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Euripides' HERACLES Complete

Translated by E. Coleridge.

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63 pages - You are on Page 54

Heracles: My barque is freighted full with sorrow; there is no room
to stow aught further.

Theseus: What wilt thou do? whither is thy fury drifting thee?

Heracles: I will die and return to that world below whence I have just come.

Theseus: Such language is fit for any common fellow.

Heracles: Ah! thine is the advice of one outside sorrow's pale.

Theseus: Are these indeed the words of Heracles, the much-enduring?

Heracles: Though never so much as this. Endurance must have a limit.

Theseus: Is this man's benefactor, his chiefest friend?

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Reference address : https://ellopos.net/elpenor/greek-texts/ancient-greece/euripides/heracles.asp?pg=54