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    The Complete Plays of Sophocles

    Page 40
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    I think you did. Sold your life for some coins.

      GUARD

      It’s a sad thing when a judge gets it wrong.

      KREON

      You’ll soon be on the wrong end of a judgment

      yourself.

      If you don’t find the guilty one,

      you’ll find your greed buys you nothing but grief.

      GUARD

      I hope he’s caught, but Fate will decide that.

      And you’ll never see me coming back here. 360

      Now that I have been spared—when everything

      seemed so desperate—all I can think about

      is how much gratitude I owe the gods.

      Exit GUARD to open country; KREON enters his palace.

      ELDERS

      Wonders abound, but none

      more astounding than man!

      He crosses to the far side

      of white seas, blown

      by winter gales, sailing

      below huge waves.

      He wears Earth down— 370

      our primal, eternal,

      inexhaustible god,

      his stallion-sired mules

      plowing her soil

      back and forth

      year after year.

      All breeds of carefree

      bird, savage beast,

      and deep-sea creature,

      ingenious man 380

      snares in his woven nets.

      He drives the mountain herds

      from wild lairs down to his folds.

      He coaxes rough-maned horses

      to thrust their necks through his yoke.

      He tames the tireless mountain bull.

      He has taught himself speech,

      wind-quick thought,

      and all the talents

      that govern a city— 390

      how to take shelter

      from cold skies or pelting rain.

      Never baffled,

      always resourceful,

      he accepts every challenge.

      But from Hades alone

      has he found no way out—

      though from hopeless disease

      he has found a defense.

      Exceeding all expectation, 400

      his robust power to create

      sometimes brings evil,

      at other times, excellence.

      When he follows the laws

      Earth teaches him—

      and Justice, which he’s sworn

      the gods he will enforce—

      he soars with his city.

      But reckless and corrupt,

      a man will be driven 410

      from his nation disgraced.

      Let no man guilty of such things

      share my hearth or invade my thoughts.

      Enter GUARD, from countryside, leading ANTIGONE.

      LEADER

      I’m stunned—what’s this? A warning from the gods?

      I know this girl. She is Antigone.

      Don’t we all recognize her?

      Unlucky Oedipus was her father.

      And now her own luck runs out.

      What’s happening? You—under guard?

      Are you a prisoner? Did you break 420

      the king’s law? Commit some thoughtless act?

      GUARD

      There’s your perpetrator. We caught her

      burying the corpse. Where’s Kreon?

      Enter KREON.

      LEADER

      Here he comes. Just in time.

      KREON

      What makes my arrival so timely?

      GUARD

      Sir, never promise something won’t happen.

      Second thoughts can make your first one a lie.

      I vowed I’d never come back here,

      after you tongue-lashed me with those threats.

      Then came a pleasure like no other, 430

      because it’s a total surprise, something

      we hope for but can’t believe will happen.

      So I came back—though I swore I wouldn’t—

      to bring you the girl we caught sprinkling dust

      on the dead body. No need to throw dice.

      This time the good fortune was all mine.

      Now she’s all yours. Question and convict her.

      Do as you see fit. But I have the right

      to go free of trouble once and for all.

      KREON

      Your prisoner—where was she when captured? 440

      GUARD

      Covering up the dead body. There you have it.

      KREON

      Do you know what you just said? No mistake?

      GUARD

      I saw her bury the man you said no one

      could bury. How can I say it plainer?

      KREON

      How did you see her? Was she caught in the act?

      GUARD

      Here’s what happened. We went back there

      after those ugly threats of yours, to brush

      the dirt off the body and strip it down

      to its rotting flesh. Afterwards, we hunkered

      upwind under some hills to spare us any stench 450

      the body might have sent our way. Each man

      kept alert, and kept his neighbor alert,

      by raking him with outbursts of abuse

      if he seemed to neglect his watch.

      We kept at it until the round sun had climbed

      the heavens and baked us in the noon heat.

      Then, rising from the earth, a whirlwind

      whipped up the dust, and terror filled the sky,

      choking the grasslands, tearing leaves off trees,

      churning up grit all around us.

      Our eyes squeezed shut, 460

      we waited out this god-sent pestilence.

      After a bit the dust cleared, and we saw her

      cry out in anguish, a piercing scream

      like a bird homing to find her nest robbed.

      When she saw the body stripped naked,

      she wailed one more time, then yelled a string

      of curses at those who’d done it. She scooped up

      powdery dust and, from a graceful bronze

      urn, poured out three cool swallows for the dead.

