THE SUPPLIANT MAIDENS
DRAMATIS PERSONAEDANAUS.THE KING OF ARGOS.HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Chorus of the Daughters of Danaus.Attendants.Scene.—A sacred precinct near the gates of Argos: statue and shrines of Zeus and other deities stand around.CHORUS.Zeus! Lord and guard of suppliant hands!Look down benign on us who craveThine aid—whom winds and waters draveFrom where, through drifting shifting sands,Pours Nilus to the wave.From where the green land, god-possest,Closes and fronts the Syrian waste,We flee as exiles, yet unbannedBy murder’s sentence from our land;But—since Aegyptus had decreedHis sons should wed his brother’s seed,—Ourselves we tore from bonds abhorred,From wedlock not of heart but hand,Nor brooked to call a kinsman lord!And Danaus, our sire and guide,The king of counsel, pond’ring wellThe dice of fortune as they fell,Out of two griefs the kindlier chose,And bade us fly, with him beside,Heedless what winds or waves arose,And o’er the wide sea waters haste,Until to Argos’ shore at lastOur wandering pinnace came—Argos, the immemorial homeOf her from whom we boast to come—Io, the ox-horned maiden, whom,After long wandering, woe, and scathe,Zeus with a touch, a mystic breath,Made mother of our name.Therefore, of all the lands of earth,On this most gladly step we forth,And in our hands aloft we bear—Sole weapon for a suppliant’s wear—The olive-shoot, with wool enwound!City, and land, and waters wanOf Inachus, and gods most high,And ye who, deep beneath the ground,Bring vengeance weird on mortal man,Powers of the grave, on you we cry!And unto Zeus the Saviour, guardOf mortals’ holy purity!Receive ye us—keep watch and wardAbove the suppliant maiden band!Chaste be the heart of this your landTowards the weak! but, ere the throng,The wanton swarm, from Egypt sprung,Leap forth upon the silted shore,Thrust back their swift-rowed bark again,Repel them, urge them to the main!And there, ’mid storm and lightning’s shine,And scudding drift and thunder’s roar,Deep death be theirs, in stormy brine!Before they foully grasp and winUs, maiden-children of their kin,And climb the couch by law denied,And wrong each weak reluctant bride.And now on her I call,Mine ancestress, who far on Egypt’s shoreA young cow’s semblance wore,—A maiden once, by Hera’s malice changed!And then on him withal,Who, as amid the flowers the grazing creature ranged,Was in her by a breath of Zeus conceived;And, as the hour of birth drew nigh,By fate fulfilled, unto the light he came;And Epaphus for name,Born from the touch of Zeus, the child received.On him, on him I cry,And him for patron hold—While in this grassy vale I stand,Where Io roamed of old!And here, recounting all her toil and pain,Signs will I show to those who rule the landThat I am child of hers; and all shall understand,Hearing the doubtful tale of the dim past made plain.And, ere the end shall be,Each man the truth of what I tell shall see.And if there dwell hard byOne skilled to read from bird-notes augury,That man, when through his ears shall thrill our tearful wail,Shall deem he hears the voice, the plaintive taleOf her, the piteous spouse of Tereus, lord of guile—Whom the hawk harries yet, the mourning nightingale.She, from her happy home and fair streams scared away,Wails wild and sad for haunts beloved erewhile.Yea, and for Itylus—ah, well-a-day!Slain by her own, his mother’s hand,Maddened by lustful wrong, the deed by Tereus planned.Like her I wail and wail, in soft Ionian tones,And as she wastes, even soWastes my soft cheek, once ripe with Nilus’ sunsAnd all my heart dissolves in utter woeSad flowers of grief I cull,Fleeing from kinsmen’s love unmerciful—Yea, from the clutching hands, the wanton crowd,I sped across the waves, from Egypt’s land of cloud[1]Gods of the ancient cradle of my race,Hear me, just gods! With righteous graceOn me, on me look down!Grant not to youth its heart’s unchaste desire,But, swiftly spurning lust’s unholy fire,Bless only love and willing wedlock’s crownThe war-worn fliers from the battle’s wrackFind refuge at the hallowed altar-side,The sanctuary divine,—Ye gods! such refuge unto me provide—Such sanctuary be mine!Though the deep will of Zeus be hard to track,Yet doth it flame and glance,A beacon in the dark, ’mid clouds of chanceThat wrap mankindYea, though the counsel fall, undone it shall not be,Whate’er be shaped and fixed within Zeus’ ruling mind—Dark as a solemn grove, with sombre leafage shaded,His paths of purpose wind,A marvel to man’s eyeSmitten by him, from towering hopes degraded,Mortals lie low and stillTireless and effortless, works forth its willThe arm divine!God from His holy seat, in calm of unarmed power,Brings forth the deed, at its appointed hour!Let Him look down on mortal wantonness!Lo! how the youthful stock of Belus’ lineCraves for me, uncontrolled—With greed and madness bold—Urged on by passion’s sunless stress—And, cheated, learns too late the prey has ’scaped their hold!Ah, listen, listen to my grievous tale,My sorrow’s words, my shrill and tearful cries!Ah woe, ah woe!Loud with lament the accents use,And from my living lips my own sad dirges flow!O Apian land of hill and dale,Thou kennest yet, O land, this faltered foreign wail—Have mercy, hear my prayer!Lo, how again, again, I rend and tearMy woven raiment, and from off my hairCast the Sidonian veil!Ah, but if fortune smile, if death be driven away,Vowed rites, with eager haste, we to the gods will pay!Alas, alas again!O wither drift the waves? and who shall loose the pain?O Apian land of hill and dale,Thou kennest yet, O land, this faltered foreign wail!Have mercy, hear my prayer!Lo, how again, again, I rend and tearMy woven raiment, and from off my hairCast the Sidonian veil!The wafting oar, the bark with woven sail,From which the sea foamed back,Sped me, unharmed of storms, along the breeze’s track—Be it unblamed of me!But ah, the end, the end of my emprise!May He, the Father, with all-seeing eyes,Grant me that end to see!Grant that henceforth unstained as heretoforeI may escape the forced embraceOf those proud children of the raceThat sacred Io bore.And thou, O maiden-goddess chaste and pure—Queen of the inner fane,—Look of thy grace on me, O Artemis,Thy willing suppliant—thine, thine it is,Who from the lustful onslaught fled secure,To grant that I too without stainThe shelter of thy purity may gain!Grant that henceforth unstained as heretoforeI may escape the forced embraceOf those proud children of the raceThat sacred Io bore!Yet if this may not be,We, the dark race sun-smitten, weWill speed with suppliant wandsTo Zeus who rules below, with hospitable handsWho welcomes all the dead from all the lands:Yea by our own hands strangled, we will go,Spurned by Olympian gods, unto the gods below!Zeus, hear and save!The searching, poisonous hate, that Io vexed and drave,Was of a goddess: well I knowThe bitter ire, the wrathful woeOf Hera, queen of heaven—A storm, a storm her breath, whereby we yet are driven!Bethink thee, what dispraiseOf Zeus himself mankind will raise,If now he turn his face averted from our cries!If now, dishonoured and alone,The ox-horned maiden’s race shall be undone,Children of Epaphus, his own begotten son—Zeus, listen from on high!—to thee our prayers arise.Zeus, hear and save!The searching poisonous hate, that Io vexed and drave,Was of a goddess: well I knowThe bitter ire, the wrathful woeOf Hera, queen of heaven—A storm, a storm her breath, whereby we yet are driven!DANAUS.Children, be wary—wary he with whomYe come, your trusty sire and steersman old:And that same caution hold I here on land,And bid you hoard my words, inscribing themOn memory’s tablets. Lo, I see afarDust, voiceless herald of a host, arise;And hark, within their grinding sockets ringAxles of hurrying wheels! I see approach,Borne in curved cars, by speeding horses drawn,A speared and shielded band. The chiefs, perchance,Of this their land are hitherward intentTo look on us, of whom they yet have heardBy messengers alone. But come who may,And come he peaceful or in ravening wrathSpurred on his path, ’twere best, in any case,Damsels, to cling unto this altar-moundMade sacred to their gods of festival,—A shrine is stronger than a tower to save,A shield that none may cleave. Step swift thereto,And in your left hands hold with reverenceThe white-crowned wands of suppliance, the signBeloved of Zeus, compassion’s lord, and speakTo those that question you, words meek and lowAnd piteous, as beseems your stranger state,Clearly avowing of this flight of yoursThe bloodless cause; and on your utteranceSee to it well that modesty attend;From downcast eyes, from brows of pure control,Let chastity look forth; nor, when ye speak,Be voluble nor eager—they that dwellWithin this land are sternly swift to chide.And be your words submissive: heed this well;For weak ye are, outcasts on stranger lands,And froward talk beseems not strengthless hands.CHORUS.O father, warily to us awareThy words are spoken, and thy wisdom’s bestMy mind shall hoard, with Zeus our sire to aid.DANAUS.Even so—with gracious aspect let him aid.CHORUS.Fain were I now to seat me by thy side.DANAUS.Now dally not, but put our thought in act.CHORUS.Zeus, pity our distress, or e’er we die.DANAUS.If so he will, your toils to joy will turn.CHORUS.Lo, on this shrine, the semblance of a bird.[2]DANAUS.Zeus’ bird of dawn it is; invoke the sign.CHORUS.Thus I invoke the saving rays of morn.DANAUS.Next, bright Apollo, exiled once from heaven.CHORUS.The exiled god will pity our exile.DANAUS.Yea, may he pity, giving grace and aid.CHORUS.Whom next invoke I, of these other gods?DANAUS.Lo, here a trident, symbol of a god.CHORUS.Who[3]gave sea-safety; may he bless on land!DANAUS.This next is Hermes, carved in Grecian wise.CHORUS.Then let him herald help to freedom won.DANAUS.Lastly, adore this altar consecrateTo many lesser gods in one; then crouchOn holy ground, a flock of doves that flee,Scared by no alien hawks, a kin not kind,Hateful, and fain of love more hateful still.Foul is the bird that rends another bird,And foul the men who hale unwilling maids,From sire unwilling, to the bridal bed.Never on earth, nor in the lower world,Shall lewdness such as theirs escape the ban:There too, if men say right, a God there isWho upon dead men turns their sin to doom,To final doom. Take heed, draw hitherward,That from this hap your safety ye may win.Enter theKING OF ARGOS.THE KING OF ARGOS.Speak—of what land are ye? No Grecian bandIs this to whom I speak, with Eastern robesAnd wrappings richly dight: no Argive maid,No woman in all Greece such garb doth wear.This too gives marvel, how unto this land,Unheralded, unfriended, without guide,And without fear, ye came? yet wands I see,True sign of suppliance, by you laid downOn shrines of these our gods of festival.No land but Greece can read such signs aright.Much else there is, conjecture well might guess,But let words teach the man who stands to hear.CHORUS.True is the word thou spakest of my garb;But speak I unto thee as citizen,Or Hermes’ wandbearer, or chieftain king?THE KING OF ARGOS.For that, take heart and answer without fear.I am Pelasgus, ruler of this land,Child of Palaichthon, whom the earth brought forth;And, rightly named from me, the race who reapThis country’s harvests are Pelasgian called.And o’er the wide and westward-stretching land,Through which the lucent wave of Strymon flowsI rule; Perrhaebia’s land my boundary isNorthward, and Pindus’ further slopes, that watchPaeonia, and Dodona’s mountain ridge.West, east, the limit of the washing seasRestrains my rule—the interspace is mine.But this whereon we stand is Apian land,Styled so of old from the great healer’s name;For Apis, coming from Naupactus’ shoreBeyond the strait, child of Apollo’s selfAnd like him seer and healer, cleansed this landFrom man-devouring monsters, whom the earth,Stained with pollution of old bloodshedding,Brought forth in malice, beasts of ravening jaws,A grisly throng of serpents manifold.And healings of their hurt, by knife and charm,Apis devised, unblamed of Argive men,And in their prayers found honour, for reward.