troopes supplie? |
A06411 | And thou Achillas halfe a man, Thou Eunuch whom the world doth ban, How durst thou so with hands prophane( Whilst heauen did thunder) work his bane? |
A06411 | And to what Fate( when thou wert fled) VVere we poore soules abandoned? |
A06411 | And whatsoeuer lawfull were From out his funerall to beare, With my hands might be gathered, In Temples of the Gods to spread? |
A06411 | And whether that it be successe Makes honest actions more or lesse? |
A06411 | And whil''st the Victors happy state Depends vpon a doubtfull fate? |
A06411 | And whilst your sturdy limbes and vaines( Not soak''t with wounds) fresh blood retains? |
A06411 | And wilt thou cruell now me leaue, And( sep''rate from thee) so bequeaue My carefull head to ruines state, And to a thundring fearefull Fate? |
A06411 | And wilt thou now the wide world range, To bring whole nations fierce and strange To ransacke Rome? |
A06411 | And with Barbarian rites polluted, Be now the Parthians thrall reputed? |
A06411 | And with what pride he bolstred out The out- rage of that rascall rout? |
A06411 | Are all those glories him assignd, Shut vp with death of such a kinde? |
A06411 | Are they opprest by Witches might, Or in their charmes take they delight? |
A06411 | Art thou obscured from our host? |
A06411 | As though we wanted sence the while To iudge of employments vile? |
A06411 | Because no kings she would obey, But that her Citizens should sway? |
A06411 | But Pompey now thy fame intend, Fate long thee happy life did lend: And didst thou not, by dying, trye The valour that in thee doth lye? |
A06411 | But how great shame to vs acrues( Whom couetise doth so abuse) That we from Affricke do not spare To marchandize that noysome ware? |
A06411 | But if prouoking warres of Spaine, Your forces thither doe constraine; Why range you then so farre astray? |
A06411 | But if this Istmos breake asunder, How would th''Aegean billowes thunder, Incountering the Ionian seas, And struggle with their counterpaise? |
A06411 | But now suppose some man will say, What if( in one vnlucky day) When we doe hope to giue a blow, Our selues receiue the ouer- throw? |
A06411 | But this is nothing that I say That poisons heate melts flesh away: The fire can shew the selfe same power, But what flame so can bones deuoure? |
A06411 | But what are we the more of worth, For all that bloud shed in the North? |
A06411 | But what need I seeke them a graue, Or instruments( O griefe) to craue? |
A06411 | But what, my sonne, needs many words? |
A06411 | But whether that the Pharian dogges, The rauenous foules, or filthy hogges, Haue with the body fild their maw? |
A06411 | But who would thinke the Scorpions sting Had such like force in poysoning, And present death with it could bring? |
A06411 | But who( O Nylus) now would wot That thou, which here dost mildly flote Shouldst suddenly enraged fret, With such a violent out- let? |
A06411 | But with what tearmes to be exprest, If Brutus fact the world detest? |
A06411 | By what meanes comes it to be so, They warre without a forraine foe? |
A06411 | Can Pompey, whom I chast away, Be follow''d with so great a sway Of Latium ships, with him to flye? |
A06411 | Can lawfully these Troopes be led Vnto this place prohibited? |
A06411 | Can this league that you haue renewd, Witnesse that Caesar is subdu''d By you? |
A06411 | Could Marius in the Lybicke soyle Repaire againe his bitter foyle, And win to him a Consuls state, And fixe his fame in Roman date? |
A06411 | Could he( from out the lofty skie) These slaughters see of Thessaly, And hold from them his thundring might, When he Pholoen so will smite? |
A06411 | Could sacrifice of my bloud spilt, Propitiate the Roman guilt? |
A06411 | Cruell why dost thou still persist, Prouoking men against their list? |
A06411 | Cursed Medusa taxlesse pries"On whom she list, with fatall eyes:"For who can feare this monsters face,"VVhen to dread death they haue no space?" |
A06411 | Dar''st thou Thessalias ashes reare And call in warres thy realme to teare? |
A06411 | Deere brother now to me explaine Where is our Sire, and in what plight Stands our affaires? |
A06411 | Didst thou( with such an eager vaine) Expose thy force by land and maine? |
A06411 | Do they preuaile this by entreates, Or do they vse some secret threates? |
