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..
But as many as were mothers caressed my children in their arms in seeming admiration, that they might be farther removed from their father, successively handing them from one to another:  and then, amidst their kind blandishments, what think you? in an instant, snatching from somewhere beneath their garments their daggers, they stab my children.  But they having seized me in an hostile manner held my hands and feet; and if, wishing to succor my children, I raised my head, they held me by the hair:  but if I attempted to move my hands, I wretched could effect nothing through the host of women.  But at last, cruelty and worse than cruelty, they perpetrated dreadful things; for having taken their clasps they pierce and gore the wretched pupils of my eyes, then vanish in flight through the tent.  But I, having leaped out, like some exasperated beast, pursue the blood-stained wretches, searching every wall, as the hunter, casting down, rending.  This have I suffered, while studious to advance thy interest, Agamemnon, and having killed thine enemy.  But that I may not extend my speech to a greater length, if any one of those of ancient times hath reviled women, or if any one doth now, or shall hereafter revile them, I will comprise the whole when I say, that such a race neither doth the sea nor the earth produce, but he who is always with them knows it best.

Chor.  Be not at all insolent, nor, in thy calamities, thus comprehending the female sex, abuse them all.  For of us there are many, some indeed are envied for their virtues, but some are by nature in the catalogue of bad things.

Hec.  Agamemnon, it never were fitting among men that the tongue should have greater force than actions.  But if a man has acted well, well should he speak; if on the other hand basely, his words likewise should be unsound, and never ought he to be capable of speaking unjust things well.  Perhaps indeed they who have brought these things to a pitch of accuracy are accounted wise, but they can not endure wise unto the end, but perish vilely, nor has any one yet escaped this.  And this in my prelude is what I have to say to thee.  Now am I going to direct my discourse to this man, and I will answer his arguments.  Thou, that assertest, that in order to rid the Greeks of their redoubled toil, and for Agamemnon’s sake that thou didst slay my son?  But, in the first place, monstrous villain, never can the race of barbarians be friendly to the Grecians, never can this take place.  But what favor wert thou so eagerly currying? wert thou about to contract an alliance, or was it that thou wert of kindred birth, or what pretext hadst thou? or were they about to ravage the crops of thy country, having sailed thither again?  Whom, thinkest thou, wilt thou persuade of these things?  The gold, if thou wert willing to speak truth, the gold destroyed my son, and thy base gains.  For come, tell me this; how when Troy was prosperous, and a tower yet girt around the city, and Priam lived,

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