The Sea! The Sea!: The Shout of the Ten Thousand in the Modern ImaginationThis book tells the story of 'Thalatta! Thalatta! (The sea! The sea!), the shout first uttered on a mountain in eastern Turkey by the army of 10,000 greek mercenaries whose adventures in what are now Turkey, Syria and Iraq were described by the Athenian historian and philosopher Xenophon, who also participated in the long march to the coast. This story has played a persistent part in the European and American cultural tradition over the last two hundred years. Rood tells its story, taking in literary masterpieces by writers such as Heine, Shelley and Joyce, books of travel and adventure set in the Middle East and elsewhere, articles in Victorian periodicals, popular romantic novels, newpaper editorials at the time of the British evacuation from Dunkirk, a painting by the 19th century artist Benjamin Robert Haydon, an unpublished radio play by Louis MacNeice, and a modern novel and film which transfer Xenophon's story to New York. |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 34 találatból.
33. oldal
Lawrence's heightened mood stayed with him as he reached the coast and had a swim : ' I felt that at last I had reached the way to the South , and all the glorious East . ... I fancy I know now better than Keats what Cortes felt like ...
Lawrence's heightened mood stayed with him as he reached the coast and had a swim : ' I felt that at last I had reached the way to the South , and all the glorious East . ... I fancy I know now better than Keats what Cortes felt like ...
107. oldal
So the great plan was defeated , or rather postponed for several generations . " One of the delegates then objected ( rightly ) that there had been a Greek city at Trapezus when the Ten Thousand reached the coast .
So the great plan was defeated , or rather postponed for several generations . " One of the delegates then objected ( rightly ) that there had been a Greek city at Trapezus when the Ten Thousand reached the coast .
208. oldal
He was suggesting that the Greek mercenaries moved from relative unity in the face of a common danger to disunity and squabbling after they reached the sea . And the way he presented the dangers they confronted in their march along the ...
He was suggesting that the Greek mercenaries moved from relative unity in the face of a common danger to disunity and squabbling after they reached the sea . And the way he presented the dangers they confronted in their march along the ...
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Tartalomjegyzék
List of Plates | 1 |
Eastern Adventure | 223 |
vii | 229 |
Copyright | |
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adventure Anabasis ancient appeal Armenia army arrival Black Sea British called century claim classical close coast Cyrus described Diary earlier echo English escape exhibition experience famous father feel felt final followed force freedom Greece Greeks Haydon hero heroic History imagination Italy John journey land later Lawrence least letter London looked MacNeice Magazine mind Mount Theches mountains narrative North noted novel ocean offered once opening orig Oxford painting parasangs pass past perhaps Persian picture play poem poet published reached readers retreat romantic route scene seems seen sense sight soldiers sort story suggests tells Ten Thousand Thalassa Thalatta thought Thousand travellers Trebizond Turkey turned wanted writers written wrote Xenophon Xenophon's shout