Index of /public/ftp/pub/linux/utils/text
What you'll find here: miscellaneous text-processing tools
You can also view this index in terse format, or return to the parent directory.
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- Translates char-sets and decodes MIME (128155 bytes)
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- banner like program using curses (2002 bytes)
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- reformat paragraph, with advanced pre/suffix handling (46805 bytes)
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- unix to DOS (and vv) file convertor (14345 bytes)
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- converts afm fonts <--> pfm fonts (23263 bytes)
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- Search for approximations of strings in text (62351 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (16400 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (13093 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (10804 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (17688 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (15676 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (13092 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (25447 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (22171 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (19208 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (25536 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (22359 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (19243 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (26498 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (23723 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (19156 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (24196 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (24041 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (19245 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (24282 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (24290 bytes)
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- recognizes and prints many ascii character formats (19342 bytes)
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- AWK-to-C Translator (459027 bytes)
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- prints large letters (9299 bytes)
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- Draws all kinds of boxes around its input text (51879 bytes)
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- Draws all kinds of boxes around its input text (138279 bytes)
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- Extensions to basic set of GNU utilities (20070 bytes)
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- A "Conditional Compilation Facility" for (many) text file (91959 bytes)
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- a program to columnize information (4615 bytes)
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- This program finds common code segments in large source trees very quickly. It may (1084306 bytes)
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- comparator-1.4-1.src.rpm be useful as a plagiarism or copyright-infringement detector. (1473167 bytes)
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- This program finds common code segments in large source trees very quickly. It may (1469060 bytes)
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- makes word, alphabet usage concordances of text files (61012 bytes)
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- concordancer is a utility for concordancing text files in UN*Xes. (63484 bytes)
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- User-friendly text search program for X (16516 bytes)
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- User-friendly text search program for X (14420 bytes)
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- ?? (3592 bytes)
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- clarion .dat-file converter to plaintext (48705 bytes)
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- gnu diff version 2.6 [bin] (92018 bytes)
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- convert a context diff to a unidiff and vice versa, and to reverse a context diff or unidiff. (47992 bytes)
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- GNU diff util binaries [elf] (89896 bytes)
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- converts text files in DOS format to UNIX format (66944 bytes)
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- English-english dictionary (1306815 bytes)
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- Add HTML decorations to source code listing (33850 bytes)
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- eoconv is a tool which converts text files to and from (20970 bytes)
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- various Esperanto text encodings, including Unicode, ISO-8859-3, HTML, (21037 bytes)
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- LaTeX, and various ASCII notations.eoconv is a tool which converts text files to and from (21011 bytes)
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- various Esperanto text encodings, including Unicode, ISO-8859-3, HTML, (21113 bytes)
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- LaTeX, and various ASCII notations.eoconv is a tool which converts text files to and from (17928 bytes)
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- various Esperanto text encodings, including Unicode, ISO-8859-3, HTML, (17877 bytes)
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- index for large collections of data (189702 bytes)
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- a program for making large letters out of ordinary text (167253 bytes)
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- ``fm'' stands for ``formatting more''. Fm paginates, fills lines, hyphenates, and justifies text files and displays (554024 bytes)
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- prints text files using Linux console font (16310 bytes)
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- gawk binaries [elf] (598754 bytes)
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- indexing and searching for text files (440031 bytes)
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- indexing and searching for text files (316696 bytes)
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- GNU grep text search utilities [elf] (34264 bytes)
