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Updated: June 5, 2025
LX. Now to return to anatomy. He gave up dissection because it turned his stomach so that he could neither eat nor drink with benefit.
LX. With respect to preserving olives, Cato advises that table olives, both the round and the bitter berried kinds, keep best in brine both when they are dry and when they are green, but if they are bruised it is well to put them in mastich oil.
LX. The kings, his friends and allies, built cities in their respective kingdoms, to which they gave the name of Caesarea; and all with one consent resolved to finish, at their common expense, the temple of Jupiter Olympius, at Athens, which had been begun long before, and consecrate it to his Genius.
And the incident taught the Government something as to the difficulty they would have in enforcing the Home Rule Bill in Ulster. See Parliamentary Debates, vol. lx, p. 73. Ibid., p. 426. Cd. 7329, No. Ibid., Nos. Ibid., Nos. See Parliamentary Debates, vol. lx, p. 246. Ibid., p. 400. The Nineteenth Century and After, January 1921, art.
21: Isaiah lx:9 "The Isles shall wait for me, and the ships of Tarshish first, to bring thy sons from far, their silver and their gold with them, unto the name of the Lord thy God, and to the Holy One of Israel, because he hath glorified thee." 22: Isaiah lx:14 "And they shall call thee the city of the Lord, the Zion of the Holy One of Israel."
They will remember not only how he caused his nephew Germanicus to be poisoned by the governor of Syria, but how he ordered a fisherman to be torn in pieces by the claws of a crab, simply because he met him, in one of his suspicious moods, when strolling in a sequestered garden of Capreæ. Sue. Tib. c. lx.
Scripture likewise seems to point out this method, 'Surely the Isles shall wait for me; the ships of Tarshish first, to bring my sons from far, their silver and their gold with them, unto the name of the Lord, thy God. Isai. lx. 9.
Nor is it in rhythm more than in the other embellishments of a speech that we behave exactly as poets do; though still, in an oration, we avoid all resemblance to a poem. LX. For there is in both oratory and poetry, first of all the material, then the execution. The material consists in the words, the execution in the arrangement of the words.
LX. But how commodious are the hands which nature has given to man, and how beautifully do they minister to many arts! For, such is the flexibility of the joints, that our fingers are closed and opened without any difficulty. With their help, the hand is formed for painting, carving, and engraving; for playing on stringed instruments, and on the pipe. These are matters of pleasure.
II. p. lx., another instance may be found of the same discourtesy on the part of Mr. It is true, also, that, in the recently published edition of Shakespeare's Works, just alluded to, he has vengefully revived, in its worst form, the animosity which disgraced the pages of the editors and commentators of the last century, and has attacked the most eminent of critical English scholars, the Rev.
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