The Trojan Women

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.

  1. Alas indeed, for my
Andromache
  1. Misery!
Hecuba
  1. Piteous the fate
Andromache
  1. Of our city,
Hecuba
  1. Smouldering in the smoke.
Andromache
  1. Come to me, my husband, come to me!
Hecuba
  1. Ah, hapless wife! you call on my son who lies in the tomb.
Andromache
  1. Your wife’s defender!
Hecuba
  1. Oh, you, who before made the Achaeans grieve, eldest of the sons I bore to Priam, take me to your rest in Hades’ halls!
Andromache
  1. These great griefs—
Hecuba
  1. Unhappy one, bitter these woes to bear.
Andromache
  1. Our city ruined—
Hecuba
  1. And sorrow to sorrow added.
Andromache
  1. Through the will of angry heaven, since the day that son [*](i.e., Paris, who had been exposed to die on account of an oracle foretelling the misery he would cause if he grew to man’s estate; but shepherds had found him on the hills and reared him.) of yours escaped death, he that for a hated bride brought destruction on the Trojan citadel. There lie the gory corpses of the slain by the shrine of Pallas for vultures to carry off;
  2. and Troy has come to slavery’s yoke.
Hecuba
  1. O my country, O unhappy land—
Andromache
  1. I weep for you now left behind.
Hecuba
  1. Now do you behold your piteous end.
Andromache
  1. And you, my house, where I gave birth.
Hecuba
  1. O my children! bereft of her city as your mother is, she now is losing you. Oh, what mourning and what sorrow! . . .