GLOSSARY A, Acharnians; K, Knights; C, Clouds; W, Wasps; P, Peace; B, Birds; F, Frogs; L, Lysistrata; T, Thesmophoriazusae; E, Ecclesiazusae; PI, Plutus. Acestor, an alien poet; also called Sacas, W. 1221 Andromeda, a play by Euripides, F. 53 Achaia,anameofDemeter,A.710 Antigone, by Euripides, quoted, F. !I82, !I 87, Acharnae, a deme of Athens, A. 180 1391 Achelous, a river of Epirus, L. 381 Antimachus, an effeminate, A. !I50, C. 1022 Acheron, the river of sorrow, in the lower regions, Antiphon, a needy glutton, W. 1270 F.471 Antisthenes, a depraved physician, E. 366, 806 Adeimantus, an Athenian general, F. 1513 Apaturia, a clan festival, A. 146, T. 558 Adonia, a yearly feast in honour of Adonis, P. 420 Apollo, physician, B. 584 Adonis, a youth beloved by Aphrodite, L. 389 Arcadia, a mountainous region in the Pelopon- Aegina, an island opposite the Peiraeus, A. 653, W. nesus, K. 798 122, F. 363 Archedemus, F. 417; the blear-eyed, F. 588 Aegyptus, a legendary King of Egypt, F. 1206 Archegetis-Arternis or Athene, L. 644 Aeolus, a play by Euripides, F. 864 Archelaus, by Euripides, quoted F. 1206 Aeschinades, P. 1154 Archenomus, F. 1507 Aeschines, a needy blusterer and braggart, W. 325, Archeptolemus, a conservative Athenian politician, 459,1220,1243, B. 823 K. 32 7, 794 Aeschylus, C. 1366, L. 188, T. 134 Archilochusquoted, A. 1228 Aesimus, a cripple, E. 208 Argeius, politician, E. 201 Aesop, W. 566, 1259 Arginusae, scene of Athenian naval victory over the Aesop's fables, P. 129, B. 471, 651 Spartans, F. 33, 191 Aetna, a city in Sicily, B. 926 Argives, i.e., Greeks, P. 475 Aetolia, a region in western Greece, K. 79 Argos, K. 465 Agamemnon, B. 509 Arignotus, son of Automenes, a harper, K. 1278, W. Agamemnon, by Aeschylus, quoted, F. 1285, 1289 1278 Agathon, a tragic poet, born about 447 B.C., F. 83 Ariphrades, son of Automenes, an evil man K. 1281, Agoracritus, "market-piace judge," K. 1335 W. 1280, E. 128 Agraulus, daughter of Cecrops, king of Athens, T. Aristeides, son of Lysimachus "the Just," a states- 533 man opposed to Themistocles, fought at Mara- Agyieus, a title of Apollo, W.875 thon, ostracized 483 B.C., but returned and took Agyrrhius, a demagogue, and in his youth efferni- a great part in the political developments of nate, had become great in the state by first pro- Athens; died about 463, K. 1325 posing, a fee of one obol for attending the Assem- Aristogeiton, the slayer of the tyrant Hipparchus, bly; then, after Heracleides had raised it to two, L. 633 by fixing it at three, E. 102, 176, 184, Pl. 176 Aristyllus, a homosexual, E. 647, Pl. 314 Alcaeus of Lesbos, an erotic poet, T. 161 Artemisia, a queen allied to Xerxes, L. 675 Alcibiades, F. 1423 Artemisium, scene of a Greek naval victory over Alcmena, bore Heracles to Zeus, B. 558 the Persians, L. 125 I Alexicacus, Averter of Ill, an epithet of Hermes Artemon, an effeminate, A. 85 (also of other gods), P. 422 Asclepius, god of healing, W. 123, Pl. 640 Alope, bore Hippothoon to Poseidon, B. 559 Ascondas, an athlete, W. 1383 Amazons, L. 679 Aspasia, mistress of Pericles, A. 527 Ameipsias, a comic poet, rival of Aristophanes, F. 14 Athamas, king of Orchomenus in Boeotia, married Ammon, Zeus, had an oracle in Libya, B. 619, Nephele, and was father of Phrixus and Helle; he 716 was stricken with madness, and fled into Thes- Amphitheus, A. 46 sa1y, C. 257 Amyclae, a town near Sparta, L. 1299 Athmone, a deme of Athens, P. 190 Amynias, Aeschines' cowardly brother, C. 31. 694. Automenes. father of Arignotus and Ariphrades, W. W·74. 1266 1275 Amynon, a depraved politician, E. 365 Anacreon of Teos, an erotic poet, T. 161 Anagyrus, an Attic deme, L. 67 Anaphlystus, an Attic de me, E. 979 Androcles, a rogue, W. 1187 Babylon, B. 552 Bacchus, shrine of, L. 2 Bakis, a Boeotian seer of Helicon; there was a collection current of his oracles, K. 123, 1003, P. 1071
Battus, king of Cyrene, Pl. 925 Belierophon, F. 1051; represented as lame in the play of Euripides, A. 427, P. 148 Bereschethus, a goblin, K. 635 Boeotians, P. 466 Brasidas, a great Spartan leader in the Peloponnesian War, killed at Amphipolis 422 B.C., W. 475, P.64° Brauron, an Attic deme, scene of a famous festival, P.874 Brauronia, a feast of Artemis, L. 645 Bupalus, a sculptor, had caricatured Hipponax, who lampooned him and threatened to strike him,L. 361 Byzantium, the earlier city on the site of Constantinople, C.249, W.236 Cadmus, founder of Thebes, F. 1225 Caecias, the N.E. wind, K. 437 Callias, son of Hipponicus, a spendthrift, B. 283, E. 810 Callimachus, a poor poet, E. 809 Camarina, a town in Sicily, A.605 Cannonus, a lawgiver, E. 1089 Cantharus, a harbour of the Peiraeus, P. 145 Carcinus, a comic poet, father of three dwarfish sons, C. 1261, W. 1508, P. 781, 866 Cardopion, a scandalous fellow, W. 1178 Caria, a country in southwestern Asia Minor, K. 173 Carthage,K. 174, 1303 Carystian (Euboean) allies in Athens, L. 1058, 1182 Caystrian (Lydian) plains, A. 68 Cebrione, a giant, B. 553 Cecrops, king of Attica, C. 301, W. 438 Celeus, son of Triptolemus, A. 49 Centaurs, C. 349 Cephale, an Attic deme, B. 476 Cephal us, a potter and demagogue, E. 248 Cephisodemus, an advocate, A. 705 Cephisophon, a slave of Euripides; he was credited with helping the dramatist in his tragedies, F. 939 Cerameicus, the potter's quarter at Athens, where public funerals took place, K. 772, B. 395, F. 127, 1093 Cerberus, the dog of Hades, P. 313, F. III Chaereas, W. 687 Chaerephon, a