Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volume 59;Volume 122John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1894 |
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... Rome . Re- ligion was not moral , save that there was necessarily a certain goodness in practices performed , not for any pleas- ure in them , but to obtain advantages from fellow - citizens . The Roman sys- tem was , in early days , a ...
... Rome . Re- ligion was not moral , save that there was necessarily a certain goodness in practices performed , not for any pleas- ure in them , but to obtain advantages from fellow - citizens . The Roman sys- tem was , in early days , a ...
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... Rome lost very much of its influence . Incredulity or indiffer- ence became the prevailing character- istics of the higher classes , who were saturated with Epicurean views . Even at the commencement of the empire Cæsar , before the ...
... Rome lost very much of its influence . Incredulity or indiffer- ence became the prevailing character- istics of the higher classes , who were saturated with Epicurean views . Even at the commencement of the empire Cæsar , before the ...
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... Rome did not know or did not practise almsgiving . Under the republic large sums were often dis- bursed to secure ... Rome , a so- ciety which might be called a " moth- ers ' meeting " -Conventus matronarum . It persisted till the ruin ...
... Rome did not know or did not practise almsgiving . Under the republic large sums were often dis- bursed to secure ... Rome , a so- ciety which might be called a " moth- ers ' meeting " -Conventus matronarum . It persisted till the ruin ...
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... Rome also felt the benefit of the upward religious move- ment . For the Roman religion not only did not close its temples against the slave but recognized that he had a soul and that his future fate did not differ from that of his ...
... Rome also felt the benefit of the upward religious move- ment . For the Roman religion not only did not close its temples against the slave but recognized that he had a soul and that his future fate did not differ from that of his ...
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... Rome the capital of the world . This disposition of mind greatly facilitated conquest , since no religious rancor hindered the fusion of a new province with the rest of Rome's vast domain . Tolerance was further pro- moted by that ...
... Rome the capital of the world . This disposition of mind greatly facilitated conquest , since no religious rancor hindered the fusion of a new province with the rest of Rome's vast domain . Tolerance was further pro- moted by that ...
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