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Page 6
... brings fire and sword to the tents of his Myrmidons . Agamemnon holds a midnight council , and Diomed volunteers to reconnoitre the Trojan lines , with Ulysses as his comrade . Hector con- ceives a similar idea , and Dolon undertakes ...
... brings fire and sword to the tents of his Myrmidons . Agamemnon holds a midnight council , and Diomed volunteers to reconnoitre the Trojan lines , with Ulysses as his comrade . Hector con- ceives a similar idea , and Dolon undertakes ...
Page 19
... bringing Ulysses , disguised again in mean apparel , to the palace , and on their way they are met by the goatherd , Melanthius , who has gone over to his master's enemies , and spurns the old man with his foot ; but at the gates he is ...
... bringing Ulysses , disguised again in mean apparel , to the palace , and on their way they are met by the goatherd , Melanthius , who has gone over to his master's enemies , and spurns the old man with his foot ; but at the gates he is ...
Page 21
... brings forth Ulysses ' bow , and will accept whichever of them can send an arrow through the rings of twelve axe - heads , as he was wont to do . Telemachus makes the first attempt , but , at a sign from his father , professes himself ...
... brings forth Ulysses ' bow , and will accept whichever of them can send an arrow through the rings of twelve axe - heads , as he was wont to do . Telemachus makes the first attempt , but , at a sign from his father , professes himself ...
Page 22
... bring it forth from our bridal chamber . ' But it consisted of the stem of an olive tree , rooted in the ground round which the chamber was built . ' Move it ! ' exclaimed Ulysses , ' who could stir it from its place ? ' and all her ...
... bring it forth from our bridal chamber . ' But it consisted of the stem of an olive tree , rooted in the ground round which the chamber was built . ' Move it ! ' exclaimed Ulysses , ' who could stir it from its place ? ' and all her ...
Page 25
... brings the bearer pain , And is not lightly shaken off ; nor dies The rumour that from many lips doth rise , But , like a god , all end of time defies . ' Davies . The remainder of the poem consists of a calendar of the lucky and ...
... brings the bearer pain , And is not lightly shaken off ; nor dies The rumour that from many lips doth rise , But , like a god , all end of time defies . ' Davies . The remainder of the poem consists of a calendar of the lucky and ...
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Common terms and phrases
Achilles Adventures Æneas Æneid Agamemnon Animals Apollo army Athenians Athens Author battle beauty bids birds body Book brother Cæsar celebrated chariot Chorus Chremes Cicero citizens cloth elegant Clytemnestra coloured Creon Creusa daughter dead death deities Demosthenes dialogue DIED B.C. earth Edipus enemy escape Eteocles Euripides fate father Fcap fleet G. A. HENTY Gauls gilt edges girl gives gods Greece Greeks hand happy heaven Hector Hercules hero honour husband Illustrations island Jupiter king Lamachus land legions living Livy mind Minerva moral mother nature Neoptolemus orator Orestes palace Persian Philoctetes philosophers Plutus poem poet Pompey Roman Rome says scene Shillings and Sixpence ships slain slave Socrates soul Spartans speech Stories Tacitus tells temple thee things thou thousand Thucydides tion Trojans Troy Ulysses victory whilst wife women words Xenophon young
Popular passages
Page 26 - Britannia: a Collection of the Principal Passages in Latin Authors that refer to this Island, with Vocabulary and Notes. By TS CAYZER. Illustrated with a Map and 29 Woodcuts. Crown 8vo. Price 3s. 6rf. True Stories from Ancient History, chronologically arranged from the Creation of the World to the Death of Charlemagne.
Page 8 - Hurricane Hurry, or THE ADVENTURES OF A NAVAL OFFICER DURING THE AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
Page 30 - Le Babillard : an Amusing Introduction to the French Language. By a FRENCH LADY. Ninth Edition. 16 Plates. Cloth, 2s. Les Jeunes Narrateurs, ou Petits Contes Moraux. With a Key to the Difficult Words and Phrases.
Page 26 - Gaultier's Familiar Geography. With a concise Treatise on the Artificial Sphere, and two coloured Maps, illustrative of the principal Geographical Terms. Sixteenth Edition. 16mo, 3s. cloth. Butler's Outline Maps, and Key, or GEOGRAPHICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL EXERCISES ; with a Set of Coloured Outline Maps, designed for the use of Young Persons. By the late WILLIAM BUTLER. Enlarged by the Author's Son, J.
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Page 169 - Go .tell the Spartans, thou that passest by. That here, obedient to their laws, we lie ; ' and, ' Of those at famed Thermopylae who lie, Glorious the fortune, bright the destiny.
Page 12 - Seven Birthdays (The), or THE CHILDREN OF FORTUNE. By KATHLEEN KNOX. Starlight Stories, TOLD TO BRIGHT EYES AND LISTENING EARS. By FANNY LABLACHE. Stories of Edward AND HIS LITTLE FRIENDS. Tales of Magic and Meaning. Written and Illustrated by ALFRED CROWQUILL.
Page 11 - By SAMUEL MOSSMAN. Modern British Plutarch (The), or LIVES OF MEN DISTINGUISHED IN THE RECENT HISTORY OF OUR COUNTRY FOR THEIR TALENTS, VIRTUES, AND ACHIEVEMENTS. By WC TAYLOR, LL.D.
Page 14 - Mamma's Lessons. For her Little Boys and Girls. Thirteenth Edition, with eight Engravings. Price 2s. 6rf. cloth; 3s. 6d. coloured, gilt edges. The Mine; Or, Subterranean Wonders. An Account of the Operations of the Miner and the Products of his Labours; with a Description of the most important in all parts of the World.
Page 267 - There's a bliss beyond all that the minstrel has told, When two, that are link'd in one heavenly tie, With heart never changing and brow never cold, Love on through all ills, and love on till they die...