Read Oedipus Trilogy Page 8


  CHORUS

  Behold our sovereign, Theseus, Aegeus' son,

  Comes at thy summons to perform his part.

  (Enter THESEUS)

  THESEUS

  Oft had I heard of thee in times gone by—

  The bloody mutilation of thine eyes—

  And therefore know thee, son of Laius.

  All that I lately gathered on the way

  Made my conjecture doubly sure; and now

  Thy garb and that marred visage prove to me

  That thou art he. So pitying thine estate,

  Most ill-starred Oedipus, I fain would know

  What is the suit ye urge on me and Athens,

  Thou and the helpless maiden at thy side.

  Declare it; dire indeed must be the tale

  Whereat I should recoil. I too was reared,

  Like thee, in exile, and in foreign lands

  Wrestled with many perils, no man more.

  Wherefore no alien in adversity

  Shall seek in vain my succor, nor shalt thou;

  I know myself a mortal, and my share

  In what the morrow brings no more than thine.

  OEDIPUS

  Theseus, thy words so apt, so generous

  So comfortable, need no long reply

  Both who I am and of what lineage sprung,

  And from what land I came, thou hast declared.

  So without prologue I may utter now

  My brief petition, and the tale is told.

  THESEUS

  Say on, and tell me what I fain would learn.

  OEDIPUS

  I come to offer thee this woe-worn frame,

  A gift not fair to look on; yet its worth

  More precious far than any outward show.

  THESEUS

  What profit dost thou proffer to have brought?

  OEDIPUS

  Hereafter thou shalt learn, not yet, methinks.

  THESEUS

  When may we hope to reap the benefit?

  OEDIPUS

  When I am dead and thou hast buried me.

  THESEUS

  Thou cravest life's last service; all before—

  Is it forgotten or of no account?

  OEDIPUS

  Yea, the last boon is warrant for the rest.

  THESEUS

  The grace thou cravest then is small indeed.

  OEDIPUS

  Nay, weigh it well; the issue is not slight.

  THESEUS

  Thou meanest that betwixt thy sons and me?

  OEDIPUS

  Prince, they would fain convey me back to Thebes.

  THESEUS

  If there be no compulsion, then methinks

  To rest in banishment befits not thee.

  OEDIPUS

  Nay, when I wished it they would not consent.

  THESEUS

  For shame! such temper misbecomes the faller.

  OEDIPUS

  Chide if thou wilt, but first attend my plea.

  THESEUS

  Say on, I wait full knowledge ere I judge.

  OEDIPUS

  O Theseus, I have suffered wrongs on wrongs.

  THESEUS

  Wouldst tell the old misfortune of thy race?

  OEDIPUS

  No, that has grown a byword throughout Greece.

  THESEUS

  What then can be this more than mortal grief?

  OEDIPUS

  My case stands thus; by my own flesh and blood

  I was expelled my country, and can ne'er

  Thither return again, a parricide.

  THESEUS

  Why fetch thee home if thou must needs obey.

  THESEUS

  What are they threatened by the oracle?

  OEDIPUS

  Destruction that awaits them in this land.

  THESEUS

  What can beget ill blood 'twixt them and me?

  OEDIPUS

  Dear son of Aegeus, to the gods alone

  Is given immunity from eld and death;

  But nothing else escapes all-ruinous time.

  Earth's might decays, the might of men decays,

  Honor grows cold, dishonor flourishes,

  There is no constancy 'twixt friend and friend,

  Or city and city; be it soon or late,

  Sweet turns to bitter, hate once more to love.

  If now 'tis sunshine betwixt Thebes and thee

  And not a cloud, Time in his endless course

  Gives birth to endless days and nights, wherein

  The merest nothing shall suffice to cut

  With serried spears your bonds of amity.

  Then shall my slumbering and buried corpse

  In its cold grave drink their warm life-blood up,

  If Zeus be Zeus and Phoebus still speak true.

  No more: 'tis ill to tear aside the veil

  Of mysteries; let me cease as I began:

  Enough if thou wilt keep thy plighted troth,

  Then shall thou ne'er complain that Oedipus

  Proved an unprofitable and thankless guest,

  Except the gods themselves shall play me false.

  CHORUS

  The man, my lord, has from the very first

  Declared his power to offer to our land

  These and like benefits.

  THESEUS

  Who could reject

  The proffered amity of such a friend?

  First, he can claim the hospitality

  To which by mutual contract we stand pledged:

  Next, coming here, a suppliant to the gods,

  He pays full tribute to the State and me;

  His favors therefore never will I spurn,

  But grant him the full rights of citizen;

  And, if it suits the stranger here to bide,

  I place him in your charge, or if he please

  Rather to come with me—choose, Oedipus,

  Which of the two thou wilt. Thy choice is mine.

  OEDIPUS

  Zeus, may the blessing fall on men like these!

  THESEUS

  What dost thou then decide—to come with me?

  OEDIPUS

  Yea, were it lawful—but 'tis rather here—

  THESEUS

  What wouldst thou here? I shall not thwart thy wish.

  OEDIPUS

  Here shall I vanquish those who cast me forth.

  THESEUS

  Then were thy presence here a boon indeed.

  OEDIPUS

  Such shall it prove, if thou fulfill'st thy pledge.

  THESEUS

  Fear not for me; I shall not play thee false.

  OEDIPUS

  No need to back thy promise with an oath.

  THESEUS

  An oath would be no surer than my word.

  OEDIPUS

  How wilt thou act then?

  THESEUS

  What is it thou fear'st?

  OEDIPUS

  My foes will come—

  THESEUS

  Our friends will look to that.

  OEDIPUS

  But if thou leave me?

  THESEUS

  Teach me not my duty.

  OEDIPUS

  'Tis fear constrains me.

  THESEUS

  My soul knows no fear!

  OEDIPUS

  Thou knowest not what threats—

  THESEUS

  I know that none

  Shall hale thee hence in my despite. Such threats

  Vented in anger oft, are blusterers,

  An idle breath, forgot when sense returns.

  And for thy foemen, though their words were brave,

  Boasting to bring thee back, they are like to find

  The seas between us wide and hard to sail.

  Such my firm purpose, but in any case

  Take heart, since Phoebus sent thee here. My name,

  Though I be distant, warrants thee from harm.

  CHORUS

  (Str. 1)

  Thou hast c
ome to a steed-famed land for rest,

  O stranger worn with toil,

  To a land of all lands the goodliest

  Colonus' glistening soil.

  'Tis the haunt of the clear-voiced nightingale,

  Who hid in her bower, among

  The wine-dark ivy that wreathes the vale,

  Trilleth her ceaseless song;

  And she loves, where the clustering berries nod

  O'er a sunless, windless glade,

  The spot by no mortal footstep trod,

  The pleasance kept for the Bacchic god,

  Where he holds each night his revels wild

  With the nymphs who fostered the lusty child.

  (Ant. 1)

  And fed each morn by the pearly dew

  The starred narcissi shine,

  And a wreath with the crocus' golden hue

  For the Mother and Daughter twine.

  And never the sleepless fountains cease

  That feed Cephisus' stream,

  But they swell earth's bosom with quick increase,

  And their wave hath a crystal gleam.

  And the Muses' quire will never disdain

  To visit this heaven-favored plain,

  Nor the Cyprian queen of the golden rein.

  (Str. 2)

  And here there grows, unpruned, untamed,

  Terror to foemen's spear,

  A tree in Asian soil unnamed,

  By Pelops' Dorian isle unclaimed,

  Self-nurtured year by year;

  'Tis the grey-leaved olive that feeds our boys;

  Nor youth nor withering age destroys

  The plant that the Olive Planter tends

  And the Grey-eyed Goddess herself defends.

  (Ant. 2)

  Yet another gift, of all gifts the most

  Prized by our fatherland, we boast—

  The might of the horse, the might of the sea;

  Our fame, Poseidon, we owe to thee,

  Son of Kronos, our king divine,

  Who in these highways first didst fit

  For the mouth of horses the iron bit;

  Thou too hast taught us to fashion meet

  For the arm of the rower the oar-blade fleet,

  Swift as the Nereids' hundred feet

  As they dance along the brine.

  ANTIGONE

  Oh land extolled above all lands, 'tis now

  For thee to make these glorious titles good.

  OEDIPUS

  Why this appeal, my daughter?

  ANTIGONE

  Father, lo!

  Creon approaches with his company.

  OEDIPUS

  Fear not, it shall be so; if we are old,

  This country's vigor has no touch of age.

  (Enter CREON with attendants)

  CREON

  Burghers, my noble friends, ye take alarm

  At my approach (I read it in your eyes),

  Fear nothing and refrain from angry words.

  I come with no ill purpose; I am old,

  And know the city whither I am come,

  Without a peer amongst the powers of Greece.

  It was by reason of my years that I

  Was chosen to persuade your guest and bring

  Him back to Thebes; not the delegate

  Of one man, but commissioned by the State,

  Since of all Thebans I have most bewailed,

  Being his kinsman, his most grievous woes.

  O listen to me, luckless Oedipus,

  Come home! The whole Cadmeian people claim

  With right to have thee back, I most of all,

  For most of all (else were I vile indeed)

  I mourn for thy misfortunes, seeing thee

  An aged outcast, wandering on and on,

  A beggar with one handmaid for thy stay.

  Ah! who had e'er imagined she could fall

  To such a depth of misery as this,

  To tend in penury thy stricken frame,

  A virgin ripe for wedlock, but unwed,

  A prey for any wanton ravisher?

  Seems it not cruel this reproach I cast

  On thee and on myself and all the race?

  Aye, but an open shame cannot be hid.

  Hide it, O hide it, Oedipus, thou canst.

  O, by our fathers' gods, consent I pray;

  Come back to Thebes, come to thy father's home,

  Bid Athens, as is meet, a fond farewell;

  Thebes thy old foster-mother claims thee first.

  OEDIPUS

  O front of brass, thy subtle tongue would twist

  To thy advantage every plea of right

  Why try thy arts on me, why spread again

  Toils where 'twould gall me sorest to be snared?