A06411 | Do you so much the mischiefe feare That your owne humors bred and reare? |
A06411 | Doth Aegypt slaughters new affoord? |
A06411 | Doth ciuill fate the whole world staine? |
A06411 | Doth not his image fixt remaine In thy grieu''d soule, and euery vaine? |
A06411 | Doth now your hearts such warre desire, As yeelds no triumphs for your hyre? |
A06411 | Doubtst thou( O Pompey) if it be A course most needfull now for me To violate thy wretched life, When lawfull t is to free all strife? |
A06411 | Durst Ptolomy so traiterously Doome one of so great name to dye? |
A06411 | Fight when you please, and fall to Armes; But yet how many wicked harmes, How great and many peoples wrackes Will this next day bring on our backes? |
A06411 | For vnto whom should I beleeue The heauenly powers would sooner giue True knowledge of their secret hest, Then vnto Cato''s holy breast? |
A06411 | For where we setled order swayes Who there can rule, or who obayes? |
A06411 | For which of them( for happy Mart) Could challenge that as their desart? |
A06411 | For who a Campe will deeme this place, That all the Consuls axes grace? |
A06411 | For who can view( with dreadlesse eye) The falling of the starry sky? |
A06411 | For who else durst take liberty On thee to shew such cruelty? |
A06411 | For who would not admire the skies, When through them such a wonder flies? |
A06411 | For why should he engage vs so That now rest free from warre or foe; And seeke to bring our land and state, So deeply into Caesars hate? |
A06411 | From whom hath she her loue restrain''d And held her chastity vnstaind? |
A06411 | Hast thou pursu''d this dire debate,( O Caesar) and in that preuail''d, That now deserues to be bewail''d? |
A06411 | Hath Fortune Pompey all bereft, That he in Parthians hands is left? |
A06411 | Hath Fortune, after all her smiles, Thus Pompey foyl''d with her last guiles? |
A06411 | Hath Pompey Romes last fortune tride? |
A06411 | Hath Rome the hoped comfort lost, Of such a warre and such an host? |
A06411 | Hath not this ciuill warre cost deere, If I and mine must perish heere? |
A06411 | Hath one dayes fate the world opprest? |
A06411 | Haue I of nycenesse shewd such signe, That I should first at thirst repine? |
A06411 | Haue I( O husband) this deeseru''d, In thy safe ship to be preseru''d? |
A06411 | Haue not as yet the powers diuine Resolu''d, how this wracke shall encline? |
A06411 | Haue not we still, with mutuall hearts, Withstood all scornes, and Fortunes thwarts? |
A06411 | Haue we so cowardly borne Armes, And offred vp our throats to harmes? |
A06411 | Haue we to this end conquest sought At the Pharsalian battaile fought; That we should lawlesse power affoord( In this kinde) vnto Aegypts sword? |
A06411 | He was a noble Roman borne, With thy sword must our breasts be torne? |
A06411 | How are the Gods perplext with paine, To yeeld vnto this sorcerous vaine? |
A06411 | How did the sword about him lay? |
A06411 | How doth he blast the stately pine? |
A06411 | How fouly I might be asham''d That now for Mart haue all things fram''d; To sleepe securely with my wife, Sequestred from this ciuill strife? |
A06411 | How hast thou wrong''d the Gods on hie, That thou shouldst be so pestered With cruell slaughters and bloodshed? |
A06411 | How long shall he( with hands vncleane) Support his pride, that holds no meane? |
A06411 | How many Kings will shed their blood? |
A06411 | How many deaths from her eyes streames? |
A06411 | How many other bodies slaine The streets of Sacroportum baine? |
A06411 | How much therefore doth lowly need For safety greatest Kings exceed, Freer from dangers and from dreed? |
A06411 | How now( quoth he) are powers Diuine So troubled with this life of mine, As that they should such care bestow How they the same might ouer- throw? |
A06411 | How oft that day were steepy rockes Cleane ouerturn''d with whirle- wind shocks? |
A06411 | How proudly then did cruell death Both Lords and Commons reaue of breath? |
A06411 | How should men know that as thou list Aduersity thou couldst resist? |
A06411 | How would it Caesars eares content, That such a Peere, as thou, wert bent To yeeld thy selfe vnto the warres, And be partaker of these iarres? |
A06411 | If Rome too little be esteem''d, What as sufficient can be deem''d? |
