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... doubt , instead of those needless French or Latin words which are thought to add dignity to style , but which in truth only add vagueness . I am in no way ashamed to find that I can write purer and clearer English now than I did ...
... doubt , instead of those needless French or Latin words which are thought to add dignity to style , but which in truth only add vagueness . I am in no way ashamed to find that I can write purer and clearer English now than I did ...
Page 21
... doubt but that the loyalty of Pisa and Pavia to the Imperial cause was as true and ennobling a feeling as any that roused their foes for the Holy Church and the liberties of Milan ? And the chiefs on either side alike displayed the ...
... doubt but that the loyalty of Pisa and Pavia to the Imperial cause was as true and ennobling a feeling as any that roused their foes for the Holy Church and the liberties of Milan ? And the chiefs on either side alike displayed the ...
Page 47
... doubt whether Herodotus , speaking in his own person , ever does give the title of Baσıλeús to any one who was strictly rúpavvos . I add an extract from an Essay of mine which deals too much with details to be reprinted in full ...
... doubt whether Herodotus , speaking in his own person , ever does give the title of Baσıλeús to any one who was strictly rúpavvos . I add an extract from an Essay of mine which deals too much with details to be reprinted in full ...
Page 51
... doubt whether Italy has not been somewhat hasty in her choice , and whether something of a Federal form would not have been better for a constitution which was to take in lands differing so widely from one another in their social state ...
... doubt whether Italy has not been somewhat hasty in her choice , and whether something of a Federal form would not have been better for a constitution which was to take in lands differing so widely from one another in their social state ...
Page 56
... accept the Iliad as a substantially true metrical chronicle . The case seems to us to be this . Homer is a very high historical authority in a certain sense . We have no doubt that his heroic age is a 56 [ ESSAY MR . GLADSTONE'S.
... accept the Iliad as a substantially true metrical chronicle . The case seems to us to be this . Homer is a very high historical authority in a certain sense . We have no doubt that his heroic age is a 56 [ ESSAY MR . GLADSTONE'S.
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Common terms and phrases
Achaian Achilleus Alexander Alexander's alike Alkibiadês allies Amphipolis ancient Aoidos Archons Arrian Asia Assembly Athenian Athenian Democracy Athens authority Barbarian Bishop Thirlwall Cæsar Caius called character citizen civil commonwealth conquest constitution Consul crimes Curtius Democracy Dêmos Dêmosthenês despotism Diodôros Domitian doubtless earlier Emperors Empire feeling freedom German Gladstone Gladstone's Grecian history Greece Greek Grote hand Hellas Hellenic Herodotus historian Homer honour Italian Italy judgement King Kleisthenês Kleôn language later Latin least less look Lucius Cornelius Sulla Macedonian Marius matter Merivale modern Mommsen monarchy moral narrative nation Nero never Niebuhr noble oligarchy once patrician Pelasgians Periklês Persian Philip plebeian Plutarch political Polybios prince provinces reign Roman Rome rulers seems Senate Sir George Lewis sovereign Sparta Sulla's surely Teutonic things Thirlwall Thucydides truth Tyrant Vespasian vote whole wholly words writers Xenophôn καὶ
Popular passages
Page 313 - From the still glassy lake that sleeps Beneath Aricia's trees — Those trees in whose dim shadow The ghastly priest doth reign, The priest who slew the slayer, And shall himself be slain...
Page 207 - LECTURES ON ANCIENT HISTORY, FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE TAKING OF ALEXANDRIA BY OCTAYIANUS, CONTAINING The History of the Asiatic Nations, the Egyptians, Greeks, Macedonians, and Carthaginians, BY BG NIEBUHR.
Page 93 - Egypt which drowns the spirit in effeminate indifference ; rather they are like the <f>dp/j,a/cov e<rd\6v, the remedial specific, which, freshening the understanding by contact with the truth and strength of nature, should both improve its vigilance against deceit and danger, and increase its vigour and resolution for the discharge of duty.
Page 53 - What strikes one more than anything else throughout Mr. Gladstone's volumes is the intense earnestness, the loftiness of moral purpose, which breathes in every page. He has not taken up Homer as a plaything, nor even as a mere literary enjoyment. To him the study of the Prince of Poets is clearly a means by which himself and other men may be made wiser and better.
Page 73 - All this is evidently heartfelt, and it almost deserves the name of eloquence ; yet it is to us simply unintelligible. Mr. Gladstone, by way of reverence for certain writings, actually goes out of his way to disparage them. Why cannot...
Page 73 - ... such a degree, indeed, that the rank and quality of the religious frame may in general be tested, at least negatively, by the height of its relish for them. There is the whole music of the human heart, when touched by the hand of the Maker, in all its tones that whisper or that swell, for every hope and fear, for every joy and pang, for every form of strength and languor, of disquietude and rest.
Page 308 - We may correct and improve from the stores which have been opened since Gibbon's time ; we may write again large parts of his story from other and often truer and more wholesome points of view, but the work of Gibbon as a whole, as the encyclopaedic history of...
Page 73 - If, however, we ought to decline to try the Judaic code by its merely political merits, much more ought we to apply the same principle to the sublimity of the prophecies, and to the deep spiritual experiences of the Psalms. In the first, we have a voice speaking from God, with the marks that it is of God so visibly imprinted upon it, that the mind utterly refuses to place the prophetical books in the scale against any production of human genius. And all that is peculiar in our conception of Isaiah,...