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    Delphi Complete Works of Sophocles

    Page 31
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      OEDIPUS

      Then may the gods ne’er quench their fatal feud,

      And mine be the arbitrament of the fight,

      For which they now are arming, spear to spear;

      That neither he who holds the scepter now

      May keep this throne, nor he who fled the realm

      Return again. They never raised a hand,

      When I their sire was thrust from hearth and home,

      When I was banned and banished, what recked they?

      Say you ’twas done at my desire, a grace

      Which the state, yielding to my wish, allowed?

      Not so; for, mark you, on that very day

      When in the tempest of my soul I craved

      Death, even death by stoning, none appeared

      To further that wild longing, but anon,

      When time had numbed my anguish and I felt

      My wrath had all outrun those errors past,

      Then, then it was the city went about

      By force to oust me, respited for years;

      And then my sons, who should as sons have helped,

      Did nothing: and, one little word from them

      Was all I needed, and they spoke no word,

      But let me wander on for evermore,

      A banished man, a beggar. These two maids

      Their sisters, girls, gave all their sex could give,

      Food and safe harborage and filial care;

      While their two brethren sacrificed their sire

      For lust of power and sceptred sovereignty.

      No! me they ne’er shall win for an ally,

      Nor will this Theban kingship bring them gain;

      That know I from this maiden’s oracles,

      And those old prophecies concerning me,

      Which Phoebus now at length has brought to pass.

      Come Creon then, come all the mightiest

      In Thebes to seek me; for if ye my friends,

      Championed by those dread Powers indigenous,

      Espouse my cause; then for the State ye gain

      A great deliverer, for my foemen bane.

      CHORUS

      Our pity, Oedipus, thou needs must move,

      Thou and these maidens; and the stronger plea

      Thou urgest, as the savior of our land,

      Disposes me to counsel for thy weal.

      OEDIPUS

      Aid me, kind sirs; I will do all you bid.

      CHORUS

      First make atonement to the deities,

      Whose grove by trespass thou didst first profane.

      OEDIPUS

      After what manner, stranger? Teach me, pray.

      CHORUS

      Make a libation first of water fetched

      With undefiled hands from living spring.

      OEDIPUS

      And after I have gotten this pure draught?

      CHORUS

      Bowls thou wilt find, the carver’s handiwork;

      Crown thou the rims and both the handles crown —

      OEDIPUS

      With olive shoots or blocks of wool, or how?

      CHORUS

      With wool from fleece of yearling freshly shorn.

      OEDIPUS

      What next? how must I end the ritual?

      CHORUS

      Pour thy libation, turning to the dawn.

      OEDIPUS

      Pouring it from the urns whereof ye spake?

      CHORUS

      Yea, in three streams; and be the last bowl drained

      To the last drop.

      OEDIPUS

      And wherewith shall I fill it,

      Ere in its place I set it? This too tell.

      CHORUS

      With water and with honey; add no wine.

      OEDIPUS

      And when the embowered earth hath drunk thereof?

      CHORUS

      Then lay upon it thrice nine olive sprays

      With both thy hands, and offer up this prayer.

      OEDIPUS

      I fain would hear it; that imports the most.

      CHORUS

      That, as we call them Gracious, they would deign

      To grant the suppliant their saving grace.

      So pray thyself or whoso pray for thee,

      In whispered accents, not with lifted voice;

      Then go and look back. Do as I bid,

      And I shall then be bold to stand thy friend;

      Else, stranger, I should have my fears for thee.

      OEDIPUS

      Hear ye, my daughters, what these strangers say?

      ANTIGONE

      We listened, and attend thy bidding, father.

      OEDIPUS

      I cannot go, disabled as I am

      Doubly, by lack of strength and lack of sight;

      But one of you may do it in my stead;

      For one, I trow, may pay the sacrifice

      Of thousands, if his heart be leal and true.

      So to your work with speed, but leave me not

      Untended; for this frame is all too week

      To move without the help of guiding hand.

      ISMENE

      Then I will go perform these rites, but where

      To find the spot, this have I yet to learn.

      CHORUS

      Beyond this grove; if thou hast need of aught,

      The guardian of the close will lend his aid.

      ISMENE

      I go, and thou, Antigone, meanwhile

      Must guard our father. In a parent’s cause

      Toil, if there be toil, is of no account.

      [Exit ISMENE]

      CHORUS

      (Str. 1)

      Ill it is, stranger, to awake

      Pain that long since has ceased to ache,

      And yet I fain would hear —

      OEDIPUS

      What thing?

      CHORUS

      Thy tale of cruel suffering

      For which no cure was found,

      The fate that held thee bound.

      OEDIPUS

      O bid me not (as guest I claim

      This grace) expose my shame.

      CHORUS

      The tale is bruited far and near,

      And echoes still from ear to ear.

      The truth, I fain would hear.

      OEDIPUS

      Ah me!

      CHORUS

      I prithee yield.

      OEDIPUS

      Ah me!

      CHORUS

      Grant my request, I granted all to thee.