A06411 | If thou at last this censure haue, Thy honest minde so to depraue? |
A06411 | If thou canst not, what Citty can Deserue to be fought for by man? |
A06411 | In forraine climes, and in such lands As to our state malignant stands? |
A06411 | Is it a fault by ciuill warre, Their insolencies to debarre? |
A06411 | Is ours the Realme on which in spleene Thou faine wouldst lay Pharsalias teene, That with thy wrackes we ruin''d beene? |
A06411 | Is so much the yeares season chang''d In this small way, that we haue rang''d? |
A06411 | Is some Barbarian land design''d, The place where thou thy graue must find? |
A06411 | Is this the hire of all our toyle About the frosty Alpes endur''d, That many a Worthies bane procur''d? |
A06411 | Is this the merit he doth yeeld, To haue his Tombe in Martius field? |
A06411 | Leades you to feast your enuious foes, To see you goar''d with your owne blowes? |
A06411 | May not such wounds be deemed wide, Though all the world escape beside? |
A06411 | Must Caesar needes giue vp his rest, Because the Pyrats are supprest, And Mithridates, with long toyle, At length receiued hath the foyle? |
A06411 | Must Caesar without more adoe Now needs be su''d and sought vnto? |
A06411 | Must I leaue such securitie To Fortunes mutabilitie? |
A06411 | Must Pharus on vs vse the sword? |
A06411 | Must Pompeys corpes with so great scorne Lye on the sands mangled and torne; And thence be cast from side to side Against the rockes with euery tide? |
A06411 | Must Roman Rulers thus be slaine? |
A06411 | Must he at all mens honours spurne? |
A06411 | Must he( with new insulting pride) Againe in Triumphes Chariot ride? |
A06411 | Must our great Empires supreme sway, Him onely serue, and sole obay? |
A06411 | Must thou turne Pirate once againe? |
A06411 | Must we amongst our selues contest? |
A06411 | Must we our state and safety gaine By fauours, that your kingdomes daine? |
A06411 | My tents art thou afraid to see? |
A06411 | Nay, whither am I further tost? |
A06411 | Need you from guilt to be acquite, Because you for your Countrey fight? |
A06411 | No better vse can Caesar make Of that great care the Gods do take For his affaires, the earth that swaies, And to whose heast all men obayes? |
A06411 | No more he sayd, this swaid their mind, What libertie last hopes do finde? |
A06411 | Nor present be when as they dye, To fill their vrnes with flowing eye? |
A06411 | Nor suffer others haue their turne? |
A06411 | Now after this Aemathian wound, Doth that all hope of helpe confound? |
A06411 | Now who can hereof tell the cause? |
A06411 | O Pompey in the chance of warre, Thinkst thou it doth nor make nor marre, VVhether the souldier do prouide A trusty sword girt to his side? |
A06411 | O cowards will you ouer- flow The fields, thereby my march to slow? |
A06411 | O cruell Fates, what day was that, What day that dismall chance begat? |
A06411 | O greedy Cilix most vntrue, Wilt thou the seas go scoure anew, Now Pompey is by fortune slaine? |
A06411 | O what could colour their pretents, Against poore harmlesse innocents? |
A06411 | O why shouldst thou a woman borne Of so great blood, like one forlorne? |
A06411 | Of Fortune then( quoth shee) was I So worthlesse that thou shouldst deny Mee meanes, and leaue for to attend My husband at his funerall end? |
A06411 | Of all thy friends that yet remaine, In this wouldst thou no one retaine? |
A06411 | Of those that fall, how great a part Are slaine with flying shafts and dart? |
A06411 | Of vowes and leagues to make a breach? |
A06411 | Or Forum now, when Fates assaile? |
A06411 | Or else containe his helping hands, If he in doubt and danger stands To be ore- whelmed with the fall Of earths grosse weight, and this vaste all? |
A06411 | Or else from whence hath my desarts More triumphs gaind then from those parts? |
A06411 | Or else of humane haps the heft Were vn- fore- doom''d at randome left? |
A06411 | Or if the earth could parted bee Twixt any other man and mee? |
A06411 | Or rather sinke amidst the maine? |
A06411 | Or that the aire on flaming fire, Our present ruine did conspire? |
A06411 | Or to what vse should we maintaine Such towring Gallions on the maine, If we be willing to release Our liberties, to gaine a peace? |
A06411 | Or what fault in posterity, Borne to be thralles to tyranny? |