—Lo, thou hast heard the tokens that I give:Speak now thy race, and tell a forthright tale;In sooth, this people loves not many words.CHORUS.Short is my word and clear. Of Argive raceWe come, from her, the ox-horned maiden whoErst bare the sacred child. My word shall giveWhate’er can ’stablish this my soothfast tale.THE KING OF ARGOS.O stranger maids, I may not trust this word,That ye have share in this our Argive race.No likeness of our country do ye bear,But semblance as of Libyan womankind.Even such a stock by Nilus’ banks might grow;Yea and the Cyprian stamp, in female forms,Shows to the life, what males impressed the same.And, furthermore, of roving Indian maidsWhose camping-grounds by Aethiopia lie,And camels burdened even as mules, and bearingRiders, as horses bear, mine ears have heard;And tales of flesh-devouring mateless maidsCalled Amazons: to these, if bows ye bare,I most had deemed you like. Speak further yet,That of your Argive birth the truth I learn.CHORUS.Here in this Argive land—so runs the tale—Io was priestess once of Hera’s fane.THE KING OF ARGOS.Yea, truth it is, and far this word prevails:Is’t said that Zeus with mortal mingled love?CHORUS.Ay, and that Hera that embrace surmised.THE KING OF ARGOS.How issued then this strife of those on high?CHORUS.By Hera’s will, a heifer she became.THE KING OF ARGOS.Held Zeus aloof then from the horned beast?CHORUS.’Tis said, he loved, in semblance of a bull.THE KING OF ARGOS.And his stern consort, did she aught thereon?CHORUS.One myriad-eyed she set, the heifer’s guard.THE KING OF ARGOS.How namest thou this herdsman many-eyed?CHORUS.Argus, the child of Earth, whom Hermes slew.THE KING OF ARGOS.Still did the goddess vex the beast ill-starred?CHORUS.She wrought a gadfly with a goading sting.THE KING OF ARGOS.Thus drave she Io hence, to roam afar?CHORUS.Yea—this thy word coheres exact with mine.THE KING OF ARGOS.Then to Canopus and to Memphis came she?CHORUS.And by Zeus’ hand was touched, and bare a child.THE KING OF ARGOS.Who vaunts him the Zeus-mated creature’s son?CHORUS.Epaphus, named rightly from the saving touch.THE KING OF ARGOS.And whom in turn did Epaphus beget?[4]CHORUS.Libya, with name of a wide land endowed.THE KING OF ARGOS.And who from her was born unto the race?CHORUS.Belus: from him two sons, my father one.THE KING OF ARGOS.Speak now to me his name, this greybeard wise.CHORUS.Revere the gods thus crowned, who steer the State.THE KING OF ARGOS.Awe thrills me, seeing these shrines with leafage crowned.CHORUS.Yea, stern the wrath of Zeus, the suppliants’ lord.Child of Palaichthon, royal chiefOf thy Pelasgians, hear!Bow down thine heart to my relief—A fugitive, a suppliant, swift with fear,A creature whom the wild wolves chaseO’er toppling crags; in piteous caseAloud, afar she lows,Calling the herdsman’s trusty arm to save her from her foes!THE KING OF ARGOS.Lo, with bowed heads beside our city shrinesYe sit ’neath shade of new-plucked olive-boughs.Our distant kin’s resentment Heaven forefend!Let not this hap, unhoped and unforeseen,Bring war on us: for strife we covet not.CHORUS.Justice, the daughter of right-dealing Zeus,Justice, the queen of suppliants, look down,That this our plight no ill may looseUpon your town!This word, even from the young, let age and wisdom learn:If thou to suppliants show grace,Thou shalt not lack Heaven’s grace in turn,So long as virtue’s gifts on heavenly shrines have place.THE KING OF ARGOS.Not at my private hearth ye sit and sue;And if the city bear a common stain,Be it the common toil to cleanse the same:Therefore no pledge, no promise will I give,Ere counsel with the commonwealth be held.CHORUS.Nay, but the source of sway, the city’s self, art thou,A power unjudged! thine, only thine,To rule the right of hearth and shrine!Before thy throne and sceptre all men bow!Thou, in all causes lord, beware the curse divine!THE KING OF ARGOS.May that curse fall upon mine enemies!I cannot aid you without risk of scathe,Nor scorn your prayers—unmerciful it were.Perplexed, distraught I stand, and fear alikeThe twofold chance, to do or not to do.CHORUS.Have heed of him who looketh from on high,The guard of woeful mortals, whosoe’erUnto their fellows cry,And find no pity, find no justice there.Abiding in his wrath, the suppliants’ lordDoth smite, unmoved by cries, unbent by prayerful word.THE KING OF ARGOS.But if Aegyptus’ children grasp you here,Claiming, their country’s right, to hold you theirsAs next of kin, who dares to counter this?Plead ye your country’s laws, if plead ye may,That upon you they lay no lawful hand.CHORUS.Let me not fall, O nevermore,A prey into the young men’s hand;Rather than wed whom I abhor,By pilot-stars I flee this land;O king, take justice to thy side,And with the righteous powers decide!THE KING OF ARGOS.Hard is the cause—make me not judge thereof.Already I have vowed it, to do noughtSave after counsel with my people ta’en,King though I be; that ne’er in after time,If ill fate chance, my people then may say—In aid of strangers thou the state hast slain.CHORUS.Zeus, lord of kinship, rules at willThe swaying balance, and surveysEvil and good; to men of illGives evil, and to good men praise.And thou—since true those scales do sway—Shall thou from justice shrink away?THE KING OF ARGOS.A deep, a saving counsel here there needs—An eye that like a diver to the depthOf dark perplexity can pass and see,Undizzied, unconfused. First must we careThat to the State and to ourselves this thingShall bring no ruin; next, that wrangling handsShall grasp you not as prey, nor we ourselvesBetray you thus embracing sacred shrines,Nor make the avenging all-destroying god,Who not in hell itself sets dead men free,A grievous inmate, an abiding bane.—Spake I not right, of saving counsel’s need?CHORUS.Yea, counsel take and stand to aidAt Justice’ side and mine.Betray not me, the timorous maidWhom far beyond the brineA godless violence cast forth forlorn.O King, wilt thou behold—Lord of this land, wilt thou behold me tornFrom altars manifold?Bethink thee of the young men’s wrath and lust,Hold off their evil pride;Steel not thyself to see the suppliant thrustFrom hallowed statues’ side,Haled by the frontlet on my forehead bound,As steeds are led, and drawnBy hands that drag from shrine and altar-moundMy vesture’s fringed lawn.Know thou that whether for Aegyptus’ raceThou dost their wish fulfil,Or for the gods and for each holy place—Be thy choice good or ill,Blow is with blow requited, grace with graceSuch is Zeus’ righteous will.THE KING OF ARGOS.Yea, I have pondered: from the sea of doubtHere drives at length the bark of thought ashore;Landward with screw and windlass haled, and firm,Clamped to her props, she lies. The need is stern;With men or gods a mighty strife we strivePerforce, and either hap in grief concludes.For, if a house be sacked, new wealth for oldNot hard it is to win—if Zeus the lordOf treasure favour—more than quits the loss,Enough to pile the store of wealth full high;Or if a tongue shoot forth untimely speech,Bitter and strong to goad a man to wrath,Soft words there be to soothe that wrath away:But what device shall make the war of kinBloodless? that woe, the blood of many beasts,And victims manifold to many gods,Alone can cure. Right glad I were to shunThis strife, and am more fain of ignoranceThan of the wisdom of a woe endured.The gods send better than my soul foretells!CHORUS.Of many cries for mercy, hear the end.THE KING OF ARGOS.Say on, then, for it shall not ’scape mine ear.CHORUS.Girdles we have, and bands that bind our robes.THE KING OF ARGOS.Even so; such things beseem a woman’s wear.CHORUS.Know, then, with these a fair device there is—THE KING OF ARGOS.Speak, then: what utterance doth this foretell?CHORUS.Unless to us thou givest pledge secure—THE KING OF ARGOS.What can thy girdles’ craft achieve for thee?CHORUS.Strange votive tablets shall these statues deck.THE KING OF ARGOS.Mysterious thy resolve—avow it clear.CHORUS.Swiftly to hang me on these sculptured gods!THE KING OF ARGOS.Thy word is as a lash to urge my heart.CHORUS.Thou seest truth, for I have cleared thine eyeTHE KING OF ARGOS.Yea, and woes manifold, invincible,A crowd of ills, sweep on me torrent-like.My bark goes forth upon a sea of troublesUnfathomed, ill to traverse, harbourless.For if my deed shall match not your demand,Dire, beyond shot of speech, shall be the baneYour death’s pollution leaves unto this land.Yet if against your kin, Aegyptus’ race,Before our gates I front the doom of war,Will not the city’s loss be sore? Shall menFor women’s sake incarnadine the ground?But yet the wrath of Zeus, the suppliants’ lordI needs must fear: most awful unto manThe terror of his anger. Thou, old man,The father of these maidens, gather upWithin your arms these wands of suppliance,And lay them at the altars manifoldOf all our country’s gods, that all the townKnow, by this sign, that ye come here to sue.Nor, in thy haste, do thou say aught of me.Swift is this folk to censure those who rule;But, if they see these signs of suppliance,It well may chance that each will pity you,And loathe the young men’s violent pursuit;And thus a fairer favour you may find:For, to the helpless, each man’s heart is kind.DANAUS.To us, beyond gifts manifold it isTo find a champion thus compassionate;Yet send with me attendants, of thy folk,Rightly to guide me, that I duly findEach altar of your city’s gods that standsBefore the fane, each dedicated shrine;And that in safety through the city’s waysI may pass onwards: all unlike to yoursThe outward semblance that I wear—the racethat Nilus rears is all dissimilarThat of Inachus. Keep watch and wardLest heedlessness bring death: full oft, I ween,Friend hath slain friend, not knowing whom he slew.THE KING OF ARGOS.Go at his side, attendants,—he saith well.On to the city’s consecrated shrines!Nor be of many words to those ye meet,The while this suppliant voyager ye lead.[ExitDANAUSwith attendants.]CHORUS.Let him go forward, thy command obeying.But me how biddest, how assurest thou?THE KING OF ARGOS.Leave there the new-plucked boughs, thy sorrow’s sign.CHORUS.Thus beckoned forth, at thy behest I leave them.THE KING OF ARGOS.Now to this level precinct turn thyself.CHORUS.Unconsecrate it is, and cannot shield me.THE KING OF ARGOS.We will not yield thee to those falcons’ greed.CHORUS.What help? more fierce they are than serpents fell.THE KING OF ARGOS.We spake thee fair—speak thou them fair in turn.CHORUS.What marvel that we loathe them, scared in soul?THE KING OF ARGOS.Awe towards a king should other fears transcend.CHORUS.Thus speak, thus act, and reassure my mind.THE KING OF ARGOS.Not long thy sire shall leave thee desolate.But I will call the country’s indwellers,And with soft words th’ assembly will persuade,And warn your sire what pleadings will avail.Therefore abide ye, and with prayer entreatThe country’s gods to compass your desire;The while I go, this matter to provide,Persuasion and fair fortune at my side.