Orations of Demosthenes: Translated by Charles Rann Kennedy, with a Critical and Biographical Introduction by Robert Barber Youngman |
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Page 4
... fear of the future is paramount to present obligation ; but with you , what- ever a man receives he may hold safely - might at least in former times . This law , therefore , which deprives gifts of their security , takes away the only ...
... fear of the future is paramount to present obligation ; but with you , what- ever a man receives he may hold safely - might at least in former times . This law , therefore , which deprives gifts of their security , takes away the only ...
Page 41
... fear of being punished for the massacres which they had committed six years before . The aristocratical exiles returned , and Corinth again became the ally of Lacedæmon . ( Xenophon , " Hel- len . , " v , c . 1 , s . 34-36 ...
... fear of being punished for the massacres which they had committed six years before . The aristocratical exiles returned , and Corinth again became the ally of Lacedæmon . ( Xenophon , " Hel- len . , " v , c . 1 , s . 34-36 ...
Page 49
... fear of the Carthaginians , Dionysius , the son of Hermocrates , was appointed to the chief military command , by means of which he raised himself to the throne , and reigned thirty- eight years . He was originally a scribe , or ...
... fear of the Carthaginians , Dionysius , the son of Hermocrates , was appointed to the chief military command , by means of which he raised himself to the throne , and reigned thirty- eight years . He was originally a scribe , or ...
Page 51
... fear , men of Athens , we shall be driven to a war with both , the king and the people whom we are anxious to protect . He will sus- pend his designs if he really has resolved to attack the Greeks will give money to some of them and ...
... fear , men of Athens , we shall be driven to a war with both , the king and the people whom we are anxious to protect . He will sus- pend his designs if he really has resolved to attack the Greeks will give money to some of them and ...
Page 52
... fear outweighs not the enmity which some of them bear toward you and toward each other . Your ambassadors then will only travel round and rhapso- dize . But when the time comes , if what we now expect be really brought to pass , I fancy ...
... fear outweighs not the enmity which some of them bear toward you and toward each other . Your ambassadors then will only travel round and rhapso- dize . But when the time comes , if what we now expect be really brought to pass , I fancy ...
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Orations of Demosthenes; Translated by Charles Rann Kennedy, with a Critical ... Demosthenes No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
accuse advantage advise Æschines affairs afterward allies ambassadors Amphictyons Amphipolis ancestors ancient appear Aristophon army assembly assistance Athenians Athens Attica battle better Cæsar Caius called Catiline Cato cause Chabrias charge Cicero citizens command commonwealth consider consul consulship council counsel crown Ctesiphon danger death decree defend Deity Demosthenes deprived desire dignity divine duty enemy Epicurus exemption F. A. Wolf favour fear force fortune give glory grant Greece Greeks hear honour immortal gods judges king Lacedæmonians Leptines Lucius Murena Marcus means measures mention mind nature never occasion old age Olynthus opinion orator Oreus Oropus party passed peace Peloponnesian Peloponnesian war Peloponnesus Persia persons Philip Phocians Phocis political possession present punishment reason received regard republic Roman Rome Scaptius Senate speak speech Thebans Thebes Thessalians Thessaly things tion trierarch troops truth virtue votes whole words yourselves καὶ
Popular passages
Page 13 - On my honour, if my slaves feared me as all your fellow-citizens fear you, I should think I must leave my house. Do not you think you should leave the city? If I saw that I was even undeservedly so suspected and hated by my fellow-citizens, I would rather flee from their sight than be gazed at by the hostile eyes of every one.
Page 8 - Lives! ay, he comes even into the senate. He takes a part in the public deliberations ; he is watching and marking down and checking off for slaughter every individual among us. And we, gallant men that we are, think that we are doing our duty to the republic if we keep out of the way of his frenzied attacks. You ought, O Catiline, long ago to have been led to execution by command of the consul. That destruction which you have been long plotting against us ought to have already fallen on your own...
Page 194 - ... not even then should the commonwealth have abandoned her design, if she had any regard for glory, or ancestry, or futurity. As it is, she appears to have failed in her enterprise, a thing to which all mankind are liable, if the Deity so wills it...
Page 217 - But for a person who never sought to punish me for any offense either public or private, on the state's behalf or on his own, to have got up an accusation because I am crowned and honored, and to have expended such a multitude of words — this is a proof of personal enmity and spite and meanness, not of anything good. And then his leaving the controversy with me, and attacking the defendant, comprises everything that is base.
Page 212 - However, if you are determined, ^Eschines, to scrutinize my fortune, compare it with your own, and, if you find my fortune better than yours, cease to revile it. Look then from the very beginning. And I pray and entreat that I may not be condemned for bad taste.
Page 247 - There while they acted and overacted, among other young scholars, I was a spectator; they thought themselves gallant men, and I thought them fools ; they made sport, and T laughed ; they mispronounced, and I misliked ; and to make up the atticism, they were out, and I hissed.
Page 196 - I should have deserved to perish! You yourselves, men of Athens, may not try private and public causes on the same principles: the compacts of every-day life you are to judge of by particular laws and circumstances; the measures of statesmen, by reference to the dignity of your ancestors. And if you think it your duty to act worthily of them, you should every one of you consider, when you come into court to decide public questions, that together with your staff and ticket the spirit of the commonwealth...
Page 175 - ... their own expense arm the young men with eight hundred shields: It hath been resolved by the council and people to crown Charidemus and Diotimus with a golden crown, and to proclaim it at the great Panathenaic festival, during the gymnastic contest, and at the Dionysian festival, at the exhibition of the new tragedies: the proclamation to be given in charge to the judges, the presidents, and the prize-masters.
Page 59 - Such an act That blurs the grace and blush of modesty; Calls virtue hypocrite; takes off the rose From the fair forehead of an innocent love, And sets a blister there; makes marriage vows As false as dicers...
Page 176 - Why then, wretched man, do you play the pettifogger? Why manufacture arguments? Why don't you take hellebore for your malady ? Are you not ashamed to bring on a cause for spite, and not for any offence...