The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 548 pages of information about The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I..

The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 548 pages of information about The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I..
Did this woman’s person excel in beauty all women?  Or did I hope to rule over thine house, having thy bridal bed as carrying dowry with it?  I must in that case have been a fool, and not at all in my senses.  But did I do it as though to reign were pleasant to the modest?  By no means indeed is it, except monarchy have destroyed the minds of men who are pleased with her.  But I would wish indeed to be first victor in the Grecian games, but second in the state ever to be happy with the most excellent friends.  For thus is it possible to be well circumstanced:  but the absence of the danger gives greater joy than dominion.  One of my arguments has not been spoken, but the rest you are in possession of:  for, if I had a witness such as myself am, and were she alive during my contention, you would know the evil ones, searching them by their works.  But now I swear by Jove, the guardian of oaths,[37] and by the plain of the earth, that never touched I thy bridal bed, nor ever wished it, nor conceived the thought.  Else may I perish inglorious, without a name, and may neither sea nor earth receive the flesh of me when dead, if I be a wicked man.  But whether or no she have destroyed her life through fear, I know not:  for it is not lawful for me to speak further.  Cautious[38] she was, though she could not be chaste; but I, who could be, had the power to no good purpose.

CHOR.  Thou hast said sufficient to rebut the charge, in offering the oaths by the Gods, no slight proof.

THES.  Is not this man then an enchanter and a juggler, who trusts that he will overcome my mind by his goodness of disposition, after he has dishonored his father?

HIPP.  I too very much wonder at this conduct of yours, my father; for if you were my son, and I your father, I should slay you, and not punish you by banishment, if you had dared to defile my wife.

THES.  How fitly hast thou said this! yet thou shalt not so die, as thou hast laid down this law for thyself; for a quick grave is easiest to the miserable man; but wandering an exile from thy country’s land to foreign realms, thou shalt drag out a life of bitterness; for this is the reward for the impious man.

HIPP.  Ah me! what wilt thou do? wilt thou not even await time as evidence against me, but wilt thou banish me from the land?

THES.  Ay, beyond the ocean, and the place of Atlas,[39] if any way I could, so much do I hate thee.

HIPP.  Without having even examined oath, or proof, or the sayings of the seers, wilt thou cast me uncondemned from out the land?

THES.  This letter here, that waiteth no seer’s observations,[40] accuses thee faithfully; but to the birds that flit above my head I bid a long farewell.

HIPP.  O Gods, wherefore then do I not ope my mouth, who am destroyed by you whom I worship?—­And yet not so—­for thus I should not altogether persuade those whom I ought, but should be violating to no purpose the oaths which I have sworn.

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The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.