[Exit theKING OF ARGOS.]CHORUS.O King of Kings, among the blestThou highest and thou happiest,Listen and grant our prayer,And, deeply loathing, thrustAway from us the young men’s lust,And deeply drownIn azure waters, down and ever down,Benches and rowers dark,The fatal and perfidious bark!Unto the maidens turn thy gracious care;Think yet again upon the tale of fame,How from the maiden loved of thee there sprungMine ancient line, long since in many a legend sung!Remember, O remember, thou whose handDid Io by a touch to human shape reclaim.For from this Argos erst our mother cameDriven hence to Egypt’s land,Yet sprung of Zeus we were, and hence our birth we claim.And now have I roamed backUnto the ancient trackWhere Io roamed and pastured among flowers,Watched o’er by Argus’ eyes,Through the lush grasses and the meadow bowers.Thence, by the gadfly maddened, forth she fliesUnto far lands and alien peoples drivenAnd, following fate, through paths of foam and surge,Sees, as she goes, the cleaving strait divideGreece, from the Eastland riven.And swift through Asian borders doth she urgeHer course, o’er Phrygian mountains’ sheep-clipt side;Thence, where the Mysian realm of Teuthras liesTowards Lydian lowlands hies,And o’er Cilician and Pamphylian hillsAnd ever-flowing rills,And thence to Aphrodite’s fertile shore,[5]The land of garnered wheat and wealthy storeAnd thence, deep-stung by wild unrest,By the winged fly that goaded her and drave,Unto the fertile land, the god-possest,(Where, fed from far-off snows,Life-giving Nilus flows,Urged on by Typho’s strength, a fertilizing wave)She roves, in harassed and dishonoured flightScathed by the blasting pangs of Hera’s dread despite.And they within the landWith terror shook and wanned,So strange the sight they saw, and were afraid—A wild twy-natured thing, half heifer and half maid.Whose hand was laid at last on Io, thus forlorn,With many roamings worn?Who bade the harassed maiden’s peace return?Zeus, lord of time eterne.Yea, by his breath divine, by his unscathing strength,She lays aside her bane,And softened back to womanhood at lengthSheds human tears again.Then, quickened with Zeus’ veritable seed,A progeny she bare,A stainless babe, a child of heavenly breed.Of life and fortune fair.His is the life of life—so all men say,—His is the seed of Zeus.Who else had power stern Hera’s craft to stay,Her vengeful curse to loose?Yea, all from Zeus befell!And rightly wouldst thou tellThat we from Epaphus, his child, were born:Justly his deed was done;Unto what other one,Of all the gods, should I for justice turn?From him our race did spring;Creator he and King,Ancient of days and wisdom he, and might.As bark before the wind,So, wafted by his mind,Moves every counsel, each device aright.Beneath no stronger handHolds he a weak command,No throne doth he abase him to adore;Swift as a word, his deedActs out what stands decreedIn counsels of his heart, for evermore.Re-enterDANAUS.DANAUS.Take heart, my children: the land’s heart is kind,And to full issue has their voting come.CHORUS.All hail, my sire; thy word brings utmost joy.Say, to what issue is the vote made sure,And how prevailed the people’s crowding hands?DANAUS.With one assent the Argives spake their will,And, hearing, my old heart took youthful cheer,The very sky was thrilled when high in airThe concourse raised right hands and swore their oath:—Free shall the maidens sojourn in this land.Unharried, undespoiled by mortal wight:No native hand, no hand of foreignerShall drag them hence; if any man use force—Whoe’er of all our countrymen shall failTo come unto their aid, let him go forth,Beneath the people’s curse, to banishment.So did the king of this Pelasgian folkPlead on behalf of us, and bade them heedThat never, in the after-time, this realmShould feed to fulness the great enmityOf Zeus, the suppliants’ guard, against itself!A twofold curse, for wronging stranger-guestsWho are akin withal, confrontinglyShould rise before this city and be shownA ruthless monster, fed on human doom.Such things the Argive people heard, and straight,Without proclaim of herald, gave assent:Yea, in full conclave, the Pelasgian folkHeard suasive pleas, and Zeus through them resolved.CHORUS.Arouse we now to chant our prayerFor fair return of service fairAnd Argos’ kindly will.Zeus, lord of guestright, look uponThe grace our stranger lips have won.In right and truth, as they begun,Guide them, with favouring hand, untilThou dost their blameless wish fulfil!Now may the Zeus-born gods on highHear us pour forthA votive prayer for Argos’ clan!—Never may this Pelasgian earth,Amid the fire-wrack, shrill the dismal cryOn Ares, ravening lord of fight,Who in an alien harvest mows down man!For lo, this land had pity on our plight,And unto us were merciful and leal,To us, the piteous flock, who at Zeus’ altar kneel!They scornèd not the pleas of maidenhood,Nor with the young men’s will hath their will stood.They knew right well.Th’ unearthly watching fiend invincible,The foul avenger—let him not draw near!For he, on roofs ill-starred,Defiling and polluting, keeps a ghastly ward!They knew his vengeance, and took holy heedTo us, the sister suppliants, who cryTo Zeus, the lord of purity:Therefore with altars pure they shall the gods revere.Thus, through the boughs that shade our lips, fly forth in air,Fly forth, O eager prayer!May never pestilence effaceThis city’s race,Nor be the land with corpses strewed,Nor stained with civic blood!The stem of youth, unpluckt, to manhood come,Nor Ares rise from Aphrodité’s bower,The lord of death and bane, to waste our youthful flower.Long may the oldCrowd to the altars kindled to consumeGifts rich and manifold—Offered to win from powers divineA benison on city and on shrine:Let all the sacred might adoreOf Zeus most high, the lordOf guestright and the hospitable board,Whose immemorial law doth rule Fate’s scales aright:The garners of earth’s storeBe full for evermore,And grace of Artemis make women’s travail light;No devastating curse of fell diseaseThis city seize;No clamour of the State arouse to warAres, from whom afarShrinketh the lute, by whom the dances fail—Ares, the lord of wail.Swarm far aloof from Argos’ citizensAll plague and pestilence,And may the Archer-God our children spare!May Zeus with foison and with fruitfulnessThe land’s each season bless,And, quickened with Heaven’s bounty manifold,Teem grazing flock and fold.Beside the altars of Heaven’s hallowingLoud let the minstrels sing,And from pure lips float forth the harp-led strain in air!And let the people’s voice, the powerThat sways the State, in danger’s hourBe wary, wise for all;Nor honour in dishonour hold,But—ere the voice of war be bold—Let them to stranger peoples grantFair and unbloody covenant—Justice and peace withal;And to the Argive powers divineThe sacrifice of laurelled kine,By rite ancestral, pay.Among three words of power and awe,Stands this, the third, the mighty law—Your gods, your fathers deified,Ye shall adore. Let this abideFor ever and for aye.DANAUS.Dear children, well and wisely have ye prayed;I bid you now not shudder, though ye hearNew and alarming tidings from your sire.From this high place beside the suppliants’ shrineThe bark of our pursuers I behold,By divers tokens recognized too well.Lo, the spread canvas and the hides that screenThe gunwale; lo, the prow, with painted eyesThat seem her onward pathway to descry,Heeding too well the rudder at the sternThat rules her, coming for no friendly end.And look, the seamen—all too plain their race—Their dark limbs gleam from out their snow-white garb;Plain too the other barks, a fleet that comesAll swift to aid the purpose of the first,That now, with furled sail and with pulse of oarsWhich smite the wave together, comes aland.But ye, be calm, and, schooled not scared by fear,Confront this chance, be mindful of your trustIn these protecting gods. And I will hence,And champions who shall plead your cause arightWill bring unto your side. There come perchanceHeralds or envoys, eager to lay handAnd drag you captive hence; yet fear them not;Foiled shall they be. Yet well it were for you(If, ere with aid I come, I tarry long),Not by one step this sanctuary to leave.Farewell, fear nought: soon shall the hour be bornWhen he that scorns the gods shall rue his scornCHORUS.Ah but I shudder, father!—ah, even now,Even as I speak, the swift-winged ships draw nigh!I shudder, I shiver, I perish with fear:Overseas though I fled,Yet nought it avails; my pursuers are near!DANAUS.Children, take heart; they who decreed to aidThy cause will arm for battle, well I ween.CHORUS.But desperate is Aegyptus’ ravening race,With fight unsated; thou too know’st it well.In their wrath they o’ertake us; the prow is deep-darkIn the which they have sped,And dark is the bench and the crew of the bark!DANAUS.Yea but a crew as stout they here shall find,And arms well steeled beneath a noon-day sun.CHORUS.Ah yet, O father, leave us not forlorn!Alone, a maid is nought, a strengthless arm.With guile they pursue me, with counsel malign,And unholy their soul;And as ravens they seize me, unheeding the shrine!DANAUS.Fair will befall us, children, in this chance,If thus in wrath they wrong the gods and you.CHORUS.Alas, nor tridents nor the sanctityOf shrines will drive them, O my sire, from us!Unholy and daring and cursed is their ire,Nor own they controlOf the gods, but like jackals they glut their desire!DANAUS.Ay, butCome wolf, flee jackal, saith the saw;Nor can the flax-plant overbear the corn.CHORUS.Lustful, accursèd, monstrous is their willAs of beasts ravening—’ware we of their power!DANAUS.Look you, not swiftly puts a fleet to sea,Nor swiftly to its moorings; long it isOr e’er the saving cables to the shoreAre borne, and long or e’er the steersmen cry,The good ship swings at anchor—all is well.Longest of all, the task to come alandWhere haven there is none, when sunset fadesIn night.To pilot wise, the adage saith,Night is a day of wakefulness and pain.Therefore no force of weaponed men, as yetScatheless can come ashore, before the bankLie at her anchorage securely moored.Bethink thee therefore, nor in panic leaveThe shrine of gods whose succour thou hast wonI go for aid—men shall not blame me long,Old, but with youth at heart and on my tongue.[ExitDANAUS.]CHORUS.O land of hill and dale, O holy land,What shall befall us? whither shall we flee,From Apian land to some dark lair of earth?O would that in vapour of smoke I might rise to the clouds of the sky,That as dust which flits up without wings I might pass and evanish and die!I dare not, I dare not abide: my heart yearns, eager to fly;And dark is the cast of my thought; I shudder and tremble for fear.My father looked forth and beheld: I die of the sight that draws near.And for me be the strangling cord, the halter made ready by Fate,Before to my body draws nigh the man of my horror and hate.Nay, ere I will own him as lord, as handmaid to Hades I go!And oh, that aloft in the sky, where the dark clouds are frozen to snow,A refuge for me might be found, or a mountain-top smooth and too highFor the foot of the goat, where the vulture sits lonely, and none may descryThe pinnacle veiled in the cloud, the highest and sheerest of all,Ere to wedlock that rendeth my heart, and love that is loveless, I fall!Yea, a prey to the dogs and the birds of the mount will I give me to be,—From wailing and curse and pollution it is death, only death, sets me free:Let death come upon me before to the ravisher’s bed I am thrust;What champion, what saviour but death can I find, or what refuge from lust?I will utter my shriek of entreaty, a prayer that shrills up to the sky,That calleth the gods to compassion, a tuneful, a pitiful cry,That is loud to invoke the releaser. O father, look down on the fight;Look down in thy wrath on the wronger, with eyes that are eager for right.Zeus, thou that art lord of the world, whose kingdom is strong over all,Have mercy on us! At thine altar for refuge and safety we call.For the race of Aegyptus is fierce, with greed and with malice afire;They cry as the questing hounds, they sweep with the speed of desire.But thine is the balance of fate, thou rulest the wavering scale,And without thee no mortal emprise shall have strength to achieve or prevail.Alack, alack! the ravisher—He leaps from boat to beach, he draweth near!Away, thou plunderer accurst!Death seize thee first,Or e’er thou touch me—off! God, hear our cry,Our maiden agony!Ah, ah, the touch, the prelude of my shame.Alas, my maiden fame!O sister, sister, to the altar cling,For he that seizeth me,Grim is his wrath and stern, by land as on the sea.Guard us, O king!Enter theHERALD OF AEGYPTUS.HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Hence to my barge—step swiftly, tarry not.CHORUS.Alack, he rends—he rends my hair! O wound on wound!Help! my lopped head will fall, my blood gush o’er the ground!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Aboard, ye cursèd—with a new curse, go!CHORUS.Would God that on the wand’ring brineThou and this braggart tongue of thineHad sunk beneath the main—Thy mast and planks, made fast in vain!Thee would I drive aboard once more,A slayer and a dastard, from the shore!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Be still, thou vain demented soul;My force thy craving shall control.Away, aboard! What, clingest to the shrine?Away! this city’s gods I hold not for divine.CHORUS.Aid me, ye gods, that never, neverI may again beholdThe mighty, the life-giving river,Nilus, the quickener of field and fold!Alack, O sire, unto the shrine I cling—Shrine of this land from which mine ancient line did spring!