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Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 24 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4228 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 Athens 8 Greece 7 athenian 6 man 5 Spartans 5 Athenians 4 grecian 4 ebook 4 demosthene 4 Zeus 4 Herodotus 4 Greeks 4 Greek 4 CHORUS 3 persian 3 old 3 Themistocles 3 Thebans 3 Philip 3 Hellenes 3 Council 3 Attica 2 time 2 good 2 footnote 2 f(1 2 Thebes 2 Spartan 2 Sparta 2 Solon 2 Socrates 2 Plutarch 2 Pisistratus 2 Phocians 2 Pericles 2 Peace 2 Pausanias 2 Olynthus 2 Mr. 2 Miltiades 2 MEGARIAN 2 LAMACHUS 2 INFORMER 2 Homer 2 HERACLES 2 Embassy 2 Egypt 2 EURIPIDES 2 EUELPIDES 2 EPOPS Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2846 man 1510 time 1154 city 1088 day 911 people 841 war 781 state 752 thing 748 god 697 year 652 name 645 part 626 woman 625 power 611 life 610 way 601 one 593 law 574 nothing 572 hand 570 friend 568 word 567 country 552 place 523 citizen 511 son 447 slave 422 peace 421 king 419 poet 411 enemy 411 death 389 force 388 age 386 father 385 house 377 fact 374 person 354 other 354 character 348 case 347 master 345 party 343 bird 343 ally 335 interest 330 matter 329 ship 329 battle 327 head Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2982 _ 1939 Athens 964 Philip 820 Athenians 533 Greece 497 Greek 489 CHORUS 429 PISTHETAERUS 424 Greeks 419 § 383 Sparta 355 DICAEOPOLIS 325 Zeus 319 Spartans 292 Aeschines 277 STREPSIADES 274 EURIPIDES 271 Callias 270 Athenian 244 TRYGAEUS 241 god 238 Attica 237 CHREMYLUS 230 . 223 Spartan 221 Council 207 ii 206 i. 206 Solon 202 EUELPIDES 201 Peace 195 Themistocles 191 C. 189 B. 188 King 186 c. 184 Thebes 183 Thebans 181 PHILOCLEON 177 Cimon 177 BDELYCLEON 174 Phocians 174 Assembly 173 Euripides 170 XANTHIAS 169 Aeschylus 168 Pericles 167 Socrates 164 WOMAN 164 EPOPS Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8783 you 7417 he 7296 i 6942 it 3922 they 3077 we 2660 him 2335 them 2335 me 1568 us 893 himself 713 she 482 themselves 405 her 299 myself 272 itself 235 yourself 176 one 142 ourselves 104 herself 64 thee 40 yours 39 yourselves 37 mine 25 theirs 25 ''s 21 ''em 15 his 14 ye 14 oneself 10 ours 8 thyself 3 theseus 3 inarus.--aegina 3 ay 2 ithome.--thasos 2 hers 1 you?--when 1 women;--they 1 whosoever 1 us:-- 1 universal;--so 1 thy 1 thasian[411 1 pelf 1 murder-- 1 italy,--they 1 ii 1 i,--i 1 heautou Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 31862 be 11186 have 3737 do 1875 say 1768 make 1622 come 1557 take 1491 see 1308 go 1306 give 1077 know 929 let 739 tell 735 find 716 bring 693 think 609 speak 580 seem 577 call 566 get 558 become 523 hear 511 leave 505 send 476 hold 466 keep 440 pass 424 receive 419 put 412 follow 399 want 398 bear 389 carry 387 appear 379 look 372 use 357 fall 350 lose 330 ask 328 show 307 stand 304 believe 301 pay 300 set 299 accord 297 wish 290 return 288 suppose 288 mean 279 act Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6464 not 2094 so 1829 more 1697 then 1496 now 1290 great 1264 only 1142 other 1130 first 1100 well 1095 very 1057 most 1026 up 1011 good 980 own 967 even 954 here 899 such 812 long 759 out 755 as 719 athenian 707 many 703 old 673 never 673 also 660 much 650 little 643 same 604 thus 573 too 561 just 544 still 527 young 514 yet 498 indeed 494 there 483 far 448 public 443 again 428 once 425 ever 425 away 414 off 405 less 400 last 391 down 389 however 386 no 373 new Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 304 good 266 least 184 most 122 great 65 early 48 high 43 bad 32 strong 21 low 20 noble 20 near 19 rich 16 small 16 Most 15 eld 13 wise 13 fine 13 brave 12 slight 12 dear 11 manif 11 easy 10 wealthy 10 simple 10 l 10 able 9 wild 9 deep 8 proud 8 old 8 lofty 7 pure 7 late 7 hard 7 close 6 young 6 sweet 6 sublime 6 safe 6 poor 6 large 6 fair 5 wide 5 short 5 rare 5 quick 5 mean 5 loud 5 long 5 happy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 873 most 42 well 30 least 2 long 2 hard 1 youngest 1 war;--the 1 highest 1 cleverest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.org 1 www.open.ac.uk Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1514 2 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/100 1 