<P> However, Helen's portraits in Troy seem to contradict each other . From one side, we read about the treacherous Helen who simulated Bacchic rites and rejoiced over the carnage of Trojans . On the other hand, there is another Helen, lonely and helpless; desperate to find sanctuary, while Troy is on fire . Stesichorus narrates that both Greeks and Trojans gathered to stone her to death . When Menelaus finally found her, he raised his sword to kill her . He had demanded that only he should slay his unfaithful wife; but, when he was ready to do so, she dropped her robe from her shoulders, and the sight of her beauty caused him to let the sword drop from his hand . Electra wails: </P> <P> Alas for my troubles! Can it be that her beauty has blunted their swords? </P> <P> Helen returned to Sparta and lived for a time with Menelaus, where she was encountered by Telemachus in Book 4 of The Odyssey . As depicted in that account, she and Menelaus were completely reconciled and had a harmonious married life--he holding no grudge at her having run away with a lover and she feeling no restraint in telling anecdotes of her life inside besieged Troy . </P> <P> According to another version, used by Euripides in his play Orestes, Helen had long ago left the mortal world by then, having been taken up to Mount Olympus almost immediately after Menelaus' return . A curious fate is recounted by Pausanias the geographer (3.19. 11--13), which has Helen share the afterlife with Achilles . </P>

Who of the following is alive at the end of the iliad