Sir G. C. Lewis
Cited as Sir G. C. Lewis. — 14 quotations
Accredit
The version of early Roman history which was accredited in the fifth century.
accretion
To strip off all the subordinate parts of his narrative as a later accretion.
Affinity
There is a close affinity between imposture and credulity.
Anterior
Antigonus, who was anterior to Polybius.
Apocryphal
The passages . . . are, however, in part from apocryphal or fictitious works.
Commemorative
An inscription commemorative of his victory.
Crepuscular
This semihistorical and crepuscular period.
Criterion
Inferences founded on such enduring criteria.
Depravation
The depravation of his moral character destroyed his judgment.
Discourager
The promoter of truth and the discourager of error.
Divergence
Related with some divergence by other writers.
Envenom
On the question of slavery opinion has of late years been peculiarly envenomed.
Literature
The origin of all positive science and philosophy, as well as of all literature and art, in the forms in which they exist in civilized Europe, must be traced to the Greeks.
Spoliation
Legal spoliation, which will impoverish one part of the community in order to corrupt the remainder.