Second Stasimon
τίς γῆ; τί γένος; τίνα φῶ λεύσσειν
τόνδε χαλινοῖς ἐν πετρίνοισιν
χειμαζόμενον;
τίνος ἀμπλακίας ποινὰς ὀλέκῃ;
565 σήμηνον ὅποι γῆς μογερὰ πεπλάνημαι.
, ,
χρίει τις αὖ με τὰν τάλαιναν οἶστρος,
εἴδωλον Ἄργου γηγενοῦς, ἄλευʼ δᾶ· φοβοῦμαι
τὸν μυριωπὸν εἰσορῶσα βούταν.
570 δὲ πορεύεται δόλιον ὄμμʼ ἔχων,
570 ὃν οὐδὲ κατθανόντα γαῖα κεύθει.
ἀλλʼ, ἐμὲ τὰν τάλαιναν
ἐξ ἐνέρων περῶν κυναγετεῖ, πλανᾷ
τε νῆστιν ἀνὰ τὰν παραλίαν ψάμμαν.
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Smyth 1922
Loeb
Smyth (eclectic), 1922 · 1922
The Editor

Herbert Weir Smyth (1857–1937) was Eliot Professor of Greek at Harvard University. Best known for his Greek Grammar (1920), which remains the standard reference grammar for students of ancient Greek, Smyth also produced the Loeb Classical Library edition of Aeschylus (2 volumes, 1922–1926). His combination of linguistic expertise and literary sensitivity made his Aeschylus edition particularly valuable.

About This Edition

Smyth's Loeb Aeschylus presents the Greek text with facing English translation. Following Loeb convention, the text is based on established critical editions. For a critical text of Aeschylus, the OCT by D. L. Page (1972) and M. L. West's Teubner (1990, revised 1998) are now the standard references. Smyth's translations, while sometimes dated in style, remain useful for their accuracy and his notes address many of the textual difficulties that make Aeschylus the most challenging of the three great tragedians.

Translator

Herbert Weir Smyth (Loeb Classical Library)

Text Basis

Smyth's own eclectic text, based on the manuscript tradition and Wilamowitz. Smyth was both editor and translator.

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