Electra
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.
- The altars of beaten gold were set out; and through the town the
- altar fires of the Argives blazed; the flute, handmaid of the Muse’s song, sounded its note sweetly, and lovely songs of the golden lamb swelled forth, saying that Thyestes had the luck; for he
- persuaded Atreus’ own wife to secret love, and carried off to his house the portent; coming before the assembly he declared that he had in his
- house the horned sheep with fleece of gold.
- Then, it was then that Zeus changed the radiant paths of the stars, and the light of the sun, and the
- bright face of dawn; and the sun drove across the western back of the sky with hot flame from heaven’s fires, while the rain-clouds went northward and Ammon’s
- lands grew parched and faint, not knowing moisture, robbed of heaven’s fairest showers of rain.
- It is said, but I have small belief in it, that the sun turned round his glowing
- throne of gold, changing it to the misfortune of mankind, for the punishment of mortals. But tales that frighten men are profitable for service to the gods; of whom you had no thought, when you