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Robert Garnier, in his tragedy La Troade (1579), stages the misfortunes of the Trojan people after the fall of Troy; he borrows from Euripides and Seneca, but amplifies pathetic and tragic elements, approaching the question of Providence. The dramatic interest consists in the accumulation of calamities, particularly for the character of Hecuba.
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Robert Garnier, in his tragedy La Troade (1579), stages the misfortunes of the Trojan people after the fall of Troy; he borrows from Euripides and Seneca, but amplifies pathetic and tragic elements, approaching the question of Providence. The dramatic interest consists in the accumulation of calamities, particularly for the character of Hecuba.