On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
each great division of the Grecian people , should hare its antiquities separately treated . The antiquities of Athens require a still further subdivision , and its constitution , its finance and commerce , its religion and its domestic life , all present such copious materials as to demand for their arrangement and investigation the undivided attention of an
able scholar . Had our older works on these subjects been as perfect as the state of criticism when they were composed allowed their authors to make them , the discovery of so many new monuments of antiquity , and the improvements which the texts of the classics have undergone , would have rendered a revision of every department necessary
for the present age- The term revision , indeed , hardly applies to that branch which Professor Boeckh has chosen , the Financial Antiquities of Athens ; it had been almost wholly neglected by preceding writers . It is , indeed , both one of the least inviting and one of the most difficult , requiring the union of profound
philology with great dexterity in figures . Unfortunately , our great classical scholars have often been indifferently fur-Bished with the latter qualification , and might have said , like Reiske , after he had tried his hand in vain , iu his notes to one of his Greek orators , on some questions in addition and subtraction , * ' Fateor me ad calculanduni et artes omnino
mathematicas crassa Minerva natum esse . " Professor Boeckh has the advantage over his predecessors , being at once a skilful arithmetician , and , of all the living scholars of Germany , the most conversant with Attic antiquities . His translator with reason wishes that he had been better acquainted with the principles of political economy , but his deficiency in this respect , not wonderful when it is considered how little this
ficience has been cultivated in Germany , affects only his reasonings , and leaves the value of hie laborious researches unimpaired . We could have wished that the translator had done ¦ something more than give an English dress to his original . The arrangement is deficient in clearness , the author having apparently put his materials together much in the form in which he had collected them
m his common * place books . Even a . little typographical contrivance would have relieved the reader from that perplexity which he always feels in using a work without summaries or visible distinction of books and chapters . The subjects treated of are the value
Untitled Article
of money and commodities at Athens ; its revenues and public expenditure . A glance at the Antiquities of Potter ( and we know not that any other modem litera * tare possesses a better work ) will shew that these topics have scarcely been noticed before ; and yet no one can hare
studied Thucydides or tne Greek orators without feeling how essential to a right understanding of them it is to have more definite ideas on Athenian finance , and on that part of jurisprudence which is more immediately connected with it . Pro * fessor Boeckh's work will be the manual
of every one who wishes to read with precise notions , instead of those vague conceptions which are often attached to the words of ancient authors . The translator has given a smooth and perspicuous version of that which , in the original , aspires to no grace of style , and has iu general represented the meaning so well , that we are at a loss to explain some mistakes which he has made where
the sense is by no means obscure . Thus Boeckh says , Vol . I . p . 208 , " To cheat the state was , at Athens , the order of the day ( an der Tagesordnung war ); even Aristides , the contemporary of Themistocles , complained of it . " This is
rendered , ( Transl . 1 . 260 , ) " Fraud was used by public officers at Athens in so great a matter as the regulation of the days . Aristides accused his contemporary Themistocles of this deceit . " Again , fVol . I . p . 276 , ) it is said in the original , " Attica was not adapted for cavalry j it is only in large plains that the horse thrives , or that this species of force is
effective : " strangely rendered , ( Transl . I . p . 344 , ) " This species of military is powerful among- undisciplined masses of infantry . " Demosthenes , in his 3 d Olynthiac , ch . xxxvi ., is contrasting the great works of past ages with the paltry undertakings of his own , which only pretended to adorn and repair what had been raised before : kou it av elir $ 7 v nc
1 % oi \ T £ b { intdX ^ Btq , a $ KWicofABV , tcoii t < &s odovq aq evta-KivaXfiiA . lv kou K ^ vaq v-oci " kilpbv ?— " the battlements which we white-wash and the roads which we mend , and fountains aud—nonsense !" The translation ( Vol . I . p . 276 ) is not according to the German , ( chough that is not quite correct , ) and wholly uufaithful to the sense and fame of Demoa ^
thenes . ?* What , indeed , can be said of youv wdrks ? What of the parapet * which- ' we * Mrow up and ( tlie roada whicli we- construct , and the fountains and the trifles at which we labotor ? " This work will pi'bbably be extensively used at the universities and should a second edition
Untitled Article
Critical Notices . 483
Untitled Article
2 m 2
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1828, page 483, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2562/page/51/
-