About: Theseus and the Minotaur (transcript)   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

This is the transcript for Theseus and the Minotaur (In a dark room, the camera pans onto an old-looking book.) Narrator: For thousands of years, there have been great sagas of brave heroes who battle hideous monsters for untold rewards. Of journeys into the unknown. These stories are told over thousands of years. Narrator: In ancient times, the island of Crete was ruled over by the noble King Minos. Guard: (to a man who is still standing) Bow down before your King! Minos: Ah, I love the sound of grovelling subjects in the morning. Ariadne: Dad, please. This has to stop. Ariadne: But why?

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Theseus and the Minotaur (transcript)
rdfs:comment
  • This is the transcript for Theseus and the Minotaur (In a dark room, the camera pans onto an old-looking book.) Narrator: For thousands of years, there have been great sagas of brave heroes who battle hideous monsters for untold rewards. Of journeys into the unknown. These stories are told over thousands of years. Narrator: In ancient times, the island of Crete was ruled over by the noble King Minos. Guard: (to a man who is still standing) Bow down before your King! Minos: Ah, I love the sound of grovelling subjects in the morning. Ariadne: Dad, please. This has to stop. Ariadne: But why?
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • This is the transcript for Theseus and the Minotaur (In a dark room, the camera pans onto an old-looking book.) Narrator: For thousands of years, there have been great sagas of brave heroes who battle hideous monsters for untold rewards. Of journeys into the unknown. These stories are told over thousands of years. Narrator: In ancient times, the island of Crete was ruled over by the noble King Minos. Guard: (to a man who is still standing) Bow down before your King! Minos: Ah, I love the sound of grovelling subjects in the morning. Narrator: The lands around Minos' kingdom feared his power, no more so than the Athenians. After the death of the king's son, the people of Athens lived in fear of the wrath of Minos. Narrator: To prevent war being waged on Athens, the king placed an ultimatum. Every seven years, fourteen men and women would be taken to Crete and trapped inside a giant maze called the Labyrinth. There, lived an evil monster called the Minotaur. It had a man's body, a bull's head and a lion's fangs. Minos kept it for one evil purpose: for innocent prisoners to meet their death. Ariadne: Dad, please. This has to stop. Minos: Ariadne, in case you haven't noticed, I have to do this. Ariadne: But why? Minos: Because my son, your brother, was killed by the Athenians. Now, they will pay the price! Ariadne: But, dad, that was years ago! Can't you just put the past behind you? Minos: Never! I will get revenge on Athens for my son's death, come hell or high water! Ariadne: (sadly) I understand. Narrator: Meanwhile, in Athens, a young man was in the city. It was Theseus, the son of both King Aegeus and the sea god Poseidon. Young woman: What's going on? Put me down, now! Let go! Mother: Please! Not our only daughter! Theseus: What's wrong? Why were those men taking your daughter? Mother: She is innocent! She has done nothing wrong! Father: (sighs) This is Minos' doing. After the death of his son, he's been sending our children to their deaths in the Labyrinth. Mother: Wait, who are you? Theseus: My name is Theseus. And I am here to see my father, King Aegeus. Father: Pardon us, your majesty. Please, you may proceed. Theseus: Thank you. (he continues on his way) Aegeus: Theseus, my son! Theseus: Father! It's so wonderful to see you. Aegeus: Where have you been all these years? We have much to catch up on. Theseus: Father, there are more serious matters at hand. Soldiers from Crete have been coming to our shores and sending young men and women to die! Aegeus: (sighs) This is all down to King Minos. After his son was killed, he's been doing this as a form of revenge. Theseus: Why not just end these senseless killings?!? Aegeus: Because if we stopped, Minos would wage war on us. It would be a battle we couldn't win. Theseus: (thinks for a moment) Father, when the next ship arrives, I will sail to Crete. Aegeus: (appalled) Absolutely not! I will not allow my only son to sail to his death. Theseus: But, father. If I don't, then Minos will continue this needless killing! Someone has to stop him! Aegeus: (stammers) Well... Theseus: How long can Athens carry on suffering? How long will Crete carry on demanding sacrifices? Someone has to make a stand and if no one else will, I shall! Aegeus: (sighs in defeat) You speak the words of a warrior...you may go. Narrator: The next morning, as Theseus prepared to sail to Crete, his father Aegeus gave him an important order. Aegeus: Remember this before you go. If you have survived the Labyrinth, you must sail back to Athens on a white-sailed ship. That way, I will know you are safe. (hugs Theseus) Theseus: I will, father. Wish me luck. Aegeus: May the gods protect you, my son. Minos: (chuckles cruelly) The next ship from Athens...full of fresh sacrifices for my dear pet. Quite skinny, but then, the Athenians never had much meat on their bones. Minos: Cheer up! I only ask for sacrifices every seven years. The Athenians should count themselves lucky. If they don't keep their side of the bargain, next time I might not be so lenient.
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software