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    The Complete Plays of Sophocles

    Page 32
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      OEDIPUS

      Then let them be kind to this suppliant!

      I’ll never leave this sacred ground.

      STRANGER

      Why do you say that?

      OEDIPUS

      It all fits: here is where I meet my fate.

      STRANGER

      Well, then, I won’t presume to drive you out.

      Not till I get permission from the city.

      STRANGER starts to leave.

      OEDIPUS

      For god’s sake, man! Don’t scorn me because I

      look like a tramp. I need to know something.

      STRANGER

      Then say what you need. I won’t hold back.

      OEDIPUS

      This place we’ve entered—what do they call it? 60

      STRANGER

      I’ll say only what I know personally.

      This entire grove is holy and belongs

      to grim Poseidon. Prometheus the firegod

      also has a shrine here. That rock ledge

      you’re on is our country’s brass-footed threshold.

      It anchors Athens. The horseman over there—

      —STRANGER gestures toward an equestrian statue—

      is Kolonos, who settled the farmland

      hereabouts. We’ve all taken his name. That’s

      the story, stranger. Kolonos isn’t

      so much a legend as a presence we feel. 70

      OEDIPUS

      Then people do live around here?

      STRANGER

      Of course! They’re named after that hero there.

      STRANGER nods toward the statue of Kolonos.

      OEDIPUS

      You have a king? Or do the people rule?

      STRANGER

      We have a king who governs from Athens.

      OEDIPUS

      Whose eloquence and strength brought him to power?

      STRANGER

      Theseus. Old King Aigeus’ son.

      OEDIPUS

      I wonder . . . could someone from here go find him?

      STRANGER

      To take a message? Bring him back? What for?

      OEDIPUS

      So he may be hugely repaid for a small kindness.

      STRANGER

      Tell me, how can a blind man be of use? 80

      OEDIPUS

      My words, every one of them, can see.

      STRANGER

      Look, friend, don’t do anything reckless.

      Your bearing tells me you’re from noble stock,

      but it’s clear you’re down on your luck.

      Stay put, right where I found you, while I go

      let the men in town know what’s happened.

      Never mind Athens—we will decide

      whether you stay here or move on.

      Exit STRANGER.

      OEDIPUS

      Has the stranger left, child?

      ANTIGONE

      He’s gone, Father. You can speak freely. 90

      It’s quiet now. I’m the only one here.

      OEDIPUS assumes a posture of prayer.

      OEDIPUS

      Ladies whose eyes we dread, since your grove

      is the first in this land where I’ve come to pray,

      don’t be unkind

      either to me or to Apollo.

      When the god condemned me to such grief,

      he assured me my long life would end here—

      that I’d find a haven, and be taken in

      by vengeful goddesses, to be a source

      of strength to those who welcomed me, and a curse 100

      to those who drove me out. The god promised

      he’d show a sign—an earthquake, some thunder,

      or lightning flamed from Zeus’ own hand.

      It must have been, Ladies, a trustworthy

      omen from you that led me to this place.

      Why else would you be the first deities

      I’ve met on my travels? I—a sober man—

      find my way to you, who spurn wine. What else

      could have brought me to this rough stone bench?

      Please, Goddesses, do as Apollo bids: 110

      grant me a clear path to my life’s end—unless

      I seem in some way beneath your concern,

      profaned as I am by the worst evils

      a man may endure. Respond to me,

      delightful daughters of primeval darkness!

      And help me Athens, most

      honored city in Greece,

      homeland of Pallas Athena! Pity

      this feeble ghost of the man Oedipus.

      My body hasn’t always looked like this. 120

      ANTIGONE

      Shhh, be quiet now. Some old men—they look

      ancient!—have come searching for you.

      OEDIPUS

      I’ll be quiet. Get me to the trees,

      off the road, so I can hear what they say.

      What we learn will help us

      decide our best course of action.

      ANTIGONE guides OEDIPUS up the slope and into the grove. Chorus of OLD MEN enters. Gracefully, they probe along the grove’s edge in a coordinated dancing movement while singing their entry song.

      OLD MEN

      Look for him,

      though we don’t know

      who he is, or where

      he’s hiding now. 130

      He’s bolted for cover,

      totally brazen!

      Search the whole grove.

      Look sharp, look everywhere.

      The old fellow’s

      a foreigner, an intruder.

      No native would invade

      prohibited grounds

      of virgins so violent,

      so uncontrollable— 140

      their very names

      we fear to say out loud.

      We walk in their midst,

      eyes lowered, not breathing

      a word, though our lips

      mouth silent prayers.

      LEADER

      We’ve heard the report:

      Someone with no respect

      for the goddesses has arrived.

