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    The Complete Plays of Sophocles

    Page 6
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      Now, how else can I help you?

      AIAS

      I want to speak to him. Face to face.

      TEKMESSA

      Yes. Servants are watching him. Near here.

      AIAS

      Then why isn’t he here?

      TEKMESSA

      Eurysakes! Your father’s calling.

      Whoever’s got him, bring him here.

      AIAS

      Not coming? Can’t hear you?

      TEKMESSA

      They’re coming! The servant . . . here they are! 670

      Servant brings in boy, who holds back.

      AIAS

      Here! Up, up! Into my arms!

      (impatient, waving the servant forward)

      Fresh blood won’t scare him, not if

      he’s truly my son. Like a colt

      he has to be broken in early on

      to become as his father—trained

      in the savage discipline of a warrior

      so that that becomes his nature.

      The boy is in his arms.

      Dear boy

      may you be luckier than I was. If so, if

      you’re still like me, you won’t do badly. 680

      For now, I envy you your innocence.

      You know nothing of evil. Life is sweetest

      before we realize the joy of it, and the grief.

      Then it will be up to you, to show

      your father’s enemies what you’re made of

      and whose son you are.

      But for now, O, graze

      on the fizzy air, be a child, a joy

      to your mother here. And don’t worry.

      The Greeks won’t dare 690

      touch you, or shame you, not

      even when I’m gone. I’ll leave

      Teukros to watch out for you

      and bring you along,

      he won’t let you down

      . . . except, he’s far away now

      hunting down our enemies.

      But you, my sea warriors, comrades,

      you must care for him too!

      Tell Teukros it is my command 700

      he take the boy back home

      where he may see, and be seen by, Telamon

      and my mother, Ereboia,

      to ease them in old age as they go down

      into the kingdom of darkness.

      And tell Teukros my weapons are not

      prizes to be handed out by judges

      at war games—not for the Greeks,

      not for the one who is destroying me!

      (to EURYSAKES)

      Look, this is for you, Eurysakes, 710

      this shield gave you your name.

      Take it. There’s seven layers of oxhide,

      no spear can pierce it. Here, grab hold

      by the braided leather loop. Like so.

      The other arms and armor will be

      buried with me.

      (to TEKMESSA)

      Quick. Take the child inside.

      Batten everything down. No crying!

      Women are always doing that.

      Shut the opening, now! 720

      A wise doctor doesn’t chant prayers

      when the only cure is the knife.

      LEADER

      Why the mad rush? I don’t like this.

      Your words are too edgy.

      TEKMESSA

      Aias, my lord, what are you thinking to do?

      AIAS

      Don’t ask. Just, get hold of yourself.

      TEKMESSA

      I’m petrified! For the gods’ sake,

      for your child, don’t leave us!

      AIAS

      Don’t worry at me! Don’t you know

      I no longer owe the gods anything. 730

      TEKMESSA

      Please! Don’t say that!

      AIAS

      Save your breath.

      TEKMESSA

      Won’t you listen?

      AIAS

      I’ve heard enough.

      TEKMESSA

      Lord! I’m afraid!

      AIAS

      (to servant, indicating the tent flaps)

      Shut them! Now!

      TEKMESSA

      For the gods, give a little!

      AIAS

      Isn’t it foolish to think

      you can teach me, now, to change my nature?

      The tent flaps are closed over him. TEKMESSA and EURYSAKES retreat into the compound. The gates are pulled shut behind them.

      LEADER

      Fabulous Salamis, you must be there 740

      still

      sparkling above the raging battering sea

      giving all men joy, for all time—

      but I these long years

      camped on the grassy slopes of Ida,

      I wear down

      against the day I will go down

      into skincrawling, unknowable Hades.

      CHORUS

      (severally)

      Now I come to grips

      with yet more grief: 750

      Aias, seized by the gods

      with incurable madness.

      The man you sent forth in war fever

      to do brave things in war

      now sits it out, ruminating lonely thoughts

      his friends can hardly bear.

      All his heroic deeds, his honors won,

      the hateful sons of Atreus

      let lie like nothings where they’ve fallen.

      Think of his mother, her hair 760

      white with years!

      When she hears how

      disease has eaten his heart

      she won’t cry to herself

      with mournful nightingale notes

      o no! o no!

      she’ll howl herself

      inside out! beating her hands

      on her breast,

      tearing her gray hair out! 770

      LEADER

      He’s better off hidden

      in Hades . . . this maddened

      warrior from the noblest line of warriors

      who’s lost touch with himself

      and all he was bred for,

      staggering among strange thoughts.

      CHORUS

      Wretched father,

      not knowing yet!

