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Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Homer, Odyssey 44 0 Browse Search
Homer, The Odyssey (ed. Samuel Butler, Based on public domain edition, revised by Timothy Power and Gregory Nagy.) 36 0 Browse Search
P. Ovidius Naso, Metamorphoses (ed. Brookes More) 26 0 Browse Search
Euripides, Cyclops (ed. David Kovacs) 16 0 Browse Search
P. Ovidius Naso, Metamorphoses (ed. Arthur Golding) 14 0 Browse Search
Euripides, Rhesus (ed. Gilbert Murray) 12 0 Browse Search
Q. Horatius Flaccus (Horace), The Art of Poetry: To the Pisos (ed. C. Smart, Theodore Alois Buckley) 6 0 Browse Search
M. Annaeus Lucanus, Pharsalia (ed. Sir Edward Ridley) 4 0 Browse Search
Plato, Republic 2 0 Browse Search
Epictetus, Works (ed. George Long) 2 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Euripides, The Trojan Women (ed. E. P. Coleridge). You can also browse the collection for Cyclops (Arizona, United States) or search for Cyclops (Arizona, United States) in all documents.

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Euripides, The Trojan Women (ed. E. P. Coleridge), line 424 (search)
of kings or governments. You say my mother shall come to the halls of Odysseus? Where then are Apollo's words, so clear to me in their interpretation, which declare that she shall die here? What else remains, I will not taunt her with. Unhappy Odysseus, he does not know the sufferings that await him; or how these ills I and my Phrygians endure shall one day seem to him precious as gold. For beyond the ten long years spent at Troy he shall drag out other ten and then come to his country all alone . . . where dreadful Charybdis lurks in a narrow channel between the rocks; past Cyclops the savage shepherd, and Ligurian Circe who turns men to swine; shipwrecked often upon the salt sea-wave; longing to eat the lotus, and the sacred cattle of the sun, whose flesh shall utter in the days to come a human voice, bitter to Odysseus. In brief, he shall descend alive to Hades, and, though he shall escape the waters' flood, yet shall he find a thousand troubles in his country when he arrives.