約 1,142,388 件
https://w.atwiki.jp/gearsofwar2/pages/47.html
COG RECON REPORT COG軍偵察報告 Found Desperate Stand 絶望的な防衛作戦 Recon tell us that a sinkhole has opened up in Jacinto. Never happened before. Great. We're sending troops ASAP to guard the perimeter of the hole, but we have no ideea what size/type of force expect. 偵察機からハシントに陥没エリアが出現したとの報告が入った。 遂に来たか。早急に部隊を派遣して周辺エリアの警備に当たらせなくてはならんが、 いったいどんな敵勢力を想定すればいいのか。 World's already gone to hell, guess this is the handbasket part. 我々の世界が加速度的に足元から崩れていこうとしているようだ。 Col. Victor Hoffman ビクター・ホフマン大佐 COG TAG CSID 911706-DZUHO-JN Found Aftermath-Desperate Stand We're staying behind to help with the evac. I've been loading families onto Ravens all morning. The kids are scared as hell, but they won't want to be here in a few hours. Word is that Locust are starting to pile up through that sinkhole, and once they come full force, there ain't gonna be no more Jacinto. 我々は居残って避難の誘導に当たっている。 家族連れをレイヴンに乗せるのに午前中一杯かかってしまった。 子供達は怖がっているが、あと数時間もすれば、此処にだって居たくはなくなるだろう。 そろそろローカストが陥没エリアから大挙して押し寄せてくるらしい。 それが本当なら、ハシントもいよいよ最後だろう。 I just hope they save some Ravens for all us Gears too. ここに残っている我々兵士の為にも、レイヴンを何機か残しておいてくれるといいんだが。 Sgt. Devon Jackson デヴォン・ジャクソン軍曹 JACINTO SENTINEL NEWSPAPER ハシント センチネル新聞 Found Aftermath-Free Parking ・Hollow Storm! 地底の嵐! COG forces struck at the heart of the enemy yesterday, delivering a devastating attack that has the Locust reeling. An enormous fleet of Assault Derricks, Grindlifts, Centaurs, and King Ravens attacked the Locust-occupied city of Landown, and thoousands of Gears are now beneath the surface of Sera, wreaking havoc in the Locust Hollow. COG軍は昨日ローカスト軍の心臓部を急襲、 敵を壊滅状態に追い込む徹底的な攻撃を加えた。 多数のアサルトデリック、グラインドリフト、ケンタウロスおよびキングレイヴンからなる 大部隊は、ローカストに制圧されたランダウン市内に進攻した。 今や惑星セラの地底には何千人ものCOG兵士が降下し、 ローカストの本拠地で戦闘を続けている。 ・Chairman Prescott Danies Ruomors of Another Safe Haven プレスコット議長、新避難所の噂を否定 Rumors of another human safe haven continue to circulate around Jacinto, but Chairman Prescott denied them, saying,"I wish that were the case, believe me. There's nothing we need more. But unfortunately, Jacinto is our last, best hope. We must protect this city at all costs." 新しい避難所が設置されたとの報告がハシントで広まっているが、 プレスコット議長は噂を否定するコメントを発表した。「正直な所、私も噂を信じたい。 誰もが望む物であるのだから。しかし残念ながら、我々にとってハシントこそが最大の希望だ。 どの様な犠牲を払おうとも、この街を守らねばならない」 COG TAG CSID 444526-MI2K9-3B Found Aftermath-Tenuous Footing I saw the sky again today. Blue and bright, I watched the Raven take off into it. Could barely see the details, my vision's all blurry now from coughing so much and the punches from that Locust jailer, but I can see enough. 今日、再び空を見ることが出来た。青くて明るい空に、レイヴンが飛び立っていくのをこの目で確かに見た。 酷い咳だし、ローカストの看守に殴られまくったせいで目が霞み、はっきりとは見えなかったが、 それでも満足だ。 Never thought I'd see it again, but I escaped. I made it... I Survived the Hollow. もう二度と空など見られないと思ってたが、逃げだせたんだ。やった…地底から生きて帰ったんだ。 And I got that little girl and her family on that Raven. Took these bullets, but I saved that family... no medics around now, but that's okay. それに、女の子とその家族をレイヴンに乗せる事が出来た。 弾は喰らったが、あの一家を救ったのは俺だ。メディックは来ないが、まあいいい。 The sky is so bright, and I finally feel all right, kinda warm... and I keep hearing that little angel telling e thank you, her sweet little voice... She said she'd pray for me... she said she'd pray for us all... 空は眩しくて、いい気分で、暖かくて…耳の奥に、まだあの子の声が聞こえる。 天使みたいな声で俺に有難うって、あの可愛らしい声で… 俺のためにお祈りしますって…皆さんの為にお祈りしますって… Sgt. Jonathan Harper ジョナサン・ハーパー軍曹 STRANDED'S JOURNAL ある難民の日記 Russel ラッセル Found Aftermah-Teneous Footing Finally, we reached Jacinto. やっとハシントに着いた。 All that time it took getting here from Montevado, all the risk, but we finally made it. We're finally gere, can finally sleeo at night without worrying about Locust or Kryll attacking in the night. Natalie is so happy, makes me smile like I haven't in a long time. モンテヴァドからここまで、危機の絶えない辛い道のりだったが、遂に辿り着いたんだ。 もうローカストやクリルの夜襲を心配せずに眠れる。 ナタリーが喜んでいるのを見ると、俺も久しぶりに笑う気になれる。 I'll be signing up for Lifeboat tommorow, they won't be processing my paperwork for a week or so, after this Landown assault. But after that, I'll be a conscript... and I'm okay with that. 明日、ライフボートプログラムに参加を申し込もう。でも、このランダウン攻撃の後では、 手続きは数週間待たされそうだ。何れにしろ召集される事は確かだ… それはそれで構わない。 I'm just happy we made it to Jacinto... and my family is finally safe. Guess there really is someone up there looking for us. 何より、家族全員がハシントまで辿り着けたのだから、俺は幸せだ。 やはり、神は本当に居らっしゃるのかもしれない。 Russel ラッセル
https://w.atwiki.jp/hmiku/pages/56433.html
【検索用 WhiteButterflr 登録タグ 2021年 VOCALOID W nkfactory カトリ 初音ミク 曲 曲英 殿堂入り 灯油/動画師 結木みお】 + 目次 目次 曲紹介 歌詞 コメント 作詞:結木みお(Twitter) 作曲:nkfactory 絵:カトリ(Twitter) 映像:灯油 唄:初音ミク 曲紹介 曲名:『White Butterfly』(ホワイト バタフライ) 歌詞 (動画説明欄より転載) どんな夢を 温かな未来を見た 光が差し込む 暗く冷えた 世界を明るく照らす そんな希望の光 大好きな音色 穏やかな 春の香り 思い出のオルゴール あの頃の 君と出会った 白い扉を開いた その先には 僕たちの未来 君と僕の 心に熱がこもった もう独りじゃないよ 大好きな音色 辛くても 悲しくても 君と過ごした日々 覚えている この先ずっと 一緒にいたいと 小さな祈りが 二人を照らした 新しい道を どんな夢を 幸せな未来を見た 光が差し込む 暗く冷えた 世界を明るく照らす そんな希望の光 一緒にいたいと 小さな祈りが 二人を照らした 新しい道を 色とりどりの 花に囲まれて 二人で紡いで 新しい時間(とき)を コメント 名前 コメント コメントを書き込む際の注意 コメント欄は匿名で使用できる性質上、荒れやすいので、 以下の条件に該当するようなコメントは削除されることがあります。 コメントする際は、絶対に目を通してください。 暴力的、または卑猥な表現・差別用語(Wiki利用者に著しく不快感を与えるような表現) 特定の個人・団体の宣伝または批判 (曲紹介ページにおいて)歌詞の独自解釈を展開するコメント、いわゆる“解釈コメ” 長すぎるコメント 『歌ってみた』系動画や、歌い手に関する話題 「カラオケで歌えた」「学校で流れた」などの曲に直接関係しない、本来日記に書くようなコメント カラオケ化、カラオケ配信等の話題 同一人物によると判断される連続・大量コメント Wikiの保守管理は有志によって行われています。 Wikiを気持ちよく利用するためにも、上記の注意事項は守って頂くようにお願いします。
https://w.atwiki.jp/hmiku/pages/46728.html
【登録タグ Jen Den L VOCALOID 曲 鏡音レン】 作詞:Jen Den 作曲:Jen Den 編曲:Jen Den 唄:鏡音レン 曲紹介 "I loved you" 歌詞 Can you listen to what I'm saying? Even though I don't really wanna say it This is something I've needed to say Cause the feeling never did quite go away You'd been with me for such a long time Then I go and just had to ruin it all I hope one day you can forgive me But I know that it's easier said than done Sometimes we say things that we do not mean Including me I'm living in a fantasy And it's not always the way we want it to Turn out at all, but you've just gotta let it be la la la la la la la la la I can't seem to get you out of my mind/any more x 2 A piece of me feels like it's missing Every time I think about you and me I really want you to be happy But inisde it's killing me What can I do? Sometimes I think about the times we had Innocently my thoughts will drift there absently And although it's painful to remember you I'm grateful for the memories that we both share la la la la la la la la la I don't want to get you out of my mind/any more x 2 Sometimes we say things that we do not mean Including me I'm living in a fantasy And it's not always the way we want it to Turn out at all, but you've just gotta let it be la la la la la la la la la I can't seem to get you out of my mind/any more x 2 Boku wa anata o aishiteita コメント 名前 コメント
https://w.atwiki.jp/mtgflavortext/pages/2137.html
マルドゥの者たちは全員戦争を好むが、それから遊戯を発案するのはゴブリンたちだけである。 The Mardu all enjoy war, but only the goblins make a game of it. 運命再編 【M TG Wiki】 名前
https://w.atwiki.jp/hmiku/pages/57316.html
【検索用 LifeIsAPuzzle 登録タグ 2020年 Haltak at satellites L VOCALOID ニコニコ外公開曲 初音ミク 初音ミク ロジックペイントS 曲 曲英】 + 目次 目次 曲紹介 歌詞 コメント pirpro 作詞:Haltak at satellites (piapro) 作曲:Haltak at satellites 編曲:Haltak at satellites 唄:初音ミク(V4X&English) 曲紹介 曲名:『Life Is A Puzzle』(ライフ イズ ア パズル) Nintendo Switch『初音ミク ロジックペイントS』に収録。 歌詞 (piaproより転載) 考える 塗りつぶす 塗りつぶす 塗りつぶす 間違える やり直す 塗りつぶす 塗りつぶす 考える 考える 塗りつぶす 塗りつぶす 間違える またやり直す そうだ時には直感も信じて Life is a puzzle Life is a puzzle Sometimes confusing as can be but we'll work it out Life is a puzzle Life is a puzzle Sometimes confusing as can be but we'll work it out 考える 塗りつぶす 塗りつぶす 塗りつぶす 間違える やり直す 塗りつぶさない 塗りつぶす 考える 考える 塗りつぶす 塗りつぶす あ 間違える またやり直す 難しいけどそれが楽しいの Life is a puzzle Life is a puzzle Sometimes confusing as can be but we'll work it out Life is a puzzle Life is a puzzle Sometimes confusing as can be but we'll work it out コメント 名前 コメント コメントを書き込む際の注意 コメント欄は匿名で使用できる性質上、荒れやすいので、 以下の条件に該当するようなコメントは削除されることがあります。 コメントする際は、絶対に目を通してください。 暴力的、または卑猥な表現・差別用語(Wiki利用者に著しく不快感を与えるような表現) 特定の個人・団体の宣伝または批判 (曲紹介ページにおいて)歌詞の独自解釈を展開するコメント、いわゆる“解釈コメ” 長すぎるコメント 『歌ってみた』系動画や、歌い手に関する話題 「カラオケで歌えた」「学校で流れた」などの曲に直接関係しない、本来日記に書くようなコメント カラオケ化、カラオケ配信等の話題 同一人物によると判断される連続・大量コメント Wikiの保守管理は有志によって行われています。 Wikiを気持ちよく利用するためにも、上記の注意事項は守って頂くようにお願いします。
https://w.atwiki.jp/qesspd_ju/pages/159.html
【反対立論原稿】作成者:足立 Hallo ladies and gentlemen. Now under the status quo many people have negative image of nuclear plants and many people say we must abolish this plant. However, this action is emotional matter because they say it without considering the nuclear power plant and Japanese energy condition. If they have considered these, they would not think we must abolish nuclear power plant. So I want to explain the reasons why we need the nuclear power. Before explaining the reasons, I would like to explain the nuclear power plant and situation of Japanese energy. What is the nuclear power? Some people mistaken nuclear power is the sinful thing. But nuclear power is only a technology. And it has three big advantages. First advantage is it can supply energy stably. (中略) Second advantage is it can supply big energy. (中略) Third advantage is it can produce electricity without emitting carbon dioxide.(中略)Even if nuclear power has a small risk it gives us very big benefits. Next, I’d like to explain about Japanese power conditions and the reasons why nuclear power plant is suitable for Japan energy condition. Japan energy condition has three big problems. First one is a rate of energy self-sufficiency. (中略) But we can impose uranium from countries which has political stability. And we can use uranium long time. (中略) Second one is from the geographical point. (中略) But power supply of nuclear power plant is insusceptible to these conditions. Third one is the problem of carbon dioxide. (中略) But nuclear power plants supply with only few CO2. For these reasons, we should not take the foolish plan.
https://w.atwiki.jp/pyopyo0124/pages/32.html
