<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>Zeus, lord and king! to death and nought<br/>
Our countless host by thee is brought.<br/>
Deep in the gloom of death, to-day,<br/>
Lie Susa and Ecbatana:<br/>
How many a maid in sorrow stands<br/>
And rends her tire with tender hands!<br/>
How tears run down, in common pain<br/>
And woeful mourning for the slain!<br/>
O delicate in dole and grief,<br/>
Ye Persian women! past relief<br/>
Is now your sorrow! to the war<br/>
Your loved ones went and come no more!<br/>
Gone from you is your joy and pride—<br/>
Severed the bridegroom from the bride—<br/>
The wedded couch luxurious<br/>
Is widowed now, and all the house<br/>
Pines ever with insatiate sighs,<br/>
And we stand here and bid arise,<br/>
For those who forth in ardour went<br/>
And come not back, the loud lament!<br/>
<br/>
Land of the East, thou mournest for the host,<br/>
Bereft of all thy sons, alas the day!<br/>
For them whom Xerxes led hath Xerxes lost—<br/>
Xerxes who wrecked the fleet, and flung our hopes away!<br/>
<br/>
How came it that Darius once controlled,<br/>
And without scathe, the army of the bow,<br/>
Loved by the folk of Susa, wise and bold?<br/>
Now is the land-force lost, the shipmen sunk below!<br/>
<br/>
Ah for the ships that bore them, woe is me!<br/>
Bore them to death and doom! the crashing prows<br/>
Of fierce Ionian oarsmen swept the sea,<br/>
And death was in their wake, and shipwreck murderous!<br/>
<br/>
Late, late and hardly—if true tales they tell—<br/>
Did Xerxes flee along the wintry way<br/>
And snows of Thrace—but ah, the first who fell<br/>
Lie by the rocks or float upon Cychrea’s bay!<br/>
<br/>
Mourn, each and all! waft heavenward your cry,<br/>
Stung to the soul, bereaved, disconsolate!<br/>
Wail out your anguish, till it pierce the sky,<br/>
In shrieks of deep despair, ill-omened, desperate!<br/>
<br/>
The dead are drifting, yea, are gnawed upon<br/>
By voiceless children of the stainless sea,<br/>
Or battered by the surge! we mourn and groan<br/>
For husbands gone to death, for childless agony!<br/>
<br/>
Alas the aged men, who mourn to-day<br/>
The ruinous sorrows that the gods ordain!<br/>
O’er the wide Asian land, the Persian sway<br/>
Can force no tribute now, and can no rule sustain.<br/>
<br/>
Yea, men will crouch no more to fallen power<br/>
And kingship overthrown! the whole land o’er,<br/>
Men speak the thing they will, and from this hour<br/>
The folk whom Xerxes ruled obey his word no more.<br/>
<br/>
The yoke of force is broken from the neck—<br/>
The isle of Ajax and th’ encircling wave<br/>
Reek with a bloody crop of death and wreck<br/>
Of Persia’s fallen power, that none can lift nor save!</p>
<p class="scenedesc"> Re-enter <span class="charname">ATOSSA,</span> in
mourning robes.</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
Friends, whosoe’er is versed in human ills,<br/>
Knoweth right well that when a wave of woe<br/>
Comes on a man, he sees in all things fear;<br/>
While, in flood-tide of fortune, ’tis his mood<br/>
To take that fortune as unchangeable,<br/>
Wafting him ever forward. Mark me now—<br/>
The gods’ thwart purpose doth confront mine eyes,<br/>
And all is terror to me; in mine ears<br/>
There sounds a cry, but not of triumph now—<br/>
So am I scared at heart by woe so great.<br/>
Therefore I wend forth from the house anew,<br/>
Borne in no car of state, nor robed in pride<br/>
As heretofore, but bringing, for the sire<br/>
Who did beget my son, libations meet<br/>
For holy rites that shall appease the dead—<br/>
The sweet white milk, drawn from a spotless cow,<br/>
The oozing drop of golden honey, culled<br/>
By the flower-haunting bee, and therewithal<br/>
Pure draughts of water from a virgin spring;<br/>
And lo! besides, the stainless effluence,<br/>
Born of the wild vine’s bosom, shining store<br/>
Treasured to age, this bright and luscious wine.<br/>
And eke the fragrant fruit upon the bough<br/>
Of the grey olive-tree, which lives its life<br/>
In sprouting leafage, and the twining flowers,<br/>
Bright children of the earth’s fertility.<br/>
But you, O friends! above these offerings poured<br/>
To reconcile the dead, ring out your dirge<br/>
To summon up Darius from the shades,<br/>
Himself a shade; and I will pour these draughts,<br/>
Which earth shall drink, unto the gods of hell.</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Queen, by the Persian land adored,<br/>
By thee be this libation poured,<br/>
Passing to those who hold command<br/>
Of dead men in the spirit-land!<br/>