http://www.open.ac.uk/Arts/CC96/lapatin.htm Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 _ is _ 7 nothing is more 6 _ coming back 5 _ do _ 5 athens was now 4 _ see _ 4 athenians are not 4 athenians were not 4 words give wings 3 _ are _ 3 athenians send envoys 3 athens is so 3 city was full 3 law does not 3 laws were not 3 men did not 3 name is not 3 philip did not 3 philip has not 3 philip is not 3 state were not 3 things do not 2 _ say _ 2 athenians did not 2 athenians were madly 2 athenians were then 2 athenians were victorious 2 athens had more 2 athens is not 2 athens is something 2 athens sent forth 2 athens was no 2 athens was not 2 city was still 2 country had not 2 day is not 2 day was not 2 gods do n''t 2 gods was only 2 life is not 2 man did not 2 man find here 2 man is never 2 men are not 2 men are usually 2 men are willing 2 men came up 2 men have not 2 men went dirty 2 name is here Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 one has no purse 2 philip has not only 2 philip is not yet 1 _ had no knowledge 1 athenians are not now 1 athenians are not open 1 athenians are not willing 1 athenians had no slaves 1 athenians have no scotch 1 athenians were not responsible 1 athens is no longer 1 athens is no place 1 athens is not commendable 1 athens was no less 1 athens was no longer 1 athens was not yet 1 athens were not favourable 1 cities were not definitely 1 city had no greater 1 gods were no distant 1 greece had not yet 1 greece were not then 1 life had no temptation 1 life has no more 1 life is not life 1 man had no connexion 1 man has no cause 1 man was not particularly 1 men are no longer 1 men are not wicked 1 men were not willing 1 name is no longer 1 name is not timagenes 1 name is not unknown 1 one does not everywhere 1 one is no less 1 one is not captious 1 one was not liable 1 people did not greatly 1 philip had no prospect 1 philip has no terrors 1 philip has not yet 1 philip made no promises 1 power is not so 1 state did not openly 1 state has no option 1 state were not regular 1 things are not ripe 1 things were not excellent 1 time sent no less A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 3012 author = Aristophanes title = The Acharnians date = keywords = Athens; BOEOTIAN; CHORUS; DICAEOPOLIS; EURIPIDES; HERALD; LAMACHUS; MEGARIAN; f(1 summary = SCENE: The Athenian Ecclesia on the Pnyx; afterwards Dicaeopolis'' house in the country. Friend, with thy great eye, round like the hole through Let the basket-bearer(1) come forward, and thou of Bacchus, night reveller, god of adultery, friend of young men, these let us hear the good grounds you can give us; I am curious to know wanted to see this great poet, who had dared to speak the truth to Come, poor little daughters of an unfortunate father, try to find Come, let some figs be Lamachus wants to keep the Feast of Cups,(1) and I come by his order Let him eat salt fish, while he shakes his plumes, and, if he comes I shall take away all these goods; I go home on thrushes'' wings Come quickly to the feast and bring your basket and your cup; Old man, I come at your bidding! id = 3013 author = Aristophanes title = The Birds date = keywords = Athens; CHORUS; EPOPS; EUELPIDES; HERACLES; INFORMER; PISTHETAERUS; PROMETHEUS; Zeus; bird; f(1; tis summary = Euelpides and Pisthetaerus, two old Athenians, Epops (the hoopoe), sometime called Tereus, and now King of the Birds, EUELPIDES This is, then, truly a running-bird.(1) Come, Trochilus, do us PISTHETAERUS Aye, indeed; ''tis a foreign bird too. PISTHETAERUS It was not the gods, but the birds, who were formerly the PISTHETAERUS First I advise that the birds gather together in one city PISTHETAERUS Why, the birds, by Zeus, will add three hundred years to f(1) Pisthetaerus and Euelpides now both return with wings. PISTHETAERUS Let us address our sacrifices and our prayers to the winged PISTHETAERUS Men now adore the birds as gods, and ''tis to them, by Zeus, PISTHETAERUS Will you stay with us and form a chorus of winged birds as PISTHETAERUS ''Tis I, but you must tell me for what purpose you want PISTHETAERUS ''Tis just my words that give you wings. id = 8688 author = Aristophanes title = The Eleven Comedies, Volume 1 date = keywords = Aristophanes; Athens; B.C.; CALONICÉ; CHORUS; CINESIAS; CLEON; DEMOS; DISCOURSE; Greek; LAMACHUS; LYSISTRATA; MEGARIAN; MYRRHINÉ; NICIAS; PHIDIPPIDES; SOCRATES; STREPSIADES; TRYGAEUS; UNJUST; War; Zeus; athenian; demosthene; dicaeopolis; hermes; man; old; sausage; seller; servant summary = DEMOS, an old man, typifying the Athenian people. This man of leather knows his old master thoroughly; he plays ''Tis best then to die; but let us seek the most heroic death. Let us drink the blood of a bull; ''tis the death which there he is, going towards the market-place; ''tis the gods, faith, ''tis nobly done and like a true friend of Demos. The god tells you here to look after me, for, ''tis I who am your have become a great man, ''tis thanks to me; I ask but a little thing; loose hairs, muse, think of my fields, long for peace, curse town life Come, speak; for ''tis a good Fate, that has dances, if you love me; come and celebrate the nuptials of the gods, the they will come, my dear; but ''tis not easy, you know, for Come, tell me the kind of mind you have; ''tis important I know id = 8689 author = Aristophanes title = The Eleven Comedies, Volume 2 date = keywords = AEACUS; AESCHYLUS; Athens; BDELYCLEON; BLEPSIDEMUS; CARIO; CHORUS; CHREMYLUS; CITIZEN; Demeter; EPOPS; EUELPIDES; EURIPIDES; Greek; HERACLES; INFORMER; MNESILOCHUS; PHILOCLEON; Plutus; SOSIAS; WOMAN; XANTHIAS; Zeus; athenian; blepyrus; dionysu; man; old; pisthetaerus; poverty; praxagora; second; young summary = ''Tis acting like a man eager for his safety. thou art come to live near the tribunal, ''tis with the express design of want my father to lead a joyous life like Morychus[64] instead of going That old men are no longer good for anything; we shall be masses; I shall always fight for the people." And ''tis you, father, who My dear son never lets me out of his sight; ''tis an unbearable tragic poet who pretends to be a skilful dancer, let him come and contest know that a clever old man has come to us, bringing an entirely new idea sake of the gods, let her come here, so that we may contemplate the Men now adore the birds as gods, and ''tis to them, by Zeus, Come, thou Muse of Euripides; ''tis ''Tis said that Euripides has sent an old man here to-day, one id = 26095 author = Aristotle title = The Athenian Constitution date = keywords = Archon; Areopagus; Assembly; Athens; Council; Piraeus; Pisistratus; Solon; law summary = The elections to the various offices Solon enacted should be by lot, nine Archons; whereas in early times the Council of Areopagus summoned Council of Five Hundred, and others to the Assembly and the law-courts. Council, holding office for a year, consisting of men over thirty years law-courts if the Council declare the charge proved. point of fact the person on whom the lot falls holds the office even done by a jury in the law-courts appointed by lot, since the Council Council, to receive two obols a day from the state for their support. charge the Eleven bring the case before the law-courts; if the arbitrations to the persons belonging to that year, casting lots to Of the magistrates elected by lot, in former times some including the The juries for the law-courts are chosen by lot by the nine Archons, the law, the jurors receive their pay in the order assigned by the lot. id = 41471 author = Church, Alfred John title = Callias: A Tale of the Fall of Athens date = keywords = Alcibiades; Athens; Bacchus; CHAPTER; Callias; Crito; Cyrus; Greece; Greeks; Hermione; Hippocles; King; Lysander; Master; Skylark; Socrates; Spartan; Syracuse; Xenophon; athenian; footnote; good; man; time summary = to Callias, and the young man asked and obtained leave from the captain "Come," he said, as Callias looked up, "if you can spare half an hour my dear boy," he said, "things have come to a pretty pass with Athens. "You talk as an Athenian," said the old man, "and they are not "Nay, sir," said the young man who had spoken to Callias, "you must call it so?" said Xenophon, to the young man as he entered the room. "As you are going to see this man for the first time," said the latter, "I feel that my place is at Athens," said Callias to his host a few days "What say you, Callias?" said Hippocles, turning to the young man. "I know very little of such