Chapter 3

FOOTNOTES:[1]Reading,caudam.ACT II[EnterCreon.]Oedipus: I quake with horror, and I fear to knowThe tendency of fate. My trembling soulStrives 'neath a double load; for joy and griefLie mingled still in dark obscurity.I shrink from knowing what I long to know.Wherefore, O brother of my consort, speak;210And if to weary hearts thou bring'st relief,With quickened utterance thy news proclaim.Creon: In dark obscurity the answer lies.Oedipus: Who gives me doubtful succor grants me none.Creon: It is the custom of the Delphic godIn dark enigmas to conceal the fates.215Oedipus: Yet speak; however dark the riddle be'Tis given to Oedipus alone to solve.Creon: Apollo doth ordain that banishmentBe meted out to him who slew our king,And so our murdered Laius be avenged;For only thus shall we again beholdThe day's clear light, and drink safe draughts of air.220Oedipus: Who was the slayer of the noble king?Tell who is designated by the god,That he th' allotted punishment may pay.Creon:May it be granted me to tell the thingsTo sight and hearing dreadful. At the thought,Numb horror holds my limbs, my blood runs cold.When to Apollo's hallowed shrine I came225With reverent feet, and pious hands upraised,Parnassus' double-crested, snowy peakGave forth a fearful crash, the laurels shook,And fair Castalia's waters ceased to flow.The priestess of the son of Lato then230Began to spread her bristling locks abroad,And felt the inspiration of the god.Scarce had she reached the sacred inner shrine,When with a roar, beyond the voice of man,There sounded forth this doubtful oracle:"Kind shall the stars return to the Theban city of Cadmus,If, O fugitive guest, Ismenian Dirce thou leavest,Stained with the blood of a king, from infancy known to Apollo.235Brief shall be thy joys, the impious joys of slaughter.With thee war thou bringest, and war to thy children thou leavest,Foul returned once more to the impious arms of thy mother."Oedipus: What I at heaven's command now meditate,Long since should have been rendered to the king,240That none by craft might violate the throne.And most doth it become a sceptered kingTo guard the life of kings; for none lamentThe death of him whose safety breedeth fear.Creon: Our care for him a greater fear removed.Oedipus: What fear so great that duty to prevent?245Creon: The Sphinx and her accurséd riddle's threats.Oedipus: Then now at heaven's command shall be atonedThat impious deed.Whoever of the godsDost look with kindly eye upon our realm;And thou, whose hand doth guide the rolling sphere;And thou, O glory of the smiling sky,250Who in thy wandering course dost rule the stars,And with thy flying wheels dost measure outThe slow procession of the centuries;Thou sister of the sun, night-wanderer,Who ever dost reflect thy brother's fires;And thou, great ruler of the boisterous winds,Who o'er the level deep dost drive thy car;255And thou, who dost allot the sunless homes:May he, by whose right hand king Laius fell,No peaceful home, no trusty lares find;And may no land in hospitalityReceive his cheerless, exiled wanderings.O'er shameful marriage may he live to grieve,260And monstrous progeny. May he his sireBy his own hand destroy; and may he do(What doom more dreadful can I imprecate?)The deed which by my flight I did not do.No room for pardon shall be given him;By this my regal scepter do I swear,Both by the sway which I as stranger hold,And that I left behind; by my household gods,265And thee, O Neptune, who with shorter wavesAnd twofold current dost disport thyselfUpon my native Corinth's double shores.And thou thyself be witness to my words,Who dost inspire the fate-revealing lipsOf Cirrha's priestess: so may Polybus,270My royal father, spend a quiet age,And end his days in peace upon the throne;And so may Merope, my mother, knowThe marriage of her Polybus alone,As from my grasp no favoring power shall snatchThat guilty one, who basely slew the king.But tell me, where was that foul murder done?In open fight, or was he basely snared?275Creon: In quest of cool Castalia's sacred fountAnd leafy woods, along the way he fared,On either side with tangled thickets hedged.'Twas where the road, three-forked, spreads to the plain.One leads through Phocian land, to Bacchus dear,Where high Parnassus, by a gentle slope280The lowlands leaving, lifts his double peakInto the heavens; and one leads off to whereTwo oceans bathe the land of Sisyphus;A third path, passing through Olenian fields,Along a hollow valley's winding way,Attains the vagrant waters and dividesThe chilling current of the Elean stream.285'Twas here he journeyed, safe 'mid general peace,When on a sudden, lo, a robber bandFell on him with the sword and slew him there.[Tiresiasis seen approaching.]But in the nick of time, by Phoebus roused,Tiresias, agéd and with trembling limbs,Hastes to our presence with what speed he may;And, as his faithful comrade, Manto comes,290Her sightless father leading by the hand.[EnterTiresias,led by his daughterManto.]Oedipus: O priest of heaven, thou next to Phoebus' self,Explain the oracle which he hath sent,And tell on whom the penalty is laid.Tiresias: Because my tongue is slow and seeks delay,Thou shouldst not wonder, great-souled Oedipus;Much truth is hidden when the eye is dimmed.295But when my country, when Apollo calls,I will obey. Then let me search the fates.If in my veins still flowed the blood of youth,I would myself sustain the god and speak.Now to the altar drive a pure-white bull,A heifer, too, upon whose tender neck300The curvéd yoke of toil hath never pressed.And thou, my child, who guid'st my darkened steps,Describe the omens which Apollo sends.[The victims are stationed before the altar as directed.]Manto: A perfect victim at the altar stands.Tiresias: With prayer invoke the presence of the gods,And heap the altar high with frankincense.305Manto: Lo, on the sacred fire the spice is heaped.Tiresias: What of the flame? Did it with vigor seizeThe generous feast?Manto:With sudden gleam it leapedInto the air, and quickly fell again.Tiresias: And did the sacred fire burn bright and clear,And point its gleaming summit straight to heaven,310And, spreading outward, to the breeze unfold;Or crawl, with course uncertain, near the ground,And, flickering, die away in gloomy smoke?Manto: Not one appearance only had the flame.As when the tempest-bringing Iris spreadsHer varying colors on the vault of heaven,315And with her painted bow adorns the sky;So to the sacred fire thou wouldst not tellWhat hue is wanting there and what prevails.Dark blue it flickered first, with yellow spots;Then bloody red, and then it vanished quite.320But see! the flame is rent in rival parts,And the glowing embers of one sacred pileAre cleft in double heaps and fall apart!O father, horror fills me as I gaze;For, as I pour the sacred liquid forth,It changes straight to blood—Oh, horrible!325And stifling smoke surrounds the royal head.And now in denser gloom it settles downUpon his face, and, with its veiling cloud,It shuts away from him the fading light.Oh, speak, and tell us what it doth portend.Tiresias: How can I speak, who halting stand amazedAmid conflicting voices of the soul?What shall I say? Dire ills are here, indeed,But hidden yet in deepest mystery.330With signs well known the wrath of heaven is wontTo be made manifest: but what is thatWhich now they would disclose, and then, again,With changing and destructive purpose hide?Some deed so vile, it shameth heaven to tell.But quickly set the chosen victims here,And sprinkle salted meal upon their heads.335With peaceful face do they endure the rites,And hands outstretched to smite?Manto:His lofty headThe bull uplifted to the eastern sky,Then shunned the light of day, and quickly turnedIn terror from the newly risen sun.Tiresias: With one blow, smitten, do they fall to earth?340Manto: The heifer threw herself upon the steel,And with one blow has fallen; but the bull,Though smitten by a double deadly blow,Distracted wanders here and there in pain,And scarce can force his struggling life away.Tiresias: Driven through a narrow opening spurts the blood,345Or, sluggish, does it water deeper wounds?Manto: The blood of one, through that same welcome thrust,Doth flow in generous streams; but of the bull,Those yawning wounds are stained with scanty drops,While, turning backward, through his eyes and mouthThe plenteous current flows.350Tiresias:These unblest ritesSome dreadful ills portend. But come, describeThe trusty markings of the viscera.Manto: Oh, what is this? For not, as is their wont,With gentle motion do the entrails quake,But, rather, strongly throb beneath the touch,While from the veins the blood leaps forth anew.355The sickly heart is shriveled up and liesDeep hidden in the breast; the veins appearOf livid hue. The entrails suffer lack;And from the wasting liver oozes slowA stream of black corruption. Nay, behold(A sign of dark foreboding to a kingWho holdeth single sway), two swelling pointsOf equal elevation rise to view;360But both are lopped and covered with a veil.Refusing lurking-place to things unseen,The hostile side uprears itself with strengthAnd shows seven swelling veins; but these, again,An intersecting line cuts straight across,Preventing their return. The natural law365And order of the parts has been reversed,And nothing lies within its proper place.All on the right the blood-filled lungs appear,Incapable of air; the heart no moreIs found upon the left, its 'customed place.The fatty walls, with their soft covering,No longer richly fold the entrails in.370The ways of nature are in all things changed;The womb itself is most unnatural.Look close, and see what impious thing is this:Oh, monstrous! 'tis the unborn progenyOf a heifer still unmated! stranger still,It lies not in the wonted place, assignedBy nature's laws, but fills its mother's side.375It moves its members with a feeble groan;Its unformed limbs with trembling rigors twitch.Black blood has stained the darkened entrails all;The mangled bodies strive e'en yet to move,Make show to rise, and menace with their hornsThe priestly hands. The entrails shun the touch.380Nor is that lowing which has frightened theeThe deep-voiced roar of bulls, nor do the callsOf frightened cattle sound upon our ears:It is the lowing of the altar fires,It is the frightened muttering of the shrine!Oedipus: What meaning have these monstrous signs? Declare;And with no timid ears will I attend.385For he who has the dregs of fortune drainedFears nothing more.Tiresias:The time will come to thee,When these thy ills, for which thou seekest aid,Will blessings seem.Oedipus:But tell me then, I pray,The one thing which the gods would have me know:Whose hands are stained with murder of the king?Tiresias: Neither the birds can summon up the name,390Who cleave the depths of heaven on fleeting wing,Nor yet the vitals plucked from living breasts.But we must seek it in another way:The murdered king himself must be recalledFrom realms of everlasting night, that thus,Released from Erebus, he may declareHis murderer. The earth must be unsealed;395The pitiless divinity of DisMust be implored, and hither brought the shadesWho live beyond the Styx.Now do thou tellTo whom thou giv'st the sacred embassy;For 'tis not right for thee who hold'st the reinsOf government to seek the gloomy shades.Oedipus: O Creon, thee this task demands, to whom,As next in power, my kingdom looks for aid.400Tiresias: And while we loose the bars of deepest hell,Do ye the praises of our Bacchus tell.[ExeuntCreon, Tiresias,andManto.]The Chorus[in dithyrambic strain sings in praise ofBacchus]: Bind ye now your flowing locks with the swaying ivy,Brandish aloft with your languishing arms the Nysaean thyrsus!O glorious light of heaven, attend the prayers405Which noble Thebes, thy Thebes, O beautiful Bacchus,With suppliant hands outstretched here offers thee.Turn hither thy smiling virgin face,Dispel the clouds with thy starry glance,410The gloomy threats of Erebus,And ravenous fate.Thee it becomes to crown thy locks with flowers of the springtime,Thee to bind thy head with the Tyrian fillet;Or with the clinging ivy, gleaming with berries,Softly to wreathe thy brow;415Now thy hair to unbind and spread in confusion,Now in close-drawn knot to collect and confine it;Just as when thou, fearing the wrath of Juno,Didst conceal thyself in the guise of maidens.Virgin, too, thou seemedst with golden ringlets,420Binding up thy robe with a saffron girdle.So the softer graces of living please thee,Robes ungirt and flowing in long profusion.When in thy golden car thou wast drawn by lions,Clad in flowing garments, the East beheld thee,425All the vast expanse of the Indian country,They who drink the Ganges and cleave the surfaceOf snowy Araxes.Seated on humble beast the old Silenus attends thee,Binding his throbbing brows with a waving garland of ivy;430While the wanton priests lead on the mysterious revels.And then a troop of BassaridsWith dancing step conducted thee,Now ranging o'er Pangaeus' foot,And now on Thracian Pindus' top.435Soon, 'mid the noble dames of Thebes,A furious Maenad, the comrade of Bacchus,In garment of fawn-skin, conducted the god.The Theban dames, by Bacchus excited,With streaming locks and thyrsus uplifted440In high-waving hands, now join in the revels,And wild in their madness they rend PentheusLimb from limb.Their fury spent, with weary frame,They look upon their impious deed,And know it not.Into the sea realms holds, the foster-mother of Bacchus;445Round her the daughters of Nereus dance, Leucothoë singing;Over the mighty deep, though new to its waves, Palaemon,Brother of Bacchus, rules, a mortal changed to a sea-god.When in childhood a band of robbers assailingBore thee away in their flying vessel a captive,Nereus quickly calmed the billowy ocean;450When lo! to rolling meadows