      But looking across the sacred glen 150

      I don’t see him or his hiding place.

      OEDIPUS steps forward from the foliage.

      OEDIPUS

      I’m here. The man you’re looking for. I see

      with my ears, as people say of the blind.

      LEADER

      Aggghh! Aggghh!

      The sight of you, the sound of your voice, appalls us.

      OEDIPUS

      Don’t look at me as though I’m some outlaw.

      LEADER

      Spare us, Zeus! Who is this haughty old man?

      OEDIPUS

      Not someone whose life you might envy—

      you men charged with guarding your country!

      Isn’t that obvious? Why else 160

      would I walk as I do, dependent

      on other people’s eyes, and tethered,

      large as I am, to this frail creature?

      LEADER

      Ah! Then you were born blind?

      You must have led a long,

      bleak life. Take our advice:

      Don’t add one more curse

      to your miseries. You’ve gone

      too far! Please step back!

      Don’t go stumbling 170

      through that green glade

      where speech is forbidden,

      where we pour

      clear water from a bowl,

      blending it

      with honey-sweet libations.

      Watch yourself,

      stranger with such

      horrendous luck—

      stand back, walk away! 180

      Move further back!

      Do you hear me? If you

      have something to tell us,

      get off that sacred ground!

      Speak only

      where talk is allowed.

      Until then, keep quiet.

      OEDIPUS

      Daughter, what should we do?

      ANTIGONE

      (conferring quietly with OEDIPUS)


      Respect their customs, Father.

      Do as they ask. Be deferential. 190

      OEDIPUS

      Give me your hand, then.

      ANTIGONE

      Here, feel mine.

      OEDIPUS, with ANTIGONE supporting him, very cautiously approaches the OLD MEN.

      OEDIPUS

      I’m going to trust you, strangers. Don’t

      betray me when I leave this holy ground.

      LEADER

      Nobody will force you to leave

      this resting place against your will.

      OEDIPUS pauses in his progress.

      OEDIPUS

      Further?

      LEADER

      Keep going.

      OEDIPUS

      More?

      LEADER

      Keep him moving, girl, you can see the path.

      ANTIGONE

      Come on, Father. 200

      Keep stepping

      into the dark

      as I lead you.

      LEADER

      You are, old man, a stranger

      in a strange land.

      Accustom yourself

      to hating what our city

      despises and revering

      what it loves.

      OEDIPUS

      Guide me, child, to some spot 210

      where I can speak and listen

      without offending the gods.

      Let’s not fight the inevitable.

      LEADER

      Stop right there. Don’t move

      beyond that rock ledge.

      OEDIPUS

      Stop here?

      LEADER

      That’s far enough, I’m telling you!

      OEDIPUS

      May I sit down?

      LEADER

      Yes. Edge sideways and squat down on that rock.

      ANTIGONE holds OEDIPUS and guides his steps.

      ANTIGONE

      Father, let me do this. Take one 220

      easy step after another . . .

      OEDIPUS

      Oh, my.

      ANTIGONE

      . . . leaning your tired body

      on my loving arm.

      OEDIPUS

      I’m sorry for my weakness.

      ANTIGONE sits him on the rock ledge downstage.

      LEADER

      Poor fellow, now that you’re at ease,

      tell us who you are in the world.

      Who would want to be moved about

      in such excruciating pain?

      Tell us where you live.

      OEDIPUS

      Strangers, I have no home! But please don’t . . . 230

      LEADER

      What don’t you want us to ask, old man?

      OEDIPUS

      Don’t! Just don’t ask who I am.

      No questions, no more probing.

      LEADER

      Is there a reason?

      OEDIPUS

      The horror I was born to.

      LEADER

      Go on.

      OEDIPUS

      (whispering)

      Child, what should I tell them?

      LEADER

      Speak up, stranger: tell us

      your bloodlines. Start with your father.

      OEDIPUS

      What’s going to happen to me, child?

      ANTIGONE

      You’ve been pushed to the brink. Better tell them.

      OEDIPUS

      All right, I’ll say it. There’s no way to hide it. 240

      LEADER

      You both take too much time. Go on, speak.

      OEDIPUS

      You’ve heard of Laios’ son . . .

      OLD MEN

      Aaaaah!

      OEDIPUS

      . . . and the house of Labdakos . . .

      OLD MEN

      O Zeus!

      OEDIPUS

      . . . and doomed Oedipus?

      LEADER

      That’s who you are?

      OEDIPUS

      Don’t fear my words . . .

      OLD MEN

      Aaagghhh! Aaagghhh!

      As their cries of apprehension overwhelm OEDIPUS’ previous words, the OLD MEN en bloc turn away from him.

      OEDIPUS

      . . . because I am a broken man.

