Hello Everybody,
I'm looking for advice on a good Greek/English Loeb Classic to use while very leisurely beginning to learn ancient Greek. Perhaps Plato or Plutarch? Any recommendations?
Thanks,
James Bath


Markos wrote:If you put a gun to my head and made me choose between the Iliad and the Odyssey, I would let you shoot me.

Markos wrote:So I would go with Chariton and Plato's Symposium and both of Homer's Book. If you put a gun to my head and made me choose between the Iliad and the Odyssey, I would let you shoot me.
Adelheid wrote:Hi James,
I would personally advise you to go for Herodotus.
jamesbath wrote:Adelheid wrote:Hi James,
I would personally advise you to go for Herodotus.
Herodotus does sound fascinating. He wrote in ionic, right? Would it not be better to learn attic first? But if I do decide on Herodotus, which work of his would you recommend?
Gratias tibi ago,
James
Scribo wrote:Lysias, I can't believe no one has mentioned him, relatively simple with some entertaining moments.
Maximas tibi gratias ago, Scribo (or should I say "Scribe"?)
Anyway, upon your recommendation, I searched out a Wikipedia article on Lysias, which I found intriguing. Then found a Loeb classic book on the same person at Amazon. Among all the very good answers I got from everybody in this discussion, I think I will probably start with Lysias because he seems to have been closer to the street, to the common man, and hence to the common mind and attitudes which should give me a better feel of Athenian life then. And he seems to have lived in very interesting times, what with the Sparta influence and during the life of Socrates. So in studying the work of Lysias I might also obtain a better feel for Socrates and Plato.
James
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