Mark Antony : Marcus Antonius (82-30 BC), associate of Julius Caesar, famed as lover & ally of Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt.
... that Tiberius was a Clausus, one of the great Italian houses renowned for its licence, cruelty, pride and genius, and Caligula the son and Nero the grandson of Germanicus, who drew his blood from Mark Antony. Science is right in its materialist data, though not always in the inferences it draws from them and when she tells us that nothing proceeds from nothingness and that for every effect there is a ...
... e.g. 5:1; 6:45; 7:2-4; 7:31; 8:22; 10:1; 11:1.) Nineham 38 ends on the note that certainty with regard * Cf. Marcus Tullius Cicero, Marcus Brutus, Marcus Aurelius, Mark Antony, etc., etc. ** See H. J. Cadbury, The Making of Luke-Acts, pp. 85ff, who rightly points out how largely second-century statements about the authorship of biblical books was based on conjecture ...
... discloses on one side of the forehead.,The single ear visible because the face is semi-front does not create any regret in me that I can't Page 227 gaze at its duplicate. If any Mark Antony were to address me as he did the Roman populace and say, "Lend me your ears", I would gladly part with them and not charge the least interest on the loan as there is nothing interesting about them ...
... remember very well (psychically, not in any outward event) my contact with his personality then." (19.7.1937) When the disciple suggested that Sri Aurobindo might have been Julius Caesar or Mark Antony and the Master gave a clue that he had been neither, the disciple wrote: "So who remains a famous person in contact with Horace? The answer is unmistakable: Caesar Octavianus, afterwards Augustus ...
... of thought and expression. Sri Aurobindo had little time to revise and refine, to pick his epithets, to chisel his images, to measure his periods; the words apparently came straight on" (as Mark Antony might have put it). It is said that once, when Shyamsundar Chakravarti asked for an article, Sri Aurobindo drew out some old packing from a pile on his table, and began writing and finished it ...
... humour, His fun. Some of it has been published, others have been kept back, so I will reveal to you today some of those tales which have 296 "This was the most unkindest cut of all" - from Mark Antony's famous burial speech in William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Act III, Scene ii, line 183. Page 251 been held back. You know, perhaps, that I worked in many departments... reverse of enthusiastic about again becoming a medical gent. When, however, you spoke lovingly and hungeringly about Rs. 20,000, I rubbed my eyes and thought, 'Well, well! Here's a chance!'" That's all. Mark the humour. So I was transferred to the Dispensary and now I will read out some 'medical' jokes from my correspondence with Him. I think the ladies here won't mind if some of the jokes refer ...
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