the dark sea changes;Here stands in vernal green the flourishing plane-tree,There the groves of laurel dear to Apollo;While resounds the chatter of birds in the branches.Now are the oars enwreathed with the living ivy,While at the masthead hang the clustering grape vines;455There on the prow loud roars a lion of Ida,At the stern appears a terrible tiger of Ganges.Filled with terror the pirates leap in the ocean.Straight in their plunging forms new changes appear;460For first their arms are seen to shrink and fall,Their bodies' length to shorten; and on their sidesThe hands appear as fins; with curving backThey skim the waves, and, lashing their crescent tails,They dash through the water.465Changed to a school of dolphins now, they follow the vessel.Soon did the Lydian stream with its precious waters receive thee,Pouring down its golden waves in a billowy current.Loosed was the vanquished bow and Scythian darts of the savageMassagetan who mingles blood in his milky goblets.470The realm of Lycurgus, bearer of axes, submitted to Bacchus;The land of the Dacians[2]untamable felt his dominion,The wandering tribes of the north by Boreas smitten,And whom the Maeotis bathes with its frozen waters.475Where the Arcadian star looks down from the zenith,Even there the power of Bacchus extended;Conquered too the scattered Gelonian peoples.From the warlike maidens their arms he wrested;Down to the earth they fell in desperate conflict,480The hardy bands of Amazonian maidens.Now, at last, their arrows swift are abandoned,And Maenads have they become.Holy Cithaeron too has streamed with slaughter,Where was spilt the noble blood of Ophion.485Proetus' daughters the forests sought; and Argos,Juno at last consenting, paid homage to Bacchus.The island of Naxos, girt by the broad Aegean,Gave to Bacchus the maid whom Theseus abandoned,Compensating her loss by a better husband.490Out of the rock there gushed Nyctelian liquor;Babbling streams at his word clove the grassy meadows;Deep the earth drank in the nectarean juices;Streams of snowy milk burst forth from the fountains,495Mingled with Lesbian wine all fragrant with spices.Now is the bride to her place in the heavens conducted;Phoebus, with flowing locks, sings a stately anthem;Love, in honor of both, bears the wedding torches;500Jove lays down the deadly darts of his lightning,Haltinghis bolts of flame at the coming of Bacchus.While the gleaming stars in their boundless pasturage wander,While the sea shall gird th' imprisoned earth with its waters,505While the full-orb'd moon shall gather her lost refulgence,While the morning star shall herald the coming of Phoebus,While in the north the Bear shall fear the cerulean ocean,Still shall we worship the shining face of the beautiful Bacchus.FOOTNOTES:[2]Reading,te Dacûm.ACT III[EnterCreon,returned from the rites of necromancy.]Oedipus: Although thy face displays the marks of grief,Declare whose death an angry heaven demands.510Creon: Thou bid'st me speak where fear would silence keep.Oedipus: If Thebes, to ruin falling, move thee not,Regard the scepter of thy kindred house.Creon: Thou wilt repent the knowledge which thou seek'st.Oedipus: A useless cure for ills is ignorance.515And wilt thou still obstruct the public weal?Creon: Where foul the cure, 'tis grievous to be cured.Oedipus: Thy tidings speak; or, by thy pains subdued,Thou soon shalt know what angered kings can do.Creon: Kings hate the words whose speech they would compel.520Oedipus: In hades shalt thou pay thy life for all,Unless thou tell the secrets of the fates.Creon: Nay, let me hold my peace. No smaller boonWas ever sought.Oedipus:More often than by speech,Have kingdoms by the boon of silence fall'n.525Creon: When silence is denied what can be given?Oedipus: He sins who silence holds when speech is best.Creon: Then hear in peace the words which I must speak.Oedipus: Was ever punishment for speech compelled?Creon: Afar from Thebes there is a frowning grove530Near the well-watered vale of Dirce's fount.And there a cypress lifts its giant headAnd holds within its evergreen embraceThe trees around. Here stands an ancient oakAnd spreads its branches dark with clustering mould.One side is torn by time's destructive hand;535The rest, with roots decayed and falling, hangsSupported on a neighbor's trunk. Here standThe bitter laurel, rustling linden trees,The myrtle, and the alder destined soonTo sweep its oarage on the boundless sea.Midway, a mighty pine its smooth trunk lifts540Against the rays of Phoebus and the winds,And with its heavy shade it overwhelmsThe lesser trees; for, with its spreading boughs,It stands, the giant guardian of the wood.Beneath this pine there springs a gloomy pool545That never saw the sun nor light of day.An oozy swamp surrounds the sluggish pool.Here did the agéd priest direct his steps;Nor was there need to wait; the gloomy spotSupplied the shades of night. A trench is dug,Where brands are kindled, pluck'd from funeral pyres.550The priest is shrouded in a mourning pall,And waves the bough; his dark robe sweeps the earth.And now, in squalid garb and wrapped in gloom,The priest advances, with his hoary locks555Encircled by the yew-tree's deadly leaves.Black sheep and sable oxen, backward driven,[3]Are sacrificed. The fire devours the food,And the living entrails quiver in the flames.The shades he calls, and him who rules the shades,And him who guards the dark Lethaean stream.560A magic rune he mutters o'er and o'erAnd fiercely chants the charm which either luresThe shifting ghosts, or forces them to come.He burns the victims whole, and fills the trenchWith sacrificial blood, and snowy milk,565And, with his left hand pouring, mingles wine;Again he chants, and, bending to the earth,With stronger words and frantic, summons upThe manes. Loudly bayed the hounds of hell;And thrice the hollows gave a mournful sound;570The whole earth trembled and the solid groundWas rent asunder. Then the priest exclaimed:"I have prevailed, for strong the words I spoke;The deep and gloomy realm of chaos yawns,And for the dwellers in the home of DisA way is opened to the world of light."The whole wood shrank away; its leaves erectIn horror stood, the mighty trunks were split,575And all the grove was smitten with amaze.The frightened earth crouched back with hollow groans,As if unwillingly she saw the deepsOf Acheron assailed; or else herself,That back to life the dead might find a way,With crashing sound her close-wrought barriers burst;580Or threefold Cerberus in angry rageClanked loud his heavy chains. Then suddenlyThe earth yawned wide, and at our very feetA deep abyss appeared. I saw, myself,The sluggish pools amidst the dusky shades;I saw the shadowy gods, and that black gloomNo earthly night can give. At that dread sightMy blood ran cold and froze within my veins.585And then there hurried forth a dreadful band,And stood in armed array, that viper brood,The troop of brothers sprung from dragon's teeth;And that fell pestilence, the curse of Thebes.Then grim Erinys raised her piercing cry,Blind Fury, Dread, and all the ghastly forms590Which spawn and lurk within the endless shades:Grief, in her madness, tearing out her hair;Disease, scarce holding up her weary head;Age, burdened with itself, and brooding Fear.Our spirits died within us at the sight.595Even the prophet's daughter stood amazed,Though well she knew her father's mystic arts.But he, undaunted, since he saw them not,Convoked the bloodless throng of gloomy Dis.Like clouds the shadowy forms come trooping up,And snuff the air of unrestricted heaven.Not lofty Eryx in his mountain glades600As many falling leaves, nor Hybla's slopesAs many flowers produce, in sunny spring,When greedy bees in teeming bunches swarm;As many waves break not upon the shore;As many birds deserting Strymon's streams,Exchange not wintry blasts and Arctic snows,605And seek the milder valley of the Nile;As were the shades the prophet summoned forth.In eager haste the shivering spirits seekThe hiding-places of the leafy grove.From out the cave, his right hand by the horns610A raging bull restraining, Zethus came,And next Amphion, with that famous shellWhose magic strains insensate rocks allured.Here haughty Niobe, in safety now,Amongst her children lifts her head in scornAnd proudly counts her shades. And worse than she,615That mother, mad Agave, next appears,With all the impious band who rent the king.Then Pentheus' self, all torn and bleeding, comes,In rage pursuing those wild Bacchanals.At length, when often summoned, Laius comesIn shame, and, skulking, flees the shadowy throng,620And hides himself away; but still the seer,With unrelenting purpose pressing on,Repeats his strong compelling exorcisms,Until he brings the ghost to open view.I shudder as I tell it. There he stood,A fearful sight, his body drenched with blood,His matted locks o'erspread with horrid filth.625And now, with raging tongue, the specter spoke:"O wild and savage house of Cadmus, thouWho ever dost rejoice in brother's blood!The thyrsus wave, in madness rend thy sons.The greatest crime of Thebes is mother's love.O fatherland, 'tis not the wrath of heaven,630But sin of man by which thou art undone.No plague-fraught south wind with its deadly blast,Nor yet the parchéd earth with its dry breath,Is harming thee; but 'tis thy bloody king,Who, as the prize of savage murder done,Hath seized his father's scepter and his bed.635An impious son (but far more impious,The mother who in most unhallowed wombBore children once again), he forced his wayBack to his source of life, and there begotUpon his mother offspring horrible,Got brothers to himself, a custom base,Whence e'en the very beasts of prey are free.640Oh, base entanglement, more monstrous farThan that fell Sphinx which he himself hath slain.Thee, thee, who dost the bloody scepter hold,Thee will thy sire, still unavenged, pursue,With all thy town; and with me will I bringTh' attendant fury of my wedding night—I'll bring her with her loud-resounding[4]lash!645Thy house, polluted, will I overthrow,And thy Penates will I trample downIn fratricidal strife! Then quickly driveThy king, O Thebes, from out thy boundaries!For when his baleful step shall leave the land,In vernal green shall it renew itself,650The air shall give again pure springs of life,And to the woods their beauty shall return.Destruction, Pestilence and Death, Distress,Disease, Despair—his fitting company—Shall all depart with him. And he, indeed,Will seek with eager haste to flee his realm,But him will I hedge round with barriers,655And hold him back. Uncertain of his way,And with his staff to guide his faltering steps,He'll creep along his sad and darkened path.Do ye the land deny him; I, his sire,Will take away from him the light of heaven."Oedipus:A chilling tremor penetrates my bones;The very thing which I have feared to do,660They say that I have done it. But the chargeThat in unholy wedlock I am joined,My mother Merope refutes, for sheTo Polybus, my sire, is wedded still;And my hands from stain of father's blood are clean,Since Polybus in safety lives and reigns.Since both my parents free me from the guiltOf murder and that base, incestuous crime,What room is there for accusation more?And as for Laius, Thebes his death deplored665Long 'ere I set my feet upon her soil.What shall we say then? Was the seer deceived,Or does the hand of God afflict the state?No! now we see these two confederatesDeep in a crafty plot: that priest of thineWith lying tongue pretends the will of heaven,And promises my sovereignty to thee.670Creon:Would I expel my sister from the throne?But if that sacred fealty which I oweUnto my kindred house restrained me not,Yet fortune would herself affright me sore,For with care and danger is she ever fraught.But be thyself content to lay aside,While still thou safely mayst, the cares of state,675Lest,[5]borne too long, they may o'erwhelm thee quite.In a humbler state more safely shalt thou dwell.Oedipus:And dost thou bid me, then, of mine own willTo lay aside the heavy cares of state?Creon:Thus would I counsel those to whom the wayIs open yet to choose the path he will.680But the lot that fortune sends thee thou must bear.Oedipus:When one desires to reign, 'tis ever thus,That humble life he praises, and the joysOf ease and sleep are ever in his mouth.A peaceful face oft hides a restless heart.Creon:Does my long loyalty defend me not?685Oedipus:To traitors, loyalty's a cloak to crime.Creon:Free from the burdens of a kingly state,I still enjoy the fruits of royalty;My house is honored by our citizens;And day by day thy royal gifts o'erflow,And fill my kindred home with luxury.690Rich food and clothing, gifts of every sort,And safety flow to many through my aid.Why should I think aught lacking to my lot?Oedipus:Because there is a lack. ProsperityNe'er halts at any bounds.Creon:And shall I fall,695Prejudged, and have no right to plead my cause?Oedipus:Hadst thou consideration formylife?Did old Tiresias listen to my cause?And yet I am condemned. My pattern, thou;I do but follow in the way thou lead'st.Creon:But what if I am guiltless?Oedipus:Kings are wontTo fear alike the doubtful and the true.Creon:Who quakes at empty fears, hath true in store.700OedipusWho in a fault is taken, and forgiven,Is filled with hate. Let all such dubious faithBe far from me.Creon:But thus is hatred bred.Oedipus:Nay, he who feareth hatred overmuch,Knows not the art of ruling like a king;For 'tis by fear that kings are guarded most.Creon:Who holds the scepter with tyrannic sway,705Doth live in fear of those who fear his power;For terror ever doth return to himWho doth inspire it.Oedipus[to attendants]: Hence, away with him;Deep in some rocky dungeon let him stay,While I unto the palace take my way.[Creonis led away by the attendants, whileOedipusretires into the palace.]

