Capitolo 59
of a man and a woman. Homer (Or. iii. 309 fs.) he/she deduces him/it from a joyfulness
from Orestes on Aigisthos and Clytemnestra; cf. under, ll. 1316 ff., p.
59; Aeschylus here and Sophocles in the _Electra_, from a celebration from
Clytemnestra of the deaths of Agamemnon and Cassandra. Probably it was
really of the New year and to the agenda and the Old celebration of year to that the poets
gives a tragic touch. It seems to have had the "Ololugmos" of a woman in him,
it perhaps sent forth from men. See her/it note of Kaibel, Soph. _Electra_ 277-281.
P. 26, l. 612, bronze is dyed as wool.]--Impossible in the misprint
feel, but there is after everything one way of dying a sword red!
P. 27, l. 617, Menelaus.]--This detour on Menelaus is due, as
generally similar detours are when they happens in Greek plays, to the
poet sensitive border to follow the tradition. Homer starts his more from a lot
account of the to kill of Agamemnon asking "Where Menelaus was?" (Or.
iii. 249). Agamemnon could be attached in safe because he was alone.
Menelaus went away, it destroyed or it wind-limited.
P. 28, l. 642, two-fold up scourge.]--Ares works his/her wish when it launches crosses
pierces through, when man meets man. "From now you two-fold up."
P. 29, choir. The name HELENA.]--there was a controversy in Aeschylus'
day if language, included names it was a matter of Convention or of
Nature. It was it mere accident, and it was able you it changes the name of anything to
desire? Or it was language a thing taken root in kind and it mended from God from of
old? Aeschylus adopts the second sight: Because this had called Helena?
If one had understood the purpose one of God you/he/she would have seen it was because her
really _was_ "Helenas"--_Ship-destroyer_. (The history of the herald of the
shipwreck has suggested this particular idea.) Likewise, if a hero were
Called Aias, and it came to the great pain, one could see that he had called this way
from 'Aiai', "Alas!"--The antistrophe seems to find a meaning in the name
Paris or Alexandras, where the etymology is not so clear.