And we will sue, in solemn chant,<br/>
That gods who do escort the dead<br/>
In nether realms, our prayer may grant—<br/>
Back to us be Darius led!<br/>
<br/>
O Earth, and Hermes, and the king<br/>
Of Hades, our Darius bring!<br/>
For if, beyond the prayers we prayed,<br/>
He knoweth aught of help or aid,<br/>
He, he alone, in realms below,<br/>
Can speak the limit of our woe!<br/>
<br/>
Doth he hear me, the king we adored, who is god among gods of the dead?<br/>
Doth he hear me send out in my sorrow the pitiful, manifold cry,<br/>
The sobbing lament and appeal? is the voice of my suffering sped<br/>
To the realm of the shades? doth he hear me and pity my sorrowful sigh?<br/>
O Earth, and ye Lords of the dead! release ye that spirit of might,<br/>
Who in Susa the palace was born! let him rise up once more to the light!<br/>
<br/>
There is none like him, none of all<br/>
That e’er were laid in Persian sepulchres!<br/>
Borne forth he was to honoured burial,<br/>
A royal heart! and followed by our tears.<br/>
God of the dead, O give him back to us,<br/>
Darius, ruler glorious!<br/>
He never wasted us with reckless war—<br/>
God, counsellor, and king, beneath a happy star!<br/>
Ancient of days and king, awake and come—<br/>
Rise o’er the mounded tomb!<br/>
Rise, plant thy foot, with saffron sandal shod<br/>
Father to us, and god!<br/>
Rise with thy diadem, O sire benign,<br/>
Upon thy brow!<br/>
List to the strange new sorrows of thy line,<br/>
Sire of a woeful son!<br/>
<br/>
A mist of fate and hell is round us now,<br/>
And all the city’s flower to death is done!<br/>
Alas, we wept thee once, and weep again!<br/>
O Lord of lords, by recklessness twofold<br/>
The land is wasted of its men,<br/>
And down to death are rolled<br/>
Wreckage of sail and oar,<br/>
Ships that are ships no more,<br/>
And bodies of the slain!</p>
<p class="scenedesc"> The <span class="charname">GHOST OF DARIUS</span> rises.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Ye aged Persians, truest of the true,<br/>
Coevals of the youth that once was mine,<br/>
What troubleth now our city? harken, how<br/>
It moans and beats the breast and rends the plain!<br/>
And I, beholding how my consort stood<br/>
Beside my tomb, was moved with awe, and took<br/>
The gift of her libation graciously.<br/>
But ye are weeping by my sepulchre,<br/>
And, shrilling forth a sad, evoking cry,<br/>
Summon me mournfully, <i>Arise, arise</i>.<br/>
No light thing is it, to come back from death,<br/>
For, in good sooth, the gods of nether gloom<br/>
Are quick to seize but late and loth to free!<br/>
Yet among them I dwell as one in power—<br/>
And lo, I come! now speak, and speed your words,<br/>
Lest I be blamed for tarrying overlong!<br/>
What new disaster broods o’er Persia’s realm?</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
With awe on thee I gaze,<br/>
And, standing face to face,<br/>
I tremble as I did in olden days!</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Nay, but as I rose to earth again, obedient to your call,<br/>
Prithee, tarry not in parley! be one word enough for all—<br/>
Speak and gaze on me unshrinking, neither let my face appal!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
I tremble to reveal,<br/>
Yet tremble to conceal<br/>
Things hard for friends to feel!</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Nay, but if the old-time terror on your spirit keeps its hold,<br/>
Speak thou, O royal lady who didst couch with me of old!<br/>
Stay thy weeping and lamenting and to me reveal the truth—<br/>
Speak! for man is born to sorrow; yea, the proverb sayeth sooth!<br/>
’Tis the doom of mortal beings, if they live to see old age,<br/>
To suffer bale, by land and sea, through war and tempest’s rage.</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
O thou whose blissful fate on earth all mortal weal excelled—<br/>
Who, while the sunlight touched thine eyes, the lord of all wert held!<br/>
A god to Persian men thou wert, in bliss and pride and fame—<br/>
I hold thee blest too in thy death, or e’er the ruin came!<br/>
Alas, Darius! one brief word must tell thee all the tale—<br/>
The Persian power is in the dust, gone down in blood and bale!</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Speak—by what chance? did man rebel, or pestilence descend?</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
Neither! by Athens’ fatal shores our army met its end.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Which of my children led our host to Athens? speak and say.</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
