Studies of the Greek Poets (Vol 1 of 2)

CHAPTER XIII.

Chapter 13163 wordsPublic domain

_SOPHOCLES._

The Personal Beauty of Sophocles: his Life; Stories about him.--Athens in the Age of Pericles.--Antique Criticism on his Style: its Perfect Harmony.--Aristotle's Respect for Sophocles.--Character in Greek Tragedy.--Sophocles and Æschylus.--The Religious Feeling of Sophocles.--His Ethics.--Exquisite Proportion observed in his Treatment of the _Dramatis Personæ_.--Power of Using Motives.--The _Philoctetes_.--Comparison of the _Choëphoroe_ and the _Electra_.--Climax of the _Oedipus Coloneüs_.--How Sophocles led onward to Euripides.--The _Trachiniæ_.--Goethe's Remarks on the _Antigone_.--The Tale of Thebes.--_Oedipus Tyrannus_, _Oedipus Coloneüs_, and _Antigone_ do not make up a Trilogy.--Story of Laius.--The Philosophy of Fate contained in it.--The Oracle.--Analysis of _Oedipus Tyrannus_.--Masterly Treatment of the Character of Oedipus.--Change of Situation in the _Coloneüs_.--Emergence of Antigone into Prominence.--Analysis of the Antigone.--The Character of Antigone: its Beauty.--Contrast afforded by Ismene and by Creon.--Fault in the Climax of the _Antigone_.--The Final Solution of the Laian Curse.--Antigone is not Subject to Nemesis Page 436

THE GREEK POETS