A06411 | Or whether that the fire we saw To cinders did the same conuart, I doe not know? |
A06411 | Or who at one blow downe is cast? |
A06411 | Or who can hope reliefe to haue Of this base cottage where I wonne? |
A06411 | Or who could claime( as his owne good) The fame, they wanne with others blood? |
A06411 | Or who on earth dead bodies spurnes? |
A06411 | Or who their bloody swords poynts turnes Vpon their breast, that gasping lye To free their soules that lingring dye? |
A06411 | Or who with darts doth bodies wound? |
A06411 | Or who with hewd limbes standeth fast? |
A06411 | Or who would doubt that earth to treade, Where thou Salpuga mak''st thy bed? |
A06411 | Or whose veins pierc''t whence blood flies out Into the aire, and doth besprout The Armour of his murdring foe? |
A06411 | Or why should I but single out Some priuate fates in this huge rout, Whose bowels pierc''t with deadly wounds Their latest liuing dayes confounds? |
A06411 | Or why should we our Citties wall, And raise huge Ramparts therewithall? |
A06411 | Or with his launce nailes men to ground? |
A06411 | Or with the Gods dar''st thou not trust The Senate, and thy cause so iust? |
A06411 | Ought not your furies to bee such, Although no dutie did you tutch? |
A06411 | Patient in pouerty we pine, O when will these warres haue a fine? |
A06411 | Searching the depth to find the chest, And lay all open where they rest? |
A06411 | Shall Caesar now( I say) be made A prey to Pompeys rusty blade, Because I scorned to forgoe My conquering Legions to my foe? |
A06411 | Shall Caesars pride them all out- face? |
A06411 | Shall I for one victorious day Now take from Rome her rest away? |
A06411 | Shall I his Pelean Towres not drowne, And all those monuments throw downe, That ouer Alexander stands In Mareotis foggy sands? |
A06411 | Shall I( that would not brooke for Mate Great Pompey, in the Roman state) Endure thee, Ptolemey, my Peere? |
A06411 | Shall Kings, from Clymes remote so farre, Assisting be vnto our warre? |
A06411 | Shall Parth that thee beheld with hate, A ruler in the Roman state? |
A06411 | Shall Pyrats so( by Pompeys grace) In fruitfull Colonies finde place, And Roman Veterans not haue That due regard their worth doth craue? |
A06411 | Shall he so long haue meanes to finde A bloody warre with all mankinde? |
A06411 | Shall his vsurped lawlesse state Nor limits haue, nor any date? |
A06411 | Shall my fleet idle range the coast, That you your marine Art may boast? |
A06411 | Shall my hard destiny still finde Such dismall woes to vex my minde? |
A06411 | Shall neuer I the fortune haue To lay my husbands in a graue? |
A06411 | Shall now with vs all ages end? |
A06411 | Shall these consorts( for money bought) Pompey to please, set vs at nought? |
A06411 | Shall they so proudly vndertake In him a Monarchy to make? |
A06411 | Shall they the murdring steele disdaine, Whilst thou dost ruthlesse still remaine, And prosecute this impious vaine? |
A06411 | Shall vnknowne Nations parties take With factions that the Romans make? |
A06411 | Shall we this wounding scorne endure, That Parths shall our reuenge procure? |
A06411 | Since Fortune swayes which way I please, And alwayes prospers my designes? |
A06411 | So fraught with vertue, free from crimes, In these our vice- corrupted times? |
A06411 | So that in lifes vncertaine dance, Things to and fro should slide and glance, And all subiected vnto chance? |
A06411 | Stout Caesar, whither now( quoth they) Did thy rash valour thee convey? |
A06411 | That I alone( of of all this troope) For want of continence should droope? |
A06411 | That Marius should, with his returne, Victor againe, make Rome to mourne? |
A06411 | That all mens thoughts it must dismay, Whether of them the world should sway? |
A06411 | That he would you vouchsafe the grace, To serue in some inferior place? |
A06411 | That since you ciuill armes do beare, Is victory to you a feare, Except you rauing wound and teare? |
A06411 | That would not suffer Pompey liue, That thou( wretch) sholdst him pardon giue? |
A06411 | The burthen of anothers feare, Vpon our shoulders must we beare? |
A06411 | The champian vninhabited? |
A06411 | The townes are vnreplenished? |
A06411 | The whole worlds hap must we afford, Vnto the hazard of the sword? |
A06411 | Then that such grace they him behight To be a happy ship- wrack''t wight? |
