The Ancient History of the Egyptians, Carthaginians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Medes & Persians, Macedonians, and Grecians, Volume 2Silas Andrus, bookseller. Hart & Lincoln, printers, Middletown., 1815 - History, Ancient |
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Page 16
... favour of him some time afterwards , that out of his five sons who served in his army , he would be pleased to leave him the eldest , in order to be a support and comfort to him in his old age ; the king was so enraged at the proposal ...
... favour of him some time afterwards , that out of his five sons who served in his army , he would be pleased to leave him the eldest , in order to be a support and comfort to him in his old age ; the king was so enraged at the proposal ...
Page 23
... favour . Themistocles , who was sensible , * that in calm weather almost any mariner may be capable of conducting a vessel , but that in storms and tempests the most able pilots are at a loss , was convinced that the common- wealth was ...
... favour . Themistocles , who was sensible , * that in calm weather almost any mariner may be capable of conducting a vessel , but that in storms and tempests the most able pilots are at a loss , was convinced that the common- wealth was ...
Page 24
... favour of Eury biades , a Lacedæmonian . Themistocles , though very aspiring after glory , thought it incumbent upon him on this occasion to neglect his own interests for the common good of Herod , 1. viii . c . 213 . * Plut . in ...
... favour of Eury biades , a Lacedæmonian . Themistocles , though very aspiring after glory , thought it incumbent upon him on this occasion to neglect his own interests for the common good of Herod , 1. viii . c . 213 . * Plut . in ...
Page 32
... favour than the other gods , whose temples he had pillaged . If we may believe what Herodotus and Di- odorus Siculus say of this matter , as soon as ever this detachment advan- ced near the temple of Minerva , surnamed the Provident ...
... favour than the other gods , whose temples he had pillaged . If we may believe what Herodotus and Di- odorus Siculus say of this matter , as soon as ever this detachment advan- ced near the temple of Minerva , surnamed the Provident ...
Page 40
... favour of another ; but that he seemed to have forgot , that the people to whom he addressed himself , had shewed them- selves , on all occasions , the most zealous defenders of the common liberty of their country . ons . Aristides was ...
... favour of another ; but that he seemed to have forgot , that the people to whom he addressed himself , had shewed them- selves , on all occasions , the most zealous defenders of the common liberty of their country . ons . Aristides was ...
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Other editions - View all
The Ancient History of the Egyptians, Carthaginians, Assyrians, Medes and ... Charles Rollin No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
abandoned admiration affairs afterwards Agesil Agesilaus Alcibiades allies amongst arms army arrived Artaxerxes assembly Athenians Athens attack barbarians battle besieged body called carried Carthaginians Cimon citadel citizens command conduct courage Cyrus death declared decree desire Diod Dion Dion's Dionysius discourse endeavoured enemy Epaminondas expence favour fleet force friends galleys gave give glory gods greatest Grecian Greece Greeks honour horse inhabitants judges justice kind king Lacedæmonians land laws liberty Lysander manner master merit never Nicias obliged observed occasion officers opinion orators passed peace Pelopidas Peloponnesus Pericles Persians person Pharnabasus Plato Plut Plutarch present prince regard reign render republic rest retired says sent ships Sicily side Socrates soldiers soon Sparta suffer Syracusans Syracuse Thebans Thebes Themistocles thing thither thought Thucyd Timoleon tion Tissaphernes took treated troops tyrant utmost valour vessels victory virtue whilst whole Xenoph Xenophon Xerxes
Popular passages
Page 84 - Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city, to finish the transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up the vision and the prophecy, and to anoint the most Holy.
Page 84 - Know therefore and understand, that from the going forth of the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince shall be seven weeks, and threescore and two weeks : the street shall be built again, and the wall, even in troublous times. And after threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, but not for himself...
Page 84 - And he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week: and in the midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease, and for the overspreading of abominations he shall make it desolate, even until the consummation, and that determined shall be poured upon the desolate.
Page 489 - He possessed all the ornaments of the mind : he had the talent of speaking in perfection, and was well versed in the most sublime sciences. But a modest reserve threw a veil over all those excellent qualities, which still augmented their value, and he knew not what it was to be ostentatious of them.
Page 309 - Socrates mihi videtur, id quod constat inter omnes, primus a rebus occultis et ab ipsa natura involutis, in quibus omnes ante eum philosophi occupati fuerunt, avocavisse philosophiam et ad vitam communem adduxisse, ut de virtutibus et...
Page 333 - 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 331 - ... their lives or liberty : ought there to be any thing more dear and precious to them, than the preservation of Socrates ? Even strangers themselves dispute that honour with them, many of whom have come expressly, with considerable sums of money, to purchase...
Page 161 - Alcibiades had abandoned himself. Alcibiades, in those moments when he listened to Socrates, differed so much from himself, that he appeared quite another man. However, his headstrong, fiery temper, and his natural fondness for pleasure, which was heightened and inflamed by the...
Page 325 - ... voice but his own in his defence, and to appear before his judges in the submissive posture of a suppliant, he did not behave in that manner out of pride, or contempt of the tribunal ; it was from a noble and intrepid assurance, resulting from greatness of soul, and the...
Page 337 - 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.