FOOTNOTES:[1]Reading,caudam.

[1]Reading,caudam.

[1]Reading,caudam.

[EnterCreon.]

Oedipus: I quake with horror, and I fear to knowThe tendency of fate. My trembling soulStrives 'neath a double load; for joy and griefLie mingled still in dark obscurity.I shrink from knowing what I long to know.Wherefore, O brother of my consort, speak;210And if to weary hearts thou bring'st relief,With quickened utterance thy news proclaim.Creon: In dark obscurity the answer lies.Oedipus: Who gives me doubtful succor grants me none.Creon: It is the custom of the Delphic godIn dark enigmas to conceal the fates.215Oedipus: Yet speak; however dark the riddle be'Tis given to Oedipus alone to solve.Creon: Apollo doth ordain that banishmentBe meted out to him who slew our king,And so our murdered Laius be avenged;For only thus shall we again beholdThe day's clear light, and drink safe draughts of air.220Oedipus: Who was the slayer of the noble king?Tell who is designated by the god,That he th' allotted punishment may pay.Creon:May it be granted me to tell the thingsTo sight and hearing dreadful. At the thought,Numb horror holds my limbs, my blood runs cold.When to Apollo's hallowed shrine I came225With reverent feet, and pious hands upraised,Parnassus' double-crested, snowy peakGave forth a fearful crash, the laurels shook,And fair Castalia's waters ceased to flow.The priestess of the son of Lato then230Began to spread her bristling locks abroad,And felt the inspiration of the god.Scarce had she reached the sacred inner shrine,When with a roar, beyond the voice of man,There sounded forth this doubtful oracle:"Kind shall the stars return to the Theban city of Cadmus,If, O fugitive guest, Ismenian Dirce thou leavest,Stained with the blood of a king, from infancy known to Apollo.235Brief shall be thy joys, the impious joys of slaughter.With thee war thou bringest, and war to thy children thou leavest,Foul returned once more to the impious arms of thy mother."Oedipus: What I at heaven's command now meditate,Long since should have been rendered to the king,240That none by craft might violate the throne.And most doth it become a sceptered kingTo guard the life of kings; for none lamentThe death of him whose safety breedeth fear.Creon: Our care for him a greater fear removed.Oedipus: What fear so great that duty to prevent?245Creon: The Sphinx and her accurséd riddle's threats.Oedipus: Then now at heaven's command shall be atonedThat impious deed.Whoever of the godsDost look with kindly eye upon our realm;And thou, whose hand doth guide the rolling sphere;And thou, O glory of the smiling sky,250Who in thy wandering course dost rule the stars,And with thy flying wheels dost measure outThe slow procession of the centuries;Thou sister of the sun, night-wanderer,Who ever dost reflect thy brother's fires;And thou, great ruler of the boisterous winds,Who o'er the level deep dost drive thy car;255And thou, who dost allot the sunless homes:May he, by whose right hand king Laius fell,No peaceful home, no trusty lares find;And may no land in hospitalityReceive his cheerless, exiled wanderings.O'er shameful marriage may he live to grieve,260And monstrous progeny. May he his sireBy his own hand destroy; and may he do(What doom more dreadful can I imprecate?)The deed which by my flight I did not do.No room for pardon shall be given him;By this my regal scepter do I swear,Both by the sway which I as stranger hold,And that I left behind; by my household gods,265And thee, O Neptune, who with shorter wavesAnd twofold current dost disport thyselfUpon my native Corinth's double shores.And thou thyself be witness to my words,Who dost inspire the fate-revealing lipsOf Cirrha's priestess: so may Polybus,270My royal father, spend a quiet age,And end his days in peace upon the throne;And so may Merope, my mother, knowThe marriage of her Polybus alone,As from my grasp no favoring power shall snatchThat guilty one, who basely slew the king.But tell me, where was that foul murder done?In open fight, or was he basely snared?275Creon: In quest of cool Castalia's sacred fountAnd leafy woods, along the way he fared,On either side with tangled thickets hedged.'Twas where the road, three-forked, spreads to the plain.One leads through Phocian land, to Bacchus dear,Where high Parnassus, by a gentle slope280The lowlands leaving, lifts his double peakInto the heavens; and one leads off to whereTwo oceans bathe the land of Sisyphus;A third path, passing through Olenian fields,Along a hollow valley's winding way,Attains the vagrant waters and dividesThe chilling current of the Elean stream.285'Twas here he journeyed, safe 'mid general peace,When on a sudden, lo, a robber bandFell on him with the sword and slew him there.[Tiresiasis seen approaching.]But in the nick of time, by Phoebus roused,Tiresias, agéd and with trembling limbs,Hastes to our presence with what speed he may;And, as his faithful comrade, Manto comes,290Her sightless father leading by the hand.

Oedipus: I quake with horror, and I fear to knowThe tendency of fate. My trembling soulStrives 'neath a double load; for joy and griefLie mingled still in dark obscurity.I shrink from knowing what I long to know.Wherefore, O brother of my consort, speak;210And if to weary hearts thou bring'st relief,With quickened utterance thy news proclaim.

Oedipus: I quake with horror, and I fear to know

The tendency of fate. My trembling soul

Strives 'neath a double load; for joy and grief

Lie mingled still in dark obscurity.

I shrink from knowing what I long to know.

Wherefore, O brother of my consort, speak;210

And if to weary hearts thou bring'st relief,

With quickened utterance thy news proclaim.

Creon: In dark obscurity the answer lies.

Creon: In dark obscurity the answer lies.

Oedipus: Who gives me doubtful succor grants me none.

Oedipus: Who gives me doubtful succor grants me none.

Creon: It is the custom of the Delphic godIn dark enigmas to conceal the fates.215

Creon: It is the custom of the Delphic god

In dark enigmas to conceal the fates.215

Oedipus: Yet speak; however dark the riddle be'Tis given to Oedipus alone to solve.

Oedipus: Yet speak; however dark the riddle be

'Tis given to Oedipus alone to solve.

Creon: Apollo doth ordain that banishmentBe meted out to him who slew our king,And so our murdered Laius be avenged;For only thus shall we again beholdThe day's clear light, and drink safe draughts of air.220

Creon: Apollo doth ordain that banishment

Be meted out to him who slew our king,

And so our murdered Laius be avenged;

For only thus shall we again behold

The day's clear light, and drink safe draughts of air.220

Oedipus: Who was the slayer of the noble king?Tell who is designated by the god,That he th' allotted punishment may pay.

Oedipus: Who was the slayer of the noble king?

Tell who is designated by the god,

That he th' allotted punishment may pay.

Creon:May it be granted me to tell the thingsTo sight and hearing dreadful. At the thought,Numb horror holds my limbs, my blood runs cold.When to Apollo's hallowed shrine I came225With reverent feet, and pious hands upraised,Parnassus' double-crested, snowy peakGave forth a fearful crash, the laurels shook,And fair Castalia's waters ceased to flow.The priestess of the son of Lato then230Began to spread her bristling locks abroad,And felt the inspiration of the god.Scarce had she reached the sacred inner shrine,When with a roar, beyond the voice of man,There sounded forth this doubtful oracle:"Kind shall the stars return to the Theban city of Cadmus,If, O fugitive guest, Ismenian Dirce thou leavest,Stained with the blood of a king, from infancy known to Apollo.235Brief shall be thy joys, the impious joys of slaughter.With thee war thou bringest, and war to thy children thou leavest,Foul returned once more to the impious arms of thy mother."

Creon:May it be granted me to tell the things

To sight and hearing dreadful. At the thought,

Numb horror holds my limbs, my blood runs cold.

When to Apollo's hallowed shrine I came225

With reverent feet, and pious hands upraised,

Parnassus' double-crested, snowy peak

Gave forth a fearful crash, the laurels shook,

And fair Castalia's waters ceased to flow.

The priestess of the son of Lato then230

Began to spread her bristling locks abroad,

And felt the inspiration of the god.

Scarce had she reached the sacred inner shrine,

When with a roar, beyond the voice of man,

There sounded forth this doubtful oracle:

"Kind shall the stars return to the Theban city of Cadmus,

If, O fugitive guest, Ismenian Dirce thou leavest,

Stained with the blood of a king, from infancy known to Apollo.235

Brief shall be thy joys, the impious joys of slaughter.

With thee war thou bringest, and war to thy children thou leavest,

Foul returned once more to the impious arms of thy mother."

Oedipus: What I at heaven's command now meditate,Long since should have been rendered to the king,240That none by craft might violate the throne.And most doth it become a sceptered kingTo guard the life of kings; for none lamentThe death of him whose safety breedeth fear.

Oedipus: What I at heaven's command now meditate,

Long since should have been rendered to the king,240

That none by craft might violate the throne.

And most doth it become a sceptered king

To guard the life of kings; for none lament

The death of him whose safety breedeth fear.

Creon: Our care for him a greater fear removed.

Creon: Our care for him a greater fear removed.

Oedipus: What fear so great that duty to prevent?245

Oedipus: What fear so great that duty to prevent?245

Creon: The Sphinx and her accurséd riddle's threats.

Creon: The Sphinx and her accurséd riddle's threats.

Oedipus: Then now at heaven's command shall be atonedThat impious deed.Whoever of the godsDost look with kindly eye upon our realm;And thou, whose hand doth guide the rolling sphere;And thou, O glory of the smiling sky,250Who in thy wandering course dost rule the stars,And with thy flying wheels dost measure outThe slow procession of the centuries;Thou sister of the sun, night-wanderer,Who ever dost reflect thy brother's fires;And thou, great ruler of the boisterous winds,Who o'er the level deep dost drive thy car;255And thou, who dost allot the sunless homes:May he, by whose right hand king Laius fell,No peaceful home, no trusty lares find;And may no land in hospitalityReceive his cheerless, exiled wanderings.O'er shameful marriage may he live to grieve,260And monstrous progeny. May he his sireBy his own hand destroy; and may he do(What doom more dreadful can I imprecate?)The deed which by my flight I did not do.No room for pardon shall be given him;By this my regal scepter do I swear,Both by the sway which I as stranger hold,And that I left behind; by my household gods,265And thee, O Neptune, who with shorter wavesAnd twofold current dost disport thyselfUpon my native Corinth's double shores.And thou thyself be witness to my words,Who dost inspire the fate-revealing lipsOf Cirrha's priestess: so may Polybus,270My royal father, spend a quiet age,And end his days in peace upon the throne;And so may Merope, my mother, knowThe marriage of her Polybus alone,As from my grasp no favoring power shall snatchThat guilty one, who basely slew the king.But tell me, where was that foul murder done?In open fight, or was he basely snared?275

Oedipus: Then now at heaven's command shall be atoned

That impious deed.

Whoever of the gods

Dost look with kindly eye upon our realm;

And thou, whose hand doth guide the rolling sphere;

And thou, O glory of the smiling sky,250

Who in thy wandering course dost rule the stars,

And with thy flying wheels dost measure out

The slow procession of the centuries;

Thou sister of the sun, night-wanderer,

Who ever dost reflect thy brother's fires;

And thou, great ruler of the boisterous winds,

Who o'er the level deep dost drive thy car;255

And thou, who dost allot the sunless homes:

May he, by whose right hand king Laius fell,

No peaceful home, no trusty lares find;

And may no land in hospitality

Receive his cheerless, exiled wanderings.

O'er shameful marriage may he live to grieve,260

And monstrous progeny. May he his sire

By his own hand destroy; and may he do

(What doom more dreadful can I imprecate?)

The deed which by my flight I did not do.

No room for pardon shall be given him;

By this my regal scepter do I swear,

Both by the sway which I as stranger hold,

And that I left behind; by my household gods,265

And thee, O Neptune, who with shorter waves

And twofold current dost disport thyself

Upon my native Corinth's double shores.

And thou thyself be witness to my words,

Who dost inspire the fate-revealing lips

Of Cirrha's priestess: so may Polybus,270

My royal father, spend a quiet age,

And end his days in peace upon the throne;

And so may Merope, my mother, know

The marriage of her Polybus alone,

As from my grasp no favoring power shall snatch

That guilty one, who basely slew the king.

But tell me, where was that foul murder done?

In open fight, or was he basely snared?275

Creon: In quest of cool Castalia's sacred fountAnd leafy woods, along the way he fared,On either side with tangled thickets hedged.'Twas where the road, three-forked, spreads to the plain.One leads through Phocian land, to Bacchus dear,Where high Parnassus, by a gentle slope280The lowlands leaving, lifts his double peakInto the heavens; and one leads off to whereTwo oceans bathe the land of Sisyphus;A third path, passing through Olenian fields,Along a hollow valley's winding way,Attains the vagrant waters and dividesThe chilling current of the Elean stream.285'Twas here he journeyed, safe 'mid general peace,When on a sudden, lo, a robber bandFell on him with the sword and slew him there.[Tiresiasis seen approaching.]But in the nick of time, by Phoebus roused,Tiresias, agéd and with trembling limbs,Hastes to our presence with what speed he may;And, as his faithful comrade, Manto comes,290Her sightless father leading by the hand.

Creon: In quest of cool Castalia's sacred fount

And leafy woods, along the way he fared,

On either side with tangled thickets hedged.

