Free Web Hosting Provider - Web Hosting - E-commerce - High Speed Internet - Free Web Page
Search the Web

Tamoskaro Directory 10
Page 10

Another way to achieve Tamoskaro is to try harder.

Tamoskaro

Tamoskaro Home

Tamoskaro Sitemap

Tamoskaro Dir 01

Tamoskaro Dir 02

Tamoskaro Dir 03

Tamoskaro Dir 04

Tamoskaro Dir 05

Tamoskaro Dir 06

Tamoskaro Dir 07

Tamoskaro Dir 08

Tamoskaro Dir 09

Tamoskaro Dir 10

Tamoskaro Dir 11

Tamoskaro Dir 12

Tamoskaro Dir 13

Tamoskaro Dir 14

Tamoskaro Dir 15

Tamoskaro Dir 16

Tamoskaro Dir 17

Tamoskaro Dir 18

Tamoskaro Dir 19

Tamoskaro Dir 20

Tamoskaro Directory 10
Page 10

Melbourne can hardly be called a very great man,--he had not the purpose or tenacity for that, and he thought both too contemptuously and too indulgently of human nature,--but I know of no historical figure who is more wholly transfused and penetrated by the aroma of charm. Everything that he did and said had some distinction and unusualness: perceptive observation, ripe wisdom, and, with it all, the petulant attractiveness of the spoiled and engaging child. And yet even so, one is baffled, because it is not the profundity or the gravity of what he said that impresses; it is rather the delicate and fantastic turn he gave to a thought or a phrase that makes his simplest deductions from life, his most sensible bits of counsel, appear to have something fresh and interesting about them, though prudent men have said much the same before, and said it heavily and solemnly.

All the efforts of the Romans to dislodge him were unsuccessful; and he only quitted Hercte in order to seize Eryx, a town situated upon the mountain of this name, and only six miles from Drepanum. This position he held for two years longer; and the Romans, despairing of driving the Carthaginians out of Sicily so long as they were masters of the sea, resolved to build another fleet. In B.C. 242 the Consul Lutatius Catulus put to sea with a fleet of 200 ships, and in the following year he gained a decisive victory over the Carthaginian fleet, commanded by Hanno, off the group of islands called the AEgates.

But with all their prowess and skill as naval combatants, and their hardihood as mountaineers, the Cilicians lacked one thing which is very essential in every nation to an honorable military fame. They had no poets or historians of their own, so that the story of their deeds had to be told to posterity by their enemies. If they had been able to narrate their own exploits, they would have figured, perhaps, upon the page of history as a small but brave and efficient maritime power, pursuing for many years a glorious career of conquest, and acquiring imperishable renown by their enterprise and success. As it was, the Romans, their enemies, described their deeds and gave them their designation. They called them robbers and pirates; and robbers and pirates they must forever remain.


[ Sec 10 Part 01 ] [ Sec 10 Part 02 ] [ Sec 10 Part 03 ] [ Sec 10 Part 04 ] [ Sec 10 Part 05 ]
[ Sec 10 Part 06 ] [ Sec 10 Part 07 ] [ Sec 10 Part 08 ] [ Sec 10 Part 09 ] [ Sec 10 Part 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Tamoskaro and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Tamoskaro provides no guaratees concerning the quality or content of other sites that Tamoskaro points links toward. Understand that Tamoskaro is not responsible for the content on other sites.