Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 16Harvard University Press, 1905 - Classical philology |
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Page 17
... Suppliants to be the first of the trilogy ( and I do not see how we can well do otherwise , when we take into account the very elaborate exposition which is found in the opening of the play ) , the betrothal of the daughters of Danaus ...
... Suppliants to be the first of the trilogy ( and I do not see how we can well do otherwise , when we take into account the very elaborate exposition which is found in the opening of the play ) , the betrothal of the daughters of Danaus ...
Page 18
... Suppliants and the Persians , and in the succeeding work , the Prometheus . These plays contain little " action " or " movement " in the modern theatrical sense of the terms , and it is absolutely impossible that Aeschylus should have ...
... Suppliants and the Persians , and in the succeeding work , the Prometheus . These plays contain little " action " or " movement " in the modern theatrical sense of the terms , and it is absolutely impossible that Aeschylus should have ...
Page 24
... Suppliants from 180 to 1851 there is graphic description of the approaching host of the king of Argos , such as we cannot possibly suppose was actually presented to view or hearing . The cloud of dust , the ranks of chariots and horses ...
... Suppliants from 180 to 1851 there is graphic description of the approaching host of the king of Argos , such as we cannot possibly suppose was actually presented to view or hearing . The cloud of dust , the ranks of chariots and horses ...
Page 25
... Suppliants there is a continual reference to the statues and altar which must be supposed to stand on the stage , and secondly to the dress and headgear of the women , especially to the suppliant boughs which they bear . The frequency ...
... Suppliants there is a continual reference to the statues and altar which must be supposed to stand on the stage , and secondly to the dress and headgear of the women , especially to the suppliant boughs which they bear . The frequency ...
Page 26
... suppliants . Lines 234-245 comprise the King's first speech , where the whole emphasis from beginning to end is on the suppliant boughs . It is the same with the altar and the statues : cf. lines 189 , 220-1 , 345-6 , 893 , 859-860 ...
... suppliants . Lines 234-245 comprise the King's first speech , where the whole emphasis from beginning to end is on the suppliant boughs . It is the same with the altar and the statues : cf. lines 189 , 220-1 , 345-6 , 893 , 859-860 ...
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Common terms and phrases
action adaptation Aegisthus Aeschylus Agamemnon Agglut agglutinative languages Bopp's Brugmann buskin century character Choephoroe chorus Class classical period Clytemnestra cothurnus definite Delbrück Denkm Dionysus drama dramatist Einleitung elements episode Eteocles Eumenides Euripides evidence exposition expressed fact Flor Urb Ambr formal genitive grammatical Greek Grundbegriff Heracles high sole high-soled boot high-soled shoe high-soled tragic boot historical hypothesis Indo-European inflectional Indo-European languages inflectional forms King Kurze Vergl Laius Latin lines Ludwig manuscripts meaning mode nominal nouns Oresteia Orestes original parodos passage Persians Piraeus play plural Polynices Prometheus Prometheus Bound reference represented Sanskrit scene semantic agglutination Sprachen stasimon subjunctive suffixes Suidas Suppliants Theatergeb theory tion tragic actors trilogy types of usage Ural-Altaic Wieseler word-formation words Zeus ἀλλ γὰρ δὲ ἐμβάδες ἐμβάτης ἐν καὶ κόθορνος μὲν οἱ τὰ τε τὴν τὸ τοῖς τὸν τοῦ τοὺς τῶν ὑπόδημα
Popular passages
Page 25 - O, for a muse of fire, that would ascend The brightest heaven of invention ! A kingdom for a stage, princes to act, And monarchs to behold the swelling scene...
Page 25 - On this unworthy scaffold to bring forth So great an object: can this cockpit hold The vasty fields of France? or may we cram Within this wooden O the very casques That did affright the air at Agincourt? O, pardon! since a crooked figure may Attest in little place a million; And let us, ciphers to this great accompt, On your imaginary forces work.
Page 25 - Piece out our imperfections with your thoughts ; Into a thousand parts divide one man, And make imaginary puissance : Think, when we talk of horses, that you see them Printing their proud hoofs i...
Page 71 - The direction of movement is towards flectionless languages (such as Chinese, or to a certain extent Modern English) with § 5. It is impossible to decide the case between Bopp's and Jespersen's hypotheses upon the basis of either historical or comparative grammar, and Brugmann therefore very properly declines to enter upon the question of the origin of formatives (suffixes and root-determinatives) : 'These1 terms [suffix, prefix, etc.] all presuppose a certain2 original independence, such as the...
Page 78 - the number of actual forms proved beyond a doubt to have originated through agglutination is very small ; the three or four instances named above [viz. the Scandinavian passive voice, the Romance future tense, and the Scandinavian suffixed article] are everywhere appealed to, but are there so many more than these? And are they numerous -enough to justify so general an assertion ? ' If the number of well-established cases of semantic agglutination in the Indo-European languages is so small, a number...
Page 152 - Fortunae gravesque principum amicitias et arma nondum expiatis uncta cruoribus, periculosae plenum opus aleae, tractas et incedis per ignes suppositos cineri doloso.
Page 86 - Quaerat etiam sitne apud Graecos vis quaedam sexti casus et apud nos quoque septimi. Nam cum dico 'hasta percussi', non utor ablativi natura, nee si idem Graece dicam, dativi.
Page 66 - The attempts to analyze grammatical forms are not simply airy speculations, they do not rest wholly upon assumptions and imaginary constructions of single scholars, but are ultimately based upon a considerable mass of definite linguistic...
Page 71 - ... sees that we have sometimes to deal with the reverse process of inseparable parts of words gradually gaining independence, will have to look out for a better or less ambiguous word than synthesis for the conditions of primitive speech. What in the later stages of language is analyzed or dissolved, in the earlier stages was unanalysable or indissoluble ; " entangled " or "complicated " would therefore be better renderings of our impression of the first state of things.
Page 72 - Primitive linguistic units must have been much more complicated in point of meaning, as well as much longer in point of sound, than those with which we are most familiar.