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Word: tacitus (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...relic, really, of a classic blunder. Perdomita Britannia et statim omissa, noted Tacitus scornfully-"Britain was conquered and then thrown away." He blamed the Emperor Domitian, who in A.D. 84 suddenly ordered his brilliant field commander Agricola to return to Rome just when a wholly Roman Britain seemed within grasp of the legions. Thereafter, year by year, the troops that had pressed nearly to the top of Scotland fell back under guerrilla attacks from the Britons. At last, in A.D. 119, Rome decided to stem the retreat and make the best of things by building a wall...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Something There Is, Etc. | 7/18/1969 | See Source »

...lecture structure has depended largely on adroit references to the incomparably wide range of literatures and artists of Borges' experience--from oriental philosophers to Homer, Tacitus, Pope, Mossetti, Gongora, Schopenhauer, Spinoza, Baudelaire, Dante, Yeats (all of whom he seems to know intimately. He believes that since literature already contains all possible ideas, he can say anything by allusion to one of his predecessors...

Author: By Jack Davis, | Title: Borges Lecturing | 3/26/1968 | See Source »

...Communist China together again." What made him think so? "I had a visitor, a rather important visitor, from the Soviet Union during the last week," he explained cryptically, and the visitor told him so. Reaching for a description of the U.S. role in Viet Nam, Bobby misquoted Roman Historian Tacitus-and ludicrously mislabeled him "one of their generals"-as saying, "We made a desert and we called it peace." Fulbright joined the debate, warned darkly that "this, I fear, is one of the last times that anybody will have courage to say anything else about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The War: Cards on the Table | 5/5/1967 | See Source »

...focused on such needs as public works projects and agricultural reform. A silk-smooth speaker and one of his country's top criminal attorneys, Burnham earned a law degree with honors at London University, reads himself to sleep in English ("political novels"), French (Lamartine, Corneille), or Latin (Cicero, Tacitus, Catullus). Originally a co-founder of Jagan's P.P.P., Burnham soon soured on Cheddi's Marxist rantings and, fired by his own ambition, set up the anti-Communist P.N.C. in 1957. If his ideas today are sometimes vague, he is an avowed friend of the U.S.-and needs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: British Guiana: Cheddi's Last Stand | 12/18/1964 | See Source »

...speech even permits the publication of pornography, no matter how "hard-core." If obscenity is now considered a special kind of nonspeech for which people can be arrested, what is to prevent some demagogue from calling his critics "obscene" and arresting them? That, says Black, citing his well-thumbed Tacitus, is just what happened in Rome under Caesar Augustus. Moreover, the Supreme Court's current obscenity doctrine forces it to read every allegedly hard-core work to see how shocking it is, a task for which Black finds his brethren ill suited and unable to set "reasonably fixed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Supreme Court: The Limits That Create Liberty & The Liberty That Creates Limits | 10/9/1964 | See Source »

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