There is also one sort of knowledge proper for a master, another for a slave; the slave's is of the nature of that which was taught by a slave at
Syracuse; for he for a stipulated sum instructed the boys in all the business of a household slave, of which there are various sorts to be learnt, as the art of cookery, and other such-like services, of which some are allotted to some, and others to others; some employments being more honourable, others more necessary; according to the proverb, "One slave excels another, one master excels another:" in such-like things the knowledge of a slave consists.
{134} The names Syra and Ortygia, on which island a great part of the Doric Syracuse was originally built, suggest that even in Odyssean times there was a prehistoric Syracuse, the existence of which was known to the writer of the poem.
{135} Literally "where are the turnings of the sun." Assuming, as we may safely do, that the Syra and Ortygia of the "Odyssey" refer to Syracuse, it is the fact that not far to the South of these places the land turns sharply round, so that mariners following the coast would find the sun upon the other side of their ship to that on which they'd had it hitherto.
I take it that Eumaeus was made to have come from Syracuse because the writer thought she rather ought to have made something happen at Syracuse during her account of the voyages of Ulysses.
{135} Modern excavations establish the existence of two and only two pre-Dorian communities at Syracuse; they were, so Dr.
To these great examples I wish to add a lesser one; still it bears some resemblance to them, and I wish it to suffice me for all of a like kind: it is Hiero the Syracusan.[*] This man rose from a private station to be Prince of
Syracuse, nor did he, either, owe anything to fortune but opportunity; for the Syracusans, being oppressed, chose him for their captain, afterwards he was rewarded by being made their prince.
no, no!" cried the superintendent once again; "you are all deceived, and deceive me in my turn; Lyodot came to see me only the day before yesterday; only three days ago I received a present of some
Syracuse wine from poor D'Eymeris."
Emil Gluck was born in
Syracuse, New York, in 1895.
Syracuse had set the national record for most losses in a row.
I READ WITH GREAT INTEREST HOLLY Aguirre's article on
Syracuse University's Independent Study M.B.A.
Single-stream recycling collection and processing has marched steadily forward, and no one is more aware than Mark Naef of Naef Recycling, East
Syracuse, N.Y.
PIMA's New York/Canadian Division presented a $15,000 endowment to the
Syracuse Pulp and Paper Foundation (SPPT) based at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF).