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Euripides' RHESUS Complete

Translated by E. Coleridge.

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44 pages - You are on Page 36

Chorus: From what I gather of this man's words, some calamity, it
seems, is befalling the Thracian host.

Charioteer: Lost is all our host, our prince is dead, slain by a treacherous
blow. Woe worth the hour! woe worth the day! O the cruel anguish of
this bloody wound that inly racks my frame! Would I were dead! Was
it to die this inglorious death that Rhesus and I did come to Troy?

Chorus: This is plain language; in no riddles he declares the disaster;
all too clearly he asserts our friends' destruction.

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Reference address : https://ellopos.net/elpenor/greek-texts/ancient-greece/euripides/rhesus.asp?pg=36