Page:Electra of Euripides (Murray 1913).djvu/82

66 With foemen; to prop up our castle towers,

And rescue other children that were ours,

Giving one life for many, by God's laws

I had forgiven all! Not so. Because

Helen was wanton, and her master knew

No curb for her: for that, for that, he slew

My daughter!—Even then, with all my wrong,

No wild beast yet was in me. Nay, for long,

I never would have killed him. But he came,

At last, bringing that damsel, with the flame

Of God about her, mad and knowing all:

And set her in my room; and in one wall

Would hold two queens!—O wild are woman's eyes

And hot her heart. I say not otherwise.

But, being thus wild, if then her master stray

To love far off, and cast his own away,

Shall not her will break prison too, and wend

Somewhere to win some other for a friend?

And then on us the world's curse waxes strong

In righteousness! The lords of all the wrong

Must hear no curse!—I slew him. I trod then

The only road: which led me to the men

He hated. Of the friends of Argos whom

Durst I have sought, to aid me to the doom

I craved?—Speak if thou wouldst, and fear not me,

If yet thou deemst him slain unrighteously.

Thy words be just, yet shame their justice brings;

A woman true of heart should bear all things

From him she loves. And she who feels it not,

I cannot reason of her, nor speak aught.