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    The Complete Plays of Sophocles

    Page 34
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      to look at, it will generate benefits

      beauty could not.

      THESEUS

      This advantage

      you claim to have brought us—what is it?

      OEDIPUS

      In time you will know. But not for a while.

      THESEUS

      Your . . . enhancement—when will it be revealed?

      OEDIPUS

      After I’m dead and you have buried me. 640

      THESEUS

      You ask me to oversee your last rites,

      but say nothing of your life before then.

      OEDIPUS

      Grant my wish. Everything else will follow.

      THESEUS

      This favor you’re asking seems a small one.

      OEDIPUS

      Take care. This is no trivial matter.

      THESEUS

      Then you anticipate trouble. From your sons?

      OEDIPUS

      King, my sons want to return me to Thebes.

      THESEUS

      If that’s your desire, why would you refuse?

      OEDIPUS

      (loudly and with fury)

      Because, when I wished to stay, they refused!

      THESEUS

      Fool! When you’re in trouble, rage never helps. 650

      OEDIPUS

      Wait till you’ve heard me out. Then chastise me.

      THESEUS

      Go on. I shouldn’t speak without the facts.

      OEDIPUS

      Theseus, I have suffered terribly.

      THESEUS

      You mean the ancient curse on your family.

      OEDIPUS

      No. Not that story every Greek has heard.

      THESEUS

      Then what superhuman pain do you suffer?

      OEDIPUS

      Here’s what my two sons did to me.

      They banished me from my homeland. I can’t

      return because I killed my own father.

      THESEUS

      If that’s the case, why would Thebes want you back? 660

      OEDIPUS

      God’s voice will compel them to take me back.

      THESEUS

      Oracles must have frightened them. Of what?

      OEDIPUS

      That Fate will strike them down in your country.

      THESEUS

      And what could cause such hatred between us?

      OEDIPUS

      Gentle son of Aigeus, only the gods

      never grow old and die. All-powerful

      Time ravages the rest. Just as the Earth

      decays, so does the body’s strength. When trust

      between people dies, betrayal begins.

      A spirit of respect can never last 670

      between two friends, or between two cities,

      because sooner or later resentment

      kills all friendships. Though sometimes they revive.

      The weather now is sunny between Thebes

      and Athens, but Time in due course will bring

      on a war sparked by a minor grievance—

      endless days and nights in which Theban spears

      shatter the peace they had promised to keep.

      Then my dead body, slumbering, buried,

      deathly cold, will drink their hot blood—if Zeus 680

      is still Zeus, if Apollo spoke the truth.

      But since there’s no pleasure in pronouncing

      words that should never be said, I will stop.

      Keep your word and you’ll never be sorry

      you welcomed Oedipus to your city—unless

      the gods abort their promises to me.

      LEADER

      From the beginning, King, this man has shown

      he has the nerve to keep every promise

      he’s made to our country—and he’ll keep more.

      THESEUS

      Who would refuse the kindness of a man 690

      like this? We welcome him to our home fires.

      As our wartime ally he’s earned the right.

      Now he comes asking our gods to help him,

      an act with no small implication

      for Athens and myself. I value

      what he brings. Reject his offers?

      Never! I’ll settle him in our land

      with the rights of a citizen.

      If it’s the stranger’s desire to live here,

      (turning toward the LEADER)

      I will charge you with his protection. 700

      Or he may wish to join me.

      Oedipus,

      it’s your decision. I’ll respect your choice.

      OEDIPUS

      O Zeus, do your utmost for this man.

      THESEUS

      What is your pleasure? To live in my house?

      OEDIPUS

      If that were allowed. But here is the place . . .

      THESEUS

      Here? What will you do here? I’m not opposed . . .

      OEDIPUS

      . . . where I will punish those who drove me out.

      THESEUS

      Then the great gift you meant—is your presence?

      OEDIPUS

      Yes. If you keep the pledges you gave me.

      THESEUS

      Don’t doubt me. I will never betray you. 710

      OEDIPUS

      I won’t demand an oath from you—as though

      you were a man who couldn’t be trusted.

      THESEUS

      But that’s all I can offer you: my word.

      OEDIPUS

      How then will you act . . .

      THESEUS

      What is your worst fear?

      OEDIPUS

      That troops will come.

      THESEUS

      My men will deal with them.

      OEDIPUS

      Take care that when you leave me . . .

      THESEUS

      Please. Don’t tell me what to do.

      OEDIPUS

      How can I not be afraid?

      THESEUS

      My heart isn’t pounding.

      OEDIPUS

      You don’t know what they threaten . . .

