But their great general, who felt that he now stood victorious on the ramparts of Italy, and that the torrent which rolled before him was carrying its waters to the rich plains of Cisalpine Gaul, endeavoured to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit... Life of Hannibal - 64. lappuseautors: Thomas Arnold - 1879 - 320 lapasPilnskats - Par šo grāmatu
| Thomas Arnold - 1845 - 524 lapas
...be perilous and painful. , , ... AUC 536. But their great general, who felt that he now Looks down stood victorious on the ramparts of Italy, and that...carrying its waters to the rich plains of Cisalpine Gaul, endeavoured to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit of hope. He called them together; he pointed... | |
| Thomas Arnold - 1846 - 520 lapas
...great general, who felt that he now Loots down stood victorious on the ramparts of Italy, and that"1" the torrent which rolled before him was carrying its waters to the rich plains of Cisalpine Gaul, endeavoured to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit of hope. He called them together ; he pointed... | |
| Archibald Alison - 1850 - 696 lapas
...that the greatness of Hannibal shone forth in all its lustre. " That great general," says Arnold, " who felt that he now stood victorious on the ramparts...carrying its waters to the rich plains of Cisalpine Gaul, endeavoured to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit of hope. He called them together ; he pointed... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1867 - 594 lapas
...we believe to be the true meaning of the whole context, and the true representation of the fact. ' But their great general, who felt that he now stood...carrying its waters to the rich plains of Cisalpine Gaul, endeavoured to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit of hope. He called them together; he pointed... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1867 - 698 lapas
...we believe to be the true meaning of the whole context, and the true representation of the fact. ' But their great general, who felt that he now stood...carrying its waters to the rich plains of Cisalpine Gaol, endeavoured to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit of hope. He called them together; he pointed... | |
| Thomas Arnold - 1869 - 432 lapas
...and painful. Looks down But their great general, who felt that he now stood upon Italy. vic£0rious on the ramparts of Italy, and that the torrent which...carrying its waters to the rich plains of Cisalpine Gaul, endeavoured to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit of hope. He called them together ; he pointed... | |
| William Wells Brown - 1874 - 576 lapas
...was then that the genins of Hannibal -houc forth in all its lustie. "The great general," says Arnold, "who felt that he now stood victorious on the ramparts...spirit of hope. He called them together; he pointed out to them the valley beneath, to which the descent seemed but the work of a moment. "That valley," said... | |
| Elizabeth Spooner - 1876 - 238 lapas
...October — the first winter snows had already fallen; but two hundred years before the Christian aera, when all Germany was one vast forest, the climate...carrying its waters to the rich plains of Cisalpine Gaul, endeavoured to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit of hope. He called them together, he pointed... | |
| F. Walter Savage - 1878 - 294 lapas
...perceive that humiliation must degrade, but could not save him. MACAULAY. V. Translate into French : But their great general, who felt that he now stood...carrying its waters to the rich plains of Cisalpine Gaul, endeavoured to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit of hope. He called them together ; he pointed... | |
| 1880 - 812 lapas
...winter snows had already fallen ; but two hundred years before the Christian era, when all Geimany was one vast forest, the climate of the Alps was far...He called them together ; he pointed out the valley bensath, to which the descent seemed the work of a moment : " That valley," he said, " U Italy ; it... | |
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