pupil of Socrates, C. 104, etc., W. 1408, B. 1296, 1564 Chaeretades, E. 51 . Chaeris, a wretched Theban piper, A. 16, P. 950 Chalcis, Chalcidice in Thrace, K. 238 Chaonia, in Epirus, A. 613, K. 78 Chaos, B. 69 I Charinades, P. I 154 Charites, the Graces, B. 781 Charixene, a poetess, E. 943 Charminius, a general, an Athenian officer, T.804 Charon, ferryman of the Styx, F. 184 Chersonesus, the peninsula of Gallipoli, K.262 Chios, a proverb relating to, P. 171 Chloe-Demeter, L. 835 GLOSSARY Choae, the Pitcher feast, A. 961 Chvtri, the Pitcher feast, F. 218 Cicynna, an Attic deme, C. 134 Cillicon, a traitor, P. 363 Cimolian earth, fuller's earth, F. 712 Cimon, an Athenian statesman, L. 1144 Cinesias, a dithyrambic poet, constantly ridiculed for his thinness, musical perversities, and profane and dissolute conduct, B. 1372, F. 153,364, 1437, E. 330 Cithaeron, mt., T. 996 Cleaenetus, father of Cleon, K. 574 Cleidemides, F. 791 Cleigenes, F. 709 Cleinarete, E. 41 Cleinias, father of Alcibiades, A. 716 Cleisthenes, "son ofSibyrtius," a coward and effeminate, A. 1I8, K. 1374, C. 355, W. 1I87, B. 831, F. 48, 422, L. 1092, T.235 Cleocritus, an ungainly man, B. 873, F. 1437 Cieomenes, king of Sparta, L. 274 Cleon, son of Cleaenetus, a tanner, demagogue and popular leader after the death of Pericles in 429 B.C., He opposed peace. In 424 took part in the surrender of the Spartans at Sphacteria, which he laid to his own credit. Killed by Brasidas at Amphipolis, 422, A. 6, 300, 378, 502, 659, K.137, 976, C. 549, 586, 591, W. 35,62, 197, 241, 596, 841, 895, 1220, 1224, 1237, 1285, P. 47, 648, F. 569 Cleonymus, the butt of Athens for his bulk and his appetite, who cast away his shield at Odium, A. 88,844, K. 958,1293, 1372, C. 353, 450,674, W. 20, 592, 822, P. 446, 672, 1295, B. 289, 1475, T. 605 Cleophon, a demagogue, F. 677, 1532 Cobalus, K. 635 Cocytus, the River of Wailing, in the lower regions, F'47 1 Coesyra, a name in the great Alcmaeonid family, A. 614, C. 48, 800 Colaenis, a name of Artemis, B. 872 Colias, a title of Aphrodite, or of her attendant lovedeities, C. 52, L. 2 Colonus, an eminence in the Agora, B. 998 Conisalus, a local Attic Priapus, L. 982 Connas, a drunken flute-player, K. 534, W. 675 Copaic eels, from Lake Copais (A. 880) in Boeotia,. P. 1005 Corinth, K. 603, B. 968 Corinthians and the League, E. 199 Corybants, priests of Cybele, L. 558 Cothocidae, an Attic deme, T.622 Cranaae-Athens, B, 123 Cranaan town-Athens, L. 481 Crates, a comic poet, flourished about 450 B.C. K. 536 Cratinus, a dandy, A. 849, 1I73; a comic poet, 519- 422 B.C., K. 400, 526, P. 700, F. 337 Cretan monodies, F. 849 Crioa, a deme of Athens, B. 645 Cronos, father of Zeus, C. 929, B. 469, 586
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GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD RO
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GENERAL CONTENTS .. II I I .. I ..
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CONTENTS BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE, p. ix T
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168-207 THE SUPPLIANT MAIDENS Then
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Reproachful commons cast it in my t
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Gray wolf: nor can the byblus-fruit
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1030-1054 Chaste Artemis, watch ove
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The land that gave them birth, Asia
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The moving finger that metes out ou
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They hailed him their God-given cou
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999-1036 AESCHYLUS I marvel that th
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Queen-Power by Zeus appointed war's
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His lightning for a stumbling-block
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Sound are her bulwarks; her ports w
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960-101 I AESCHYLUS 1011-1053 An. W
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... PROMETHEUS BOUND KRATOS BrA HEP
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Oc. Seest thou in warm affection de
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See! See! the wax-webbed reeds! Oh,
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Better to die at once than live, an
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87-128 AGAMEMNON No altar, none, in
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Now may men say .. Zeus smote them"
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He. But why so ill at ease? Why suc
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In Priam's house a hated face, A cu
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1015-/061 AGAMEMNON 1062-III1 And a
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1205-1249 AGAMEMNON Ch. We are nice
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15°2-1550 She hath the altar dress
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CHOEPHOROE DRAMATIS PERSONAE ORESTE
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Ch. I'm an old woman, and shall you
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Is that a fetch of thought beyond t
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808-854 AESCHYLUS Through this dark
