From John_Thorburn@baylor.edu Wed Aug 1 08:11:55 2001 Received: from mxu4.u.washington.edu (mxu4.u.washington.edu [140.142.33.8]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.11.2+UW01.01/8.11.2+UW01.04) with ESMTP id f71FBs077710 for ; Wed, 1 Aug 2001 08:11:54 -0700 Received: from ccis01.baylor.edu (ccis01.baylor.edu [129.62.1.18]) by mxu4.u.washington.edu (8.11.2+UW01.01/8.11.2+UW01.04) with ESMTP id f71FBrs11651 for ; Wed, 1 Aug 2001 08:11:53 -0700 Received: from [129.62.161.13] (john-thornburn.baylor.edu [129.62.161.13]) by ccis01.baylor.edu (8.9.1/8.9.1) with ESMTP id KAA1553536 for ; Wed, 1 Aug 2001 10:11:53 -0500 (CDT) Message-Id: <200108011511.KAA1553536@ccis01.baylor.edu> X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express Macintosh Edition - 4.5 (0410) Date: Wed, 01 Aug 2001 10:15:15 -0500 Subject: Children in Greek tragedy From: "John Thorburn" To: classics@u.washington.edu Mime-version: 1.0 X-Priority: 3 Content-type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit Status: O X-Status: When a child has a speaking part in Greek tragedy, such as Admetus & Alcestis' son in Alc., or Molossus in Andr., how was this accomplished? Did a child actor actually deliver the lines? Or was there someone behind the skene who delivered the lines, while the child pretended to speak? Or was there someone on stage, who delivered the lines while the child pretended to speak? What think ye? : ) John_Thorburn@baylor.edu http://www.baylor.edu/~John_Thorburn/welcome.html ---------- >From: chiara bittasi >To: classics@u.washington.edu >Subject: R: Augustine site? >Date: Wed, Aug 1, 2001, 9:16 AM > > > > ---------- >>Da: Terrence Lockyer >>A: Classics List >>Oggetto: Re: Augustine site? >>Data: Lun, 30 lug 2001 11:09 >> > >> On Sun, 29 Jul 2001, David Lupher justifiably recommended >> >> : Try Jim O'Donnell's Augustine site. It includes Latin text, >> : Pusey's translation (not my favorite, I must say) and, best >> : of all, JO'D's great 3-vol Oxford Univ. Press commentary >> : on the "Confessions." >> >> For those who may want it, the Pusey translation is also available on the >> Web at the University of Adelaide electronic text collection. The index >> page is at >> >> http://www.library.adelaide.edu.au/etext/ >> >> A particular advantage of this collection is that, in addition to the online >> versions, most texts (including the Augustine translation) are also >> available for download in Zip files. >> >> There is a reasonable amount for classicists there too. >> >> >> Terrence Lockyer >> Johannesburg, South Africa >> .