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Shrines, shrines, forsooth!—the ship, the ship be shrine!Aboard, perforce and will-ye nill-ye, go!Or e’er from hands of mineYe suffer torments worse and blow on blow.CHORUS.Alack, God grant those hands may strive in vainWith the salt-streaming wave,When ’gainst the wide-blown blasts thy bark shall strainTo round Sarpedon’s cape, the sandbank’s treach’rous grave.HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Shrill ye and shriek unto what gods ye may,Ye shall not leap from out Aegyptus’ bark,How bitterly soe’er ye wail your woe.CHORUS.Alack, alack my wrong!Stern is thy voice, thy vaunting loud and strong.Thy sire, the mighty Nilus, drive thee henceTurning to death and doom thy greedy violence!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Swift to the vessel of the double prow,Go quickly! let none linger, else this handRuthless will hale you by your tresses hence.CHORUS.Alack, O father! from the shrineNot aid but agony is mine.As a spider he creeps and he clutches his prey,And he hales me away.A spectre of darkness, of darkness. Alas and alas! well-a-day!O Earth, O my mother! O Zeus, thou king of the earth, and her child!Turn back, we pray thee, from us his clamour and threatenings wild!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Peace! I fear not this country’s deities.They fostered not my childhood nor mine age.CHORUS.Like a snake that is human he comes, he shudders and crawls to my side;As an adder that biteth the foot, his clutch on my flesh doth abide.O Earth, O my mother! O Zeus, thou king of the earth, and her child!Turn back, we pray thee, from us his clamour and threatenings wild!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Swift each unto the ship; repine no more,Or my hand shall not spare to rend your robe.CHORUS.O chiefs, O leaders, aid me, or I yield!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Peace! if ye have not ears to hear my words,Lo, by these tresses must I hale you hence.CHORUS.Undone we are, O king! all hope is gone.HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Ay, kings enow ye shall behold anon,Aegyptus’ sons—Ye shall not want for kings.Enter theKING OF ARGOS.THE KING OF ARGOS.Sirrah, what dost thou? in what arroganceDarest thou thus insult Pelasgia’s realm?Deemest thou this a woman-hearted town?Thou art too full of thy barbarian scornFor us of Grecian blood, and, erring thus,Thou dost bewray thyself a fool in all!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Say thou wherein my deeds transgress my right.THE KING OF ARGOS.First, that thou play’st a stranger’s part amiss.HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Wherein? I do but search and claim mine own.THE KING OF ARGOS.To whom of our guest-champions hast appealed?HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.To Hermes, herald’s champion, lord of search.THE KING OF ARGOS.Yea, to a god—yet dost thou wrong the gods!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.The gods that rule by Nilus I revere.THE KING OF ARGOS.Hear I aright? our Argive gods are nought?HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.The prey is mine, unless force rend it from me.THE KING OF ARGOS.At thine own peril touch them—’ware, and soon!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.I hear thy speech, no hospitable word.THE KING OF ARGOS.I am no host for sacrilegious hands.HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.I will go tell this to Aegyptus’ sons.THE KING OF ARGOS.Tell it! my pride will ponder not thy word.HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Yet, that I have my message clear to say(For it behooves that heralds’ words be clear,Be they or ill or good), how art thou named?By whom despoilèd of this sister-bandOf maidens pass I homeward?—speak and say!For lo, henceforth in Ares’ court we stand,Who judges not by witness but by war:No pledge of silver now can bring the causeTo issue: ere this thing end, there must beCorpse piled on corpse and many lives gasped forth.THE KING OF ARGOS.What skills it that I tell my name to thee?Thou and thy mates shall learn it ere the end.Know that if words unstained by violenceCan change these maidens’ choice, then mayest thou,With full consent of theirs, conduct them hence.But thus the city with one voice ordained—No force shall bear away the maiden band.Firmly this word upon the temple wallIs by a rivet clenched, and shall abide:Not upon wax inscribed and delible,Nor upon parchment sealed and stored away.—Lo, thou hast heard our free mouths speak their will:Out from our presence—tarry not, but go!HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Methinks we stand on some new edge of war:Be strength and triumph on the young men’s side!THE KING OF ARGOS.Nay but here also shall ye find young men,Unsodden with the juices oozed from grain.[6][ExitHERALD OF AEGYPTUS.]But ye, O maids, with your attendants true,Pass hence with trust into the fencèd town,Ringed with a wide confine of guarding towers.Therein are many dwellings for such guestsAs the State honours; there myself am housedWithin a palace neither scant nor strait.There dwell ye, if ye will to lodge at easeIn halls well-thronged: yet, if your soul prefer,Tarry secluded in a separate home.Choose ye and cull, from these our proffered gifts,Whiche’er is best and sweetest to your will:And I and all these citizens whose voteStands thus decreed, will your protectors be.Look not to find elsewhere more loyal guard.CHORUS.O godlike chief, God grant my prayer:Fair blessings on thy proffers fair,Lord of Pelasgia’s race!Yet, of thy grace, unto our sideSend thou the man of courage tried,Of counsel deep and prudent thought,—Be Danaus to his children brought;For his it is to guide us wellAnd warn where it behoves to dwell—What place shall guard and shelter usFrom malice and tongues slanderous:Swift always are the lips of blameA stranger-maiden to defame—But Fortune give us grace!THE KING OF ARGOS.A stainless fame, a welcome kindFrom all this people shall ye find:Dwell therefore, damsels, loved of us,Within our walls, as DanausAllots to each, in order due,Her dower of attendants true.Re-enterDANAUS.DANAUSHigh thanks, my children, unto Argos con,And to this folk, as to Olympian gods,Give offerings meet of sacrifice and wine;For saviours are they in good sooth to you.From me they heard, and bitter was their wrath,How those your kinsmen strove to work you wrong,And how of us were thwarted: then to meThis company of spearmen did they grant,That honoured I might walk, nor unawareDie by some secret thrust and on this landBring down the curse of death, that dieth not.Such boons they gave me: it behoves me payA deeper reverence from a soul sincere.Ye, to the many words of warinessSpoken by me your father, add this word,That, tried by time, our unknown companyBe held for honest: over-swift are tonguesTo slander strangers, over-light is speechTo bring pollution on a stranger’s name.Therefore I rede you, bring no shame on meNow when man’s eye beholds your maiden prime.Lovely is beauty’s ripening harvest-field,But ill to guard; and men and beasts, I wot,And birds and creeping things make prey of it.And when the fruit is ripe for love, the voiceOf Aphrodite bruiteth it abroad,The while she guards the yet unripened growth.On the fair richness of a maiden’s bloomEach passer looks, o’ercome with strong desire,With eyes that waft the wistful dart of love.Then be not such our hap, whose livelong toilDid make our pinnace plough the mighty main:Nor bring we shame upon ourselves, and joyUnto my foes. Behold, a twofold home—One of the king’s and one the people’s gift—Unbought, ’tis yours to hold,—a gracious boon.Go—but remember ye your sire’s behest,And hold your life less dear than chastity.CHORUS.The gods above grant that all else be well.But fear not thou, O sire, lest aught befallOf ill unto our ripened maidenhood.So long as Heaven have no new ill devised,From its chaste path my spirit shall not swerve.SEMI-CHORUS.Pass and adore ye the Blessed, the gods of the city who dwellAround Erasinus, the gush of the swift immemorial tide.SEMI-CHORUS.Chant ye, O maidens; aloud let the praise of Pelasgia swell;Hymn we no longer the shores where Nilus to ocean doth glide.SEMI-CHORUS.Sing we the bounteous streams that ripple and gush through the city;Quickening flow they and fertile, the soft new life of the plain.SEMI-CHORUS.Artemis, maiden most pure, look on us with grace and with pity—Save us from forced embraces: such love hath no crown but a pain.SEMI-CHORUS.Yet not in scorn we chant, but in honour of Aphrodite;She truly and Hera alone have power with Zeus and control.Holy the deeds of her rite, her craft is secret and mighty,And high is her honour on earth, and subtle her sway of the soul.SEMI-CHORUS.Yea, and her child is Desire: in the train of his mother he goeth—Yea and Persuasion soft-lipped, whom none can deny or repel:Cometh Harmonia too, on whom Aphrodite bestowethThe whispering parley, the paths of the rapture that lovers love well.SEMI-CHORUS.Ah, but I tremble and quake lest again they should sail to reclaim!Alas for the sorrow to come, the blood and the carnage of war.Ah, by whose will was it done that o’er the wide ocean they came,Guided by favouring winds, and wafted by sail and by oar?SEMI-CHORUS.Peace! for what Fate hath ordained will surely not tarry but come;Wide is the counsel of Zeus, by no man escaped or withstood:Only I pray that whate’er, in the end, of this wedlock he doom,We as many a maiden of old, may win from the ill to the good.[7]SEMI-CHORUS.Great Zeus, this wedlock turn from me—Me from the kinsman bridegroom guard!SEMI-CHORUS.Come what come may, ’tis Fate’s decree.SEMI-CHORUS.Soft is thy word—the doom is hard.SEMI-CHORUS.Thou know’st not what the Fates provide.SEMI-CHORUS.How should I scan Zeus’ mighty will,The depth of counsel undescried?SEMI-CHORUS.Pray thou no word of omen ill.SEMI-CHORUS.What timely warning wouldst thou teach?SEMI-CHORUS.Beware, nor slight the gods in speech.SEMI-CHORUS.Zeus, hold from my body the wedlock detested, the bridegroom abhorred!It was thou, it was thou didst releaseMine ancestress Io from sorrow: thine healing it was that restored,The touch of thine hand gave her peace.SEMI-CHORUS.Be thy will for the cause of the maidens! of two ills, the lesser I pray—The exile that leaveth me pure.May thy justice have heed to my cause, my prayers to thy mercy find way!For the hands of thy saving are sure.[Exeunt omnes.][1]“ἀερίας ἀπὸ γᾶς.” This epithet may appear strange to modern readers accustomed to think of Egypt as a land of cloudless skies and pellucid atmosphere. Nevertheless both Pindar (Pythiv 93) and Apollonius Rhodius (iv 267) speak of it in the same way as Aeschylus. It has been conjectured that they allude to the fog banks that often obscure the low coasts—a phenomenon likely to impress the early navigators and to be reported by them.[2]The whole of this dialogue in alternate verses is disarranged in the MSS. The re-arrangement which has approved itself to Paley has been here followed. It involves, however, a hiatus, instead of the line to which this note is appended. The substance of the lost line being easily deducible from the context, it has been supplied in the translation.[3]Poseidon.[4]Here one verse at least has been lost. The conjecture of Bothe seems to be verified, as far as substance is concerned, by the next line, and has consequently been adopted.[5]Cyprus.[6]For this curious taunt, strongly illustrative of what Browning calls “nationality in drinks,” see Herodotus, ii. 77. A similar feeling may perhaps be traced in Tacitus’ description of the national beverage of the Germans: “Potui humor ex hordeo aut frumento,in quandam similitudinem vini corruptus” (Germania, chap, xxiii).[7]The ambiguity of these two lines is reproduced from the original. The Semi-Chorus appear to pray, in one aspiration, that the threatened wedlock may never take place, and,ifit does take place, may be for weal, not woe.