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Delphi. Before the Temple of Apollo
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360-388 EUMENIDES 389-433 Grave car
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Or. a Pallas! a Preserver of my rac
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971- 1007 Spirit of Counsel, suave
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SOPHOCLES was born at Colonus in At
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OEDIPUS THE KING OEDIPUS, King of T
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Oed. Teiresias, whose soul grasps a
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point alone, but has the largest sc
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SOPHOCLES So, in that case, Apollo
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950-1000 SOPHOCLES 1001-1039 Oed. I
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After bearing such a stain upon me,
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OEDIPUS AT COLONUS OEDIPUS ANTIGONE
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Oed. In what conjuncture of events,
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Ch. (threateningly, to CREON). What
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SOPHOCLES touch to joy, perchance t
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OEDlPUS AT COLONUS will, but to do
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ANTIGONE I daughters of Oedipus ISM
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552-016 SOPHOCLES Is. Tell me-how c
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een mine, no joy of marriage, no po
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would ever praise or blame as settl
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182:-255 AJAX Never of thine own he
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555-606 thou shalt come unto that k
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Ah. hapless Ajax. from what height
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Teu. And hear my answer-he shall be
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Ag. So thou wouldst have me allow t
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I have praise of such; never, when
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age in my heart, through those new
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last, keeping his horses behind, fo
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aimless waste; for the story would
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TRACHINIAE DRAMATIS PERSONAE DEiANE
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TRACHINIAE Such a state is grievous
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668-'124 SOPHOCLES Ch. It is nothin
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PHILOCTETES ODYSSEUS NEOPTOLEMUS PH
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SOPHOCLES Ne. A clever wrestler he;
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PHILOCIETES that in no wise, willin
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PHILOCTETES Ph. What, thou basest a
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First I would tell thee of mine own
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EURIPIDES, "the philosopher of the
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1-50 50-88 RHESUS DRAMATIS PERSONAE
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EURIPIDES not a few, with countless
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My counsel is we go and rouse the L
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890"""945 RHESUS Muse, one of the s
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towards you? Perdition catch him, b
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MEDEA Cr. I will, for I love not th
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MEDEA as your foes. Yea, men should
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sweet fancy dead and gone; for I mu
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129{)-J343 MEDEA any deed of horror
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EURIPIDES Hi. And rightly too; rese
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Ph. I will grant it out of reverenc
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581- 637 EURIPIDES Ph. 'Tis the son
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like a bird from the covert of my h
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1073-1150 EURIPIDES 1151-1211 seaso
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o'ertake its halls, through heaven'
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death he hath a legacy of grief tha
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ALCESTIS Ch. Peace! enough the pres
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886-954 ALCESTIS death's ravages is
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1121-1139 ALCESTIS if haply to thy
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81-133 HERACLEIDlE left Eubrea's cl
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this custom, to exaggerate what hap
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EURIPIDES 10. A messenger who says
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EURIPIDES what sage purpose Iolaus
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from aged eyes the piteous tear is