      How will you bear the shame of it,

      to hear 780

      your line, never doomed before, has ended

      in Aias’s ruin?

      AIAS comes out, calm, with Hektor’s sword in hand. TEKMESSA and EURYSAKES also appear.

      AIAS

      Long rolling waves of time

      bring all things to light

      and plunge them down again

      in utter darkness. There is

      nothing that cannot happen.

      Solemn oaths, willpower, go under.

      Just now my mind was made up,

      tempered, like hot iron plunged 790

      into cold water. Even so I felt

      the sharp edge of this same mind

      soften at that woman’s words.

      How could I leave her

      a widow? my son fatherless

      among enemies . . .

      I will go down

      to the cleansing pool by the great salt marsh

      to wash this filth off. Get out from under

      the anger Athena heaps on me. I’ll find 800

      some place no one passes through.

      I’ll dig into the earth, bury

      this sword, hateful thing,

      some place no one ever sees.

      Let night and Hades keep it in the dark.

      From the day I was given this

      by Hektor, my worst enemy, the Greeks

      gave me nothing but a bad time.

      It’s true, the old saying: gifts

      from enemies bring no good. 810

      From now on I’ll know how to

      give way to the gods and how

      to venerate the sons of Atreus.

      They give the orders. We’re bound

      to obey. How could it be otherwise?

      Great natural forces know their place

      in the greater
    scheme of things. So

      the snowy tracks of winter melt away

      before the fruit ripening into summer.

      Dark night, making its rounds, makes way 820

      for the white horses of day scattering light.

      Savage blasts of wind die down, so as

      the groaning ocean may sleep. Great

      sleep itself, overcoming all, yet lets go.

      It’s not sleep binds us forever. How can

      we not learn limits from that vast

      natural discretion?

      I have.

      I know, now, to hate my enemy

      as one who may later be a friend. 830

      My friend I’ll help out just enough—

      he may, one day, be my enemy.

      Most men never find a secure

      mooring in friendship.

      But . . . that will all work out.

      You, woman, go in and pray the gods

      all my heart desires will come to pass.

      TEKMESSA leaves.

      And you, my friends, do me the honor

      she does. When Teukros comes, tell him

      to care for us. And do right by you. 840

      I will go where I am going,

      but soon, perhaps, you should hear

      I’ve come through this and found

      a kind of peace.

      AIAS leaves.

      CHORUS

      (severally)

      Ooo I’ve got goose bumps, I’m so flat out happy

      I could fly!

      O Pan god Pan

      show yourself,

      you who get the gods to dance,

      sweep across the sea 850

      from the snow-swirling cliffs of Kyllene,

      teach me, dance me

      the wild crazy steps of Mysia

      and Crete

      you all by yourself taught yourself—

      now I want to dance!

      And Apollo, lord of Delos, cross over

      the waters of Ikaros,

      kindly join me

      that I may see, face to face, your brilliance! 860

      Ares dissolves his blood-dark threat!

      Zeus god Zeus

      now in broad daylight our swift ships

      can put to sea again!

      Aias buries his pain

      and goes, in good faith,

      to make the sacrifice the gods require.

      LEADER

      Time darkens all things

      and time rekindles them.

      I believe anything is possible 870

      now Aias no longer

      feuds with, nor hates,

      the sons of Atreus.

      MESSENGER arrives.

      MESSENGER

      Friends! News! Teukros

      is just back from Mysia. In camp,

      by the generals’ tent. He was

      confronted by everybody at once.

      The Greeks saw him coming

      from way off. When he got near

      they surrounded him, shouting insults, 880

      things like he’s related to a crazy,

      a traitor—no way could he save himself

      from being stoned to shreds. Suddenly

      swords were out. In hand. But then

      when it got to the breaking point

      the elders broke it up. Everyone

      calmed down. But where’s Aias?

      He’s the one who needs to hear this.

      LEADER

      Just left. He’s pulled himself together

      with a whole new sense of purpose. 890

      MESSENGER

      NO!! . . . I was sent too late

      or took too long getting here.

      LEADER

      You’ve done your duty, haven’t you?

      MESSENGER

      He wasn’t to be let go out.

      Not till Teukros gets here.

      LEADER

      Well I’m telling you

      he’s gone with the best intentions

      to do the best he could do:

      make his peace with the gods.

      MESSENGER

      That’s a dumb thing to say—if there’s any 900

      truth in what Kalchas predicted.

      LEADER

      A prophecy? What more do you know?

      MESSENGER

      I know what I heard. I was there.

      Some chiefs were gathered around

      in conference. Kalchas got up and came

      over to Teukros—gave him his hand

      and steered him away, out of earshot

      of the generals. He insisted Aias

      be kept indoors the rest of this day,

      otherwise Teukros would never see him 910

      see the end of it. Kalchas himself said this.