'Twas where the road, three-forked, spreads to the plain.

One leads through Phocian land, to Bacchus dear,

Where high Parnassus, by a gentle slope280

The lowlands leaving, lifts his double peak

Into the heavens; and one leads off to where

Two oceans bathe the land of Sisyphus;

A third path, passing through Olenian fields,

Along a hollow valley's winding way,

Attains the vagrant waters and divides

The chilling current of the Elean stream.285

'Twas here he journeyed, safe 'mid general peace,

When on a sudden, lo, a robber band

Fell on him with the sword and slew him there.

[Tiresiasis seen approaching.]

But in the nick of time, by Phoebus roused,

Tiresias, agéd and with trembling limbs,

Hastes to our presence with what speed he may;

And, as his faithful comrade, Manto comes,290

Her sightless father leading by the hand.

[EnterTiresias,led by his daughterManto.]

Oedipus: O priest of heaven, thou next to Phoebus' self,Explain the oracle which he hath sent,And tell on whom the penalty is laid.Tiresias: Because my tongue is slow and seeks delay,Thou shouldst not wonder, great-souled Oedipus;Much truth is hidden when the eye is dimmed.295But when my country, when Apollo calls,I will obey. Then let me search the fates.If in my veins still flowed the blood of youth,I would myself sustain the god and speak.Now to the altar drive a pure-white bull,A heifer, too, upon whose tender neck300The curvéd yoke of toil hath never pressed.And thou, my child, who guid'st my darkened steps,Describe the omens which Apollo sends.

Oedipus: O priest of heaven, thou next to Phoebus' self,Explain the oracle which he hath sent,And tell on whom the penalty is laid.

Oedipus: O priest of heaven, thou next to Phoebus' self,

Explain the oracle which he hath sent,

And tell on whom the penalty is laid.

Tiresias: Because my tongue is slow and seeks delay,Thou shouldst not wonder, great-souled Oedipus;Much truth is hidden when the eye is dimmed.295But when my country, when Apollo calls,I will obey. Then let me search the fates.If in my veins still flowed the blood of youth,I would myself sustain the god and speak.Now to the altar drive a pure-white bull,A heifer, too, upon whose tender neck300The curvéd yoke of toil hath never pressed.And thou, my child, who guid'st my darkened steps,Describe the omens which Apollo sends.

Tiresias: Because my tongue is slow and seeks delay,

Thou shouldst not wonder, great-souled Oedipus;

Much truth is hidden when the eye is dimmed.295

But when my country, when Apollo calls,

I will obey. Then let me search the fates.

If in my veins still flowed the blood of youth,

I would myself sustain the god and speak.

Now to the altar drive a pure-white bull,

A heifer, too, upon whose tender neck300

The curvéd yoke of toil hath never pressed.

And thou, my child, who guid'st my darkened steps,

Describe the omens which Apollo sends.

[The victims are stationed before the altar as directed.]

Manto: A perfect victim at the altar stands.Tiresias: With prayer invoke the presence of the gods,And heap the altar high with frankincense.305Manto: Lo, on the sacred fire the spice is heaped.Tiresias: What of the flame? Did it with vigor seizeThe generous feast?Manto:With sudden gleam it leapedInto the air, and quickly fell again.Tiresias: And did the sacred fire burn bright and clear,And point its gleaming summit straight to heaven,310And, spreading outward, to the breeze unfold;Or crawl, with course uncertain, near the ground,And, flickering, die away in gloomy smoke?Manto: Not one appearance only had the flame.As when the tempest-bringing Iris spreadsHer varying colors on the vault of heaven,315And with her painted bow adorns the sky;So to the sacred fire thou wouldst not tellWhat hue is wanting there and what prevails.Dark blue it flickered first, with yellow spots;Then bloody red, and then it vanished quite.320But see! the flame is rent in rival parts,And the glowing embers of one sacred pileAre cleft in double heaps and fall apart!O father, horror fills me as I gaze;For, as I pour the sacred liquid forth,It changes straight to blood—Oh, horrible!325And stifling smoke surrounds the royal head.And now in denser gloom it settles downUpon his face, and, with its veiling cloud,It shuts away from him the fading light.Oh, speak, and tell us what it doth portend.Tiresias: How can I speak, who halting stand amazedAmid conflicting voices of the soul?What shall I say? Dire ills are here, indeed,But hidden yet in deepest mystery.330With signs well known the wrath of heaven is wontTo be made manifest: but what is thatWhich now they would disclose, and then, again,With changing and destructive purpose hide?Some deed so vile, it shameth heaven to tell.But quickly set the chosen victims here,And sprinkle salted meal upon their heads.335With peaceful face do they endure the rites,And hands outstretched to smite?Manto:His lofty headThe bull uplifted to the eastern sky,Then shunned the light of day, and quickly turnedIn terror from the newly risen sun.Tiresias: With one blow, smitten, do they fall to earth?340Manto: The heifer threw herself upon the steel,And with one blow has fallen; but the bull,Though smitten by a double deadly blow,Distracted wanders here and there in pain,And scarce can force his struggling life away.Tiresias: Driven through a narrow opening spurts the blood,345Or, sluggish, does it water deeper wounds?Manto: The blood of one, through that same welcome thrust,Doth flow in generous streams; but of the bull,Those yawning wounds are stained with scanty drops,While, turning backward, through his eyes and mouthThe plenteous current flows.350Tiresias:These unblest ritesSome dreadful ills portend. But come, describeThe trusty markings of the viscera.Manto: Oh, what is this? For not, as is their wont,With gentle motion do the entrails quake,But, rather, strongly throb beneath the touch,While from the veins the blood leaps forth anew.355The sickly heart is shriveled up and liesDeep hidden in the breast; the veins appearOf livid hue. The entrails suffer lack;And from the wasting liver oozes slowA stream of black corruption. Nay, behold(A sign of dark foreboding to a kingWho holdeth single sway), two swelling pointsOf equal elevation rise to view;360But both are lopped and covered with a veil.Refusing lurking-place to things unseen,The hostile side uprears itself with strengthAnd shows seven swelling veins; but these, again,An intersecting line cuts straight across,Preventing their return. The natural law365And order of the parts has been reversed,And nothing lies within its proper place.All on the right the blood-filled lungs appear,Incapable of air; the heart no moreIs found upon the left, its 'customed place.The fatty walls, with their soft covering,No longer richly fold the entrails in.370The ways of nature are in all things changed;The womb itself is most unnatural.Look close, and see what impious thing is this:Oh, monstrous! 'tis the unborn progenyOf a heifer still unmated! stranger still,It lies not in the wonted place, assignedBy nature's laws, but fills its mother's side.375It moves its members with a feeble groan;Its unformed limbs with trembling rigors twitch.Black blood has stained the darkened entrails all;The mangled bodies strive e'en yet to move,Make show to rise, and menace with their hornsThe priestly hands. The entrails shun the touch.380Nor is that lowing which has frightened theeThe deep-voiced roar of bulls, nor do the callsOf frightened cattle sound upon our ears:It is the lowing of the altar fires,It is the frightened muttering of the shrine!Oedipus: What meaning have these monstrous signs? Declare;And with no timid ears will I attend.385For he who has the dregs of fortune drainedFears nothing more.Tiresias:The time will come to thee,When these thy ills, for which thou seekest aid,Will blessings seem.Oedipus:But tell me then, I pray,The one thing which the gods would have me know:Whose hands are stained with murder of the king?Tiresias: Neither the birds can summon up the name,390Who cleave the depths of heaven on fleeting wing,Nor yet the vitals plucked from living breasts.But we must seek it in another way:The murdered king himself must be recalledFrom realms of everlasting night, that thus,Released from Erebus, he may declareHis murderer. The earth must be unsealed;395The pitiless divinity of DisMust be implored, and hither brought the shadesWho live beyond the Styx.Now do thou tellTo whom thou giv'st the sacred embassy;For 'tis not right for thee who hold'st the reinsOf government to seek the gloomy shades.Oedipus: O Creon, thee this task demands, to whom,As next in power, my kingdom looks for aid.400Tiresias: And while we loose the bars of deepest hell,Do ye the praises of our Bacchus tell.

Manto: A perfect victim at the altar stands.

Manto: A perfect victim at the altar stands.

Tiresias: With prayer invoke the presence of the gods,And heap the altar high with frankincense.305

Tiresias: With prayer invoke the presence of the gods,

And heap the altar high with frankincense.305

Manto: Lo, on the sacred fire the spice is heaped.

Manto: Lo, on the sacred fire the spice is heaped.

Tiresias: What of the flame? Did it with vigor seizeThe generous feast?

Tiresias: What of the flame? Did it with vigor seize

The generous feast?

Manto:With sudden gleam it leapedInto the air, and quickly fell again.

Manto:With sudden gleam it leaped

Into the air, and quickly fell again.

Tiresias: And did the sacred fire burn bright and clear,And point its gleaming summit straight to heaven,310And, spreading outward, to the breeze unfold;Or crawl, with course uncertain, near the ground,And, flickering, die away in gloomy smoke?

Tiresias: And did the sacred fire burn bright and clear,

And point its gleaming summit straight to heaven,310

And, spreading outward, to the breeze unfold;

Or crawl, with course uncertain, near the ground,

And, flickering, die away in gloomy smoke?

Manto: Not one appearance only had the flame.As when the tempest-bringing Iris spreadsHer varying colors on the vault of heaven,315And with her painted bow adorns the sky;So to the sacred fire thou wouldst not tellWhat hue is wanting there and what prevails.Dark blue it flickered first, with yellow spots;Then bloody red, and then it vanished quite.320But see! the flame is rent in rival parts,And the glowing embers of one sacred pileAre cleft in double heaps and fall apart!O father, horror fills me as I gaze;For, as I pour the sacred liquid forth,It changes straight to blood—Oh, horrible!325And stifling smoke surrounds the royal head.And now in denser gloom it settles downUpon his face, and, with its veiling cloud,It shuts away from him the fading light.Oh, speak, and tell us what it doth portend.

Manto: Not one appearance only had the flame.

As when the tempest-bringing Iris spreads

Her varying colors on the vault of heaven,315

And with her painted bow adorns the sky;

So to the sacred fire thou wouldst not tell

What hue is wanting there and what prevails.

Dark blue it flickered first, with yellow spots;

Then bloody red, and then it vanished quite.320

But see! the flame is rent in rival parts,

And the glowing embers of one sacred pile

Are cleft in double heaps and fall apart!

O father, horror fills me as I gaze;

For, as I pour the sacred liquid forth,

It changes straight to blood—Oh, horrible!325

And stifling smoke surrounds the royal head.

And now in denser gloom it settles down

Upon his face, and, with its veiling cloud,

It shuts away from him the fading light.

Oh, speak, and tell us what it doth portend.

Tiresias: How can I speak, who halting stand amazedAmid conflicting voices of the soul?What shall I say? Dire ills are here, indeed,But hidden yet in deepest mystery.330With signs well known the wrath of heaven is wontTo be made manifest: but what is thatWhich now they would disclose, and then, again,With changing and destructive purpose hide?Some deed so vile, it shameth heaven to tell.But quickly set the chosen victims here,And sprinkle salted meal upon their heads.335With peaceful face do they endure the rites,And hands outstretched to smite?

Tiresias: How can I speak, who halting stand amazed

Amid conflicting voices of the soul?

What shall I say? Dire ills are here, indeed,

But hidden yet in deepest mystery.330

With signs well known the wrath of heaven is wont

To be made manifest: but what is that

Which now they would disclose, and then, again,

With changing and destructive purpose hide?

Some deed so vile, it shameth heaven to tell.

But quickly set the chosen victims here,

And sprinkle salted meal upon their heads.335

With peaceful face do they endure the rites,

And hands outstretched to smite?

Manto:His lofty headThe bull uplifted to the eastern sky,Then shunned the light of day, and quickly turnedIn terror from the newly risen sun.

Manto:His lofty head

The bull uplifted to the eastern sky,

Then shunned the light of day, and quickly turned

In terror from the newly risen sun.

Tiresias: With one blow, smitten, do they fall to earth?340

Tiresias: With one blow, smitten, do they fall to earth?340

Manto: The heifer threw herself upon the steel,And with one blow has fallen; but the bull,Though smitten by a double deadly blow,Distracted wanders here and there in pain,And scarce can force his struggling life away.

Manto: The heifer threw herself upon the steel,

And with one blow has fallen; but the bull,

Though smitten by a double deadly blow,

Distracted wanders here and there in pain,

And scarce can force his struggling life away.

Tiresias: Driven through a narrow opening spurts the blood,345Or, sluggish, does it water deeper wounds?

Tiresias: Driven through a narrow opening spurts the blood,345

Or, sluggish, does it water deeper wounds?

