Front cover image for The Bacchae, and other plays

The Bacchae, and other plays

Euripides, Philip Vellacott (Translator)
Euripides' major themes--religious scepticism, the injustices suffered by women, and the destructive folly of war--are issues still vitally important today. Ion, a play more concerned with character than ideas, deals with the problem of reconciling religious faith with the facts of human life. The Women of Troy poignantly reveals the horror of war, a theme also woven into the comedy, Helen, in which Euripides good-humouredly parodies himself. The Bacchae, his last surviving tragedy and masterpiece, explores the psychology of mass violence. Above all, as these four plays demonstrate, Euripides sought to understand the nature of the human soul and human society. As Philip Vellacott states in his introduction, we enter, through reading these dramas, a world "whose mysteries are infinite because they are the simple ones of common human experience."

Print Book, English, [1972]
[Rev. ed
Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, Eng., [1972]