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Prometheus Bound VS The Iliad
Prometheus Bound vs. Iliad
Persuasion is a technique that has been used as far back as historians can track language (Encyclopaedia Britannica V.12, p.334). Persuasion is utilized in many of the Greek stories, including Prometheus Bound, by Aeschylus, and The Iliad, by Homer. The art of persuasion is best exhibited in these passages: lines 308-31 in Prometheus Bound, and book twenty-two, lines thirty-seven to seventy-eight in The Iliad. The persuasion in these tales reveals many of the similarities and differences in the plot of the two stories, along with disclosing information about the emotions, pride and suffering of many of the characters.
In Prometheus Bound, Oceanus is trying to persuade Prometheus. Oceanus is a longtime and loyal friend of Prometheus. He is at Prometheus’s punishment site to give advice about how to keep his punishment as small as possible. Prometheus, though, is openly speaking of how Zeus, the king of all the gods, is a terrible ruler, which Oceanus does not believe will help his cause. Oceanus describes his language as, “words that are whetted swords,” in a metaphor displaying Prometheus’s rashness. Oceanus is afraid that the words that Prometheus is speaking are too harsh and that
Approximate Word count = 1523
Approximate Pages = 6 (250 words per page double spaced)
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