The Grecian History: From the Earliest State to the Death of Alexander the Great |
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Page 39
... fleets ; keeping up and repairing public buildings ; temples , walls , ports , and citadels . But in the decline of the republic , the greatest part was consumed in frivolous expen- ses , games , feasts , and shows , which cost immense ...
... fleets ; keeping up and repairing public buildings ; temples , walls , ports , and citadels . But in the decline of the republic , the greatest part was consumed in frivolous expen- ses , games , feasts , and shows , which cost immense ...
Page 41
... fleets of Persia . Such were the two states , that in some measure engros- sed all the power of Greece to themselves ; and , though sev- eral petty kingdoms still held their governments in indepen- dence , yet they owed their safety to ...
... fleets of Persia . Such were the two states , that in some measure engros- sed all the power of Greece to themselves ; and , though sev- eral petty kingdoms still held their governments in indepen- dence , yet they owed their safety to ...
Page 46
... fleet , he entered the Persian frontiers , and marched by land to Sardis , the capital city of Lydia . Artaphernes , who resided there as the Persian viceroy , find- ing the city untenable , resolved to secure himself in the cit- adel ...
... fleet , he entered the Persian frontiers , and marched by land to Sardis , the capital city of Lydia . Artaphernes , who resided there as the Persian viceroy , find- ing the city untenable , resolved to secure himself in the cit- adel ...
Page 47
... fleet of three hun- dred ships , at a little island over against Miletus , and on the superiority of this fleet they placed their whole reliance . But the Persian gold effected what their arms were unable to compass . Their emissaries ...
... fleet of three hun- dred ships , at a little island over against Miletus , and on the superiority of this fleet they placed their whole reliance . But the Persian gold effected what their arms were unable to compass . Their emissaries ...
Page 48
... fleet , and the refusal of that state to admit Hippias as their king ; the taking of Sardis , and the contempt they testified for the Persian power , were all sufficient motives for exciting the resentment of that empire ; and for ...
... fleet , and the refusal of that state to admit Hippias as their king ; the taking of Sardis , and the contempt they testified for the Persian power , were all sufficient motives for exciting the resentment of that empire ; and for ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards Alcibiades Alexander ambition Aristagoras Aristides arms arrived Athenians Athens attack battle began besieged body camp carried cause chariot Cimon citizens commanded conquest courage Cyrus danger Darius death declared defeat defend Demaratus Demosthenes dreadful endeavored enemy enemy's engagement Epaminondas expedition favor fleet forces fought friends gallies gave give glory greatest Grecian Greece Greeks Gylippus head Hellespont honor horse hundred inhabitants killed king Lacedæmonians land laws liberty Lycurgus Lysander Macedon Macedonians manner Mardonius master mean monarch nians Nicias obliged occasion oppose oracle orators Parmenio passed Pausanias Pelopidas Pericles Persian phalanx Philip Phocians Porus possessed present prince prisoners resolved rest retire river sail seemed seized sent shew ships side siege Socrates soldiers Solon soon Spartans success Syracusans Thebans Thebes Themistocles thence thousand tion Tissaphernes took troops tyrants utmost valor victory walls whole army wing Xenophon Xerxes
Popular passages
Page 125 - Athenians, that even success would profit the enemy but little, should they be conquerors, whereas if they were defeated, Sparta itself was hardly safe.
Page 148 - ... of my old age. I cannot, indeed, forbear admiring their courage and felicity, in sacrificing to their country's welfare a life, of which they would one day have been deprived by the common course of nature : but then I cannot but be strongly affected with the cruel wound which their death has made in my heart, nor forbear hating and detesting the Athenians, the authors of this unhappy war, as the murderers of my children ; but, however...
Page 193 - Here, said they, he formed our youth, and taught our children to love their country, and to honour their parents. In this place, he gave us his admirable lessons, and sometimes made us seasonable reproaches, to engage us more warmly in the pursuit of virtue. Alas ! how have we rewarded him for such important services ! Athens was in universal mourning and consternation.
Page 190 - Presently after they entered, and found Socrates, whose chains had been taken off, sitting by Xantippe, his wife, who held one of his children in her arms; as soon as she perceived them, setting up great cries, sobbing, and tearing her face and hair, she made the prison resound with her complaints.
Page 125 - Alcibiades, with great apparent courtesy, demanded of them, With what powers they were come? They made answer that they were not come as plenipotentiaries.
Page 185 - If to speak in this manner be to corrupt youth, I confess, Athenians, that I am guilty, and deserve to be punished. If what I say be not true, it is most easy to convict me of my falsehood.
Page 188 - I believe neither honest nor lawful, especially upon this Occasion, wherein I am accused of impiety by Melitus : for, if I should influence you by my prayers, and thereby induce you to, violate your oaths, it would be undeniably evident, that I teach...
Page 188 - He does not swear to discharge with impunity whom he pleases, but to do justice where it is due. We ought not, therefore, to accustom you to perjury, nor you to suffer yourselves to be accustomed to it ; for, in so doing, both the one and the other of us equally injure justice and religion, and both are criminals.
Page 267 - Demosthenes related to the people the fable of the wolves and dogs, in which it is supposed, " that the wolves one day told the sheep, that in case they desired to be at peace with them, they must deliver up to them the dogs who were their guard.
Page 186 - I honour and love you ; but I shall choose rather to obey God than you, and to my latest breath shall never renounce my philosophy, nor cease to exhort and reprove you, according to my custom, by telling- each of you, when you come in my way, My good friend and citizen of the most famous city in the world for wisdom and valour, are you not ashamed to have no other thoughts than...