      THESEUS

      I know this:

      no men will seize you unless I allow it. 720

      And if they brag how simple it will be

      to kidnap you, I think the sea they’re crossing

      will prove too vast and too rough for their skills.

      For now, take courage. Aside from any

      assurance I’ve given, it was Apollo

      who sent you. While I’m gone,

      my word will protect you.

      Exit THESEUS.

      OLD MEN

      You’ve come, stranger, to shining Kolonos

      abounding with horses

      and Earth’s loveliest farms. 730

      Here the Nightingale

      sings her long clear trills

      under green forest trees

      laden with apples and berries.

      In the wine-dark ivy she sings,

      in the forbidden

      thickets of goddesses

      untroubled by hot sun

      or the chill blast of winter.

      She sings in the clearings 740

      where Dionysos dances

      among the everloving

      maenads who raised him.

      Here, drinking dew from the sky

      morning after morning,

      narcissi flourish.

      Their heavenly blossoms

      crown two immortals,

      Persephone and Demeter—sunlight

      illumines the golden crocus. 750

      Bountiful fountains send Kephisos

      cascading down the mountain.

      He never stops flowing, greening

      all that grows, pouring daily

      his pure waters

      through the valley’s nurturing hills.

      Nor do the Muses,

      singing in harmony, or the Goddess of Love

      with golden reins in her hands,

      stay away long. 760

      A tree not found in Asia,

      or on the Dorian Island of Pelops,


      lives here, a tree born from itself,

      a tree no one plants.

      A terror to enemy spears,

      the gray-green olive

      grows freely on our land,

      nourishing our children.

      Neither the young men nor the old

      will shatter and destroy it, 770

      for Zeus of the Olive Groves,

      and Athena with seagreen eyes,

      guard it with tireless glare.

      And now with all our strength we sing

      our gratitude to our mother city,

      for the great gifts the gods have given her:

      that peerless glory of our land,

      the strength of stallions, the speed of colts—

      and the rolling power of the sea.

      It was you, son of Kronos, 780

      who gave Kolonos our throne,

      and you, Lord Poseidon,

      who taught us to harness, out on these roads,

      the fury of horses, taught us to drive

      the long-limbed oar that pulses us

      over salt seas, in pursuit

      of fifty Nereids’ skittering feet.

      ANTIGONE’s attention is drawn offstage left.

      ANTIGONE

      You’ve praised your land beyond all others—

      prove now you can act on those glowing words.

      OEDIPUS

      What makes you say that to them, daughter? 790

      ANTIGONE

      Kreon’s arriving, Father, backed by troops.

      OEDIPUS

      Can I trust these kind old men to protect me?

      LEADER

      Don’t worry, you’re in good hands. I may have aged,

      but this country has lost none of its strength.

      Enter KREON, escorted by his armed Soldiers.

      KREON

      You men must be the local nobility.

      I detect some fear showing in your eyes

      at my arrival. Don’t be alarmed.

      There’s no need for hostile murmuring.

      I haven’t come intending to use force.

      I’m an old man. Yours is a powerful city, 800

      if ever there was one in Greece. So yes—

      I was sent here, on account of my age,

      to reason with that man, and bring him home.

      No single person sent me—all Thebes did.

      Kinship demands I show greater concern

      for his troubles than do my countrymen.

      (turning to face OEDIPUS)

      You’ve suffered for too long, Oedipus.

      Please hear me out, then we can both go home.

      It’s high time your fellow Kadmeans

      took you back. More than anyone else, I 810

      share your sorrows, old man, now that I see

      how you live in your miserable exile—

      drifting in constant want, with only this girl

      as your servant.

      I never thought her life

      would sink to such gross squalor, but it has:

      tending to you, to your personal needs,

      living in poverty. And at her age,

      with no experience of men, she’s ripe

      for the first vulgar lout who comes along.

      Those are harsh judgments, aren’t they, alas, 820

      on you and on me? On our whole family.

      Since there’s no way to hide your obvious

      degradation, Oedipus, please agree

      to placate our family gods by coming

      home to the house and city of your fathers.

      Thank Athens for her kindness as you leave,

      for she deserves it. But your birthplace must,

      if you would do the right thing, have the final

      claim on you. Long ago, she nurtured you.

      OEDIPUS

      You! You’ll try anything! You have based your 830

      insidious arguments on the most

      ethical grounds. But why make the attempt?

      Why try to slide a noose around my neck?

      That would cause me unendurable pain.

      Some time ago, when I was tormented

      by self-inflicted agony and wanted

      with all my heart to be banished from Thebes,

      you refused me. Later, when my grief eased

      and I wished to remain home, you drove me

      from my house, off the land, into exile, 840

      without one thought of this kinship you claim.