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- NU groff text formatter (?roff replacement) [elf] (1810719 bytes)
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- converts hpgl and dxy files to postscript (145966 bytes)
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- utility to strip HTML tags from a text file (5061 bytes)
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- HTML to SGML converter (using Linuxdoc.dtd) (19015 bytes)
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- converts html into texinfo (121754 bytes)
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- generic document indexing system (20522 bytes)
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- A small utility to join (interleave) files (4716 bytes)
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- collection of text utils using tcl/tk (328063 bytes)
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- ktail monitors files (like tail -f) and pipes (90409 bytes)
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- Typesets label sheets in PostScript (4967 bytes)
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- Typesets label sheets in PostScript (4938 bytes)
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- Typesets label sheets in PostScript (5340 bytes)
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- looks for english phonemes in telephone numbers (15859 bytes)
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- looks for english phonemes in telephone numbers (15935 bytes)
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- looks for english phonemes in telephone numbers (13314 bytes)
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- graphical interface to Unix/Linux dictionary resources (108075 bytes)
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- notes on the M4 implementation (891 bytes)
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- M4 general-purpose macro expander (102117 bytes)
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- Small Ansi C compliant personal note taker (2743 bytes)
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- Marquee for X Windows and NCurses. (44479 bytes)
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- Mini hyper-dictionary, covering 1111 essential English words (1721530 bytes)
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- clone of Vernon Buerg's list program (28952 bytes)
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- simple text-to-PostScript converter (23891 bytes)
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- companion to letterize (12637 bytes)
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- companion to letterize (13398 bytes)
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- companion to letterize (11276 bytes)
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- Binaries for nroff (not groff) (87419 bytes)
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- Source for nroff (not groff) (117231 bytes)
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- a simple text formatter (51776 bytes)
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- enables the creation of smooth animations w/ povray (25903 bytes)
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- phonetic word lookup in the Unix system dictionary (15796 bytes)
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- strips graphics stuff from PostScript, leaving text (39724 bytes)
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- moves around negative page numbers in a postscript file (6149 bytes)
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- performs various operations on text files (8351 bytes)
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- performs various operations on text files (15987 bytes)
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- Randomise reads input of arbitrary length and returns a pseudo-randomly selected line. (9618 bytes)
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- reads text from a file/stdin and puts out each character at random intervals (15524 bytes)
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- finds relevence of docs to boolean keyword expression (228264 bytes)
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- score relevance of a document to keywords by phonetic match (95370 bytes)
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- enciphers and deciphers text with the rot13 method (11789 bytes)
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- simple utility for doing and undoing ROT13 encryption (14662 bytes)
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- filter utility to shroud text with Usenet rot-13 cypher (17864 bytes)
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- Save the output of a pipe to a file that may have been it's source, without truncating it. (17258 bytes)
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- Save the output of a pipe to a file that may have been it's source, without truncating it. (17254 bytes)
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- no se (6924 bytes)
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- smaller, cheaper, faster SED utility then GNUs (34740 bytes)
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- Sed (Stream EDitor) is a stream or batch (non-interactive) (17488 bytes)
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- editor.Sed (Stream EDitor) is a stream or batch (non-interactive) (38907 bytes)
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- editor.Sed (Stream EDitor) is a stream or batch (non-interactive) (36001 bytes)
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- sed text stream editor binaries [elf] (27376 bytes)
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- gnu's stream editor [bin] (48357 bytes)
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- improved version of sgml-tools (2910247 bytes)
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- formatting package w/ LaTeX, groff, HTML output (426684 bytes)
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- Upgrades sgml tools so, that they're able to produce polish txt files (3381 bytes)
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- queries text files with well known strutures (72583 bytes)
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- interpret and show text through ncurses (15872 bytes)
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- shuffle/randomize command line or stdin (4023 bytes)
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- sign your e-mail and news postings with a different signature every time (46725 bytes)
