The Tragedies of SophoclesD. A. Talboys, 1819 - 408 Seiten |
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Seite 21
... shalt not know . DIP . Thou vilest of the vile - for thou wou'dst raise Th ' insensate rock to rage - wilt thou not speak , But shew thyself unfeeling and unmov'd ? TIR . My passion thou hast blam'd ; but dost not see That which with ...
... shalt not know . DIP . Thou vilest of the vile - for thou wou'dst raise Th ' insensate rock to rage - wilt thou not speak , But shew thyself unfeeling and unmov'd ? TIR . My passion thou hast blam'd ; but dost not see That which with ...
Seite 22
... shalt not triumph for this second taunt . More shall I speak then , and enrage thee more ? DIP . Say what thou wilt , it will be said in vain . TIR . I say , flagitious is thy intercourse TIR . With those most dear to thee ; thou know ...
... shalt not triumph for this second taunt . More shall I speak then , and enrage thee more ? DIP . Say what thou wilt , it will be said in vain . TIR . I say , flagitious is thy intercourse TIR . With those most dear to thee ; thou know ...
Seite 24
... shalt know that , driv'n by swelling gales , The port of marriage thou hast gain'd , thy bark Where anchor cannot hold ! The numerous train Of other ills thou seest not , which will rank In the same line thee and thy sons alike . Go to ...
... shalt know that , driv'n by swelling gales , The port of marriage thou hast gain'd , thy bark Where anchor cannot hold ! The numerous train Of other ills thou seest not , which will rank In the same line thee and thy sons alike . Go to ...
Seite 48
... shalt unfold All this mystery round thee roll'd , And with pride and triumph own Edipus thy foster'd son . Then with joy would we advance , Leading light the festive dance ; Teach thy woods with joy to ring , And with transport hail our ...
... shalt unfold All this mystery round thee roll'd , And with pride and triumph own Edipus thy foster'd son . Then with joy would we advance , Leading light the festive dance ; Teach thy woods with joy to ring , And with transport hail our ...
Seite 50
... ? CDIP . This child , of which he asks , Didst thou consign it to his hands ? HERD . Would I had died that day ! I did . CEDIP . And thou shalt die , HERD . Unless thou speak the truth . And if 50 ŒDIPUS KING OF THEBES . 1191-1216.
... ? CDIP . This child , of which he asks , Didst thou consign it to his hands ? HERD . Would I had died that day ! I did . CEDIP . And thou shalt die , HERD . Unless thou speak the truth . And if 50 ŒDIPUS KING OF THEBES . 1191-1216.
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Ægisthus Æschylus Ajax ANTIGONE ANTIS Argive arms art thou assur'd Atreus bear behold beneath blood CDIP CEDIP CHOR CHORUS CHRY Creon daughters dead death deed DEIA DEIANIRA didst dost thou dreadful e'en EDIP Edipus ELEC Electra Euripides Eurytus eyes fate fear friends glory gods Grecian grief hallow'd hand hast thou hated hath hear heart hence HERC hither honour HYLL ills illustrious ISMENE Jove king know'st Laius LICH lord lov'd midst mind mortal mournful ne'er NEOP NEOPTOLEMUS never o'er Orestes PHIL Philoctetes pity Polybus Polynices pow'r rage rais'd realms receiv'd reverence shew Sophocles soul speak stranger STRO TECM TECMESSA TEUC Teucer Thebes thee Theseus thine things thou art thou hast thou may'st thou shalt thou wilt thought thy father thy words Tiresias toils tomb Troy ULYS Ulysses unhappy vengeance virgin voice whilst wilt thou wish woes wou'dst thou wretched
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 37 - Of Law there can be no less acknowledged than that her seat is in the bosom of God ; her voice the harmony of the world ; all things in heaven and earth do her homage; the very least as feeling her care, and the greatest as not exempted from her power...
Seite 186 - Life's but a walking shadow ; a poor player, That struts and frets his hour upon the stage, And then is heard no more : it is a tale Told by an ideot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing.
Seite 227 - Presid'st on bleak Dodona's vocal hill. (Whose groves, the Selli, race austere ! surround, Their feet unwash'd, their slumbers on the ground ; Who hear, from rustling oaks, thy dark decrees ; 290 And catch the fates, low-whisper'd in the breeze :) Hear, as of old ! Thou gav'st, at Thetis' prayer, Glory to me, and to the Greeks despair.
Seite vi - ... and its gates proudly hung with trophies. Sophocles appears with splendid dignity, like some imperial palace of richest architecture, the symmetry of whose parts and the chaste magnificence of the whole, delight the eye. and command the approbation of the judgment. The pathetic and moral Euripides hath the solemnity of a Gothic temple, whose storied windows admit a dim religious light, enough to show...
Seite 390 - A wandering exile, from thy sister far. Nor in the cleansing lavers did I bathe With these fond hands thy corse, nor, as became A sister, bear 'from the consuming flames The mournful burden. By a stranger's hands These duties paid, thou com'st a little dust . Clos'd in a little urn.
Seite 122 - ... He was not ; but we saw the king alone ; He stood) and o'er his face his hands he spread Shading his eyes, as if with terror struck At something horrible to human sight. Thus long he stood not, but we saw him soon The Earth adoring, and Olympus high, Seat of th' immortal gods, with ardent pray'r. But by what fate he died no mortal man, Save Theseus, can declare : for not the flames Thick flashing from the thunders of high Jove Consum'd him, nor the tempest from the sea Then raging wild ; but...
Seite 65 - I ask indeed but little, and receive Less than that little ; yet for me e'en that Suffices ; my afflictions, the long course Of years so pass'd, and fortitude of soul Teach me with cheerfulness to bear my ills. But, O my daughter, some one if thou seest Or in the sacred groves, or on the seats Not hallow'd, lead me thither, place me there, That in what land we are we may inquire ; For of the natives, strangers as we are, We come to learn, and as instructed act.
Seite 129 - Creon, who succeeded to the throne of Thebes, allowed funeral honours to Eteocles, but commanded the body of Polynices to be cast out unburied, a prey to dogs and ravenous birds, denouncing death to any person who should presume to disobey his edict, and inter the corse. The tender and virtuous Antigone, so illustrious for her filial piety, shines forth on this occasion a bright example of affection to her brother, and reverence to the gods ; animated with a sense of duty, and unterrified by the...
Seite 347 - Euripides, yielding to the bold and exalted genius of ./Eschylus, pursued a plan more adapted to the exquisite sensibility of his own mind ; and by presenting his Electra in a rustic cottage, and patiently engaged in the laborious offices of her humble station, he renders her amiable before he displays the noble elevation of her mind : he always knew the way to touch the heart. Sophocles has dared to dispute the palm with /Eschylus even on...
Seite 305 - As, wearied with the tossing of the waves, They saw me sleeping on the shore, beneath This rock's rude covering, with malignant joy They left me, and sail'd hence. Think from that sleep, my son, how I awoke, When they were gone ! Think on my tears, my groans. — Such ills lamenting, when I saw my ships, With which I hither sail'd, all out at sea, And steering hence ; no mortal in the place ; Not one to succour me; — not one to lend His lenient hand to mitigate my wound ! On every side I roll'd...