Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Volume 101Association, 1970 - 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 97
... Eteocles accepts the omens of the blazons and mottos which the attackers bear upon their shields and turns these omens against them . The secret of the defense of the city does indeed lie , as Eteocles claims in the first line , in ...
... Eteocles accepts the omens of the blazons and mottos which the attackers bear upon their shields and turns these omens against them . The secret of the defense of the city does indeed lie , as Eteocles claims in the first line , in ...
Page 108
... Eteocles hedges and leaves the possibility open by saying that if she brings Polyneices back she would be evdávvμos ( 670 ) . This then of all the omens is false , and Eteocles fails to accept it . Therefore he fails to control events ...
... Eteocles hedges and leaves the possibility open by saying that if she brings Polyneices back she would be evdávvμos ( 670 ) . This then of all the omens is false , and Eteocles fails to accept it . Therefore he fails to control events ...
Page 117
... Eteocles ) intends to seek out his brother and face him in hand to hand combat ( 635 f . ) , 59 Eteocles understands the meaning of his father's curse . It is this sudden enlightenment which causes him to exclaim at line 653 ff .: ὦ ...
... Eteocles ) intends to seek out his brother and face him in hand to hand combat ( 635 f . ) , 59 Eteocles understands the meaning of his father's curse . It is this sudden enlightenment which causes him to exclaim at line 653 ff .: ὦ ...
Contents
The Leyden MS of Tacitus Major Works | 51 |
Sophocles Philoctetes and the Homeric | 63 |
The Pattern of Aeschylean Tragedy | 84 |
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Aegisthus Aeschylus Ahasuerus Alcibiades appears Apuleius argument Association assume aulos avena Buck Caesar century chorus Cicero cited Classical Clytemnestra Coleman Committee Contra Celsum dialects discussion earlier Electra element Esther Eteocles Euclio Eumolpus Euripides evidence example fact fanum father Greece Greek Haman Helen hero Hesiod Homer hymn ibid innovation interpolated interpretation isoglosses Josephus later Latin Leidensis Ligarius lines linguistic Lucius Lysiteles Manilius meaning Megadorus Menaechmus Menelaus Metamorphoses motif Muses narrative Neoptolemus occurs Odysseus Oedipus original papyri passage Peloponnese perhaps Philoctetes Plautus play poem poet Pompey probably reference Risch Roman Satyricon says scene Schwyzer seems Seneca Servius Sirens slave Socrates song speech stage Stoic suggests syrinx thematic theme Theoclymenus Theogony third inversion Tibullus Timai tion tradition trial verbs vowel words Zeus δὲ καὶ