The Life and Travels of Herodotus in the Fifth Century: Before Christ: an Imaginary Biography Founded on Fact, Illustrative of the History, Manners, Religion, Literature, Arts, and Social Condition of the Greeks, Egyptians, Persians, Babylonians, Hebrews, Scythians, and Other Ancient Nations, in the Days of Pericles and Nehemiah, Volumen1Harper, 1855 |
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Página
... sent forth into the world is wholly inadequate to convey an idea of its rich and varied contents . We opened it under the impression that we should find in it a discussion of geographical details , learned and scientific it might be ...
... sent forth into the world is wholly inadequate to convey an idea of its rich and varied contents . We opened it under the impression that we should find in it a discussion of geographical details , learned and scientific it might be ...
Página 3
... sent envoys to Athens and Sparta , the two great capitals of Greece , for assistance in establishing the new colony . Sparta refused to aid them ; but Athens warmly accepted their proposals . It was this Athenian expedition , swelled by ...
... sent envoys to Athens and Sparta , the two great capitals of Greece , for assistance in establishing the new colony . Sparta refused to aid them ; but Athens warmly accepted their proposals . It was this Athenian expedition , swelled by ...
Página 22
... sent every day to the school and gymnasium , and his father Lyxes , appointed a slave to attend him everywhere and carry his books , tablet , and other school requirements . This slave was called a pædagogue , a name which is often ...
... sent every day to the school and gymnasium , and his father Lyxes , appointed a slave to attend him everywhere and carry his books , tablet , and other school requirements . This slave was called a pædagogue , a name which is often ...
Página 39
... sent , the sooner the better . And indeed Lyxes himself was not at all disposed to confine his son's peregrinations to Chios or Samos ; but if things progressed favourably at Halicarnassus , he proposed sending him across the Ægean to ...
... sent , the sooner the better . And indeed Lyxes himself was not at all disposed to confine his son's peregrinations to Chios or Samos ; but if things progressed favourably at Halicarnassus , he proposed sending him across the Ægean to ...
Página 53
... Lydia , resolved to destroy the powerful tyrant of so small an island . He sent a trusty messenger to Polycrates , saying in his name , " I know that you are planning vast enterprises , with insufficient money . Now I E 3.
... Lydia , resolved to destroy the powerful tyrant of so small an island . He sent a trusty messenger to Polycrates , saying in his name , " I know that you are planning vast enterprises , with insufficient money . Now I E 3.
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Términos y frases comunes
Accordingly Acropolis Ægean agora Alcmæonids altar amongst ancient Apollo archons Argives Argos Aristagoras Aristides army Asia Minor Athenian Athens Attica beautiful Boeotians called captain carried celebrated Chalcidians chariot Cimon citizens Cleomenes Clisthenes coast Corinth Corinthian darics Darius deity Delphi Demaratus democracy dicastery divine Dorian dotus drachmas envoys Ephors Euphorion exile father fell festival fleet Glaucus goddess gods Greece Greek Halicarnassus hands heard Hellas Helots Hera hero Herodotus Herodotus's Hippias horses hundred Ionian Isagoras island king Leotychides Lycurgus Lyxes Marathon Megacles Megara mighty Miltiades moneychanger Olympian Olympic once oracle passed Peloponnesus Pericles Persian philosophers Phocæans Phylarchus Piræus Pisistratus pnyx poets political Polydorus Popular Assembly Prytanes Prytaneum race replied sacred sacrifice Samian Samos Senate of Four sent ships slave Solon soon Sparta story Tegea temple Themistocles tribes victory voyage walls whilst wine Xerxes young Zeus
Pasajes populares
Página 225 - The oracles are dumb; No voice or hideous hum Runs through the arched roof in words deceiving. Apollo from his shrine Can no more divine, With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving: No nightly trance or breathed spell Inspires the pale-eyed priest from the prophetic cell.
Página 242 - ... forbade all future loans or contracts in which the person of the debtor was pledged as security : it deprived the. creditor in future of all power to imprison, or enslave, or extort work, from his debtor, and confined him to an effective judgment at law authorizing the seizure of the property of the latter.
Página iii - The Life and Travels of Herodotus in the Fifth Century before Christ : An imaginary Biography, founded on fact, illustrative of the History, Manners, Religion, Literature, Arts, and Social Condition of the Greeks, Egyptians, Persians, Babylonians, Hebrews, Scythians, and other Ancient Nations, in the Days of Pericles and Nehemiah. By J. TALBOYS WHEELER, FRGS 2 vols. post 8vo. with Map, 21s. Wheeler.— The Geography of Herodotus Developed, Explained, and Illustrated from Modern Researches and Discoveries.
Página 136 - There were fifteen persons to a table, or a few more or less. Each of them was obliged to bring in monthly a bushel of meal, eight gallons of wine, five pounds of cheese, two pounds and a half of figs, and a little money to buy flesh and fish.
Página v - The design of the present work, as stated by the author's introduction, is -to give, in a popular form, a complete survey of the principal nations of the ancient world, as they were in the days of Pericles and Nehemiah. With this view. Mr. Wheeler has written an imaginary biography of Herodotus, the Greek historian and Geographer...
Página 62 - ... though he probably meant, not the fire perceptible by the senses, but a higher and more universal agent. For, as we have already seen, he conceived the sensible fire as living and dying, like the other elements...
Página v - Greek historian and geographer, who flourished in the 5th century before Christ ; and by describing his supposed travels to the most famous cities and countries of antiquity, he has been enabled to review their several histories, narrate their national traditions, describe the appearance of each people, point out their peculiarities and manners, and develop the various religious views and ideas which belong to their several mythologies.
Página 368 - Thou bitter water ! thy master inflicts this punishment upon thee, because thou hast injured him, although thou hadst not suffered any harm from him. And king Xerxes will cross over thee, whether thou wilt or not ; it is with justice that no man sacrifices to thee, because thou art both a deceitful and briny river...
Página 61 - ... animated than those of many poems. The cardinal doctrine of his natural philosophy seems to have been, that everything is in perpetual motion, that nothing has any stable or permanent existence, but that everything is assuming a new form or perishing. ' We step (he says, in his symbolical language) into the same rivers and we do not step into them ' (because in a moment the water is changed).
Página 246 - ... regard to the regulations of the senate and the assembly of the people, as constituted by Solon, we are altogether without information : nor is it safe to transfer to the Solonian constitution the information, comparatively ample, which we possess respecting these bodies under the later democracy. The laws of Solon were inscribed on wooden rollers and triangular tablets, in the species of writing called boustrophedon...