Page:Tragedies of Euripides (Way 1898) v3.djvu/186

158 The while thy sire, thou, and thy sister die,

Thy mother—that I pass, unmeet to say,—

And that he hold thine halls who won his bride

By Agamemnon's spear!—may I not live

If we shall not against her draw the sword!

If haply we achieve not Helen's death,

Yon palace will we fire, and so will die.

For, of two glories, one we will not miss,

To die with honour, or with honour 'scape.

This child of Tyndareus, who hath brought shame

On womankind, deserves all women's hate.

Ha! nought is better than a loyal friend—

Nor wealth, nor lordship! Sure, of none account

The crowd is, weighed against one noble friend.

Aegisthus' punishment didst thou devise;

On peril's brink thou stoodest at my side;

And profferest now avenging on my foes,

Nor stand'st aloof;—but I will cease from praise,

For weariness cometh even of overpraise.

I must in any wise give up the ghost,

Yet fain would sting mine enemies ere I die,

That my betrayers I may so requite,

And they which made me miserable may groan.

Agamemnon's son am I, the son of one

Held worthy to rule Greece—no despot, yet

A god's might had he. Him I will not shame,

Brooking a slave's death; but as a free man