Poems List

Those who are held / Wise among men and who search the reasons of things / Are those who bring the most sorrow on themselves.
2
The unrighteous are never really fortunate.
2
They who are sad find somehow sweetness in tears.
2
That glittering hope is immemorial / And beckons many men / To their undoing.
2
If some appalling disaster befalls, there’s / Always a way for the rich.
2
God hates violence. He has ordained that all men / fairly possess their property, not seize it.
2
Where there are two, one cannot be wretched, and one not.
2
If there are none [gods], / All our toil is without meaning.
2
Our lives ... are but a little while, / so let them run as sweetly as you can, / and give no thought to grief from day to day. / For time is not concerned to keep our hopes, / but hurries on its business, and is gone.
2
There is no harbor of peace / From the changing waves of joy and despair.
3

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Euripides was born on the island of Salamis in Ancient Greece. His life coincided with a period of great cultural and political effervescence in Classical Athens, although he himself was not Athenian by birth. He dedicated himself to writing tragedies, distinguishing himself from his predecessors by his more skeptical and humanist approach to myths. His characters are often portrayed with psychological depth, questioning the gods, justice, and human nature. Plays such as "Medea", "The Bacchae", "The Trojan Women", and "The Cyclops" (the only complete satyr play to have survived from Ancient Greece) exemplify his style and concerns. "Medea", in particular, is famous for its raw depiction of revenge and passion. Euripides is considered a precursor to modern drama for his psychological analysis and his critical approach to traditional narratives. He died in Pella, Macedonia.