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- perl tool to gerneate random signatures (13819 bytes)
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- perl tool to gerneate random signatures (21746 bytes)
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- graphical viewer for circuit simulator output (276822 bytes)
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- A graphical interface for viewing and editing data in tabular form (38868 bytes)
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- A graphical interface for viewing and editing data in tabular form (42076 bytes)
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- A utility to convert text files between DOS, UNIX and MAC/Amiga line break conventions (3936 bytes)
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- Aligns common characters at the ends of lines (24443 bytes)
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- displays ASCII table (11884 bytes)
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- converts a text file into an auto-extract C source file (18201 bytes)
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- Source for banner, col, colrm, and column (56484 bytes)
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- GNU text utilities (cat, tr, tail, head, etc) (721985 bytes)
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- utility for DOS/Unix text file conversion (85133 bytes)
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- troff to LaTeX translation (35264 bytes)
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- translator (english->german) (german->english) (1089156 bytes)
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- Txt2man converts flat ASCII text to man page format. (12244 bytes)
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- text converter for German umlaut characters (11878 bytes)
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- removes unwanted HTML code from files (5141 bytes)
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- converts text files in UNIX format to DOS format (27171 bytes)
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- tool to create html tables from a directory listing (1432 bytes)
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- uu, xx, base64, binhex decoder (259627 bytes)
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- compares files word by word (193514 bytes)
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- Modifications to the "rels" package to make a variant that works with html files (26185 bytes)
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- renumbers the items in a numbered list (10910 bytes)
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- converts Word Perfect 5.1 files to many formats (121669 bytes)
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- break text lines at specified character width (4021 bytes)
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- convert DOS text files into UNIX text files (and the other way back) (4270 bytes)
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- miscellaneous text-processing tools (75539 bytes)
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- document preprocessor w/ HTML, man, LaTeX support (340808 bytes)
Last updated by keeper@ibiblio.org using keeper 1.55 on 2010-04-13 13:18:32 UCT
A much more important factor in the social movement than those already mentioned was the ever-increasing influence of women. This probably stood at the lowest point to which it has ever fallen, during the classic age of Greek life and thought. In the history of Thucydides, so far as it forms a connected series of events, four times only during a period of nearly seventy years does a woman cross the scene. In each instance her apparition only lasts for a moment. In three of the four instances she is a queen or a princess, and belongs either to the half-barbarous kingdoms of northern Hellas or to wholly barbarous Thrace. In the one remaining instance208— that of the woman who helps some of the trapped Thebans to make their escape from Plataea—while her deed of mercy will live for ever, her name is for ever lost.319 But no sooner did philosophy abandon physics for ethics and religion than the importance of those subjects to women was perceived, first by Socrates, and after him by Xenophon and Plato. Women are said to have attended Plato’s lectures disguised as men. Women formed part of the circle which gathered round Epicurus in his suburban retreat. Others aspired not only to learn but to teach. Arêtê, the daughter of Aristippus, handed on the Cyrenaic doctrine to her son, the younger Aristippus. Hipparchia, the wife of Crates the Cynic, earned a place among the representatives of his school. But all these were exceptions; some of them belonged to the class of Hetaerae; and philosophy, although it might address itself to them, remained unaffected by their influence. The case was widely different in Rome, where women were far more highly honoured than in Greece;320 and even if the prominent part assigned to them in the legendary history of the city be a proof, among others, of its untrustworthiness, still that such stories should be thought worth inventing and preserving is an indirect proof of the extent to which feminine influence prevailed. With the loss of political liberty, their importance, as always happens at such a conjuncture, was considerably increased. Under a personal government there is far more scope for intrigue than where law is king; and as intriguers women are at least the209 equals of men. Moreover, they profited fully by the levelling tendencies of the age. One great service of the imperial jurisconsults was to remove some of the disabilities under which women formerly suffered. According to the old law, they were placed under male guardianship through their whole life, but this restraint was first reduced to a legal fiction by compelling the guardian to do what they wished, and at last it was entirely abolished. Their powers both of inheritance and bequest were extended; they frequently possessed immense wealth; and their wealth was sometimes expended for purposes of public munificence. Their social freedom seems to have been unlimited, and they formed combinations among themselves which probably served to increase their general influence.321 The old religions of Greece and Italy were essentially oracular. While inculcating the existence of supernatural beings, and