Travels of Anacharsis the Younger in Greece: During the Middle of the Fourth Century Before the Christian Æra, Volumen 4G. G. and J. Robinson, 1796 |
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Página 51
... souls which sustain their paffions , their happiness , or their misfortunes , with that decency and firmness which are fuitable to the ele- vation of their character f . In the attitudes of the actors we ought to recognize the models ...
... souls which sustain their paffions , their happiness , or their misfortunes , with that decency and firmness which are fuitable to the ele- vation of their character f . In the attitudes of the actors we ought to recognize the models ...
Página 52
... soul of Achilles , and that of the fpectators , the fentiments with which they are penetrated . The dance of comedy is free , familiar , often ignoble , and too frequently difgraced by a licentiousness fo grofs as to dif- guft perfons ...
... soul of Achilles , and that of the fpectators , the fentiments with which they are penetrated . The dance of comedy is free , familiar , often ignoble , and too frequently difgraced by a licentiousness fo grofs as to dif- guft perfons ...
Página 302
... SOULS " . It is loudly declared in our holy ceremonies ; in which , when the prieft has faid , Who are those who are here assembled the multitude reply , Good and virtuous people . PHILOCLES . Have your prayers for their object the ...
... SOULS " . It is loudly declared in our holy ceremonies ; in which , when the prieft has faid , Who are those who are here assembled the multitude reply , Good and virtuous people . PHILOCLES . Have your prayers for their object the ...
Página 480
... Soul of the World , iii . 208 , 499 ; ív . 372 . Sparta , or Lacedæmon , had no walls , ii . 425. Was compofed of five towns , feparated from each other , and each occupied by one of the five tribes , ibid . 426. Note on the number of ...
... Soul of the World , iii . 208 , 499 ; ív . 372 . Sparta , or Lacedæmon , had no walls , ii . 425. Was compofed of five towns , feparated from each other , and each occupied by one of the five tribes , ibid . 426. Note on the number of ...
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Términos y frases comunes
actors Æfchylus againſt alfo almoſt alſo Anacharfis ancient Ariftoph Ariftot Athenians Athens authors becauſe cauſe CHAP chorus Cicer coaft comedy Crete Death Delos Demofth DEMOPHON difciples Diod Diog diſtance drachma eſpecially Euripides faid fame fays fcenes fecond feftivals fentiments feven feveral fhall fhould fince fing firft firſt fituated fome fometimes foon foul ftadia ftill fubject fuch fuffer fufficient gods Greece Greeks happineſs Herodot Hift Hiftorian himſelf ibid intereft iſland itſelf king l'Acad Lacedæmonians Laert leaſt lefs Legiflator meaſure Miletus moft moſt muſt neceffary obferved occafion Orator paffions Painter Paufan Perfians perfons PHILOCLES Philofopher Phocion Phyfician pieces Plat Plato pleaſure Plin Plut Poet poffefs prefent preferve Pythagoras reafon refpect reprefented ſcenes Schol ſhall ſome Sophocles ſpeak Statuary ſtill Strab Suid temple tetradrachms thefe themſelves Theodectes theſe thofe thoſe thouſand Thucyd Tournef tragedy uſe verfe verſes Xenoph Zopyrus
Pasajes populares
Página 27 - And roll the darkening waves, my father slew me, A victim to Diana, so he thought, For Helen's sake, its bay where Aulis winds, To fame well known; for there his thousand ships...
Página 6 - The first of these writers has been censured for having admitted mute characters into his drama. " Achilles after the death of his friend, and Niobe after the destruction of her children, appear on the stage, and remain during several scenes motionless...
Página 3 - ... already known. The hymns in honour of Bacchus, while they described his rapid progress and splendid conquests, became imitative ; and in the contests of the Pythian games, the players on the flute who entered into competition were enjoined by an express law to represent successively the circumstances that had preceded, accompanied, and followed the victory of Apollo over Python. Some years after this regulation...
Página 9 - I gor'd him with a wound; a grateful present To the stern god, that in the realms below Reigns o'er the dead: there let him take his seat. He lay: and spouting from his wounds a stream Of blood, bedew'd me with these crimson drops. I glory in them, like the genial earth, When the warm showers of...
Página 454 - All who have meditated on the art of governing mankind have been convinced that the fate of empires depends on the education of youth.
Página 253 - The priefts, after having examined the entrails of the victims, declared that the gods approved the marriage. To conclude the ceremonies, we proceeded to the Artemifium, where the lovers depofited each a lock of their hair on the tomb of the laft Theori of the Hyperboreans.
Página 6 - Niobe after the destruction of her children, appear on the stage, and remain during several scenes motionless, their heads covered with a veil and without uttering a word ; but if their eyes had overflown with tears, and they had poured forth the bitterest lamentations, could they have produced an effect so terrible as this veil, this silence, and...
Página 21 - ... painted men greater than they can be, Sophocles as they ought to be, and Euripides as they are.
Página 40 - Ilegemori proposed to break off the piece abruptly; but the Athenians, without removing from their places, covered themselves with their cloaks, and, after having paid the tribute of a few tears to their relatives who had fallen in...
Página 362 - Cnof'us, and adduce, as the principal fupport of this opinion, the coins of that city, which reprefent the plan of it, according as the arii ils conceived it.