A great opening, the first sentence in Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy states the thesis of the book, introduces a critical distinction (“apprehending directly” as superior to “merely ascertaining”), and illustrates the main point with a complex simile, ostensibly a subordinate clause but one that threatens to eclipse all that preceded it. Before you have quite begun to grasp the idea of the “duality” between Apollo and Dionysus, and its significance for understanding why Aeschylus is superior to Euripides, we’re asked to accept the casual observation that the sexes are in constant conflict. No wonder a couple in the heat of love concludes its quarrels with nothing resolved but the force of sexual attraction triumphant.
— DL
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Author: The Best American Poetry