Capitolo 58
of battle that he comes right from the war and you/he/she can speak with
knowledge." Probably the herald is (although perhaps not rather constantly)
conceived as having dressed again wicker the place-alacrity with his/her news.
Pp. 22 ff., Herald.]--The herald bursts in you overcome with excitement and
please, full of love for what he sees. A marked
contrasts to Agamemnon ll. 810 ff. Note that its first discourse confirms everybody
the worse fears suggested by Clytemnestra. Agamemnon has committed all the
sins against which she has prayed, and more. The terrible lines 527 ff., "Up to her
The Houses of of the, etc." they are a lot of as a passage in the _Persae_, 811 ff.,
where precisely the same actions from the Persian invaders of Greece do them
inevitable future punishment.
P. 22, l. 509, God of Pythian.]--Apollo is often a left figure in
tragedy. Cf. Sophocles _Oedipus_, ll. 915 ff., pp. 52 ff., and the
similar scene, _Electra_, 655 ff. Here it is a hit to the herald to come
suddenly on the god that was the principal enemy of the Greek to Troy. One
touches Apollo a bad presence also in the scene of Cassandra, 11. 1071 ff.,
pp. 47 ff.
P. 23, l. 530, happy among men.]--crowns her of his/her triumph! The first Greek
was thought asking the question what is always the human happiness? To the
Herald Agamemnon has realized the happiness if some that one ever did. Cf. the
notorious history of Croesus that asks to Solon in that it was the happiest man the
world (Herodotus, me. 30-33).
P. 24, ll. 551 ff., The second discourse of herald.]--The connexion of thought is:
"Later everything, because both us you/they should desire to die? All have ended well." This
vivid description of the actualities of war can now be increased better of value
what it was able in 1913.
P. 25, l. 577, these loots.]--Loots that it means to come from the Trojan
War is existing in Greek weathers in the day of Aeschylus and later.
P. 26, l. 595, the to joy-whine of our women.]--Là seems to have been in Argos a
old popular party, celebrating with joy or derision the supposed death