Word: caesar
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Best general references: G. W. Cable, The Negro Question, The Silent South; A. W. Tourgee, An Appeal to Caesar; L. H. Blair, Prosperity of the South dependent on the Elevation of the Negro; J. T. Pomeroy, Constitutional Law, p. 213; North Am. Review, Vol. 153, pp. 641-660 (Dec. 1891); Contemporary Review, LXV., pp. 818-827 (June, 1894); Political Sci. Quarterly, IX. 671-701 (Dec., 1894); Popular Sci. Monthly, XXVIII. 24-37 (Nov., 1895); Nation. Vol. 53, pp. 208-209 (Sept. 17, 1891); Forum...
...tfTHE repertoire for Alexander Salvini's second and last week at the Hollis has been arranged as follows: Monday, "Don Caesar de Bazan;" Tuesday, "Friend Fritz," and "Rustic Chivalry;" Wednesday night and Saturday matinee, "Ruy Blas;" Thursday and Saturday evening, "Three Guardsmen;" Friday night, "Hamlet...
...repertoire for Alexander Salvini's second and last week at the Hollis has been arranged as follows: Monday, "Don Caesar de Bazan;" Tuesday, "Friend Fritz," and "Rustic Chivalry;" Wednesday night and Saturday matinee, "Ruy Blas;" Thursday and Saturday evening, "Three Guardsmen;" Friday night, "Hamlet...
Passing on to the Stoics, the professor spoke of the doctrines of Caesar, who held the view that there was no eternal life, and of Cato and Cicero, both of whom agreed with the views of Caesar. Marcus Aurelius was a more cautious stoic, never directly offering any view upon immortality. The influence which these men held upon Roman thought was very great. The conflicting tendencies of the religion of the second century were mentioned. The hopeless cynicism of Pliny was contrasted with the faith of Vergil, who had a deep consciousness of the ethical demand for retribution...
...annihilates time and space for us; it revives for us without a miracle the Age of Wonder, endowing us with the shoes of swiftness and the cap of darkness, so that we walk invisible like fern-seed, and witness unharmed the plague at Athens or Florence or London; accompany Caesar on his marches, or look in on Catiline in council with his fellow conspirators, or Guy Fawkes in the cellar of St. Stephen's. We often hear of people who will descend to any servility, submit to any insult, for the sake of getting themselves or their children into what...