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JE. Yet the word, that lurks within
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law of all Hellas. Wha t is not wel
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EURIPIDES Ad. Hearken then. For in
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0;//62 EURIPIDES shall it avail me
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THE TROJAN WOMEN POSEIDON ATHENA HE
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to take my place thereon? Lose no f
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EURIPIDES sets himself to work the
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EURIPIDES gained, was ruin to me, a
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of our race, dost thou behold our s
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ION Ion. The god's whole temple is
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ION is not my own, but only finding
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EURIPIDES Ch. Ah! how I ever hate t
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ION 1222-1277 ian votary; and in th
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EURIPIDES Cr. With fear I tremble s
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HELEN TEUCER CHORUS, ladies attenda
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swallowed; and in a cavern's deep r
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But I, since I have stayed my appoi
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EURIPIDES He. Thou canst not slay t
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EURIPIDES escape; my lips are seale
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122//260 EURIPIDES He. An easy task
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HELEN hold"; and as he spoke he dre
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ANDROMACHE DRAMATIS PERSONAE ANDROM
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mine should rule o'er Phthia? Ah no
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ANDROMACHE It was to make thee leav
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voyage of note; and when in days lo
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ANDROMACHE gleaming harness like a
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PEASANT, Of Mycenae ELECTRA ORESTES
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ELECTRA El. In what land is my poor
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Pe. I will take this message to the
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O.M. Yes, and when he sees thee the
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861-919 ELECfRA' 91g-973 join in th
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1086-1136 ELECTRA to virtue. If, as
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Before the Palace of Pentheus at Th
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Di. Day too for that matter may dis
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EURIPIDES shall we chase Agave, mot
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Pe. Shall I be able to carryon my s
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sorrowl Ohl to reach a spot where c
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100-179 EURIPIDES 180-244 as his ap
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I upon a foreign shore am called a
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EURIPIDES 88r953 perhaps this were
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HECUBA former times have spoken ill
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HERACLES MAD DRAMATIS PERSONAE AMPH
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HERACLES MAD terror of a brave man'
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EURIPIDES Am. Stand further off, ma
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lie. I will die and return to that
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THE PHCENICIAN MAIDENS DRAMATIS PER
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EURIPIDES Enter CHORUS. hither as a
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to the flames and dedicated these s
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THE PHCENICIAN MAIDENS and mine. As
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THE PHCENICIAN MAIDENS Men. Wh;l.t
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will possess my palace without riva
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CE. Where fate appoints, there will
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EURIPIDES EI. Death, death; what el
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his eyes, whom my soul abhors. What
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pease as a fierce fire is to quench
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EURIPIDES Oh! to reach that rock wh
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1186-1236 EURIPIDES Or. With what i
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IPHIGENIA AMONG THE TAURI DRAMATIS
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IPHIGENIA AMONG THE TAURI rescue; f
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death; else shall I get a name for
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a deliverance from trouble for the
