Electra is a circa 420–410 BCE play by Sophocles, translated in 1870 by R.C. Jebb. Electra, who is in mourning for her dead father and her long-absent brother, is aware of the intensity of her grief but believes it to be justified: ______
Which quotation from Electra most effectively illustrates the claim?
Choose 1 answer:
Choose 1 answer:
(Choice A) “O thou pure sunlight, and thou air, earth’s canopy, how often have ye heard the strains of my lament, the wild blows dealt against this bleeding breast, when dark night fails!”
A
“O thou pure sunlight, and thou air, earth’s canopy, how often have ye heard the strains of my lament, the wild blows dealt against this bleeding breast, when dark night fails!”
(Choice B) “I know my own passion, it escapes me not; but, seeing that the causes are so dire, will never curb these frenzied plaints, while life is in me.”
B
“I know my own passion, it escapes me not; but, seeing that the causes are so dire, will never curb these frenzied plaints, while life is in me.”
(Choice C) “Send to me my brother; for I have no more the strength to bear up alone against the load of grief that weighs me down.”
C
“Send to me my brother; for I have no more the strength to bear up alone against the load of grief that weighs me down.”
(Choice D) “But never will I cease from dirge and sore lament, while I look on the trembling rays of the bright stars, or on this light of day.”
D
“But never will I cease from dirge and sore lament, while I look on the trembling rays of the bright stars, or on this light of day.”
1 answer