<SPAN name="part2play"></SPAN><br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Thy son has gone, my liege, in angry haste.<br/>
Fell is the wrath of youth beneath a smart.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Let him go vent his fury like a fiend:<br/>
These sisters twain he shall not save from death.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Surely, thou meanest not to slay them both?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
I stand corrected; only her who touched<br/>
The body.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
And what death is she to die?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
She shall be taken to some desert place<br/>
By man untrod, and in a rock-hewn cave,<br/>
With food no more than to avoid the taint<br/>
That homicide might bring on all the State,<br/>
Buried alive. There let her call in aid<br/>
The King of Death, the one god she reveres,<br/>
Or learn too late a lesson learnt at last:<br/>
'Tis labor lost, to reverence the dead.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
(Str.)<br/>
Love resistless in fight, all yield at a glance of thine eye,<br/>
Love who pillowed all night on a maiden's cheek dost lie,<br/>
Over the upland holds. Shall mortals not yield to thee?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
(Ant).<br/>
Mad are thy subjects all, and even the wisest heart<br/>
Straight to folly will fall, at a touch of thy poisoned dart.<br/>
Thou didst kindle the strife, this feud of kinsman with kin,<br/>
By the eyes of a winsome wife, and the yearning her heart to win.<br/>
For as her consort still, enthroned with Justice above,<br/>
Thou bendest man to thy will, O all invincible Love.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
Lo I myself am borne aside,<br/>
From Justice, as I view this bride.<br/>
(O sight an eye in tears to drown)<br/>
Antigone, so young, so fair,<br/>
Thus hurried down<br/>
Death's bower with the dead to share.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
ANTIGONE<br/>
(Str. 1)<br/>
Friends, countrymen, my last farewell I make;<br/>
My journey's done.<br/>
One last fond, lingering, longing look I take<br/>
At the bright sun.<br/>
For Death who puts to sleep both young and old<br/>
Hales my young life,<br/>
And beckons me to Acheron's dark fold,<br/>
An unwed wife.<br/>
No youths have sung the marriage song for me,<br/>
My bridal bed<br/>
No maids have strewn with flowers from the lea,<br/>
'Tis Death I wed.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
But bethink thee, thou art sped,<br/>
Great and glorious, to the dead.<br/>
Thou the sword's edge hast not tasted,<br/>
No disease thy frame hath wasted.<br/>
Freely thou alone shalt go<br/>
Living to the dead below.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
ANTIGONE<br/>
(Ant. 1)<br/>
Nay, but the piteous tale I've heard men tell<br/>
Of Tantalus' doomed child,<br/>
Chained upon Siphylus' high rocky fell,<br/>
That clung like ivy wild,<br/>
Drenched by the pelting rain and whirling snow,<br/>
Left there to pine,<br/>
While on her frozen breast the tears aye flow—<br/>
Her fate is mine.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
She was sprung of gods, divine,<br/>
Mortals we of mortal line.<br/>
Like renown with gods to gain<br/>
Recompenses all thy pain.<br/>
Take this solace to thy tomb<br/>
Hers in life and death thy doom.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
ANTIGONE<br/>
(Str. 2)<br/>
Alack, alack! Ye mock me. Is it meet<br/>
Thus to insult me living, to my face?<br/>
Cease, by our country's altars I entreat,<br/>
Ye lordly rulers of a lordly race.<br/>
O fount of Dirce, wood-embowered plain<br/>
Where Theban chariots to victory speed,<br/>
Mark ye the cruel laws that now have wrought my bane,<br/>
The friends who show no pity in my need!<br/>
Was ever fate like mine? O monstrous doom,<br/>
Within a rock-built prison sepulchered,<br/>
To fade and wither in a living tomb,<br/>
And alien midst the living and the dead.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
(Str. 3)<br/>
In thy boldness over-rash<br/>
Madly thou thy foot didst dash<br/>
'Gainst high Justice' altar stair.<br/>
Thou a father's guild dost bear.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
ANTIGONE<br/>
(Ant. 2)<br/>
At this thou touchest my most poignant pain,<br/>
My ill-starred father's piteous disgrace,<br/>
