Greece: Pictorial, Descriptive, and Historical |
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Page xiii
... described - Restoration of . 136 Temple of Victory - its Frieze 137 . • Doors of the Propylæa thrown open - First Sight of the Interior of Acropolis 138 The Acropolis was the Temple , the Fortress , the Museum , and the Treasury of ...
... described - Restoration of . 136 Temple of Victory - its Frieze 137 . • Doors of the Propylæa thrown open - First Sight of the Interior of Acropolis 138 The Acropolis was the Temple , the Fortress , the Museum , and the Treasury of ...
Page 18
... described the localities in question , that in spite of the changeful operations of Nature he may be asserted , as it were , to have fixed the river and the sea in their old positions for ever . Thermopyla is now no longer Thermopylæ ...
... described the localities in question , that in spite of the changeful operations of Nature he may be asserted , as it were , to have fixed the river and the sea in their old positions for ever . Thermopyla is now no longer Thermopylæ ...
Page 21
... described by himself , in the Eschylean drama of Prometheus . The road from Daulis , to the south - west , leads along a rugged valley to DELPHI , and falls in with another from AMBRYSSUS on the south , at a point half - way between the ...
... described by himself , in the Eschylean drama of Prometheus . The road from Daulis , to the south - west , leads along a rugged valley to DELPHI , and falls in with another from AMBRYSSUS on the south , at a point half - way between the ...
Page 38
... described , the air and climate which were combined with them served to mitigate the asperities of their other attributes . If the arena and cunei of the Pelopon- nesus were formed of rugged and bleak mountains , a clear and brilliant ...
... described , the air and climate which were combined with them served to mitigate the asperities of their other attributes . If the arena and cunei of the Pelopon- nesus were formed of rugged and bleak mountains , a clear and brilliant ...
Page 53
... described , of the Arcadian hills . The bed of this natural stadium was the valley of Sparta . The entrance Bargent to it was from the Bay of Laconia at the south . Along it flowed the river EUROTAS , which has its source above the ...
... described , of the Arcadian hills . The bed of this natural stadium was the valley of Sparta . The entrance Bargent to it was from the Bay of Laconia at the south . Along it flowed the river EUROTAS , which has its source above the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acropolis Agora ancient Arcadia Argolic Argos Asopus Athenian Athens Attica battle battle of Salamis beautiful beneath Boeotia called Cecrops centre Cephissus character citadel Citharon coast Corinth Decelea deity Delphi distance earth east eastern Eleusis eminence exhibited flows Goddess Greek groves Gulf Gulf of Corinth Haliacmon harbour Helicon Hercules hero hill honour Hymettus inhabitants island J. C. Bentley Lacedæmonians Laconia lake land Lebadea lofty marble miles Minerva Mount Parnes Mount Pindus mountain natural north-east objects Orchomenus Parnassus PARTHENON pass Peloponnesus Peneus Peninsula Pentelicus Persians Phocis Phyle plain of Marathon Platea PNYX poet portico present promontory provinces Radclyffe remarkable Rhamnus ridge river road rock rocky ruins sacred Salamis scene sculpture shore side Sketch by HERVE soil south-east southern Sparta spot stands stood stream summit Sunium Taygetus Temple Thebes Themistocles Thermaic Gulf Thermopyla Theseus Thessaly town valley walls western
Popular passages
Page 31 - Look once more, ere we leave this specular mount, Westward, much nearer by south-west, behold, Where on the ^Egean shore a city stands, Built nobly, pure the air, and light the soil ; Athens, the eye of Greece, mother of arts And eloquence, native to famous wits Or hospitable, in her sweet recess, City or suburban, studious walks and shades. See there the olive grove of Academe, Plato's retirement, where the Attic bird Trills her thick-warbled notes the summer long; There flowery hill Hymettus, with...
Page 31 - And eloquence, native to famous wits, Or hospitable, in her sweet recess, City or suburban, studious walks and shades. See there the olive grove of Academe, Plato's retirement, where the Attic bird Trills her thick-warbled notes the summer long ; There flowery hill Hymettus with the sound Of bees' industrious murmur oft invites To studious musing; there Ilissus rolls His whispering stream.
Page 270 - The lonely mountains o'er And the resounding shore A voice of weeping heard, and loud lament; From haunted spring and dale Edged with poplar pale The parting Genius is with sighing sent; With flower-inwoven tresses torn The Nymphs in twilight shade of tangled thickets mourn.
Page 72 - The race of her inhabitants had been always the same ; nor could she tell whence they had sprung ; no foreign land had sent them ; they had not forced their way within her confines by a violent irruption. She traced the stream of her population in a backward course, through many 232 generation«, till at last it hid itself, like one of her own brooks, in the recesses of her own soil.
Page 193 - Thebes had also the advantage of a ready export for her productions, by her convenient position in the vicinity of three seas. The character of her inhabitants appears to have been affected in a remarkable manner by the physical properties of the place. The seven-gated citadel of Thebes stood on a small circular hill, about one hundred and fifty feet above the level of the surrounding plain. The base of the hill on the eastern and western sides is bounded by two small streams, which take their rise...
Page 269 - Thamus ! who, giving ear to the cry, was bidden (for he was pilot of the ship), when he came near to Pelodes " (the Bay of Butrinto) " to tell that the great god Pan was dead ; which he doubting to do, yet for that when he came to Pelodes there was such a calm of wind that the ship stood still in...
Page 182 - ... Attica on the S. by Kithaeron, — Eleutherae which came between having voluntarily enrolled itself with Attica [Paus. I. 38, 8], — and from the territory of Thebes on the N. by the river Asopos. Toward the east, along the valley of the Asopos, it was limited by the village of Hysiae. The town stood ' on the steep and rugged slopes which fall from the heights of Kithaeron into the valley on the north. In this lower ground, and near the walls of the city, two small rivers take their rise, and...
Page 130 - ... our case. We commence our description of this city with avowing the fact, that it is impossible at this time to convey, or entertain an idea of Athens such as it appeared of old to the eyes of one of its inhabitants. But there is another point of view from which we love to contemplate it — one which supplies us with reflections of deeper interest, and raises in the heart sublimer emotions than could have been ever suggested in ancient days by the sight of Athens to an Athenian.
Page 136 - ... of the wings are fringed with an azure embroidery of ivy leaf. We pass along the avenue lying between the two central columns of the portico, and through a corridor leading from it, and formed by three Ionic columns on each hand, and are brought in front of five doors of bronze; the central one, which is the loftiest and broadest, being immediately before us.
Page 137 - Propylaea or Vestibule of the Athenian citadel. It is built of Pentelic marble. In the year BC 437 it was commenced, and was completed by the architect Mnesicles in five years from that time. Its termination, therefore, coincides very nearly with the commencement of the Peloponnesian war. After a short pause, in order to contemplate the objects around us, to explore the gallery, adorned with the paintings of...