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ful swans do service to the Muse. W
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IPHIGENJA AMONG THE TAURI the stran
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IPHIGENIA AT AULIS AGAMEMNON DRAMAT
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Attica, having the goddess Pallas s
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sons to weep and tell out all their
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Ag. There is a sacrifice I have fir
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een mine this long time past. At. T
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EURIPIDES 1250-1324 children on thy
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15 10- 1573 IPHIGENIA AT AU LIS Ch.
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EURIPIDES never been a race of wome
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Cy. It is not right that gods shoul
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THE PLAYS OF ARISTOPHANES
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CONTENTS BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE, p. 451
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Enter, clad in gorgeous Oriental ap
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And from land to land to chase him,
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ARISTOPHANES 'Tis I, Cholleidian Di
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Are ye for buyin' onie pigs the day
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Enter CRIER, while the eccyclema ex
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1182-1211 THE ACHARNIANS 1212-1233
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ARISTOPHANES Viler and fouler and c
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Pa. I'll stretch you Bat, by Heracl
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ARISTOPHANES Thou Agora, whence my
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He will know to your cost what a de
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One who for Demus will fight with a
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s.-s. You're quite derisive of thes
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74-118 A galloping consumption caug
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ARISTOPHANES St. This then will I d
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THE CLOUDS St. Ah, but Cleonymus ha
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Your arms shall be tight, your tong
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Am. "0 heavy fatel" "0 Fortune, tho
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ARISTOPHANES talked over all the cr
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Donkey, why grieve? at being sold t
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Now protruding, now protruding, Com
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They count you all as a Connas's vo
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ARISTOPHANES 888-933 Bd. (to PHILOC
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Mine was then a life of glory, neve
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Once he travelled to Pharsalus, our
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1462-1501 THE WASPS 1501- 1537 With
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70-120 THE PEACE And tried by them
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Tr. What's to bedone, my poor dear
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Butt on butt was dashed and shivere
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And I fought for the safety of you
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ARISTOPHANES 1080-1111 1st S. What
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1I8rrI233 ARISTOPHANES Very lions i
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1-20 EUELPIDES PEISTHETAERUS THE BI
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225-267 Pe. Hi! THE BIRDS Eu. Well?
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THE BIRDS You would slay two worthy
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Pc. But the strongest and clearest
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First a Captain, then a Colonel, ti
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With great foundation-stones they h
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He gets the marts reopened, and the
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1-27 XANTHIAS, servant of Dionysus
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Di. Then crouch we down, and mark w
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Chorus Come, Muse, to our Mystical
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Of four continuous lyric odes: the
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1216-1263 THE FROGS He'll never tac
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Di. I'll tell you. "Achilles threw
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1-23 THE LYSISTRATA LYSISTRATA CALO
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Ly. 0 dearest friend; my one true f
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ARISTOPHANES or Committee of Pllbli
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Ca. Here is an excellent spindle to
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