The froward Xerxes, leaving all our realm to disarray.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Was it with army or with fleet on folly’s quest he went?</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
With both alike, a twofold front of double armament.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
And how then did so large a host on foot pass o’er the sea?</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
He bridged the ford of Helle’s strait by artful carpentry.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
How? could his craft avail to span the torrent of that tide?</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
’Tis sooth I say—some unknown power did fatal help provide!</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Alas, that power in malice came, to his bewilderment!</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
Alas, we see the end of all, the ruin on us sent.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Speak, tell me how they fared therein, that thus ye mourn and weep?</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
Disaster to the army came, through ruin on the deep!</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Is all undone? hath all the folk gone down before the foe?</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
Yea, hark to Susa’s mourning cry for warriors laid low!</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Alas for all our gallant aids, our Persia’s help and pride!</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
Ay! old with young, the Bactrian force hath perished at our side!</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Alas, my son! what gallant youths hath he sent down to death!</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
Alone, or with a scanty guard—for so the rumour saith—</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
He came—but how, and to what end? doth aught of hope remain?</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
With joy he reached the bridge that spanned the Hellespontine main.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
How? is he safe, in Persian land? speak soothly, yea or nay!</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
Clear and more clear the rumour comes, for no man to gainsay.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Woe for the oracle fulfilled, the presage of the war<br/>
Launched on my son, by will of Zeus! I deemed our doom afar<br/>
In lap of time; but, if a king push forward to his fate,<br/>
The god himself allures to death that man infatuate!<br/>
So now the very fount of woe streams out on those I loved,<br/>
And mine own son, unwisely bold, the truth hereof hath proved!<br/>
He sought to shackle and control the Hellespontine wave,<br/>
That rushes from the Bosphorus, with fetters of a slave!—<br/>
To curb and bridge, with welded links, the streaming water-way,<br/>
And guide across the passage broad his manifold array!<br/>
Ah, folly void of counsel! he deemed that mortal wight<br/>
Could thwart the will of Heaven itself and curb Poseidon’s might!<br/>
Was it not madness? much I fear lest all my wealth and store<br/>
Pass from my treasure-house, to be the snatcher’s prize once more!</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
Such is the lesson, ah, too late! to eager Xerxes taught—<br/>
Trusting random counsellors and hare-brained men of nought,<br/>
Who said <i>Darius mighty wealth and fame to us did bring,<br/>
But thou art nought, a blunted spear, a palace-keeping king!</i><br/>
Unto those sorry counsellors a ready ear he lent,<br/>
And led away to Hellas’ shore his fated armament.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Therefore through them hath come calamity<br/>
Most huge and past forgetting; nor of old<br/>
Did ever such extermination fall<br/>
Upon the city Susa. Long ago<br/>
Zeus in his power this privilege bestowed,<br/>
That with a guiding sceptre one sole man<br/>
Should rule this Asian land of flock and herd.<br/>
Over the folk a Mede, Astyages,<br/>
Did grasp the power: then Cyaxares ruled<br/>
In his sire’s place, and held the sway aright,<br/>
Steering his state with watchful wariness.<br/>
Third in succession, Cyrus, blest of Heaven,<br/>
Held rule and ’stablished peace for all his clan:<br/>
Lydian and Phrygian won he to his sway,<br/>
And wide Ionia to his yoke constrained,<br/>
For the god favoured his discretion sage.<br/>