A06411 | These bloudy broyles like to ensue, Might moue the Dakes and Getes to view Our hard mishaps; and yet shall I Carelesse let Rome her fortune try? |
A06411 | They onely were exempt by me Of all the Easterne Kings as free: With such desert I did them binde, And shall I Parthes vngratefull finde? |
A06411 | Think''st thou that ought so safe can bee, As thy deere selfe is vnto mee? |
A06411 | Thinke you that I shall losse receaue, Because that you my Campe doe leaue? |
A06411 | Thinke you that I would now refraine To put my trust in you againe, As though that now you stood in awe, Caesars dislikes on you to draw? |
A06411 | Thinke you that any friendly loue To warres, did these Armenians moue? |
A06411 | Thinke you( base men) that euer I Like Pompey''s Cowards meane to dye? |
A06411 | Thinkst thou that freedoms state must stand Supported by thy feeble hand? |
A06411 | Thinkst thou, thou dost my life protect, Whil''st my desire thou dost reiect? |
A06411 | Thinkst thou, we can not gesse aright Vpon whom all the wracke will light? |
A06411 | This coast will now bee more of fame, So honor''d with my noble name: Who will not know that place the while, Where Pompey''s wife liues in exile? |
A06411 | Thou souldier base, what dost thou see, That is of so small worth in mee? |
A06411 | To swim to them he doth entend, And therewith said, what shall we end Our Fortunes here by villaines slaine? |
A06411 | To what lands hath my name more runne For famous conquests by me wonne? |
A06411 | VVas none of vs of that desart, VVith thee in this to share a part? |
A06411 | VVhat Cities walles, or strongest Forts VVhen Caesars hand beates at the ports, Could like security possesse? |
A06411 | VVhat corn bringst thou that shal not haue( Vpon his blade) a bloody staine, To shew these slaughters in thy graine? |
A06411 | VVhat fruit or pleasure could they take This wofull spectacle to make Of Marius vgly mangled face? |
A06411 | VVhat hand would not with feare be taint, To see his wounded father faint? |
A06411 | VVhat mou''d him thus with secret might So to entrude his swords despight In actions, longing to our right? |
A06411 | VVhat plow- share can here furrows rend But they will Roman ghosts offend? |
A06411 | VVhat shame and blame hath heauy fate Remoued from the Roman state? |
A06411 | VVhat shame is this that you so droope, To shift your selues from all the troope? |
A06411 | VVhat woes vpon our mortall bowers, Or what strange plagues doe you intend Vpon this wretched world to send? |
A06411 | VVhat, is the loue that I haue showne To Pompey, yet no better knowne? |
A06411 | VVhither is thy braue courage fled, Vngratefull dost thou stand in dread, That heauen hath thee abandoned? |
A06411 | VVhom doth not Cleopatra hate Of vs, as hainous to her state? |
A06411 | VVhy didst thou to vnwilling waues Thy body giue, where danger raues? |
A06411 | VVhy stand you cowards in such frights, To looke vpon poore trembling sprights? |
A06411 | VVithout fight will you loose your liues? |
A06411 | Vaine woman, doth not Pompey rest Intombed in thy faithfull breast? |
A06411 | Was I then worthy of my life When death on thee his force would trye? |
A06411 | Was Sylla, Foelix nam''d for this? |
A06411 | Was it a worke of so great paine To let the corpes entire remaine, That Caesar might behold it plaine? |
A06411 | Were these the meanes to mend amisse? |
A06411 | What Captaine of the greatest spright Would not this mutiny affright? |
A06411 | What Deity of heauenly birth Can be partaker with this earth? |
A06411 | What Destiny( with endlesse toyle) First drew vs to this fatall soyle? |
A06411 | What Ditch or Rampart could suffise To hold them out whom such a prize And booty of the warre inuites? |
A06411 | What boots it then the Gods to pray, This misery to turne away? |
A06411 | What boots it, that in thee it lay The armed peoples willes to sway? |
A06411 | What can it now tend to thy praise To haue vprightly spent thy dayes? |
A06411 | What can this forlorne towne attempt? |
A06411 | What comfort should they finde at last, To recompence their trauailes past? |
A06411 | What contract haue they made withall? |
A06411 | What dismall Planets wrathfull frowne, So neere the Gaules, confin''d our Towne? |
A06411 | What do you now your selues perswade That you in ought my fortune made? |
