Social Life in Greece from Homer to MenanderMacmillan, 1874 - 495 strani |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 45
Stran viii
... hand . Wherever modern writers have suggested to me interesting views or quotations , I trust I have fully acknowledged my obligations . I cannot do so ade- quately to my old pupils , Mr. H. B. Leech , of Caius College , Cambridge , and ...
... hand . Wherever modern writers have suggested to me interesting views or quotations , I trust I have fully acknowledged my obligations . I cannot do so ade- quately to my old pupils , Mr. H. B. Leech , of Caius College , Cambridge , and ...
Stran 2
... hand , would only need to understand the names invented for our modern discoveries . In all moral and social questions they would at once find their way , and enjoy even our poetry and our fiction . But what is more striking , even the ...
... hand , would only need to understand the names invented for our modern discoveries . In all moral and social questions they would at once find their way , and enjoy even our poetry and our fiction . But what is more striking , even the ...
Stran 4
... hand , and the abundance of theories based upon them , there is still room for attempts to select salient features , and to bring before the modern public an accurate picture of Greek life , not in its trivial details , but in its large ...
... hand , and the abundance of theories based upon them , there is still room for attempts to select salient features , and to bring before the modern public an accurate picture of Greek life , not in its trivial details , but in its large ...
Stran 12
... hand . Such a misfortune was too shocking to the sensibilities of an aristocratic audience . Amid the cloud of missiles that were flying on the plains of Troy , amid the crowd of chiefs and kings that were marshalled on either side , we ...
... hand . Such a misfortune was too shocking to the sensibilities of an aristocratic audience . Amid the cloud of missiles that were flying on the plains of Troy , amid the crowd of chiefs and kings that were marshalled on either side , we ...
Stran 20
... hands of his fellows , felt himself degraded , and untrue to the oath taken before God , and the obligation which he had bound himself to fulfil . This , I conceive , was the ideal of knighthood . Let us now turn to the Homeric poems to ...
... hands of his fellows , felt himself degraded , and untrue to the oath taken before God , and the obligation which he had bound himself to fulfil . This , I conceive , was the ideal of knighthood . Let us now turn to the Homeric poems to ...
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Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
Æschylus Alcibiades Andocides aristocratic Aristophanes Athenian Athens Attic attitude Author beauty Callippus character charming civilised Clytemnestra Comedy contrast course court Crown 8vo culture Demosthenes dialogue doubt Edition English epic epoch Euripides evidence Extra fcap fact fcap feast feature feeling frag fragments friends gilt gods Greece Greek habit Herodotus heroes Hesiod Homeric honour human Iliad Illustrations king ladies literature lower classes lyric poets Lysias MALL GAZETTE Menelaus mind modern moral nation nature noble Odyssey orators ordinary passage passion peculiar Peiræus Periclean Pericles picture Pindar Plato Plutarch poems poetry political quoted reader refinement religion remarkable respect rude says scepticism seems sentiment Simonides of Amorgos slaves social society Socrates Solon Sophocles Spartan speak story tells Theognis things Thucydides tions tragedy tyrants Ulysses wife woman women Xenophon δὲ καὶ μὲν τὸ
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 25 - THE GOLDEN TREASURY OF THE BEST SONGS AND LYRICAL POEMS IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE. Selected and arranged, with Notes, by FRANCIS TURNER PALGRAVE.
Stran 5 - THE FAIRY BOOK ; the Best Popular Fairy Stories. Selected and rendered anew by the Author of
Stran 30 - HORACE— THE WORKS OF HORACE, rendered into English Prose, with Introductions, Running Analysis, and Notes, by J.
Stran 25 - The Golden Treasury of the Best Songs and Lyrical Poems in the English Language. Selected and arranged, with Notes, by FRANCIS TURNER PALGRAVE.
Stran 26 - To the young, for whom it is especially intended, as a most interesting collection of thrilling tales well told; and to their elders, as a useful handbook of reference, and a pleasant one to take up •when their •wish is to while away a weary half-hour. We have seen no prettier gift-book for a long time."— ATHENAEUM.
Stran 12 - Mitford (AB) — TALES OF OLD JAPAN. By AB MITFORD, Second Secretary to the British Legation in Japan. With Illustrations drawn and cut on Wood by Japanese Artists. New and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.
Stran 17 - She handles her little marvel with that rare poetic discrimination which neither exhausts it of its simple wonders by pushing symbolism too far, nor keeps those wonders in the merely fabulous and capricious stage. In fact she has produced a true children's poem, which is far more delightful to the mature than to children, though it would be delightful to all.
Stran 15 - So choice, so perfect, and so refined, so tender in feeling, and so scholarly in expression, that we look with special interest to everything that he gives us.
Stran 13 - One quality in the piece, sufficient of itself to claim a moment's attention, is that it is unique— original, indeed, is not too strong a word — in the manner of its conception and execution.