Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Volume 99Association, 1968 - Classical philology Beginning with v. 31, the proceedings and papers of the Philological Association of the Pacific Coast are included. |
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Page 19
... Hippolytus is one of the most famous lines in Greek tragedy . It is spoken by Hippolytus in his quarrel with the Nurse after she has revealed to him Phaedra's love . She had sworn him to secrecy earlier , before she made the revelation ...
... Hippolytus is one of the most famous lines in Greek tragedy . It is spoken by Hippolytus in his quarrel with the Nurse after she has revealed to him Phaedra's love . She had sworn him to secrecy earlier , before she made the revelation ...
Page 27
... Hippolytus to be evil . Hippolytus at first trusts in his inner goodness but he becomes aware late in the scene ( after 1050 ) that the knowledge of his own goodness will not save him , that in fact he has been caught by circumstances ...
... Hippolytus to be evil . Hippolytus at first trusts in his inner goodness but he becomes aware late in the scene ( after 1050 ) that the knowledge of his own goodness will not save him , that in fact he has been caught by circumstances ...
Page 34
... Hippolytus has been revealed for the good man he is and now , at the point of death , his inner goodness is fully manifest . At this moment Theseus covers Hippolytus ' face for the last time . Hippolytus , now fully integrated with ...
... Hippolytus has been revealed for the good man he is and now , at the point of death , his inner goodness is fully manifest . At this moment Theseus covers Hippolytus ' face for the last time . Hippolytus , now fully integrated with ...
Contents
My Tongue Swore But My Mind | 19 |
Cosmological Myth and the Tuna | 37 |
Trophonios The Manner of his Revelation | 63 |
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Abraham Aeneas Alcibiades anger appears argument Aristotle Association Athenian Athens Attis Becker 37 Calif Canada catalogue Catullus century chorus Cicero Circe Clas Classics Dept codex Conn contrast Cyme deliberate interpolation Demosthenes Diodorus discussion divination emotion Ephorus epic Epicurean Epicurus Eudemian Ethics Euripides eutrapelia fact folios Gnilka goal Greek Hellenistic Heracles hero hexameter Hippolytus Homer Horace Hylas John Josephus Latin Library lines literary Lorsch Lucretius Magna Moralia manuscripts Mass mean-dispositions Medea mention Mindarus moral virtues nature Nicomachean Ethics Odysseus Ovid parallel passage pastoral pathê pentameter Phaedra philosophical Pindar poem poet poetic poetry present Prof Prudentius Pyth reference Rhet Rhetoric Roman satire says Scholion seems Seneca ships sics simile statement Stoic strophe suggested Telesicrates theme Theocritus Theramenes Thrasybulus tion tradition truth Vergil verse Wilamowitz wittiness words Xenophon York καὶ