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Euripides' HERACLES Complete

Translated by E. Coleridge.

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63 pages - You are on Page 44

Amphitryon: My child! mine still, for all thy misery.

Heracles: Why, what is there so sad in my case that thou dost weep?

Amphitryon: That which might make any of the gods weep, were he to suffer so.

Heracles: A bold assertion that, but thou art not yet explaining what has happened.

Amphitryon: Thine own eyes see that, if by this time thou are restored to thy senses.

Heracles: Fill in thy sketch if any change awaits my life.

Amphitryon: I will explain, if thou art no longer mad as a fiend of hell.

Heracles: God help us! what suspicions these dark hints of thine again excite!

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Reference address : https://ellopos.net/elpenor/greek-texts/ancient-greece/euripides/heracles.asp?pg=44