CHAPTER XVII UP CHAPTER XIX CHAPTER XVIII Anne to the Rescue ALL things great are wound up with all things little. At first glance it might not seem that the decision of a certain Canadian Premier to include Prince Edward Island in a political tour could have much or anything to do with the fortunes of little Anne Shirley at Green Gables. But it had. It was a January the Premier came, to address his loyal supporters and such of his nonsupporters as chose to be present at the monster mass meeting held in Charlottetown. Most of the Avonlea people were on Premier s side of politics; hence on the night of the meeting nearly all the men and a goodly proportion of the women had gone to town thirty miles away. Mrs. Rachel Lynde had gone too. Mrs. Rachel Lynde was a red-hot politician and couldn t have believed that the political rally could be carried through without her, although she was on the opposite side of politics. So she went to town and took her husband--Thomas would be useful in looking after the horse--and Marilla Cuthbert with her. Marilla had a sneaking interest in politics herself, and as she thought it might be her only chance to see a real live Premier, she promptly took it, leaving Anne and Matthew to keep house until her return the following day. Hence, while Marilla and Mrs. Rachel were enjoying themselves hugely at the mass meeting, Anne and Matthew had the cheerful kitchen at Green Gables all to themselves. A bright fire was glowing in the old-fashioned Waterloo stove and blue-white frost crystals were shining on the windowpanes. Matthew nodded over a FARMERS ADVOCATE on the sofa and Anne at the table studied her lessons with grim determination, despite sundry wistful glances at the clock shelf, where lay a new book that Jane Andrews had lent her that day. Jane had assured her that it was warranted to produce any number of thrills, or words to that effect, and Anne s fingers tingled to reach out for it. But that would mean Gilbert Blythe s triumph on the morrow. Anne turned her back on the clock shelf and tried to imagine it wasn t there. "Matthew, did you ever study geometry when you went to school?" "Well now, no, I didn t," said Matthew, coming out of his doze with a start. "I wish you had," sighed Anne, "because then you d be able to sympathize with me. You can t sympathize properly if you ve never studied it. It is casting a cloud over my whole life. I m such a dunce at it, Matthew." "Well now, I dunno," said Matthew soothingly. "I guess you re all right at anything. Mr. Phillips told me last week in Blair s store at Carmody that you was the smartest scholar in school and was making rapid progress. `Rapid progress was his very words. There s them as runs down Teddy Phillips and says he ain t much of a teacher, but I guess he s all right." Matthew would have thought anyone who praised Anne was "all right." "I m sure I d get on better with geometry if only he wouldn t change the letters," complained Anne. "I learn the proposition off by heart and then he draws it on the blackboard and puts different letters from what are in the book and I get all mixed up. I don t think a teacher should take such a mean advantage, do you? We re studying agriculture now and I ve found out at last what makes the roads red. It s a great comfort. I wonder how Marilla and Mrs. Lynde are enjoying themselves. Mrs. Lynde says Canada is going to the dogs the way things are being run at Ottawa and that it s an awful warning to the electors. She says if women were allowed to vote we would soon see a blessed change. What way do you vote, Matthew?" "Conservative," said Matthew promptly. To vote Conservative was part of Matthew s religion. "Then I m Conservative too," said Anne decidedly. "I m glad because Gil--because some of the boys in school are Grits. I guess Mr. Phillips is a Grit too because Prissy Andrews s father is one, and Ruby Gillis says that when a man is courting he always has to agree with the girl s mother in religion and her father in politics. Is that true, Matthew?" "Well now, I dunno," said Matthew. "Did you ever go courting, Matthew?" "Well now, no, I dunno s I ever did," said Matthew, who had certainly never thought of such a thing in his whole existence. Anne reflected with her chin in her hands. "It must be rather interesting, don t you think, Matthew? Ruby Gillis says when she grows up she s going to have ever so many beaus on the string and have them all crazy about her; but I think that would be too exciting. I d rather have just one in his right mind. But Ruby Gillis knows a great deal about such matters because she has so many big sisters, and Mrs. Lynde says the Gillis girls have gone off like hot cakes. Mr. Phillips goes up to see Prissy Andrews nearly every evening. He says it is to help her with her lessons but Miranda Sloane is studying for Queen s too, and I should think she needed help a lot more than Prissy because she s ever so much stupider, but he never goes to help her in the evenings at all. There are a great many things in this world that I can t understand very well, Matthew." "Well now, I dunno as I comprehend them all myself," acknowledged Matthew. "Well, I suppose I must finish up my lessons. I won t allow myself to open that new book Jane lent me until I m through. But it s a terrible temptation, Matthew. Even when I turn my back on it I can see it there just as plain. Jane said she cried herself sick over it. I love a book that makes me cry. But I think I ll carry that book into the sitting room and lock it in the jam closet and give you the key. And you must NOT give it to me, Matthew, until my lessons are done, not even if I implore you on my bended knees. It s all very well to say resist temptation, but it s ever so much easier to resist it if you can t get the key. And then shall I run down the cellar and get some russets, Matthew? Wouldn t you like some russets?" "Well now, I dunno but what I would," said Matthew, who never ate russets but knew Anne s weakness for them. Just as Anne emerged triumphantly from the cellar with her plateful of russets came the sound of flying footsteps on the icy board walk outside and the next moment the kitchen door was flung open and in rushed Diana Barry, white faced and breathless, with a shawl wrapped hastily around her head. Anne promptly let go of her candle and plate in her surprise, and plate, candle, and apples crashed together down the cellar ladder and were found at the bottom embedded in melted grease, the next day, by Marilla, who gathered them up and thanked mercy the house hadn t been set on fire. "Whatever is the matter, Diana?" cried Anne. "Has your mother relented at last?" "Oh, Anne, do come quick," implored Diana nervously. "Minnie May is awful sick--she s got croup. Young Mary Joe says--and Father and Mother are away to town and there s nobody to go for the doctor. Minnie May is awful bad and Young Mary Joe doesn t know what to do--and oh, Anne, I m so scared!" Matthew, without a word, reached out for cap and coat, slipped past Diana and away into the darkness of the yard. "He s gone to harness the sorrel mare to go to Carmody for the doctor," said Anne, who was hurrying on hood and jacket. "I know it as well as if he d said so. Matthew and I are such kindred spirits I can read his thoughts without words at all." "I don t believe he ll find the doctor at Carmody," sobbed Diana. "I know that Dr. Blair went to town and I guess Dr. Spencer would go too. Young Mary Joe never saw anybody with croup and Mrs. Lynde is away. Oh, Anne!" "Don t cry, Di," said Anne cheerily. "I know exactly what to do for croup. You forget that Mrs. Hammond had twins three times. When you look after three pairs of twins you naturally get a lot of experience. They all had croup regularly. Just wait till I get the ipecac bottle--you mayn t have any at your house. Come on now." The two little girls hastened out hand in hand and hurried through Lover s Lane and across the crusted field beyond, for the snow was too deep to go by the shorter wood way. Anne, although sincerely sorry for Minnie May, was far from being insensible to the romance of the situation and to the sweetness of once more sharing that romance with a kindred spirit. The night was clear and frosty, all ebony of shadow and silver of snowy slope; big stars were shining over the silent fields; here and there the dark pointed firs stood up with snow powdering their branches and the wind whistling through them. Anne thought it was truly delightful to go skimming through all this mystery and loveliness with your bosom friend who had been so long estranged. Minnie May, aged three, was really very sick. She lay on the kitchen sofa feverish and restless, while her hoarse breathing could be heard all over the house. Young Mary Joe, a buxom, broad-faced French girl from the creek, whom Mrs. Barry had engaged to stay with the children during her absence, was helpless and bewildered, quite incapable of thinking what to do, or doing it if she thought of it. Anne went to work with skill and promptness. "Minnie May has croup all right; she s pretty bad, but I ve seen them worse. First we must have lots of hot water. I declare, Diana, there isn t more than a cupful in the kettle! There, I ve filled it up, and, Mary Joe, you may put some wood in the stove. I don t want to hurt your feelings but it seems to me you might have thought of this before if you d any imagination. Now, I ll undress Minnie May and put her to bed and you try to find some soft flannel cloths, Diana. I m going to give her a dose of ipecac first of all." Minnie May did not take kindly to the ipecac but Anne had not brought up three pairs of twins for nothing. Down that ipecac went, not only once, but many times during the long, anxious night when the two little girls worked patiently over the suffering Minnie May, and Young Mary Joe, honestly anxious to do all she could, kept up a roaring fire and heated more water than would have been needed for a hospital of croupy babies. It was three o clock when Matthew came with a doctor, for he had been obliged to go all the way to Spencervale for one. But the pressing need for assistance was past. Minnie May was much better and was sleeping soundly. "I was awfully near giving up in despair," explained Anne. "She got worse and worse until she was sicker than ever the Hammond twins were, even the last pair. I actually thought she was