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Euripides' IPHIGENIA IN TAURIS Complete

Translated by R. Potter.

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The Original Greek New Testament
88 pages - You are on Page 56

Orestes: I would not be the murderer of my mother,
And of thee too; sufficient is her blood.
No; I will share thy fortune, live with thee,
Or with thee die: to Argos I will lead thee,
If here I perish not; or dying, here
Remain with thee. But what my mind suggests,
Hear: if Diana were averse to this,
How could the voice of Phoebus from his shrine
Declare that to the state of Pallas hence
The statue of the goddess I should bear,
And see thy face? All this, together weigh'd,
Gives hope of fair success, and our return.

Iphigenia: But how effect it, that we neither die,
And what we wish achieve? For our return
On this depends: this claims deliberate thought.

Orestes: Have we not means to work the tyrant's death?

Iphigenia: For strangers full of peril were the attempt.

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