The Antigone of Sophocles in Greek and EnglishJohn W. Parker, 1848 - 31 páginas |
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Página xxxv
... deed to the watch- men , who , he thinks , have been bribed by a party among the citizens unfavourable to his authority : and he re- turns to his palace uttering the direst threats against the Sentinel , if he does not forthwith produce ...
... deed to the watch- men , who , he thinks , have been bribed by a party among the citizens unfavourable to his authority : and he re- turns to his palace uttering the direst threats against the Sentinel , if he does not forthwith produce ...
Página xxxvi
... deed or its consequences . Kreon sends them back by the left - hand door , which led to the prison , as well as to the women's apartments , forcibly expressing the thought , that imprisonment was the proper lot of their sex . Kreon ...
... deed or its consequences . Kreon sends them back by the left - hand door , which led to the prison , as well as to the women's apartments , forcibly expressing the thought , that imprisonment was the proper lot of their sex . Kreon ...
Página xxxvii
... deed which has brought her to it . A few anapæsts are recited by Kreon , the Chorus , and Antigone , as she is led away by the right - hand parascenia . Kreon takes his seat on the throne , while the Chorus , INTRODUCTION . xxxvii.
... deed which has brought her to it . A few anapæsts are recited by Kreon , the Chorus , and Antigone , as she is led away by the right - hand parascenia . Kreon takes his seat on the throne , while the Chorus , INTRODUCTION . xxxvii.
Página 9
... deed ? tell me , I pray , thy drift . ANTIGONE . Wilt aid this hand of mine to lift the corpse ? ISMENE . And wouldst thou bury whom the state proscribes ? ANTIGONE . Proscribed or not , my brother and thine too , Though it mislike thee ...
... deed ? tell me , I pray , thy drift . ANTIGONE . Wilt aid this hand of mine to lift the corpse ? ISMENE . And wouldst thou bury whom the state proscribes ? ANTIGONE . Proscribed or not , my brother and thine too , Though it mislike thee ...
Página 11
... deed . Be what it liketh thee to be , but I Will bury him ; and shall esteem it honour To die in the attempt : dying for him , Loving with one who loves me I shall lie , After a holy deed of sin : the time Of the world's claims upon me ...
... deed . Be what it liketh thee to be , but I Will bury him ; and shall esteem it honour To die in the attempt : dying for him , Loving with one who loves me I shall lie , After a holy deed of sin : the time Of the world's claims upon me ...
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Passagens conhecidas
Página 227 - The hand that writ it ; for I love you so That I in your sweet thoughts would be forgot If thinking on me then should make you woe. O, if, I say, you look upon this verse When I perhaps compounded am with clay, Do not so much as my poor name rehearse, But let your love even with my life decay, Lest the wise world should look into your moan And mock you with me after I am gone.
Página 196 - But love, first learned in a lady's eyes, Lives not alone immured in the brain; But with the motion of all elements, Courses as swift as thought in every power; And gives to every power a double power, Above their functions and their offices.
Página 166 - Man, that is born of a woman, hath but a short time to live, and is full of misery. He cometh up, and is cut down, like a flower ; he fleeth as it were a shadow, and never continueth in one stay.
Página 197 - I'll see their trial first : — Bring in the evidence. — Thou robed man of justice, take thy place ; — [To Edgar. And thou, his yoke-fellow of equity, [To the Fool. Bench by his side : — You are of the commission, Sit you too.
Página 45 - Twas they who ratified those other laws, And set their record in the human heart. Nor do I deem thy heraldings so mighty, That thou, a mortal man, couldst trample on The unwritten and unchanging laws of heaven. They are not of to-day, or yesterday, But ever live, and no one knows their birth-tide...
Página 163 - ... he would be bold with himself and say, when he preached twice a day at St. Giles...
Página 232 - The time is out of joint; — О cursed spite! That ever I was born to set it right ! Nay, come, let 's go together.
Página 165 - Haud minus .¿Eneas tortos legit obvius orbes, Vestigatque virum, et disjecta per agmina magna Voce vocat. Quoties oculos conjecit in hostem, Alipedumque fugam cursu tentavit equorum : Aversos toties currus Juturna retorsit.
Página ix - Lamb to an honoured friend of mine : that he had derived more pleasure from the meagre Latin versions of the Greek tragedians, than from any other versions of them he was acquainted with.