Sophocles: The Plays and Fragments, Том 3University Press, 1891 |
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Страница ix
... Attic addition to the story . 1 Salustius , in his Argument to this play ( p . 5 ) , notices that the fortunes of the sisters were differently related by other writers . Mimnermus ( c . 620 B.C. ) spoke of Ismene having been slain at ...
... Attic addition to the story . 1 Salustius , in his Argument to this play ( p . 5 ) , notices that the fortunes of the sisters were differently related by other writers . Mimnermus ( c . 620 B.C. ) spoke of Ismene having been slain at ...
Страница x
... Attic invention , it may be conjectured that Antigone's resolve to defy the edict was also the conception of an Attic poet . Aeschylus is the earliest author who refers to the edict against burial , and he is also the first who tells of ...
... Attic invention , it may be conjectured that Antigone's resolve to defy the edict was also the conception of an Attic poet . Aeschylus is the earliest author who refers to the edict against burial , and he is also the first who tells of ...
Страница xvi
... Attic masters , knew how to use . But they suffice to indicate the secret trembling of the balance behind those protestations of an unconquerable resolve ; the terrible prophecy of Teiresias only turns the scale . The Chorus is now ...
... Attic masters , knew how to use . But they suffice to indicate the secret trembling of the balance behind those protestations of an unconquerable resolve ; the terrible prophecy of Teiresias only turns the scale . The Chorus is now ...
Страница xxiv
... Attic poet in the essential image of the historical tyrannus . The Attic audience would mentally compare him , not to an Agamemnon or an Alcinous , but to a Hippias or a Periander . He resembles the ruler whose absolutism , imposed on ...
... Attic poet in the essential image of the historical tyrannus . The Attic audience would mentally compare him , not to an Agamemnon or an Alcinous , but to a Hippias or a Periander . He resembles the ruler whose absolutism , imposed on ...
Страница xxxix
... Attic version of the story . Argeia , the widow of Polyneices , meets Antigone by night at the corpse . Each , unknown to the other , has come to do the same task ; both are put to death by Creon , - ' ambae hilares et mortis amore ...
... Attic version of the story . Argeia , the widow of Polyneices , meets Antigone by night at the corpse . Each , unknown to the other , has come to do the same task ; both are put to death by Creon , - ' ambae hilares et mortis amore ...
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Страница 75 - And speech, and wind-swift thought, and all the moods that mould a state, hath he taught himself; and how to flee the arrows of the frost, when 'tis hard lodging under the clear sky, and the arrows of the rushing rain; yea, he hath resource for all; without resource he meets nothing that must come: only against Death shall he call for aid in vain; but from baffling maladies he hath devised escapes.
Страница 71 - Wonders are many, and none is more wonderful than man; the power that crosses the white sea, driven by the stormy south-wind, making a path under surges that threaten to engulf him; and Earth, the eldest of the gods, the immortal, the unwearied, doth he wear, turning the soil with the offspring of horses, as the ploughs go to and fro from year to year.
Страница 28 - Adam the goodliest man of men since born His sons, the fairest of her daughters Eve.
Страница 74 - He gave man speech, and speech created thought, Which is the measure of the universe...
Страница 91 - ... are the laws set among men by the Justice who dwells with the gods below; nor deemed I that thy decrees were of such force, that a mortal could override the unwritten and unfailing statutes of heaven. For their life is not of to-day or yesterday, but from all time, and no man knows when they were first put forth. Not through dread of any human pride could I answer to the gods for breaking these.
Страница xxxv - No, whomsoever the city may appoint, that man must be obeyed, in little things and great, in just things and unjust...
Страница 135 - tis no shame for him to learn many things, and to bend in season. Seest thou, beside the wintry torrent's course, how the trees that yield to it save every twig, while the stiff-necked perish root and branch? And even thus he who keeps the sheet of his sail taut, and never slackens it, upsets his boat, and finishes his voyage with keel uppermost.
Страница 165 - But dreadful is the mysterious power of fate; there is no deliverance from it by wealth or by war, by fenced city, or dark, sea-beaten ships.
Страница 146 - Slow melting strains their Queen's approach declare: Where'er she turns the Graces homage pay. With arms sublime, that float upon the air, In gliding state she wins her easy way: O'er her warm cheek, and rising bosom, move The bloom of young Desire and purple light of Love.
Страница 185 - Then know thou — aye, know it well — that thou shalt not live through many more courses of the sun's swift chariot, ere one begotten of thine own loins shall have been given by thee, a corpse for corpses; because thou hast thrust children of the sunlight to the shades, and ruthlessly lodged a living soul in the grave; but keepest in this world one who belongs to the gods infernal, a corpse unburied, unhonored, all unhallowed.