going to choke to death. I gave her every drop of ipecac in that bottle and when the last dose went down I said to myself--not to Diana or Young Mary Joe, because I didn t want to worry them any more than they were worried, but I had to say it to myself just to relieve my feelings--`This is the last lingering hope and I fear, tis a vain one. But in about three minutes she coughed up the phlegm and began to get better right away. You must just imagine my relief, doctor, because I can t express it in words. You know there are some things that cannot be expressed in words." "Yes, I know," nodded the doctor. He looked at Anne as if he were thinking some things about her that couldn t be expressed in words. Later on, however, he expressed them to Mr. and Mrs. Barry. "That little redheaded girl they have over at Cuthbert s is as smart as they make em. I tell you she saved that baby s life, for it would have been too late by the time I got there. She seems to have a skill and presence of mind perfectly wonderful in a child of her age. I never saw anything like the eyes of her when she was explaining the case to me." Anne had gone home in the wonderful, white-frosted winter morning, heavy eyed from loss of sleep, but still talking unweariedly to Matthew as they crossed the long white field and walked under the glittering fairy arch of the Lover s Lane maples. "Oh, Matthew, isn t it a wonderful morning? The world looks like something God had just imagined for His own pleasure, doesn t it? Those trees look as if I could blow them away with a breath--pouf! I m so glad I live in a world where there are white frosts, aren t you? And I m so glad Mrs. Hammond had three pairs of twins after all. If she hadn t I mightn t have known what to do for Minnie May. I m real sorry I was ever cross with Mrs. Hammond for having twins. But, oh, Matthew, I m so sleepy. I can t go to school. I just know I couldn t keep my eyes open and I d be so stupid. But I hate to stay home, for Gil--some of the others will get head of the class, and it s so hard to get up again--although of course the harder it is the more satisfaction you have when you do get up, haven t you?" "Well now, I guess you ll manage all right," said Matthew, looking at Anne s white little face and the dark shadows under her eyes. "You just go right to bed and have a good sleep. I ll do all the chores." Anne accordingly went to bed and slept so long and soundly that it was well on in the white and rosy winter afternoon when she awoke and descended to the kitchen where Marilla, who had arrived home in the meantime, was sitting knitting. "Oh, did you see the Premier?" exclaimed Anne at once. "What did he look like Marilla?" "Well, he never got to be Premier on account of his looks," said Marilla. "Such a nose as that man had! But he can speak. I was proud of being a Conservative. Rachel Lynde, of course, being a Liberal, had no use for him. Your dinner is in the oven, Anne, and you can get yourself some blue plum preserve out of the pantry. I guess you re hungry. Matthew has been telling me about last night. I must say it was fortunate you knew what to do. I wouldn t have had any idea myself, for I never saw a case of croup. There now, never mind talking till you ve had your dinner. I can tell by the look of you that you re just full up with speeches, but they ll keep." Marilla had something to tell Anne, but she did not tell it just then for she knew if she did Anne s consequent excitement would lift her clear out of the region of such material matters as appetite or dinner. Not until Anne had finished her saucer of blue plums did Marilla say "Mrs. Barry was here this afternoon, Anne. She wanted to see you, but I wouldn t wake you up. She says you saved Minnie May s life, and she is very sorry she acted as she did in that affair of the currant wine. She says she knows now you didn t mean to set Diana drunk, and she hopes you ll forgive her and be good friends with Diana again. You re to go over this evening if you like for Diana can t stir outside the door on account of a bad cold she caught last night. Now, Anne Shirley, for pity s sake don t fly up into the air." The warning seemed not unnecessary, so uplifted and aerial was Anne s expression and attitude as she sprang to her feet, her face irradiated with the flame of her spirit. "Oh, Marilla, can I go right now--without washing my dishes? I ll wash them when I come back, but I cannot tie myself down to anything so unromantic as dishwashing at this thrilling moment." "Yes, yes, run along," said Marilla indulgently. "Anne Shirley--are you crazy? Come back this instant and put something on you. I might as well call to the wind. She s gone without a cap or wrap. Look at her tearing through the orchard with her hair streaming. It ll be a mercy if she doesn t catch her death of cold." Anne came dancing home in the purple winter twilight across the snowy places. Afar in the southwest was the great shimmering, pearl-like sparkle of an evening star in a sky that was pale golden and ethereal rose over gleaming white spaces and dark glens of spruce. The tinkles of sleigh bells among the snowy hills came like elfin chimes through the frosty air, but their music was not sweeter than the song in Anne s heart and on her lips. "You see before you a perfectly happy person, Marilla," she announced. "I m perfectly happy--yes, in spite of my red hair. Just at present I have a soul above red hair. Mrs. Barry kissed me and cried and said she was so sorry and she could never repay me. I felt fearfully embarrassed, Marilla, but I just said as politely as I could, `I have no hard feelings for you, Mrs. Barry. I assure you once for all that I did not mean to intoxicate Diana and henceforth I shall cover the past with the mantle of oblivion. That was a pretty dignified way of speaking wasn t it, Marilla?" "I felt that I was heaping coals of fire on Mrs. Barry s head. And Diana and I had a lovely afternoon. Diana showed me a new fancy crochet stitch her aunt over at Carmody taught her. Not a soul in Avonlea knows it but us, and we pledged a solemn vow never to reveal it to anyone else. Diana gave me a beautiful card with a wreath of roses on it and a verse of poetry "If you love me as I love you Nothing but death can part us two. And that is true, Marilla. We re going to ask Mr. Phillips to let us sit together in school again, and Gertie Pye can go with Minnie Andrews. We had an elegant tea. Mrs. Barry had the very best china set out, Marilla, just as if I was real company. I can t tell you what a thrill it gave me. Nobody ever used their very best china on my account before. And we had fruit cake and pound cake and doughnuts and two kinds of preserves, Marilla. And Mrs. Barry asked me if I took tea and said `Pa, why don t you pass the biscuits to Anne? It must be lovely to be grown up, Marilla, when just being treated as if you were is so nice." "I don t know about that," said Marilla, with a brief sigh. "Well, anyway, when I am grown up," said Anne decidedly, "I m always going to talk to little girls as if they were too, and I ll never laugh when they use big words. I know from sorrowful experience how that hurts one s feelings. After tea Diana and I made taffy. The taffy wasn t very good, I suppose because neither Diana nor I had ever made any before. Diana left me to stir it while she buttered the plates and I forgot and let it burn; and then when we set it out on the platform to cool the cat walked over one plate and that had to be thrown away. But the making of it was splendid fun. Then when I came home Mrs. Barry asked me to come over as often as I could and Diana stood at the window and threw kisses to me all the way down to Lover s Lane. I assure you, Marilla, that I feel like praying tonight and I m going to think out a special brand-new prayer in honor of the occasion." CHAPTER XVII UP CHAPTER XIX 今日 - | 昨日 - | Total - since 05 June 2007 last update 2007-06-05 01 23 23 (Tue)
https://w.atwiki.jp/toynavi/pages/623.html
Alex Taylori -- Alex Taylori 2007-08-17 23 32 01 Not much on my mind lately, but I don t care. Eh. I ve just been letting everything pass me by these days. Nothing seems worth doing. I just don t have anything to say recently. My mind is like a void, but shrug. 名前 コメント
https://w.atwiki.jp/eumenes/pages/11.html
プルタルコス 対比列伝 Plutarch, The Parallel Lives エウメネスの生涯 p79 The Life of Eumenes カルディアのエウメネスは、デュリスによると、トラキアの半島ケルソネソスにおいて貧しさから荷馬車の御者をしていた男の息子だと言われているが、文学と運動競技では一般的な教育を受けていた。さらにデュリスによれば、まだエウメネスが少年の頃にその地に逗留して余暇を過ごしていたフィリッポスが、パンクラティオンやレスリングの訓練をしているカルディアの青年や少年達を見に行き、彼らの中でエウメネスは素晴らしい活躍を見せ、極めて優れた知性や勇敢さを持っていることを証明したので、フィリッポスは気に入り従者とした。しかし私の意見としては他の歴史家達が唱えている、エウメネスの父親とフィリッポスの賓客としての関わりによってエウメネスが優遇された、という説がより確かなように思われる。フィリッポス2世の死後、エウメネスは聡明さや忠誠心においてアレクサンドロス大王の部下達と比べても全く劣ることなく、また筆頭書記官の地位しかなかったが、王の一番の親密な友としてより一層の敬意を持って扱われたので、インド遠征の際にも軍隊の指揮官として実際に送り出され、またヘファイスティオンの死後に軍の指揮官の後任となったペルディッカスが所持していた騎兵隊の指揮を任された。そのようなことから、盾持ち隊の隊長ネオプレモスはアレクサンドロスの死の際に自分は盾と槍を持って王に従ったが、エウメネスが持っていたのはペンと紙だけだ、と言ったときにはマケドニア人達はネオプレモスを軽蔑し笑い者にした。マケドニア人達はエウメネスが他の数々の名誉に加えて、血族関係に値する人物であると王に見なされていたことを知っていた。アルタバズスの娘のバルシネについては、アレクサンドロスのアジアでの最初の愛人であり、その息子ヘラクレスを生んだが、姉妹が2人いた。一人はアレクサンドロスがプトレマイオスに与えたアパマ、もう一人はエウメネスに与えられ、同じくバルシネという名であった。これはアレクサンドロスが他のペルシア人女性の捕虜を仲間に配偶者として分け与えた時のことであった。 583 1 Eumenes of Cardia, according to Duris, was the son of a man whom poverty drove to be a waggoner, in the Thracian Chersonesus, but received a liberal education in literature and athletics. While he was still a boy, Duris says further, Philip, who was sojourning in the place and had an hour of leisure, came to see the young men and boys of Cardia exercising in the pancratium1 and in wrestling, among whom Eumenes had such success and gave such proofs of intelligence and bravery that he pleased Philip and was taken into his following. 