The taint of blood, the hereditary stain,<br/>
That clings to all of Labdacus' famed race.<br/>
Woe worth the monstrous marriage-bed where lay<br/>
A mother with the son her womb had borne,<br/>
Therein I was conceived, woe worth the day,<br/>
Fruit of incestuous sheets, a maid forlorn,<br/>
And now I pass, accursed and unwed,<br/>
To meet them as an alien there below;<br/>
And thee, O brother, in marriage ill-bestead,<br/>
'Twas thy dead hand that dealt me this death-blow.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Religion has her chains, 'tis true,<br/>
Let rite be paid when rites are due.<br/>
Yet is it ill to disobey<br/>
The powers who hold by might the sway.<br/>
Thou hast withstood authority,<br/>
A self-willed rebel, thou must die.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
ANTIGONE<br/>
Unwept, unwed, unfriended, hence I go,<br/>
No longer may I see the day's bright eye;<br/>
Not one friend left to share my bitter woe,<br/>
And o'er my ashes heave one passing sigh.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
If wail and lamentation aught availed<br/>
To stave off death, I trow they'd never end.<br/>
Away with her, and having walled her up<br/>
In a rock-vaulted tomb, as I ordained,<br/>
Leave her alone at liberty to die,<br/>
Or, if she choose, to live in solitude,<br/>
The tomb her dwelling. We in either case<br/>
Are guiltless as concerns this maiden's blood,<br/>
Only on earth no lodging shall she find.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
ANTIGONE<br/>
O grave, O bridal bower, O prison house<br/>
Hewn from the rock, my everlasting home,<br/>
Whither I go to join the mighty host<br/>
Of kinsfolk, Persephassa's guests long dead,<br/>
The last of all, of all more miserable,<br/>
I pass, my destined span of years cut short.<br/>
And yet good hope is mine that I shall find<br/>
A welcome from my sire, a welcome too,<br/>
From thee, my mother, and my brother dear;<br/>
From with these hands, I laved and decked your limbs<br/>
In death, and poured libations on your grave.<br/>
And last, my Polyneices, unto thee<br/>
I paid due rites, and this my recompense!<br/>
Yet am I justified in wisdom's eyes.<br/>
For even had it been some child of mine,<br/>
Or husband mouldering in death's decay,<br/>
I had not wrought this deed despite the State.<br/>
What is the law I call in aid? 'Tis thus<br/>
I argue. Had it been a husband dead<br/>
I might have wed another, and have borne<br/>
Another child, to take the dead child's place.<br/>
But, now my sire and mother both are dead,<br/>
No second brother can be born for me.<br/>
Thus by the law of conscience I was led<br/>
To honor thee, dear brother, and was judged<br/>
By Creon guilty of a heinous crime.<br/>
And now he drags me like a criminal,<br/>
A bride unwed, amerced of marriage-song<br/>
And marriage-bed and joys of motherhood,<br/>
By friends deserted to a living grave.<br/>
What ordinance of heaven have I transgressed?<br/>
Hereafter can I look to any god<br/>
For succor, call on any man for help?<br/>
Alas, my piety is impious deemed.<br/>
Well, if such justice is approved of heaven,<br/>
I shall be taught by suffering my sin;<br/>
But if the sin is theirs, O may they suffer<br/>
No worse ills than the wrongs they do to me.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
The same ungovernable will<br/>
Drives like a gale the maiden still.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Therefore, my guards who let her stay<br/>
Shall smart full sore for their delay.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
ANTIGONE<br/>
Ah, woe is me! This word I hear<br/>
Brings death most near.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
I have no comfort. What he saith,<br/>
Portends no other thing than death.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
ANTIGONE<br/>
My fatherland, city of Thebes divine,<br/>
Ye gods of Thebes whence sprang my line,<br/>
Look, puissant lords of Thebes, on me;<br/>
The last of all your royal house ye see.<br/>
Martyred by men of sin, undone.<br/>
Such meed my piety hath won.<br/>
[Exit ANTIGONE]<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
(Str. 1)<br/>
Like to thee that maiden bright,<br/>
Danae, in her brass-bound tower,<br/>
Once exchanged the glad sunlight<br/>
For a cell, her bridal bower.<br/>
And yet she sprang of royal line,<br/>
My child, like thine,<br/>
And nursed the seed<br/>
By her conceived<br/>
Of Zeus descending in a golden shower.<br/>
Strange are the ways of Fate, her power<br/>
Nor wealth, nor arms withstand, nor tower;<br/>
Nor brass-prowed ships, that breast the sea<br/>
From Fate can flee.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
(Ant. 1)<br/>
Thus Dryas' child, the rash Edonian King,<br/>
For words of high disdain<br/>
Did Bacchus to a rocky dungeon bring,<br/>
To cool the madness of a fevered brain.<br/>
His frenzy passed,<br/>
He learnt at last<br/>
'Twas madness gibes against a god to fling.<br/>
For once he fain had quenched the Maenad's fire;<br/>
And of the tuneful Nine provoked the ire.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
(Str. 2)<br/>
By the Iron Rocks that guard the double main,<br/>
On Bosporus' lone strand,<br/>
Where stretcheth Salmydessus' plain<br/>
In the wild Thracian land,<br/>
There on his borders Ares witnessed<br/>
The vengeance by a jealous step-dame ta'en<br/>
The gore that trickled from a spindle red,<br/>
The sightless orbits of her step-sons twain.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
(Ant. 2)<br/>
Wasting away they mourned their piteous doom,<br/>
The blasted issue of their mother's womb.<br/>
But she her lineage could trace<br/>
To great Erecththeus' race;<br/>
Daughter of Boreas in her sire's vast caves<br/>
Reared, where the tempest raves,<br/>
Swift as his horses o'er the hills she sped;<br/>
A child of gods; yet she, my child, like thee,<br/>
By Destiny<br/>
That knows not death nor age—she too was vanquished.<br/>
[Enter TEIRESIAS and BOY]<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
Princes of Thebes, two wayfarers as one,<br/>
Having betwixt us eyes for one, we are here.<br/>
The blind man cannot move without a guide.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Why tidings, old Teiresias?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
I will tell thee;<br/>
And when thou hearest thou must heed the seer.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Thus far I ne'er have disobeyed thy rede.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
So hast thou steered the ship of State aright.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
I know it, and I gladly own my debt.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
Bethink thee that thou treadest once again<br/>
The razor edge of peril.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
What is this?<br/>
Thy words inspire a dread presentiment.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
The divination of my arts shall tell.<br/>
Sitting upon my throne of augury,<br/>
As is my wont, where every fowl of heaven<br/>
Find harborage, upon mine ears was borne<br/>
A jargon strange of twitterings, hoots, and screams;<br/>
So knew I that each bird at the other tare<br/>
With bloody talons, for the whirr of wings<br/>
Could signify naught else. Perturbed in soul,<br/>
I straight essayed the sacrifice by fire<br/>
On blazing altars, but the God of Fire<br/>
Came not in flame, and from the thigh bones dripped<br/>
And sputtered in the ashes a foul ooze;<br/>
Gall-bladders cracked and spurted up: the fat<br/>
Melted and fell and left the thigh bones bare.<br/>
Such are the signs, taught by this lad, I read—<br/>
As I guide others, so the boy guides me—<br/>
The frustrate signs of oracles grown dumb.<br/>
O King, thy willful temper ails the State,<br/>
For all our shrines and altars are profaned<br/>
By what has filled the maw of dogs and crows,<br/>
The flesh of Oedipus' unburied son.<br/>
Therefore the angry gods abominate<br/>
Our litanies and our burnt offerings;<br/>
Therefore no birds trill out a happy note,<br/>
Gorged with the carnival of human gore.<br/>
O ponder this, my son. To err is common<br/>
To all men, but the man who having erred<br/>
Hugs not his errors, but repents and seeks<br/>
The cure, is not a wastrel nor unwise.<br/>
No fool, the saw goes, like the obstinate fool.<br/>
Let death disarm thy vengeance. O forbear<br/>
To vex the dead. What glory wilt thou win<br/>
By slaying twice the slain? I mean thee well;<br/>
Counsel's most welcome if I promise gain.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Old man, ye all let fly at me your shafts<br/>
Like anchors at a target; yea, ye set<br/>
Your soothsayer on me. Peddlers are ye all<br/>
