Andromache
Euripides
Euripides. The Plays of Euripides, Translated into English Prose from the Text of Paley. Vol. II. Coleridge, Edward P., translator. London: George Bell and Sons, 1891.
- in the day he came to Ida’s glen, guiding that fair young trio of goddesses, all girded for the fray in bitter rivalry about their beauty,
- to the shepherd’s fold, where dwelt the youthful herdsman all alone by the hearth of his lonely hut.
- Soon as they reached the wooded glen, in gushing mountain
- springs they bathed[*](νίψαν. So Hermann. αἰγλᾶντα, Musgrave. ἐν ῥοαῖς, Aldus.) their dazzling skin, then sought the son of Priam, comparing their rival charms in more than rancorous phrase.[*](Reading ὑπερβολαῖς λόγων δθσφρόνων. Hermann places a stop after Πριαμίδαν, and then reads ὑπερβολαῖς λόγων δ’ εὐφρόνων.) But Cypris won the day by her deceitful promises,
- sweet-sounding words, but fraught with ruthless overthrow to Phrygia’s hapless town and Ilium’s towers.