2 But in my opinion those historians tell a more probable story who say that a tie of guest-friendship with his father led Philip to give advancement to Eumenes. After Philip s death Eumenes was thought to be inferior to none of Alexander s followers in sagacity and fidelity, and though he had only the title of chief secretary, he was held in as much honour as the king s principal friends and intimates, so that on the Indian expedition he was actually sent out as general with a force under his own orders,2 and received the command in the cavalry which Perdiccas had held, when Perdiccas, after Hephaestion s death, was advanced to that officer s position. 3 Therefore when Neoptolemus, the commander of the Shield-bearers, after Alexander s p81death, said that he had followed the king with shield and spear, but Eumenes with pen and paper, the Macedonians laughed him to scorn; they knew that, besides his other honours, Eumenes had been deemed worthy by the king of relationship in marriage. For Barsiné the daughter of Artabazus, the first woman whom Alexander knew in Asia, and by whom he had a son, Heracles, had two sisters; of these Alexander gave one, Apama, to Ptolemy, and the other, also called Barsiné,3 to Eumenes. This was at the time when he distributed the other Persian women as consorts among his companions.4 しかし、エウメネスはしばしばアレクサンドロスと衝突し、ヘファイスティオンを介して自身を危険に陥れていた。まず、一例として、ヘファイスティオンがエウメネスの部下が取り立てられていた営舎付きの地位に笛吹きEuiusをに任命した際には、エウメネスはメントルを伴って怒りながらアレクサンドロスを訪れ、自分は武器を捨て笛吹きか悲劇役者になるほかないと叫んだ。直ちに結果としてアレクサンドロスは彼の不名誉を認めヘファイスティオンへの非難を口にした。しかし、すぐに彼は心変わりしエウメネスに怒りを抱き、エウメネスはヘファイスティオンを直接非難するよりアレクサンドロス自身を侮辱したかったのだと感じた。 2 However, Eumenes was often in collision with Alexander, and he got himself into danger through Hephaestion. In the first place, for instance, when Hephaestion assigned to Euius the flute-player the quarters which his servants had already taken up for Eumenes, Eumenes, accompanied by Mentor, came in a passion to Alexander and cried out that it was best for him to throw away his arms and be a flute-player or a tragic actor. The immediate result was that Alexander shared his indignation and heaped abuse upon Hephaestion. Soon, however, he changed his mind and was angry with Eumenes, feeling that he had indulged in insolence towards himself more than in bold words against Hephaestion. さらに、外洋を探索するためにネアルコスを提督とした艦隊を派遣していたときのことだが、王家の資金が底を付いたのでアレクサンドロスは資金の提供を味方の者達に求めたことがあった。エウメネスは300タラントンを要求されたが、100タラントンしか贈らず、この額でさえ自分の管財人によって苦労して時間をかけて集められたのだ、と言った。アレクサンドロスは全く非難をせず、また金を受け取ることもしなかったが、密かに家来に命じてエウメネスの天幕に火を放たせた。隠し持った財宝がその中から運び出された時には、その見え透いた嘘を理由にエウメネスを捕られば良いと思っていたのだ。しかし、そうなる前に天幕は燃え尽き、同時にエウメネスが所有していた文献も失われたので、アレクサンドロスは自分の仕打ちを後悔したのだった。それにもかかわらず、炎で溶かされた金銀は1000タラントン以上の価値があることが分かった。しかしながらアレクサンドロスはそれらを何も奪うことはなく、それどころか支配下の地方総督や将軍すべてに向けて失われた文献の写しを送るように手紙を書き、エウメネスにそれら全てを管理するよう命じた。 2 Again, when Alexander was sending out Nearchus with a fleet to explore the outer sea, he asked money of his friends, since the royal treasury was empty. Eumenes was asked for three hundred talents, but gave only a hundred, and said that even these had been slowly and with difficulty collected for him by p83his stewards. Alexander made no reproaches, nor did he take the money, but ordered his servants secretly to set fire to the tent of Eumenes, wishing to take its owner in a manifest lie when the treasure was carried out of it. 3 But before that could be done the tent was consumed, and the destruction of his papers made Alexander repent him of his orders. Still, the gold and silver that was melted down by the fire was found to be more than a thousand talents worth. Alexander took none of it, however, but actually wrote to his satraps and generals everywhere to send copies of the documents that had been destroyed, and ordered Eumenes to take them all in charge. またさらに、エウメネスはある贈り物をめぐってヘファイスティオンと言い争い、多くの口ぎたない言葉が2人の間を飛び交った。その時点ではエウメネスは以前と変わらずアレクサンドロスから目をかけられていたのだが、しばらく経って、ヘファイスティオンが亡くなると王は激しい悲嘆に陥り、その好意的な態度は消え、また生前のヘファイスティオンの寵愛を羨みその死に歓喜したと王がみなす者達すべてに厳しく当たった。特にエウメネスにはその疑いが向けられ、生前にヘファイスティオンとの口論で彼を口汚く罵ったことを王は度々非難した。だが、したたかで言葉巧みなエウメネスは、その身を危うくする危機から逃れようと努めた。すなわち、アレクサンドロスのヘファイスティオンへの感謝の思いをエウメネスは利用して、生前のヘファイスティオンの行いを称えるに最も相応しい栄誉を贈ることを提案したり、また墓の建立のための資金を快くふんだんに提供したりした。 4 And still again, Eumenes had a quarrel with Hephaestion about a certain gift, and much abusive language passed between them. At the time, indeed, Eumenes was no less in favour than before; but a little while afterwards Hephaestion died, and the king, in his bitter sorrow, dealt harshly and was severe with all who, as he thought, had been jealous of his favourite while he lived and now rejoiced at his death. Eumenes, in particular, he suspected of such feelings, and often reproached him for his former quarrels with Hephaestion and his abusive language towards him. 5 But Eumenes, who was wily and persuasive, tried to make what threatened his ruin conduce to his salvation. He sought refuge, namely, in Alexander s ardent gratitude towards Hephaestion, suggesting honours which were most likely to adorn the memory of the deceased, and contributing money for the construction of his tomb lavishly and readily. アレクサンドロスが亡くなり、マケドニア兵と最高行政官や王の側近達の間に諍いが起こったときに、エウメネスはその個人的な評価からは後者に味方をしたが、実際には自分は双方の共通の友人であると言い、自分は異邦人であるからマケドニア人達の論争には関わらない、という理由で、争いからは遠ざかっていた。そればかりか、他の行政官達がバビロンから撤退した時にも、エウメネスは都市に残り、マケドニア兵たちの多くをなだめ、争いを和解に持ち込ませようとした。そして行政官達がお互いに協議をし、最初の騒々しい議事を終えて、管轄領と指揮権を分配していたとき、エウメネスはカッパドキア、パフラゴニア、トラペズスまでの黒海の南海岸を受領した。当時、これらの領土がマケドニアの支配下でなかったのは事実である。なぜならそれらはアリアラテス家の勢力化にあったからである。しかし、レオンナトスとアンティゴノスは大軍を伴ってエウメネスをそこへ導き、彼がその地の総督であると布告することになっていた。 p85 3 When Alexander was dead5 and a quarrel had arisen between the Macedonian men-at‑war and his principal officers, or companions,6 Eumenes sided with the latter in his opinions, but in what he said he was a kind of common friend to both and held himself aloof from the quarrel, on the ground that it was no business of his, since he was a stranger, to meddle in disputes of Macedonians. Moreover, when the rest of the principal officers had withdrawn from Babylon, he remained behind in the city and mollified many of the men-at‑war and made them more disposed towards a settlement of the quarrel. 2 And when the officers, having conferred with one another, brought their first tumultuous proceedings to an end, and were distributing satrapies and commands, Eumenes received Cappadocia, Paphlagonia, and the southern coast of the Euxine sea as far as Trapezus. It is true that at the time this territory was not subject to the Macedonians, for Ariarathes held royal sway over it; but Leonnatus and Antigonus, with a great army, were to conduct Eumenes thither and declare him satrap of the country. 3 Now, Antigonus paid no heed to the edicts of Perdiccas, being already lifted up in his ambitions and scorning all his associates; but Leonnatus came down from the interior into Phrygia in order to undertake the expedition in behalf of Eumenes. Here, however, Hecataeus the tyrant of Cardia joined him and besought p87him to go rather to the assistance of Antipater and the Macedonians besieged in Lamia.7 Leonnatus therefore determined to cross over to Greece, invited Eumenes to go with him, and tried to reconcile him with Hecataeus. 4 For they had a hereditary distrust of one another arising from political differences; and frequently Eumenes had been known to denounce Hecataeus when a tyrant and to exhort Alexander to restore its freedom to Cardia. Therefore at this time also Eumenes declined to go on the expedition against the Greeks, saying he was afraid that Antipater, who had long hated him, would kill him to please Hecataeus. Then Leonnatus took him into his confidence and revealed to him all his purposes. 5 Assistance to Antipater, namely, was what he alleged as a pretext for his expedition, but he really meant, as soon as he had crossed into Europe, to lay claim to Macedonia; and he showed certain letters from Cleopatra8 in which she invited him to come to Pella and promised to marry him. But Eumenes, either because he was afraid of Antipater, or because he despaired of Leonnatus as a capricious man full of uncertain and rash impulses, took his own equipment and decamped by night.9 And he had three hundred horsemen, two hundred armed camp-followers, and in gold what would amount to five thousand talents of money. 6 With this equipment he fled to Perdiccas, and by telling him of the designs of Leonnatus at once enjoyed great influence with him and was made a member of his council. Moreover, a little while after he was conducted into Cappadocia with an army p89which Perdiccas commanded in person. There Ariarathes was taken prisoner, the country was brought into subjection, and Eumenes was proclaimed satrap. 7 He entrusted the cities of the country to his own friends, appointed commanders of garrisons, left behind him such judges and administrators as he wished, Perdiccas not at all interfering in these matters, and then marched away with Perdiccas, desiring to pay court to that general, and not wishing to be separated from the kings.10 4 However, Perdiccas felt confident of carrying out his projects by himself, and thought that the country they had left behind them needed an efficient and faithful guardian, and therefore sent Eumenes back from Cilicia, ostensibly to his own satrapy, but really to reduce to obedience the adjacent country of Armenia, which had been thrown into confusion by Neoptolemus.11 2 Accordingly, although Neoptolemus was a victim of ostentation and empty pride, Eumenes tried to constrain him by personal intercourse; then, finding that the Macedonian men-at‑war were conceited and bold, he raised a force of cavalry as a counterpoise to them by offering the natives of the country who were able to serve as horsemen immunity from contributions and tributes, 3 and by distributing horses that he had bought among those of his followers in whom he placed most confidence; the spirits of these men, too, he incited by honours and gifts, and developed their bodies by exercise and discipline; so that a part of the Macedonians were amazed, a part emboldened, when they saw that in a short time p91he had assembled about him no fewer than sixty-three hundred horsemen. 5 And when Craterus12 and Antipater, after overpowering the Greeks,13 were crossing into Asia14 to overthrow the power of Perdiccas, and were reported to be planning an invasion of Cappadocia, Perdiccas, who was himself heading an expedition against Ptolemy,15 appointed Eumenes commander of the forces in Armenia and Cappadocia with plenary powers. 