BOOK ONE
BOOK TWO
See how tragedy is made when common things happen to silly men.
Such are the wishes that they utter.
BOOK THREE
he answered, when he was half-asleep,
So he was conscious of his own qualification, and knew her weakness.
And still earlier it was the fortune of Hercules to visit all the inhabited world
BOOK FOUR
Do you think that Admetus did not love his own child when he was little? that he was not in agony when the child had a fever? that he did not often say, "I wish I had the fever instead of the child?" then when the test (the thing) came and was near, see what words they utter. Were not Eteocles and Polynices from the same mother and from the same father? Were they not brought up together, had they not lived together, drunk together, slept together, and often kissed one another? So that, if any man, I think, had seen them, he would have ridiculed the philosophers for the paradoxes which they utter about friendship. But when a quarrel rose between them about the royal power, as between dogs about a bit of meat, see what they say,
Polynices: Where will you take your station before the towers?
Eteocles: Why do you ask me this?
Pol. I place myself opposite and try to kill you.
Et. I also wish to do the same.