The Histories of HerodotusD. Appleton, 1904 - 568 pages |
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Page 2
... Persians say that Io went to Egypt , not agreeing herein with the Phoenicians ; and that this was the beginning of wrongs . After this , that certain Grecians ( for they are unable to tell their name ) , having touched at Tyre in ...
... Persians say that Io went to Egypt , not agreeing herein with the Phoenicians ; and that this was the beginning of wrongs . After this , that certain Grecians ( for they are unable to tell their name ) , having touched at Tyre in ...
Page 3
... Persians claim Asia and the barbarous nations that inhabit it as their own , and consider Europe and the people of Greece as totally dis- tinct . Such is the Persian account ; and to the capture of Troy they ascribe the beginning of ...
... Persians claim Asia and the barbarous nations that inhabit it as their own , and consider Europe and the people of Greece as totally dis- tinct . Such is the Persian account ; and to the capture of Troy they ascribe the beginning of ...
Page 17
... Persians , put an end to the grief of Croesus ; and he began to consider whether he could by any means check the growing power of the Persians before they became formidable . After he had formed this purpose , he determined to make ...
... Persians , put an end to the grief of Croesus ; and he began to consider whether he could by any means check the growing power of the Persians before they became formidable . After he had formed this purpose , he determined to make ...
Page 19
... Persians , and whether he should join any auxiliary forces with his own ? " Such were their questions ; and the opinions of both oracles concurred , foretelling " that if Croesus should make war on the Persians , he would destroy a ...
... Persians , and whether he should join any auxiliary forces with his own ? " Such were their questions ; and the opinions of both oracles concurred , foretelling " that if Croesus should make war on the Persians , he would destroy a ...
Page 27
... Persians . While Croesus was preparing for his expedition against the Persians , a certain Lydian , who before that time was esteemed a wise man , and on this occasion acquired a very great name in Lydia , gave him advice in these words ...
... Persians . While Croesus was preparing for his expedition against the Persians , a certain Lydian , who before that time was esteemed a wise man , and on this occasion acquired a very great name in Lydia , gave him advice in these words ...
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Common terms and phrases
accordingly Ægina Æginetæ afterward Amasis answered Argives Aristagoras army arrived Artaphernes Asia Astyages Athenians Athens barbarians battle called Cambyses Carians carried cavalry Cleomenes commanded consult the oracle Croesus Cyrenæans Cyrus Darius daughter death Delphi Demaratus Egypt Egyptians engagement Ethiopians expedition father fled flows forces gave give gods gold Grecians Greece Greeks happened Harpagus heard Hellespont herald Herodotus Histiæus honour horses hundred inhabitants Ionians island Ister Jupiter king Lacedæmonians lake land Libya Lydians manner marched Mardonius Medes Megabyzus mentioned Milesians Miletus Miltiades nations Nile opinion Pæonians passed Pelasgians Peloponnesus Periander Persians Phocians Phoenicians Pisistratus Platæans Polycrates possession Pythian reigned rest revolt river round sacred sacrifice sailed Salamis Samians Samos Sardis Scythians sent ships sians Smerdis Sparta spoke stades subdued temple territory Thebans thence thereupon things thousand Thracians tion took tyrant whole wife wished women Xerxes
Popular passages
Page 113 - them: each physician applies himself to one disease only, and not more. All places abound in physicians; some physicians are for the eyes, others for the head, others for the teeth, others for the parts about the belly, and others for internal disorders.
Page 17 - I know the number of the sands, and the measure of the sea; I understand the dumb, and hear him that does not speak; the savour of the hardshelled tortoise boiled in brass with the flesh of lamb strikes on my senses; brass is laid beneath it, and brass is put
Page 110 - the west, the trochilus enters its mouth and swallows the leeches: the crocodile is so well pleased with this service that it never hurts the trochilus. With some of the Egyptians crocodiles are sacred; with others not, but they treat them as enemies. Those who dwell about Thebes and Lake
Page 356 - different forms: the asphalt and the salt immediately become solid, but the oil they collect, and the Persians call it rhadinace; it is black and emits a strong odour. Here King Darius settled the Eretrians; who, even to my time, occupied this territory, retaining their ancient language. Such things took place with regard to the Eretrians.
Page 249 - A very remarkable circumstance, that was advantageous to the Persians and adverse to the Scythians, when they attacked the camp of Darius, I will now proceed to mention : this was the braying of the asses, and the appearance of the mules; for Scythia produces neither ass nor mule, as I have before observed;
Page 125 - though anxious to return hither because I did not offer perfect hecatombs to them." 3 He shows in these verses that he was acquainted with the wandering of Paris in Egypt; for Syria borders on Egypt; and the Phoenicians, to whom Sidon belongs, inhabit Syria. From these verses, and
Page 142 - Egypt, constructed the portico to Vulcan's Temple at Memphis, that faces the south wind; and he built a court for Apis, in which he is fed whenever he appears, opposite the portico, surrounded by a colonnade, and full of sculptured figures; and instead of pillars, statues twelve cubits high are placed under the piazza.
Page 131 - excavations! It is related that Cheops reached such a degree of infamy that, being in want of money, he prostituted his own daughter in a brothel, and ordered her to extort, they did not say how much; but she exacted a certain sum of money, privately, as much as her father ordered her; and
Page 356 - Two thousand of the Lacedaemonians came to Athens after the full moon, making such haste to be in time that they arrived in Attica on the third day after leaving Sparta. But having come too late for the battle, they, nevertheless, desired to see the Medes; and having proceeded to Marathon, they saw the slain; and
Page 1 - THIS is a publication of the researches of Herodotus of Halicarnassus, in order that the actions of men may not be effaced by time, nor the great and wondrous deeds displayed by both Greeks and barbarians