DANAUS.THE KING OF ARGOS.HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Chorus of the Daughters of Danaus.Attendants.
Scene.—A sacred precinct near the gates of Argos: statue and shrines of Zeus and other deities stand around.
CHORUS.Zeus! Lord and guard of suppliant hands!Look down benign on us who craveThine aid—whom winds and waters draveFrom where, through drifting shifting sands,Pours Nilus to the wave.From where the green land, god-possest,Closes and fronts the Syrian waste,We flee as exiles, yet unbannedBy murder’s sentence from our land;But—since Aegyptus had decreedHis sons should wed his brother’s seed,—Ourselves we tore from bonds abhorred,From wedlock not of heart but hand,Nor brooked to call a kinsman lord!And Danaus, our sire and guide,The king of counsel, pond’ring wellThe dice of fortune as they fell,Out of two griefs the kindlier chose,And bade us fly, with him beside,Heedless what winds or waves arose,And o’er the wide sea waters haste,Until to Argos’ shore at lastOur wandering pinnace came—Argos, the immemorial homeOf her from whom we boast to come—Io, the ox-horned maiden, whom,After long wandering, woe, and scathe,Zeus with a touch, a mystic breath,Made mother of our name.Therefore, of all the lands of earth,On this most gladly step we forth,And in our hands aloft we bear—Sole weapon for a suppliant’s wear—The olive-shoot, with wool enwound!City, and land, and waters wanOf Inachus, and gods most high,And ye who, deep beneath the ground,Bring vengeance weird on mortal man,Powers of the grave, on you we cry!And unto Zeus the Saviour, guardOf mortals’ holy purity!Receive ye us—keep watch and wardAbove the suppliant maiden band!Chaste be the heart of this your landTowards the weak! but, ere the throng,The wanton swarm, from Egypt sprung,Leap forth upon the silted shore,Thrust back their swift-rowed bark again,Repel them, urge them to the main!And there, ’mid storm and lightning’s shine,And scudding drift and thunder’s roar,Deep death be theirs, in stormy brine!Before they foully grasp and winUs, maiden-children of their kin,And climb the couch by law denied,And wrong each weak reluctant bride.And now on her I call,Mine ancestress, who far on Egypt’s shoreA young cow’s semblance wore,—A maiden once, by Hera’s malice changed!And then on him withal,Who, as amid the flowers the grazing creature ranged,Was in her by a breath of Zeus conceived;And, as the hour of birth drew nigh,By fate fulfilled, unto the light he came;And Epaphus for name,Born from the touch of Zeus, the child received.On him, on him I cry,And him for patron hold—While in this grassy vale I stand,Where Io roamed of old!And here, recounting all her toil and pain,Signs will I show to those who rule the landThat I am child of hers; and all shall understand,Hearing the doubtful tale of the dim past made plain.And, ere the end shall be,Each man the truth of what I tell shall see.And if there dwell hard byOne skilled to read from bird-notes augury,That man, when through his ears shall thrill our tearful wail,Shall deem he hears the voice, the plaintive taleOf her, the piteous spouse of Tereus, lord of guile—Whom the hawk harries yet, the mourning nightingale.She, from her happy home and fair streams scared away,Wails wild and sad for haunts beloved erewhile.Yea, and for Itylus—ah, well-a-day!Slain by her own, his mother’s hand,Maddened by lustful wrong, the deed by Tereus planned.Like her I wail and wail, in soft Ionian tones,And as she wastes, even soWastes my soft cheek, once ripe with Nilus’ sunsAnd all my heart dissolves in utter woeSad flowers of grief I cull,Fleeing from kinsmen’s love unmerciful—Yea, from the clutching hands, the wanton crowd,I sped across the waves, from Egypt’s land of cloud[1]Gods of the ancient cradle of my race,Hear me, just gods! With righteous graceOn me, on me look down!Grant not to youth its heart’s unchaste desire,But, swiftly spurning lust’s unholy fire,Bless only love and willing wedlock’s crownThe war-worn fliers from the battle’s wrackFind refuge at the hallowed altar-side,The sanctuary divine,—Ye gods! such refuge unto me provide—Such sanctuary be mine!Though the deep will of Zeus be hard to track,Yet doth it flame and glance,A beacon in the dark, ’mid clouds of chanceThat wrap mankindYea, though the counsel fall, undone it shall not be,Whate’er be shaped and fixed within Zeus’ ruling mind—Dark as a solemn grove, with sombre leafage shaded,His paths of purpose wind,A marvel to man’s eyeSmitten by him, from towering hopes degraded,Mortals lie low and stillTireless and effortless, works forth its willThe arm divine!God from His holy seat, in calm of unarmed power,Brings forth the deed, at its appointed hour!Let Him look down on mortal wantonness!Lo! how the youthful stock of Belus’ lineCraves for me, uncontrolled—With greed and madness bold—Urged on by passion’s sunless stress—And, cheated, learns too late the prey has ’scaped their hold!Ah, listen, listen to my grievous tale,My sorrow’s words, my shrill and tearful cries!Ah woe, ah woe!Loud with lament the accents use,And from my living lips my own sad dirges flow!O Apian land of hill and dale,Thou kennest yet, O land, this faltered foreign wail—Have mercy, hear my prayer!Lo, how again, again, I rend and tearMy woven raiment, and from off my hairCast the Sidonian veil!Ah, but if fortune smile, if death be driven away,Vowed rites, with eager haste, we to the gods will pay!Alas, alas again!O wither drift the waves? and who shall loose the pain?O Apian land of hill and dale,Thou kennest yet, O land, this faltered foreign wail!Have mercy, hear my prayer!Lo, how again, again, I rend and tearMy woven raiment, and from off my hairCast the Sidonian veil!The wafting oar, the bark with woven sail,From which the sea foamed back,Sped me, unharmed of storms, along the breeze’s track—Be it unblamed of me!But ah, the end, the end of my emprise!May He, the Father, with all-seeing eyes,Grant me that end to see!Grant that henceforth unstained as heretoforeI may escape the forced embraceOf those proud children of the raceThat sacred Io bore.And thou, O maiden-goddess chaste and pure—Queen of the inner fane,—Look of thy grace on me, O Artemis,Thy willing suppliant—thine, thine it is,Who from the lustful onslaught fled secure,To grant that I too without stainThe shelter of thy purity may gain!Grant that henceforth unstained as heretoforeI may escape the forced embraceOf those proud children of the raceThat sacred Io bore!Yet if this may not be,We, the dark race sun-smitten, weWill speed with suppliant wandsTo Zeus who rules below, with hospitable handsWho welcomes all the dead from all the lands:Yea by our own hands strangled, we will go,Spurned by Olympian gods, unto the gods below!Zeus, hear and save!The searching, poisonous hate, that Io vexed and drave,Was of a goddess: well I knowThe bitter ire, the wrathful woeOf Hera, queen of heaven—A storm, a storm her breath, whereby we yet are driven!Bethink thee, what dispraiseOf Zeus himself mankind will raise,If now he turn his face averted from our cries!If now, dishonoured and alone,The ox-horned maiden’s race shall be undone,Children of Epaphus, his own begotten son—Zeus, listen from on high!—to thee our prayers arise.Zeus, hear and save!The searching poisonous hate, that Io vexed and drave,Was of a goddess: well I knowThe bitter ire, the wrathful woeOf Hera, queen of heaven—A storm, a storm her breath, whereby we yet are driven!
DANAUS.Children, be wary—wary he with whomYe come, your trusty sire and steersman old:And that same caution hold I here on land,And bid you hoard my words, inscribing themOn memory’s tablets. Lo, I see afarDust, voiceless herald of a host, arise;And hark, within their grinding sockets ringAxles of hurrying wheels! I see approach,Borne in curved cars, by speeding horses drawn,A speared and shielded band. The chiefs, perchance,Of this their land are hitherward intentTo look on us, of whom they yet have heardBy messengers alone. But come who may,And come he peaceful or in ravening wrathSpurred on his path, ’twere best, in any case,Damsels, to cling unto this altar-moundMade sacred to their gods of festival,—A shrine is stronger than a tower to save,A shield that none may cleave. Step swift thereto,And in your left hands hold with reverenceThe white-crowned wands of suppliance, the signBeloved of Zeus, compassion’s lord, and speakTo those that question you, words meek and lowAnd piteous, as beseems your stranger state,Clearly avowing of this flight of yoursThe bloodless cause; and on your utteranceSee to it well that modesty attend;From downcast eyes, from brows of pure control,Let chastity look forth; nor, when ye speak,Be voluble nor eager—they that dwellWithin this land are sternly swift to chide.And be your words submissive: heed this well;For weak ye are, outcasts on stranger lands,And froward talk beseems not strengthless hands.
CHORUS.O father, warily to us awareThy words are spoken, and thy wisdom’s bestMy mind shall hoard, with Zeus our sire to aid.
DANAUS.Even so—with gracious aspect let him aid.
CHORUS.Fain were I now to seat me by thy side.
DANAUS.Now dally not, but put our thought in act.
CHORUS.Zeus, pity our distress, or e’er we die.
DANAUS.If so he will, your toils to joy will turn.
CHORUS.Lo, on this shrine, the semblance of a bird.[2]
DANAUS.Zeus’ bird of dawn it is; invoke the sign.
CHORUS.Thus I invoke the saving rays of morn.
DANAUS.Next, bright Apollo, exiled once from heaven.
CHORUS.The exiled god will pity our exile.
DANAUS.Yea, may he pity, giving grace and aid.
CHORUS.Whom next invoke I, of these other gods?
DANAUS.Lo, here a trident, symbol of a god.
CHORUS.Who[3]gave sea-safety; may he bless on land!
DANAUS.This next is Hermes, carved in Grecian wise.
CHORUS.Then let him herald help to freedom won.
DANAUS.Lastly, adore this altar consecrateTo many lesser gods in one; then crouchOn holy ground, a flock of doves that flee,Scared by no alien hawks, a kin not kind,Hateful, and fain of love more hateful still.Foul is the bird that rends another bird,And foul the men who hale unwilling maids,From sire unwilling, to the bridal bed.Never on earth, nor in the lower world,Shall lewdness such as theirs escape the ban:There too, if men say right, a God there isWho upon dead men turns their sin to doom,To final doom. Take heed, draw hitherward,That from this hap your safety ye may win.
Enter theKING OF ARGOS.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Speak—of what land are ye? No Grecian bandIs this to whom I speak, with Eastern robesAnd wrappings richly dight: no Argive maid,No woman in all Greece such garb doth wear.This too gives marvel, how unto this land,Unheralded, unfriended, without guide,And without fear, ye came? yet wands I see,True sign of suppliance, by you laid downOn shrines of these our gods of festival.No land but Greece can read such signs aright.Much else there is, conjecture well might guess,But let words teach the man who stands to hear.
CHORUS.True is the word thou spakest of my garb;But speak I unto thee as citizen,Or Hermes’ wandbearer, or chieftain king?
THE KING OF ARGOS.For that, take heart and answer without fear.I am Pelasgus, ruler of this land,Child of Palaichthon, whom the earth brought forth;And, rightly named from me, the race who reapThis country’s harvests are Pelasgian called.And o’er the wide and westward-stretching land,Through which the lucent wave of Strymon flowsI rule; Perrhaebia’s land my boundary isNorthward, and Pindus’ further slopes, that watchPaeonia, and Dodona’s mountain ridge.West, east, the limit of the washing seasRestrains my rule—the interspace is mine.But this whereon we stand is Apian land,Styled so of old from the great healer’s name;For Apis, coming from Naupactus’ shoreBeyond the strait, child of Apollo’s selfAnd like him seer and healer, cleansed this landFrom man-devouring monsters, whom the earth,Stained with pollution of old bloodshedding,Brought forth in malice, beasts of ravening jaws,A grisly throng of serpents manifold.And healings of their hurt, by knife and charm,Apis devised, unblamed of Argive men,And in their prayers found honour, for reward.—Lo, thou hast heard the tokens that I give:Speak now thy race, and tell a forthright tale;In sooth, this people loves not many words.