Fourth in the dynasty was Cyrus’ son,<br/>
And fifth was Mardus, scandal of his land<br/>
And ancient lineage. Him Artaphrenes,<br/>
Hardy of heart, within his palace slew,<br/>
Aided by loyal plotters, set for this.<br/>
And I too gained the lot for which I craved,<br/>
And oftentimes led out a goodly host,<br/>
Yet never brought disaster such as this<br/>
Upon the city. But my son is young<br/>
And reckless in his youth, and heedeth not<br/>
The warnings of my mouth. Mark this, my friends,<br/>
Born with my birth, coeval with mine age—<br/>
Not all we kings who held successive rule<br/>
Have wrought, combined, such ruin as my son!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
How then, O King Darius? whitherward<br/>
Dost thou direct thy warning? from this plight<br/>
How can we Persians fare towards hope again?</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
By nevermore assailing Grecian lands,<br/>
Even tho’ our Median force be double theirs—<br/>
For the land’s self protects its denizens.</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
How meanest thou? by what defensive power?</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
She wastes by famine a too countless foe.</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
But we will bring a host more skilled than huge.</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Why, e’en that army, camped in Hellas still,<br/>
Shall never win again to home and weal!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
How say’st thou? will not all the Asian host<br/>
Pass back from Europe over Helle’s ford?</p>
<p class="noindent">GHOST OF DARIUS.<br/>
Nay—scarce a tithe of all those myriads,<br/>
If man may trust the oracles of Heaven<br/>
When he beholds the things already wrought,<br/>
Not false with true, but true with no word false<br/>
If what I trow be truth, my son has left<br/>
A chosen rear-guard of our host, in whom<br/>
He trusts, now, with a random confidence!<br/>
They tarry where Asopus laves the ground<br/>
With rills that softly bless Boeotia’s plain—<br/>
There is it fated for them to endure<br/>
The very crown of misery and doom,<br/>
Requital for their god-forgetting pride!<br/>
For why? they raided Hellas, had the heart<br/>
To wrong the images of holy gods,<br/>
And give the shrines and temples to the flame!<br/>
Defaced and dashed from sight the altars fell,<br/>
And each god’s image, from its pedestal<br/>
Thrust and flung down, in dim confusion lies!<br/>
Therefore, for outrage vile, a doom as dark<br/>
They suffer, and yet more shall undergo—<br/>
They touch no bottom in the swamp of doom,<br/>
But round them rises, bubbling up, the ooze!<br/>
So deep shall lie the gory clotted mass<br/>
Of corpses by the Dorian spear transfixed<br/>
Upon Plataea’s field! yea, piles of slain<br/>
To the third generation shall attest<br/>
By silent eloquence to those that see—<br/>
<i>Let not a mortal vaunt him overmuch</i>.<br/>
For pride grows rankly, and to ripeness brings<br/>
The curse of fate, and reaps, for harvest, tears!<br/>
Therefore when ye behold, for deeds like these,<br/>
Such stern requital paid, remember then<br/>
Athens and Hellas. Let no mortal wight,<br/>
Holding too lightly of his present weal<br/>
And passionate for more, cast down and spill<br/>
The mighty cup of his prosperity!<br/>
Doubt not that over-proud and haughty souls<br/>
Zeus lours in wrath, exacting the account.<br/>
Therefore, with wary warning, school my son,<br/>
Though he be lessoned by the gods already,<br/>
To curb the vaunting that affronts high Heaven!<br/>
And thou, O venerable Mother-queen,<br/>
Beloved of Xerxes, to the palace pass<br/>
And take therefrom such raiment as befits<br/>
Thy son, and go to meet him: for his garb<br/>
In this extremity of grief hangs rent<br/>
Around his body, woefully unstitched,<br/>
Mere tattered fragments of once royal robes!<br/>
Go thou to him, speak soft and soothing words—<br/>
Thee, and none other, will he bear to hear,<br/>
As well I know. But I must pass away<br/>
From earth above, unto the nether gloom;<br/>
Therefore, old men, take my farewell, and clasp,<br/>
Even amid the ruin of this time,<br/>
Unto your souls the pleasure of the day,<br/>
For dead men have no profit of their gold!</p>
<p class="right"> [<i>The <span class="charname">GHOST OF DARIUS</span> sinks.</i>]</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas, I thrill with pain for Persia’s woes—<br/>
Many fulfilled, and others hard at hand!</p>
<p class="noindent">ATOSSA.<br/>
