ir sons but truly use them for their own needs and self-pity. Indulged in their own self worth, their idea of love is turned villainous.Love is suppose to be good and righteous, yet in Euripides’ “Medea” it is used as evil that causes a true misfortune. In the play “Medea”, Jason never claims his love or remorse for Medea. He used her for his own self-redemption and then credits himself for his good fortune. At the beginning, Medea had so much love for Jason that she would do anything that she could for him. Medea went against her family to help Jason and fled from her homeland. Medea’s love and Jason’s betrayal lead to this play’s catastrophe. Love was the essential power that ignited Medea but, in conclusion, vengeance and hatred prevailed. This play was a true tragedy for no one proved to excel. In conclusion, the play “Medea” exhibits how evil can corrupt even the purest and most passionate forms of love....