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    The Complete Plays of Sophocles

    Page 7
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      whose people grew up with mine,

      and the springs and rivers, the very

      plains of Troy, good-bye to all

      who have nursed me in this life.

      This is the last word Aias has

      for you. The rest I will speak

      only to the dead in Hades.

      AIAS falls on his sword. His body is screened by the bushes. CHORUS in two parties—“hurried and disorderly” (Garvie, 209)—stumble in from opposite directions.

      SEMI-CHORUS 1

      Take pains, get pain,

      pain piled on.

      Where haven’t I looked? 1040

      Where have I?

      Still no sign anywhere.

      Listen! What’s that?

      SEMI-CHORUS 2

      Your shipmates!

      SEMI-CHORUS 1

      What’s the word?

      SEMI-CHORUS 2

      We’ve covered the west.

      SEMI-CHORUS 1

      And . . . ?

      SEMI-CHORUS 2

      Nothing. Hard going.

      SEMI-CHORUS 1

      Nothing on the road from where the sun comes, either.

      CHORUS

      (severally)

      If only some fisherman 1050

      out fishing day and night,

      or nymph from Olympus or some

      stream rushing toward the Bosphoros

      could shout to us they’ve seen

      somewhere

      a man of ferocious heart wandering through!

      It’s hard making my way

      aimless,

      no wind at my back,

      to catch a glimpse of that fast fading man. 1060

      Off: short, sharp scream.

      CHORUS

      From the wood! Who screamed?

      Off: drawn-out howl.

      Disclosure of TEKMESSA, rising from behind the bushes that hide the body of AIAS. Two parties of the CHORUS converge.

      CHORUS

      (severally)

      Tekmessa!

      His spear-gotten bride . . .

      dissolved in her own cries.

      TEKMESSA

      Now nothing . . . left! I’m lost! My friends . . .

      CHORUS

      What?

      TEKMESSA

      Here. Aias. Fresh slaughter.

      His sword buried in his body.

      CHORUS

      (severally)

      Nooo! We’ll never get home!

      Lord you’ve killed us too, 1070

      your own comrades! And you,

      poor woman.

      TEKMESSA

      AIAI! his very name, Aias, cries out of us!

      LEADER

      Who had a hand in this?

      TEKMESSA

      Himself alone. He planted the sword

      he fell on. The sword stands witness.

      CHORUS

      (severally)

      And I saw nothing!

      Blind, dumb, and you by your own hand

      in your own blood

      with no friends to watch over you! 1080

      Where now is Aias

      relentless as the grief sounding his name?

      TEKMESSA covers the corpse with a robe.

      TEKMESSA

      Don’t look! I’ll wrap him

      in my robe. Nothing must show.

      None who loved him could bear seeing

      the blood gasping up through his nostrils,

      darkening from the wound

      his own hand opened.

      Now what will I do?

      Who’ll lift you up? Where’s Teukros? 1090

      If he would just come, give

      composure to his brother’s corpse!

      O Aias, to have from so high

      come to this! Even your enemies

      must to their sorrow feel it.

      LEADER

      It had to be, had to,

      you were so thick-hearted

      you had to push your fate to the bitter end.

      All night long,

      all day, you’d be groaning, 1100

      raging at the sons of Atreus

      with inextinguishable murder in your heart.

      Yes, the day

      Achilles’ arms became a contest prize

      for the best warrior,

      that day began this misery.

      TEKMESSA groans.

      LEADER

      Grief this deep stops the heart.

      TEKMESSA, howling.

      LEADER

      I don’t

      wonder you cry out over and over,

      you’ve lost so much. 1110

      TEKMESSA

      You imagine my life. I live it.

      LEADER

      Yes.

      TEKMESSA

      Ah child, our new overseers will put

      the collar of slaves on us.

      CHORUS

      Shsh! It’s unspeakable

      how brutal the sons of Atreus

      will be to you in your grief.

      Pray the gods stop them!

      TEKMESSA

      Yet the gods had a hand in this.

      LEADER

      The gods’ burden will break us. 1120

      TEKMESSA

      Athena, dread daughter of Zeus,

      she concocted this. She’ll do

      anything for her Odysseus.

      CHORUS

      Sure in the darkness of his heart

      that long-calculating man

      has to be thrilled!

      He mocks this mad frenzy,

      he laughs, and with him

      the sons of Atreus have a good laugh too.

      TEKMESSA

      Then let them laugh! Joy in his sorrows. 1130

      They didn’t miss him alive? Maybe they will

      when in the thick of it they find he’s gone!

      Men with no sense don’t know what good

      they have . . . till they’ve thrown it away.

