Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Band 3Harvard University Press, 1892 |
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Seite 4
... tion of generals in the age of Pericles and in the Peloponnesian war.3 The most important datable event following the establishment of the annual archontate - leaving out of the question for the present that which is the subject of our ...
... tion of generals in the age of Pericles and in the Peloponnesian war.3 The most important datable event following the establishment of the annual archontate - leaving out of the question for the present that which is the subject of our ...
Seite 9
... tion into the Athenian state of the commonwealth of Eleusis.1 Later on , but some time before Solon , the spirit of war , whatever its occa- sion , stirred up a prolonged and humiliating contest with Megara for the possession of Salamis ...
... tion into the Athenian state of the commonwealth of Eleusis.1 Later on , but some time before Solon , the spirit of war , whatever its occa- sion , stirred up a prolonged and humiliating contest with Megara for the possession of Salamis ...
Seite 19
... tion the great law - giver Solon , whose half - mythical figure dominates the following centuries , nor does he name even Cleisthenes the reformer . Herodotus , the range of whose history is more extended , has occasion to treat more ...
... tion the great law - giver Solon , whose half - mythical figure dominates the following centuries , nor does he name even Cleisthenes the reformer . Herodotus , the range of whose history is more extended , has occasion to treat more ...
Seite 26
... tion of the order in which they occur in the two writers , as also of extraneous matter inserted and of important and illuminating facts omitted , show that Plutarch was certainly not intimately acquainted with the Respub . Ath . The ...
... tion of the order in which they occur in the two writers , as also of extraneous matter inserted and of important and illuminating facts omitted , show that Plutarch was certainly not intimately acquainted with the Respub . Ath . The ...
Seite 29
... tion of the conduct of Megacles and his associates , viz . that the breaking of the thread which connected the suppliants with the statue of Athena implied that the goddess rejected such a relation . Grote , Hist . Greece , III . p . 83 ...
... tion of the conduct of Megacles and his associates , viz . that the breaking of the thread which connected the suppliants with the statue of Athena implied that the goddess rejected such a relation . Grote , Hist . Greece , III . p . 83 ...
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Seite 77 - ubi iste post phasellus antea fuit comata silua; nam Cytorio in iugo loquente saepe sibilum edidit coma. Amastri Pontica et Cytore buxifer, tibi haec fuisse et esse cognitissima 15 ait phasellus; ultima ex origine tuo stetisse dicit in cacumine, tuo imbuisse palmulas in aequore, et inde tot per impotentia freta
Seite 77 - Amastri Pontica et Cytore buxifer, tibi haec fuisse et esse cognitissima 15 ait phasellus; ultima ex origine tuo stetisse dicit in cacumine, tuo imbuisse palmulas in aequore, et inde tot per impotentia freta erum tulisse, laeua siue dextera 20
Seite 168 - further notices, is to be found in Comte's Altruism and in Fichte's Ethics, the latter of whom says: " Es gibt nur eine Tugend, die — sich selber als Person zu vergessen, und nur ein Laster, das — an sich selbst zu denken.
Seite 191 - Inde ad negotia urbana animum conuertit; quorum erat primum, ut louis templum in monte Tarpeio monumentum regni sui nominisque relinqueret: Tarquinios reges ambos, patrem uouisse, filium perfecisse.
Seite 79 - (XXXI.) : — Paene insularum Sirmio insularumque ocelle, quascumque in liquentibus stagnis marique vasto fert uterque Neptunus, quam te libenter quamque laetus
Seite 77 - nouissimo hunc ad usque limpidum lacum. 25 Sed haec prius fuere: nunc recondita senet quiete seque dedicat tibi, gemelle Castor et gemelle Castoris.
Seite 82 - Catullus represents himself as pointing out and praising to some guests, who were with him at his villa in Sirmio, the phaselus, now laid up beside the Benacus or Lago di Garda, which had carried him from Bithynia to Italy.
Seite 195 - I smell a rat; I see him floating in the air; but I will nip him in the bud.
Seite 91 - ON THE HOMERIC CAESURA AND THE CLOSE OF THE VERSE AS RELATED TO THE EXPRESSION OF THOUGHT. BY THOMAS D. SEYMOUR.
Seite 159 - well as the Greek Ethics in general is eudaemonistic. Virtue was regarded by Socrates and the Socratic Plato not only as an end in itself, but also as a means; the end at which all virtue aims is happiness. All conduct accordingly is good only in so far as it is useful to the attainment of this end. Further, that the ethical teaching of the historical Socrates 1 Kostlin: Die Ethik des