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Euripides' IPHIGENIA AT AULIS Complete

Translated by E. Coleridge.

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Attendant: Nor yet will I let loose my hold.

Menelaus: Why then, this staff of mine will be dabbling thy head with
blood ere long.

Attendant: To die in my master's cause were a noble death.

Menelaus: Let go! thou art too wordy for a slave.

Attendant: (Seeing Agamemnon approaching) Master, he is wronging
me; he snatched thy letter violently from my grasp, Agamemnon, and
will not heed the claims of right. (Enter Agamemnon.)

Agamemnon: How now? what means this uproar at the gates, this indecent
brawling?

Menelaus: My tale, not his, has the better right to be spoken.

Agamemnon: Thou, Menelaus! what quarrel hast thou with this man, why
art thou haling him hence? (Exit Attendant.)

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Reference address : https://ellopos.net/elpenor/greek-texts/ancient-Greece/euripides/iphigenia-aulis.asp?pg=12