The Influence of Aeschylus And Euripides On the Structure And Content of Swinbur
The Influence of Aeschylus And Euripides On the Structure And Content of Swinbur
Marion Clyde Wier
The book The Influence of Aeschylus And Euripides On the Structure And Content of Swinbur was written by author Marion Clyde Wier Here you can read free online of The Influence of Aeschylus And Euripides On the Structure And Content of Swinbur book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is The Influence of Aeschylus And Euripides On the Structure And Content of Swinbur a good or bad book?
What reading level is The Influence of Aeschylus And Euripides On the Structure And Content of Swinbur book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
533 we read This light is sweet; the darkness under earth Gives no delight for man to enter in Even in a dream; and I though grown so old Abominate it; never wish to die. Fr. 543 is just one word, "He offered up sacrifice, " which finds its echo in "when the king did sacrifice, " This seems on the whole quite a number of hints for a poet to take from the scanty fragments of one he held in such contempt. Fragments of Erechtheus. Of the fragments of the Erechtheus he made little use, but somewhat... more than he claimed in the letter quoted by Gosse. An examination of the fragment referred to (Nauck 362) will show that he made use of more than a hint and one or two of the best lines. Moreover fragment 370 of the Erechtheus seems to find an echo in Atalanta, where Althaea tells her son of the glorious old age that comes to men who have done great deeds and thought high thoughts. This shows that Swinburne learned early the value of material found in the tragic fragments; he certainly made free use of whatever appealed to him in those of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides.
User Reviews: