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Works of Aeschylus - Aeschylus [82]

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The doom of exile such as he has borne.

So clamours he and so invokes the gods

Who guard his race and home, to hear and heed

The curse that sounds in Polyneices' name!

He bears a round shield, fresh from forge and fire,

And wrought upon it is a twofold sign-

For lo, a woman leads decorously

The figure of a warrior wrought in gold;

And thus the legend runs-I Justice am,

And I will bring the hero home again,

To hold once more his place within this town,

Once more to pace his sire's ancestral hall.

Such are the symbols, by our foemen shown-

Now make thine own decision, whom to send

Against this last opponent! I have said-

Nor canst thou in my tidings find a flaw-

Thine is it, now, to steer the course aright.

ETEOCLES

Ah me, the madman, and the curse of Heaven

And woe for us, the lamentable line

Of Oedipus, and woe that in this house

Our father's curse must find accomplishment!

But now, a truce to tears and loud lament,

Lest they should breed a still more rueful wail!

As for this Polyneices, named too well,

Soon shall we know how this device shall end-

Whether the gold-wrought symbols on his shield,

In their mad vaunting and bewildered pride,

Shall guide him as a victor to his home!

For had but justice, maiden-child of Zeus,

Stood by his act and thought, it might have been!

Yet never, from the day he reached the light

Out of the darkness of his mother's womb,

Never in childhood, nor in youthful prime,

Nor when his chin was gathering its beard,

Hath justice hailed or claimed him as her own.

Therefore I deem not that she standeth now

To aid him in this outrage on his home!

Misnamed, in truth, were justice, utterly,

If to impiety she lent her hand.

Sure in this faith, I will myself go forth

And match me with him; who hath fairer claim?

Ruler, against one fain to snatch the rule,

Brother with brother matched, and foe with foe,

Will I confront the issue. To the wall!

LEADER OF THE CHORUS

O thou true heart, O child of Oedipus,

Be not, in wrath, too like the man whose name

Murmurs an evil omen! 'Tis enough

That Cadmus' clan should strive with Arges' host,

For blood there is that can atone that stain!

But-brother upon brother dealing death-

Not time itself can expiate the sin!

ETEOCLES

If man find hurt, yet clasp his honour still,

'Tis well; the dead have honour, nought beside.

Hurt, with dishonour, wins no word of praise!

CHORUS chanting

Ah, what is thy desire?

Let not the lust and ravin of the sword

Bear thee adown the tide accursed, abhorred!

Fling off thy passion's rage, thy spirit's prompting dire!

ETEOCLES

Nay-since the god is urgent for our doom,

Let Laius' house, by Phoebus loathed and scorned,

Follow the gale of destiny, and win

Its great inheritance, the gulf of hell!

CHORUS chanting

Ruthless thy craving is-

Craving for kindred and forbidden blood

To be outpoured-a sacrifice imbrued

With sin, a bitter fruit of murderous enmities!

ETEOCLES

Yea, my own father's fateful Curse proclaims-

A ghastly presence, and her eyes are dry-

Strike! honour is the prize, not life prolonged!

CHORUS chanting

Ah, be not urged of her! for none shall dare

To call thee coward, in thy throned estate!

Will not the Fury in her sable pal

Pass outward from these halls, what time the gods

Welcome a votive offering from our hands?

ETEOCLES

The gods! long since they hold us in contempt,

Scornful of gifts thus offered by the lost!

Why should we fawn and flinch away from doom?

CHORUS chanting

Now, when it stands beside thee! for its power

May, with a changing gust of milder mood,

Temper the blast that bloweth wild and rude

And frenzied, in this hour!

ETEOCLES

Ay, kindled by the curse of Oedipus-

All too prophetic, out of dreamland came

The vision, meting out our sire's estate!

LEADER OF THE CHORUS

Heed women's voices, though thou love them not!

ETEOCLES

Say aught that may avail, but stint thy words.

LEADER

Go not thou forth to guard the seventh gate!

ETEOCLES

Words shall not blunt the edge of my resolve.

LEADER

Yet

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