Reference address : https://ellopos.net/elpenor/greek-texts/ancient-Greece/euripides/iphigenia-tauris.asp?pg=39
HOME | GREEK LANGUAGE | LIBRARIES | BLOG | HELP | SEARCH | FREEWARE | BOOKSTORE
EURIPIDES HOME PAGE / EURIPIDES POEMS
Translated by R. Potter.
88 pages - You are on Page 39 Orestes: What wouldst thou then? What is thy anxious thought? Iphigenia: This: let him give an oath that he will bear To Argos this epistle to those friends, To whom it is my ardent wish to send it. Orestes: And wilt thou in return give him thy oath? Iphigenia: That I will do, or will not do, say what. Orestes: To send him from this barbarous shore alive. Iphigenia: That's just: how should he bear my letter else? Orestes: But will the monarch to these things assent? Iphigenia: By me induced. Him I will see embark'd. Previous Page / First / Next Page of Iphigenia In Tauris
Euripides Home Page ||| Elpenor's Free Greek Lessons Aeschylus ||| Sophocles
Euripides Complete Works Euripides Home Page & Bilingual Anthology Euripides in Print
Elpenor's Greek Forum : Post a question / Start a discussion
HOME | LANGUAGE | LIBRARIES | BLOG | HELP | SEARCH | CONTACT | DONATIONS | BOOKSTORE