      Soon as we saw this, we moved in to stop her. 470

      She wasn’t a bit shocked when we charged her

      with the earlier crime, and now this one.

      Didn’t deny a thing. That pleased,

      but also troubled me. Escaping blame

      oneself is always a relief. Still, it hurts

      to cause your own people grief. But all that

      matters much less to me than my own safety.

      KREON

      (to ANTIGONE)

      You! Don’t stand there nodding your head.

      Out with it! Admit this or deny it.

      ANTIGONE

      I swear I did. And I don’t deny it. 480

      KREON

      (to GUARD)

      You are excused from this grim business.

      You’re now free to go anywhere you please.

      Exit GUARD. KREON turns to ANTIGONE.

      Explain something to me without elaborating.

      Were you aware of my decree forbidding this?

      ANTIGONE

      Of course I knew. We all knew.

      KREON

      And still you dared to violate the law?

      ANTIGONE

      I did. It wasn’t Zeus who issued me

      this order. And Justice—who lives below—

      was not involved. They’d never condone it!

      I deny that your edicts—since you, a mere man, 490

      imposed them—have the force to trample on

      the gods’ unwritten and infallible laws.

      Their laws are not ephemeral—they weren’t

      made yesterday. They will rule forever.

      No man knows how far back in time they go.

      I’d never let any man’s arrogance

      bully me into breaking the gods’ laws.

      I’ll die someday—how could I not know that?

      I knew it without your
    proclamation.

      If I do die young, that’s an advantage, 500

      for doesn’t a person like me, who lives

      besieged by trouble, escape by dying?

      My own death isn’t going to bother me,

      but I would be devastated to see

      my mother’s son die and rot unburied.

      I’ve no regrets for what I’ve done. And if you

      consider my acts foolhardy, I say:

      look at the fool charging me with folly.

      LEADER

      It’s apparent this girl’s nature is savage

      like her father’s. She hasn’t got the sense 510

      to back off when she gets into trouble.

      KREON

      Stubborn spirits are the first to crack.

      It’s always the iron tool hardened by fire

      that snaps and shatters. And headstrong horses

      can be tamed by a little iron bit.

      There’s no excuse for a slave

      to preen when her master’s home.

      This girl learned insolence long before

      she broke this law. What’s more, she keeps on

      insulting us, and then gloats about it. 520

      There is no doubt that if she emerges

      victorious, and is never punished,

      I am no man. She will be the man here.

      I don’t care if she is my sister’s child,

      a blood relative, closer than all those

      who worship Zeus in my household,

      she—and her sister—still must die.

      I charge her sister too with conspiring

      to bury Polyneikes. Bring her out.

      I observed her inside just now, 530

      screaming, hysterical, deranged.

      Someone who intends to commit a crime

      can lose control of a guilty conscience.

      Her furtive treason gives itself away.

      Two of Kreon’s Men enter the palace. KREON turns back to ANTIGONE.

      But I also hate it when someone caught

      red-handed tries to glorify her crime.

      ANTIGONE

      Take me and kill me—is that your whole plan?

      KREON

      That’s it. When that’s done I’ll be satisfied.

      ANTIGONE

      Then what stops you? Are you waiting for me

      to accept what you’ve said? I never will. 540

      And nothing I say will ever please you.

      Yet, since you did mention glory, how

      could I do anything more glorious

      than build my own brother a tomb?

      These men here would approve my actions—

      if fear didn’t seal their lips.

      Tyranny

      is fortunate in many ways: it can,

      for instance, say and do anything it wants.

      KREON

      These Thebans don’t see it your way.

      ANTIGONE

      But they do. To please you they bite their tongues. 550

      KREON

      Aren’t you ashamed not to follow their lead?

      ANTIGONE

      Since when is it shameful to honor a brother?

      KREON

      You had another brother who died fighting him?

      ANTIGONE

      That’s right. Born to the same mother and father.

      KREON

      Then why do you honor Polyneikes

      when doing so desecrates Eteokles?

      ANTIGONE

      Eteokles wouldn’t agree with you.

      KREON

      Oh, but he would. Because you’ve honored

      treason as though it were patriotism.

      ANTIGONE

      It was his brother who died, not his slave! 560

      KREON

      That brother died ravaging our country!

      Eteokles fell fighting to protect it.

      ANTIGONE

      Hades will still expect his rituals!

      KREON

      The brave deserve better than the vile.

      ANTIGONE

      Who knows what matters to the dead?

      KREON

      Not even death reconciles enemies.

      ANTIGONE

      I made no enemies by being born!

      I made my lifelong friends at birth.

      KREON

      Then go down to them! Love your dead brothers!

