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The Seven Against Thebes [14]

By Root 213 0
and our

care!



O grievous the fate

That attends upon wrong)

Stern ghost of our sire,

Thy vengeance is long!

Dark Fury of hell and of death, the hands of thy kingdom are

strong!



By proof have ye learnt it!

At once and as one,

O brothers beloved,

To death ye were, done!

Ye came to the strife of the sword, and behold! ye are both

overthrown!



O grievous the tale is,

And grievous their fall,

To the house, to the land,

And to me above all!

Ah, God! for the curse that hath come, the sin and the ruin

withal!



O children distraught,

Who in madness have died!

Shall ye rest with old kings

In the place of their pride?

Alas for the wrath of your sire if he findeth you laid by his

side!

(A HERALD enters.)

HERALD

I bear command to tell to one and all

What hath approved itself and now is law,

Ruled by the counsellors of Cadmus' town.

For this Eteocles, it is resolved

To lay him on his earth-bed, in this soil,

Not without care and kindly sepulture.

For why? he hated those who hated us,

And, with all duties blanielessly performed

Unto the sacred ritual of his sires,

He met such end as gains our city's grace,-

With auspices that do ennoble death.

Such words I have in charge to speak of him:

But of his brother Polyneices, this-

Be he cast out unburied, for the dogs

To rend and tear: for he presumed to waste

The land of the Cadmeans, had not Heaven-

Some god of those who aid our fatherland-

Opposed his onset, by his brother's spear,

To whom, tho' dead, shall consecration come!

Against him stood this wretch, and brought a horde

Of foreign foemen, to beset our town.

He therefore shall receive his recompense,

Buried ignobly in the maw of kites-

No women-wailers to escort his corpse

Nor pile his tomb nor shrill his dirge anew-

Unhouselled, unattended, cast away

So, for these brothers, doth our State ordain.

ANTIGONE

And I-to those who make such claims of rule

In Cadmus' town-I, though no other help,

(Pointing to the body of POLYNEICES)

I, I will bury this my brother's corse

And risk your wrath and what may come of it!

It shames me not to face the State, and set

Will against power, rebellion resolute:

Deep in my heart is set my sisterhood,

My common birthright with my brothers, born

All of one womb, her children who, for woe,

Brought forth sad offspring to a sire ill-starred.

Therefore, my soul! take thou thy willing share,

In aid of him who now can will no more,

Against this outrage: be a sister true,

While yet thou livest, to a brother dead!

Him never shall the wolves with ravening maw

Rend and devour: I do forbid the thought!

I for him, I-albeit a woman weak-

In place of burial-pit, will give him rest

By this protecting handful of light dust

Which, in the lap of this poor linen robe,

I bear to hallow and bestrew his corpse

With the due covering. Let none gainsay!

Courage and craft shall arm me, this to do.

HERALD

I charge thee, not to flout the city's law!

ANTIGONE

I charge thee, use no useless heralding!

HERALD

Stern is a people newly 'scaped from death.

ANTIGONE

Whet thou their sternness! burial he shall have.

HERALD

How? grace of burial, to the city's foe?

ANTIGONE

God hath not judged him separate in guilt.

HERALD

True-till he put this land in jeopardy.

ANTIGONE

His rights usurped, he answered wrong
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