      OLD MEN

      Aaagghhh! Aaagghhh!

      OEDIPUS

      What’s going to happen, child?

      LEADER

      Get out of here! Leave our country! 250

      OEDIPUS

      And the promise you made me?

      How do you plan to honor that?

      LEADER

      When someone who’s been wronged

      defends himself by striking back,

      Fate doesn’t punish him. And when

      deception is used to counter

      deceit, it should cause pain, not gratitude.

      Stand up! Now! Get off that seat! Leave this land

      as fast as you can walk, so you won’t burden

      our city with your deadly contagion. 260

      ANTIGONE

      Strangers, so full of holy sentiments!

      You can’t abide my agèd father’s presence,

      can you? Because you’ve heard the rumors

      about those actions he took in ignorance.

      Think how unhappy it makes me

      to plead with you on my father’s behalf.

      Strangers, I am looking at you with eyes

      that aren’t blind, and I beg you to see me

      as though I were your family—and to feel

      responsible for this afflicted person. 270

      Our miserable lives depend on you

      as if you all were gods. Give us the help

      that we’ve stopped hoping for!

      I’m begging you, in the name

      of whatever you hold dear—

      whether it’s your child or your wife,

      your fortune or your god!

      However hard

      you look, you’ll never find a man who can

      escape his own fate-driven actions.

      LEADER

      We pity both of you, daughter— 280

      you and your father, Oedipus.

      You’ve led unfortunate lives.

      But we fear the gods, we fear their anger,

      if we say more than we’ve already said.

      OEDIPUS

      What good are fame and glory, if they just

      trickle away and accomplish nothing?

      Men call Athens the most god-fearing city,

      a safe haven for persecuted strangers,

      their best hope when they need a helping hand.

      But how do these virtues benefit me 290

      when you force me to climb down these ledges

      and depart from your country? Does my name

      frighten you? My appearance? Or my past deeds?

      I performed every one of those actions,

      you should know, but I willed none. You want me

      to speak of my relations with my father

      and mother—is that the source of your fear?

      I have no doubt it is exactly that.

      Yet, tell me: how is my nature evil—

      if all I did was to return a blow? 300

      How could I have been guilty, even if

      I’d known where my actions would take me

      while I was living them? But those who tried

      to murder me—they knew what they were doing.

      My friends, the gods inspired you to drive

      me off that ledge. So respect these same gods—

      and grant me the refuge that you’ve offered.

      Don’t act now as though gods don’t exist.

      They protect those who fear them,

      but they also destroy those who don’t. 310

      And no godless mortal ever escapes.

      Let the gods show you the way: don’t blacken

      Athens’ reputation by taking part

      in crimes of irreverence! I am

      a suppliant to whom you promised

      safety. Don’t break that promise. And don’t

      shun me because of
    my disfigured face.

      I’ve come here a devout and sacred man,

      and I’ll prove myself useful to your people.

      When the man who holds power arrives, 320

      whoever that may be, I will tell him

      everything. Until then, do me no harm.

      LEADER

      We’re impressed by the way you think, old man.

      How could we not be? You speak with force.

      We don’t take you lightly, but we’d prefer

      to have our rulers deal with this problem.

      OEDIPUS

      Where then, my friends, is this leader of yours?

      LEADER

      He’s now in Athens, his home city. The same

      person who sent us went on to find him.

      OEDIPUS

      Do you think he’ll have sufficient 330

      concern and regard for a blind old man

      to travel all the way out here himself?

      LEADER

      He will come as soon as he hears your name.

      OEDIPUS

      And how will he hear my name?

      LEADER

      It’s a long road,

      but it’s busy with foot traffic. News spreads

      quickly. Don’t worry. He’ll recognize your name,

      then come immediately to this place.

      Your story’s widely known, old man. Even

      if he’s asleep and wakes slowly,

      word you’re here will bring him in a hurry. 340

      OEDIPUS

      His coming will help Athens, and help me.

      A good man is always his own best friend.

      ANTIGONE looks offstage, brightens, and then calls out loudly.

      ANTIGONE

      O Zeus! What do I say now, Father? Or even think?

      OEDIPUS

      What do you see, Antigone?

      ANTIGONE

      (raising her voice)

      A woman riding

      a young Sicilian horse. Wearing a hat

      from Thessaly to keep sun off her face.

      What can I say? Is she, or isn’t she?

      Am I hallucinating? Yes? No?

      I can’t tell yet. Yes! YES!

      There’s no one else it could be. 350

      As she comes closer, I can see her

      smiling at me. It’s my sister, Ismene!

      OEDIPUS

      What’s that you’re shouting, girl?

      ANTIGONE

      (still shouting)

     


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