And bush, and bird, and mute fish in the sea,”—
Euripides transcribes in Chrysippus:
“But nothing dies
Of things that are; but being dissolved,
One from the other,
Shows another form.”
And Plato having said, in the Republic, that women were common, Euripides writes in the Protesilaus:
“For common, then, is woman’s bed.”
Further, Euripides having written:
“For to the temperate enough sufficient is,”—