      OEDIPUS

      (Ant. 1)

      Know then I suffered ills most vile, but none

      (So help me Heaven!) from acts in malice done.

      CHORUS

      Say how.

      OEDIPUS

      The State around

      An all unwitting bridegroom bound

      An impious marriage chain;

      That was my bane.

      CHORUS

      Didst thou in sooth then share

      A bed incestuous with her that bare —

      OEDIPUS

      It stabs me like a sword,

      That two-edged word,

      O stranger, but these maids — my own —

      CHORUS

      Say on.

      OEDIPUS

      Two daughters, curses twain.

      CHORUS

      Oh God!

      OEDIPUS

      Sprang from the wife and mother’s travail-pain.

      CHORUS

      (Str. 2)

      What, then thy offspring are at once —

      OEDIPUS

      Too true.

      Their father’s very sister’s too.

      CHORUS

      Oh horror!

      OEDIPUS

      Horrors from the boundless deep

      Back on my soul in refluent surges sweep.

      CHORUS

      Thou hast endured —

      OEDIPUS

      Intolerable woe.

      CHORUS

      And sinned —

      OEDIPUS

      I sinned not.

      CHORUS

      How so?

      OEDIPUS

      I served t
    he State; would I had never won

      That graceless grace by which I was undone.

      CHORUS

      (Ant. 2)

      And next, unhappy man, thou hast shed blood?

      OEDIPUS

      Must ye hear more?

      CHORUS

      A father’s?

      OEDIPUS

      Flood on flood

      Whelms me; that word’s a second mortal blow.

      CHORUS

      Murderer!

      OEDIPUS

      Yes, a murderer, but know —

      CHORUS

      What canst thou plead?

      OEDIPUS

      A plea of justice.

      CHORUS

      How?

      OEDIPUS

      I slew who else would me have slain;

      I slew without intent,

      A wretch, but innocent

      In the law’s eye, I stand, without a stain.

      CHORUS

      Behold our sovereign, Theseus, Aegeus’ son,

      Comes at thy summons to perform his part.

      [Enter THESEUS]

      THESEUS

      Oft had I heard of thee in times gone by —

      The bloody mutilation of thine eyes —

      And therefore know thee, son of Laius.

      All that I lately gathered on the way

      Made my conjecture doubly sure; and now

      Thy garb and that marred visage prove to me

      That thou art he. So pitying thine estate,

      Most ill-starred Oedipus, I fain would know

      What is the suit ye urge on me and Athens,

      Thou and the helpless maiden at thy side.

      Declare it; dire indeed must be the tale

      Whereat I should recoil. I too was reared,

      Like thee, in exile, and in foreign lands

      Wrestled with many perils, no man more.

      Wherefore no alien in adversity

      Shall seek in vain my succor, nor shalt thou;

      I know myself a mortal, and my share

      In what the morrow brings no more than thine.

      OEDIPUS

      Theseus, thy words so apt, so generous

      So comfortable, need no long reply

      Both who I am and of what lineage sprung,

      And from what land I came, thou hast declared.

      So without prologue I may utter now

      My brief petition, and the tale is told.

      THESEUS

      Say on, and tell me what I fain would learn.

      OEDIPUS

      I come to offer thee this woe-worn frame,

      A gift not fair to look on; yet its worth

      More precious far than any outward show.

      THESEUS

      What profit dost thou proffer to have brought?

      OEDIPUS

      Hereafter thou shalt learn, not yet, methinks.

      THESEUS

      When may we hope to reap the benefit?

      OEDIPUS

      When I am dead and thou hast buried me.

      THESEUS

      Thou cravest life’s last service; all before —

      Is it forgotten or of no account?

      OEDIPUS

      Yea, the last boon is warrant for the rest.

      THESEUS

      The grace thou cravest then is small indeed.

      OEDIPUS

      Nay, weigh it well; the issue is not slight.

      THESEUS

      Thou meanest that betwixt thy sons and me?

      OEDIPUS

      Prince, they would fain convey me back to Thebes.

      THESEUS

      If there be no compulsion, then methinks

      To rest in banishment befits not thee.

      OEDIPUS

      Nay, when I wished it they would not consent.

      THESEUS

      For shame! such temper misbecomes the faller.

      OEDIPUS

      Chide if thou wilt, but first attend my plea.

      THESEUS

      Say on, I wait full knowledge ere I judge.

      OEDIPUS

      O Theseus, I have suffered wrongs on wrongs.

      THESEUS

      Wouldst tell the old misfortune of thy race?

      OEDIPUS

      No, that has grown a byword throughout Greece.

      THESEUS

      What then can be this more than mortal grief?

      OEDIPUS

      My case stands thus; by my own flesh and blood

      I was expelled my country, and can ne’er

      Thither return again, a parricide.

      THESEUS

      Why fetch thee home if thou must needs obey.

      THESEUS

      What are they threatened by the oracle?

      OEDIPUS

      Destruction that awaits them in this land.

      THESEUS

      What can beget ill blood ‘twixt them and me?

      OEDIPUS

      Dear son of Aegeus, to the gods alone

      Is given immunity from eld and death;

      But nothing else escapes all-ruinous time.

