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10921 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 39.3 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… Mountains, runs through the country of the Dardanians, and empties itself into the river Tigris .... When Cyrus reached this stream, which could only be passed …
10922 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 45.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… shall run to meet another, and one messenger to meet another, to show the king of Babylon that his city is taken at one end, and that the passages are stopped, and …
10923 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 59.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… Persia runs thus: “Also I in the first year of Darius the Mede, even I, stood to confirm and to strengthen him. And now will I show thee the truth. Behold, there shall …
10924 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 84.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… a run. Now the distance between the two armies was little short of eight furlongs. The Persians, therefore, when they saw the Greeks coming on at speed, made ready …
10925 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 90.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… to run any such risk, but rather to cut a canal through the land to the north of Mount Athos, and by that to conduct his fleet safely toward Greece. It seems to have …
10926 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 90.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… land runs out for some distance into the sea ... Toward this tongue of land then, the men to whom the business was assigned, carried out a double bridge from Abydos …
10927 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 101.3 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… which runs a range of lofty hills, impossible to climb, enclosing all Malis within them, and called the Trachinians Cliffs. The first city upon the bay, as you …
10928 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 103.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… would run away.” He, however, sent out “a mounted spy to observe the Greeks, and note how many they were, and what they were doing. He had heard, before he came out of …
10929 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 105.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… , it runs along the ridge of the mountain (which is called, like the pathway over it, Anopaea), and ends at the city of Alpenus—the first Locrian town as you come from …
10930 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 106.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… came running down from the heights, and brought in the same accounts, when the day was just beginning to break. Then the Greeks held a council to consider what …
10931 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 118.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… , and run great risk of perishing. He therefore made up his mind to fly; but as he wished to hide his purpose alike from the Greeks and from his own people, he set …
10932 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 123.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… a run directly upon the track of the Greeks, whom he believed to be in actual flight. He could not see the Athenians; for as they had taken the way of the plain, they …
10933 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 168.4 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… not run away. I shall march forward against you, wherever you may be.” [Page 168] Grote’s “History of Greece,” chap 93, par. 43.
10934 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 176.3 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… had run unto him with the fury of his power. He had come close to him, and, moved with choler, had smitten the ram and broken his two horns; there was no power in the …
10935 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 226.3 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… have run the hazard of being pressed to death by the crowd, had not the vigor of his years, for he was not above thirty-three years old, and the joy which so glorious …
10936 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 261.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… long run to sell themselves to those who could bid highest for their voices.”— Froude. [Page 261] “Caesar,” chap 3, par. 5.
10937 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 329.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… to run about, the soldiers made him a pair of boots— caliga —after the pattern of their own, and from that he got his name of “Caligula,” that is, Little Boots. His real …
10938 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 332.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… were run up so high as to ruin the purchasers. At one of these sales a certain Aponius Saturninus, sitting on a bench, became sleepy and fell to nodding; the emperor …
10939 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 441.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… . Thus runs the story:—
10940 The Great Empires of Prophecy, from Babylon to the Fall of Rome, p. 455.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… . Thus runs that part of the edict:—