2 He also sent letters on the subject, in which he commanded Alcetas16 and Neoptolemus to look to Eumenes for orders, and Eumenes to manage matters as he thought best. Alcetas, then, flatly refused to serve in the campaign, on the ground that the Macedonians under him were ashamed to fight Antipater, and were so well disposed to Craterus that they were ready to receive him with open arms. Neoptolemus, however, plotting treachery against Eumenes, was detected, and when he was summoned would not obey, but drew up his forces in battle array. 3 Here first did Eumenes reap the fruit of his forethought and preparation; for when his infantry had already been defeated, he routed Neoptolemus with his cavalry, and captured his baggage, and when the men-at‑war of Neoptolemus were scattered in pursuit of their enemies, charged upon them with his entire body of horse and compelled them to lay down their arms and make oath with him to serve under him. 4 Neoptolemus, then, collected a few of his men from the rout and fled to Craterus and Antipater. p93But they had already sent an embassy to Eumenes inviting him to come over to their side; he would enjoy possession of his present satrapies, would receive additional troops and territory from them, would become a friend to Antipater instead of an enemy, and would not become an enemy to Craterus instead of a friend. 5 On hearing this proposition Eumenes replied that he had been Antipater s enemy from of old and could not now become his friend, when he saw him treating his friends as enemies, but that he was ready to reconcile Craterus with Perdiccas and bring the two together on just and equal terms; if, however, either undertook to overreach the other he would give aid to the injured party as long as he had breath, and would rather lose his life than his honour. 6 Craterus and Antipater, then, after getting this answer, were taking deliberate counsel about the whole situation, when Neoptolemus came to them after his flight, told them about the battle he had lost, and urged them to come to his aid, both of them if possible, but at any rate Craterus; for the Macedonians longed for him exceedingly, and if they should only see his cap and hear his voice, they would come to him with a rush, arms and all. 2 And indeed the name of Craterus was really great among them, and after the death of Alexander most of them had longed for him as their commander. They remembered that he had many times incurred the strong displeasure of Alexander himself in their behalf, by opposing his gradually increasing desire to adopt Persian customs, and by defending the manners of their country, which, thanks to the spread of luxury and pomp, were already being treated with contempt. 3 At the time of which I speak, then, Craterus sent p95Antipater into Cilicia,17 while he himself with a large part of the forces advanced with Neoptolemus against Eumenes. He thought that he should fall upon him when he was off his guard, and when, after their recent victory, his soldiers were in revelry and disorder. Now, that Eumenes should learn beforehand of his approach and get himself ready for it in advance, one might consider a mark of sober generalship, though not of superlative ability; 4 but that he should keep his enemies from getting any knowledge that would work him harm, and, besides this, that he should hurl his soldiers upon Craterus before they knew with whom they were fighting, and conceal from them the name of the opposing general, seems to me to have been an exploit peculiar to this commander. He gave out word, then, that Neoptolemus was once more coming against him, with Pigres, and that they had a force of Paphlagonian and Cappadocian cavalry. One night he was planning to decamp and then fell asleep and had a strange vision. 5 He dreamed, namely, that he saw two Alexanders ready to give each other battle, each at the head of a phalanx; then Athena came to help the one, and Demeter the other, and after a fierce struggle the one who had Athena for a helper was beaten, and Demeter, culling ears of grain, wove them into a wreath for the victor. 6 At once, then, he conjectured that the vision was in his favour, since he was fighting for a country that was most fertile and had at that time an abundance of fine young grain in the ear; for the land had everywhere been sown and bespoke a time of peace, p97now that its plains were covered with a luxuriant growth; and he was all the more strengthened in his belief when he learned that the enemy s watchword was "Athena and Alexander." Accordingly, he too gave out a watchword, namely, "Demeter and Alexander," and ordered all his men to crown themselves and wreathe their arms with ears of grain. 7 But though he often felt an impulse to speak out and tell his principal officers who it was against whom their struggle was to be, and not to keep hidden away in his own breast alone a secret so important, nevertheless he abode by his first resolution and made his judgment surety for the peril. 7 However, he arrayed against Craterus not a single Macedonian, but two troops of foreign horse commanded by Pharnabazus the son of Artabazus and Phoenix of Tenedos, who had strict orders to charge at full speed when the enemy came into view and engage them at close quarters, without giving them a chance to withdraw or say anything, and without receiving any herald they might send. For he had strong fears that his Macedonians, if they recognized Craterus, would go over to him. 2 He himself, with a division of his best horsemen, three hundred in number, rode along to the right wing, where he purposed to attack Neoptolemus. When the forces of Eumenes had crossed the intervening hill and were seen coming on to the attack with a swift and impetuous dash, Craterus was dumbfounded and heaped much abuse upon Neoptolemus for having deceived him about the Macedonians changing sides; but he exhorted his officers to act like brave men, and he charged upon the enemy. 3 The first collision was severe, the spears were p99quickly shattered, and the fighting was done with the swords. Here Craterus did not disgrace Alexander, but slew many foes, and frequently routed the opposing arrays. At last, however, he was wounded by a Thracian who attacked him from the side, and fell from his horse. 4 As he lay prostrate there all his enemies rode past him, not knowing who he was, except Gorgias, one of the officers of Eumenes; he recognized him, dismounted from his horse, and stood guard over his body, for he was now in an evil plight and struggling with death. In the meantime Neoptolemus also was engaged with Eumenes. They had long hated one another with a deadly hatred, but in two onsets neither had caught sight of the other; in the third, however, they recognized each other, and at once drew their swords and with loud cries rode to the attack. 5 Their horses dashed together with the violence of colliding triremes, and dropping the reins they clutched one another with their hands, each trying to tear off the other s helmet and strip the breastplate from his shoulders. While they were struggling, their horses ran from under them and they fell to the ground, where they closed with one another and wrestled for the mastery. 6 Then Eumenes, as Neoptolemus sought to rise first, gave him an undercut in the ham, and himself got to his feet before his adversary did; but Neoptolemus, supporting himself on one knee, and wounded in the other, defended himself vigorously from underneath. He could not, however, inflict fatal wounds, but was himself wounded in the neck, fell to the ground, and lay there prostrate. 7 His sword, however, he still retained, and while Eumenes, transported with rage and ancient hatred, was stripping off his armour and p101reviling him, Neoptolemus surprised him with a wound under the breastplate, where it reaches the groin. But the blow gave Eumenes more fright than harm, since lack of strength made it feeble. After stripping the dead body, weak as he was from wounds received in legs and arms, Eumenes nevertheless had himself put upon his horse and hastened to the other wing, supposing that the enemy were still resisting. 8 But when he learned of the fate of Craterus and had ridden up to where he lay, and saw that he was still alive and conscious, he dismounted, wept bitterly, clasped his hand, and had many words of abuse for Neoptolemus, and many words of pity for Craterus in his evil fortune, and for himself in the necessity which had brought him into a conflict with a friend and comrade, where he must do or suffer this harm.18 8 This battle was won by Eumenes about ten days after the former.19 It lifted his reputation high, and he was thought to have accomplished his task alike with wisdom and bravery; but it got him much envy and hatred as well among his allies as among his enemies. They felt that he, an alien and a stranger, had used the arms and might of the Macedonians for slaying the foremost and most approved of them. 2 Now, if Perdiccas could have learned in time of the death of Craterus, no one else would have had chief place among Macedonians; but as it was, he was slain in a mutiny of his soldiers in Egypt20 two days before the report of the battle p103came to his camp, and his Macedonians, in a rage, at once condemned Eumenes to death. Moreover, Antigonus was appointed to conduct the war against him, in conjunction with Antipater. 