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CHORUS.


     Now Adrasteia1 be near and guard
     Our lips from sin, lest the end be hard!
But he cometh, he cometh, the Child of the River!
     The pride of my heart it shall roll unbarred.
We craved thy coming; yea, need was strong
     In the Hall of thy lovers, O child of Song;
Thy mother the Muse and her fair-bridged River
     They held thee from us so long, so long!

1 P. 20, l. 342, Adrasteia.]-She-from-whom-there-is-no-Running, is a goddess identified with Nemesis, a requiter of sin, especially the sin of pride or over-confidence. In spite of the opening apology this whole chorus, with its boundless exultation, is an offence against her.-It is interesting to notice that a town and a whole district in the north of the Troad was called by her name; the poet is using local colour in making his Trojans here, and Rhesus in l. 468, speak of her. There seems also to be something characteristically Thracian in the story of the Muse and the River, in the title "Zeus of the Dawn" given to Rhesus, in the revelry to be held when Ilion is free, and in the conception of the king in his dazzling chariot, Sun-god-like.

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    • James Adam, The Republic of Plato, 5.451A
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