Pinnock's Improved Edition of Dr. Goldsmith's History of Greece: Abridged, by the Addition of Several New Chapters and Numerous Useful Notes. Together with Questions for Examination at the End of Each Section. Illustrated with Thirty-two Engravings on Wood by AthertonThomas, Cowperthwait & Company, 1843 - 372 pages |
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Page 55
... fleet was a matter of very great difficulty . 14. Two descriptions of men , marines and sailors , were employed the former were originally part of the unpaid militia , the latter were slaves or foreigners . The same causes that led to a ...
... fleet was a matter of very great difficulty . 14. Two descriptions of men , marines and sailors , were employed the former were originally part of the unpaid militia , the latter were slaves or foreigners . The same causes that led to a ...
Page 56
... fleet became soon one of the most difficult parts of Grecian finance . The Spartans were utterly unable to maintain a fleet until they were aided by subsidies from Persia . The Greeks early made a distinction between mer- chant ...
... fleet became soon one of the most difficult parts of Grecian finance . The Spartans were utterly unable to maintain a fleet until they were aided by subsidies from Persia . The Greeks early made a distinction between mer- chant ...
Page 103
... fleet being shattered in a storm in doubling the cape of Mount A'thos , his army repulsed , and himself wounded , by the Thracians , who attacked him suddenly by night , Mardo'nius returned to the Persian court , covered with shame and ...
... fleet being shattered in a storm in doubling the cape of Mount A'thos , his army repulsed , and himself wounded , by the Thracians , who attacked him suddenly by night , Mardo'nius returned to the Persian court , covered with shame and ...
Page 104
... fleet of six hundred ships , and an army of a hundred and twenty thousand men ; † and their instructions were to give up Athens and Ere'tria to be plundered , to burn all the houses and temples , and to lead the inhabitants into ...
... fleet of six hundred ships , and an army of a hundred and twenty thousand men ; † and their instructions were to give up Athens and Ere'tria to be plundered , to burn all the houses and temples , and to lead the inhabitants into ...
Page 106
... fleet , warned by the disaster of Mardo'- nius , steered their course through the Cyc'lades , for the Athenian coasts . The islanders made no resistance to an armament whose numbers seemed to hide the waters of the Ægei'an , but either ...
... fleet , warned by the disaster of Mardo'- nius , steered their course through the Cyc'lades , for the Athenian coasts . The islanders made no resistance to an armament whose numbers seemed to hide the waters of the Ægei'an , but either ...
Common terms and phrases
Achæans Alcibi'ades Alexander allies ancient Arca'dia Argives Aristei'des Aristom'enes army Asia Asiatic assistance Athenians Athens attack Attica banishment battle became Boeotia Cassander cause celebrated character citizens colonies command conduct confederates consequence Corinth countrymen courage Darius death declared defeated defence Delphi Demos'thenes endeavoured enemy engagement Epaminon'das Epaminondas expedition favour fleet forces former galleys garrison Grecian Greeks Hippias honour hundred inhabitants invaders invasion island king Lacedæmo'nians Laco'nia land laws length liberty Lycurgus Macedon Macedonian Mardo'nius Messe'nians monarch mountains Ni'cias nians oracle orator Pausa'nias peace Peloponnesian PELOPONNESIAN WAR Peloponnesus Per'icles Persian Persian war Philip Phocians poets possession principal Questions for Examination received remarkable resolved retreat Romans Sal'amis Saronic gulf satraps seized sent ships siege soldiers Solon soon Spartans subdued success surrender Syracu'sans temple Thebans Thebes Themis'tocles Thessaly thousand Thrace tion took tribes Trojan war troops tyrant valour victory Xerx'es Xerxes
Popular passages
Page 305 - May we know what this new doctrine, whereof thou speakest, is? 20 For thou bringest certain strange things to our ears: we would know therefore what these things mean. 21 (For all the Athenians, and strangers which were there, spent their time in nothing else, but either to tell or to hear some new thing...
Page 28 - Without a sign his sword the brave man draws, And asks no omen but his country's cause.
Page 256 - crowning city, whose merchants were princes, and whose traffickers were the honourable of the earth...
Page 164 - Cicero had reason to observe, speaking of the battles in the harbour of Syracuse, that it was there the troops of Athens, as well as their galleys, were ruined and sunk ; and that, in this harbour, the power and glory of the Athenians were miserably shipwrecked. The Athenians, however, did not suffer themselves to be wholly dejected, but resumed courage.
Page 148 - Athenians, that even success would profit the enemy but little, should they be conquerors, whereas if they were defeated, Sparta itself was hardly safe.
Page 125 - It is even asserted that he did not leave money enough behind him to defray the expense of his funeral, but that the government was obliged to bear the charge of it, and to maintain his family. His daughters were...
Page 363 - The controllers of the public schools of the first school district of Pennsylvania...
Page 136 - No skill could obviate, nor remedy dispel, the terrible infection. The instant a person was seized, he was struck with despair, which quite disabled him from attempting a cure. The humanity of friends was fatal to themselves, as it was ineffectual to the unhappy sufferers.
Page 99 - But this bridge, when completed, being carried away by the current, Xerxes, like a tyrant, wreaked his vengeance upon the workmen, and, like a lunatic, upon the sea. He caused the heads of the former to be struck off, and a certain number of lashes to be inflicted upon the latter, to punish it for its insolence ; and fetters to be thrown into it, to teach it, for the future, obedience to his will : a striking proof how much the possession of despotic power tends not only to corrupt the heart, but...