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Euripides

Hippolytus/The Bacchae

  • mtjjelena2006has quotedlast month
    And now I come to Hellas—having taught
    All the world else my dances and my rite
    Of mysteries, to show me in men's sight
    Manifest God.
  • mtjjelena2006has quoted2 months ago
    There by the castle side
    I see her place, the Tomb of the Lightning's Bride,
    The wreck of smouldering chambers, and the great
    Faint wreaths of fire undying—as the hate
    Dies not, that Hera held for Semelê.
  • mtjjelena2006has quoted2 months ago
    , changed in shape from God to man,
    I walk again by Dirce's streams and scan
    Ismenus' shore.
  • mtjjelena2006has quoted2 months ago
    Of heaven's hot splendour lit to life,
  • mtjjelena2006has quoted2 months ago
    background represents the front of the Castle of PENTHEUS, King of Thebes. At one side is visible the sacred Tomb of Semelê, a little enclosure overgrown with wild vines, with a cleft in the rocky floor of it from which there issues at times steam or smoke. The God DIONYSUS _is discovered alone.
  • mtjjelena2006has quoted2 months ago
    DIONYSUS, THE GOD; son of Zeus and of the Theban princess Semelê.
    CADMUS, formerly King of Thebes, father of Semelê.
    PENTHEUS, King of Thebes, grandson of Cadmus.
    AGAVE, daughter of Cadmus, mother of Pentheus.
    TEIRESIAS, an aged Theban prophet.
    A SOLDIER OF PENTHEUS' GUARD.
    TWO MESSENGERS.
    A CHORUS OF INSPIRED DAMSELS, following Dionysus from the East.
  • mtjjelena2006has quoted2 months ago
    tendencies to what are now called realism and romanticism, while marking his inferiority to the chaste classicism of Sophocles, bring him more easily within the sympathetic interest of the modern reader.
  • mtjjelena2006has quoted2 months ago
    even gods and heroes are represented as moved by the petty motives of ordinary humanity. The chorus is often quite detached from the action; the poetry is florid; and the action is frequently tinged with sensationalism.
  • mtjjelena2006has quoted2 months ago
    The idea of Fate hitherto dominant in the plays of his predecessors, tends to be degraded by him into mere chance;
  • mtjjelena2006has quoted2 months ago
    the hundred and twenty dramas ascribed to Euripides, there have come down to us complete eighteen tragedies and one satyric drama, "Cyclops," beside numerous fragments.
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