Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Prometheus and Agamemnon of Aeschylus Translated Into English Verse
In the first place, it has no human personages whatever, nor any direct human interest; appealing only to mere mortal sympathies as in behalf of the suffering mediator, friend, and saviour, who is represented as punished by the superior force of Zeus mainly on account of his philanthropic mood. In the second place, it entirely lacks every thing approaching to exterior action, and, indeed, to action at all, except at the very opening of the plot.
Vicissitude there is, indeed, and a directly continuous prog ress toward the final catastrophe of the drama, although that progress is worked out through a train of episodical entrances of persons but slenderly connected with the thread of the piece, and acting the part rather of incidental agents than of characters, in the proper sense of the word.
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