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Author Lysias.

Title Lysias, with an English translation by W.R.M. Lamb.

Publication Info. London, W. Heinemann; 1930.
New York, G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1930.

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Location Call No. Status
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Standard Shelving Location  888 L994L    Check Shelf
Description xxvi, 706, [2] pages 17 cm.
Series Loeb classical library
Loeb classical library.
Note Greek and English on opposite pages.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (page vi) and index.
Contents On the murder of Eratosthenes -- Funeral oration -- Against Simon -- On a wound by premeditation -- For Callias : on a charge of sacrilege -- Against Andocides : for impiety -- Before the Areopagus : the matter of the olive-stump -- Accusation of calumny against fellow members of a society -- For the soldier -- Against Theomnestus, I -- Against Theomnestus, II -- Against Eratosthenes -- Against Agoratus -- Against Alcibiades, I -- Against Albiciades, II -- Before the council : in defence of Mantitheus -- On the property of Eraton -- On the confiscation of the brother of Nicias -- On the property of Aristophanes -- For Polystratus -- Defence against a charge of taking bribes -- Against the corn dealers -- Against Pancleon -- On the refusal of a pension to the invalid -- Defence against a charge of subverting the democracy -- On the scrutiny of Evandros -- Against Epicrates and his fellow envoys -- Against Ergocles -- Against Philocrates -- Against Nichomachus -- Against Philon -- Against Diogeiton -- Olympic oration -- Against the subversion of the constitution of Athens.
Summary LYSIAS (c.458- C.380 B.C.), born at Athens, son of wealthy Cephalus of Syracuse settled in Attica, is said to have gone after his father's death to Greek Thurii when it was founded in Italy in 444, and to have begun his studies in the new art of Rhetoric there. After the Athenian disaster in Sicily in 413, Lysias and his brother Polemarchus and others were expelled from Thurii in 413 and became 'metrics' (resident aliens) of a privileged kind in Attica, Polemarchus in Athens, Lysias in Peiraeus where they inherited their father's shileld-factory. Both being loyal supporters of democracy, Polemarchus fell victim to the 'Thirty Tyrants' in 404 but Lysias escaped and helped the democrats at Athens with shields and money. After one political speech in accusation of Ertosthenes (one of the Thirty) in 405, he became at Athens a busy professional speech-writer for the law-courts. At the Olympic festival of 388 he denounced, with riotous results, the costly display of the embassy sent by Dionysius I of Syracuse and the domination of Sicily by Dionysus. The surviving speeches (about thirty complete out of a very much larger number) -- fluent, simple and graceful in style yet vivid in description, and in expression of character, suggest that Lysias, though an over-passionate partisan was a gentle humorous man loyal to the Athenian democracy. We see him in the art of oratory young and fresh.
Language Greek and English on opposite pages.
Subject Speeches, addresses, etc., Greek -- Translations into English.
Speeches, addresses, etc., Greek. (OCoLC)fst01129363
Genre/Form Translations. (OCoLC)fst01423791
Added Author Lamb, W. R. M. (Walter Rangeley Maitland), 1882-1961.
Added Title Works. English & Greek. 1930
Other Form: Online version: Lysias. Works. English & Greek. 1930. Lysias. London : W. Heinemann ; New York : G.P. Putnam, 1930 (OCoLC)580288708
ISBN 9780674992696
0674992695
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