Poems List

Those who have not, and live in want, are a menace, / Ridden with envy and fooled by demagogues.
2
Spare me the sight / of this thankless breed, these politicians / who cringe for favors from a screaming mob / and do not care what harm they do their friends, / providing they can please a crowd!
2
Too much zeal offends / where indirection works.
4
In every work / a reward added makes the pleasure twice as great.
2
The new-come stepmother hates the children born / to a first wife.
2
Oh, what a power is motherhood, possessing / A potent spell. All women alike / Fight fiercely for a child.
2
Here all mankind is equal: / rich and poor alike, they love their children.
3
All men know their children / Mean more than life. If childless people sneer—/Well, they’ve less sorrow. But what lonesome luck!
2
If all men saw the fair and wise the same / men would not have debaters’ double strife.
2
Old age is not / a total misery. Experience helps.
2

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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.