Quotes about a dead pillow
the gods always hated us
Andromache becoming disenchanted with the gods
my naked flesh will be thrown into a rocky gulley
what is going to happen to Cassandra
howl of agony
what the chorus says Hecuba sounds like
she's happier dead than I am living
Andromache about Polyxena's fate
a whole generation of women raped in their own bedrooms
Brutal description of what happened to the women during the attack on Troy
what howling can give tongue to a pain no animal could endure
Chorus trying to express their grief
teach me, gods of song, some harsh lament dissonant with tears and howls ... invent new sounds for my grief
Chorus using musical imagery to try to express their grief and cope
They died fighting for the fatherland
Cassandra about the Trojan soldiers
who was not dragged away from her home by force, but ran away and was unfaithful
Cassandra on why Helen left the Greeks
The gods hate Troy
Chorus about the gods' opinion of Troy
The Trojans were cut down in their own homes, in sanctuary, beheaded where they lay
Chorus describing the brutality of the death of the Trojans
you whom the gods have cursed
Hecuba about what the gods have done to the women
Let me kneel, lay my old legs on the ground, and my old woman's hands, let them beat the earth
Hecuba at the end alluding to the legend of the dog
why bother to call on them? we called before and they didn't hear us. They ignored our prayers
Hecuba at the end on why we shouldn't call on the gods
Priam, you are dead, ... can you hear my anguished moan?
Hecuba beginning to call on the dead rather than the gods at the end
Oh you gods, what good were you to us? Betrayers!
Hecuba being angry at the gods
My legs are trembling, but I won't fall. Old limbs, strengthen yourselves. Your slavery is beginning.
Hecuba choosing to directly and actively face her fate at the end
wearing make-up, your hair brushed with your best dress on
Hecuba criticising Helen for what she's wearing
Some agonies are beyond telling
Hecuba describing her grief
The force that governs our lives, what else is it but a madman dancing, leaping one way then the next, without pattern or meaning?
Hecuba describing why life is unfair
The living at least have hope. To be dead is to be nothing
Hecuba on why we shouldn't die to Andromache
Born lucky to heighten the tragedy
Hecuba saying how being royal makes this harder
Everything I have done in my life has meant nothing to the vindictive gods
Hecuba saying how nothing matters to the gods
yet ... if the god had not decided to make the greatest suffer most ... what nonentities we would all have been
Hecuba saying that they would not be remembered if everything never happened (There's no mistake in this one this is the actual quote. Blame the translator for making it sound so weird)
Like loot they are stealing us
Hecuba talking about how the women are being dehumanised at the end
The lucky ones are dead
Hecuba talking about how theres no point in living because everyone's gone
My song has become a scream
Hecuba using music imagery to express her dehumanisation
Why not run into the flames?
Hecuba wanting to die with Troy
slave of your lust
Hecuba warns Menelaus not to become one again
The blood's still oozing from the broken bones, laughing at us in its mockery of life
Hecuba's description of Astyanax's corpse
spineless idiot
Helen manipulating Menelaus by calling him names
Consummate the Greek victory by killing your wife!
Helen telling Menelaus what to do with Helen
the sun shines brighter today, this most glorious of days
Menelaus describing the day
I too shall desert famous Troy
Poseidon saying he's going to abandon Troy
poor creature
Poseidon's description of Hecuba
such acts of brainless stupidity
What Hecuba says the gods would never do based on Helen's story.
I took the opportunity to wash the body
Talthybius being not so bad and washing Astyanax's body
I'm a poor man. But there's no way I'd let her anywhere near my bed
Talthybius describing Cassandra as insane
She belongs to Odysseus now
Talthybius describing Hecuba as property at the end of the play
I'm not half hard enough
Talthybius hesitating taking Astyanax away
I shall have to carry the can
Talthybius saying he must follow orders
these are a proud people
Talthybius showing that he understands the women's pain
fill the whole bay if Euboea with floating corpses so thick you could walk on them
What Athene wants to do to the Greeks
I'll kill him, and destroy his whole family in return for my father and brothers destroyed
What Cassandra wants to do to Agamemnon
Howl! Howl! Howl!
What Hecuba says once her fate is settled due to not being able to die
He wants her because she's sacred
Why Agamemnon wants Cassandra
altars soon to drip and smooth floors run slippery with Trojan blood
description of Troy during attack
This child was murdered by the Greeks because they were afraid of him
hecuba on why the Greeks killed Astyanax
tens of thousands dead
how many Greeks died for Helen
a Greek baggage wagon
what Andromache is introduced in
uncontrollable lust
what Menelaus feels for Helen
march down to the Achaean fleet!
the chorus choosing to face their fate actively
Greek war machine
what Poseidon calls the Greek army in the opening monologue