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Translated by E. Coleridge.
80 pages - You are on Page 45 Attendant: Nay; sane, except where thou and thy daughter are concerned; there he is mad. Clytaemnestra: What is his reason? what vengeful fiend impels him? Attendant: Oracles-at least so Calchas says, in order that the host may start Clytaemnestra: Whither? Woe is me, and woe is thee, thy father's destined victim! Attendant: To the halls of Dardanus, that Menelaus may recover Helen. Clytaemnestra: So Helen's return then was fated to affect Iphigenia? Attendant: Thou knowest all; her father is about to offer thy child to Artemis. Clytaemnestra: But that marriage-what pretext had it for bringing me from home? Previous Page / First / Next Page of Iphigenia At Aulis
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