3 When Eumenes fell in with the royal herds of horse that were pasturing about Mount Ida, he took as many horses as he wanted and sent a written statement of the number to the overseers, at this, we are told, Antipater laughed and said that he admired Eumenes for his forethought, since he evidently expected to give an account of the royal properties to them, or to receive one from them. 4 Because he was superior in cavalry, Eumenes wished to give battle in the plains of Lydia about Sardis, and at the same time he was ambitious to make a display of his forces before Cleopatra;21 but at the request of that princess, who was afraid to give Antipater any cause for complaint, he marched away into upper Phrygia and wintered at Celaenae. Here Alcetas, Polemon, and Docimus strove emulously with him for the chief command, whereupon he said "This bears out the saying, Of perdition no account is made. " 5 Moreover, having promised to give his soldiers their pay within three days, he sold them the homesteads and castles about the country, which were full of slaves and flocks. Then every captain in the phalanx or commander of mercenaries who had bought a place was supplied by Eumenes with implements and engines of war and took it by siege; and thus every soldier received the pay that was due him, in a distribution of the captured properties. 6 In consequence of this, Eumenes was again in high favour; and once when letters were found in his camp which the leaders of the enemy p105had caused to be scattered there, wherein they offered a hundred talents and honours to any one who should kill Eumenes, his Macedonians were highly incensed and made a decree that a thousand of the leading soldiers should serve him continually as a body-guard, watching over him when he went abroad and spending the night at his door. 7 These carried out the decree, and were delighted to receive from Eumenes such honours as kings bestow upon their friends. For he was empowered to distribute purple caps and military cloaks, and this was a special gift of royalty among Macedonians. 9 Now, prosperity lifts even men of inferior natures to higher thoughts, so that they appear to be invested with a certain greatness and majesty as they look down from their lofty state; but the truly magnanimous and constant soul reveals itself rather in its behaviour under disasters and misfortunes. 2 And so it was with Eumenes. For, to begin with, he was defeated by Antigonus22 at Orcynii in Cappadocia through treachery,23 and yet, though in flight, he did not suffer the traitor to make his escape out of the rout to the enemy, but seized and hanged him. Then, taking the opposite route in his flight to that of his pursuers, he changed his course before they knew it, and, passing along by them, came to the place where the battle had been fought. Here he encamped, collected the bodies of the dead, and burned them on pyres made from the doors of the neighbouring villages, which he had split into billets. He burned the bodies of the officers on one pyre, those of the common soldiers on another, heaped great mounds of earth over the ashes, and p107departed, so that even Antigonus, when he came up later, admired his boldness and constancy. 3 Again, when he came upon the baggage of Antigonus, and could easily have captured many freemen, many slaves, and wealth amassed from so many wars and plunderings, he was afraid that his men, if loaded down with booty and spoils, would become too heavy for flight, and too luxurious to endure wanderings and lapse of time. In lapse of time, however, he placed his chief hopes for ending the war, feeling that he could thus cause Antigonus to turn back. 4 But since it was quite a difficult matter to deflect his Macedonians from good things which were within their reach, he ordered them to refresh themselves and bait their horses before advancing upon the enemy. He himself, however, sent a secret message to Menander, who was in charge of the enemy s baggage, implying that he was concerned for him as an old time friend and comrade, and advising him to be on his guard and withdraw as quickly as possible from his low-lying and accessible position to the foot-hills near by, which could not be reached by cavalry or surrounded. 5 Menander speedily comprehended his peril and decamped, and then Eumenes openly sent out scouts and ordered his soldiers to arm themselves and bridle their horses, as he was going to lead them against the enemy. But when the scouts brought word that Menander was altogether safe from capture now that he had taken refuge in a difficult region, Eumenes pretended to be vexed, and led his forces away. 6 And it is said that when Menander bore witness of these things to Antigonus, and the Macedonians began to praise Eumenes and felt more p109kindly towards him, because, when it was in his power to enslave their children and outrage their wives, he had spared them and let them go, Antigonus said "Nay, my good men, that fellow did not let them go out of regard for you, but because he was afraid to put such fetters on himself in his flight." 10 After this, as he wandered about and sought to elude his enemies, Eumenes persuaded most of his soldiers to leave him,24 either out of regard for them, or because he was unwilling to trail after him a body of men too small to give battle, and too large to escape the enemy s notice. Moreover, after he had taken refuge in Nora, a stronghold on the confines of Lycaonia and Cappadocia, with five hundred horsemen and two hundred men-at‑war, even there again, whatsoever friends asked to be dismissed because they could not endure the asperities of the place and the constraint in diet, all these he sent away, after bestowing upon them tokens of affection and kindness. 2 And when Antigonus came up and invited him to a conference before the siege began, he replied that the friends of Antigonus and officers to succeeded Antigonus in command were many, whereas those in whose behalf he was fighting had no one left to command them after him; and he bade Antigonus to send hostages if he wanted to have a conference with him. Moreover, when Antigonus demanded to be addressed by him as a superior, Eumenes replied "I regard no man as my superior so long as I am master of my sword." 3 Nevertheless, after Antigonus had sent his nephew Ptolemy p111into the fortress, as Eumenes had demanded, Eumenes went down to meet him, and they embraced one another with greetings of friendship and affection, since they had formerly been close associates and intimate companions. A long conference was held, in which Eumenes made no mention of his own safety or peace, but actually demanded that he should be confirmed in the possession of his satrapies, and that what was his by gift should be restored to him. At this the bystanders were amazed, and they admired his lofty spirit and confidence. 4 But meanwhile many of the Macedonians came running together in their eagerness to see what sort of man Eumenes was; for no one else had been so much talked about in the army since the death of Craterus. Then Antigonus, afraid that Eumenes might suffer some violence, first loudly forbade the soldiers to approach, and pelted with stones those who were hurrying up, but finally threw his arms about Eumenes and, keeping off the throng with his bodyguards, with much ado removed him to a place of safety. 11 After this, Antigonus built a wall round Nora, left troops to guard it, and retired; Eumenes, however, although closely besieged in a stronghold which had grain, water in abundance, and salt, but no other edible, not even a relish to go with the grain, nevertheless, with what he had, managed to render the life of his associates cheerful, inviting them all by turns to his own table, and seasoning the meal thus shared with conversation which had charm and friendliness. 2 For he had a pleasant face, not like that of a war-worn veteran, but delicate and youthful, and all his body had, as it were, artistic proportions, with limbs of astonishing symmetry; and p113though he was not a powerful speaker, still he was insinuating and persuasive, as one may gather from his letters. 3 But most of all detrimental to his forces thus besieged was their narrow quarters, since their movements were confined to small houses and a place only •two furlongs in circumference, so that neither men nor horses could get exercise before eating or being fed. Therefore, wishing to remove the weakness and languor with which their inactivity afflicted them, and, more than that, to have them somehow or other in training for flight, if opportunity should offer, 4 he assigned the men a house, the largest in the place, fourteen cubits long,a as a place to walk, ordering them little by little to increase their pace. And as for the horses, he had them all girt round the neck with great straps fastened to the roof, and raised them partly up into the air by means of pulleys, so, while with their hind legs they rested firmly upon the ground, they just touched it with the tips of their fore hoofs. 5 Then, while they were thus suspended, the grooms would stand at their sides and stir them up with shouts and strokes of the goad; and the horses, full of rage and fury, would dance and leap about on their hind legs, while with their swinging fore feet they would strike the ground and try to get a footing there, thus exerting their whole bodies and covering themselves with sweat and foam, — no bad exercise either for speed or strength.25 Then their barley would be thrown to them boiled, that they might the sooner dispatch and the better digest it. 12 But presently, as the siege dragged along, p115Antigonus learned that Antipater had died in Macedonia,26 and that matters were in confusion owing to the dissension between Cassander and Polysperchon.b He therefore cherished no longer an inferior hope, but embraced the whole empire in his scheme, and desired to have Eumenes as friend and helper in his undertakings. Accordingly, he sent Hieronymus to make a treaty with Eumenes, and proposed an oath for him to take. 2 This oath Eumenes corrected and then submitted it to the Macedonians who were besieging him, requesting them to decide which was the juster form. Antigonus, namely, for form s sake, had mentioned the kings27a at the beginning of the oath, and then had made the rest of it refer to himself; but Eumenes wrote at the head of the oath the names of Olympias and the kings,27b and proposed to swear fealty, not to Antigonus alone, but also to Olympias and the kings, and to have the same enemies and friends as they. This was thought to be more just, and the Macedonians accordingly administered this oath of Eumenes, raised the siege, and sent to Antigonus, that he too, on his part, might take the oath to Eumenes. 