Collard, Formal Debates in Euripides' Drama, 1975
Collard, Formal Debates in Euripides' Drama, 1975
Collard, Formal Debates in Euripides' Drama, 1975
Author(s): C. Collard
Source: Greece & Rome , Apr., 1975, Vol. 22, No. 1 (Apr., 1975), pp. 58-71
Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association
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What argument could there be about wisdom with Orestes here ? If what
is good and what is not good are clear to all, was ever man more fool than
he, who did not look for justice nor had resort to Greece's common law?
(Or. 491-5).'
Such headlines often draw responses which accept the ground of
argument marked out by the opponent, as Orestes takes up this attack
by Tyndareus:
Old man, I truly fear to speak against you when I am likely to outrage
you. I know, for killing my mother I am impure, but under another head,
pure, in that I have avenged my father (Or. 544-7).
I 491 codd.
-rrpi. Trp6S Dramatic
-r6v6E aoqaias & " &ycv
context and ylKoi rrOpt;
the logic ofPorson: -rp6s r6v6'
the argument c&yCbv
(cf. -riS
below, p. aoqIa 1Ket
70) bar
Bothe's daopacc and it must be struck from Murray's OCT.