And I the merchandise ye buy and sell.<br/>
Go to, and make your profit where ye will,<br/>
Silver of Sardis change for gold of Ind;<br/>
Ye will not purchase this man's burial,<br/>
Not though the winged ministers of Zeus<br/>
Should bear him in their talons to his throne;<br/>
Not e'en in awe of prodigy so dire<br/>
Would I permit his burial, for I know<br/>
No human soilure can assail the gods;<br/>
This too I know, Teiresias, dire's the fall<br/>
Of craft and cunning when it tries to gloss<br/>
Foul treachery with fair words for filthy gain.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
Alas! doth any know and lay to heart—<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Is this the prelude to some hackneyed saw?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
How far good counsel is the best of goods?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
True, as unwisdom is the worst of ills.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
Thou art infected with that ill thyself.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
I will not bandy insults with thee, seer.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
And yet thou say'st my prophesies are frauds.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Prophets are all a money-getting tribe.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
And kings are all a lucre-loving race.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Dost know at whom thou glancest, me thy lord?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
Lord of the State and savior, thanks to me.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Skilled prophet art thou, but to wrong inclined.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
Take heed, thou wilt provoke me to reveal<br/>
The mystery deep hidden in my breast.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Say on, but see it be not said for gain.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
Such thou, methinks, till now hast judged my words.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Be sure thou wilt not traffic on my wits.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TEIRESIAS<br/>
Know then for sure, the coursers of the sun<br/>
Not many times shall run their race, before<br/>
Thou shalt have given the fruit of thine own loins<br/>
In quittance of thy murder, life for life;<br/>
For that thou hast entombed a living soul,<br/>
And sent below a denizen of earth,<br/>
And wronged the nether gods by leaving here<br/>
A corpse unlaved, unwept, unsepulchered.<br/>
Herein thou hast no part, nor e'en the gods<br/>
In heaven; and thou usurp'st a power not thine.<br/>
For this the avenging spirits of Heaven and Hell<br/>
Who dog the steps of sin are on thy trail:<br/>
What these have suffered thou shalt suffer too.<br/>
And now, consider whether bought by gold<br/>
I prophesy. For, yet a little while,<br/>
And sound of lamentation shall be heard,<br/>
Of men and women through thy desolate halls;<br/>
And all thy neighbor States are leagues to avenge<br/>
Their mangled warriors who have found a grave<br/>
I' the maw of wolf or hound, or winged bird<br/>
That flying homewards taints their city's air.<br/>
These are the shafts, that like a bowman I<br/>
Provoked to anger, loosen at thy breast,<br/>
Unerring, and their smart thou shalt not shun.<br/>
Boy, lead me home, that he may vent his spleen<br/>
On younger men, and learn to curb his tongue<br/>
With gentler manners than his present mood.<br/>
[Exit TEIRESIAS]<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
My liege, that man hath gone, foretelling woe.<br/>
And, O believe me, since these grizzled locks<br/>
Were like the raven, never have I known<br/>
The prophet's warning to the State to fail.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
I know it too, and it perplexes me.<br/>
To yield is grievous, but the obstinate soul<br/>
That fights with Fate, is smitten grievously.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Son of Menoeceus, list to good advice.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
What should I do. Advise me. I will heed.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Go, free the maiden from her rocky cell;<br/>
And for the unburied outlaw build a tomb.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Is that your counsel? You would have me yield?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Yea, king, this instant. Vengeance of the gods<br/>
Is swift to overtake the impenitent.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
Ah! what a wrench it is to sacrifice<br/>
My heart's resolve; but Fate is ill to fight.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Go, trust not others. Do it quick thyself.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
I go hot-foot. Bestir ye one and all,<br/>
My henchmen! Get ye axes! Speed away<br/>
To yonder eminence! I too will go,<br/>
For all my resolution this way sways.<br/>
'Twas I that bound, I too will set her free.<br/>
Almost I am persuaded it is best<br/>
To keep through life the law ordained of old.<br/>
[Exit CREON]<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
(Str. 1)<br/>
Thou by many names adored,<br/>
Child of Zeus the God of thunder,<br/>
Of a Theban bride the wonder,<br/>
Fair Italia's guardian lord;<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
In the deep-embosomed glades<br/>
Of the Eleusinian Queen<br/>
Haunt of revelers, men and maids,<br/>
Dionysus, thou art seen.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
Where Ismenus rolls his waters,<br/>
Where the Dragon's teeth were sown,<br/>
Where the Bacchanals thy daughters<br/>
Round thee roam,<br/>
There thy home;<br/>
Thebes, O Bacchus, is thine own.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
(Ant. 1)<br/>
Thee on the two-crested rock<br/>
Lurid-flaming torches see;<br/>
Where Corisian maidens flock,<br/>
Thee the springs of Castaly.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
By Nysa's bastion ivy-clad,<br/>
By shores with clustered vineyards glad,<br/>
There to thee the hymn rings out,<br/>
And through our streets we Thebans shout,<br/>
All hall to thee<br/>
Evoe, Evoe!<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
(Str. 2)<br/>
Oh, as thou lov'st this city best of all,<br/>
To thee, and to thy Mother levin-stricken,<br/>
In our dire need we call;<br/>
Thou see'st with what a plague our townsfolk sicken.<br/>
Thy ready help we crave,<br/>
Whether adown Parnassian heights descending,<br/>
Or o'er the roaring straits thy swift was wending,<br/>
Save us, O save!<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
(Ant. 2)<br/>
Brightest of all the orbs that breathe forth light,<br/>
Authentic son of Zeus, immortal king,<br/>
Leader of all the voices of the night,<br/>
Come, and thy train of Thyiads with thee bring,<br/>
Thy maddened rout<br/>
Who dance before thee all night long, and shout,<br/>
Thy handmaids we,<br/>
Evoe, Evoe!<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
[Enter MESSENGER]<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER<br/>
Attend all ye who dwell beside the halls<br/>
Of Cadmus and Amphion. No man's life<br/>
As of one tenor would I praise or blame,<br/>
For Fortune with a constant ebb and rise<br/>
Casts down and raises high and low alike,<br/>
And none can read a mortal's horoscope.<br/>
Take Creon; he, methought, if any man,<br/>
Was enviable. He had saved this land<br/>
Of Cadmus from our enemies and attained<br/>
A monarch's powers and ruled the state supreme,<br/>
While a right noble issue crowned his bliss.<br/>
Now all is gone and wasted, for a life<br/>
Without life's joys I count a living death.<br/>
You'll tell me he has ample store of wealth,<br/>
The pomp and circumstance of kings; but if<br/>
These give no pleasure, all the rest I count<br/>
The shadow of a shade, nor would I weigh<br/>
His wealth and power 'gainst a dram of joy.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
What fresh woes bring'st thou to the royal house?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER<br/>
Both dead, and they who live deserve to die.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Who is the slayer, who the victim? speak.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER<br/>
Haemon; his blood shed by no stranger hand.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
What mean ye? by his father's or his own?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER<br/>
His own; in anger for his father's crime.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
O prophet, what thou spakest comes to pass.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER<br/>
So stands the case; now 'tis for you to act.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Lo! from the palace gates I see approaching<br/>
Creon's unhappy wife, Eurydice.<br/>
Comes she by chance or learning her son's fate?<br/>
[Enter EURYDICE]<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
EURYDICE<br/>
Ye men of Thebes, I overheard your talk.<br/>
As I passed out to offer up my prayer<br/>
To Pallas, and was drawing back the bar<br/>
To open wide the door, upon my ears<br/>
There broke a wail that told of household woe<br/>
Stricken with terror in my handmaids' arms<br/>
I fell and fainted. But repeat your tale<br/>
To one not unacquaint with misery.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER<br/>
Dear mistress, I was there and will relate<br/>
The perfect truth, omitting not one word.<br/>
Why should we gloze and flatter, to be proved<br/>
Liars hereafter? Truth is ever best.<br/>
Well, in attendance on my liege, your lord,<br/>
I crossed the plain to its utmost margin, where<br/>
The corse of Polyneices, gnawn and mauled,<br/>
Was lying yet. We offered first a prayer<br/>
To Pluto and the goddess of cross-ways,<br/>
With contrite hearts, to deprecate their ire.<br/>
Then laved with lustral waves the mangled corse,<br/>
Laid it on fresh-lopped branches, lit a pyre,<br/>
And to his memory piled a mighty mound<br/>
Of mother earth. Then to the caverned rock,<br/>
The bridal chamber of the maid and Death,<br/>
We sped, about to enter. But a guard<br/>
Heard from that godless shrine a far shrill wail,<br/>
And ran back to our lord to tell the news.<br/>
But as he nearer drew a hollow sound<br/>
Of lamentation to the King was borne.<br/>
He groaned and uttered then this bitter plaint:<br/>
"Am I a prophet? miserable me!<br/>
Is this the saddest path I ever trod?<br/>
'Tis my son's voice that calls me. On press on,<br/>
My henchmen, haste with double speed to the tomb<br/>
Where rocks down-torn have made a gap, look in<br/>
And tell me if in truth I recognize<br/>
The voice of Haemon or am heaven-deceived."<br/>
So at the bidding of our distraught lord<br/>
We looked, and in the craven's vaulted gloom<br/>
I saw the maiden lying strangled there,<br/>
A noose of linen twined about her neck;<br/>
And hard beside her, clasping her cold form,<br/>
Her lover lay bewailing his dead bride<br/>
Death-wedded, and his father's cruelty.<br/>
When the King saw him, with a terrible groan<br/>
He moved towards him, crying, "O my son<br/>
What hast thou done? What ailed thee? What mischance<br/>
Has reft thee of thy reason? O come forth,<br/>
Come forth, my son; thy father supplicates."<br/>
But the son glared at him with tiger eyes,<br/>
Spat in his face, and then, without a word,<br/>
Drew his two-hilted sword and smote, but missed<br/>
His father flying backwards. Then the boy,<br/>
Wroth with himself, poor wretch, incontinent<br/>
Fell on his sword and drove it through his side<br/>
Home, but yet breathing clasped in his lax arms<br/>
The maid, her pallid cheek incarnadined<br/>
With his expiring gasps. So there they lay<br/>
Two corpses, one in death. His marriage rites<br/>
Are consummated in the halls of Death:<br/>
A witness that of ills whate'er befall<br/>
Mortals' unwisdom is the worst of all.<br/>
[Exit EURYDICE]<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
What makest thou of this? The Queen has gone<br/>
Without a word importing good or ill.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER<br/>
I marvel too, but entertain good hope.<br/>
'Tis that she shrinks in public to lament<br/>
Her son's sad ending, and in privacy<br/>
Would with her maidens mourn a private loss.<br/>
Trust me, she is discreet and will not err.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
I know not, but strained silence, so I deem,<br/>
Is no less ominous than excessive grief.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER<br/>
Well, let us to the house and solve our doubts,<br/>
Whether the tumult of her heart conceals<br/>
Some fell design. It may be thou art right:<br/>
Unnatural silence signifies no good.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Lo! the King himself appears.<br/>
Evidence he with him bears<br/>
'Gainst himself (ah me! I quake<br/>
'Gainst a king such charge to make)<br/>
But all must own,<br/>
The guilt is his and his alone.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
(Str. 1)<br/>
Woe for sin of minds perverse,<br/>