matters," said the young Callias after a "Stand up for the honor of Athens," said Xenophon, "don''t let the men of id = 12842 author = Colman, George title = A Fairy Tale in Two Acts Taken from Shakespeare (1763) date = keywords = Fairy; Pyramus; Queen; Quince summary = Enter Quince, Snug, Bottom, Flute, Snowt, and Starveling. Bot. First, good Peter Quince, say what the play treats on; then Flu. Nay, faith, let not me play a woman, I have a beard coming. Bot. An I may hide my face, let me play Thisby too; I''ll speak in a monstrous little voice; Thisne, Thisne, ah Pyramus my lover dear, thy Bot. Let me play the Lion too, I will roar, that I will do any man''s Enter a Fairy at one Door, and Puck, or Robin-good-fellow, at But make room, Fairy, here comes Oberon. Enter Oberon King of Fairies at one door, with his train, and the Enter Queen of the Fairies, and her Train. Come not near our fairy Queen. [Oberon squeeses the Juice of the Flower on the Queen''s Eyes. Bot. There are things in this Comedy of Pyramus and Thisby, that id = 4716 author = Davis, William Stearns title = A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life date = keywords = Academy; Acropolis; Agora; Athens; Attica; B.C.; Ecclesia; Greece; Lamachus; Parthenon; Peiræus; Plato; Pnyx; Socrates; Zeus; athenian; chapter; city; day; god; good; great; greek; house; life; little; long; man; old; public; slave; time; woman summary = Athenian Pottery an Expression of the Greek Sense of Beauty . Attica in general; but what of the setting of the city of Athens of the old Athenian life in Zimmern''s "The Greek Commonwealth," p. Preëminently Athens may be called the "City of the Simple Life." great side of civilization which the city of Athens might develop the Hellene,--Old Age. Athenian women especially (though the men Slavery an Integral Part of Greek Life.--An Athenian lady cares The Schoolboy''s Pedagogue.--It is a great day for an Athenian in Athens) as possible, and must they not some day, as good citizens, By eighteen the young Athenian''s days of study will usually come The Commerce of Athens.--Part of Athenian wealth comes from the boys, there are three great public Gymnasia at Athens,--the a marked man around Athens or any other Greek city. The Acropolis of Athens.--Almost every Greek city has its own id = 6878 author = Demosthenes title = The Olynthiacs and the Phillippics of Demosthenes Literally translated with notes date = keywords = Athenians; Athens; Greece; Greek; Lacedaemonians; Olynthians; Olynthus; Philip; Thebans; Thessaly; demosthene; footnote; man; war summary = pass a good account [Footnote: Every man, who is required to justify the That here are men prepared for a war with Philip, possessed of a myself, men of Athens, should most assuredly have regarded Philip as an To this crisis, O Athenians, are Philip''s affairs come; or let Think not, Athenians, that Philip and his subjects to let Philip enslave Greek cities for lack of provisions for your [Footnote: He refers to the war in which Athens assisted the Thebans In all the speeches, men of Athens, about Philip''s measures and If now we were all agreed that Philip is at war with Athens and [Footnote: Not long before this oration was delivered, Philip was convinced in your minds, that Philip is at war with our state, and has are in such danger as you, men of Athens; not only because Philip''s without any Athenian moving a declaration of war, Philip has taken many id = 9060 author = Demosthenes title = The Public Orations of Demosthenes, volume 1 date = keywords = Aeschines; Assembly; Athens; Council; Embassy; Hellenes; Olynthus; Peace; Philip; Philocrates; Phocians; Sparta; Spartans; Thebans; Thebes; athenian; demosthene; man summary = {14} In thinking out these points and others like them, men of Athens, For you ought, men of Athens, to think of a man''s But Philip saw quite clearly, men of Athens, {1} I believe, men of Athens, that you would give a great sum to know {2} The present time, men of Athens, seems almost to cry aloud that you {3} Now to describe at length the power of Philip, men of Athens, and the crisis, men of Athens, to which Philip''s fortunes have now come. {22} Now if any of you, men of Athens, seeing Philip''s good fortune, time of peace; and