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Plato, Republic, Book 6, section 497e (search)
st be completed by making this plain.” “It will be no lack of will,” I said, “but if anything,For the idiomatic A)LL' EI)/PER Cf. Parmen. 150 B, Euthydem. 296 B, Thompson on Meno,Excursus 2, pp. 258-264, Aristot.An. Post. 91 b 33, Eth. Nic. 1101 a 12, 1136 b 25, 1155 b 30, 1168 a 12, 1174 a 27, 1180 b 27, Met. 1028 a 24, 1044 a 11, Rhet. 1371 a 16. a lack of ability, that would prevent that. But you shall observe for yourself my zeal. And note again how zealously and recklessly I am prepared to say that the state ought to take up this pursuit in just the reverse of our present fashion
Plato, Republic, Book 9, section 586c (search)
as to seem intense in either kind, and to beget mad loves of themselves in senseless souls, and to be fought for,For PERIMAXH/TOUS cf. Aristot.Eth. Nic. 1168 b 19, Eth. Eud. 1248 b 27, and on 521 A, p. 145, note e. as Stesichorus says the wraith of HelenFor the Stesichorean legend that the real Helen remained in Egypt while only her phantom went to Troy Cf. Phaedr. 243 A-B, Eurip.Hel. 605 ff., Elect. 1282-1283, Isoc.Hel. 64, and Philologus 55, pp. 634 ff. Dümmler, Akademika p. 55, thinks this passage a criticism of Isoc.Helena 40. Cf. also Teichmüller, Lit. Fehden, i. pp. 113 ff. So Milton, Reason of Church Government,“A lawny
ay. See telegrams, in Appendix. General Beauregard insisted, however, that the order should be revoked, and thus were Petersburg and Richmond barely saved by the opportune presence and gallant conduct of Hagood's command. It was upon that occasion that General Butler's forces were baffled and beaten off, on the 6th and 7th of May, in their attempt to seize the Richmond Railroad above Petersburg. Much praise is also due to the prompt action of General Bushrod Johnson and his Tennesseeans, 1168 in number, whom General Hagood found at the junction when he arrived in person with the remaining companies of the 25th South Carolina Regiment. General Johnson had marched from Drury's Bluff, in the direction of Colonel Graham's firing, with the purpose of giving him assistance. Owing to the position assigned to his forces, the part he and his men took in this sharp encounter, which overturned Butler's plans, was not so conspicuous as it would otherwise have been, though it neutralized the
his dead and wounded upon the field. * * * At 8 P. M. the same evening General Hagood arrived at Petersburg with the remaining seven companies of the 25th, commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Pressley. After some delay in rationing the men, he moved forward to reinforce Graham. * * * Arrived at the Junction, General Hagood found General Bushrod Johnson there, who informed him that, hearing Graham's firing, he had marched to his assistance from the direction of Drury's Bluff with a brigade of 1168 Tennesseeans, and had arrived during the night. Galliard, with the 27th regiment, joined Hagood at daybreak, and raised his command to an aggregate of 1500 men. * * * About 10 A. M. General Hagood was directed to move across Ashton Creek towards the church, to feel and develop the strength and position of the enemy. * * * The skirmishers encountered the enemy's cavalry advancing, and fired upon them, driving them back. The 27th was at once deployed to the right of the road, and the skirm
