Plutarch, כרך 111Twayne Publishers, 1970 - 177 עמודים |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 17
עמוד 10
... remains the central design for the Parallel Lives , Plutarch never evades an ethical , humanistic orientation in his essays . He de- scribes the personal benefits he derived from setting down the Lives in this passage : For the result ...
... remains the central design for the Parallel Lives , Plutarch never evades an ethical , humanistic orientation in his essays . He de- scribes the personal benefits he derived from setting down the Lives in this passage : For the result ...
עמוד 35
... remains true for Plutarch , he will appeal to that second possibility in man by way of narratives from past history or more directly through moral axioms . In his essays Plutarch remains a man with a mission , just as was true in his ...
... remains true for Plutarch , he will appeal to that second possibility in man by way of narratives from past history or more directly through moral axioms . In his essays Plutarch remains a man with a mission , just as was true in his ...
עמוד 91
... remains unimpressed and unconvinced by anything stated . These auditors are too self - oriented to glean even a whit of information : .. " An offensive and tiresome listener is the man who is not to be touched or moved by anything that ...
... remains unimpressed and unconvinced by anything stated . These auditors are too self - oriented to glean even a whit of information : .. " An offensive and tiresome listener is the man who is not to be touched or moved by anything that ...
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
A. H. Clough Alexander Alexander's Amulius Amyot's ancient antiquity Antony Athens authority biographer Caesar career century B.C. Chaeronea chapter character Cicero classical classicist commentaries concerning Coriolanus daemons Dareius death deeds Delphi Demosthenes didactic divine Egyptian Emerson English Erasmus ethical fact French friends gods Greece Greece's Hellenic hero historians human humanistic instance intellectual Isis and Osiris J. P. Mahaffy king Lamprias later Latin LCL volume learned lecture literary Loeb London Lycurgus man's ments mind Montaigne moon moral Moralia narrative nature Oliver Goldsmith one's oracle Osiris Parallel Lives philosophy piece Plato Plutarch Plutarch's accounts Plutarch's Lives Plutarch's Moralia Plutarch's writings poetry political Pompey R. H. Barrow Ralph Waldo Emerson readers reason religious remains result reveal Roman Rome Romulus ruler scholars senate sense Shakespeare soul speaking tarch Theseus thought tion trans translation Typhon York