prescribing the modes according to which such beings were to be worshipped, they paid most attention to the interpretation of the signs by which either future events in general, or the consequences of particular actions, were supposed to be divinely revealed. Of these intimations, some were given to the whole world, so that he who ran might read, others were reserved for certain favoured localities, and only communicated through the appointed ministers of the god. The Delphic oracle in particular enjoyed an enormous reputation both among Greeks and barbarians for guidance afforded under the latter conditions; and during a considerable period it may even be said to have directed the course of Hellenic civilisation. It was also under this form that supernatural religion suffered most injury from the great intellectual movement which followed the Persian wars. Men who had learned to study the constant sequences of Nature for themselves, and to shape their conduct according to fixed principles of prudence or of justice, either thought it irreverent to trouble the god about questions on which they were competent to form an opinion for themselves, or did not choose to place a well-considered scheme at the mercy of his possibly interested responses. That such a revolution occurred about the middle of the fifth century B.C., seems proved by the great change of tone in reference to this subject which one perceives on passing from Aeschylus to Sophocles. That anyone should question the veracity of an oracle is a supposition which never crosses the mind of the elder dramatist. A knowledge of augury counts among the greatest benefits222 conferred by Prometheus on mankind, and the Titan brings Zeus himself to terms by his acquaintance with the secrets of destiny. Sophocles, on the other hand, evidently has to deal with a sceptical generation, despising prophecies and needing to be warned of the fearful consequences brought about by neglecting their injunctions. The stranger had a pleasant, round face, with eyes that twinkled in spite of the creases around them that showed worry. No wonder he was worried, Sandy thought: having deserted the craft they had foiled in its attempt to get the gems, the man had returned from some short foray to discover his craft replaced by another. “Thanks,” Dick retorted, without smiling. When they reached him, in the dying glow of the flashlight Dick trained on a body lying in a heap, they identified the man who had been warned by his gypsy fortune teller to “look out for a hidden enemy.” He was lying at full length in the mould and leaves. "But that is sport," she answered carelessly. On the retirement of Townshend, Walpole reigned supreme and without a rival in the Cabinet. Henry Pelham was made Secretary at War; Compton Earl of Wilmington Privy Seal. He left foreign affairs chiefly to Stanhope, now Lord Harrington, and to the Duke of Newcastle, impressing on them by all means to avoid quarrels with foreign Powers, and maintain the blessings of peace. With all the faults of Walpole, this was the praise of his political system, which system, on the meeting of Parliament in the spring of 1731, was violently attacked by Wyndham and Pulteney, on the plea that we were making ruinous treaties, and sacrificing British interests, in order to benefit Hanover, the eternal millstone round the neck of England. Pulteney and Bolingbroke carried the same attack into the pages of The Craftsman, but they failed to move Walpole, or to shake his power. The English Government, instead of treating Wilkes with a dignified indifference, was weak enough to show how deeply it was touched by him, dismissed him from his commission of Colonel of the Buckinghamshire Militia, and treated Lord Temple as an abettor of his, by depriving him of the Lord-Lieutenancy of the same county, and striking his name from the list of Privy Councillors, giving the Lord-Lieutenancy to Dashwood, now Lord Le Despencer. "I tell you what I'll do," said the Deacon, after a little consideration. "I feel as if both Si and you kin stand a little more'n you had yesterday. I'll cook two to-day. We'll send a big cupful over to Capt. McGillicuddy. That'll leave us two for to-morrer. After that we'll have to trust to Providence." "Indeed you won't," said the Surgeon decisively. "You'll go straight home, and stay there until you are well. You won't be fit for duty for at least a month yet, if then. If you went out into camp now you would have a relapse, and be dead inside of a week. The country between here and Chattanooga is dotted with the graves of men who have been sent back to the front too soon." "Adone do wud that—though you sound more as if you wur in a black temper wud me than as if you pitied me." "Wot about this gal he's married?" "Don't come any further." "Davy, it 'ud be cruel of us to go and leave him." "Insolent priest!" interrupted De Boteler, "do you dare to justify what you have done? Now, by my faith, if you had with proper humility acknowledged your fault and sued for pardon—pardon you should have had. But now, you leave this castle instantly. I will teach you that De Boteler will yet be master of his own house, and his own vassals. And here I swear (and the baron of Sudley uttered an imprecation) that, for your meddling knavery, no priest or monk shall ever again abide here. If the varlets want to shrieve, they can go to the Abbey; and if they want to hear mass, a priest can come from Winchcombe. But never shall another of your meddling fraternity abide at Sudley while Roland de Boteler is its lord." "My lord," said Edith, in her defence, "this woman has sworn falsely. The medicine I gave was a sovereign remedy, if given as I ordered. Ten drops would have saved the child's life; but the contents of the phial destroyed it. The words I uttered were prayers for the life of the child. My children, and all who know me, can bear witness that I have a custom of asking His blessing upon all I take in hand. I raised my eyes towards heaven, and muttered words; but, my lord, they were words of prayer—and I looked up as I prayed, to the footstool of the Lord. But it is in vain to contend: the malice of the wicked will triumph, and Edith Holgrave, who even in thought never harmed one of God's creatures, must be sacrificed to cover the guilt, or hide the thoughtlessness of another." "Aye, Sir Treasurer, thou hast reason to sink thy head! Thy odious poll-tax has mingled vengeance—nay, blood—with the cry of the bond." HoME古一级毛片免费观看
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