Hippolytus
Euripides
Euripides. The Plays of Euripides, Translated into English Prose from the Text of Paley. Vol. I. Coleridge, Edward P., translator. London: George Bell and Sons, 1906.
- I greet her from afar, preserving still my chastity.
- Yet is she an august goddess, far renowned on earth.
- ’Mongst gods as well as men we have our several preferences.
- I wish thee luck, and wisdom too, so far as thou dost need it.
- No god, whose worship craves the night, hath charms for me.
- My son, we should avail us of the gifts that gods confer.
- Go in, my faithful followers, and make ready food within the house; a well-filled board hath charms after the chase is o’er.
- Rub down my steeds ye must, that when I have had my all I may yoke them to the chariot and give them proper exercise.
- As for thy Queen of Love, a long farewell to her.
- Meantime I with sober mind, for I must not copy my young master,
- do offer up my prayer to thy image, lady Cypris, in such words as it becomes a slave to use. But thou should’st pardon all, who, in youth’s impetuous heat, speak idle words of thee; make as though thou hearest not,
- for gods must needs be wiser than the sons of men.
- A rock there is, where, as they say, the ocean dew distils, and from its beetling brow it pours a copious stream for pitchers to be dipped therein;
- ’twas here I had a friend washing robes of purple in the trickling stream, and she was spreading them out on the face of a warm sunny rock; from her
- I had the tidings, first of all, that my mistress
- she was wasting on the bed of sickness, pent within her house, a thin veil o’ershadowing her head of golden hair.
- And this is the third day I hear that she hath closed her lovely lips and denied her chaste body all sustenance, eager to hide her suffering
- and reach death’s cheerless bourn.
- Maiden, thou must be possessed, by Pan made frantic or by Hecate, or by the Corybantes dread, and Cybele the mountain mother.
- Or maybe thou hast sinned against Dictynna, huntress-queen, and art wasting for thy guilt in sacrifice unoffered. For she doth range o’er lakes’ expanse and past the bounds of earth