      While I’m alive, no woman governs me. 570

      Enter ISMENE, led in by Kreon’s Men.

      LEADER

      Ismene’s coming from the palace.

      She cries the loving tears of a sister.

      Her eyes fill up, her flushed face darkens.

      Tears pour down her cheeks.

      KREON

      Now you—a viper

      who slithered through my house, quietly

      drinking my blood! I never knew

      I nurtured two insurrections,

      both attacking my throne.

      Go ahead,

      confess your role in this burial

      party. Or do you claim ignorance? 580

      ISMENE

      I confess it—if she’ll let me.

      I accept my full share of the blame.

      ANTIGONE

      Justice won’t let you make that claim, Sister!

      You refused to help me. You took no part.

      ISMENE

      You’re leaving on a grim voyage. I’m not

      ashamed to suffer with you the whole way.

      ANTIGONE

      The dead in Hades know who buried him.

      I don’t want love that just shows up in words.

      ISMENE

      You’ll disgrace me, Sister! Don’t keep me

      from honoring our dead! Take me with you! 590

      ANTIGONE

      Don’t try to share my death! Don’t try to claim

      you helped me bury him! My death’s enough.

      ISMENE

      With you dead, why would I want to live?

      ANTIGONE

      Ask Kreon that! You sprang to his defense.

      ISMENE

      Why do you wound me? It does you no good.

      ANTIGONE

      I’m sorry if my scorn for him hurts you.

      ISMENE

      I can still help you. Tell me what to do.

      ANTIGONE

      Go on living. I’d rather you survived.

      ISMENE

      Then you want to exclude me from your fate?

      ANTIGONE

      You made the choice to live. I chose to die. 600

      ISMENE

      And I’ve told you how much I hate that choice.

      ANTIGONE

      Some think you’re right. Others will think I am.

      ISMENE

      Then aren’t we both equally wrong?

      ANTIGONE

      Gather your strength. Your life goes on. Long ago

      I dedicated my own to the dead.

      KREON

      One woman only now shows her madness—

      the other’s been out of her mind since birth.

      ISMENE

      King, when you are shattered by grief

      your native wit vanishes. It just goes.

      KREON

      You surely lost your wits when you teamed up 610

      with a criminal engaged in a crime.

      ISMENE

      What would my life be like without her?

      KREON

      You’re living that life now. Hers is over.

      ISMENE

      Then you’re willing to kill your own son’s bride?

      KREON

      Oh yes. He’ll find other fields to plow.

      ISMENE

      No other woman would suit him so well.

      KREON

      I want no pernicious wives for my son.

      ISMENE

      Dearest Haimon! How your father hates you!

      KREON

      Enough! No more talk about this marriage.

      ISMENE

      You’re going to rob your son of his bride? 620

      KREON

      Hades will c
    ancel their marriage for me.

      ISMENE

      Then you’ve made up your mind she will die?

      KREON

      Both my mind and your mind. No more delay,

      men, take them in. Make sure they behave

      like women. Don’t let either slip away.

      Even the brave will try to run

      when they see death coming at them.

      Kreon’s Men take ANTIGONE and ISMENE inside.

      ELDERS

      Lucky are those

      whose lives

      never taste evil! 630

      For once the gods

      attack a family,

      their curse never relents.

      It sickens life after life,

      rising like a deep

      sea swell, a darkness

      boiling from below, driven

      by the wild stormwinds

      of Thrace that churn up

      black sand from the seafloor— 640

      the battered headlands

      moan as the storm pounds in.

      I see sorrows that struck

      the dead Labdakids long ago

      break over their children,

      wave on wave of sorrows!

      Each generation fails

      to protect its own youth—

      because a god always hacks

      at their roots, draining 650

      strength that could set them free.

      Now the hope that brightened

      over the last rootstock

      alive in the house

      of Oedipus, in its turn

      is struck down—

      by the blood-drenched dust

      the death gods demand,

      by reckless talk,

      by Furies in the mind. 660

      O Zeus,

      what human arrogance

      can rival your power?

      Neither Sleep,

      who beguiles us all,

      nor the tireless, god-driven months

      overcome it.

      O Monarch

      whom time cannot age—

      you live in the magical

      sunrays of Olympos! 670

      One law of yours rules

      our own and future time,

      just as it ruled the past:

      nothing momentous man

      achieves will go unpunished.

      For Hope is a wanderer

      who profits multitudes

      but tempts just as many

      with light-headed longings—

      and a man’s failure 680

      dawns on him only

      when blazing coals

      scald his feet.

     


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