      Earth’s might decays, the might of men decays,

      Honor grows cold, dishonor flourishes,

      There is no constancy ‘twixt friend and friend,

      Or city and city; be it soon or late,

      Sweet turns to bitter, hate once more to love.

      If now ’tis sunshine betwixt Thebes and thee

      And not a cloud, Time in his endless course

      Gives birth to endless days and nights, wherein

      The merest nothing shall suffice to cut

      With serried spears your bonds of amity.

      Then shall my slumbering and buried corpse

      In its cold grave drink their warm life-blood up,

      If Zeus be Zeus and Phoebus still speak true.

      No more: ’tis ill to tear aside the veil

      Of mysteries; let me cease as I began:

      Enough if thou wilt keep thy plighted troth,

      Then shall thou ne’er complain that Oedipus

      Proved an unprofitable and thankless guest,

      Except the gods themselves shall play me false.

      CHORUS

      The man, my lord, has from the very first

      Declared his power to offer to our land

      These and like benefits.

      THESEUS

      Who could reject

      The proffered amity of such a friend?

      First, he can claim the hospitality

      To which by mutual contract we stand pledged:

      Next, coming here, a suppliant to the gods,

      He pays full tribute to the State and me;

      His favors therefore never will I spurn,

      But grant him the full rights of citizen;

      And, if it suits the stranger here to bide,

      I place him in your charge, or if he please

      Rather to come with me — choose, Oedipus,

      Which of the two thou wilt. Thy choice is mine.

      OEDIPUS

      Zeus, may the blessing fall on men like these!

      THESEUS

      What dost thou then decide — to come with me?

      OEDIPUS

      Yea, were it lawful — but ’tis rather here —

      THESEUS

      What wouldst thou here? I shall not thwart thy wish.

      OEDIPUS

      Here shall I vanquish those who cast me forth.

      THESEUS

      Then were thy presence here a boon indeed.

      OEDIPUS

      Such shall it prove, if thou fulfill’st thy pledge.

      THESEUS

      Fear not for me; I shall not play thee false.

      OEDIPUS

      No need to back thy promise with an oath.

      THESEUS

      An oath would be no surer than my word.

      OEDIPUS

      How wilt thou act then?

      THESEUS

      What is it thou fear’st?

      OEDIPUS

      My foes will come —

      THESEUS

      Our friends will look to that.

      OEDIPUS


      But if thou leave me?

      THESEUS

      Teach me not my duty.

      OEDIPUS

      ’Tis fear constrains me.

      THESEUS

      My soul knows no fear!

      OEDIPUS

      Thou knowest not what threats —

      THESEUS

      I know that none

      Shall hale thee hence in my despite. Such threats

      Vented in anger oft, are blusterers,

      An idle breath, forgot when sense returns.

      And for thy foemen, though their words were brave,

      Boasting to bring thee back, they are like to find

      The seas between us wide and hard to sail.

      Such my firm purpose, but in any case

      Take heart, since Phoebus sent thee here. My name,

      Though I be distant, warrants thee from harm.

      CHORUS

      (Str. 1)

      Thou hast come to a steed-famed land for rest,

      O stranger worn with toil,

      To a land of all lands the goodliest

      Colonus’ glistening soil.

      ’Tis the haunt of the clear-voiced nightingale,

      Who hid in her bower, among

      The wine-dark ivy that wreathes the vale,

      Trilleth her ceaseless song;

      And she loves, where the clustering berries nod

      O’er a sunless, windless glade,

      The spot by no mortal footstep trod,

      The pleasance kept for the Bacchic god,

      Where he holds each night his revels wild

      With the nymphs who fostered the lusty child.

      (Ant. 1)

      And fed each morn by the pearly dew

      The starred narcissi shine,

      And a wreath with the crocus’ golden hue

      For the Mother and Daughter twine.

      And never the sleepless fountains cease

      That feed Cephisus’ stream,

      But they swell earth’s bosom with quick increase,

      And their wave hath a crystal gleam.

      And the Muses’ quire will never disdain

      To visit this heaven-favored plain,

      Nor the Cyprian queen of the golden rein.

      (Str. 2)

      And here there grows, unpruned, untamed,

      Terror to foemen’s spear,

      A tree in Asian soil unnamed,

      By Pelops’ Dorian isle unclaimed,

      Self-nurtured year by year;

      ’Tis the grey-leaved olive that feeds our boys;

      Nor youth nor withering age destroys

      The plant that the Olive Planter tends

      And the Grey-eyed Goddess herself defends.

      (Ant. 2)

      Yet another gift, of all gifts the most

      Prized by our fatherland, we boast —

      The might of the horse, the might of the sea;

      Our fame, Poseidon, we owe to thee,

      Son of Kronos, our king divine,

      Who in these highways first didst fit

      For the mouth of horses the iron bit;

      Thou too hast taught us to fashion meet

      For the arm of the rower the oar-blade fleet,

      Swift as the Nereids’ hundred feet

      As they dance along the brine.

      ANTIGONE

      Oh land extolled above all lands, ’tis now

     


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