1918 Polish translation by Jan Kasprowicz.
1The Iphigenia is not of the same order as The Trojan Women.
2The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Trojan women of Euripides, by Euripides
3He enters her tent where is nobody but some Trojan women weaving.
4You can take twenty Trojan women, the loveliest after Helen herself.
5End of Project Gutenberg's The Trojan women of Euripides, by Euripides
6Additional speech is borrowed from Brendan Kennelly's Trojan Women.
7The rest of the Trojan women shrilled their grief.
8Hector exhorted all the Trojan women to supplicate the Pallas Athena with gifts and prayers.
9See the first scene of The Trojan Women.
10One of her most personally memorable roles was in the play "The Trojan Women."
11Shall she see again her home and her children, with Trojan women forsooth to be her handmaidens?
12Title: The Trojan women of Euripides
13She wrapped her mantle about her and went in silence, following the goddess and unnoticed by the Trojan women.
14I saw the streets swimming in Trojan blood, Trojan women and children led captive, Cassandra dragged from her shrine.
15Then she went to call Helen, and found her on a high tower with the Trojan women crowding round her.
16The baby will be flung over Troy's ramparts by the victorious Greeks - a scene that appears in The Trojan Women.
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