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The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.
Document | Max. Freq | Min. Freq | ||
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Homer, The Odyssey (ed. Samuel Butler, Based on public domain edition, revised by Timothy Power and Gregory Nagy.) | 32 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Euripides, Orestes (ed. E. P. Coleridge) | 32 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Euripides, Iphigenia in Aulis (ed. E. P. Coleridge) | 28 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Diodorus Siculus, Library | 28 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Euripides, Electra (ed. E. P. Coleridge) | 24 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Euripides, Phoenissae (ed. E. P. Coleridge) | 22 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Plato, Laws | 18 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Aeschylus, Suppliant Women (ed. Herbert Weir Smyth, Ph. D.) | 18 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Euripides, The Trojan Women (ed. E. P. Coleridge) | 18 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Aeschylus, Agamemnon (ed. Herbert Weir Smyth, Ph. D.) | 16 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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Browsing named entities in Euripides, Iphigenia in Aulis (ed. E. P. Coleridge). You can also browse the collection for Argos (Greece) or search for Argos (Greece) in all documents.
Your search returned 14 results in 12 document sections:
Euripides, Iphigenia in Aulis (ed. E. P. Coleridge), line 855 (search)
Euripides, Iphigenia in Aulis (ed. E. P. Coleridge), line 944 (search)
So am I made the poorest wretch in Argos; I a thing of nothing, and Menelaus counting for a man! No son of Peleus I, but the issue of a vengeful fiend, if my name shall serve your husband for the murder. No! by Nereus, who begot my mother Thetis, in his home amid the flowing waves, never shall king Agamemnon touch your daughter, no! not even to the laying of a finger-tip upon her robe; or SipylusA mountain in Lycia, near which was shown the grave of Tantalus, the ancestor of the Atridae; the town of the same name was swallowed up in very early times by an earthquake., that frontier town of barbarism, the cradle of those chieftains' line, will be henceforth a city indeed, while Phthia's name will nowhere find mention. Calchas, the seer, shall rue beginning the sacrifice with his barley-meal and lustral water. Why, what is a seer? A man who with luck tells the truth sometimes, with frequent falsehoods, but when his luck deserts him, collapses then and there.
It is not to secure a br