Alas ! the flower was just expanded in full blossom to the morning sun, when the day overcast, and this promised pride of the garden perished by the relentless storm. THE LIFE OF PERSIUS. AULUS PERSIUS FLACCUS, according to the fragment ascribed to Probus,... The Satires of Persius - Page xxi1797 - 111 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
 | Aulus Persius Flaccus - 1797
...overcast, and this promised pride of the garden perished by the relentless storm. THE LIFE OF PERSIUS. PERSIUS FLACCUS, according to the fragment ascribed...Persius died at thirty years of age. Persius was born at Volaterrae in Etruria. He was of the equestrian order, and was allied to some of the noblest families... | |
 | Persius, Pre-1801 Imprint Collection (Library of Congress) - 1799 - 189 pages
...his arm, which had already warded off a thousand dangers. Alas! the flower was just expanded in foil blossom to the morning sun, when the day overcast,...Vitellius; and died in that of Rubrius Marius, and Asinius Callus, on the eighth of the Kalends of December. But as there were only twenty-eight years between... | |
 | Persius - 1803 - 189 pages
...it was his arm, which had already warded offa thousand dangers. Alas ! the flower was just expanded in full blossom to the morning sun, when the day overcast,...Persius died at thirty years of age. Persius was born at Volaterrae in Etruria. He was of the equestrian order, and was allied to some of the noblest families... | |
 | Juvenal, Aulus Persius Flaccus - 1857
...so far a guarantee for the genuineness of this Grammarian's facts. " Aulus Persius Flaccus was born the day before the nones of December, in the consulship of Fabius Persicus and L. Vitellius1. He died the eighth day before the kalends of December, in the consulship of P. Marius... | |
 | Juvenal - 1857
...so far a guarantee for the genuineness of this Grammarian's facts. " Aulus Persius Flaccus was born the day before the nones of December, in the consulship of Fabius Persicus and L. Vitellius1. He died the eighth day before the kalends of December, in the consulship of P. Marius... | |
 | Juvenal, Persius, A. J. Macleane - 1867 - 466 pages
...so far a guarantee for the genuineness of this Grammarian's facts. " Aulus Persius Flaecus was born the day before the nones of December, in the consulship of Fabius Persicus and L. Vitellius '. He died the eighth day before the kalends of December, in the consulship of P. Marius... | |
![Christian epitaphs of the first six centuries [ed. and tr.] by J. McCaul Christian epitaphs of the first six centuries [ed. and tr.] by J. McCaul](http://bks6.books.google.fr/books?id=IXoBAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&img=1&zoom=5&edge=curl) | John McCaul - 1869
...(Constante) II Consulibus. " To the very innocent Paul, who lived ten months, fourteen days. Buried on the day before the Nones of December, in the Consulship of Constantius for the third time, and Constans for the second time," ie December 4th, 342, AD 18. (See... | |
![“The” Roman Near East: 31 BC - AD 337 ; [based on Carl Newell Jackson Lectures] “The” Roman Near East: 31 BC - AD 337 ; [based on Carl Newell Jackson Lectures]](http://bks8.books.google.fr/books?id=IA-YlZqHv90C&printsec=frontcover&img=1&zoom=5&edge=curl) | Fergus Millar - 1993 - 587 pages
...[Second hand] Translation of subscription of the prefect: I, Priscus, prefect of cavalry, received (this) on the day before the nones of December in the consulship of Gallicanus and Titianus. To complete our impression of the meeting of languages, the document has on... | |
 | Benjamin H. Isaac - 1998 - 481 pages
...[2nd hand] Translation of subscription of the prefect: I, Priscus, prefect of cavalry, received [this] on the day before the nones of December in the consulship of Gallicanus and Titianus. On the back, individual signatures (in Nabataean) right edge 'Abdu son of... | |
 | James Noel Adams - 2003 - 836 pages
...[and hand] Translation of subscription of the prefect: I, Priscus, prefect of cavalry, received [this] on the day before the nones of December in the consulship of Gallicanus and Titianus.' Babatha and her husband were Aramaic speakers, though they may have understood... | |
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