Deadly fraught with mortal curse.<br/>
Behold us slain and slayers, all akin.<br/>
Woe for my counsel dire, conceived in sin.<br/>
Alas, my son,<br/>
Life scarce begun,<br/>
Thou wast undone.<br/>
The fault was mine, mine only, O my son!<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Too late thou seemest to perceive the truth.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
(Str. 2)<br/>
By sorrow schooled. Heavy the hand of God,<br/>
Thorny and rough the paths my feet have trod,<br/>
Humbled my pride, my pleasure turned to pain;<br/>
Poor mortals, how we labor all in vain!<br/>
[Enter SECOND MESSENGER]<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
SECOND MESSENGER<br/>
Sorrows are thine, my lord, and more to come,<br/>
One lying at thy feet, another yet<br/>
More grievous waits thee, when thou comest home.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
What woe is lacking to my tale of woes?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
SECOND MESSENGER<br/>
Thy wife, the mother of thy dead son here,<br/>
Lies stricken by a fresh inflicted blow.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
(Ant. 1)<br/>
How bottomless the pit!<br/>
Does claim me too, O Death?<br/>
What is this word he saith,<br/>
This woeful messenger? Say, is it fit<br/>
To slay anew a man already slain?<br/>
Is Death at work again,<br/>
Stroke upon stroke, first son, then mother slain?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Look for thyself. She lies for all to view.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
(Ant. 2)<br/>
Alas! another added woe I see.<br/>
What more remains to crown my agony?<br/>
A minute past I clasped a lifeless son,<br/>
And now another victim Death hath won.<br/>
Unhappy mother, most unhappy son!<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
SECOND MESSENGER<br/>
Beside the altar on a keen-edged sword<br/>
She fell and closed her eyes in night, but erst<br/>
She mourned for Megareus who nobly died<br/>
Long since, then for her son; with her last breath<br/>
She cursed thee, the slayer of her child.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
(Str. 3)<br/>
I shudder with affright<br/>
O for a two-edged sword to slay outright<br/>
A wretch like me,<br/>
Made one with misery.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
SECOND MESSENGER<br/>
'Tis true that thou wert charged by the dead Queen<br/>
As author of both deaths, hers and her son's.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
In what wise was her self-destruction wrought?<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
SECOND MESSENGER<br/>
Hearing the loud lament above her son<br/>
With her own hand she stabbed herself to the heart.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
(Str. 4)<br/>
I am the guilty cause. I did the deed,<br/>
Thy murderer. Yea, I guilty plead.<br/>
My henchmen, lead me hence, away, away,<br/>
A cipher, less than nothing; no delay!<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Well said, if in disaster aught is well<br/>
His past endure demand the speediest cure.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
(Ant. 3)<br/>
Come, Fate, a friend at need,<br/>
Come with all speed!<br/>
Come, my best friend,<br/>
And speed my end!<br/>
Away, away!<br/>
Let me not look upon another day!<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
This for the morrow; to us are present needs<br/>
That they whom it concerns must take in hand.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
I join your prayer that echoes my desire.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
O pray not, prayers are idle; from the doom<br/>
Of fate for mortals refuge is there none.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CREON<br/>
(Ant. 4)<br/>
Away with me, a worthless wretch who slew<br/>
Unwitting thee, my son, thy mother too.<br/>
Whither to turn I know now; every way<br/>
Leads but astray,<br/>
And on my head I feel the heavy weight<br/>
Of crushing Fate.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS<br/>
Of happiness the chiefest part<br/>
Is a wise heart:<br/>
And to defraud the gods in aught<br/>
With peril's fraught.<br/>
Swelling words of high-flown might<br/>
Mightily the gods do smite.<br/>
Chastisement for errors past<br/>
Wisdom brings to age at last.<br/></p>
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