“With his last noble words, he exiles himself from his own people and joins the Diaspora of the dead: a bitter ending. But he has come a long way from the younger, self-righteous Samson who petulantly said before wreaking havoc: Now am I blameless for the harm I will do them. Like a hero in a Greek tragedy, he has finished his journey from warrior pride to humility, by taking responsibility for violating the tribal laws.”—Phillip Lopate, “Judges: Tests of Weakness: Samson and Delilah,” Congregation: Contemporary Writers Read the Jewish Bible, edited by David Rosenberg (1987)
Lopate’s essay in the marvelous anthology Congregation is a dazzler, incorporating close Biblical reading, film criticism (his explication of Cecil B. DeMille’s Samson and Delilah is hilarious), and autobiography.
Lopate’s essay in the marvelous anthology Congregation is a dazzler, incorporating close Biblical reading, film criticism (his explication of Cecil B. DeMille’s Samson and Delilah is hilarious), and autobiography.
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