id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt euripides-helen-1430 euripides-helen-1430 .txt text/plain 16657 1446 93 HELEN Thine must be a piteous lot; who from thy country drives thee HELEN Hath Menelaus reached his home by this time with his wife? For though in form thou dost resemble Helen, thy thy lord hath lost his life, and never, never more shalt thou fill Yea, for to recognize our friends is of God. MENELAUS Art thou from Hellas, or a native of this land? HELEN Dost not believe thou seest in me thy wife? MENELAUS For thy likeness unto Helen, fare thee well. MENELAUS Tell me, I adjure thee, how wert thou from my home conveyed? HELEN The sword far sooner than thy wife's embrace is waiting thee. Thou hast seen thy husband Menelaus arrive HELEN Then by thy knees, since thou art my friend indeed,THEOCLYMENUS What am I to give thee then for thy dead husband? (THEOCLYMENUS, HELEN, MENELAUS ./cache/euripides-helen-1430.txt ./txt/euripides-helen-1430.txt