      His death leaves more pain to me

      than joy to them. His own joy is

      he got what he wanted. And met his own death

      on his own terms. What’s for them

      to celebrate? His death is between him

      and the gods—and not, no way, for them. 1140

      Let Odysseus mouth off. What was Aias

      is gone. And has left me wretched.

      VOICE OF TEUKROS

      o god o god o aias o god

      LEADER

      Quiet!

      I think I hear Teukros, shouting something

      awful striking the heart of this disaster.

      TEUKROS appears.

      TEUKROS

      Brother Aias, dear familiar face,

      what I hear, is it true?

      LEADER

      He’s dead, Teukros. Know that for a fact.

      TEUKROS

      This falls on me! 1150

      LEADER

      That’s it, for sure.

      TEUKROS

      The rashness of it!

      LEADER

      Yes. Let it all out.

      TEUKROS

      So sudden a doom . . .

      LEADER

      Sudden, yes.

      TEUKROS

      But his son!

      Where will I find him in this Troy?

      LEADER

      Alone. In the tent.

      TEUKROS

      Get him. NOW!

      before our enemies bag him like 1160

      a lion cub whose mother finds it gone.

      Go! Hurry! Help him! Others too!

      Men can’t help crowing over

      the dead—once they are dead.

      TEKMESSA hurries off.

      LEADER

      While he lived, Teukros, that’s exactly what

      he commanded: that you watch over his son.

      And you do.

      TEUKROS

      A worse sight I have not seen

      in all my life—the road here

      became the worst I ever walked 1170

      when I learned, Aias, it was

      your death I was on the trail of.

      Word of it raced through the Greek ar
    my

      like a message from the gods. It got to me

      before I could get to you. Hearing it I

      moaned low my wretchedness. But here

      now the sight of this unnerves me

      aiai!

      (to sailor)

      You. Uncover. Let’s see the worst.

      The sailor does so, behind the screen of bushes.

      It’s awful to see in the flesh 1180

      courage this brutal. What fields of grief

      your death seeds for me! Where

      will I go now? Who will welcome me

      who couldn’t help you through this?

      Naturally our father Telamon

      will be all smiles when I come home

      without you—that same man who,

      after getting good news, is no less

      sour than before. He’ll curse me out

      as the bastard of a captive girl, war spoil, 1190

      a coward who let you down. Or charge that

      calculating to get your privilege and power

      I betrayed you. Overbearing, foul-tempered,

      aimlessly mean old man! He’ll say all that

      and banish me. His words will brand me

      a slave. That will be my welcome home.

      Now enemies are everywhere, same as

      in Troy. This your death has left me.

      Now what? How can I lift you off

      the acrid glint of the swordpoint 1200

      that took your breath away? You see

      how even in death your enemy, Hektor,

      took you down?

      (to sailors)

      Look how fate

      bound these two together! With the war belt

      Aias gave him, Hektor was gripped

      against the chariot rails and dragged,

      mangled, till his life gave out. In turn,

      Aias got this gift from Hektor

      and fell on it. 1210

      Wasn’t this sword forged

      by the Furies? And that war belt by Hades,

      the savage craftsman who fashions death

      for everyone? As I see it, these things

      and all such always are ways the gods

      set men up. Anyone who sees this otherwise,

      think what you like. This thought is mine.

      LEADER

      Don’t drag this out. Think how you’ll bury

      your brother—and what will you say now

      that your enemy’s coming up. There! 1220

      He’s the type that could mock us our loss.

      TEUKROS

      From the army? Who?

      CHORUS

      The Menelaos we came all this way to help.

      TEUKROS

      O yes. This close

      there’s no doubt who he is.

      MENELAOS arrives with guards and a herald.

      MENELAOS

      Hey, you! Don’t lift that corpse don’t

      even touch it! That’s an order.

      TEUKROS

      A tall order. Why waste your breath on it?

      MENELAOS

      Because I say so. Our commander says so too.

      TEUKROS

      Then maybe you’d care to tell us 1230

      on what grounds you order this?

      MENELAOS

      We brought him here thinking

      he’d be a friend, an ally of the Greeks.

      He turned out to be a worse enemy

      than any Trojan. With his spear he

      plotted to murder us all in the night.

      If a god hadn’t stopped him, it would be

      our doom now to die his shameful death,

      exposed to all, while he’d still be alive.

      Yet the god drove his mad rage aside 1240

      against cattle and sheep. Not a man alive

      has the power, now, to bury him in a grave.

      We’ll haul the carcass out onto damp

      yellow sands somewhere, for seabirds

      to feed on. So don’t puff yourself up

      threatening us. We couldn’t in life

      keep him in line, but like it or not, in death

      we will. He will go wherever our hands

      take him, and leave him, seeing as in life

      he never listened to a word I said. 1250

      When a common person defies his betters

      it shows he’s no good. What city can thrive

      where there’s no fear of the law? How keep

      discreet order in an army camp without

      shutting it up in fear and respect? Even

      a man grown gigantic, he should watch it!