we have trained Philip to be the powerful enemy to peace should be made by Athens and her allies with Philip and his {5} In the first place, men of Athens, when at the time of For you must be well assured, men of Athens, that Philip does not id = 9061 author = Demosthenes title = The Public Orations of Demosthenes, volume 2 date = keywords = Aeschines; Athens; Chersonese; Council; Embassy; Greek; Hellenes; Introd; Peace; Philip; Phocians; Speech; Thebans; Thebes; athenian; demosthene; §§ summary = Philip sent troops to hold the town, and complained to Athens in accused of having brought about the war, Philip wrongfully seized many one comes forward and tells you the truth, and says, ''Men of Athens, minds to the fact that Philip is at war with Athens, and has broken the reason, men of Athens, that though Philip''s campaigns, his aggressions, for any one in Athens to propose the declaration of war, Philip has not city, although, men of Athens, I could tell how often I had been admitted by us all that Philip was at war with Athens, and was For, men of Athens, we have many natural advantages for a war,[n] if we Amphictyonic states must either send men and money, or else make Philip {61} Philip, men of Athens, had a great advantage in Yet in truth, men of Athens, so far as Aeschines is id = 6151 author = Lytton, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Baron title = Athens: Its Rise and Fall, Book I date = keywords = Athenians; Athens; Attica; Cecrops; Crete; Dorians; East; Egypt; Greece; Greeks; Hellenes; Helots; Hercules; Homer; Ionians; Lycurgus; Pelasgi; Peloponnesus; Spartan; Theseus; egyptian; grecian summary = I Remarks on the Effects of War.--State of Athens.--Interference earliest Civilizers of Greece foreigners or Greeks?--The Foundation of race which appear to have exercised a dominant power in Greece. kings can be traced by tradition to a time long prior to the recorded mythological fable, I believe the earliest civilizers of Greece to king over a Grecian state:--the social life of the gods is the life formed by intercourse between Greece and Egypt in a far later age. whole character of the Athenian people--moral, social, religious, and At that time, as I have before stated, Greece was overrun by robbers: an extensive population was necessary to a powerful state, so Theseus A General Survey of Greece and the East previous to the time of the most powerful of the states of Greece; and Argos, next to Sicyori, many of the Dorian states--even Sparta itself--appear to have been id = 6152 author = Lytton, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Baron title = Athens: Its Rise and Fall, Book II date = keywords = Athenians; Athens; Attica; Cleomenes; Darius; Greece; Greeks; Herodotus; Hippias; Homer; Miletus; Miltiades; Mr.; Pisistratus; Plutarch; Sardis; Solon; Spartans; grecian; persian summary = Cirrhaean War.--Epimenides.--Political State of Athens.--Character of Solon.--His Legislation.--General View of the Athenian Constitution. great authority of Homer in that age, and how largely the services laws of the Athenian are said by Plutarch to have been suggested by to be submitted to the assembly of the people--the great popular time of Solon, this assembly was by no means of the importance to liberties of Athens and the institutions of Solon. The Departure of Solon from Athens.--The Rise of Pisistratus.--Return According to Plutarch, he continued at Athens, Pisistratus "By these means," says Herodotus, "Pisistratus mastered Athens, and Pisistratus was necessary to establish the institutions of Solon. most powerful of the Athenians was a noble named Miltiades, son of in the time of his great-grandson Alyattes, a war of twelve years with From the time that the Athenians had assisted the forces of Miletus of the Athenians, one cannot but suppose, that if Solon had really id = 6153 author = Lytton, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Baron title = Athens: Its Rise and Fall, Book III date = keywords = Aeschylus; Athenians; Athens; Darius; Greece; Greeks; Herodotus; Leonidas; Marathon; Mardonius; Miltiades; Pausanias; Salamis; Spartans; Themistocles; Thermopylae; Xerxes; aristide; grecian; persian summary = Artemisium.--The Greeks retreat.