Julian the Emperor: Containing Gregory Nazianzen's Two Invectives and Libanius' Monody with Julian's Extant Theosophical WorksG. Bell and sons, 1888 - 288 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 31
Page 3
... called , especially delights in this appellation , and in such a sense of the title , but also a fitting judgment is it for that man to be punished by means of words for his transgressions against words , 1 which , though the common ...
... called , especially delights in this appellation , and in such a sense of the title , but also a fitting judgment is it for that man to be punished by means of words for his transgressions against words , 1 which , though the common ...
Page 10
... called us , and who comforts the lowly in heart . " 17. Do ye mark how I weave my song out of sacred words and thoughts ? and , as it were , with what belongs to others , I exalt and decorate myself , how I grow in- spired by my joy ? I ...
... called us , and who comforts the lowly in heart . " 17. Do ye mark how I weave my song out of sacred words and thoughts ? and , as it were , with what belongs to others , I exalt and decorate myself , how I grow in- spired by my joy ? I ...
Page 31
... called ; for this is a kind of divination amongst them to confer with darkness , as it were , and the subterranean demons concerning future events : whether that they delight more in darkness , because they are darkness , and makers of ...
... called ; for this is a kind of divination amongst them to confer with darkness , as it were , and the subterranean demons concerning future events : whether that they delight more in darkness , because they are darkness , and makers of ...
Page 45
... called by the most opprobrious of titles . He immediately 1 All these evils being in truth less virulent than those caused by the sectarian quarrels which had raged under Constantius . In the new reign whatever annoyances the Christians ...
... called by the most opprobrious of titles . He immediately 1 All these evils being in truth less virulent than those caused by the sectarian quarrels which had raged under Constantius . In the new reign whatever annoyances the Christians ...
Page 98
... called these terms " reasonable , " but now spying an opportunity of laying the blame on Julian , he calls them " disgraceful . " Whoever reads Ammian's dispassionate account of the transaction will be convinced that Jovian actually ...
... called these terms " reasonable , " but now spying an opportunity of laying the blame on Julian , he calls them " disgraceful . " Whoever reads Ammian's dispassionate account of the transaction will be convinced that Jovian actually ...
Other editions - View all
Julian the Emperor: Containing Gregory Nazianzen's Two Invectives and ... Charles William King,Julian,Gregory No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
admired Ammian amongst ancient army Athene Attis barbarians battle of Singara better body brought cause Chimæra Christ Christians coloured Constantius Ctesiphon dæmons death deity didst Dioscuri divine earth Edit emperor empire enemy Engravings escape Essay Euphrates evil existence fable force Gaul give glory goddess gods Greek Gregory hand hath heaven History honour Iamblichus imperial impiety impious inasmuch Intelligible Julian Jupiter king labour Libanius Lord Magnentius matters means Memoir mighty Misopogon nature Notes numerous occasion P. L. Simmonds persecution Persians person philosophers Phrygians Plato Plutarch Portrait possessed prince punishment reason received reign religion river Roman sacrifice sense side sistrum soldiers sort soul sovereign Sun speech suffer superior temple thee Theocritus things thou thought Tigris tion towns Trans Translated truth unto victory virtue visible vols whilst whole wickedness Woodcuts words
Popular passages
Page 287 - DICTIONARY of LATIN and GREEK Quotations ; including Proverbs, Maxims, Mottoes, Law Terms and Phrases. With the Quantities marked, and English Translations. With Index Verborum (622 pages).
Page 285 - Art, with the prices at which they were sold by auction, and names of the possessors. To which are added, an Introductory Lecture on Pottery and Porcelain, and an Engraved List of all the known Marks and Monograms.
Page 5 - Snow Image, and Other Tales. Scarlet Letter. House with the Seven Gables. • Transformation ; or the Marble Fawn. Two Parts. HAZLITT (W.). Table-talk: Essays on Men and Manners. Three Parts. Plain Speaker : Opinions on Books, Men, and Things. Three Parts. Lectures on the English Comic Writers.
Page 283 - HUNTINGDON'S History of the English, from the Roman Invasion to the Accession of Henry II. ; with the Acts of King Stephen, and the Letter to Walter. By T. Forester, MA Frontispiece from an old MS. INGULPH'S Chronicles of the Abbey of Croyland, with the CONTINUATION by Peter of Blois and others. Trans, with Notes by HT Riley, BA KEIGHTLEY'S (Thomas) Fairy Mythology, illustrative of the Romance and Superstition of Various Countries.
Page 285 - NAVAL and MILITARY HEROES of Great Britain ; a Record of British Valour on every Day in the year, from William the Conqueror to the Battle of Inkermann. By Major Johns, RM, and Lieut. PH Nicolas, RM Indexes.
Page 2 - LILLY. Introduction to Astrology. With a Grammar of Astrology and Tables for calculating Nativities, by Zadkiel. MANTELL'S (Dr.) Geological Excursions through the Isle of Wight and along the Dorset Coast. Numerous Woodcuts and Geological Map. — — Petrifactions and their Teachings. Handbook to the Organic Remains in the British Museum. Numerous Woodcuts. 6s, Wonders of Geology ; or, a Familiar Exposition of Geological Phenomena.
Page 276 - Vol. I. —Essays, Lectures, and Poems. Vol. II. — English Traits, Nature, and Conduct of Life. Vol. III.— Society and Solitude— Letters and Social Aims — Miscellaneous Papers (hitherto uncollected)— May-Day, &c. FOSTER'S (John) Life and Correspondence. Edit, by JE Ryland. Portrait. 2 vols. — Lectures at Broadmead Chapel. Edit, by JE Ryland. 2 vols. Critical Essays contributed to the
Page 283 - Ecclesiastical History of England and Normandy. With Notes, Introduction of Guizot, and the Critical Notice of M. Delille, by T. Forester, MA To which is added the CHRONICLE OF St.
Page 286 - SHARPE (S.) The History of Egypt, from the Earliest Times till the Conquest by the Arabs, AD 640.
Page 288 - SULPICIA, and Lucilius. In Prose, with Notes, ' Chronological Tables; Arguments, by L. Evans, MA To which is added the Metrical Version of Juvenal and Persius by Gifford.