A06411 | What face had Gorgon then I wonder, When that her necke was cut a sunder With that same crooked wounding blade? |
A06411 | What fields to plant, or to be plowd? |
A06411 | What foolish trust would leagues combine With friends, in pouerty that pine? |
A06411 | What future age or tract of time, May well repaire this bloody crime, Or lodge this in obliuous graue? |
A06411 | What haue our children yet misdonne, That they to seruile state must runne? |
A06411 | What heapes of carcasses all hewd, Before Collina gates were strewd? |
A06411 | What in thy Mart effected was, But that our hands hath brought to passe? |
A06411 | What is become of all the store Of humane races but of yore, That in the world were borne and bread? |
A06411 | What is there more for me to say? |
A06411 | What lands to them shall be alowd? |
A06411 | What more durst Aegypts force haue done If after Pompey they had runne? |
A06411 | What must this worke be brought to fine By Cassius hand? |
A06411 | What name can such a worke display? |
A06411 | What need I feare my foe to serue, When death can me from that preserue? |
A06411 | What need such troopes of Coursers braue, As in our Campes we daily haue? |
A06411 | What need we deepe mines vndertake For Steele and Iron, Armes to make? |
A06411 | What need we feare his martiall might? |
A06411 | What need you waile this mad vnrest? |
A06411 | What outrage of disordered armes? |
A06411 | What power of Stygian Region? |
A06411 | What power on him had any griefe, That so to others gaue reliefe? |
A06411 | What poyson did her gorge vnlade? |
A06411 | What profits it thy voyce did draw The Senate to infringe the law? |
A06411 | What shore wilt thou cast me vpon, That rapt aboue the clouds haue gone? |
A06411 | What solace yeelds that Soueraignty That''s gain''d with such hostility As doth your hands and hearts diuide, And turmoiles all the world beside? |
A06411 | What spoyles of Gods or men remaines, For vs to aske more for our paines? |
A06411 | What supreme power( from heauen deposd) Vouchsafes confined thus to dwell Within this solitary Cell? |
A06411 | What though no Royall blood we haue? |
A06411 | What though our Isle lye in the maine; Can Caesars Nauy vs constraine? |
A06411 | What wicked damn''d infernall sprights, That range about in gloomy nights, Hath stir''d thee vp, and whet thy rage This odious wicked warre to wage? |
A06411 | What wicked rage( ô yee most blinde) Makes you to be of this strange minde? |
A06411 | What wilt thou teach the Parthian swarmes, The way to vexe vs with their armes? |
A06411 | What worke( quoth he) meane you to make? |
A06411 | What wretched man my helpe doth craue? |
A06411 | What, must he neuer quit againe The rule, that once he doth attaine? |
A06411 | When Fortune pipes, shall we not dance? |
A06411 | When no man knowes for what, or why; But all due course doth it deny? |
A06411 | When thine owne Armes doe thee forsake, Shall these their thirst from bloud so slake? |
A06411 | When we are not prepar''d for warre? |
A06411 | Where diffring age doe oft auaile, Where rigor can true goodnesse quaile? |
A06411 | Where fortune doe her threats but loose, When she doth vertues might oppose? |
A06411 | Where they in peace may eate their breads, And rest their limbes in quiet bed? |
A06411 | Whether that it may vs suffice Praise- worthy deeds to enterprise? |
A06411 | Whether the people shall retaine Their lawes, and liberties againe; Or ciuill warre shall vs still straine? |
A06411 | Whether we may a life it call, That is not dated long withall? |
A06411 | Whither( deere sonnes) and to what end My famous Standard do you spread? |
A06411 | Whither( quoth she) doth your march tend? |
A06411 | Who better then his course should range, Then he that oft had try''d such change? |
A06411 | Who else will thinke that euer you In these warres did your hands embrue? |
A06411 | Who knowes not that( by his affront Contrary to the Roman wo nt) The Iudges, in the Market- place, Assaulted were with foule disgrace? |
A06411 | Who liueth now that doth not know The famine that did ouer- flow By publicke dearth of corne and bread, Whereby his auarice was fed? |
A06411 | Whose liues the destinies thinke good, To mingle with the Latium blood? |
