An edition of Ion (1820)

Ion

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 30, 2024 | History
An edition of Ion (1820)

Ion

  • 4.0 (1 rating) ·
  • 9 Want to read

One of Euripides' late plays, Ion tells the story of Kreousa, queen of Athens, and her son by the god Apollo. Apollo raped Kreousa; she secretly abandoned their child, assuming thereafter that the god had allowed him to die. Ion, however, is saved to become a ward of Apollo's temple at Delphi. In the play, Kreousa and her husband Xouthos go to Delphi to seek a remedy for their childlessness; Apollo, speaking through his oracle, gives Ion to Xouthos as a son, enraging the apparently still childless Kreousa.

Mother tries to kill son, son traps mother at an altar and is about to do her violence; just then, Apollo's priestess appears to reveal the birth tokens that permit Kreousa to recognize and embrace the child she thought she had lost forever. Ion must accept Apollo's duplicity along with his benevolence toward his son.

  1. Disturbing riptides of thought and feeling run just below the often shimmering surface of this masterpiece of Euripidean melodrama. Despite Ion's "happy ending," the concatenation of mistaken identities, failed intrigues, and misdirected violence enacts a gripping and serious drama. Euripides leaves the audience to come to terms with the shifting relations of god and mortals in his complex and equivocal interpretation of myth.
Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
99

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Previews available in: English Ancient Greek Latin

Edition Availability
Cover of: Ion
Ion: Orestes ; Phoenician women ; Suppliant women
2001, Oxford University Press
in English
Cover of: Ion
Ion
1996, Oxford University Press
in English
Cover of: Ion
Ion
1979, BSB Teubner
in Ancient Greek - 1. Aufl.
Cover of: Ion.
Ion.
1970, Prentice-Hall
in English
Cover of: Ion
Ion
1963, The Clarendon Press
in English
Cover of: Ion
Ion
1937, Houghton Mifflin Co., Houghton Mifflin Company
in English
Cover of: Ion
Ion
1896, Clarendon press
in Ancient Greek
Cover of: Ion.
Cover of: The  Ion of Euripides
The Ion of Euripides
1890, University Press
in English and Ancient Greek
Cover of: Ion
Ion
1889, Williams
in English and Ancient Greek
Cover of: Ion
Ion
1820, Duncan
in Latin and Ancient Greek

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
New York
Series
Greek tragedy in new translations

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
882/.01
Library of Congress
PA3975.I6 D5 1996, PA3975.I6D5 1996

The Physical Object

Pagination
ix, 99 p. ;
Number of pages
99

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL798758M
Internet Archive
iongreektragedyi00euri
ISBN 10
0195094514
LCCN
95034977
OCLC/WorldCat
32970218
Library Thing
396537
Wikidata
Q116690955
Goodreads
1152993

Work Description

he Ion is the shortest, or nearly the shortest, of all the writings which bear the name of Plato, and is not authenticated by any early external testimony. The grace and beauty of this little work supply the only, and perhaps a sufficient, proof of its genuineness. The plan is simple; the dramatic interest consists entirely in the contrast between the irony of Socrates and the transparent vanity and childlike enthusiasm of the rhapsode Ion. The theme of the Dialogue may possibly have been suggested by the passage of Xenophon's Memorabilia in which the rhapsodists are described by Euthydemus as 'very precise about the exact words of Homer, but very idiotic themselves.' (Compare Aristotle, Met.)

Ion the rhapsode has just come to Athens; he has been exhibiting in Epidaurus at the festival of Asclepius, and is intending to exhibit at the festival of the Panathenaea. Socrates admires and envies the rhapsode's art; for he is always well dressed and in good company--in the company of good poets and of Homer, who is the prince of them. In the course of conversation the admission is elicited from Ion that his skill is restricted to Homer, and that he knows nothing of inferior poets, such as Hesiod and Archilochus;--he brightens up and is wide awake when Homer is being recited, but is apt to go to sleep at the recitations of any other poet. 'And yet, surely, he who knows the superior ought to know the inferior also;--he who can judge of the good speaker is able to judge of the bad. And poetry is a whole; and he who judges of poetry by rules of art ought to be able to judge of all poetry.' This is confirmed by the analogy of sculpture, painting, flute-playing, and the other arts. The argument is at last brought home to the mind of Ion, who asks how this contradiction is to be solved.

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
July 30, 2024 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
March 3, 2023 Edited by WikidataBot [sync_edition_olids] add wikidata identifier
November 20, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
October 10, 2020 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from Scriblio MARC record