O spirit of the race, what sorrows crowd<br/>
Upon me! and this anguish stings me worst,<br/>
That round my royal son’s dishonoured form<br/>
Hang rags and tatters, degradation deep!<br/>
I will away, and, bringing from within<br/>
A seemly royal robe, will straightway strive<br/>
To meet and greet my son: foul scorn it were<br/>
To leave our dearest in his hour of shame.</p>
<p class="right"> [<i>Exit <span class="charname">ATOSSA</span>.</i>]</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Ah glorious and goodly they were, the life and the lot that we gained,<br/>
The cities we held in our hand when the monarch invincible reigned,<br/>
The king that was good to his realm, sufficing, fulfilled of his sway,<br/>
A lord that was peer of the gods, the pride of the bygone day!<br/>
Then could we show to the skies great hosts and a glorious name,<br/>
And laws that were stable in might; as towers they guarded our fame!<br/>
There without woe or disaster we came from the foe and the fight,<br/>
In triumph, enriched with the spoil, to the land and the city’s delight.<br/>
What towns ere the Halys he passed! what towns ere he came to the West,<br/>
To the main and the isles of the Strymon, and the Thracian region possess’d!<br/>
And those that stand back from the main, enringed by their fortified wall,<br/>
Gave o’er to Darius, the king, the sceptre and sway over all!<br/>
Those too by the channel of Helle, where southward it broadens and glides,<br/>
By the inlets, Propontis! of thee, and the strait of the Pontic tides,<br/>
And the isles that lie fronting our sea-board, and the Eastland looks on each one,<br/>
Lesbo and Chios and Paros, and Samos with olive-trees grown,<br/>
And Naxos, and Myconos’ rock, and Tenos with Andros hard by,<br/>
And isles that in midmost Aegean, aloof from the continent, lie—<br/>
And Lemnos and Icaros’ hold—all these to his sceptre were bowed,<br/>
And Cnidos and neighbouring Rhodes, and Soli, and Paphos the proud,<br/>
And Cyprian Salamis, name-child of her who hath wrought us this wrong!<br/>
Yea, and all the Ionian tract, where the Greek-born inhabitants throng,<br/>
And the cities are teeming with gold—Darius was lord of them all,<br/>
And, great by his wisdom, he ruled, and ever there came to his call,<br/>
In stalwart array and unfailing, the warrior chiefs of our land,<br/>
And mingled allies from the tribes who bowed to his conquering hand!<br/>
But now there are none to gainsay that the gods are against us; we lie<br/>
Subdued in the havoc of wreck, and whelmed by the wrath of the sky!</p>
<p class="scenedesc"> Enter <span class="charname">XERXES</span> in disarray.</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Alas the day, that I should fall<br/>
Into this grimmest fate of all,<br/>
This ruin doubly unforeseen!<br/>
On Persia’s land what power of Fate<br/>
Descends, what louring gloom of hate?<br/>
How shall I bear my teen?<br/>
My limbs are loosened where they stand,<br/>
When I behold this aged band—<br/>
Oh God! I would that I too, I,<br/>
Among the men who went to die,<br/>
Were whelmed in earth by Fate’s command!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Ah welladay, my King! ah woe<br/>
For all our heroes’ overthrow—<br/>
For all the gallant host’s array,<br/>
For Persia’s honour, pass’d away,<br/>
For glory and heroic sway<br/>
Mown down by Fortune’s hand to-day!<br/>
Hark, how the kingdom makes its moan,<br/>
For youthful valour lost and gone,<br/>
By Xerxes shattered and undone!<br/>
He, he hath crammed the maw of hell<br/>
With bowmen brave, who nobly fell,<br/>
Their country’s mighty armament,<br/>
Ten thousand heroes deathward sent!<br/>
Alas, for all the valiant band,<br/>
O king and lord! thine Asian land<br/>
Down, down upon its knee is bent!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Alas, a lamentable sound,<br/>
A cry of ruth! for I am found<br/>
A curse to land and lineage,<br/>
With none my sorrow to assuage!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas, a death-song desolate<br/>
I send forth, for thy home-coming!<br/>
A scream, a dirge for woe and fate,<br/>
Such as the Asian mourners sing,<br/>
A sorry and ill-omened tale<br/>
Of tears and shrieks and Eastern wail!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Ay, launch the woeful sorrow’s cry,<br/>
The harsh, discordant melody,<br/>
For lo, the power, we held for sure,<br/>
Hath turned to my discomfiture!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Yea, dirges, dirges manifold<br/>
Will I send forth, for warriors bold,<br/>
