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    The Complete Plays of Sophocles

    Page 42
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      of blessing are considered blasphemy?

      If the gods are happy I’m sentenced to die,

      I hope one day I’ll discover

      what divine law I have broken. 1020

      But if my judges are at fault, I want them

      to suffer the pain they inflict on me now.

      LEADER

      She’s still driven by raw gusts

      raging through her mind.

      KREON

      I have no patience with such outbursts.

      And none for men who drag their feet.

      ANTIGONE

      I think you mean my death is near.

      KREON

      It will be carried out. Don’t think otherwise.

      ANTIGONE

      I leave you, Thebes, city of my fathers.

      I leave you, ancient gods. This very moment, 1030

      I’m being led away. They cannot wait!

      ANTIGONE pulls the veil off her face and shakes her hair free.

      Look at me, princely citizens of Thebes:

      I’m the last daughter of the kings who ruled you.

      Look at what’s done to me, and by whom

      it’s done, to punish me for keeping faith.

      Kreon’s Men lead ANTIGONE offstage.

      ELDERS

      Like you, lovely Danaë

      endured her loss

      of heavenly sunlight

      in a brass-bound cell—

      a prison secret as a tomb. 1040

      Night and day she was watched.

      Like yours, my daughter,

      her family was a great one.

      The seed of Zeus, which fell

      on her as golden rain,

      she treasured in her womb.

      Fate is strange and powerful.

      Wealth cannot protect us,

      nor can war, high city towers,

      or storm-beaten black ships. 1050

      Impounded too, was Lycurgos,

      short-tempered son of Dryas,

      King of Edonia: to pay

      him back for insulting

      defiance, Dionysos shut

      him up in a rocky cell.

      There his surging madness ebbed.

      He learned too late how mad

      he was to taunt this god

      with derisive laughter. 1060

      When he tried to suppress

      Bakkhanalian torches

      and women fired by their god,

      he angered the Muses,

      who love the oboe’s song.

      By waters off the Black Rocks,

      a current joins two seas—

      the Bosphoros’ channel

      follows the Thracian

      shoreline of Salmydessos. 1070

      Ares from his nearby city

      saw this wild assault—

      the savage wife of Phineus

      attacking his two sons:

      her stab-wounds darkened

      their vengeance-craving eyes,

      burst with a pointed shuttle

      gripped in her blood-drenched hands.

      Broken spirits, they howled

      in their pain—these sons 1080

      of a woman unhappy

      in her marriage, this daughter

      descended from the ancient

      Erektheids. Nursed in caves

      among her father’s storm winds,

      this daughter of the gods,

      this child of Boreas,

      rode swift horses over the mountains—

      yet Fate broke her brutally, my child.

      Enter TIRESIAS and the Lad who guides him.

      TIRESIAS

      Theban lords, we walk here side by side, 1090

      one pair of eyes looking out for us both.

      Blind men must travel with somebody’s help.

      KREON

      What news do you bring, old man Tiresias?

      TIRESIAS

      I’ll tell you. Then you must trust this prophet.

      KREON

      I’ve never questioned the advice you’ve given.

      TIRESIAS

      And it helped you keep Thebes on a straight course?

      KREON

      I know your value. I learned it firsthand.

      TIRESIAS

      Take care.

      You’re standing on the knife edge of fate.

      KREON

      What do you mean? That makes me shudder. 1100

      TIRESIAS

      You’ll comprehend when you hear the warnings

      issued by my art. When I took my seat

      at my accustomed post of augury,

      birds from everywhere fluttering nearby,

      I heard a strange sound coming from their midst.

      They screeched with such mindless ferocity,

      any meaning their song possessed was drowned out.

      I knew the birds were tearing at each other

      with lethal talons. The hovering beats

      of thrashing wings could have meant nothing else. 1110

      Alarmed, I lit a sacrificial fire,

      but the god failed to keep his flames alive.

      Then from charred thighbones came a rancid slime,

      smoking and sputtering, oozing out

      into the ashes. The gallbladder burst open.

      Liquefying thighs slid free from the strips

      of fat enfolding them.

      But my attempt

      at prophecy failed. The signs I had sought

      never appeared—this I learned from my lad.

      He’s my guide, as I am the guide for others. 1120

      Kreon, your mind has sickened Thebes.

      Our city’s altars, and our city’s braziers,

      have been defiled, all of them, by dogs

      and birds, with flesh torn from the wretched

      corpse of Oedipus’ fallen son.

      Because of this, the gods will not accept

      our prayers or the offerings of burnt meat

      that come from our hands. No bird now sings

      a clear omen—their keen cries have been garbled

      by the taste of a slain man’s thickened blood. 1130

      Think about these facts, son.

