![](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/66/958/400/thermopylae.jpg)
In 1963, Life Magazine commissioned artist Stanley Meltzoff to illustrate an article about ancient Greece. The result was a set of glowing masterpieces that brought ancient Greece vividly to life.
![](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/66/958/400/dismantling.jpg)
In addition to the beauty of the images, Meltzoff labored long and hard to make his paintings historically accurate. A meticulous craftsman, he even distinguished the uniforms of the Persians from the uniforms of the Scythians and the Medes.
His illustrations conveyed everything from the pathos of an a individual dying in the streets from the plague...
![](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/66/958/400/Greeks%20002.jpg)
...to the grand sweep of the world's largest army storming across the Hellespont to invade Greece.
![](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/66/958/400/darius.jpg)
These are works of enduring value. They appeared for one brief moment in a 25 cent weekly magazine, then disappeared as Life moved on to a different topic the following week. They aren't displayed in a museum or gallery for the public to admire.
![](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/66/958/400/Greeks%20001.jpg)
And yet, having appeared once, they are not gone. I can personally attest that these dramatic images were seared permanently into the memories and imaginations of ten year old boys of that time. I am reproducing them here in the hope that there is another generation out there watching.