  In old days when by self-wrought woes distraught,

  I yearned for exile as a glad release,

  Thy will refused the favor then I craved.

  But when my frenzied grief had spent its force,

  And I was fain to taste the sweets of home,

  Then thou wouldst thrust me from my country, then

  These ties of kindred were by thee ignored;

  And now again when thou behold'st this State

  And all its kindly people welcome me,

  Thou seek'st to part us, wrapping in soft words

  Hard thoughts. And yet what pleasure canst thou find

  In forcing friendship on unwilling foes?

  Suppose a man refused to grant some boon

  When you importuned him, and afterwards

  When you had got your heart's desire, consented,

  Granting a grace from which all grace had fled,

  Would not such favor seem an empty boon?

  Yet such the boon thou profferest now to me,

  Fair in appearance, but when tested false.

  Yea, I will proved thee false, that these may hear;

  Thou art come to take me, not to take me home,

  But plant me on thy borders, that thy State

  May so escape annoyance from this land.

  That thou shalt never gain, but this instead—

  My ghost to haunt thy country without end;

  And for my sons, this heritage—no more—

  Just room to die in. Have not I more skill

  Than thou to draw the horoscope of Thebes?

  Are not my teachers surer guides than thine—

  Great Phoebus and the sire of Phoebus, Zeus?

  Thou art a messenger suborned, thy tongue

  Is sharper than a sword's edge, yet thy speech

  Will bring thee more defeats than victories.

  Howbeit, I know I waste my words—begone,

  And leave me here; whate'er may be my lot,

  He lives not ill who lives withal content.

  CREON

  Which loses in this parley, I o'erthrown

  By thee, or thou who overthrow'st thyself?

  OEDIPUS

  I shall be well contented if thy suit

  Fails with these strangers, as it has with me.

  CREON

  Unhappy man, will years ne'er make thee wise?

  Must thou live on to cast a slur on age?

  OEDIPUS

  Thou hast a glib tongue, but no honest man,

  Methinks, can argue well on any side.

  CREON

  'Tis one thing to speak much, another well.

  OEDIPUS

  Thy words, forsooth, are few and all well aimed!

  CREON

  Not for a man indeed with wits like thine.

  OEDIPUS

  Depart! I bid thee in these burghers' name,

  And prowl no longer round me to blockade

  My destined harbor.

  CREON

  I protest to these,

  Not thee, and for thine answer to thy kin,

  If e'er I take thee—

  OEDIPUS

  Who against their will

  Could take me?

  CREON

&n
bsp; Though untaken thou shalt smart.

  OEDIPUS

  What power hast thou to execute this threat?

  CREON

  One of thy daughters is already seized,

  The other I will carry off anon.

  OEDIPUS

  Woe, woe!

  CREON

  This is but prelude to thy woes.

  OEDIPUS

  Hast thou my child?

  CREON

  And soon shall have the other.

  OEDIPUS

  Ho, friends! ye will not surely play me false?

  Chase this ungodly villain from your land.

  CHORUS

  Hence, stranger, hence avaunt! Thou doest wrong

  In this, and wrong in all that thou hast done.

  CREON (to his guards)

  'Tis time by force to carry off the girl,

  If she refuse of her free will to go.

  ANTIGONE

  Ah, woe is me! where shall I fly, where find

  Succor from gods or men?

  CHORUS

  What would'st thou, stranger?

  CREON

  I meddle not with him, but her who is mine.

  OEDIPUS

  O princes of the land!

  CHORUS

  Sir, thou dost wrong.

  CREON

  Nay, right.

  CHORUS

  How right?

  CREON

  I take but what is mine.

  OEDIPUS

  Help, Athens!

  CHORUS

  What means this, sirrah? quick unhand her, or

  We'll fight it out.

  CREON

  Back!

  CHORUS

  Not till thou forbear.

  CREON

  'Tis war with Thebes if I am touched or harmed.

  OEDIPUS

  Did I not warn thee?

  CHORUS

  Quick, unhand the maid!

  CREON

  Command your minions; I am not your slave.

  CHORUS

  Desist, I bid thee.

  CREON (to the guard)

  And O bid thee march!

  CHORUS

  To the rescue, one and all!

  Rally, neighbors to my call!

  See, the foe is at the gate!

  Rally to defend the State.

  ANTIGONE

  Ah, woe is me, they drag me hence, O friends.

  OEDIPUS

  Where art thou, daughter?

  ANTIGONE

  Haled along by force.

  OEDIPUS

  Thy hands, my child!

  ANTIGONE

  They will not let me, father.

  CREON

  Away with her!

  OEDIPUS

  Ah, woe is me, ah woe!

  CREON

  So those two crutches shall no longer serve thee

  For further roaming. Since it pleaseth thee

  To triumph o'er thy country and thy friends

  Who mandate, though a prince, I here discharge,

  Enjoy thy triumph; soon or late thou'lt find

  Thou art an enemy to thyself, both now

  And in time past, when in despite of friends

  Thou gav'st the rein to passion, still thy bane.

  CHORUS

  Hold there, sir stranger!