A06411 | Whose there( qth he) what shipwrackt wight Beates at my doore this time of night? |
A06411 | Why did we first to armes discend, Our libertie but to defend? |
A06411 | Why do all kings their subiects sweare Fidelitie to them to beare, If that the kings owne actions teach? |
A06411 | Why doe the Roman armies straine Against themselues with might and maine? |
A06411 | Why doe the people fondly throng To Tyrants, that our State would wrong, And willingly the thraldome trust Of kingly raignes, proud and vniust? |
A06411 | Why dost thou so by force hold backe The whole worlds Armes frō Caesars wrack? |
A06411 | Why doth this soyle the world oppresse, And so bring mankinde to distresse? |
A06411 | Why languish we in miserie? |
A06411 | Why should his name giue vs affright? |
A06411 | Why should not I a woman raigne On those chiefe Citties, that pertaine To me by right in Nylus land? |
A06411 | Why shouldst thou as a runnagate, So range the world to mend thy fate? |
A06411 | Why weariest thou the Gods aboue? |
A06411 | Why were we not in those dayes borne, When Punicke warres did vs ingage, With Canna''s and Trebeia''s rage? |
A06411 | Why with such reuerence and such awe Haue we obseru''d our ancient law? |
A06411 | Will you as men that ill deserue, Vnder condemned Ensignes serue? |
A06411 | Will you assent my will to do, Or shall I him compell thereto, Vpon whose name I neuer call, But that the earth doth quake withall? |
A06411 | Will you become proud Caesars slaue Whilst in your hands you weapons haue? |
A06411 | Wilt thou forbeare, thus hard bested, To violate thy Mistresse bed? |
A06411 | With all the Gods haue they that hand: Or do those powerfull charmes command? |
A06411 | With manly voyce he gan to cry, VVhither( base cowards) do you flye? |
A06411 | With what hope didst thou( haples wight) Desire vpon our coast to light? |
A06411 | Would Pompey new warres vndertake With our hands, since all him forsake? |
A06411 | Would he prouoke the victors might Againe, that hath put him to flight? |
A06411 | and can it be maintain''d, Your countries freedome thus is gain''d? |
A06411 | and must he quell The Tyrants head that so doth swell? |
A06411 | are we of might As yet, or else abandon''d quite? |
A06411 | art thou not asham''d, That still to warre thy minde is fram''d? |
A06411 | can it thus betide, That thou so blindly things should guide, And shamelesse tollerate such pride? |
A06411 | could this men so Forsake thee, ere they saw a foe? |
A06411 | how dost thou enlarge My weary shoulders of a charge? |
A06411 | how happy Lesbos name, Will through all Ages flye with fame? |
A06411 | must I againe In solitary sort remaine, And rest the company of thee Now from Thessalian dangers free? |
A06411 | must all thy threapes Fall all on him at once in heapes, That neuer earst did feele mis- happe, But alwayes dandled in thy lappe? |
A06411 | quoth he, Are not strong walles esteem''d to be Sufficient sculking dennes to hide These crauen Souldiers terrifide? |
A06411 | what doubts are these? |
A06411 | why do you spend Your shafts and darts thus to no end? |
A06411 | why dost thou so racke And labour to bring all to wracke? |
A06411 | why should you giue Me longer life, that loath to liue? |
A06411 | why vexe you so your breast? |
A06411 | with that which can not be: For how canst thou from cares be free, Amidst this whole worlds storme of strife, Except the Gods bereaue thy life? |
A06411 | with what stormes do they contend, That in the warres their liues do spend? |
A06411 | ¶ But what malignant Deities, And Furies of impieties O Caesar hast thou cal''d vpon? |
A06411 | ¶ Canst thou in this finde no reliefe, That thus repulst thou shunst the griefe To see the slaughtred heapes that lye? |
A06411 | ¶ Deare Cittizens, what brainsick charmes? |
A06411 | ¶ Hath so this late Thessalian blow Thy minde deiected and brought low? |
A06411 | ¶ O Brutus( that thy head didst maske But with a meane Plebeian caske, And so wert to thy foes vnknowne) With what sword was thy valour showne? |
A06411 | ¶ What God( quoth he) is here inclosd? |
A06411 | ¶ What can the Rostrum thee auaile? |
A06411 | ¶ What now( quoth he) shall slumbring sights Of visions vaine, appall our sprights? |
A06411 | ¶ Who would haue thought the scattred traines That of Pharsalias wracke remaines, Suffisd so many ships to fill? |