Manto: The blood of one, through that same welcome thrust,Doth flow in generous streams; but of the bull,Those yawning wounds are stained with scanty drops,While, turning backward, through his eyes and mouthThe plenteous current flows.350

Manto: The blood of one, through that same welcome thrust,

Doth flow in generous streams; but of the bull,

Those yawning wounds are stained with scanty drops,

While, turning backward, through his eyes and mouth

The plenteous current flows.350

Tiresias:These unblest ritesSome dreadful ills portend. But come, describeThe trusty markings of the viscera.

Tiresias:These unblest rites

Some dreadful ills portend. But come, describe

The trusty markings of the viscera.

Manto: Oh, what is this? For not, as is their wont,With gentle motion do the entrails quake,But, rather, strongly throb beneath the touch,While from the veins the blood leaps forth anew.355The sickly heart is shriveled up and liesDeep hidden in the breast; the veins appearOf livid hue. The entrails suffer lack;And from the wasting liver oozes slowA stream of black corruption. Nay, behold(A sign of dark foreboding to a kingWho holdeth single sway), two swelling pointsOf equal elevation rise to view;360But both are lopped and covered with a veil.Refusing lurking-place to things unseen,The hostile side uprears itself with strengthAnd shows seven swelling veins; but these, again,An intersecting line cuts straight across,Preventing their return. The natural law365And order of the parts has been reversed,And nothing lies within its proper place.All on the right the blood-filled lungs appear,Incapable of air; the heart no moreIs found upon the left, its 'customed place.The fatty walls, with their soft covering,No longer richly fold the entrails in.370The ways of nature are in all things changed;The womb itself is most unnatural.Look close, and see what impious thing is this:Oh, monstrous! 'tis the unborn progenyOf a heifer still unmated! stranger still,It lies not in the wonted place, assignedBy nature's laws, but fills its mother's side.375It moves its members with a feeble groan;Its unformed limbs with trembling rigors twitch.Black blood has stained the darkened entrails all;The mangled bodies strive e'en yet to move,Make show to rise, and menace with their hornsThe priestly hands. The entrails shun the touch.380Nor is that lowing which has frightened theeThe deep-voiced roar of bulls, nor do the callsOf frightened cattle sound upon our ears:It is the lowing of the altar fires,It is the frightened muttering of the shrine!

Manto: Oh, what is this? For not, as is their wont,

With gentle motion do the entrails quake,

But, rather, strongly throb beneath the touch,

While from the veins the blood leaps forth anew.355

The sickly heart is shriveled up and lies

Deep hidden in the breast; the veins appear

Of livid hue. The entrails suffer lack;

And from the wasting liver oozes slow

A stream of black corruption. Nay, behold

(A sign of dark foreboding to a king

Who holdeth single sway), two swelling points

Of equal elevation rise to view;360

But both are lopped and covered with a veil.

Refusing lurking-place to things unseen,

The hostile side uprears itself with strength

And shows seven swelling veins; but these, again,

An intersecting line cuts straight across,

Preventing their return. The natural law365

And order of the parts has been reversed,

And nothing lies within its proper place.

All on the right the blood-filled lungs appear,

Incapable of air; the heart no more

Is found upon the left, its 'customed place.

The fatty walls, with their soft covering,

No longer richly fold the entrails in.370

The ways of nature are in all things changed;

The womb itself is most unnatural.

Look close, and see what impious thing is this:

Oh, monstrous! 'tis the unborn progeny

Of a heifer still unmated! stranger still,

It lies not in the wonted place, assigned

By nature's laws, but fills its mother's side.375

It moves its members with a feeble groan;

Its unformed limbs with trembling rigors twitch.

Black blood has stained the darkened entrails all;

The mangled bodies strive e'en yet to move,

Make show to rise, and menace with their horns

The priestly hands. The entrails shun the touch.380

Nor is that lowing which has frightened thee

The deep-voiced roar of bulls, nor do the calls

Of frightened cattle sound upon our ears:

It is the lowing of the altar fires,

It is the frightened muttering of the shrine!

Oedipus: What meaning have these monstrous signs? Declare;And with no timid ears will I attend.385For he who has the dregs of fortune drainedFears nothing more.

Oedipus: What meaning have these monstrous signs? Declare;

And with no timid ears will I attend.385

For he who has the dregs of fortune drained

Fears nothing more.

Tiresias:The time will come to thee,When these thy ills, for which thou seekest aid,Will blessings seem.

Tiresias:The time will come to thee,

When these thy ills, for which thou seekest aid,

Will blessings seem.

Oedipus:But tell me then, I pray,The one thing which the gods would have me know:Whose hands are stained with murder of the king?

Oedipus:But tell me then, I pray,

The one thing which the gods would have me know:

Whose hands are stained with murder of the king?

Tiresias: Neither the birds can summon up the name,390Who cleave the depths of heaven on fleeting wing,Nor yet the vitals plucked from living breasts.But we must seek it in another way:The murdered king himself must be recalledFrom realms of everlasting night, that thus,Released from Erebus, he may declareHis murderer. The earth must be unsealed;395The pitiless divinity of DisMust be implored, and hither brought the shadesWho live beyond the Styx.Now do thou tellTo whom thou giv'st the sacred embassy;For 'tis not right for thee who hold'st the reinsOf government to seek the gloomy shades.

Tiresias: Neither the birds can summon up the name,390

Who cleave the depths of heaven on fleeting wing,

Nor yet the vitals plucked from living breasts.

But we must seek it in another way:

The murdered king himself must be recalled

From realms of everlasting night, that thus,

Released from Erebus, he may declare

His murderer. The earth must be unsealed;395

The pitiless divinity of Dis

Must be implored, and hither brought the shades

Who live beyond the Styx.

Now do thou tell

To whom thou giv'st the sacred embassy;

For 'tis not right for thee who hold'st the reins

Of government to seek the gloomy shades.

Oedipus: O Creon, thee this task demands, to whom,As next in power, my kingdom looks for aid.400

Oedipus: O Creon, thee this task demands, to whom,

As next in power, my kingdom looks for aid.400

Tiresias: And while we loose the bars of deepest hell,Do ye the praises of our Bacchus tell.

Tiresias: And while we loose the bars of deepest hell,

Do ye the praises of our Bacchus tell.

[ExeuntCreon, Tiresias,andManto.]

The Chorus[in dithyrambic strain sings in praise ofBacchus]: Bind ye now your flowing locks with the swaying ivy,Brandish aloft with your languishing arms the Nysaean thyrsus!O glorious light of heaven, attend the prayers405Which noble Thebes, thy Thebes, O beautiful Bacchus,With suppliant hands outstretched here offers thee.Turn hither thy smiling virgin face,Dispel the clouds with thy starry glance,410The gloomy threats of Erebus,And ravenous fate.Thee it becomes to crown thy locks with flowers of the springtime,Thee to bind thy head with the Tyrian fillet;Or with the clinging ivy, gleaming with berries,Softly to wreathe thy brow;415Now thy hair to unbind and spread in confusion,Now in close-drawn knot to collect and confine it;Just as when thou, fearing the wrath of Juno,Didst conceal thyself in the guise of maidens.Virgin, too, thou seemedst with golden ringlets,420Binding up thy robe with a saffron girdle.So the softer graces of living please thee,Robes ungirt and flowing in long profusion.When in thy golden car thou wast drawn by lions,Clad in flowing garments, the East beheld thee,425All the vast expanse of the Indian country,They who drink the Ganges and cleave the surfaceOf snowy Araxes.Seated on humble beast the old Silenus attends thee,Binding his throbbing brows with a waving garland of ivy;430While the wanton priests lead on the mysterious revels.And then a troop of BassaridsWith dancing step conducted thee,Now ranging o'er Pangaeus' foot,And now on Thracian Pindus' top.435Soon, 'mid the noble dames of Thebes,A furious Maenad, the comrade of Bacchus,In garment of fawn-skin, conducted the god.The Theban dames, by Bacchus excited,With streaming locks and thyrsus uplifted440In high-waving hands, now join in the revels,And wild in their madness they rend PentheusLimb from limb.Their fury spent, with weary frame,They look upon their impious deed,And know it not.Into the sea realms holds, the foster-mother of Bacchus;445Round her the daughters of Nereus dance, Leucothoë singing;Over the mighty deep, though new to its waves, Palaemon,Brother of Bacchus, rules, a mortal changed to a sea-god.When in childhood a band of robbers assailingBore thee away in their flying vessel a captive,Nereus quickly calmed the billowy ocean;450When lo! to rolling meadows the dark sea changes;Here stands in vernal green the flourishing plane-tree,There the groves of laurel dear to Apollo;While resounds the chatter of birds in the branches.Now are the oars enwreathed with the living ivy,While at the masthead hang the clustering grape vines;455There on the prow loud roars a lion of Ida,At the stern appears a terrible tiger of Ganges.Filled with terror the pirates leap in the ocean.Straight in their plunging forms new changes appear;460For first their arms are seen to shrink and fall,Their bodies' length to shorten; and on their sidesThe hands appear as fins; with curving backThey skim the waves, and, lashing their crescent tails,They dash through the water.465Changed to a school of dolphins now, they follow the vessel.Soon did the Lydian stream with its precious waters receive thee,Pouring down its golden waves in a billowy current.Loosed was the vanquished bow and Scythian darts of the savageMassagetan who mingles blood in his milky goblets.470The realm of Lycurgus, bearer of axes, submitted to Bacchus;The land of the Dacians[2]untamable felt his dominion,The wandering tribes of the north by Boreas smitten,And whom the Maeotis bathes with its frozen waters.475Where the Arcadian star looks down from the zenith,Even there the power of Bacchus extended;Conquered too the scattered Gelonian peoples.From the warlike maidens their arms he wrested;Down to the earth they fell in desperate conflict,480The hardy bands of Amazonian maidens.Now, at last, their arrows swift are abandoned,And Maenads have they become.Holy Cithaeron too has streamed with slaughter,Where was spilt the noble blood of Ophion.485Proetus' daughters the forests sought; and Argos,Juno at last consenting, paid homage to Bacchus.The island of Naxos, girt by the broad Aegean,Gave to Bacchus the maid whom Theseus abandoned,Compensating her loss by a better husband.490Out of the rock there gushed Nyctelian liquor;Babbling streams at his word clove the grassy meadows;Deep the earth drank in the nectarean juices;Streams of snowy milk burst forth from the fountains,495Mingled with Lesbian wine all fragrant with spices.Now is the bride to her place in the heavens conducted;Phoebus, with flowing locks, sings a stately anthem;Love, in honor of both, bears the wedding torches;500Jove lays down the deadly darts of his lightning,Haltinghis bolts of flame at the coming of Bacchus.While the gleaming stars in their boundless pasturage wander,While the sea shall gird th' imprisoned earth with its waters,505While the full-orb'd moon shall gather her lost refulgence,While the morning star shall herald the coming of Phoebus,While in the north the Bear shall fear the cerulean ocean,Still shall we worship the shining face of the beautiful Bacchus.

