A Survey of Greek CivilizationChautauqua-Century Press, 1896 - 337 páginas |
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Página 31
... foreign influence . The occurrence of an ostrich egg , Ostrich egg at probably adorned and used as a cup , in the remains of Mycenæ . Mycena would in itself put the matter beyond doubt . * I mean the citations from Diodorus and Strabo ...
... foreign influence . The occurrence of an ostrich egg , Ostrich egg at probably adorned and used as a cup , in the remains of Mycenæ . Mycena would in itself put the matter beyond doubt . * I mean the citations from Diodorus and Strabo ...
Página 32
... Agamemnon's banner . We may therefore assume with certainty that whatever refinement can be imported with delicate and expressive foreign luxuries , was brought by Phenician or Egyptian Iliad 32 A Survey of Greek Civilization .
... Agamemnon's banner . We may therefore assume with certainty that whatever refinement can be imported with delicate and expressive foreign luxuries , was brought by Phenician or Egyptian Iliad 32 A Survey of Greek Civilization .
Página 33
... foreign wares with them as a cloak to hide a bait to promote their real designs . But when foreign kings ruled at Mycena these traders were probably of a higher class , and more respectable . From them the natives learned the arts of ...
... foreign wares with them as a cloak to hide a bait to promote their real designs . But when foreign kings ruled at Mycena these traders were probably of a higher class , and more respectable . From them the natives learned the arts of ...
Página 34
... foreign help , I greatly doubt . It remains to say something about the religion of this Mycenaean civilization . There are , so far as I know , only two means of attaining to the slightest knowledge on this point . How indeed can a ...
... foreign help , I greatly doubt . It remains to say something about the religion of this Mycenaean civilization . There are , so far as I know , only two means of attaining to the slightest knowledge on this point . How indeed can a ...
Página 38
... foreign to these pre - Homeric people . And this is what we might ex- pect . So long as the dead were suffered to live in the tomb and enjoy the pious offerings placed there periodi- cally for their use , it was obvious that any ...
... foreign to these pre - Homeric people . And this is what we might ex- pect . So long as the dead were suffered to live in the tomb and enjoy the pious offerings placed there periodi- cally for their use , it was obvious that any ...
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Æschylus Alexander Alexandria ancient Argos aristocratic artistic Asia Minor Athenians Athens Attic beauty Boeotia called century B. C. civilization coast Comedy conquest Corinth culture Demosthenes divine Dorian early Egypt enemies epoch Eschylus Euripides evidence fact feature foreign genius gods Greece Greek art Greek cities Greek history Hellenic Hellenistic Herodotus Hesiod Homeric honor human ideal Iliad Isocrates king learned literary literature lived luxury lyric Macedonian master ment mercenary modern moral Mycena nation neighbors never noble Odyssey older orator ornaments Parthenon perfect Pergamum perhaps Pericles Persian Philip philosophers Phocion picture Pindar Plato Plutarch poems poetry poets politics Polybius Polyperchon prose Ptolemy race reader refinement regarded religion Roman Rome rude Schliemann sculpture seems slaves society Socrates Solon Spartan splendid splendor Stoic style temples Thebes theory things thought Thucydides tion Tiryns tombs Troy tyrants whole women Xenophon
Pasajes populares
Página 260 - ... as unknown, and yet well known; as dying, and, behold, we live; as chastened, and not killed; as sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing all things.
Página 155 - ... the powerful exact what they can, and the weak grant what they must.
Página 274 - The wisdom of the scribe cometh by opportunity of leisure; And he that hath little business shall become wise. How shall he become wise that holdeth the plough, That glorieth in the shaft of the goad, That driveth oxen, and is occupied in their labours, And whose discourse is of the stock of bulls? He will set his heart upon turning his furrows; And his wakefulness is to give his heifers their fodder.
Página 153 - Any agreements sworn to by either party, when they could do nothing else, were binding as long as both were powerless. But he who on a favourable opportunity first took courage and struck at his enemy when he saw him off his guard, had greater pleasure in a perfidious than he would have had in an open act of revenge...
Página 274 - They shall not be sought for in the council of the people, and in the assembly they shall not mount on high...
Página 159 - Hurled from the hands of Love, the boy with Zeus for sire. Idly, how idly, by the Alpheian river 10 And in the Pythian shrines of Phoebus, quiver Blood-offerings from the bull, which Hellas heaps: While Love we worship not — the Lord of men ! Worship not him, the very key who keeps Of Aphrodite, when She closes up her dearest chamber-portals: — Love, when he comes to mortals, Wide-wasting, through those deeps of woes beyond the deep!
Página 152 - And revolution brought upon the cities of Hellas many terrible calamities, such as have been and always will be while human nature remains the same, but which are more or less aggravated and differ in character with every new combination of circumstances.
Página 153 - ... evil one who had no idea of it. The tie of party was stronger than the tie of blood, because a partisan was more ready to dare without asking why. (For party associations are not based upon any established law, nor do they seek the public good; they are formed in defiance of the laws and from self-interest.) The seal of good faith was not divine law but fellowship in crime.
Página 153 - For the leaders on either side used specious names, the one party professing to uphold the constitutional equality of the many, the other the wisdom of an aristocracy, while they made the public interests, to which in name they were devoted, in reality their prize. Striving in every way to overcome each other, they committed the most monstrous crimes; yet even these were surpassed by the magnitude of their revenges which they pursued to the very utmost, neither party observing any definite limits...
Página 152 - The meaning of words had no longer the same relation to things, but was changed by them as they thought proper.