The Throne of Labdacus
Winner of the 2001 Los Angeles Times Book Prize in Poetry.

A New York Times Book Review Notable Book of 2000.

The first warning passing through Thebes—

As small a sound

As a housefly alighting from Persia

And stamping its foot on a mound

Where the palace once was;

As small a moth chewing thread

In the tyrant's robe;

As small as the cresting of red

In the rim of an injured eye; as small

As the sound of a human conceived

A compelling, lyric telling of the story of Oedipus, and of "what happens outside the play," in the experience of the god who is its presiding oracle: Apollo, the god of poetry, music, and healing. Given the task of setting the Sophocles text to music, the god is woven reluctantly into its world of riddles, unanswered questions, partially disclosed objects, and ambiguous second-hand reports—a world where the gods, as much as humans, are subject to the binding claims of fate and necessity.

Gjertrud Schnackenberg draws upon ancient fragments and allusions to Oedipus and upon folk-tales about the origin of the Greek alphabet to present a vision of the tragedy's essential unknowableness, where the destinies of gods and humans secretly mingle in the unfolding of time, and where Zeus's laws, which suffuse the great tragedy's world, are as invisible and as inviolable as physical laws.

1103019848
The Throne of Labdacus
Winner of the 2001 Los Angeles Times Book Prize in Poetry.

A New York Times Book Review Notable Book of 2000.

The first warning passing through Thebes—

As small a sound

As a housefly alighting from Persia

And stamping its foot on a mound

Where the palace once was;

As small a moth chewing thread

In the tyrant's robe;

As small as the cresting of red

In the rim of an injured eye; as small

As the sound of a human conceived

A compelling, lyric telling of the story of Oedipus, and of "what happens outside the play," in the experience of the god who is its presiding oracle: Apollo, the god of poetry, music, and healing. Given the task of setting the Sophocles text to music, the god is woven reluctantly into its world of riddles, unanswered questions, partially disclosed objects, and ambiguous second-hand reports—a world where the gods, as much as humans, are subject to the binding claims of fate and necessity.

Gjertrud Schnackenberg draws upon ancient fragments and allusions to Oedipus and upon folk-tales about the origin of the Greek alphabet to present a vision of the tragedy's essential unknowableness, where the destinies of gods and humans secretly mingle in the unfolding of time, and where Zeus's laws, which suffuse the great tragedy's world, are as invisible and as inviolable as physical laws.

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The Throne of Labdacus

The Throne of Labdacus

by Gjertrud Schnackenberg
The Throne of Labdacus

The Throne of Labdacus

by Gjertrud Schnackenberg

Paperback(First Edition)

$16.00 
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Overview

Winner of the 2001 Los Angeles Times Book Prize in Poetry.

A New York Times Book Review Notable Book of 2000.

The first warning passing through Thebes—

As small a sound

As a housefly alighting from Persia

And stamping its foot on a mound

Where the palace once was;

As small a moth chewing thread

In the tyrant's robe;

As small as the cresting of red

In the rim of an injured eye; as small

As the sound of a human conceived

A compelling, lyric telling of the story of Oedipus, and of "what happens outside the play," in the experience of the god who is its presiding oracle: Apollo, the god of poetry, music, and healing. Given the task of setting the Sophocles text to music, the god is woven reluctantly into its world of riddles, unanswered questions, partially disclosed objects, and ambiguous second-hand reports—a world where the gods, as much as humans, are subject to the binding claims of fate and necessity.

Gjertrud Schnackenberg draws upon ancient fragments and allusions to Oedipus and upon folk-tales about the origin of the Greek alphabet to present a vision of the tragedy's essential unknowableness, where the destinies of gods and humans secretly mingle in the unfolding of time, and where Zeus's laws, which suffuse the great tragedy's world, are as invisible and as inviolable as physical laws.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780374527969
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication date: 12/07/2001
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 112
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Gjertrud Schnackenberg was born in Tacoma, Washington, in 1953. The Throne of Labdacus (FSG, 2000) received the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in Poetry. She graduated from Mount Holyoke, and was awarded an honorary doctorate from that college in 1985. She has also received the Lavan Younger Poets Award (judged by Robert Fitzgerald) from the Academy of American Poets, and the Rome Prize in Literature from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters.

Read an Excerpt

The first warning passing through Thebes-

As small a sound

As a housefly alighting from Persia

And stamping its foot on a mound

Where the palace once was;

As small as a moth chewing thread

In the tyrant's robe;

As small as the cresting of red

In the rim of an injured eye; as small

As the sound of a human conceived-

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