The Chorus[in dithyrambic strain sings in praise ofBacchus]: Bind ye now your flowing locks with the swaying ivy,Brandish aloft with your languishing arms the Nysaean thyrsus!O glorious light of heaven, attend the prayers405Which noble Thebes, thy Thebes, O beautiful Bacchus,With suppliant hands outstretched here offers thee.Turn hither thy smiling virgin face,Dispel the clouds with thy starry glance,410The gloomy threats of Erebus,And ravenous fate.Thee it becomes to crown thy locks with flowers of the springtime,Thee to bind thy head with the Tyrian fillet;Or with the clinging ivy, gleaming with berries,Softly to wreathe thy brow;415Now thy hair to unbind and spread in confusion,Now in close-drawn knot to collect and confine it;Just as when thou, fearing the wrath of Juno,Didst conceal thyself in the guise of maidens.Virgin, too, thou seemedst with golden ringlets,420Binding up thy robe with a saffron girdle.So the softer graces of living please thee,Robes ungirt and flowing in long profusion.When in thy golden car thou wast drawn by lions,Clad in flowing garments, the East beheld thee,425All the vast expanse of the Indian country,They who drink the Ganges and cleave the surfaceOf snowy Araxes.Seated on humble beast the old Silenus attends thee,Binding his throbbing brows with a waving garland of ivy;430While the wanton priests lead on the mysterious revels.And then a troop of BassaridsWith dancing step conducted thee,Now ranging o'er Pangaeus' foot,And now on Thracian Pindus' top.435Soon, 'mid the noble dames of Thebes,A furious Maenad, the comrade of Bacchus,In garment of fawn-skin, conducted the god.The Theban dames, by Bacchus excited,With streaming locks and thyrsus uplifted440In high-waving hands, now join in the revels,And wild in their madness they rend PentheusLimb from limb.Their fury spent, with weary frame,They look upon their impious deed,And know it not.Into the sea realms holds, the foster-mother of Bacchus;445Round her the daughters of Nereus dance, Leucothoë singing;Over the mighty deep, though new to its waves, Palaemon,Brother of Bacchus, rules, a mortal changed to a sea-god.When in childhood a band of robbers assailingBore thee away in their flying vessel a captive,Nereus quickly calmed the billowy ocean;450When lo! to rolling meadows the dark sea changes;Here stands in vernal green the flourishing plane-tree,There the groves of laurel dear to Apollo;While resounds the chatter of birds in the branches.Now are the oars enwreathed with the living ivy,While at the masthead hang the clustering grape vines;455There on the prow loud roars a lion of Ida,At the stern appears a terrible tiger of Ganges.Filled with terror the pirates leap in the ocean.Straight in their plunging forms new changes appear;460For first their arms are seen to shrink and fall,Their bodies' length to shorten; and on their sidesThe hands appear as fins; with curving backThey skim the waves, and, lashing their crescent tails,They dash through the water.465Changed to a school of dolphins now, they follow the vessel.Soon did the Lydian stream with its precious waters receive thee,Pouring down its golden waves in a billowy current.Loosed was the vanquished bow and Scythian darts of the savageMassagetan who mingles blood in his milky goblets.470The realm of Lycurgus, bearer of axes, submitted to Bacchus;The land of the Dacians[2]untamable felt his dominion,The wandering tribes of the north by Boreas smitten,And whom the Maeotis bathes with its frozen waters.475Where the Arcadian star looks down from the zenith,Even there the power of Bacchus extended;Conquered too the scattered Gelonian peoples.From the warlike maidens their arms he wrested;Down to the earth they fell in desperate conflict,480The hardy bands of Amazonian maidens.Now, at last, their arrows swift are abandoned,And Maenads have they become.Holy Cithaeron too has streamed with slaughter,Where was spilt the noble blood of Ophion.485Proetus' daughters the forests sought; and Argos,Juno at last consenting, paid homage to Bacchus.The island of Naxos, girt by the broad Aegean,Gave to Bacchus the maid whom Theseus abandoned,Compensating her loss by a better husband.490Out of the rock there gushed Nyctelian liquor;Babbling streams at his word clove the grassy meadows;Deep the earth drank in the nectarean juices;Streams of snowy milk burst forth from the fountains,495Mingled with Lesbian wine all fragrant with spices.Now is the bride to her place in the heavens conducted;Phoebus, with flowing locks, sings a stately anthem;Love, in honor of both, bears the wedding torches;500Jove lays down the deadly darts of his lightning,Haltinghis bolts of flame at the coming of Bacchus.While the gleaming stars in their boundless pasturage wander,While the sea shall gird th' imprisoned earth with its waters,505While the full-orb'd moon shall gather her lost refulgence,While the morning star shall herald the coming of Phoebus,While in the north the Bear shall fear the cerulean ocean,Still shall we worship the shining face of the beautiful Bacchus.

The Chorus[in dithyrambic strain sings in praise ofBacchus]: Bind ye now your flowing locks with the swaying ivy,

Brandish aloft with your languishing arms the Nysaean thyrsus!

O glorious light of heaven, attend the prayers405

Which noble Thebes, thy Thebes, O beautiful Bacchus,

With suppliant hands outstretched here offers thee.

Turn hither thy smiling virgin face,

Dispel the clouds with thy starry glance,410

The gloomy threats of Erebus,

And ravenous fate.

Thee it becomes to crown thy locks with flowers of the springtime,

Thee to bind thy head with the Tyrian fillet;

Or with the clinging ivy, gleaming with berries,

Softly to wreathe thy brow;415

Now thy hair to unbind and spread in confusion,

Now in close-drawn knot to collect and confine it;

Just as when thou, fearing the wrath of Juno,

Didst conceal thyself in the guise of maidens.

Virgin, too, thou seemedst with golden ringlets,420

Binding up thy robe with a saffron girdle.

So the softer graces of living please thee,

Robes ungirt and flowing in long profusion.

When in thy golden car thou wast drawn by lions,

Clad in flowing garments, the East beheld thee,425

All the vast expanse of the Indian country,

They who drink the Ganges and cleave the surface

Of snowy Araxes.

Seated on humble beast the old Silenus attends thee,

Binding his throbbing brows with a waving garland of ivy;430

While the wanton priests lead on the mysterious revels.

And then a troop of Bassarids

With dancing step conducted thee,

Now ranging o'er Pangaeus' foot,

And now on Thracian Pindus' top.435

Soon, 'mid the noble dames of Thebes,

A furious Maenad, the comrade of Bacchus,

In garment of fawn-skin, conducted the god.

The Theban dames, by Bacchus excited,

With streaming locks and thyrsus uplifted440

In high-waving hands, now join in the revels,

And wild in their madness they rend Pentheus

Limb from limb.

Their fury spent, with weary frame,

They look upon their impious deed,

And know it not.

Into the sea realms holds, the foster-mother of Bacchus;445

Round her the daughters of Nereus dance, Leucothoë singing;

Over the mighty deep, though new to its waves, Palaemon,

Brother of Bacchus, rules, a mortal changed to a sea-god.

When in childhood a band of robbers assailing

Bore thee away in their flying vessel a captive,

Nereus quickly calmed the billowy ocean;450

When lo! to rolling meadows the dark sea changes;

Here stands in vernal green the flourishing plane-tree,

There the groves of laurel dear to Apollo;

While resounds the chatter of birds in the branches.

Now are the oars enwreathed with the living ivy,

While at the masthead hang the clustering grape vines;455

There on the prow loud roars a lion of Ida,

At the stern appears a terrible tiger of Ganges.

Filled with terror the pirates leap in the ocean.

Straight in their plunging forms new changes appear;460

For first their arms are seen to shrink and fall,

Their bodies' length to shorten; and on their sides

The hands appear as fins; with curving back

They skim the waves, and, lashing their crescent tails,

They dash through the water.465

Changed to a school of dolphins now, they follow the vessel.

Soon did the Lydian stream with its precious waters receive thee,

Pouring down its golden waves in a billowy current.

Loosed was the vanquished bow and Scythian darts of the savage

Massagetan who mingles blood in his milky goblets.470

The realm of Lycurgus, bearer of axes, submitted to Bacchus;

The land of the Dacians[2]untamable felt his dominion,

The wandering tribes of the north by Boreas smitten,

And whom the Maeotis bathes with its frozen waters.475

Where the Arcadian star looks down from the zenith,

Even there the power of Bacchus extended;

Conquered too the scattered Gelonian peoples.

From the warlike maidens their arms he wrested;

Down to the earth they fell in desperate conflict,480

The hardy bands of Amazonian maidens.

Now, at last, their arrows swift are abandoned,

And Maenads have they become.

Holy Cithaeron too has streamed with slaughter,

Where was spilt the noble blood of Ophion.485

Proetus' daughters the forests sought; and Argos,

Juno at last consenting, paid homage to Bacchus.

The island of Naxos, girt by the broad Aegean,

Gave to Bacchus the maid whom Theseus abandoned,

Compensating her loss by a better husband.490

Out of the rock there gushed Nyctelian liquor;

Babbling streams at his word clove the grassy meadows;

Deep the earth drank in the nectarean juices;

Streams of snowy milk burst forth from the fountains,495

Mingled with Lesbian wine all fragrant with spices.

Now is the bride to her place in the heavens conducted;

Phoebus, with flowing locks, sings a stately anthem;

Love, in honor of both, bears the wedding torches;500

Jove lays down the deadly darts of his lightning,

Haltinghis bolts of flame at the coming of Bacchus.

While the gleaming stars in their boundless pasturage wander,

While the sea shall gird th' imprisoned earth with its waters,505

While the full-orb'd moon shall gather her lost refulgence,

While the morning star shall herald the coming of Phoebus,

While in the north the Bear shall fear the cerulean ocean,

Still shall we worship the shining face of the beautiful Bacchus.

FOOTNOTES:[2]Reading,te Dacûm.

[2]Reading,te Dacûm.

[2]Reading,te Dacûm.

[EnterCreon,returned from the rites of necromancy.]

Oedipus: Although thy face displays the marks of grief,Declare whose death an angry heaven demands.510Creon: Thou bid'st me speak where fear would silence keep.Oedipus: If Thebes, to ruin falling, move thee not,Regard the scepter of thy kindred house.Creon: Thou wilt repent the knowledge which thou seek'st.Oedipus: A useless cure for ills is ignorance.515And wilt thou still obstruct the public weal?Creon: Where foul the cure, 'tis grievous to be cured.Oedipus: Thy tidings speak; or, by thy pains subdued,Thou soon shalt know what angered kings can do.Creon: Kings hate the words whose speech they would compel.520Oedipus: In hades shalt thou pay thy life for all,Unless thou tell the secrets of the fates.Creon: Nay, let me hold my peace. No smaller boonWas ever sought.Oedipus:More often than by speech,Have kingdoms by the boon of silence fall'n.525Creon: When silence is denied what can be given?Oedipus: He sins who silence holds when speech is best.Creon: Then hear in peace the words which I must speak.Oedipus: Was ever punishment for speech compelled?Creon: Afar from Thebes there is a frowning grove530Near the well-watered vale of Dirce's fount.And there a cypress lifts its giant headAnd holds within its evergreen embraceThe trees around. Here stands an ancient oakAnd spreads its branches dark with clustering mould.One side is torn by time's destructive hand;535The rest, with roots decayed and falling, hangsSupported on a neighbor's trunk. Here standThe bitter laurel, rustling linden trees,The myrtle, and the alder destined soonTo sweep its oarage on the boundless sea.Midway, a mighty pine its smooth trunk lifts540Against the rays of Phoebus and the winds,And with its heavy shade it overwhelmsThe lesser trees; for, with its spreading boughs,It stands, the giant guardian of the wood.Beneath this pine there springs a gloomy pool545That never saw the sun nor light of day.An oozy swamp surrounds the sluggish pool.Here did the agéd priest direct his steps;Nor was there need to wait; the gloomy spotSupplied the shades of night. A trench is dug,Where brands are kindled, pluck'd from funeral pyres.550The priest is shrouded in a mourning pall,And waves the bough; his dark robe sweeps the earth.And now, in squalid garb and wrapped in gloom,The priest advances, with his hoary locks555Encircled by the yew-tree's deadly leaves.Black sheep and sable oxen, backward driven,[3]Are sacrificed. The fire devours the food,And the living entrails quiver in the flames.The shades he calls, and him who rules the shades,And him who guards the dark Lethaean stream.560A magic rune he mutters o'er and o'erAnd fiercely chants the charm which either luresThe shifting ghosts, or forces them to come.He burns the victims whole, and fills the trenchWith sacrificial blood, and snowy milk,565And, with his left hand pouring, mingles wine;Again he chants, and, bending to the earth,With stronger words and frantic, summons upThe manes. Loudly bayed the hounds of hell;And thrice the hollows gave a mournful sound;570The whole earth trembled and the solid groundWas rent asunder. Then the priest exclaimed:"I have prevailed, for strong the words I spoke;The deep and gloomy realm of chaos yawns,And for the dwellers in the home of DisA way is opened to the world of light."The whole wood shrank away; its leaves erectIn horror stood, the mighty trunks were split,575And all the grove was smitten with amaze.The frightened earth crouched back with hollow groans,As if unwillingly she saw the deepsOf Acheron assailed; or else herself,That back to life the dead might find a way,With crashing sound her close-wrought barriers burst;580Or threefold Cerberus in angry rageClanked loud his heavy chains. Then suddenlyThe earth yawned wide, and at our very feetA deep abyss appeared. I saw, myself,The sluggish pools amidst the dusky shades;I saw the shadowy gods, and that black gloomNo earthly night can give. At that dread sightMy blood ran cold and froze within my veins.585And then there hurried forth a dreadful band,And stood in armed array, that viper brood,The troop of brothers sprung from dragon's teeth;And that fell pestilence, the curse of Thebes.Then grim Erinys raised her piercing cry,Blind Fury, Dread, and all the ghastly forms590Which spawn and lurk within the endless shades:Grief, in her madness, tearing out her hair;Disease, scarce holding up her weary head;Age, burdened with itself, and brooding Fear.Our spirits died within us at the sight.595Even the prophet's daughter stood amazed,Though well she knew her father's mystic arts.But he, undaunted, since he saw them not,Convoked the bloodless throng of gloomy Dis.Like clouds the shadowy forms come trooping up,And snuff the air of unrestricted heaven.Not lofty Eryx in his mountain glades600As many falling leaves, nor Hybla's slopesAs many flowers produce, in sunny spring,When greedy bees in teeming bunches swarm;As many waves break not upon the shore;As many birds deserting Strymon's streams,Exchange not wintry blasts and Arctic snows,605And seek the milder valley of the Nile;As were the shades the prophet summoned forth.In eager haste the shivering spirits seekThe hiding-places of the leafy grove.From out the cave, his right hand by the horns610A raging bull restraining, Zethus came,And next Amphion, with that famous shellWhose magic strains insensate rocks allured.Here haughty Niobe, in safety now,Amongst her children lifts her head in scornAnd proudly counts her shades. And worse than she,615That mother, mad Agave, next appears,With all the impious band who rent the king.Then Pentheus' self, all torn and bleeding, comes,In rage pursuing those wild Bacchanals.At length, when often summoned, Laius comesIn shame, and, skulking, flees the shadowy throng,620And hides himself away; but still the seer,With unrelenting purpose pressing on,Repeats his strong compelling exorcisms,Until he brings the ghost to open view.I shudder as I tell it. There he stood,A fearful sight, his body drenched with blood,His matted locks o'erspread with horrid filth.625And now, with raging tongue, the specter spoke:"O wild and savage house of Cadmus, thouWho ever dost rejoice in brother's blood!The thyrsus wave, in madness rend thy sons.The greatest crime of Thebes is mother's love.O fatherland, 'tis not the wrath of heaven,630But sin of man by which thou art undone.No plague-fraught south wind with its deadly blast,Nor yet the parchéd earth with its dry breath,Is harming thee; but 'tis thy bloody king,Who, as the prize of savage murder done,Hath seized his father's scepter and his bed.635An impious son (but far more impious,The mother who in most unhallowed wombBore children once again), he forced his wayBack to his source of life, and there begotUpon his mother offspring horrible,Got brothers to himself, a custom base,Whence e'en the very beasts of prey are free.640Oh, base entanglement, more monstrous farThan that fell Sphinx which he himself hath slain.Thee, thee, who dost the bloody scepter hold,Thee will thy sire, still unavenged, pursue,With all thy town; and with me will I bringTh' attendant fury of my wedding night—I'll bring her with her loud-resounding[4]lash!645Thy house, polluted, will I overthrow,And thy Penates will I trample downIn fratricidal strife! Then quickly driveThy king, O Thebes, from out thy boundaries!For when his baleful step shall leave the land,In vernal green shall it renew itself,650The air shall give again pure springs of life,And to the woods their beauty shall return.Destruction, Pestilence and Death, Distress,Disease, Despair—his fitting company—Shall all depart with him. And he, indeed,Will seek with eager haste to flee his realm,But him will I hedge round with barriers,655And hold him back. Uncertain of his way,And with his staff to guide his faltering steps,He'll creep along his sad and darkened path.Do ye the land deny him; I, his sire,Will take away from him the light of heaven."Oedipus:A chilling tremor penetrates my bones;The very thing which I have feared to do,660They say that I have done it. But the chargeThat in unholy wedlock I am joined,My mother Merope refutes, for sheTo Polybus, my sire, is wedded still;And my hands from stain of father's blood are clean,Since Polybus in safety lives and reigns.Since both my parents free me from the guiltOf murder and that base, incestuous crime,What room is there for accusation more?And as for Laius, Thebes his death deplored665Long 'ere I set my feet upon her soil.What shall we say then? Was the seer deceived,Or does the hand of God afflict the state?No! now we see these two confederatesDeep in a crafty plot: that priest of thineWith lying tongue pretends the will of heaven,And promises my sovereignty to thee.670Creon:Would I expel my sister from the throne?But if that sacred fealty which I oweUnto my kindred house restrained me not,Yet fortune would herself affright me sore,For with care and danger is she ever fraught.But be thyself content to lay aside,While still thou safely mayst, the cares of state,675Lest,[5]borne too long, they may o'erwhelm thee quite.In a humbler state more safely shalt thou dwell.Oedipus:And dost thou bid me, then, of mine own willTo lay aside the heavy cares of state?Creon:Thus would I counsel those to whom the wayIs open yet to choose the path he will.680But the lot that fortune sends thee thou must bear.Oedipus:When one desires to reign, 'tis ever thus,That humble life he praises, and the joysOf ease and sleep are ever in his mouth.A peaceful face oft hides a restless heart.Creon:Does my long loyalty defend me not?685Oedipus:To traitors, loyalty's a cloak to crime.Creon:Free from the burdens of a kingly state,I still enjoy the fruits of royalty;My house is honored by our citizens;And day by day thy royal gifts o'erflow,And fill my kindred home with luxury.690Rich food and clothing, gifts of every sort,And safety flow to many through my aid.Why should I think aught lacking to my lot?Oedipus:Because there is a lack. ProsperityNe'er halts at any bounds.Creon:And shall I fall,695Prejudged, and have no right to plead my cause?Oedipus:Hadst thou consideration formylife?Did old Tiresias listen to my cause?And yet I am condemned. My pattern, thou;I do but follow in the way thou lead'st.Creon:But what if I am guiltless?Oedipus:Kings are wontTo fear alike the doubtful and the true.Creon:Who quakes at empty fears, hath true in store.700OedipusWho in a fault is taken, and forgiven,Is filled with hate. Let all such dubious faithBe far from me.Creon:But thus is hatred bred.Oedipus:Nay, he who feareth hatred overmuch,Knows not the art of ruling like a king;For 'tis by fear that kings are guarded most.Creon:Who holds the scepter with tyrannic sway,705Doth live in fear of those who fear his power;For terror ever doth return to himWho doth inspire it.Oedipus[to attendants]: Hence, away with him;Deep in some rocky dungeon let him stay,While I unto the palace take my way.

