The Description of Greece, Volume 1R. Priestley, 1824 - Art, Greek |
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Page 1
... Ptolemy the son of Lagus sent in aid of the Athenians , secretly landing on this island , enclosed it with a wall , and drew a trench round it , at that time when Antigonus , the son of Deme- trius , making an irruption into it with his ...
... Ptolemy the son of Lagus sent in aid of the Athenians , secretly landing on this island , enclosed it with a wall , and drew a trench round it , at that time when Antigonus , the son of Deme- trius , making an irruption into it with his ...
Page 14
... Ptolemy , and of my time the emperor Adrian , who is a most religious cultivator of divinity , and who confers the great- est felicity on his subjects . This emperor never under- takes a war willingly ; and has alone revenged the revolt ...
... Ptolemy , and of my time the emperor Adrian , who is a most religious cultivator of divinity , and who confers the great- est felicity on his subjects . This emperor never under- takes a war willingly ; and has alone revenged the revolt ...
Page 15
... Ptolemy of the kingdom of Egypt . He was however himself expelled from Egypt , and besides this was not admired for his warlike abilities so much as he had formerly been ; and lastly , being prior to this greatly envied by the ...
... Ptolemy of the kingdom of Egypt . He was however himself expelled from Egypt , and besides this was not admired for his warlike abilities so much as he had formerly been ; and lastly , being prior to this greatly envied by the ...
Page 16
... Ptolemy's fleet , in a naval battle , and after- wards Ptolemy himself , who was advancing to engage him . And on Ptolemy's flying into Egypt , Antigonus as- saulted him by land , and Demetrius by sea . But Ptolemy , who was now arrived ...
... Ptolemy's fleet , in a naval battle , and after- wards Ptolemy himself , who was advancing to engage him . And on Ptolemy's flying into Egypt , Antigonus as- saulted him by land , and Demetrius by sea . But Ptolemy , who was now arrived ...
Page 17
... Ptolemy again took Syria and Cyprus , and brought back Pyrrhus into the Thesprotian Epirus . And Cyrene having revolted from him , he re- took it in the fifth year of its revolt , through Magas the son of Berenice , who was at that time ...
... Ptolemy again took Syria and Cyprus , and brought back Pyrrhus into the Thesprotian Epirus . And Cyrene having revolted from him , he re- took it in the fifth year of its revolt , through Magas the son of Berenice , who was at that time ...
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Common terms and phrases
Achaians Achilles affairs afterwards Agesilaus Alcamenes altar Amphiaraus ancient Antigonus Arcadians Argives Argos Aristodemus Aristomenes army Asopus assert assistance Athenians Athens Attica Bacchus battle brazen statue buried called Ceres CHAPTER Cleomenes consequence Corinthians dæmon dæmonians daughter death dedicated Deiphontes Delphos Demetrius denominated descended Dioscuri distance divinity Dorienses Eleans engagement Epidaurians Epopeus Esculapius father fled fountain goddess gods grandson Greeks hence Hercules heroic monument Hippocoon Homer honours illustrious inhabitants island Ithome Juno Jupiter king kingdom Lacedæmonians land likewise Lysimachus Macedonians manner Megarenses Messene Messenians Neptune nians oracle Pausanias Peloponnesus perceive Perseus Phoroneus possessed present Ptolemy Pyrrhus reigned relate respect river sacred sacrifice sent sepulchre Sicyonians slain slew sons Sparta Spartans stadia stone Teleclus Temenus temple of Apollo temple of Minerva Thebans Theopompus Theseus Tisamenus tomb took tower town troops vanquished Venus verses victory virgin walls women worthy of inspection
Popular passages
Page 235 - Dorians, plumed amid the files of war, Her foodful glebe with fierce Achaians share; Cnossus, her capital of high command; Where sceptred Minos with impartial hand Divided right: each ninth revolving year, By Jove received in council to confer.
Page 142 - Renown'd, triumphant, and enrich'd with spoils. Now, shameful flight alone can save the host, Our blood, our treasure, and our glory lost. So Jove decrees, resistless lord of all! At whose command whole empires rise or fall: He shakes the feeble props of human trust, And towns and armies humbles to the dust.
Page 313 - Messena's state from Ithaca detains Three hundred sheep, and all the shepherd swains; And to the youthful prince to urge the laws, The king and elders trust their common cause. But Iphitus...
Page 183 - Latona's line ; But two the goddess, twelve the queen enjoy'd ; Those boasted twelve th' avenging two destroy'd. Steep'd in their blood and in the dust outspread, Nine days neglected lay...
Page xii - ... neoPlatonists helped to shape the intellectual world of Romantic poetry and its richly symbolic narratives, engaged with Paine in A Vindication of the Rights of Brutus (1792); he specifically contrasted the connective particles of his version of Pausanias (1794) with contemporary France, which exhibited "anarchy and uproar, licentious liberty and barbaric rage, all the darkness of atheism, and all the madness of democratic power" (The Description of Greece, by Pausanias [London, 1794], preface).
Page 264 - Indeed even at present, (AD 160 to 180), those that sail to India report that Indian equivalents are given for the Grecian commodities which are carried thither, but that the inhabitants are unacquainted with money, though their country abounds with gold and brass.29 Now this assertion is directly contradicted by his contemporary Arrian, the author of the Erythraean Periplus, who says that the Roman gold was exchanged with advantage against the native gold coin called kaltis.30 But the story told...
Page 231 - In order to keep them together, he built a city, and called it after the name of his son Enoch, which, in the Hebrew tongue, signifies a dedication.
Page ix - I have unfolded in them a theory which seems for many ages to have been entirely unknown.
Page 37 - It is a curious coincidence also that Pausanias, as Taylor translates him, when about to describe the mysteries of Eleusis which was connected with the underworld and Orphic ritual, '. . . was restrained from the execution of this design by a vision in a dream.
Page vi - Upon which that which happened to me, may seem strange, though it be true ; for it was not so much by the knowledge of words, that I came to the understanding of things, as by my experience of things I was enabled to follow the meaning of words.