ition has been many times made, but the instance illustrated is that of the steamer Frigorific, 900 tons, intended for the La Plata and Paris trade. The barge shown alongside is intended for the river Seine transportation between Havre and Paris. Both ship and barge are fitted with the Tellier refrigerating apparatus, in which a low degree of temperature is imparted to an air-blast which passes around large plates cooled by the expanded vapor of methylated spirit. See ice-making, pages 1164-68, and Plate XXVI. Some of these refrigerating devices employ ice, and others cool the air by the expansion of previously condensed vapor. See also refrigerator, pages 1910, 1911. Refrigerating steamer. (transverse Section.) Refrigerating steamer. (longitudinal Section.) Steam′boat-ing. (Bookbinding.) Cutting simultaneously a pile of books which are as yet uncovered, that is, are out of boards. Steamboat-roll′ers. (Coal-mining.) The large coal-breaking rollers at the mi
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Cheerful Yesterdays, Index. (search)
Le Barnes, J. W., 231, 232, 240. Lee, Mrs., Thomas, 87. Leighton, Caroline (Andrews), 129. Leland, C. G., 312, 314. Leroux, Pierre, 86. Lewes, Mrs. (George Eliot), 219. Lincoln, Abraham, 239, 261. Linnaeus, Charles von, 89, 92. literary London twenty years ago, 271-297. literary Paris twenty years ago, 298-325. Literature and Oratory compared, 360. Locke, John, 700. Lodge, H. C., 352. Long, J. D., 337, 354. Longfellow, H. W., 12, 13, 33, 54, 55, 67, 95, 101, 1002, 103, 1168, 171, 176, 178, 179, 180, 189, 313, 314, 331, 345. Longfellow, Samuel, 105. Loring, E. G., 141. Loring, G. B., 176. L'Ouverture, Toussaint, 270. Lovering, Joseph, 53, 54. Lowell, Charles, 103. Lowell, J. R., 24, 28, 37, 42, 53, 55, 67, 700, 75, 76, 77, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 103, 110, 118, 126, 128, 168, 1700 171, 173, 174, 176, 178, 179, 180, 182, 184, 186, 295. Lowell, John, 5. Lowell, Maria (White), 67, 75, 76, 77, 101. Lynch, John, 235, 236. Lyttelton, Lord, 289. Macaulay, T. B
Col. O. M. Roberts, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 12.1, Alabama (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Battles of the Western army in which Albama troops were engaged. (search)
total loss 38. Alabama troops, parts of 1st, 3d, 51st Cav., and 3d, 10th Conf. Cav. Goldsboro Rd., Nahunta Swamp, Little River, N. C., Mar. 22. Gen. Jos. Wheeler; total loss 28.—Federal, total loss 236. Alabama troops, parts of 1st, 3d, 51st Cav., and 3d, 10th Conf. Cav. Kinston, N. C., Mar. 19.—Federal, Gen. Schofield. Alabama troops, 34th 1nf. Bentonville, N. C., Mar. 19 to 21. Gen. Johnston, 10,000; loss 239 k, 1694 w, 673 m.—Federal, Gen. Sherman, 60,000; loss 191 k, 1168 w, 287 m. Alabama troops, 1st, 16th-45th, 17th, 19th, 20th, 22d-(25th, 39th, 50th), 23d, 24th, 28th, 34th, 27th-(35th, 40th, 55th, 57th), 29th, 30th, 37th-(42d, 54th) Inf. Pine Barren Cr., Ala., Mar. 25. Gen. Maury; loss 275 m.—Federal, Gen. Steele; loss 2 k, 10 w. Alabama troops, 15th Conf., and 8th Cav. reserves. Spanish Fort, Ala., Mar. 26 to April 8. Gen. Gibson; loss 93 k, 395 w, 250 m.—Federal, Gen. Canby, 32,000; loss 100 k, 695 w. Alabama troops, 18th, 21st, 32d, 36t
er from, VII., 306, 334, 347. Hampton, F., IV., 110. Hampton, W.: II., 326, 340, 350; III., 42, 198, 324, 330, 332, 342, 344; IV., 41, 96, 108, 110, 128, 203, 262, 269 seq., 274 seq., 276, 286; VII., 203; VIII., 364; IX., 41; garden of, IX., 313; X., 247, 252. Hampton, Va.: I., 260, 262; Chesapeake hospital at, VII., 233. Hampton roads, Va.: I., 226, 239, 260, 358, 364; schooners loaded with ammunition at, V., 175; VI., 36 seq., 40, 50, 61, 82, 100, 104, 116, 130, 156, 1168, 174, l81, 269, 283, 310, 312. Hampton's Legion: of South Carolina, I., 295, 350; battery, IV., 232; IX., 313; X., 156. Hancock, W. B., II., 340. Hancock, W. S.: L., 270; II., 72. 93, 237, 244., 246, 250, 259, 262; III., 34, 36, 40, 42, 48, 54, 62, 64, 67, 69, 72, 83, 84, 86, 88, 190. 208, 318; IV., 273; V., 35, 38, VII., 154; VIII., 98, 177, 232, 246, 252; IX., 221; X., 179, 190, 192. Handy, E. G., I., 18. Handy, I. W. K., VI., 21. Hanging Rock, W. Va. Sam