Oedipus: Although thy face displays the marks of grief,Declare whose death an angry heaven demands.510

Oedipus: Although thy face displays the marks of grief,

Declare whose death an angry heaven demands.510

Creon: Thou bid'st me speak where fear would silence keep.

Creon: Thou bid'st me speak where fear would silence keep.

Oedipus: If Thebes, to ruin falling, move thee not,Regard the scepter of thy kindred house.

Oedipus: If Thebes, to ruin falling, move thee not,

Regard the scepter of thy kindred house.

Creon: Thou wilt repent the knowledge which thou seek'st.

Creon: Thou wilt repent the knowledge which thou seek'st.

Oedipus: A useless cure for ills is ignorance.515And wilt thou still obstruct the public weal?

Oedipus: A useless cure for ills is ignorance.515

And wilt thou still obstruct the public weal?

Creon: Where foul the cure, 'tis grievous to be cured.

Creon: Where foul the cure, 'tis grievous to be cured.

Oedipus: Thy tidings speak; or, by thy pains subdued,Thou soon shalt know what angered kings can do.

Oedipus: Thy tidings speak; or, by thy pains subdued,

Thou soon shalt know what angered kings can do.

Creon: Kings hate the words whose speech they would compel.520

Creon: Kings hate the words whose speech they would compel.520

Oedipus: In hades shalt thou pay thy life for all,Unless thou tell the secrets of the fates.

Oedipus: In hades shalt thou pay thy life for all,

Unless thou tell the secrets of the fates.

Creon: Nay, let me hold my peace. No smaller boonWas ever sought.

Creon: Nay, let me hold my peace. No smaller boon

Was ever sought.

Oedipus:More often than by speech,Have kingdoms by the boon of silence fall'n.525

Oedipus:More often than by speech,

Have kingdoms by the boon of silence fall'n.525

Creon: When silence is denied what can be given?

Creon: When silence is denied what can be given?

Oedipus: He sins who silence holds when speech is best.

Oedipus: He sins who silence holds when speech is best.

Creon: Then hear in peace the words which I must speak.

Creon: Then hear in peace the words which I must speak.

Oedipus: Was ever punishment for speech compelled?

Oedipus: Was ever punishment for speech compelled?

Creon: Afar from Thebes there is a frowning grove530Near the well-watered vale of Dirce's fount.And there a cypress lifts its giant headAnd holds within its evergreen embraceThe trees around. Here stands an ancient oakAnd spreads its branches dark with clustering mould.One side is torn by time's destructive hand;535The rest, with roots decayed and falling, hangsSupported on a neighbor's trunk. Here standThe bitter laurel, rustling linden trees,The myrtle, and the alder destined soonTo sweep its oarage on the boundless sea.Midway, a mighty pine its smooth trunk lifts540Against the rays of Phoebus and the winds,And with its heavy shade it overwhelmsThe lesser trees; for, with its spreading boughs,It stands, the giant guardian of the wood.Beneath this pine there springs a gloomy pool545That never saw the sun nor light of day.An oozy swamp surrounds the sluggish pool.Here did the agéd priest direct his steps;Nor was there need to wait; the gloomy spotSupplied the shades of night. A trench is dug,Where brands are kindled, pluck'd from funeral pyres.550The priest is shrouded in a mourning pall,And waves the bough; his dark robe sweeps the earth.And now, in squalid garb and wrapped in gloom,The priest advances, with his hoary locks555Encircled by the yew-tree's deadly leaves.Black sheep and sable oxen, backward driven,[3]Are sacrificed. The fire devours the food,And the living entrails quiver in the flames.The shades he calls, and him who rules the shades,And him who guards the dark Lethaean stream.560A magic rune he mutters o'er and o'erAnd fiercely chants the charm which either luresThe shifting ghosts, or forces them to come.He burns the victims whole, and fills the trenchWith sacrificial blood, and snowy milk,565And, with his left hand pouring, mingles wine;Again he chants, and, bending to the earth,With stronger words and frantic, summons upThe manes. Loudly bayed the hounds of hell;And thrice the hollows gave a mournful sound;570The whole earth trembled and the solid groundWas rent asunder. Then the priest exclaimed:"I have prevailed, for strong the words I spoke;The deep and gloomy realm of chaos yawns,And for the dwellers in the home of DisA way is opened to the world of light."The whole wood shrank away; its leaves erectIn horror stood, the mighty trunks were split,575And all the grove was smitten with amaze.The frightened earth crouched back with hollow groans,As if unwillingly she saw the deepsOf Acheron assailed; or else herself,That back to life the dead might find a way,With crashing sound her close-wrought barriers burst;580Or threefold Cerberus in angry rageClanked loud his heavy chains. Then suddenlyThe earth yawned wide, and at our very feetA deep abyss appeared. I saw, myself,The sluggish pools amidst the dusky shades;I saw the shadowy gods, and that black gloomNo earthly night can give. At that dread sightMy blood ran cold and froze within my veins.585And then there hurried forth a dreadful band,And stood in armed array, that viper brood,The troop of brothers sprung from dragon's teeth;And that fell pestilence, the curse of Thebes.Then grim Erinys raised her piercing cry,Blind Fury, Dread, and all the ghastly forms590Which spawn and lurk within the endless shades:Grief, in her madness, tearing out her hair;Disease, scarce holding up her weary head;Age, burdened with itself, and brooding Fear.Our spirits died within us at the sight.595Even the prophet's daughter stood amazed,Though well she knew her father's mystic arts.But he, undaunted, since he saw them not,Convoked the bloodless throng of gloomy Dis.Like clouds the shadowy forms come trooping up,And snuff the air of unrestricted heaven.Not lofty Eryx in his mountain glades600As many falling leaves, nor Hybla's slopesAs many flowers produce, in sunny spring,When greedy bees in teeming bunches swarm;As many waves break not upon the shore;As many birds deserting Strymon's streams,Exchange not wintry blasts and Arctic snows,605And seek the milder valley of the Nile;As were the shades the prophet summoned forth.In eager haste the shivering spirits seekThe hiding-places of the leafy grove.From out the cave, his right hand by the horns610A raging bull restraining, Zethus came,And next Amphion, with that famous shellWhose magic strains insensate rocks allured.Here haughty Niobe, in safety now,Amongst her children lifts her head in scornAnd proudly counts her shades. And worse than she,615That mother, mad Agave, next appears,With all the impious band who rent the king.Then Pentheus' self, all torn and bleeding, comes,In rage pursuing those wild Bacchanals.At length, when often summoned, Laius comesIn shame, and, skulking, flees the shadowy throng,620And hides himself away; but still the seer,With unrelenting purpose pressing on,Repeats his strong compelling exorcisms,Until he brings the ghost to open view.I shudder as I tell it. There he stood,A fearful sight, his body drenched with blood,His matted locks o'erspread with horrid filth.625And now, with raging tongue, the specter spoke:"O wild and savage house of Cadmus, thouWho ever dost rejoice in brother's blood!The thyrsus wave, in madness rend thy sons.The greatest crime of Thebes is mother's love.O fatherland, 'tis not the wrath of heaven,630But sin of man by which thou art undone.No plague-fraught south wind with its deadly blast,Nor yet the parchéd earth with its dry breath,Is harming thee; but 'tis thy bloody king,Who, as the prize of savage murder done,Hath seized his father's scepter and his bed.635An impious son (but far more impious,The mother who in most unhallowed wombBore children once again), he forced his wayBack to his source of life, and there begotUpon his mother offspring horrible,Got brothers to himself, a custom base,Whence e'en the very beasts of prey are free.640Oh, base entanglement, more monstrous farThan that fell Sphinx which he himself hath slain.Thee, thee, who dost the bloody scepter hold,Thee will thy sire, still unavenged, pursue,With all thy town; and with me will I bringTh' attendant fury of my wedding night—I'll bring her with her loud-resounding[4]lash!645Thy house, polluted, will I overthrow,And thy Penates will I trample downIn fratricidal strife! Then quickly driveThy king, O Thebes, from out thy boundaries!For when his baleful step shall leave the land,In vernal green shall it renew itself,650The air shall give again pure springs of life,And to the woods their beauty shall return.Destruction, Pestilence and Death, Distress,Disease, Despair—his fitting company—Shall all depart with him. And he, indeed,Will seek with eager haste to flee his realm,But him will I hedge round with barriers,655And hold him back. Uncertain of his way,And with his staff to guide his faltering steps,He'll creep along his sad and darkened path.Do ye the land deny him; I, his sire,Will take away from him the light of heaven."

