Demosthenes was written by the French Prime Minister, Georges Clémenceau in 1926 and translated into English the same year by Charles Miner Thompson. Demosthenes was the famous orator who waged a life or death struggle against King Philip II of Macedon, to preserve Greek independence.

It's not quite a straight history of the man and his period, nor is it an analysis of his rhetoric, nor is it about a chronicle of the military battles. Rather, it is an exhortation of the heroism of Demosthenes, and a recounting of his brave deeds, for the sake of holding up his example as one of the highest ideals of the classical period. His great tragedy is that Athens would not let him lead or let him win. But Clemenceau shows that the tragedy makes the man's glory easier to admire.

This is a new edition of the public domain book that was originally published in 1926.
This new edition includes:

  • A new Foreword written by the publisher.

  • Several footnotes giving context to the remarks made by the author.

  • New format, layout, and typesetting.

  • Several illustrations and maps

  • A compilation of the reviews the book received when it was first published

  • An overview of Demosthenes' life and works

Bulkington Book's mission is to build a bridge into the past, before film, television, copyright, and internet swallowed up the world. We found this story worthy of revival, and we hope you find it worth your while.

https://amzn.to/40OCriX

Our Substack Post, including the Foreword, can be read here: https://bulkingtonbooks.substack.com/p/foreword-to-demosthenes

the original text can be found here on googlebooks: https://books.google.com/books/about/Demosthenes.html?id=-x9FAQAAIAAJ

Demosthenes
By Clémenceau, Georges, Demosthenes, Books, Bulkington
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