      As for Athena, her anger would end

      when this day did.

      He also said,

      “The gods have it in for men too

      full of themselves, their bodies gotten

      too big and stupid—they’re only human

      but think they’re superhuman. Against

      them, the gods are pitiless.”

      His own father warned him 920

      the day he left home. Reckless Aias

      rushing to war. “With your spear

      go,” he said, “for victory! but always

      only with help from the gods.”

      Yet Aias was cocky. Like a fool he said:

      “O father, with help from the gods

      a nothing could rack up victories!

      I can do it without them.” He said that.

      Another time Athena was after him

      to counterattack the Trojans. Bloody them. 930

      He uttered, then, words too

      awful to speak: “My Lady,

      go, back up the other Greeks.

      Where Aias stands the battle line

      will not be broken through.”

      That did it. Brought down on him

      what no one wants: the fury of Athena.

      Still, if he can get through this day

      with Apollo’s help, we might yet

      save him. So Kalchas said. 940

      Teukros got right up and sent me

      here with these orders for you.

      But if he’s gone, he’s gone for good,

      or Kalchas is no prophet.

      LEADER

      (at the compound gate)

      Tekmessa! whose life is misery!

      Come hear what this man says.

      It cuts too close for comfort.

      TEKMESSA comes out with EURYSAKES.

      TEKMESSA

      Haven’t I had enough? Why get me out here

      again—just as I was finding some relief?

      LEADER

      Listen. I’m afraid 950

      this man has news of Aias.

      TEKMESSA

      You, man, out with it. Surely not . . . the worst?

      MESSENGER

      For you I don’t know. I’m afraid

      for Aias. Has he gone out?

      TEKMESSA

      Out, yes. Why? Why scare me like this?

      MESSENGER

      Orders from Teukros: this one day

      keep Aias in his tent. Don’t let him

      go out alone.

      TEKMESSA

      Where’s Teukros? Why does he say this?

      MESSENGER

      He just got back. He believes 960

      if Aias goes out today, he’ll die.

      TEKMESSA

      No! Where did he hear this?

      MESSENGER

      From Kalchas. The seer. He fears

      today, for Aias, it’s life or death.

      TEKMESSA

      AI!! Stand, friends, between me and what

      follows this foul relentless luck!

      You, hurry, go meet Teukros.

      The rest split up, east and west, to the far

      reaches of the bay. Pick up his tracks.

      He deceived me. I see that now. 970

      What love he had for me

      he’s thrown away. My child,

      what am I to
    do? I can’t just sit here.

      I’ll go too, long as I’m strong enough.

      Everyone, let’s go! We’ve no time to lose

      finding this man who’s in a rush to die.

      CHORUS

      We’re gone almost before the words

      are out of your mouth.

      CHORUS goes off in two parties. Servant takes EURYSAKES elsewhere. AIAS on a desolate shore. A sword point sticks up from behind bushes.

      AIAS

      This killer is set

      to do what it does best. 980

      If there were time to think

      I’d think this the gift

      of Hektor, the guest-friend

      I hated most the sight of—

      sticking up from the enemy earth

      of Troy, its edge

      fresh off the grinding stone.

      I’ve embedded it with care

      for a quick, merciful death.

      I have done all I can do. 990

      Now it’s up to you, Zeus,

      as it should be, to help me.

      I ask little enough, just

      a messenger to break the news

      to Teukros—to be the first to pull

      me up off the blood-running sword

      before my enemies come running

      to throw my body to the dogs

      and crows. That’s all I ask of you.

      From Hermes, 1000

      who takes us under, I ask only

      a short quick death, a soundless leap

      from waking to sleep, as the sword

      slips through me.

      I call also

      on the deathless virgins who see

      all human suffering: the dread

      ever-overtaking Furies.

      Look how the sons of Atreus

      have brought my life to a rotten end! 1010

      Overcome their vile lives with vile deaths!

      O Furies, let your rage drink the blood

      of the whole body of the Greek army!

      And you there,

      Helios, chariot wheels climbing the sky,

      as you pass over my homeland

      pull up on your gold shimmering reins,

      tell my death, my disaster, to my father

      so old now, and to the luckless woman

      who suckled me. Poor mother! 1020

      When she hears this her wailing

      will overwhelm the city. But now’s

      no time for tears. Time now is only

      to do, and quickly.

      Death, Death! look at me!

      We will have words in the otherworld.

      And Helios, bright day, this is the last

      I will see of you. Not ever again!

      O light! O holy Salamis, hearth

      of my fathers, and great Athens too 1030

     


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