For the sea-sorrow of our host!<br/>
The city mourns, and I must wail<br/>
With plashing tears our sorrow’s tale,<br/>
Lamenting for the loved and lost!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Alas, the god of war, who sways<br/>
The scales of fight in diverse ways,<br/>
Gives glory to Ionia!<br/>
Ionian ships, in fenced array,<br/>
Have reaped their harvest in the bay,<br/>
A darkling harvest-field of Fate,<br/>
A sea, a shore, of doom and hate!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Cry out, and learn the tale of woe!<br/>
Where are thy comrades? where the band<br/>
Who stood beside thee, hand in hand,<br/>
A little while ago?<br/>
Where now hath Pharandákes gone,<br/>
Where Psammis, and where Pelagon?<br/>
Where now is brave Agdabatas,<br/>
And Susas too, and Datamas?<br/>
Hath Susiscanes past away,<br/>
The chieftain of Ecbatana?</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
I left them, mangled castaways,<br/>
Flung from their Tyrian deck, and tossed<br/>
On Salaminian water-ways,<br/>
From surging tides to rocky coast!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alack, and is Pharnuchus slain,<br/>
And Ariomardus, brave in vain?<br/>
Where is Seualces’ heart of fire?<br/>
Lilaeus, child of noble sire?<br/>
Are Tharubis and Memphis sped?<br/>
Hystaechmas, Artembáres dead?<br/>
And where is brave Masistes, where?<br/>
Sum up death’s count, that I may hear!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Alas, alas, they came, their eyes surveyed<br/>
Ancestral Athens on that fatal day.<br/>
Then with a rending struggle were they laid<br/>
Upon the land, and gasped their life away!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
And Batanochus’ child, Alpistus great,<br/>
Surnamed the Eye of State—<br/>
Saw you and left you him who once of old<br/>
Ten thousand thousand fighting-men enrolled?<br/>
His sire was child of Sesamas, and he<br/>
From Megabates sprang. Ah, woe is me,<br/>
Thou king of evil fate!<br/>
Hast thou lost Parthus, lost Oebares great?<br/>
Alas, the sorrow! blow succeedeth blow<br/>
On Persia’s pride; thou tellest woe on woe!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Bitter indeed the pang for comrades slain,<br/>
The brave and bold! thou strikest to my soul<br/>
Pain, pain beyond forgetting, hateful pain.<br/>
My inner spirit sobs and sighs with dole!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Another yet we yearn to see,<br/>
And see not! ah, thy chivalry,<br/>
Xanthis, thou chief of Mardian men<br/>
Countless! and thou, Anchares bright,<br/>
And ye, whose cars controlled the fight,<br/>
Arsaces and Diaixis wight,<br/>
Kegdadatas, Lythimnas dear,<br/>
And Tolmus, greedy of the spear!<br/>
I stand bereft! not in thy train<br/>
Come they, as erst! ah, ne’er again<br/>
Shall they return unto our eyes,<br/>
Car-borne, ’neath silken canopies!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Yea, gone are they who mustered once the host!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Yea, yea, forgotten, lost!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Alas, the woe and cost!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas, ye heavenly powers!<br/>
Ye wrought a sorrow past belief,<br/>
A woe, of woes the chief!<br/>
With aspect stern, upon us Ate looms!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Smitten are we—time tells no heavier blow!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Smitten! the doom is plain!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Curse upon curse and pang on pang we know!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
With the Ionian power<br/>
We clashed, in evil hour!<br/>
Woe falls on Persia’s race, yea, woe again, again!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Yea, smitten am I, and my host is all to ruin hurled!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Yea verily—in mighty wreck hath sunk the Persian world!</p>
<p class="noindent">
XERXES (<i>holding up a torn robe and a quiver</i>)
See you this tattered rag of pride?</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
I see it, welladay!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
See you this quiver?</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Say, hath aught survived and ’scaped the fray?</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
A store for darts it was, erewhile!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Remain but two or three!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
