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A Literal Translation, with Notes.
88 pages - You are on Page 46
AEACUS. No, present your belly.
DIONYSUS. Oh, Posidon ...
XANTHIAS. Ah! here's someone who's feeling it.
DIONYSUS. ... who reignest on the Aegean headland and in the depths of the azure sea.[452]
AEACUS. By Demeter, I cannot find out which of you is the god. But come in; the master and Persephone will soon tell you, for they are gods themselves.
DIONYSUS. You are quite right; but you should have thought of that before you beat us.
CHORUS. Oh! Muse, take part in our sacred choruses; our songs will enchant you and you shall see a people of wise men, eager for a nobler glory than that of Cleophon,[453] the braggart, the swallow, who deafens us with his hoarse cries, while perched upon a Thracian tree. He whines in his barbarian tongue and repeats the lament of Philomela with good reason, for even if the votes were equally divided, he would have to perish.[454]
[452] According to the Scholiast this is a quotation from the 'Laocoon,' a lost play of Sophocles.
[453] A general known for his cowardice; he was accused of not being a citizen, but of Thracian origin; in 406 B.C. he was in disfavour, and he perished shortly after in a popular tumult.
[454] According to Athenian law, the accused was acquitted when the voting was equal.
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