The classics for the million, an epitome, in English, of the works of the principal Greek and Latin authors |
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Page 1
... honour , that he was born at Smyrna , and that in early life he travelled through Egypt , Italy , Spain , and the islands of the Mediterranean , until he was stricken with blindness , when he returned to his native place , and composed ...
... honour , that he was born at Smyrna , and that in early life he travelled through Egypt , Italy , Spain , and the islands of the Mediterranean , until he was stricken with blindness , when he returned to his native place , and composed ...
Page 13
... - miration , and on entering the palace he finds himself surrounded with wealth and magnificence . The place of honour is ceded to him , and , in reply to a suggestion that he has descended from Olympus , he thus assures his HOMER . 13.
... - miration , and on entering the palace he finds himself surrounded with wealth and magnificence . The place of honour is ceded to him , and , in reply to a suggestion that he has descended from Olympus , he thus assures his HOMER . 13.
Page 14
... honour of the stranger , and at the banquet the blind bard Demodocus , in whom , it is thought , the poet describes himself , — ' Whom the muse loved , and gave him good and ill ; Ill , that of light she did his eyes deprive , Good ...
... honour of the stranger , and at the banquet the blind bard Demodocus , in whom , it is thought , the poet describes himself , — ' Whom the muse loved , and gave him good and ill ; Ill , that of light she did his eyes deprive , Good ...
Page 20
... honour hast thou now let fall , Antinous , on the wandering poor this blow . Haply a god from heaven is in our hall , And thou art ripe for ruin : I bid thee know Gods in the garb of strangers to and fro Wander the cities , and men's ...
... honour hast thou now let fall , Antinous , on the wandering poor this blow . Haply a god from heaven is in our hall , And thou art ripe for ruin : I bid thee know Gods in the garb of strangers to and fro Wander the cities , and men's ...
Page 32
... honour , but that Polynices is to be cast out to the birds and wolves . Antigone , however , declares that she will bury Polynices , and half the Chorus bear away his body , whilst the other half follow Ismene with that of Eteocles ...
... honour , but that Polynices is to be cast out to the birds and wolves . Antigone , however , declares that she will bury Polynices , and half the Chorus bear away his body , whilst the other half follow Ismene with that of Eteocles ...
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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
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