No aid is left!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Ionian folk such darts, unfearing, see!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Right resolute they are! I saw disaster unforeseen.</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Ah, speakest thou of wreck, of flight, of carnage that hath been?</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Yea, and my royal robe I rent, in terror at their fall!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas, alas!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Yea, thrice alas!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
For all have perished, all!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Ah woe to us, ah joy to them who stood against our pride!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
And all our strength is minished and sundered from our side!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
No escort have I!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Nay, thy friends are whelmed beneath the tide!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Wail, wail the miserable doom, and to the palace hie!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas, alas, and woe again!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Shriek, smite the breast, as I!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
An evil gift, a sad exchange, of tears poured out in vain!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Shrill out your simultaneous wail!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas the woe and pain!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
O, bitter is this adverse fate!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
I voice the moan with thee!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Smite, smite thy bosom, groan aloud for my calamity!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
I mourn and am dissolved in tears!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Cry, beat thy breast amain!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
O king, my heart is in thy woe!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Shriek, wail, and shriek again!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
O agony!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
A blackening blow—</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
A grievous stripe shall fall!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Yea, beat anew thy breast, ring out the doleful Mysian call!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
An agony, an agony!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Pluck out thy whitening beard!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
By handfuls, ay, by handfuls, with dismal tear-drops smeared!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Sob out thine aching sorrow!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
I will thine best obey.</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
With thine hands rend thy mantle’s fold—</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas, woe worth the day!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
With thine own fingers tear thy locks, bewail the army’s weird!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
By handfuls, yea, by handfuls, with tears of dole besmeared!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Now let thine eyes find overflow—</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
I wend in wail and pain!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Cry out for me an answering moan—</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas, alas again!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Shriek with a cry of agony, and lead the doleful train!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas, alas, the Persian land is woeful now to tread!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Cry out and mourn! the city now doth wail above the dead!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
I sob and moan!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
I bid ye now be delicate in grief!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Alas, the Persian land is sad and knoweth not relief!</p>
<p class="noindent">XERXES.<br/>
Alas, the triple banks of oars and those who died thereby!</p>
<p class="noindent">CHORUS.<br/>
Pass! I will lead you, bring you home, with many a broken sigh!</p>
<p class="right"> [<i>Exeunt.</i>]</p>
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