ArionTrustees of Boston University, 1963 - Classical literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 40
Page 86
... accepting your fate . It means dying in one form and being reborn in another . It means ac- cepting - accepting oneself , accepting fate . SAPPHO : And did you accept , Britomart ? BRITOMART : I ran away , Sappho . It's easier for the ...
... accepting your fate . It means dying in one form and being reborn in another . It means ac- cepting - accepting oneself , accepting fate . SAPPHO : And did you accept , Britomart ? BRITOMART : I ran away , Sappho . It's easier for the ...
Page 87
... accepting , and accepting oneself . SAPPHO : Yes , but what does it mean ? How can you accept a force that seizes you and turns you into desire , into shuddering desire that struggles over a body , a man's or a girl's , like the foam ...
... accepting , and accepting oneself . SAPPHO : Yes , but what does it mean ? How can you accept a force that seizes you and turns you into desire , into shuddering desire that struggles over a body , a man's or a girl's , like the foam ...
Page 133
... accepted without reservation , for it introduces a symbol on which the remainder of the poem will depend : like the ... accept it , a host of qualifications must be added ; and , by the time we have added them , the equation is hardly ...
... accepted without reservation , for it introduces a symbol on which the remainder of the poem will depend : like the ... accept it , a host of qualifications must be added ; and , by the time we have added them , the equation is hardly ...
Contents
NATURE AND THE WORLD OF MAN | 9 |
GREEK LITERATURE | 32 |
TWO FROM ARCHILOCHUS | 54 |
31 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Achilles Aeneas Aeneid Aeschylus Agamemnon ancient Apollo Archaic Archilochus ARIADNE ARION Aristotle Aristotle's audience BACCHANTE beauty BRITOMART CASTOR century chorus classical culture classical scholarship classical studies classicists Clytaemnestra criticism death Deianeira divine dramatic dream ENDYMION Euripides eyes fact fate feel forces girl give gods Greek tragedy Hellenic Heracles hero heroic Hesiod Homer Horace human Iliad imitation irrational language Latin LEUCOTHEA lines literary literature live look man's Mandel matter mean ment mind MNEMOSYNE modern moral natural world never Nietzsche Nietzsche's Odyssey Oedipus Oresteia Orestes ORPHEUS passage passion pattern perhaps Philoctetes philologists philology Pindar Plato play poem poet poetic poetry polis POLYDEUCES Pound Pyrrha rational Renaissance Roman SAPPHO scholars seems sense sleep song Sophocles STRANGER style suffering tell things thought Thucydides tion tradition tragic translation true understand University Virgil vision whole Wilamowitz woman word Zeus