Creon: Afar from Thebes there is a frowning grove530

Near the well-watered vale of Dirce's fount.

And there a cypress lifts its giant head

And holds within its evergreen embrace

The trees around. Here stands an ancient oak

And spreads its branches dark with clustering mould.

One side is torn by time's destructive hand;535

The rest, with roots decayed and falling, hangs

Supported on a neighbor's trunk. Here stand

The bitter laurel, rustling linden trees,

The myrtle, and the alder destined soon

To sweep its oarage on the boundless sea.

Midway, a mighty pine its smooth trunk lifts540

Against the rays of Phoebus and the winds,

And with its heavy shade it overwhelms

The lesser trees; for, with its spreading boughs,

It stands, the giant guardian of the wood.

Beneath this pine there springs a gloomy pool545

That never saw the sun nor light of day.

An oozy swamp surrounds the sluggish pool.

Here did the agéd priest direct his steps;

Nor was there need to wait; the gloomy spot

Supplied the shades of night. A trench is dug,

Where brands are kindled, pluck'd from funeral pyres.550

The priest is shrouded in a mourning pall,

And waves the bough; his dark robe sweeps the earth.

And now, in squalid garb and wrapped in gloom,

The priest advances, with his hoary locks555

Encircled by the yew-tree's deadly leaves.

Black sheep and sable oxen, backward driven,[3]

Are sacrificed. The fire devours the food,

And the living entrails quiver in the flames.

The shades he calls, and him who rules the shades,

And him who guards the dark Lethaean stream.560

A magic rune he mutters o'er and o'er

And fiercely chants the charm which either lures

The shifting ghosts, or forces them to come.

He burns the victims whole, and fills the trench

With sacrificial blood, and snowy milk,565

And, with his left hand pouring, mingles wine;

Again he chants, and, bending to the earth,

With stronger words and frantic, summons up

The manes. Loudly bayed the hounds of hell;

And thrice the hollows gave a mournful sound;570

The whole earth trembled and the solid ground

Was rent asunder. Then the priest exclaimed:

"I have prevailed, for strong the words I spoke;

The deep and gloomy realm of chaos yawns,

And for the dwellers in the home of Dis

A way is opened to the world of light."

The whole wood shrank away; its leaves erect

In horror stood, the mighty trunks were split,575

And all the grove was smitten with amaze.

The frightened earth crouched back with hollow groans,

As if unwillingly she saw the deeps

Of Acheron assailed; or else herself,

That back to life the dead might find a way,

With crashing sound her close-wrought barriers burst;580

Or threefold Cerberus in angry rage

Clanked loud his heavy chains. Then suddenly

The earth yawned wide, and at our very feet

A deep abyss appeared. I saw, myself,

The sluggish pools amidst the dusky shades;

I saw the shadowy gods, and that black gloom

No earthly night can give. At that dread sight

My blood ran cold and froze within my veins.585

And then there hurried forth a dreadful band,

And stood in armed array, that viper brood,

The troop of brothers sprung from dragon's teeth;

And that fell pestilence, the curse of Thebes.

Then grim Erinys raised her piercing cry,

Blind Fury, Dread, and all the ghastly forms590

Which spawn and lurk within the endless shades:

Grief, in her madness, tearing out her hair;

Disease, scarce holding up her weary head;

Age, burdened with itself, and brooding Fear.

Our spirits died within us at the sight.595

Even the prophet's daughter stood amazed,

Though well she knew her father's mystic arts.

But he, undaunted, since he saw them not,

Convoked the bloodless throng of gloomy Dis.

Like clouds the shadowy forms come trooping up,

And snuff the air of unrestricted heaven.

Not lofty Eryx in his mountain glades600

As many falling leaves, nor Hybla's slopes

As many flowers produce, in sunny spring,

When greedy bees in teeming bunches swarm;

As many waves break not upon the shore;

As many birds deserting Strymon's streams,

Exchange not wintry blasts and Arctic snows,605

And seek the milder valley of the Nile;

As were the shades the prophet summoned forth.

In eager haste the shivering spirits seek

The hiding-places of the leafy grove.

From out the cave, his right hand by the horns610

A raging bull restraining, Zethus came,

And next Amphion, with that famous shell

Whose magic strains insensate rocks allured.

Here haughty Niobe, in safety now,

Amongst her children lifts her head in scorn

And proudly counts her shades. And worse than she,615

That mother, mad Agave, next appears,

With all the impious band who rent the king.

Then Pentheus' self, all torn and bleeding, comes,

In rage pursuing those wild Bacchanals.

At length, when often summoned, Laius comes

In shame, and, skulking, flees the shadowy throng,620

And hides himself away; but still the seer,

With unrelenting purpose pressing on,

Repeats his strong compelling exorcisms,

Until he brings the ghost to open view.

I shudder as I tell it. There he stood,

A fearful sight, his body drenched with blood,

His matted locks o'erspread with horrid filth.625

And now, with raging tongue, the specter spoke:

"O wild and savage house of Cadmus, thou

Who ever dost rejoice in brother's blood!

The thyrsus wave, in madness rend thy sons.

The greatest crime of Thebes is mother's love.

O fatherland, 'tis not the wrath of heaven,630

But sin of man by which thou art undone.

No plague-fraught south wind with its deadly blast,

Nor yet the parchéd earth with its dry breath,

Is harming thee; but 'tis thy bloody king,

Who, as the prize of savage murder done,

Hath seized his father's scepter and his bed.635

An impious son (but far more impious,

The mother who in most unhallowed womb

Bore children once again), he forced his way

Back to his source of life, and there begot

Upon his mother offspring horrible,

Got brothers to himself, a custom base,

Whence e'en the very beasts of prey are free.640

Oh, base entanglement, more monstrous far

Than that fell Sphinx which he himself hath slain.

Thee, thee, who dost the bloody scepter hold,

Thee will thy sire, still unavenged, pursue,

With all thy town; and with me will I bring

Th' attendant fury of my wedding night—

I'll bring her with her loud-resounding[4]lash!645

Thy house, polluted, will I overthrow,

And thy Penates will I trample down

In fratricidal strife! Then quickly drive

Thy king, O Thebes, from out thy boundaries!

For when his baleful step shall leave the land,

In vernal green shall it renew itself,650

The air shall give again pure springs of life,

And to the woods their beauty shall return.

Destruction, Pestilence and Death, Distress,

Disease, Despair—his fitting company—

Shall all depart with him. And he, indeed,

Will seek with eager haste to flee his realm,

But him will I hedge round with barriers,655

And hold him back. Uncertain of his way,

And with his staff to guide his faltering steps,

He'll creep along his sad and darkened path.

Do ye the land deny him; I, his sire,

Will take away from him the light of heaven."

Oedipus:A chilling tremor penetrates my bones;The very thing which I have feared to do,660They say that I have done it. But the chargeThat in unholy wedlock I am joined,My mother Merope refutes, for sheTo Polybus, my sire, is wedded still;And my hands from stain of father's blood are clean,Since Polybus in safety lives and reigns.Since both my parents free me from the guiltOf murder and that base, incestuous crime,What room is there for accusation more?And as for Laius, Thebes his death deplored665Long 'ere I set my feet upon her soil.What shall we say then? Was the seer deceived,Or does the hand of God afflict the state?No! now we see these two confederatesDeep in a crafty plot: that priest of thineWith lying tongue pretends the will of heaven,And promises my sovereignty to thee.670

Oedipus:A chilling tremor penetrates my bones;

The very thing which I have feared to do,660

They say that I have done it. But the charge

That in unholy wedlock I am joined,

My mother Merope refutes, for she

To Polybus, my sire, is wedded still;

And my hands from stain of father's blood are clean,

Since Polybus in safety lives and reigns.

Since both my parents free me from the guilt

Of murder and that base, incestuous crime,

What room is there for accusation more?

And as for Laius, Thebes his death deplored665

Long 'ere I set my feet upon her soil.

What shall we say then? Was the seer deceived,

Or does the hand of God afflict the state?

No! now we see these two confederates

Deep in a crafty plot: that priest of thine

With lying tongue pretends the will of heaven,

And promises my sovereignty to thee.670

Creon:Would I expel my sister from the throne?But if that sacred fealty which I oweUnto my kindred house restrained me not,Yet fortune would herself affright me sore,For with care and danger is she ever fraught.But be thyself content to lay aside,While still thou safely mayst, the cares of state,675Lest,[5]borne too long, they may o'erwhelm thee quite.In a humbler state more safely shalt thou dwell.

Creon:Would I expel my sister from the throne?

But if that sacred fealty which I owe

Unto my kindred house restrained me not,

Yet fortune would herself affright me sore,

For with care and danger is she ever fraught.

But be thyself content to lay aside,

While still thou safely mayst, the cares of state,675

Lest,[5]borne too long, they may o'erwhelm thee quite.

In a humbler state more safely shalt thou dwell.

Oedipus:And dost thou bid me, then, of mine own willTo lay aside the heavy cares of state?

Oedipus:And dost thou bid me, then, of mine own will

To lay aside the heavy cares of state?

Creon:Thus would I counsel those to whom the wayIs open yet to choose the path he will.680But the lot that fortune sends thee thou must bear.

Creon:Thus would I counsel those to whom the way

Is open yet to choose the path he will.680

But the lot that fortune sends thee thou must bear.

Oedipus:When one desires to reign, 'tis ever thus,That humble life he praises, and the joysOf ease and sleep are ever in his mouth.A peaceful face oft hides a restless heart.

Oedipus:When one desires to reign, 'tis ever thus,

That humble life he praises, and the joys

Of ease and sleep are ever in his mouth.

A peaceful face oft hides a restless heart.

Creon:Does my long loyalty defend me not?685

Creon:Does my long loyalty defend me not?685

Oedipus:To traitors, loyalty's a cloak to crime.

Oedipus:To traitors, loyalty's a cloak to crime.

Creon:Free from the burdens of a kingly state,I still enjoy the fruits of royalty;My house is honored by our citizens;And day by day thy royal gifts o'erflow,And fill my kindred home with luxury.690Rich food and clothing, gifts of every sort,And safety flow to many through my aid.Why should I think aught lacking to my lot?

Creon:Free from the burdens of a kingly state,

I still enjoy the fruits of royalty;

My house is honored by our citizens;

And day by day thy royal gifts o'erflow,

And fill my kindred home with luxury.690

Rich food and clothing, gifts of every sort,

And safety flow to many through my aid.

Why should I think aught lacking to my lot?

Oedipus:Because there is a lack. ProsperityNe'er halts at any bounds.

Oedipus:Because there is a lack. Prosperity

Ne'er halts at any bounds.

Creon:And shall I fall,695Prejudged, and have no right to plead my cause?

Creon:And shall I fall,695

Prejudged, and have no right to plead my cause?

Oedipus:Hadst thou consideration formylife?Did old Tiresias listen to my cause?And yet I am condemned. My pattern, thou;I do but follow in the way thou lead'st.

Oedipus:Hadst thou consideration formylife?

Did old Tiresias listen to my cause?

And yet I am condemned. My pattern, thou;

I do but follow in the way thou lead'st.

Creon:But what if I am guiltless?

Creon:But what if I am guiltless?

Oedipus:Kings are wontTo fear alike the doubtful and the true.

Oedipus:Kings are wont

To fear alike the doubtful and the true.

Creon:Who quakes at empty fears, hath true in store.700

Creon:Who quakes at empty fears, hath true in store.700

OedipusWho in a fault is taken, and forgiven,Is filled with hate. Let all such dubious faithBe far from me.

OedipusWho in a fault is taken, and forgiven,

Is filled with hate. Let all such dubious faith

Be far from me.

Creon:But thus is hatred bred.

Creon:But thus is hatred bred.

Oedipus:Nay, he who feareth hatred overmuch,Knows not the art of ruling like a king;For 'tis by fear that kings are guarded most.

Oedipus:Nay, he who feareth hatred overmuch,

Knows not the art of ruling like a king;

For 'tis by fear that kings are guarded most.

Creon:Who holds the scepter with tyrannic sway,705Doth live in fear of those who fear his power;For terror ever doth return to himWho doth inspire it.

Creon:Who holds the scepter with tyrannic sway,705

Doth live in fear of those who fear his power;

For terror ever doth return to him

Who doth inspire it.

Oedipus[to attendants]: Hence, away with him;Deep in some rocky dungeon let him stay,While I unto the palace take my way.

Oedipus[to attendants]: Hence, away with him;

Deep in some rocky dungeon let him stay,

While I unto the palace take my way.

[Creonis led away by the attendants, whileOedipusretires into the palace.]


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