The Ancient History of the Egyptians, Carthaginians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Medes and Persians, Macedonians, and Grecians, Volume 2W. Borradaile, 1825 - Civilization, Ancient |
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Page 13
... courage for their king . " Your thoughts coincide with mine , " replied Darius , " which were upon invading the Scythians . I had much rather , " said Atossa , you would first turn your arms against Greece . I have heard great things ...
... courage for their king . " Your thoughts coincide with mine , " replied Darius , " which were upon invading the Scythians . I had much rather , " said Atossa , you would first turn your arms against Greece . I have heard great things ...
Page 16
... courage and resolution . His name and person were both well known at Babylon ; the condition in which he appeared , his blood and his wounds , testified for him , and , by proofs not to be suspected , confirmed the truth of all he ...
... courage and resolution . His name and person were both well known at Babylon ; the condition in which he appeared , his blood and his wounds , testified for him , and , by proofs not to be suspected , confirmed the truth of all he ...
Page 21
... courage , the love of exercise and liberty , innocence of life , sincerity , an abhorrence of all fraud and dissimula- tion , and , in a word , all such qualities as render a man more virtuous and more valuable . If to these happy ...
... courage , the love of exercise and liberty , innocence of life , sincerity , an abhorrence of all fraud and dissimula- tion , and , in a word , all such qualities as render a man more virtuous and more valuable . If to these happy ...
Page 31
... courage but still pushed on their point with resolution . Their fleet set sail towards the Hellespont and the Propontis , and reduced Byzantium , with * Herod . 1. v . c . 99 , 103 . This island is very remote from lonia , and could ...
... courage but still pushed on their point with resolution . Their fleet set sail towards the Hellespont and the Propontis , and reduced Byzantium , with * Herod . 1. v . c . 99 , 103 . This island is very remote from lonia , and could ...
Page 38
... courage of their own troops , and to strike terror into those of the enemy , was to advance boldly towards them with an air of confidence and intrepidity . Aristides strenuously defended this opinion , and brought some of the other ...
... courage of their own troops , and to strike terror into those of the enemy , was to advance boldly towards them with an air of confidence and intrepidity . Aristides strenuously defended this opinion , and brought some of the other ...
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Other editions - View all
The Ancient History of the Egyptians, Carthaginians, Assyrians, Babylonians ... Charles Rollin,James Bell No preview available - 2019 |
Common terms and phrases
advantage affairs afterwards Agesil Agesilaus Alcibiades allies Aristides arms army arrived Artaxerxes Artyphius Asia assembly Athenians Athens attack authority barbarians battle besieged Brasidas brother carried caused Cimon citizens Clearchus command conduct courage Cyrus Darius death declared decree defend desired Diod endeavoured enemy engaged ephori Evagoras expedition favour fleet forces friends galleys gave give glory gods greatest Grecian Greece Greeks Gylippus Herod honour horse hundred inhabitants island justice king of Persia king's Lacedæmon Lacedæmonians land laws liberty Lysander manner master means merit never Nicias obliged observed occasion Parysatis passed Peloponnesus Pericles Persians person Pharnabasus Plut Plutarch prevent prince promised reign render republic resolved rest retired sail says sent ships Sicily side Socrates soldiers soon Sparta succour Syracusans Syracuse Themistocles thing thither thought thousand throne Thucyd tion Tiribasus Tissaphernes treaty troops utmost valour victory virtue whole Xenoph Xenophon Xerxes
Popular passages
Page 110 - 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 109 - 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 prophecy, and to anoint the Most Holy.
Page 110 - 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...
Page 75 - Thus the day passed without any action at all. In the evening the Grecians held a council of war, in which they determined to decamp, and take possession of a place more commodious for water, because the springs of their present camp were disturbed and spoiled by the enemy's horse.
Page 294 - I incessantly urge to you, that virtue does not proceed from riches ; but, on the contrary, riches from virtue : and that all the other goods of human life, as well public as private, have their source in the same principle.
Page 39 - In order to prevent them, he judged it necessary to vest the whole power in one single person ; and, to induce his colleagues to act conformably, he himself set the first example of resignation. When the day came on which it was his turn to take upon him the command, he resigned it to Miltiades, as the more able and experienced general. The other commanders did the same, all sentiments of jealousy giving way to the love of the public good ; and by this day's...
Page 173 - Selinus, who were assisted by the Syracusans. It was the sixteenth year of the Peloponnesian war. They represented, among other things, that, should they be abandoned, the Syracusans, after seizing their city, as they had done that of Leontium, would possess themselves of all Sicily, and not fail to aid the Peloponnesians, who were their founders ; and, that they might put them to as little charge as possible, they offered to pay the troops that should be sent to succour them. The Athenians, who...
Page 285 - He had no open school, like the rest of the philosophers, nor set times for his lessons; he had no benches prepared nor ever mounted a professor's chair; he was the philosopher of all times and seasons; he taught in all places, and upon all occasions; in walking, conversation at meals, in the army, and in the midst of the camp, in the public assemblies of the senate or people.
Page 40 - Having but 10,000 men to oppose to such a numerous and vast army, it was impossible for him either to make a large front, or to give an equal depth to his battalions. He was obliged, therefore, to take his choice ; and he imagined, that he could gain the victory no otherwise than by the efforts he should make with his two wings, in order to break and disperse those of the Persians...
Page 54 - ... again over them fastened and joined together, to serve as a kind of floor or solid bottom : all which they covered over with earth, and added rails or battlements on each side, that the horses and cattle might not be frightened with seeing the sea in their passage.