A History of Greece, Volume 1Harper & brothers, 1845 - Greece |
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Page xxv
... represented by Homer , Herodo- tus , Thucydides , and Strabo - Traces of the Pelasgi- ans in Thessaly In Messenia - In Etolia In Locris - General Character of the Eolian Settle- ments - Origin of the Dorians Their Struggles with the ...
... represented by Homer , Herodo- tus , Thucydides , and Strabo - Traces of the Pelasgi- ans in Thessaly In Messenia - In Etolia In Locris - General Character of the Eolian Settle- ments - Origin of the Dorians Their Struggles with the ...
Page 62
... represents the continued resistance which the new settlers experienced from some of the na- tive tribes , which they ... represented by the wily Sisyphus ; and this , his legendary character , may not be unconnected with the causes which ...
... represents the continued resistance which the new settlers experienced from some of the na- tive tribes , which they ... represented by the wily Sisyphus ; and this , his legendary character , may not be unconnected with the causes which ...
Page 71
... represents the continued resistance which the new settlers experienced from some of the na- tive tribes , which they ... represented by the wily Sisyphus ; and this , his Tyro , the beautiful daughter of Salmoneus . legendary character ...
... represents the continued resistance which the new settlers experienced from some of the na- tive tribes , which they ... represented by the wily Sisyphus ; and this , his Tyro , the beautiful daughter of Salmoneus . legendary character ...
Page 75
... represented genealogy recorded by later writers , he is like- by the general voice of antiquity as having rais - wise the adopted son of Asterius , a descend- ed Crete to a higher degree of prosperity and ant of Dorus the son of Hellen ...
... represented genealogy recorded by later writers , he is like- by the general voice of antiquity as having rais - wise the adopted son of Asterius , a descend- ed Crete to a higher degree of prosperity and ant of Dorus the son of Hellen ...
Page 82
... represented in the adverse fortune of the prin- the poet's contemporaries were competent and cipal chiefs of the ... represents most truly is the state of Grecian society near to his effects of imperceptible changes and for poet- own day ...
... represented in the adverse fortune of the prin- the poet's contemporaries were competent and cipal chiefs of the ... represents most truly is the state of Grecian society near to his effects of imperceptible changes and for poet- own day ...
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Common terms and phrases
according Achæans Anaximander ancient Apollo Apollod appears Argolis Argos Aristotle ascribed Asia Athenian Athens Attica authority believed belonged Boeotia called celebrated character citizens coast colonies connected connexion conquest Corinth Cretan Crete Croton Delphi described Dorian doubt early Egypt Egyptian Eolian Ephorus expedition favour foreign gods Greece Greek ground hand Hellenic hence Heracleids Hercules Herodotus heroes heroic Hesiod Homer honour inhabitants institutions Ionian island king Laconia land legend Leleges less Lycurgus Messenian migration Miletus Minos nation nature nobles observed occasion opinion oracle Orchomenus origin Paus peculiar Pelasgians Peloponnesus perhaps period Persian persons philosophical Phoenicians Pisistratus plain Plut poems poet poetical poetry political probably Pythagoras race reign religion religious sacred scarcely seems Solon Spartan story Strabo supposed temple Thales Theseus Thessaly tion took town tradition tribes Trojan Trojan war whole Xenophanes
Popular passages
Page 71 - 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 145 - This is perhaps in one sense more, and in another less than he really attempted, and the opinion seems to affect the character of the Dorians rather than the views of Pythagoras. His leading thought appears to have been, that the state and the individual ought, each in its way, to reflect the image of that order and harmony by which he believed the universe to be sustained and regulated...
Page 71 - ... not the less admirable and engaging. The heroic companions whom we find celebrated, partly by Homer and partly in traditions, which, if not of equal antiquity, were grounded on the same feeling, seem to have but one heart and soul, with scarcely a wish or object apart, and only to live, as they are always ready to die, for one another. It is true that the relation between them is not always one of perfect equality: but this is a circumstance which, while it often adds a peculiar charm to the...
Page 81 - According to every hypothesis the origin of the Homeric poetry is wrapt in mystery; as must be the case with the beginning of a new period when that which precedes it is very obscure. And it would certainly be no unparalleled or surprising coincidence if the production of a great work, which formed the most momentous epoch in the history of Greek literature, should have concurred with either the first introduction, or a new application of the most important of all inventions.
Page 71 - 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. The relation in which he stands to Fate is not uniformly represented in the Homeric poems, and probably the poet had not formed a distinct notion of it. Fate is generally described as emanating from his will, but sometimes he appears to be no more than the minister of a stern necessity, which he wishes in...
Page 66 - If however we reject the traditional occasion of the Trojan war, we are driven to conjecture in order to explain the real connection of the events ; yet not so as to be wholly without traces to direct us. We have already observed that the Argonautic expedition was sometimes represented as connected with the first conflict between Greece and Troy. This was according to the legend which numbered Hercules among the Argonauts and supposed him, on the voyage, to have rendered a service to the Trojan king,...
Page 143 - the remains of a worship which preceded the rise of the Hellenic mythology and its attendant rites, grounded on a view of nature, less fanciful, more earnest, and better fitted to awaken both philosophical thought and religious feeling.
Page 207 - But compare a somewhat different statement inhisLifeofNiciass23. ed his long life in quiet and honour at Lampsacus. The danger which threatened Aspasia was also averted ; but it seems that Pericles, who pleaded her cause, found need for his most strenuous exertions, and that in her behalf* he descended to tears and entreaties, which no similar emergency of his own could ever draw from him.* It was, indeed, probably a trial more of his personal influence than of his eloquence ; and his success, hardly...
Page 201 - More than twenty thousand persons were believed to have been destroyed by the shock.t and the flower of the Spartan youth was overwhelmed by the fall of the building in which they were exercising themselves at the time. It was chiefly the presence of mind displayed on this occasion by King Archidamus that preserved the state from a still more terrible disaster. Many of the Helots assembled, and hastened to the city to take advantage of the defenceless condition in which they hoped to surprise their...
Page xx - upon the established system, if an accidental custom may be so called, as a mass of anomalies, the growth of ignorance and chance, equally repugnant to good taste and to common sense.