CHORUS.Short is my word and clear. Of Argive raceWe come, from her, the ox-horned maiden whoErst bare the sacred child. My word shall giveWhate’er can ’stablish this my soothfast tale.
THE KING OF ARGOS.O stranger maids, I may not trust this word,That ye have share in this our Argive race.No likeness of our country do ye bear,But semblance as of Libyan womankind.Even such a stock by Nilus’ banks might grow;Yea and the Cyprian stamp, in female forms,Shows to the life, what males impressed the same.And, furthermore, of roving Indian maidsWhose camping-grounds by Aethiopia lie,And camels burdened even as mules, and bearingRiders, as horses bear, mine ears have heard;And tales of flesh-devouring mateless maidsCalled Amazons: to these, if bows ye bare,I most had deemed you like. Speak further yet,That of your Argive birth the truth I learn.
CHORUS.Here in this Argive land—so runs the tale—Io was priestess once of Hera’s fane.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Yea, truth it is, and far this word prevails:Is’t said that Zeus with mortal mingled love?
CHORUS.Ay, and that Hera that embrace surmised.
THE KING OF ARGOS.How issued then this strife of those on high?
CHORUS.By Hera’s will, a heifer she became.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Held Zeus aloof then from the horned beast?
CHORUS.’Tis said, he loved, in semblance of a bull.
THE KING OF ARGOS.And his stern consort, did she aught thereon?
CHORUS.One myriad-eyed she set, the heifer’s guard.
THE KING OF ARGOS.How namest thou this herdsman many-eyed?
CHORUS.Argus, the child of Earth, whom Hermes slew.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Still did the goddess vex the beast ill-starred?
CHORUS.She wrought a gadfly with a goading sting.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Thus drave she Io hence, to roam afar?
CHORUS.Yea—this thy word coheres exact with mine.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Then to Canopus and to Memphis came she?
CHORUS.And by Zeus’ hand was touched, and bare a child.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Who vaunts him the Zeus-mated creature’s son?
CHORUS.Epaphus, named rightly from the saving touch.
THE KING OF ARGOS.And whom in turn did Epaphus beget?[4]
CHORUS.Libya, with name of a wide land endowed.
THE KING OF ARGOS.And who from her was born unto the race?
CHORUS.Belus: from him two sons, my father one.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Speak now to me his name, this greybeard wise.
CHORUS.Revere the gods thus crowned, who steer the State.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Awe thrills me, seeing these shrines with leafage crowned.
CHORUS.Yea, stern the wrath of Zeus, the suppliants’ lord.Child of Palaichthon, royal chiefOf thy Pelasgians, hear!Bow down thine heart to my relief—A fugitive, a suppliant, swift with fear,A creature whom the wild wolves chaseO’er toppling crags; in piteous caseAloud, afar she lows,Calling the herdsman’s trusty arm to save her from her foes!
THE KING OF ARGOS.Lo, with bowed heads beside our city shrinesYe sit ’neath shade of new-plucked olive-boughs.Our distant kin’s resentment Heaven forefend!Let not this hap, unhoped and unforeseen,Bring war on us: for strife we covet not.
CHORUS.Justice, the daughter of right-dealing Zeus,Justice, the queen of suppliants, look down,That this our plight no ill may looseUpon your town!This word, even from the young, let age and wisdom learn:If thou to suppliants show grace,Thou shalt not lack Heaven’s grace in turn,So long as virtue’s gifts on heavenly shrines have place.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Not at my private hearth ye sit and sue;And if the city bear a common stain,Be it the common toil to cleanse the same:Therefore no pledge, no promise will I give,Ere counsel with the commonwealth be held.
CHORUS.Nay, but the source of sway, the city’s self, art thou,A power unjudged! thine, only thine,To rule the right of hearth and shrine!Before thy throne and sceptre all men bow!Thou, in all causes lord, beware the curse divine!
THE KING OF ARGOS.May that curse fall upon mine enemies!I cannot aid you without risk of scathe,Nor scorn your prayers—unmerciful it were.Perplexed, distraught I stand, and fear alikeThe twofold chance, to do or not to do.
CHORUS.Have heed of him who looketh from on high,The guard of woeful mortals, whosoe’erUnto their fellows cry,And find no pity, find no justice there.Abiding in his wrath, the suppliants’ lordDoth smite, unmoved by cries, unbent by prayerful word.
THE KING OF ARGOS.But if Aegyptus’ children grasp you here,Claiming, their country’s right, to hold you theirsAs next of kin, who dares to counter this?Plead ye your country’s laws, if plead ye may,That upon you they lay no lawful hand.
CHORUS.Let me not fall, O nevermore,A prey into the young men’s hand;Rather than wed whom I abhor,By pilot-stars I flee this land;O king, take justice to thy side,And with the righteous powers decide!
THE KING OF ARGOS.Hard is the cause—make me not judge thereof.Already I have vowed it, to do noughtSave after counsel with my people ta’en,King though I be; that ne’er in after time,If ill fate chance, my people then may say—In aid of strangers thou the state hast slain.
CHORUS.Zeus, lord of kinship, rules at willThe swaying balance, and surveysEvil and good; to men of illGives evil, and to good men praise.And thou—since true those scales do sway—Shall thou from justice shrink away?
THE KING OF ARGOS.A deep, a saving counsel here there needs—An eye that like a diver to the depthOf dark perplexity can pass and see,Undizzied, unconfused. First must we careThat to the State and to ourselves this thingShall bring no ruin; next, that wrangling handsShall grasp you not as prey, nor we ourselvesBetray you thus embracing sacred shrines,Nor make the avenging all-destroying god,Who not in hell itself sets dead men free,A grievous inmate, an abiding bane.—Spake I not right, of saving counsel’s need?
CHORUS.Yea, counsel take and stand to aidAt Justice’ side and mine.Betray not me, the timorous maidWhom far beyond the brineA godless violence cast forth forlorn.O King, wilt thou behold—Lord of this land, wilt thou behold me tornFrom altars manifold?Bethink thee of the young men’s wrath and lust,Hold off their evil pride;Steel not thyself to see the suppliant thrustFrom hallowed statues’ side,Haled by the frontlet on my forehead bound,As steeds are led, and drawnBy hands that drag from shrine and altar-moundMy vesture’s fringed lawn.Know thou that whether for Aegyptus’ raceThou dost their wish fulfil,Or for the gods and for each holy place—Be thy choice good or ill,Blow is with blow requited, grace with graceSuch is Zeus’ righteous will.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Yea, I have pondered: from the sea of doubtHere drives at length the bark of thought ashore;Landward with screw and windlass haled, and firm,Clamped to her props, she lies. The need is stern;With men or gods a mighty strife we strivePerforce, and either hap in grief concludes.For, if a house be sacked, new wealth for oldNot hard it is to win—if Zeus the lordOf treasure favour—more than quits the loss,Enough to pile the store of wealth full high;Or if a tongue shoot forth untimely speech,Bitter and strong to goad a man to wrath,Soft words there be to soothe that wrath away:But what device shall make the war of kinBloodless? that woe, the blood of many beasts,And victims manifold to many gods,Alone can cure. Right glad I were to shunThis strife, and am more fain of ignoranceThan of the wisdom of a woe endured.The gods send better than my soul foretells!
CHORUS.Of many cries for mercy, hear the end.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Say on, then, for it shall not ’scape mine ear.
CHORUS.Girdles we have, and bands that bind our robes.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Even so; such things beseem a woman’s wear.
CHORUS.Know, then, with these a fair device there is—
THE KING OF ARGOS.Speak, then: what utterance doth this foretell?
CHORUS.Unless to us thou givest pledge secure—
THE KING OF ARGOS.What can thy girdles’ craft achieve for thee?
CHORUS.Strange votive tablets shall these statues deck.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Mysterious thy resolve—avow it clear.
CHORUS.Swiftly to hang me on these sculptured gods!
THE KING OF ARGOS.Thy word is as a lash to urge my heart.
CHORUS.Thou seest truth, for I have cleared thine eye
THE KING OF ARGOS.Yea, and woes manifold, invincible,A crowd of ills, sweep on me torrent-like.My bark goes forth upon a sea of troublesUnfathomed, ill to traverse, harbourless.For if my deed shall match not your demand,Dire, beyond shot of speech, shall be the baneYour death’s pollution leaves unto this land.Yet if against your kin, Aegyptus’ race,Before our gates I front the doom of war,Will not the city’s loss be sore? Shall menFor women’s sake incarnadine the ground?But yet the wrath of Zeus, the suppliants’ lordI needs must fear: most awful unto manThe terror of his anger. Thou, old man,The father of these maidens, gather upWithin your arms these wands of suppliance,And lay them at the altars manifoldOf all our country’s gods, that all the townKnow, by this sign, that ye come here to sue.Nor, in thy haste, do thou say aught of me.Swift is this folk to censure those who rule;But, if they see these signs of suppliance,It well may chance that each will pity you,And loathe the young men’s violent pursuit;And thus a fairer favour you may find:For, to the helpless, each man’s heart is kind.
DANAUS.To us, beyond gifts manifold it isTo find a champion thus compassionate;Yet send with me attendants, of thy folk,Rightly to guide me, that I duly findEach altar of your city’s gods that standsBefore the fane, each dedicated shrine;And that in safety through the city’s waysI may pass onwards: all unlike to yoursThe outward semblance that I wear—the racethat Nilus rears is all dissimilarThat of Inachus. Keep watch and wardLest heedlessness bring death: full oft, I ween,Friend hath slain friend, not knowing whom he slew.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Go at his side, attendants,—he saith well.On to the city’s consecrated shrines!Nor be of many words to those ye meet,The while this suppliant voyager ye lead.
[ExitDANAUSwith attendants.]
CHORUS.Let him go forward, thy command obeying.But me how biddest, how assurest thou?
THE KING OF ARGOS.Leave there the new-plucked boughs, thy sorrow’s sign.
CHORUS.Thus beckoned forth, at thy behest I leave them.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Now to this level precinct turn thyself.
CHORUS.Unconsecrate it is, and cannot shield me.
THE KING OF ARGOS.We will not yield thee to those falcons’ greed.
CHORUS.What help? more fierce they are than serpents fell.
THE KING OF ARGOS.We spake thee fair—speak thou them fair in turn.
CHORUS.What marvel that we loathe them, scared in soul?
THE KING OF ARGOS.Awe towards a king should other fears transcend.
CHORUS.Thus speak, thus act, and reassure my mind.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Not long thy sire shall leave thee desolate.But I will call the country’s indwellers,And with soft words th’ assembly will persuade,And warn your sire what pleadings will avail.Therefore abide ye, and with prayer entreatThe country’s gods to compass your desire;The while I go, this matter to provide,Persuasion and fair fortune at my side.
[Exit theKING OF ARGOS.]
