Grecian and Roman MythologyBarnes & Burr, 1864 - 451 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 39
Sivu 37
... sent by Juno from Olympus to release the struggling soul of Dido . HARPIES . Children of the same parents are the swift - winged Har- pies , Aello , Ocypete , and Celano ; who , like raging torna- does , rush forth from the sea and ...
... sent by Juno from Olympus to release the struggling soul of Dido . HARPIES . Children of the same parents are the swift - winged Har- pies , Aello , Ocypete , and Celano ; who , like raging torna- does , rush forth from the sea and ...
Sivu 40
... sent this mon- ster to ravage the territory of Thebes . She had been taught riddles by the Muses , and from the Phicean Hill propounded one to the Thebans : It was this : " What is that which has one voice , is four - footed , two ...
... sent this mon- ster to ravage the territory of Thebes . She had been taught riddles by the Muses , and from the Phicean Hill propounded one to the Thebans : It was this : " What is that which has one voice , is four - footed , two ...
Sivu 47
... sent a gadfly to torment Io , who fled over the whole world from its pursuit . She swam through the Ionian Sea , which was fabled to have hence derived its name from her . She then roamed over the plains of Illyria , ascended Mount ...
... sent a gadfly to torment Io , who fled over the whole world from its pursuit . She swam through the Ionian Sea , which was fabled to have hence derived its name from her . She then roamed over the plains of Illyria , ascended Mount ...
Sivu 56
... sent Pandora away without suffering himself to be captivated by her charms . He continued to teach men every useful art , for which the employment of fire is necessary , and which was the greatest of his benefits ; but deprived them of ...
... sent Pandora away without suffering himself to be captivated by her charms . He continued to teach men every useful art , for which the employment of fire is necessary , and which was the greatest of his benefits ; but deprived them of ...
Sivu 59
... sent Mercury desiring him to ask what he would . His request was , to have the earth replenished with men . Thereupon , by the direction of Jupiter , he and his wife threw stones behind them , and those which Deucalion threw became men ...
... sent Mercury desiring him to ask what he would . His request was , to have the earth replenished with men . Thereupon , by the direction of Jupiter , he and his wife threw stones behind them , and those which Deucalion threw became men ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
abode according Adrastos ægis afterwards Alcmena altars Amphitryon ancient Aphrodite Apollo appears Argos arms Athenians Athens Atlas avenge Bacchos beauty became bull Cadmos called celebrated celestial Centaur Ceres chariot charms Chimæra Colchis consecrated dæmons daughter death Deianeira deities Demeter descended Deucalion Diana Dionysos divine earth Eleusis emblem Eteocles Eurystheus fable fate father festival fiction gave genii goddess gods golden Grecian Greece Greeks Hades hand head Heaven Hecate Hephaestos Hera Heracles Hercules Hermes heroes Hesiod Hippodameia honor horse immortals Inachos island Jason Juno Jupiter killed king Lares Love mankind married Medeia Mercury Minerva Minos monster mortal mother mountain Muses Mycenae mysteries Neptune night nymphs Oceanos offered Olympos oracle Penates Perseus Pirithoös Pluto poets Pollux Poseidon priests Prometheus Pterelaos reigned rendered represented rites river Romans sacred sacrifices sent serpent sister solemn sometimes souls temple Thebes Theseus tion Titans Vesta wife winged worship youth Zeus
Suositut otteet
Sivu 163 - Thammuz came next behind, Whose annual wound in Lebanon allured The Syrian damsels to lament his fate In amorous ditties, all a summer's day; While smooth Adonis from his native rock Ran purple to the sea, supposed with blood Of Thammuz yearly wounded...
Sivu 138 - ... present to the inhabitants of the earth. Neptune, upon this, struck the ground with his trident, and immediately a horse issued from the earth. Minerva produced the olive, and obtained the victory by the unanimous voice of the gods, who observed that the olive, as the emblem of peace, is far preferable to the horse, the symbol of war and bloodshed. The victorious deity called the capital Athenae, and became the tutelar goddess of the place.
Sivu 26 - A god of the infernal regions, son of Nox and Erebus, who conducted the souls of the dead in a boat over the rivers Styx and Acheron.
Sivu 70 - ... the matches. The only prize given to the conqueror was a garland of wild olive ; but this was valued as one of the dearest distinctions in life. To have his name proclaimed as victor before assembled Hellas was an object of ambition with the noblest and the wealthiest of the Greeks.
Sivu 62 - JEther or pure invisible Fire ', the most subtle and elastic of all bodies, seems to pervade and expand itself throughout the whole universe. If air be the immediate agent or instrument in natural things, it is the pure invisible fire that is the first natural mover or spring from whence the air derives its power (sect.
Sivu 31 - Pluto's kingdom, to appease the barking mouths of Cerberus with a cake. Orpheus lulled him to sleep with his lyre ; and Hercules dragged him from hell when he went to redeem Alcestis.
Sivu 296 - Atalanta was afterwards recognized by her parents. Her father wished her to marry, to which she consented, on condition that her suitors should run a race with her, promising, if she should be vanquished, to become the wife of the victor ; but the vanquished suitor should be shot by one of her own darts.
Sivu 22 - Jupiter and Necessity. They were supposed to be the ministers of the vengeance of the gods, and therefore appeared stern and inexorable ; always employed in punishing the guilty upon earth, as well as in the infernal regions. They inflicted their vengeance upon earth by wars, pestilence, and...
Sivu 126 - Zeus' lightning, and accompanied by her nymphs went forth through the dark forests and woody mountains. Bending her silver bow, she sends forth the fatal shafts on every side ; the tops of the mountains tremble, and the forests resound with the panting of the wounded deer. Yet, even in the tumult of the chase, the goddess does not forget her divine brother, whom, of all immortals, she loves most. After having enjoyed herself in the sylvan sport in which she delighted — speeding over the hills,...
Sivu 145 - Her dress and attributes are adapted to her character. She has a helmet upon her head, and a plume nodding formidably in the air. In her right hand she holds a spear, and in her left grasps a shield with the head of the dying Medusa upon it. The same figure with all its terrors and beauties, is also on her breast-plate ; and sometimes she is represented with serpents about her shoulders. An owl, the bird sacred to her, is sometimes seen hovering over her helmet.