Translated by S. T. Coleridge.
"Upon the whole there can be no doubt that this trilogy forms, in its original tongue, one of the most splendid specimens of tragic art the world has witnessed; and none at all, that the execution of the version from which we have quoted so largely, places Mr. Coleridge in the very first rank of poetical translators. He is, perhaps, the solitary example of a man of very great original genius submitting to all the labors, and reaping all the honors of this species of literary exertion."—Blackwood, 1823.
[ PREFACE. ]
[ DRAMATIS PERSONAE. ]
[ ACT I. ]
[ SCENE I. ]
[ SCENE II. ]
[ SCENE III. ]
[ SCENE IV. ]
[ SCENE V. ]
[ ACT II. ]
[ SCENE I. ]
[ SCENE II. ]
[ SCENE III. ]
[ SCENE IV. ]
[ SCENE V. ]
[ SCENE VI. ]
[ SCENE VII. ]
[ ACT III. ]
[ SCENE I. ]
[ SCENE II. ]
[ SCENE III. ]
[ SCENE IV. ]
[ SCENE V. ]
[ SCENE VI. ]
[ SCENE VII. ]
[ SCENE VIII. ]
[ SCENE IX. ]
[ ACT IV. ]
[ SCENE I. ]
[ SCENE II. ]
[ SCENE III. ]
[ SCENE IV. ]
[ SCENE V. ]
[ SCENE VI. ]
[ SCENE VII. ]
[ ACT V. ]
[ SCENE I. ]
[ SCENE II. ]
[ SCENE III. ]
[ FOOTNOTES. ]
[ [!-- H2 anchor --] ]