3 Meanwhile, however, Eumenes gave back all the Cappadocian hostages whom he was holding in Nora, and received from those who came for them horses, beasts of burden, and tents. He also collected all the soldiers who had become scattered by his flight and were now wandering about the country, so that he had a force of almost a thousand horsemen. With p117these he set out in flight, being rightly in fear of Antigonus. For Antigonus not only ordered his Macedonians to wall him in again and besiege him, but also wrote back bitter reproaches to them for accepting the correction of the oath. 13 While Eumenes was in flight, letters were brought to him from those in Macedonia who feared the growing power of Antigonus. Olympias invited him to come and take charge of Alexander s little son and rear him, feeling that plots were laid against his life; Polysperchon and Philip28 the king ordered him, as commander of the forces in Cappadocia, to wage war upon Antigonus, to take five hundred talents of the treasure at Quinda29 in reparation of his own losses, and to use as much of it as he wished for the war. 2 They had also written concerning these matters to Antigenes and Teutamus, the commanders of the Silver-shields. These men, on receiving their letters, ostensibly treated Eumenes with friendliness, but were plainly full of envy and contentiousness, disdaining to be second to him. Eumenes therefore allayed their envy by not taking the money, alleging that he had no need of it; 3 while upon their love of contention and love of command, seeing that they were as unable to lead as they were unwilling to follow, he brought superstition to bear. He said, namely, that Alexander had appeared to him in a dream, had shown him a tent arrayed in royal fashion with a throne standing in it, and had then said that if they held their councils and transacted their business there, he himself would be p119present and would assist them in every plan and enterprise which they undertook in his name. Eumenes easily convinced Antigenes and Teutamus that this was true. They were unwilling to go to him, and he himself thought it undignified to be seen at the doors of others. 4 So they erected a royal tent, and a throne in it which they dedicated to Alexander, and there they met for deliberation on matters of highest importance. And now, as they advanced into the interior of the country,30 Peucestas,31 who was a friend of Eumenes, met them with the other satraps, and they joined their forces, so that the number of their men and the splendour of their equipment raised the spirits of the Macedonians. But the leaders themselves had been made unmanageable by their exercise of power, and effeminate by their mode of life, after the death of Alexander, 5 and they brought into collision spirits that were tyrannical and fed on barbaric arrogance, so that they were harsh towards one another and hard to reconcile. Moreover, by flattering the Macedonian soldiery extravagantly and lavishing money upon them for banquets and sacrifices, in a short time they made the camp a hostelry of festal prodigality, and the army a mob to be cajoled into the election of its generals, as in a democracy. 6 Eumenes, however, perceiving that, while they despised one another, they feared him and were on the watch for an opportunity to kill him, pretended to be in need of money, and got together many talents by borrowing from those who hated him most, in order that they might put confidence in him and refrain from killing him out of regard for the money p121they had lent him. The consequence was that the wealth of others was his body-guard, and that, whereas men generally preserve their lives by giving, he alone won safety by receiving. 14 The Macedonians, however, while there was no danger, continued to take gifts from their corrupters, and hung about the doors of these men, who now had body-guards and wanted to be generals. But when Antigonus encamped near them with a large force and the situation called aloud for a real general, not only did the common soldiers attach themselves to Eumenes, but also those who were great only when peace and luxury prevailed, every man of them, gave in to him and consented without a murmur to hold post which he gave them. 2 And, indeed, when Antigonus tried to cross the river Pasitigris, none of the other commanders who were watching his movements was even aware of it, but Eumenes, and he alone, withstood him, joined battle with him, slew many of his men and filled the stream with dead bodies, and took four thousand prisoners. But most of all in connection with the sickness that befell him did the Macedonians make it clear that they considered the others able to feast them splendidly and hold high festival, but him alone capable of wielding command and waging war, 3 For Peucestas, having feasted them splendidly in Persis, and having given every man a victim for sacrifice, was expecting to be chief in command; and a few days afterwards, as the soldiers were marching against the enemy, it chanced that Eumenes, in consequence of a dangerous illness, was being carried along in a litter outside the ranks, where it was quiet and his sleep would not be broken. But after they had p123advanced a little way, suddenly the enemy were seen passing over some hills and descending into the plain. 4 The gleams of their golden armour in the sun flashed down from the heights as they marched along in close formation, and on the backs of the elephants the towers and purple trappings were seen, which was their array when going into battle. Accordingly, the foremost Macedonians halted in their march and called with loud cries for Eumenes, declaring that they would not go forward unless he was in command of them; and grounding their arms they passed word to one another to wait, and to their leaders to keep still, and without Eumenes not to give battle or run any hazard even with the enemy. 5 When Eumenes heard of this, he quickened the pace of his bearers to a run and came to them, and lifting the curtains of his litter on either side, stretched forth his hand in delight. And when the soldiers saw him, they hailed him at once in their Macedonian speech, caught up their shields, beat upon them with their spears, and raised their battle-cry, challenging the enemy to fight in the assurance that their leader was at hand. 15 Now Antigonus, hearing from his prisoners that Eumenes was sick and in such wretched plight as to be borne along in a litter, thought it no great task to crush the other commanders if Eumenes was sick. He therefore hastened to lead his army to battle. 2 But when, as the enemy were forming in battle order, he had ridden past their lines and observed their shape and disposition, he was amazed, and paused for some time; then the litter was seen as it was carried from one wing to the other. At this, Antigonus gave a loud laugh, as was his wont, p125and after saying to his friends, "This litter, it would seem, is what is arrayed against us," immediately retired with his forces and pitched his camp.32 3 But the Macedonians opposed to him, after getting a little respite, once more acted like a capricious mob, and, mocking at their leaders, distributed themselves in winter quarters over almost the whole of Gabene, so that the rear was separated from the van by •almost a thousand furlongs. When Antigonus became aware of this, he set out suddenly against them, taking this time a road that was difficult and without water, but direct and short, hoping that, in case he fell upon them when they were scattered about in their winter quarters, it would no longer be easy for the mass of them to join their generals. But after he had entered an uninhabited country, dire winds and severe frosts gave trouble to his army and impeded their march. 4 The only help, therefore, was to burn many fires, and this was what revealed his presence to the enemy. For the Barbarians living on the mountains which overlooked the uninhabited tract, amazed at the number of fires, sent messengers on dromedaries to Peucestas. And he, when he heard the news, being himself quite out of his mind with fear and seeing that the other officers were in a like state, set out to fly, after rousing up those of their soldiers especially who were quartered along the route. 5 But Eumenes tried to put a stop to their confusion and panic fear, by promising so to check the speed of the enemy that they would come up three days later than they were expected. And when his hearers were persuaded, he sent round p127messengers with orders that the forces in winter quarters and elsewhere should assemble with all speed; at the same time, too, he himself rode for with the other commanders, took possession of a place which could be seen at a distance by such as traversed the desert, measured it off, and ordered many fires to be made at intervals, as in an encampment. 6 This was done, and when Antigonus saw these fires on the mountains, he was distressed and disheartened, supposing that his enemies had long been aware of his approach and were coming to meet him. In order, therefore, that he might not be forced to fight, when his men were worn and weary from their march, against those who had spent a comfortable winter and were ready for the conflict, he forsook the direct road and led his army through villages and cities, taking time to refresh it. 7 But when no one tried to obstruct his progress, the thing which usually happens when enemies are facing one another, and when the people round about said they had seen no army, but that the place was full of lighted fires, Antigonus perceived that he had been outgeneraled by Eumenes, and in deep resentment led his forces forward to try the issue in open battle. 