The Drama of Euripides |
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Page 100
... sympathy is likely to be guided by theirs , a fact of which the dramatist makes full and effective use . By putting the weight of the chorus ' sympathy on one side , he makes it difficult for the sympathy of the audience to be engaged ...
... sympathy is likely to be guided by theirs , a fact of which the dramatist makes full and effective use . By putting the weight of the chorus ' sympathy on one side , he makes it difficult for the sympathy of the audience to be engaged ...
Page 102
... sympathy from them . After her death , however , men would have been more suitable , for then it is Hippolytus who needs support . Indeed , because our sympathy is immedi- ately engaged on behalf of the lovelorn woman , we may well feel ...
... sympathy from them . After her death , however , men would have been more suitable , for then it is Hippolytus who needs support . Indeed , because our sympathy is immedi- ately engaged on behalf of the lovelorn woman , we may well feel ...
Page 109
... sympathy they go on to express for the suppliants echo , as usual , the essential features of 7 the prologos . In The Trojan Women , the chorus first join in Hecuba's lamentation , and then sing an ode in which they wonder to which ...
... sympathy they go on to express for the suppliants echo , as usual , the essential features of 7 the prologos . In The Trojan Women , the chorus first join in Hecuba's lamentation , and then sing an ode in which they wonder to which ...
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Common terms and phrases
Achilles Admetus Adrastus Aegisthus Agamemnon Alcestis Amphitryo Andromache Antigone Aphrodite Apollo appears Argive Argos Artemis Athenian Athens audience Bacchants beautiful begs brother character child Children of Heracles choral ode chorus clearly Clytemnestra comes Creon Creusa curse daughter dead death Dionysus divine doubt dramatic dramatist Electra emotional Eteocles Euripidean Euripides express fact fate father fear feel gives goddess gods Greece Greek Hector Hecuba Helen Hermione hero Hippolytus human husband Iocasta Iolaus Iphigenia Jason kill king lamentation Lycus madness Medea Menelaus messenger monologue mother murder natural Neoptolemus Odysseus Oedipus Orestes palace parodos Peleus Pentheus Phaedra pity play poet Polyneices Polyxena prayer prologos Pylades reference relevance Rhesus sacrifice says scene seems sing slave song sorrow Sparta speak speech story Suppliants sympathy Taurians tells Theban Thebes Theonoe Theseus tragedy tragic Trojan Women Troy Tyndareus vengeance Verrall whole wife woman words worship Xuthus Zeus