CHORUS.O King of Kings, among the blestThou highest and thou happiest,Listen and grant our prayer,And, deeply loathing, thrustAway from us the young men’s lust,And deeply drownIn azure waters, down and ever down,Benches and rowers dark,The fatal and perfidious bark!Unto the maidens turn thy gracious care;Think yet again upon the tale of fame,How from the maiden loved of thee there sprungMine ancient line, long since in many a legend sung!Remember, O remember, thou whose handDid Io by a touch to human shape reclaim.For from this Argos erst our mother cameDriven hence to Egypt’s land,Yet sprung of Zeus we were, and hence our birth we claim.And now have I roamed backUnto the ancient trackWhere Io roamed and pastured among flowers,Watched o’er by Argus’ eyes,Through the lush grasses and the meadow bowers.Thence, by the gadfly maddened, forth she fliesUnto far lands and alien peoples drivenAnd, following fate, through paths of foam and surge,Sees, as she goes, the cleaving strait divideGreece, from the Eastland riven.And swift through Asian borders doth she urgeHer course, o’er Phrygian mountains’ sheep-clipt side;Thence, where the Mysian realm of Teuthras liesTowards Lydian lowlands hies,And o’er Cilician and Pamphylian hillsAnd ever-flowing rills,And thence to Aphrodite’s fertile shore,[5]The land of garnered wheat and wealthy storeAnd thence, deep-stung by wild unrest,By the winged fly that goaded her and drave,Unto the fertile land, the god-possest,(Where, fed from far-off snows,Life-giving Nilus flows,Urged on by Typho’s strength, a fertilizing wave)She roves, in harassed and dishonoured flightScathed by the blasting pangs of Hera’s dread despite.And they within the landWith terror shook and wanned,So strange the sight they saw, and were afraid—A wild twy-natured thing, half heifer and half maid.Whose hand was laid at last on Io, thus forlorn,With many roamings worn?Who bade the harassed maiden’s peace return?Zeus, lord of time eterne.Yea, by his breath divine, by his unscathing strength,She lays aside her bane,And softened back to womanhood at lengthSheds human tears again.Then, quickened with Zeus’ veritable seed,A progeny she bare,A stainless babe, a child of heavenly breed.Of life and fortune fair.His is the life of life—so all men say,—His is the seed of Zeus.Who else had power stern Hera’s craft to stay,Her vengeful curse to loose?Yea, all from Zeus befell!And rightly wouldst thou tellThat we from Epaphus, his child, were born:Justly his deed was done;Unto what other one,Of all the gods, should I for justice turn?From him our race did spring;Creator he and King,Ancient of days and wisdom he, and might.As bark before the wind,So, wafted by his mind,Moves every counsel, each device aright.Beneath no stronger handHolds he a weak command,No throne doth he abase him to adore;Swift as a word, his deedActs out what stands decreedIn counsels of his heart, for evermore.
Re-enterDANAUS.
DANAUS.Take heart, my children: the land’s heart is kind,And to full issue has their voting come.
CHORUS.All hail, my sire; thy word brings utmost joy.Say, to what issue is the vote made sure,And how prevailed the people’s crowding hands?
DANAUS.With one assent the Argives spake their will,And, hearing, my old heart took youthful cheer,The very sky was thrilled when high in airThe concourse raised right hands and swore their oath:—Free shall the maidens sojourn in this land.Unharried, undespoiled by mortal wight:No native hand, no hand of foreignerShall drag them hence; if any man use force—Whoe’er of all our countrymen shall failTo come unto their aid, let him go forth,Beneath the people’s curse, to banishment.So did the king of this Pelasgian folkPlead on behalf of us, and bade them heedThat never, in the after-time, this realmShould feed to fulness the great enmityOf Zeus, the suppliants’ guard, against itself!A twofold curse, for wronging stranger-guestsWho are akin withal, confrontinglyShould rise before this city and be shownA ruthless monster, fed on human doom.Such things the Argive people heard, and straight,Without proclaim of herald, gave assent:Yea, in full conclave, the Pelasgian folkHeard suasive pleas, and Zeus through them resolved.
CHORUS.Arouse we now to chant our prayerFor fair return of service fairAnd Argos’ kindly will.Zeus, lord of guestright, look uponThe grace our stranger lips have won.In right and truth, as they begun,Guide them, with favouring hand, untilThou dost their blameless wish fulfil!Now may the Zeus-born gods on highHear us pour forthA votive prayer for Argos’ clan!—Never may this Pelasgian earth,Amid the fire-wrack, shrill the dismal cryOn Ares, ravening lord of fight,Who in an alien harvest mows down man!For lo, this land had pity on our plight,And unto us were merciful and leal,To us, the piteous flock, who at Zeus’ altar kneel!They scornèd not the pleas of maidenhood,Nor with the young men’s will hath their will stood.They knew right well.Th’ unearthly watching fiend invincible,The foul avenger—let him not draw near!For he, on roofs ill-starred,Defiling and polluting, keeps a ghastly ward!They knew his vengeance, and took holy heedTo us, the sister suppliants, who cryTo Zeus, the lord of purity:Therefore with altars pure they shall the gods revere.Thus, through the boughs that shade our lips, fly forth in air,Fly forth, O eager prayer!May never pestilence effaceThis city’s race,Nor be the land with corpses strewed,Nor stained with civic blood!The stem of youth, unpluckt, to manhood come,Nor Ares rise from Aphrodité’s bower,The lord of death and bane, to waste our youthful flower.Long may the oldCrowd to the altars kindled to consumeGifts rich and manifold—Offered to win from powers divineA benison on city and on shrine:Let all the sacred might adoreOf Zeus most high, the lordOf guestright and the hospitable board,Whose immemorial law doth rule Fate’s scales aright:The garners of earth’s storeBe full for evermore,And grace of Artemis make women’s travail light;No devastating curse of fell diseaseThis city seize;No clamour of the State arouse to warAres, from whom afarShrinketh the lute, by whom the dances fail—Ares, the lord of wail.Swarm far aloof from Argos’ citizensAll plague and pestilence,And may the Archer-God our children spare!May Zeus with foison and with fruitfulnessThe land’s each season bless,And, quickened with Heaven’s bounty manifold,Teem grazing flock and fold.Beside the altars of Heaven’s hallowingLoud let the minstrels sing,And from pure lips float forth the harp-led strain in air!And let the people’s voice, the powerThat sways the State, in danger’s hourBe wary, wise for all;Nor honour in dishonour hold,But—ere the voice of war be bold—Let them to stranger peoples grantFair and unbloody covenant—Justice and peace withal;And to the Argive powers divineThe sacrifice of laurelled kine,By rite ancestral, pay.Among three words of power and awe,Stands this, the third, the mighty law—Your gods, your fathers deified,Ye shall adore. Let this abideFor ever and for aye.
DANAUS.Dear children, well and wisely have ye prayed;I bid you now not shudder, though ye hearNew and alarming tidings from your sire.From this high place beside the suppliants’ shrineThe bark of our pursuers I behold,By divers tokens recognized too well.Lo, the spread canvas and the hides that screenThe gunwale; lo, the prow, with painted eyesThat seem her onward pathway to descry,Heeding too well the rudder at the sternThat rules her, coming for no friendly end.And look, the seamen—all too plain their race—Their dark limbs gleam from out their snow-white garb;Plain too the other barks, a fleet that comesAll swift to aid the purpose of the first,That now, with furled sail and with pulse of oarsWhich smite the wave together, comes aland.But ye, be calm, and, schooled not scared by fear,Confront this chance, be mindful of your trustIn these protecting gods. And I will hence,And champions who shall plead your cause arightWill bring unto your side. There come perchanceHeralds or envoys, eager to lay handAnd drag you captive hence; yet fear them not;Foiled shall they be. Yet well it were for you(If, ere with aid I come, I tarry long),Not by one step this sanctuary to leave.Farewell, fear nought: soon shall the hour be bornWhen he that scorns the gods shall rue his scorn
CHORUS.Ah but I shudder, father!—ah, even now,Even as I speak, the swift-winged ships draw nigh!I shudder, I shiver, I perish with fear:Overseas though I fled,Yet nought it avails; my pursuers are near!
DANAUS.Children, take heart; they who decreed to aidThy cause will arm for battle, well I ween.
CHORUS.But desperate is Aegyptus’ ravening race,With fight unsated; thou too know’st it well.In their wrath they o’ertake us; the prow is deep-darkIn the which they have sped,And dark is the bench and the crew of the bark!
DANAUS.Yea but a crew as stout they here shall find,And arms well steeled beneath a noon-day sun.
CHORUS.Ah yet, O father, leave us not forlorn!Alone, a maid is nought, a strengthless arm.With guile they pursue me, with counsel malign,And unholy their soul;And as ravens they seize me, unheeding the shrine!
DANAUS.Fair will befall us, children, in this chance,If thus in wrath they wrong the gods and you.
CHORUS.Alas, nor tridents nor the sanctityOf shrines will drive them, O my sire, from us!Unholy and daring and cursed is their ire,Nor own they controlOf the gods, but like jackals they glut their desire!
DANAUS.Ay, butCome wolf, flee jackal, saith the saw;Nor can the flax-plant overbear the corn.
CHORUS.Lustful, accursèd, monstrous is their willAs of beasts ravening—’ware we of their power!
DANAUS.Look you, not swiftly puts a fleet to sea,Nor swiftly to its moorings; long it isOr e’er the saving cables to the shoreAre borne, and long or e’er the steersmen cry,The good ship swings at anchor—all is well.Longest of all, the task to come alandWhere haven there is none, when sunset fadesIn night.To pilot wise, the adage saith,Night is a day of wakefulness and pain.Therefore no force of weaponed men, as yetScatheless can come ashore, before the bankLie at her anchorage securely moored.Bethink thee therefore, nor in panic leaveThe shrine of gods whose succour thou hast wonI go for aid—men shall not blame me long,Old, but with youth at heart and on my tongue.
[ExitDANAUS.]
CHORUS.O land of hill and dale, O holy land,What shall befall us? whither shall we flee,From Apian land to some dark lair of earth?O would that in vapour of smoke I might rise to the clouds of the sky,That as dust which flits up without wings I might pass and evanish and die!I dare not, I dare not abide: my heart yearns, eager to fly;And dark is the cast of my thought; I shudder and tremble for fear.My father looked forth and beheld: I die of the sight that draws near.And for me be the strangling cord, the halter made ready by Fate,Before to my body draws nigh the man of my horror and hate.Nay, ere I will own him as lord, as handmaid to Hades I go!And oh, that aloft in the sky, where the dark clouds are frozen to snow,A refuge for me might be found, or a mountain-top smooth and too highFor the foot of the goat, where the vulture sits lonely, and none may descryThe pinnacle veiled in the cloud, the highest and sheerest of all,Ere to wedlock that rendeth my heart, and love that is loveless, I fall!Yea, a prey to the dogs and the birds of the mount will I give me to be,—From wailing and curse and pollution it is death, only death, sets me free:Let death come upon me before to the ravisher’s bed I am thrust;What champion, what saviour but death can I find, or what refuge from lust?I will utter my shriek of entreaty, a prayer that shrills up to the sky,That calleth the gods to compassion, a tuneful, a pitiful cry,That is loud to invoke the releaser. O father, look down on the fight;Look down in thy wrath on the wronger, with eyes that are eager for right.Zeus, thou that art lord of the world, whose kingdom is strong over all,Have mercy on us! At thine altar for refuge and safety we call.For the race of Aegyptus is fierce, with greed and with malice afire;They cry as the questing hounds, they sweep with the speed of desire.But thine is the balance of fate, thou rulest the wavering scale,And without thee no mortal emprise shall have strength to achieve or prevail.Alack, alack! the ravisher—He leaps from boat to beach, he draweth near!Away, thou plunderer accurst!Death seize thee first,Or e’er thou touch me—off! God, hear our cry,Our maiden agony!Ah, ah, the touch, the prelude of my shame.Alas, my maiden fame!O sister, sister, to the altar cling,For he that seizeth me,Grim is his wrath and stern, by land as on the sea.Guard us, O king!
Enter theHERALD OF AEGYPTUS.
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Hence to my barge—step swiftly, tarry not.
CHORUS.Alack, he rends—he rends my hair! O wound on wound!Help! my lopped head will fall, my blood gush o’er the ground!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Aboard, ye cursèd—with a new curse, go!
