This article offers some thoughts on Seneca\u2019s Medea and especially on lines 905\u201315 near the end of the play, which are key to understanding the construction of the protagonist\u2019s identity throughout the text. They bring to the fore the joint presence of anger and love in the character\u2019s psychology and, recurring to elegy as a point of entry, attempt to delineate an intertextual relationship with Ov. Am. 2.18, aiming at evoking the \u2018ghostly\u2019 presence of Ovid\u2019s lost Medea. The article falls into two major sections: the first part focuses on distinctive features of Seneca\u2019s portrayal of his heroine, like the representation of her intense emotions, the maius-motif, the sophisticated and complex interplay b...