--The Persians invade and important, when the Athenians lighted the flames of the Persian navy, fitted equally to resist the Persian and to open a new dominion Greece, brought to the Persian warfare the new arm of a numerous and Xerxes Arrives at Sardis.--Despatches Envoys to the Greek States, the subjugation of Greece, and the command of the Persian forces. Artemisium.--The Greeks retreat.--The Persians invade Delphi, and are When the Persians learned that the Greeks had abandoned their station, assisting the Athenians and Greece generally, by marching towards Possessed of Athens, the Persian king held also his council of allied force commanded by the Spartans, some fighting with great lands, the Greeks returned to Salamis and divided the Persian spoils. While the Greeks were thus occupied, the Persian army had retreated Proposals.--Athenians retreat to Salamis.--Mardonius occupies Athens. The answer of the Athenians to both Spartan and Persian, the id = 6154 author = Lytton, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Baron title = Athens: Its Rise and Fall, Book IV date = keywords = Aristides; Athenians; Athens; Cimon; Egypt; Greece; Herodotus; Megara; Pausanias; Pericles; Sparta; Spartans; Themistocles; grecian; persian summary = Remarks on the Effects of War.--State of Athens.--Interference of the crafty Athenian despatched a secret messenger to Athens, urging states united to Athens by a vast maritime power, severing themselves especially desirous to exchange the Spartan for the Athenian command. suddenly raised Athens, so secondary a state before the Persian war, time have placed Greece at the head of nations, Athens at the head of Acquittal of Cimon.--The Athenians assist the Spartans at Ithome.-Spartan faction in Athens stood Cimon. Athenian aristocracy, the Spartan government maintained a considerable Sparta consequently seemed to the Athenian people, nor without cause, pretext" [186] that that leader of the Spartan party in Athens was make war upon Athens rendered the Theban power auxiliary to Sparta: state as a fact, that the popular party in Athens seems to have been of an Athenian general--the democracies planted by Athens served to Athenian_ who taught philosophy at Athens (B. id = 6155 author = Lytton, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Baron title = Athens: Its Rise and Fall, Book V date = keywords = Aeschylus; Antigone; Athens; Cimon; Creon; Electra; Greece; Herodotus; Mr.; Oedipus; Orestes; Pericles; Plut; Plutarch; Sophocles; Spartans; Themistocles; Thucyd; athenian; thucydide summary = withdrawn, than an Athenian force, headed by Pericles, who is said to Causes of the Power of Pericles.--Judicial Courts of the dependant Allies transferred to Athens.--Sketch of the Athenian Revenues.-ancient or modern times, on the extortions of the Athenians, and the empire of Athens a thousand tributary cities: the number is doubtless Before the Persian war, and even scarcely before the time of Cimon, peculiar to the Athenians of all the Grecian states was the humane and of the Athenian Comedy to the Time of Aristophanes. Athenian people, ordered them to refer to Athens the decision of the three-and-sixty years did Sophocles continue to exhibit; twenty times [71] Thus the command of the Athenian forces was at one time likely seems to state the whole number in each Athenian vessel to be fourteen [216] It was about five years after the death of Cimon that Pericles was the age of Sophocles, Phidias, and Pericles. id = 1113 author = Shakespeare, William title = A Midsummer Night''s Dream date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#1514) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1514 id = 1132 author = Shakespeare, William title = The Life of Timon of Athens date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#100) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/100 id = 1778 author = Shakespeare, William title = A Midsummer Night''s Dream date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#1514) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1514 id = 1798 author = Shakespeare, William title = Timon of Athens date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#100) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/100