      One little slip, he could go down. No,

      the man who lives in fear and shame

      is safe. But in a city of no respect, just

      insolence and willfulness, though it 1260

      enjoy awhile a following wind, one day

      it will go under. Fear is in order.

      Why dream we can do what we want

      without paying for it? One such turn

      deserves another. This man flared up, all

      hot-tempered and cocky. Now it’s

      my turn for high-and-mighty thoughts.

      I warn you: bury that man, you may

      bury yourself with him.

      LEADER

      You’ve set down right-minded precepts, 1270

      Menelaos. Don’t overreach yourself

      outraging the dead.

      TEUKROS

      My friends, it’s no surprise that a nobody

      of common stock offends, in his own way,

      when a supposed noble can talk such trash.

      Again now. You say you brought him here

      as an ally. He didn’t sail here on his own?

      His own master? What justifies your claim

      to command him and his men? You rule

      the Spartans, not us. You’ve no more grounds 1280

      to claim power over him than he over you.

      You yourself came under orders; you’re not

      the commander of these forces. So how is it

      you command Aias?

      Lord it over those

      you’re lord over. Give them a tongue-lashing

      with your big talk. I’ll bury Aias the proper way

      no matter what you or that other general say.

      Your mouth doesn’t scare me. Aias didn’t, like

      those poor bastards in the ranks, come here 1290

      to get you your wife back. He came

      because of an oath he’d taken. Not for you.

      He wouldn’t go to war for the shell of a man.

      Next time you come here bring more heralds,

      bring the commander in chief! Make

      all the racket you want. As long as you are

      what you are, I wouldn’t bother to notice.

      LEADER

      Again insulting words! On top of all this?

      I don’t like it. Even if they are called for.

      MENELAOS

      The archer, far from blood dust, thinks he’s something. 1300

      TEUKROS

      I’m very good at what I do.

      MENELAOS

      How you’d brag . . . had you a shield.

      TEUKROS

      Barehanded I’d match you in all your armor.

      MENELAOS

      Your courage is all in your mouth.

      TEUKROS

      A righteous cause is my courage.

      MENELAOS

      What? It’s right to defend my killer?

      TEUKROS

      Your killer!? You’re dead? And still alive?

      MENELAOS

      A god saved me. But he wanted me dead.

      TEUKROS

      If the gods saved you, why disrespect them?

      MENELAOS

      How do I disrespect the gods? 1310

      TEUKROS

      By forbidding the burial of the dead.

      MENELAOS

      This was our enemy. It’s right to forbid him rest.

      TEUKROS

      Did Aias ever really confront you a
    s an enemy?

      MENELAOS

      We hated one another. You know that.

      TEUKROS

      Sure. He knew you rigged the vote against him.

      MENELAOS

      The judges made that ruling. Not me.

      TEUKROS

      You’d put a straight face on any crooked scheme.

      MENELAOS

      Talk like that could get someone hurt.

      TEUKROS

      Not us more than you.

      MENELAOS

      One last time. He will not be buried. 1320

      TEUKROS

      I’m telling you. He will.

      MENELAOS

      I saw, once, a real blowhard make

      his crew sail into a spell of bad weather.

      When the storm broke, you wouldn’t have heard

      a peep out of him, scrunched under his robe,

      not daring to breathe a word with the crew

      running round stepping all over him. So

      you. One little cloudburst may set off

      a monster storm that will drown you out.

      TEUKROS

      Me too. I once saw a fool so full 1330

      of himself, he made fun of others’ misery.

      It happened a man like me, the way I feel

      it could be me, said something like

      “Man, don’t disrespect the dead. You do,

      you will pay for it.” To his face said it,

      the face of the fool standing before me now,

      Menelaos. How’s that for talking double-talk?

      MENELAOS

      I’m leaving. It would be shameful if anyone knew

      I, with so much power, stooped to quibble with you.

      TEUKROS

      Then get! Shame is in standing still 1340

      blasted by hot air from a fool.

      MENELAOS and Attendants leave.

      LEADER

      A big fight for sure. And soon.

      Move, Teukros! Find a hollowed-out spot,

      some moldy darkness men will hold

      famous forever as his tomb.

      TEKMESSA reappears with EURYSAKES in hand.

      TEUKROS

      Just in time, his wife and son are here

      to perform the burial rites.

      You, boy, come here.

      Stand by the father who gave you your life.

      Press your hand on him, clutching locks of hair: 1350

      mine, your mother’s, your own.

      The suppliant’s power that is stored there

      will go under with him. And if anyone

     


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