The Anabasis, Or Expedition of Cyrus, and the Memorabilia of Socrates: Literally Tr. from the Greek of XenophonH. G. Bohn, 1854 - 518 pages |
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Page 6
... Colonel Leake , makes the parasang equal to 3 Eng- lish miles , 180 yards , or 3 geographical miles of 1822 yards each . Travels in the Track , pref . p . xii . Thus five parasangs would be a long day's march ; these marches were more ...
... Colonel Leake , makes the parasang equal to 3 Eng- lish miles , 180 yards , or 3 geographical miles of 1822 yards each . Travels in the Track , pref . p . xii . Thus five parasangs would be a long day's march ; these marches were more ...
Page 265
... Colonel Chesney , gave , however , opportunities for investi- gating this very interesting subject , such as had never previously presented themselves ; and these opportunities may be said to have received their complement , by the ...
... Colonel Chesney , gave , however , opportunities for investi- gating this very interesting subject , such as had never previously presented themselves ; and these opportunities may be said to have received their complement , by the ...
Page 266
... Colonel Chesney remarks , admirable judgment in taking the more circuitous route along the great plains and through the prin- cipal cities of Asia Minor , in preference to that by which Xerxes advanced through Cappadocia ; since it gave ...
... Colonel Chesney remarks , admirable judgment in taking the more circuitous route along the great plains and through the prin- cipal cities of Asia Minor , in preference to that by which Xerxes advanced through Cappadocia ; since it gave ...
Page 268
... Colonel Jervis , the amount admit- ted in the Travels in the Track of the Ten Thousand Greeks , was 607.62977 English feet for the first , 5468.668 English feet for the second . The principle upon which this estimate is founded is this ...
... Colonel Jervis , the amount admit- ted in the Travels in the Track of the Ten Thousand Greeks , was 607.62977 English feet for the first , 5468.668 English feet for the second . The principle upon which this estimate is founded is this ...
Page 269
... Colonel Jervis felt satisfied that these data would serve to clear up many difficulties in the writings of Herodotus , Xenophon , Strabo , Pliny , Diodorus , Curtius , and others , whose apparent discrepancies he believed to be due ...
... Colonel Jervis felt satisfied that these data would serve to clear up many difficulties in the writings of Herodotus , Xenophon , Strabo , Pliny , Diodorus , Curtius , and others , whose apparent discrepancies he believed to be due ...
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The Anabasis, Or Expedition of Cyrus, and the Memorabilia of Socrates ... Xenophon Xenophon No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
able accordingly Agasias ANABASIS ANABASIS OF XENOPHON Anaxibius appear Arcadian Ariæus Aristippus Armenia arms army arrived Assyria Athenians Barbarians beautiful body Bornemann Byzantium called captains Carduchi cavalry Cheirisophus Cilicia Cleander Clearchus Colchians Colonel Chesney command conduct consider cross Cyrus desire Dexippus Dindorf distance encamped endeavour enemy Euphrates Euthydemus Euxine favour friends give Glaucon gods Greece Greeks Harpasus hearing heavy-armed Heraclea hills honour horse hundred journey Jupiter king Krüger Kühner Lacedæmonians laws Layard means miles mountains Mysia observed parasangs pass passage peltasts Persian person Pharnabazus plain present proceeded provisions receive regard replied rest river road ruins sacrifice sail satrap Schneider sect seems sent Seuthes Sinope slaves Socrates soldiers stadia Strabo suppose Tagh Thapsacus things thought Thracians Tigris tion Tiribazus Tissaphernes town translated troops villages Weiske wish word Xeno Xenophon Zeune καὶ
Popular passages
Page vii - That not to know at large of things remote From use, obscure and subtle, but to know That which before us lies in daily life, Is the prime wisdom...
Page vii - Socrates the wisest of all men living, because he judiciously made choice of human nature for the object of his thoughts ; an inquiry into which as much exceeds all other learning, as it is of more consequence to adjust the true nature and measures of right and wrong, than to settle the distances of the planets, and compute the times of their circumvolutions.
Page 263 - CHESNEY— THE EXPEDITION FOR THE SURVEY OF THE RIVERS EUPHRATES and TIGRIS, carried on by order of the British Government, in the Years 1835, 1836, and 1837.
Page 472 - Are you willing then," said Socrates, " that we should make a delta on this side, and an alpha3 on that, and then that we should put whatever seems to us to be a work of justice under the delta, and whatever seems to be a work of injustice under the alpha?" "If you think that we need those letters," said Euthydemus,
Page 318 - Hence they proceeded three days' journey through a desert tract of country, a distance of fifteen parasangs, to the river Euphrates, and passed it without being wet higher than the middle. The sources of the river were said not to be far off. From hence they advanced three days...
Page 505 - ... preferred pleasure to virtue ; so wise, that he never erred in distinguishing better from worse, needing no counsel from others, but being sufficient in himself to discriminate between them ; so able to explain and settle such questions by argument ; and so capable of discerning the character of others, of confuting those who were in error, and of exhorting them to virtue and honour, he seemed to be such as the best and happiest of men would be. But if any one disapproves of my opinion, let him...
Page 398 - ... your mother, lest, regarding you as an ungrateful person, they should be disinclined to do you good ; and you will have regard, also, to the opinion of men, lest, observing you to be neglectful of your parents, they should all...
Page 505 - To me, being such as I have described him, so pious that he did nothing without the sanction of the gods ; so just, that he wronged no man even in the most trifling affair, but was of service, in the most important matters, to those who enjoyed his society ; so temperate, that he never preferred pleasure to virtue; so wise, that he never erred in distinguishing better from worse, needing no counsel from others, but being sufficient in himself to discriminate between them ; so able to explain and...
Page 402 - Even when friends and slaves were sick, he said that he noticed people calling in physicians to their slaves, and carefully providing other means for their recovery, but paying no attention to their friends ; and that, if both died, they grieved for their slaves, and thought that they had suffered a loss, but considered that they lost nothing in losing friends. Of their other possessions they left nothing untended or unheeded, but when their friends required attention, they utterly neglected them....