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Page 12
... slave wife . The strangers are hospitably entertained , and Menelaus agitates his guest by alluding to his still missing comrade Ulysses , when Helen enters and at once recognises Telemachus by his likeness to his father . She mixes ...
... slave wife . The strangers are hospitably entertained , and Menelaus agitates his guest by alluding to his still missing comrade Ulysses , when Helen enters and at once recognises Telemachus by his likeness to his father . She mixes ...
Page 18
... slave , is of princely birth , and very loyal to his master's house , he is hospitably entertained , and he pretends to be a Cretan chief , who has been at Troy , where he saw Ulysses , has heard of him since , and offers a wager that ...
... slave , is of princely birth , and very loyal to his master's house , he is hospitably entertained , and he pretends to be a Cretan chief , who has been at Troy , where he saw Ulysses , has heard of him since , and offers a wager that ...
Page 33
... , and , having asked consideration for Cassandra , he treads the purple , and the procession enters the palace . The queen returns to bid Cassandra , who has C remained in her chariot , enter as a slave ; ÆSCHYLUS . 33.
... , and , having asked consideration for Cassandra , he treads the purple , and the procession enters the palace . The queen returns to bid Cassandra , who has C remained in her chariot , enter as a slave ; ÆSCHYLUS . 33.
Page 34
Henry Grey (F.R.B.S.). remained in her chariot , enter as a slave ; upon which she appeals to Apollo , and , calling to mind the impious feast of Thyestes , her hair ' streams like a meteor in the troubled air ' — she foresees the ...
Henry Grey (F.R.B.S.). remained in her chariot , enter as a slave ; upon which she appeals to Apollo , and , calling to mind the impious feast of Thyestes , her hair ' streams like a meteor in the troubled air ' — she foresees the ...
Page 41
... slave ; When headless lay Medusa , fair of face . ' STROPHE . ' Slain by the hero , sprung they say from golden rain . But , when from his peril she had saved her champion dear , Maiden Athene fashioned then the flute with its varied ...
... slave ; When headless lay Medusa , fair of face . ' STROPHE . ' Slain by the hero , sprung they say from golden rain . But , when from his peril she had saved her champion dear , Maiden Athene fashioned then the flute with its varied ...
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Achilles Æneas Æneid afterwards Agamemnon Apollo army Athenians Athens Author battle beauty bids birds body Book Brasidas brother Cæsar Catiline celebrated chariot Chorus Chremes Cicero citizens cloth elegant Clytemnestra coloured Creon Creusa daughter dead death Demosthenes dialogue DIED B.C. earth Edipus enemy escape Eteocles Euripides fate father Fcap fleet Gaul gilt edges gives gods Greece Greek hand happy heaven Hector Hercules honour husband Illustrations island Jugurtha Jupiter king Lamachus land legions living Livy mind Minerva moral mother nature Neoptolemus orator Orestes palace peace Persian Philoctetes philosophers Plutus poem poet Pompey Roman Rome says scene Shillings and Sixpence ships slain slave Socrates soldiers soul Spartans speech Stories Tacitus tells temple thee things thou thousand Thucydides tion Trojans Troy Ulysses victory virtue whilst wife women words Xenophon young
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Page 19 - Two Shillings, cloth elegant, with Illustrations, or with coloured plates, gilt edges, Three Shillings.
Page 28 - Cayzer, TS One Thousand Arithmetical Tests, or THE EXAMINER'S ASSISTANT. Specially adapted, by a novel arrangement of the subject, for Examination Purposes, but also suited for general use in Schools. With a complete set of Examples and Models of Work. Price Is. Gd. Key with Solutions of all the Examples in the One Thousand Arithmetical Tests.
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 - True Stories from Ancient History, chronologically arranged from the Creation of the World to the Death of Charlemagne.
Page 8 - The Three Lieutenants ; or, NAVAL LIFE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. * „ The Three Commanders ; or, ACTIVE SERVICE AFLOAT IN MODERN TIMES. *
Page 10 - Stories from the Old and New Testaments. By the Rev. BH DRAPER. With 48 Engravings. Trimmer's History of the Robins. Written for the Instruction of Children on their treatment of Animals. With 24 Illustrations by HARRISON WEIR.
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 15 - With 42 Illustrations by HARRISON WEIR. %* Also in Two Vols., entitled "British Animals and Birds,"
Page 273 - 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...
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.