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Euripides' IPHIGENIA AT AULIS Complete

Translated by E. Coleridge.

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80 pages - You are on Page 56

Agamemnon: My child, why weepest thou and no longer lookest cheerfully?
why art thou fixing thine eyes upon the ground and holding thy robe
before them?

Clytaemnestra: Alas! with which of my woes shall I begin? for I may
treat them all as first, or put them last or midway anywhere.

Agamemnon: How now? I find you all alike, confusion and alarm in every
eye.

Clytaemnestra: My husband, answer frankly the questions I ask thee.

Agamemnon: There is no necessity to order me; I am willing to be questioned.

Clytaemnestra: Dost thou mean to slay thy child and mine?

Agamemnon: (Starting) Ha! these are heartless words, unwarranted
suspicions!

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Reference address : https://ellopos.net/elpenor/greek-texts/ancient-Greece/euripides/iphigenia-aulis.asp?pg=56