16 But meanwhile most of the forces with Eumenes had assembled, and, admiring his sagacity, demanded that he should be sole commander. At this, Antigenes and Teutamus, the leaders of the Silver-shields, were filled with vexation and jealousy, so that they plotted against the life of Eumenes, and, assembling most of the satraps and generals, deliberated when and how they might put him out of the way. 2 They were unanimous in the decision to make every use of him in the ensuing battle, and after the battle p129to kill him at once. But Eudamus, the master of the elephants, and Phaedimus, secretly brought word to Eumenes of this decision; not that they were moved by any goodwill or kindness, but because they were anxious not to lose the money they had lent him.33 These men Eumenes commended, and then went off to his tent, where he said to his friends that he was living in a great herd of wild beasts. Then he made his will, and tore up and destroyed his papers; he did not wish that after his death, in consequence of the secrets contained in these documents, accusations and calumnies should be brought against his correspondents. 3 After this business had been finished, he deliberated whether to give over the victory to the enemy, or to take flight through Media and Armenia and invade Cappadocia. He came to no decision while his friends were with him, but after considering many expedients with a mind which was as versatile as his fortunes were changeable, he proceeded to draw up his forces, urging on the Greeks and the Barbarians, and himself exhorted by the phalanx and the Silver-shields to be of good courage, since, as they felt sure, the enemy would not withstand their attack. 4 And indeed they were the oldest soldiers of Philip and Alexander, war s athletes as it were, without a defeat or a fall up to that time, many of them now seventy years old, and not a man younger than sixty. And so, when they charged upon the forces of Antigonus, they shouted; "It is against your fathers that ye sin, ye miscreants;" and falling upon them in a rage they crushed their whole phalanx at once, not a man withstanding them, and most of their opponents being cut to pieces at close quarters. p131 5 At this point, then, Antigonus was defeated overwhelmingly, but with his cavalry he got the upper hand; for Peucestas fought in a way that was altogether lax and ignoble, and Antigonus captured all the baggage. He was a man who kept cool in the presence of danger, and he was aided by the ground. 6 For the plain whereº they fought was vast, and its soil was neither deep nor trodden hard, but sandy and full of a dry and saline substance, which, loosened up by the trampling of so many horses and men during the battle, issued forth in a dust like lime, and this made the air all white and obscured the vision. Therefore it was easy for Antigonus to capture the enemy s baggage unobserved. 17 After the battle was over, Teutamus at once sent an embassy to treat for the baggage. And when Antigonus promised not only to give this back to the Silver-shields but also to treat them kindly in other ways, the Silver-shields formed a dire design to put the man alive into the hands of his enemies. 2 So, to begin with, they drew near him, without awakening his suspicions, and kept him in ward, some making complaints about their baggage, others bidding him to be of good courage, since he was victorious, and others still denouncing their former commanders. Then they fell upon him, snatched their sword away from him, and tied his hands fast with his girdle. And when Nicanor had been sent by Antigonus to receive him and he was being led along through the Macedonians, he begged for leave to speak to them, not with a view to supplication or entreaty, but in order to set forth what was for their advantage. p133 3 Silence was made, and standing on an eminence he stretched forth his hands, bound as they were, and said "What trophy, O ye basest of Macedonians, could Antigonus have so much desired to set up over your defeat, as this which ye yourselves are now erecting by delivering up your general as a prisoner? It is not a dreadful thing, then, that in the hour of your victory ye should acknowledge yourselves defeated for the sake of your baggage, implying that victory lies in your possessions and not in your arms, but ye must also send your leader as a ransom for that baggage. 4 As for me, then, ye lead me away undefeated, a victor over my enemies, a victim of my fellow-soldiers; but as for you, by Zeus the god of armies and by the gods who hallow oaths, I bid you slay me here with your own hands. Even should I be slain yonder, it will be wholly your work. Nor will Antigonus find any fault; for he wants a dead and not a living Eumenes. And if ye would spare your own hands, one of mine, if released, will suffice to do the business. 5 And if ye cannot trust me with a sword, cast me under the feet of your elephants, all bound as I am. If ye do this, I will absolve you from your guilt towards me, holding that ye have shown yourselves most just and righteous in your dealings with your own general." 18 As Eumenes said this, the rest of the throng was overwhelmed with sorrow, and some wept, but the Silver-shields shouted to lead him along and pay no attention to his babbling; for it was not so dreadful a thing, they said, that a pest from the Chersonesus should come to grief for having harassed Macedonians with infinite wars, as that the best of the soldiers of Philip and Alexander, p135after all their toils, should in their old age be robbed of their rewards and get their support from others, and that their wives should be spending the third night now in the arms of their enemies. At the same time they led him along at a quickened pace. 2 But Antigonus, fearing their multitude (since no one had been left behind in the camp), sent out ten of his strongest elephants and a great number of Median and Parthian spearmen to drive away the throng. He himself could not endure to see Eumenes, by reason of their former intimate friendship, and when those who had received him asked how they should guard his person, he said "Just as ye would an elephant or a lion." 3 But after a little while he became compassionate and ordered the keepers to remove the prisoner s heavy fetters and admit one of his personal servants to anoint him, and permitted any one of his friends who wished to spend the day with him and bring what he needed. Then he deliberated many days what to do with him, and considered various arguments and suggestions, Demetrius his son and Nearchus the Cretan being eager to save the life of Eumenes, while the rest, almost all of them, were insistent in urging that he be put to death. 4 We are told, also, that Eumenes asked his keeper, Onomarchus, why in the world Antigonus, now that he had got a hated enemy in his hands, neither killed him speedily nor generously set him free; and when Onomarchus insolently told him it was not now, but on the field of battle, that he should have faced death boldly, "Yea, by Zeus," said Eumenes, "then, too, I did do; ask the men who fought with me; I know that none I met was a p137better man." "Well, then, " said Onomarchus, "since now thou hast found thy better, why canst thou not bide his time?" 19When, then, Antigonus had decided to kill Eumenes, he gave orders to deprive him of food. And so, after two or three days of fasting, the prisoner began to draw nigh his end. But camp was suddenly broken and a man was sent to dispatch him.34 His body, however, was delivered to his friends by Antigonus, who permitted them to burn it and collect the ashes and place them in a silver urn, that they might be returned to his wife and children. 2 Eumenes thus slain, on no other man than Antigonus did Heaven devolve the punishment of the soldiers and commanders who betrayed him, but he himself, regarding the Silver-shields as impious and bestial men, put them into the violence of Sibyrtius the governor of Arachosia, ordering him to wear them out and destroy them in every possible way, that not a man of them might ever return to Macedonia or behold the Grecian sea.
https://w.atwiki.jp/bb_archive08/pages/265.html
gettysburg drill 投稿者:ふかさわ 投稿日:2009/11/09(Mon) 22 13 No.679 みきすけさんから送ってもらいました。 農グラ通いましょう! Lacrosse Skills Wall Drills 1. 全てのメニューを左右どちらもやること。 2. グローブをつけて行うこと。 3. 壁から約5メートル離れて行うこと。 4. 足をフラットにせず、壁と垂直に向き合うこと。その上で、体重移動を大切にすること。 5. 週4もしくは5回、1回15~20分やることでクロスワークは短期間で飛躍的に向上する。 6. メニュー ①両手:クイック 50回 ※両手をつけて、ともかくも「クイック」にやることを意識すること。 ②両手:1クレドル 50回 ③片手:クイック 50回 ④両手:キャッチ後フェイスダッヂ 50回 ※肩でプロテクトする、意識を持つこと。 ⑤両手:持ちかえ(右投げ→右キャッチ→持ちかえ→左投げ→左キャッチ→持ちかえ) 50回 ⑥両手:クイック(投げた瞬間に持ちかえてクイック) 50回 ⑦両手:クロスハンド 50回 ⑧両手:ビハインド 50回 ⑨両手:サイド(シュートフェイクして投げる) 50回 ⑩ オリジナルメニュー 7.音楽聴いたりしながら、ともかくも楽しくやりましょう! Re gettysburg drill まえの - 2009/11/10(Tue) 05 58 No.680 ふかさわナイス! これはおもしろそう。 Re gettysburg drill 43 - 2009/11/10(Tue) 11 11 No.681 ビョンサンキュー 農グラに早く行ってやってみたいな Re gettysburg drill 21 - 2009/11/10(Tue) 20 22 No.682 ナイス! これ毎日やります。夜だろうがなんだろうがやります。 Re gettysburg drill いしづか - 2009/11/11(Wed) 09 25 No.683 メニューとして決めると質が高くなってよさそう。 早く雨やんでほしいです。 Re gettysburg drill ふかさわ - 2009/11/11(Wed) 22 21 No.684 英語版も貼っておきます。 慶応に負けないクロスワークをつけましょう! Lacrosse Skills Wall Drills I. All drills must be performed with both hands. II. Any wall will work, but a smooth concrete wall at least 10 feet tall is the best surface. III. Use your gloves when performing this routine. IV. Stand about five yards from the wall. V. Perform this routine 4 to 5 times a week for 15 to 20 minutes and your stick skills will improve a great deal in a very short period of time. VI. Drills 1. Right hand quick stick- 50 times (left hand). 2. Right hand- 1 catch cradle 50 times (left hand). 3. Right hand (1 hand only) quick stick- 50 times (left hand). 4. Right hand catch face dodge- 50 times (left hand). 5. Split dodge- throw right, catch right, split dodge to left hand, throw left, catch left, split back to right hand- 50 times. 6. Quick stick- change hands on every toss while ball is in air. 7. Cross handed- 50 times each hand. 8. Around-the-back- 50 times each hand. 9. Side arm after a great hard fake- 50 times each hand. 10. Be creative- develop your own drill. NOTE This routine takes 15 to 20 minutes. Crank up your music and have some fun. Develop a set-wall program for the best results. back