A History of Greece, Volume 1Longmans, 1835 - Greece |
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Page 2
... coast compared with the extent of its surface ; so that while in the latter respect it is considerably less than Portugal , in the former it exceeds the whole Pyrenean peninsula . The great eastern limb which projects from the main ...
... coast compared with the extent of its surface ; so that while in the latter respect it is considerably less than Portugal , in the former it exceeds the whole Pyrenean peninsula . The great eastern limb which projects from the main ...
Page 3
... coast of Epirus , into a channel only thirty geographical miles in breadth ; and the Italian coast may be seen not only from the moun- tains of Corcyra , but from the low headland of the Ceraunian hills . Thus on two sides Greece is ...
... coast of Epirus , into a channel only thirty geographical miles in breadth ; and the Italian coast may be seen not only from the moun- tains of Corcyra , but from the low headland of the Ceraunian hills . Thus on two sides Greece is ...
Page 4
... coast . A fourth ram- part , which runs parallel to Pindus , is formed by the range which includes the celebrated heights of Pelion and Ossa ; the first a broad and nearly even ridge , the other towering into a steep conical peak , the ...
... coast . A fourth ram- part , which runs parallel to Pindus , is formed by the range which includes the celebrated heights of Pelion and Ossa ; the first a broad and nearly even ridge , the other towering into a steep conical peak , the ...
Page 7
... coast is again deeply in- dented by that of Malia , into which the Spercheius , rising from Mount Tymphrestus , a continuation of Pindus , winds through a long narrow vale , which , though considered as a part of Thessaly , forms a se ...
... coast is again deeply in- dented by that of Malia , into which the Spercheius , rising from Mount Tymphrestus , a continuation of Pindus , winds through a long narrow vale , which , though considered as a part of Thessaly , forms a se ...
Page 8
... ( ix . 427. ) applies to the Dorian towns . but the range which separates Phocis from the coast of 8 CHAP . I. HISTORY OF GREECE . Doris-Phocis-Locris Boeotia-Lake Copais Southern Boeotia Euboea-the Euripus-Baotian Character Attica.
... ( ix . 427. ) applies to the Dorian towns . but the range which separates Phocis from the coast of 8 CHAP . I. HISTORY OF GREECE . Doris-Phocis-Locris Boeotia-Lake Copais Southern Boeotia Euboea-the Euripus-Baotian Character Attica.
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Acarnania according Achæans Ægean Æolian Æolus ancient Apollod appears Arcadia Argive Argolis Argos Aristomenes ascribed Asia Athenians Athens Attica authority believed belonged Boeotia called celebrated character coast colonies conjecture connected conquest considered Corinth Cretan Crete descendants described Dodona Dorians doubt earliest eastern Egyptian Elis ephors Epirus epithet Euboea Eurysthenes expedition foreign gods Greece Greeks ground gulf Hellenic Helots Heracleids Hercules Herodotus heroes heroic ages Hesiod Homeric poems honour Iliad inhabitants institutions Ionians island Jupiter king Laconia land legend Leleges Lycurgus mentioned Messenian migrated Minos Minyans mountains nation nature neighbours occupied opinion oracle Orchomenus origin Paus Pausanias peculiar Pelasgians Pelasgus Peloponnesus perhaps period Phoenician plain poet poetical Poseidon probably race region reign relation religion scarcely seats seems side Spartan Strabo supposed temple territory Thebes Thessalian Thessaly Thracians Thucydides town traces tradition tribes Trojan Trojan war Troy western Xuthus
Popular passages
Page 184 - Tartarus ; while, on the other hand, only the most exalted heroes are, after their death, endowed with a new body and enjoy the pleasures of Elysium. But these are very exceptional cases : ' When a man is dead,' says the shade of Anticlea, 'the flesh and the bones are left to be consumed by the flames, but the soul passes away like a dream.
Page 181 - Their other affections correspond to the grossness of these animal appetites. Capricious love and hatred, anger and jealousy, often disturb the calm of their bosoms ; the peace of the Olympian state might be broken by factions, and even by conspiracies formed against its chief. He himself cannot keep perfectly aloof from their quarrels ; he occasionally wavers in his purpose, is overruled by artifice, blinded by desires, and hurried by resentment into unseemly violence.
Page 393 - ... though the highest offices of the state might be reserved to a privileged class. But a finished democracy, that which fully satisfied the Greek notion, was one in which every attribute of sovereignty might be shared, without respect to rank or property, by every freeman.
Page 169 - The ruthless steel, impatient of delay, Forbade the sire to linger out the day : It struck the bending father to the earth, And cropt the wailing infant at the birth. Can innocents the rage of parties know, And they who ne'er offended find a foe ?
Page 16 - Œnus the Eurotas flows through a very deep and narrow valley, which near Sparta is so much contracted as to leave room for little more than the channel of the river. After it leaves Sparta the hills recede farther from the river ; but near...
Page 226 - ... poet's words : but if admitted , it only proves, what could hardly be questioned even without this evidence, [?] that the poet was not so ignorant of the art as never to have heard of its existence. * * * And on the other hand, if the tablet contained only a picture or a series of imitative pictures, it would be evident that where the want of alphabetical writing was so felt, and had begun to be so supplied by drawing, the step by which the Greeks adopted the Phoenician characters must have been...
Page 372 - The contests carried on at these games consisted of exhibitions displaying almost every • mode of bodily activity ; they included races on foot, and with horses and chariots ; contests in leaping, throwing, wrestling, and boxing, and some in which several of these exercises were combined ; but no combats with any kind of weapon. The...
Page 373 - ... poetry. He also received still more substantial rewards. He was generally relieved from the payment of taxes, and had a right to the front seat at all public games and spectacles. An Athenian victor in the Olympic games received, in accordance with one of Solon's laws, a prize of...
Page 145 - ... been a contemporary of those who had fought under Achilles, but it is not the less true, that he describes his principal hero as the son of a sea-goddess. He and his hearers most probably looked upon epic song as a vehicle of history, and therefore it required a popular tradition for its basis.
Page 226 - ... acutely observes, that it "has been the subject of controversy, perhaps, more earnest than the case deserved. It has been disputed whether the tablet contained alphabetical characters or mere pictures. The former seems to be the simplest and easiest interpretation of the poet's words : but if admitted, it only proves, what could hardly be questioned even without this evidence, [?] that the poet was not so ignorant of the art as never to have heard of its existence. * * * And on the other hand,...