| 184 new threat . . . old doom It is an old doom that the Voice of Zeus will invoke against the murderer of Laius. The Chorus distinguishes between a curse that has been known for some years and one that has newly emerged.
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| 189 91 Athena, Artemis, Apollo The three divinities are here invoked in a military prayer to focus their powers on rescuing Thebes. The Chorus does not know which god may be the truly relevant one.
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| 211 sunset god Hades
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| 227 Ares The war god. The Chorus does not believe Ares sent the plague; he is the plague or destruction itself, and was so conceived also by Aeschylus in Suppliants , ll. 659 ff. and 678 ff.
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| 232 33 great searoom / of Amphitrité Lit. ''great hall of Amphitrite." Amphitrité was a sea nymph whose home was the Atlantic Ocean, hence her name became synonymous with that ocean.
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| 235 jagged harbors Lit. "welcomeless anchorage."
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| 236 off Thrace The Black Sea, where the Thracians lived, who being warlike, took Ares as their primary god.
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| 237 38 If night . . . finish it . Meaning obscure. Gould suggests that the phrase means something like, "if the night lets anything survive, the day moves in to finish it."
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| 242 god killing us Ares.
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| 244 lord . . . morning light Lit. "Lycean Lord." Lycean was one of Apollo's epithets, and could suggest either "light" or "wolf." The Chorus here is surely calling on him in his protective, light-bringing aspect.
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| 250 morning hills Lit. "Lycian hills." In southwestern Asia Minor, where Artemis was worshipped, with her brother Apollo, as a fire deity. Sophocles puns on the similar words to stress the light-bearing character of the sibling gods.
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| 253 name . . . country's own Bakkhos was a native Theban, the son of Zeus and Semele, Kadmos' daughter.
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