Works, Volume 9J. Stockdale, 1807 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 56
Page 19
... thought to have been his pupil in rhetorick , has given him in the history of the Peloponnefian war , would have rendered him fufficiently illuftrious ; fo that , of all the ten , Ifæus alone appears to have confined his talents to the ...
... thought to have been his pupil in rhetorick , has given him in the history of the Peloponnefian war , would have rendered him fufficiently illuftrious ; fo that , of all the ten , Ifæus alone appears to have confined his talents to the ...
Page 31
... thought this an innovation in their language , but they would , perhaps , have adopted the definition on his authority . We are not however contending about the proper applica- tion of terms , or the abftract idea of univerfal genius ...
... thought this an innovation in their language , but they would , perhaps , have adopted the definition on his authority . We are not however contending about the proper applica- tion of terms , or the abftract idea of univerfal genius ...
Page 32
... thought manly , nervous , acute , pertinent , and better in most respects than the generality of addreffes to an English jury on fimilar fubjects , we shall have a kind of model , by which the ftudent may form himself , allowing for the ...
... thought manly , nervous , acute , pertinent , and better in most respects than the generality of addreffes to an English jury on fimilar fubjects , we shall have a kind of model , by which the ftudent may form himself , allowing for the ...
Page 36
... thought interesting to lawyers only ; and Taylor , who published his Elements of Civil Law little more than twenty years ago , fpeaks of my author as a writer then hardly known : " When I quoted Ifæus , fays " he , I would fuggest to my ...
... thought interesting to lawyers only ; and Taylor , who published his Elements of Civil Law little more than twenty years ago , fpeaks of my author as a writer then hardly known : " When I quoted Ifæus , fays " he , I would fuggest to my ...
Page 42
... thought himself wronged , and refolved to feek redrefs in a court of juf- tice , his first step was to prefer his plaint and de- nounce the name of his adversary to the fitting magiftrate , who examined the complainant , and , if he thought ...
... thought himself wronged , and refolved to feek redrefs in a court of juf- tice , his first step was to prefer his plaint and de- nounce the name of his adversary to the fitting magiftrate , who examined the complainant , and , if he thought ...
Common terms and phrases
adopted fon adverfaries affert Afide Aftyphilus againſt alfo alſo anſwered Apollodorus Archon Athenian Athens becauſe brother cafe caufe cauſe Charidemus Ciron claim Cleon coufin court daugh daughter deceaſed defcended defire Demochares Demofthenes depofitions Dicæogenes Diocles Dufbm Dufhm eftate Endius eſtate Eubulides Euctemon Eupolis faid falfely fame father favour fecond feems fhall fhould fifter fince firft firſt fome fortune friends fucceffion fuch fuit fuppofe fupporting Hagnias Hagnon heir himſelf houſe huſband Ifæus iffue inheritance judges juft juftice juſt lefs legitimate Leochares Lyfias Mádh marriage married Menexenus minas moft moſt mother muft muſt myſelf neareſt Nicodemus obferved occafion orator paffage perfons perfuaded Philoctemon Phylomache pleaſed poffeffed poffeffions prefent prove publick Pyrrhus raiſed reaſon reſpect Sacontalá ſeems ſhall ſhe ſon ſpeak ſpeech Stratocles ſuppoſe thefe themſelves Theopompus ther theſe thofe thoſe thou tion uncle uſe ward whilft whofe whoſe witneffes Xenocles