In the play's unconventional opening, the ghost of Polydorus tells how when the war threatened Troy, he was sent to King Polymestor of Thrace for safekeeping, with gifts of gold and jewelry. But when Troy lost the war, Polymestor treacherously murdered Polydorus, and seized the treasure. Polydorus has foreknowledge of many of the play's events and haunted his mother's dreams the night before.
Iphigenie in Aulis
Euripides
bookMedeia
Euripides
bookMedea
Euripides
bookAlkestis
Euripides
bookDie Bakchen
Euripides
bookDie Bakchen
Euripides
bookGreek and Roman Mythology - World's Best Collection
Homer, Ovid, Hesiod, Aesop, Euripides, Aeschylus, Aristophanes, Apollonius, Apulieus, Virgil, Sophocles
bookThe Complete Euripides Collection
Euripides
bookHeracles
Euripides
bookOrestes
Euripides
bookThe Phoenissae
Euripides
bookHecuba
Euripides
book
High Crime Area : Tales of Darkness and Dread
Joyce Carol Oates
audiobookThe Dragon and the Pearl
Jeannie Lin
audiobookA Separate Peace
John Knowles
audiobookThe Riddle of the Sands
Erskine Childers
audiobookbookRevenge
Yoko Ogawa
audiobookDays Without End
Sebastian Barry
audiobookThe Parade
Dave Eggers
audiobookAll Grown Up
Jami Attenberg
audiobookGreen Shadows, White Whale
Ray Bradbury
audiobookThe Burning Girl
Claire Messud
audiobookBeneath the Lion's Gaze
Maaza Mengiste
audiobookWhere the Dead Sit Talking
Brandon Hobson
audiobook