      All men go wrong.

      But when a man blunders, he won’t be stripped

      of his wits and his strength if he corrects

      the error he’s committed and then ends

      his stubborn ways. Stubbornness, you well know,

      will bring on charges of stupidity.

      Respect the dead. Don’t spear the fallen.

      How much courage does it take

      to kill a dead man?

      Let me

      help you. My counsel is sound and well meant. 1140

      No advice is sweeter than that from a wise

      source who has only your interests at heart.

      KREON

      Old man, like archers at target practice,

      you all aim arrows at me. And now you

      stoop to using prophecy against me.

      For a long time I have been merchandise

      sold far and wide by you omen-mongers.

      Go, make your money, strike your deals, import

      silver from Sardis, gold from India,

      if it suits you. But you won’t hide that corpse 1150

      under the earth! Never—even if Zeus’

      own eagles fly scraps of flesh to his throne.

      Defilement isn’t something I fear. It won’t

      persuade me to order this burial.

      I don’t accept that men can defile gods.

      But even the cleverest of mortals,

      venerable Tiresias, will be brought

      down hard, if, hoping to turn a profit,

      they clothe ugly ideas in handsome words.

      TIRESIAS

      Does any man grasp . . . does he realize . . . 1160

      KREON

      Realize . . . what? What point are you making?

      TIRESIAS

      . . . that no possession is worth more than good sense?

      KREON

      Just as its absence is our
    worst disease.

      TIRESIAS

      But hasn’t that disease infected you?

      KREON

      I won’t trade insults with you, prophet.

      TIRESIAS

      You do when you call my prophecies false.

      KREON

      Your profession has always loved money.

      TIRESIAS

      And tyrants have a penchant for corruption.

      KREON

      You know you’re abusing a king in power?

      TIRESIAS

      You hold power because I helped you save Thebes. 1170

      KREON

      You’re a shrewd prophet. But you love to cause harm.

      TIRESIAS

      You’ll force me to say what’s clenched in my heart.

      KREON

      Say it. Unless you’ve been paid to say it.

      TIRESIAS

      I don’t think it will pay you to hear it.

      KREON

      Get one thing straight: my conscience can’t be bought.

      TIRESIAS

      Then tell your conscience this. You will not live

      for many circuits of the chariot sun

      before you trade a child born from your loins

      for all the corpses whose deaths you have caused.

      You have thrown children from the sunlight 1180

      down to the shades of Hades, ruthlessly

      housing a living person in a tomb,

      while you detain here, among us, something

      that belongs to the gods who live below

      our world—the naked unwept corpse you’ve robbed

      of the solemn grieving we owe our dead.

      None of this should have been any concern

      of yours—or of the Olympian gods—

      but you have involved them in your outrage!

      Therefore, avengers wait to ambush you— 1190

      the Furies sent by Hades and its gods

      will punish you for the crimes I have named.

      Do you think someone hired me to tell you this?

      It won’t be long before wailing breaks out

      from the women and men in your own house.

      And hatred against you will surge in all

      the countries whose sons, in mangled pieces,

      received their rites of burial

      from dogs, wild beasts, or flapping birds

      who have carried the stench of defilement 1200

      to the homelands and the hearths of the dead.

      Since you’ve provoked me, these are the arrows

      I have shot in anger, like a bowman,

      straight at your heart—arrows you cannot dodge,

      and whose pain you will feel.

      Lad, take me home—

      let this man turn his anger on younger

      people. That might teach him to hold his tongue,

      and to think more wisely than he does now.

      Exit TIRESIAS led by the Lad.

      LEADER

      This old man leaves stark prophecies behind.

      Never once, while my hair has gone from black 1210

      to white, has this prophet told Thebes a lie.

      KREON

      I’m well aware of that. It unnerves me.

      Surrender would be devastating,

      but if I stand firm, I could be destroyed.

      LEADER

      What you need is some very clear advice,

      son of Menoikeus.

      KREON

      What must I do?

      If you have such advice, give it to me.

      LEADER

      Free the girl from her underground prison.

      Build a tomb for the corpse you have let rot.

      KREON

      That’s your advice? I should surrender? 1220

      LEADER

      Yes, King. Do it now. For the gods

      act quickly to abort human folly.

      KREON

      I can hardly say this. But I’ll give up

      convictions I hold passionately—

      and do what you ask. We can’t fight

      the raw power of destiny.

      LEADER

      Then go!

      Yourself. Delegate this to no one.

      KREON

      I’ll go just as I am. Move out, men. Now!

      All of you, bring axes and run toward

      that rising ground. You can see it from here. 1230

      Because I’m the one who has changed, I who

      locked her away will go there to free her.

      My heart is telling me we must obey

      established law until the day we die.

