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Updated: July 29, 2025


Twelve of them had committed burglary, two a street robbery, and one had personated another man's name, with intent to receive his wages. Ann. Reg. xxvii, 193, and Gent. Mag. liv. 379, 474. The Gent.

Ariovistus had two wives. Caes. Probant, cf. probaverit, 13, note. Comatur. Subj. denoting the intention of the presents with which she is to be adorned. Frenatum, bridled, caparisoned==paratus below. So Liv.: in has leges, in easdem leges. Hoc vinculum, So, Sec. 13: haec apud illos toga. Conjugales deos. Certain gods at Rome presided over marriage, e.g.

LIV. A man must not flatter himself that he knows his wife, and is making her happy unless he sees her often at his knees.

In scores of passages in Cicero we find officium et munus, 'duty and function', as in 34. CN. ET P. SCIPIONES: in Cic. the plural is always used where two men of the same family are mentioned and their names connected by et. In other writers the plural is regular, the singular exceptional, as in Sall. Iug. 42, 1 Ti. et C. Gracchus; Liv. 6, 22 Sp. et L. Papirius.

QUI: = quo modo, as in 4. ANIMO CONSISTERE: so in pro Quint. 77; also mente consistere in Phil. 2, 68; Div. 2, 149; Q. Fr. 2, 3, 2 neque mente neque lingua neque ore consistere. The word is, literally, 'to stand firm', 'to get a firm foothold'. L. BRUTUM: fell in single combat with Aruns, son of the exiled Tarquin; see Liv. 2, 6.

Fouquet had originally been a cook in the service of Madame Catherine, and was famous for his talent for larding poultry, but he had subsequently entered the household of Henry, where he had been employed in the most degrading service which one man can render to another. Memoires de Sully, Liv. vi. p. 296, note 6.

Tanta: suis petiere ultra fera semina sylvis, Dat Venus accessus, et blando foedere jungit. Tunc et mansuetis tuto ferus erat adulter In stabulis, ultroque gravis succedere tigrim Ausa canis, majore tulit de sanguine foetum. 'Gratii Falisci Cyneget., liv. 1. v. 160.

Inscribed "OBEDIENTI ;" the rest of the sentence is much defaced, but looks like "A'ONOEXIBEO." I suppose the note of contraction above the final A has disappeared and that the inscription was "Obedientiam domino exhibeo." Obedience holds a less principal place in Spenser. We have seen her above associated with the other peculiar virtues of womanhood. SECTION LIV. Seventh side. Infidelity.

LIV. An eighth topic is one of which we avail ourselves to demonstrate that the crime which is the present subject of discussion is not a common one, not one such as is often perpetrated. And, that is foreign to the nature of even men in a savage state, of the most barbarous nations, or even of brute beasts.

He likewise took credit for not having caused her to be strangled and her body cast upon the Gemonian Steps, and suffered a decree of the senate to pass, thanking him for his clemency, and an offering of gold to be made to Jupiter Capitolinus on the occasion. LIV. He had by Germanicus three grandsons, Nero, Drusus, and Caius; and by his son Drusus one, named Tiberius.

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