CHORUS.Would God that on the wand’ring brineThou and this braggart tongue of thineHad sunk beneath the main—Thy mast and planks, made fast in vain!Thee would I drive aboard once more,A slayer and a dastard, from the shore!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Be still, thou vain demented soul;My force thy craving shall control.Away, aboard! What, clingest to the shrine?Away! this city’s gods I hold not for divine.
CHORUS.Aid me, ye gods, that never, neverI may again beholdThe mighty, the life-giving river,Nilus, the quickener of field and fold!Alack, O sire, unto the shrine I cling—Shrine of this land from which mine ancient line did spring!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Shrines, shrines, forsooth!—the ship, the ship be shrine!Aboard, perforce and will-ye nill-ye, go!Or e’er from hands of mineYe suffer torments worse and blow on blow.
CHORUS.Alack, God grant those hands may strive in vainWith the salt-streaming wave,When ’gainst the wide-blown blasts thy bark shall strainTo round Sarpedon’s cape, the sandbank’s treach’rous grave.
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Shrill ye and shriek unto what gods ye may,Ye shall not leap from out Aegyptus’ bark,How bitterly soe’er ye wail your woe.
CHORUS.Alack, alack my wrong!Stern is thy voice, thy vaunting loud and strong.Thy sire, the mighty Nilus, drive thee henceTurning to death and doom thy greedy violence!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Swift to the vessel of the double prow,Go quickly! let none linger, else this handRuthless will hale you by your tresses hence.
CHORUS.Alack, O father! from the shrineNot aid but agony is mine.As a spider he creeps and he clutches his prey,And he hales me away.A spectre of darkness, of darkness. Alas and alas! well-a-day!O Earth, O my mother! O Zeus, thou king of the earth, and her child!Turn back, we pray thee, from us his clamour and threatenings wild!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Peace! I fear not this country’s deities.They fostered not my childhood nor mine age.
CHORUS.Like a snake that is human he comes, he shudders and crawls to my side;As an adder that biteth the foot, his clutch on my flesh doth abide.O Earth, O my mother! O Zeus, thou king of the earth, and her child!Turn back, we pray thee, from us his clamour and threatenings wild!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Swift each unto the ship; repine no more,Or my hand shall not spare to rend your robe.
CHORUS.O chiefs, O leaders, aid me, or I yield!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Peace! if ye have not ears to hear my words,Lo, by these tresses must I hale you hence.
CHORUS.Undone we are, O king! all hope is gone.
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Ay, kings enow ye shall behold anon,Aegyptus’ sons—Ye shall not want for kings.
Enter theKING OF ARGOS.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Sirrah, what dost thou? in what arroganceDarest thou thus insult Pelasgia’s realm?Deemest thou this a woman-hearted town?Thou art too full of thy barbarian scornFor us of Grecian blood, and, erring thus,Thou dost bewray thyself a fool in all!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Say thou wherein my deeds transgress my right.
THE KING OF ARGOS.First, that thou play’st a stranger’s part amiss.
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Wherein? I do but search and claim mine own.
THE KING OF ARGOS.To whom of our guest-champions hast appealed?
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.To Hermes, herald’s champion, lord of search.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Yea, to a god—yet dost thou wrong the gods!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.The gods that rule by Nilus I revere.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Hear I aright? our Argive gods are nought?
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.The prey is mine, unless force rend it from me.
THE KING OF ARGOS.At thine own peril touch them—’ware, and soon!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.I hear thy speech, no hospitable word.
THE KING OF ARGOS.I am no host for sacrilegious hands.
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.I will go tell this to Aegyptus’ sons.
THE KING OF ARGOS.Tell it! my pride will ponder not thy word.
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Yet, that I have my message clear to say(For it behooves that heralds’ words be clear,Be they or ill or good), how art thou named?By whom despoilèd of this sister-bandOf maidens pass I homeward?—speak and say!For lo, henceforth in Ares’ court we stand,Who judges not by witness but by war:No pledge of silver now can bring the causeTo issue: ere this thing end, there must beCorpse piled on corpse and many lives gasped forth.
THE KING OF ARGOS.What skills it that I tell my name to thee?Thou and thy mates shall learn it ere the end.Know that if words unstained by violenceCan change these maidens’ choice, then mayest thou,With full consent of theirs, conduct them hence.But thus the city with one voice ordained—No force shall bear away the maiden band.Firmly this word upon the temple wallIs by a rivet clenched, and shall abide:Not upon wax inscribed and delible,Nor upon parchment sealed and stored away.—Lo, thou hast heard our free mouths speak their will:Out from our presence—tarry not, but go!
HERALD OF AEGYPTUS.Methinks we stand on some new edge of war:Be strength and triumph on the young men’s side!
THE KING OF ARGOS.Nay but here also shall ye find young men,Unsodden with the juices oozed from grain.[6]
[ExitHERALD OF AEGYPTUS.]
But ye, O maids, with your attendants true,Pass hence with trust into the fencèd town,Ringed with a wide confine of guarding towers.Therein are many dwellings for such guestsAs the State honours; there myself am housedWithin a palace neither scant nor strait.There dwell ye, if ye will to lodge at easeIn halls well-thronged: yet, if your soul prefer,Tarry secluded in a separate home.Choose ye and cull, from these our proffered gifts,Whiche’er is best and sweetest to your will:And I and all these citizens whose voteStands thus decreed, will your protectors be.Look not to find elsewhere more loyal guard.
CHORUS.O godlike chief, God grant my prayer:Fair blessings on thy proffers fair,Lord of Pelasgia’s race!Yet, of thy grace, unto our sideSend thou the man of courage tried,Of counsel deep and prudent thought,—Be Danaus to his children brought;For his it is to guide us wellAnd warn where it behoves to dwell—What place shall guard and shelter usFrom malice and tongues slanderous:Swift always are the lips of blameA stranger-maiden to defame—But Fortune give us grace!
THE KING OF ARGOS.A stainless fame, a welcome kindFrom all this people shall ye find:Dwell therefore, damsels, loved of us,Within our walls, as DanausAllots to each, in order due,Her dower of attendants true.
Re-enterDANAUS.
DANAUSHigh thanks, my children, unto Argos con,And to this folk, as to Olympian gods,Give offerings meet of sacrifice and wine;For saviours are they in good sooth to you.From me they heard, and bitter was their wrath,How those your kinsmen strove to work you wrong,And how of us were thwarted: then to meThis company of spearmen did they grant,That honoured I might walk, nor unawareDie by some secret thrust and on this landBring down the curse of death, that dieth not.Such boons they gave me: it behoves me payA deeper reverence from a soul sincere.Ye, to the many words of warinessSpoken by me your father, add this word,That, tried by time, our unknown companyBe held for honest: over-swift are tonguesTo slander strangers, over-light is speechTo bring pollution on a stranger’s name.Therefore I rede you, bring no shame on meNow when man’s eye beholds your maiden prime.Lovely is beauty’s ripening harvest-field,But ill to guard; and men and beasts, I wot,And birds and creeping things make prey of it.And when the fruit is ripe for love, the voiceOf Aphrodite bruiteth it abroad,The while she guards the yet unripened growth.On the fair richness of a maiden’s bloomEach passer looks, o’ercome with strong desire,With eyes that waft the wistful dart of love.Then be not such our hap, whose livelong toilDid make our pinnace plough the mighty main:Nor bring we shame upon ourselves, and joyUnto my foes. Behold, a twofold home—One of the king’s and one the people’s gift—Unbought, ’tis yours to hold,—a gracious boon.Go—but remember ye your sire’s behest,And hold your life less dear than chastity.
CHORUS.The gods above grant that all else be well.But fear not thou, O sire, lest aught befallOf ill unto our ripened maidenhood.So long as Heaven have no new ill devised,From its chaste path my spirit shall not swerve.
SEMI-CHORUS.Pass and adore ye the Blessed, the gods of the city who dwellAround Erasinus, the gush of the swift immemorial tide.
SEMI-CHORUS.Chant ye, O maidens; aloud let the praise of Pelasgia swell;Hymn we no longer the shores where Nilus to ocean doth glide.
SEMI-CHORUS.Sing we the bounteous streams that ripple and gush through the city;Quickening flow they and fertile, the soft new life of the plain.
SEMI-CHORUS.Artemis, maiden most pure, look on us with grace and with pity—Save us from forced embraces: such love hath no crown but a pain.
SEMI-CHORUS.Yet not in scorn we chant, but in honour of Aphrodite;She truly and Hera alone have power with Zeus and control.Holy the deeds of her rite, her craft is secret and mighty,And high is her honour on earth, and subtle her sway of the soul.
SEMI-CHORUS.Yea, and her child is Desire: in the train of his mother he goeth—Yea and Persuasion soft-lipped, whom none can deny or repel:Cometh Harmonia too, on whom Aphrodite bestowethThe whispering parley, the paths of the rapture that lovers love well.
SEMI-CHORUS.Ah, but I tremble and quake lest again they should sail to reclaim!Alas for the sorrow to come, the blood and the carnage of war.Ah, by whose will was it done that o’er the wide ocean they came,Guided by favouring winds, and wafted by sail and by oar?
SEMI-CHORUS.Peace! for what Fate hath ordained will surely not tarry but come;Wide is the counsel of Zeus, by no man escaped or withstood:Only I pray that whate’er, in the end, of this wedlock he doom,We as many a maiden of old, may win from the ill to the good.[7]
SEMI-CHORUS.Great Zeus, this wedlock turn from me—Me from the kinsman bridegroom guard!
SEMI-CHORUS.Come what come may, ’tis Fate’s decree.
SEMI-CHORUS.Soft is thy word—the doom is hard.
SEMI-CHORUS.Thou know’st not what the Fates provide.
SEMI-CHORUS.How should I scan Zeus’ mighty will,The depth of counsel undescried?
SEMI-CHORUS.Pray thou no word of omen ill.
SEMI-CHORUS.What timely warning wouldst thou teach?
SEMI-CHORUS.Beware, nor slight the gods in speech.
SEMI-CHORUS.Zeus, hold from my body the wedlock detested, the bridegroom abhorred!It was thou, it was thou didst releaseMine ancestress Io from sorrow: thine healing it was that restored,The touch of thine hand gave her peace.
SEMI-CHORUS.Be thy will for the cause of the maidens! of two ills, the lesser I pray—The exile that leaveth me pure.May thy justice have heed to my cause, my prayers to thy mercy find way!For the hands of thy saving are sure.
[Exeunt omnes.]
[1]“ἀερίας ἀπὸ γᾶς.” This epithet may appear strange to modern readers accustomed to think of Egypt as a land of cloudless skies and pellucid atmosphere. Nevertheless both Pindar (Pythiv 93) and Apollonius Rhodius (iv 267) speak of it in the same way as Aeschylus. It has been conjectured that they allude to the fog banks that often obscure the low coasts—a phenomenon likely to impress the early navigators and to be reported by them.
[2]The whole of this dialogue in alternate verses is disarranged in the MSS. The re-arrangement which has approved itself to Paley has been here followed. It involves, however, a hiatus, instead of the line to which this note is appended. The substance of the lost line being easily deducible from the context, it has been supplied in the translation.
[3]Poseidon.
[4]Here one verse at least has been lost. The conjecture of Bothe seems to be verified, as far as substance is concerned, by the next line, and has consequently been adopted.
[5]Cyprus.
[6]For this curious taunt, strongly illustrative of what Browning calls “nationality in drinks,” see Herodotus, ii. 77. A similar feeling may perhaps be traced in Tacitus’ description of the national beverage of the Germans: “Potui humor ex hordeo aut frumento,in quandam similitudinem vini corruptus” (Germania, chap, xxiii).
[7]The ambiguity of these two lines is reproduced from the original. The Semi-Chorus appear to pray, in one aspiration, that the threatened wedlock may never take place, and,ifit does take place, may be for weal, not woe.