      Exit KREON and his Men toward open country.

      ELDERS

      God with myriad names—

      lustrous child

      of Kadmos’ daughter,

      son of thundering Zeus—

      you govern fabled Italy,

      you preside at Eleusis, 1240

      secluded Valley of Demeter

      that welcomes all pilgrims.

      O Bakkhos! Thebes

      is your homeland,

      mother city of maenads

      on the quietly flowing

      Ismenos, where the dragon’s

      teeth were sown.

      Now you stand on the ridges rising

      up the twin peaks of Parnassos. 1250

      There through the wavering

      smoke-haze your torches flare.

      There walk your devotees,

      the nymphs of Korykia,

      beside Kastalia’s fountains.

      Thick-woven ivy on Nysa’s sloping hills,

      grape-clusters ripe on verdant shorelines

      propel you here, while voices

      of more than human power

      sing “Evohoi!”—your name divine— 1260

      when the streets of Thebes

      are your final destination.

      By honoring Thebes

      beyond all cities,

      you honor your mother

      whom the lightning killed.

      Now a plague

      ravages our city. Come home

      on healing footsteps—down

      the slopes of Parnassos, 1270

      or over the howling channel.

      Stars breathing their gentle fire

      shine joy on you as they rise,

      O master of nocturnal voices!

      Take shape before our eyes, Bakkhos,

      son of Zeus our king, let the Thyiads

      come with you, let them climb

      the mad heights of frenzy

      as you, Iakkhos, the bountiful,

      watch them 1280

      dance through the night.

      Enter MESSENGER.

      MESSENGER

      Neighbors, who live not far from the grand

      old houses of Amphion and Kadmos,

      you can’t trust anything in a person’s life—

      praiseworthy or shameful—never to change.

      Fate lifts up—and Fate cuts down—both the lucky

      and the unlucky, day in and day out.

      No prophet can tell us what happens next.

      Kreon always seemed someone to envy,

      to me at least. He saved from attack 1290

      the homeland where we sons of Kadmos live.

      This won him absolute power. He was

      the brilliant father of patrician children.

      Now it has all slipped away. For when things

      that give pleasure and meaning to our lives

      desert a man, he’s not a human being

      anymore—he becomes a breathing corpse.

      Amass wealth if you can, show off your house.

      Display the panache of a great monarch.

      But if joy disappears from your life, 1300

      I wouldn’t give the shadow cast by smoke

      for all you possess. Only happiness matters.

      LEADER

      Should our masters expect more grief? What’s happened?

      MESSENGER

      Death. And the killer is alive.

      LEADER

      Name the m
    urderer. Name the dead. Tell us.

      MESSENGER

      Haimon is dead. The hand that killed him was his own . . .

      LEADER

      . . . father’s? Or do you mean he killed himself?

      MESSENGER

      He killed himself. Raging at his killer father.

      LEADER

      Tiresias, you spoke the truth.

      MESSENGER

      You know the facts. Now you must cope with them. 1310

      Enter EURYDIKE.

      LEADER

      I see Eurydike, soon to be crushed,

      approaching from inside the house.

      She may have heard what’s happened to her son.

      EURYDIKE

      I heard all of you speaking as I came out—

      on my way to offer prayers to Athena.

      I happened to unlatch the gate,

      to open it, when words of our disaster

      carried to my ears. I fainted, terrified

      and dumbstruck, in the arms of my servant.

      Please tell me your news. Tell me all of it. 1320

      I’m someone who has lived through misfortune.

      MESSENGER

      O my dear Queen, I will spare you nothing.

      I’ll tell you truthfully what I’ve just seen.

      Why should I say something to soothe you

      that will later prove me a liar?

      Straight talk is always best.

      I traveled with your husband to the far

      edge of the plain where Polyneikes’ corpse,

      mangled by wild dogs, lay still uncared for.

      We prayed for mercy to the Goddess 1330

      of Roadways, and to Pluto, asking them

      to restrain their anger. We washed his remains

      with purified water. Using boughs stripped

      from nearby bushes, we burned what was left,

      then mounded a tomb from his native earth.

      After that we turned toward the girl’s deadly

      wedding cavern—with its bed of cold stone.

      Still far off, we heard an enormous wail

      coming from somewhere near the unhallowed

      portico—so we turned back to tell Kreon. 1340

      As the king arrived, these incoherent

      despairing shouts echoed all around him.

      First he groaned, then he yelled out in raw pain,

      “Am I a prophet? Will my worst fears come true?

      Am I walking down the bitterest street

      of my life? That’s my son’s voice greeting me!

      “Move quickly, men. Run through that narrow gap

      where the stones have been pulled loose from the wall.

     


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