      Now this time, seeing the friendly welcome

      Athens and her people have given me,

      you try to abduct me—your harsh purpose

      sheathed in amiable words. What joy is there

      in kindness that’s imposed against our will?

      Suppose someone refuses to help you—

      though you’ve begged him for help. But once

      you possess what your heart craves—then he

      offers to give what you no longer want. 850

      Would that be kindness? Fulfillment like that

      is worthless—as are your offers to me.

      They sound good, but in fact they’re evil.

      Let me explain your motives to these men,

      so they’ll see just how treacherous you are.

      You have sought me out—not to take me home—

      but to plant me outside your borders,

      so that your city will emerge unscathed

      from any invasion launched against it.

      You won’t get that, but you’ll get something else: 860

      this part of me—my spirit—ravaging

      your country. And it will rage there always:

      my sons will inherit from their father

      only enough of my homeland to die in!

      Don’t you see? I know the future of Thebes

      better than you do. A great deal better,

      because my sources are better: Apollo,

      for instance, and his father, Zeus himself.

      Your lying mouth has come here spitting out

      all those words—your tongue’s keener than a blade. 870

      But your guile hurts you far more than it helps.

      I don’t think I’ve persuaded you. So leave!

      Let me live here! Poor as I am, I won’t

      live in want if I’m at peace with myself.

      KREON

      In our exchange, who do you think suffers

      more, me by your views, or you by your own?

      OEDIPUS

      All that matters to me is that you’ve failed

      to change my mind, or the minds of these men.

      KREON

      Growing old hasn’t improved your judgment,

      friend. It’s perpetuated your disgrace. 880

      OEDIPUS

      Your tongue’s extremely quick. But a good man

      never pleads a dishonorable cause.

      KREON

      Making noise doesn’t prove you’re making sense.

      OEDIPUS

      As if you spoke briefly, and to the point?

      KREON

      Not pointedly enough to pierce your mind.

      OEDIPUS

      Go! I speak for these men and for myself.

      Don’t keep me under hostile surveillance

      in a land that’s destined to be my home.

      KREON gestures toward the OLD MEN and his Soldiers.

      KREON

      I ask these men—not you—and I ask my . . .

      comrades here, to note the tone you’re taking 890

      with a kinsman. If I ever seize you . . .

      OEDIPUS

      Who could seize me against my friends’ will?

      KREON

      I swear you’ll suffer even if we don’t.

      OEDIPUS

      How do you plan to back up your bluster?

      KREON

      I’ve already seized one of your daughters

      and removed her. I’ll take the other soon.

      OEDIPUS

      My god.

      KREON

      Soon you’ll have greater
    cause to say, “My god.”

      OEDIPUS

      You took Ismene?

      KREON

      And I’ll soon take this one.

      KREON indicates ANTIGONE.

      OEDIPUS

      What will you do, my hosts—my friends? 900

      Fail me by not banishing

      this blaspheming thug?

      LEADER

      (to KREON)

      Stranger, go. There’s no way to justify

      what you’re attempting, or what you’ve just done.

      KREON

      (to his Soldiers)

      It’s time we take this girl away, by force

      if she puts up the slightest resistance.

      ANTIGONE

      I don’t know where to run. Are there men

      or gods willing to help me?

      LEADER

      What are you doing, stranger?

      KREON

      I’ll leave him, but I will take her. She’s mine.

      OEDIPUS

      You men in power here!

      LEADER

      Stranger, there’s no 910

      justification for what you’re doing.

      KREON

      I can justify it.

      LEADER

      How can you do that?

      KREON

      I’m taking what belongs to me.

      KREON grabs ANTIGONE.

      OEDIPUS

      Stop him, Athens!

      LEADER

      What is this, stranger? Let the daughter go—

      or you’ll discover who holds power here.

      KREON

      Stand back!

      LEADER

      Not from you! Not while you do this!

      KREON

      Touch me, and you’re at war with Thebes.

      OEDIPUS

      All of this I foresaw.

      LEADER

      Release the girl.

      KREON

      Don’t issue orders when you have no power.

      LEADER

      I warn you, let her go.

      KREON

      And I warn you: leave! 920

      LEADER

      (yelling offstage)

      Over here, citizens! Join our fight! My city,

      our city, is attacked! Come help us!

      ANTIGONE

      They’re dragging me away! Friends! FRIENDS!

      OEDIPUS

      Where are you, child?

      ANTIGONE

      . . . I . . . can’t . . . get . . . free!

     


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