The Ancient History of the Egyptians, Carthaginians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Medes and Persians, Macedonians and Grecians, Volume 2G. Long, 1830 - History, Ancient |
From inside the book
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Page 3
... Allies in vain to require succours from them . The Command of the Fleet given to the Lacedæmonians , Sect . V. The Battle of Thermopyla . The Death of Leonidas , -VI . Naval Battle near Artemisium , -VII . The Athenians abandon their ...
... Allies in vain to require succours from them . The Command of the Fleet given to the Lacedæmonians , Sect . V. The Battle of Thermopyla . The Death of Leonidas , -VI . Naval Battle near Artemisium , -VII . The Athenians abandon their ...
Page 24
... allies against the enemy , not with the view of giving him battle , for they were determined to avoid that , but to draw him into such places as best suited their interest . Whenever the Persians seemed disposed to attack them , they ...
... allies against the enemy , not with the view of giving him battle , for they were determined to avoid that , but to draw him into such places as best suited their interest . Whenever the Persians seemed disposed to attack them , they ...
Page 38
... allies prepared to succour them , such terror had the formidable army of the Persians spread on every side . The inhabitants of Platææ alone fur- nished them with a thousand soldiers . In this extremity the Athenians were obliged to arm ...
... allies prepared to succour them , such terror had the formidable army of the Persians spread on every side . The inhabitants of Platææ alone fur- nished them with a thousand soldiers . In this extremity the Athenians were obliged to arm ...
Page 57
... ALLIES IN VAIN TO REQUIRE SUCCOURS FROM THEM . THE COMMAND OF THE FLEET GIVEN TO THE LACEDEMONIANS . LACEDEMON and Athens , which were the two most powerful cities of Greece , and the cities against which Xerxes was most exasperated ...
... ALLIES IN VAIN TO REQUIRE SUCCOURS FROM THEM . THE COMMAND OF THE FLEET GIVEN TO THE LACEDEMONIANS . LACEDEMON and Athens , which were the two most powerful cities of Greece , and the cities against which Xerxes was most exasperated ...
Page 59
... allies , or formidable to her enemies . His opinion herein prevailed among the people in spite of the opposition of Miltiades , whose difference of opinion undoubtedly arose from the little probability there was , that a people entirely ...
... allies , or formidable to her enemies . His opinion herein prevailed among the people in spite of the opposition of Miltiades , whose difference of opinion undoubtedly arose from the little probability there was , that a people entirely ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration affairs afterwards Agesil Agesilaus Alcibiades allies Aristides arms army arrived Artaxerxes Asia assembly Athenians Athens attack barbarians battle besieged Brasidas brother carried Carthaginians caused citizens command courage Cyrus Darius death declared decree defend desired Diod Dion Dionysius endeavoured enemy engaged enterprise 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 Lacedæmon Lacedæmonians land laws liberty Lysander manner master means merit never Nicias obliged observed occasion opinion Parysatis passed peace Pelopidas Peloponnesus Pericles Persians person Pharnabasus Plut Plutarch present prince promised rendered republic rest retired sail says sent ships Sicily side Socrates soldiers soon Sparta succour Syracusans Syracuse Thebans Themistocles thing thither thought thousand throne Thucyd tion Tissaphernes took treated troops tyrant utmost valour victory virtue whole Xenoph Xenophon Xerxes
Popular passages
Page 110 - And after threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, but not for himself : and the people of the prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary; and the end thereof shall be with a floXxl, and unto the end of the war desolations are determined.
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 316 - ... nature they be; and against too little regard for the soul, which ought to be the object of their affection. For 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 85 - Themistocles taking him aside, told him that the design he had conceived, was to burn the fleet belonging to the rest of the Grecian states which then lay in a neighbouring port, when Athens would assuredly become mistress of all Greece.
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 317 - Delium, the fear of death should at this time make me abandon that in which the Divine Providence has placed me, by commanding me to pass my life in the study of philosophy, for the instruction of myself and others, this would be a most criminal desertion indeed, and make me highly worthy of being cited before this tribunal as an impious man, who does not believe the gods. " Should you resolve to acquit me ; for the future, I should not hesitate to make answer, Atheaians, I honour and love you; but...
Page 317 - I should have been amongst the dead long ago, had I been concerned in the measures of the state, without effecting any thing to the advantage of myself or our country. Do not take it ill, I beseech you, if I speak my thoughts without disguise, and with truth and freedom. Every man who would generously oppose a whole people, either amongst us or elsewhere, and who inflexibly applies himself to prevent...
Page 325 - Soon after which, he breathed his last. Crito went to his body, and closed his mouth and eyes. Such was the end of Socrates, in the first year of the ninety-fifth Olympiad, and the seventieth of his age.
Page 115 - Lacedaemonians sent a second time to desire succours of the Athenians against the Messenians and Helots, who had seized upon Ithome. But when they came, fearing their boldness and gallantry, of all that came to their assistance, they sent them only back, alleging they were designing innovations. The Athenians returned home, enraged at this usage, and vented their anger upon all those who were...
Page 74 - Megarians, who were encamped upon a plain, suffered extremely by them ; and, in spite of all the vigour and resolution with which they defended themselves, they were upon the point of giving way, when a detachment of 300 Athenians, with some troops...