book 3: 23-28# Thoughts - 思考者
C*r
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CHAP. 23.--OF THE INTERNAL DISASTERS WHICH VEXED THE ROMAN
REPUBLIC, AND FOLLOWED A PORTENTOUS
MADNESS WHICH SEIZED ALL THE DOMESTIC ANIMALS.
But let us now mention, as succinctly as possible, those
disasters which were still more vexing, because nearer home;
I mean those discords which
are erroneously called civil, since they destroy civil
interests. The seditions had now become urban wars, in which
blood was freely shed, and in
which parties raged against one another, not with wrangling
and ve
REPUBLIC, AND FOLLOWED A PORTENTOUS
MADNESS WHICH SEIZED ALL THE DOMESTIC ANIMALS.
But let us now mention, as succinctly as possible, those
disasters which were still more vexing, because nearer home;
I mean those discords which
are erroneously called civil, since they destroy civil
interests. The seditions had now become urban wars, in which
blood was freely shed, and in
which parties raged against one another, not with wrangling
and ve