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    Four Tragedies and Octavia

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      Of one more Cyclad? Now the rising waters

      Covered the sacred reef of Epidaurus,

      And the notorious Scironian rocks,

      And all the Isthmus in between the seas.

      Amazed we watched, and wondered, while the whole

      Sea roared, and the surrounding cliffs roared back.

      Each pinnacle was wet with driven spray

      Blown out and sucked back by the swirling waters;

      As when the huge spouting leviathan’s

      Wide mouth blows out the water as he rides

      Across the ocean. Then, a tremor shook

      The mass of water and it burst apart

      And threw on to the shore a thing – a thing

      Of evil, far more foul than any fear

      Of ours could have conceived; and after it

      The sea rushed on towards us, in the wake

      Of that abominable apparition.…

      My fear still trembles on my lips.… How vast,

      How horrible of shape the creature was!

      A bull – dark blue about the rising neck,

      Sea-green the shaggy forelock on its brow,

      Hairy the ears, eyes shot with varied hues,

      That of the leader of a mountain herd,

      And that of some sea-creature – fiery red,

      And lustrous with the purple of the sea.

      Thick muscles rippled on its massive neck,

      And through the gaping nostrils draughts of air

      Hissed horribly. Its breast and dewlaps dripped

      Green slimy moss, and all along its flanks

      Red seaweed clung. The hinder parts were drawn

      Into some nameless shape, a scaly length

      Of tail enormous trailed behind the monster.

      Of such a shape might be the deep-sea shark

      Which crushes or devours the swiftest ships.

      Earth shook, and every animal took flight

      In terror from the fields, and every herdsman

      Was too amazed to follow up his cattle.

      Wild beasts broke from their coverts everywhere,

      And everywhere the huntsman, frozen stiff

      With fear, stood trembling. Only Hippolytus

      Was unafraid; his horses took alarm,

      But with the rein he held them hard and mastered

      Their panic with the voice they knew so well.

      The road that skirts the margin of the sea

      Turns through a deep ravine between the hills

      Towards the country. Here the monster paused

      To whet its anger and prepare for battle.

      Then, having practised to its satisfaction

      And limbered up its powers, with wrath renewed

      It charged ahead, so fast the flying feet

      Scarce touched the ground beneath; and then it stopped,

      Confronting with a scowl the quivering horses.

      Your son stood boldly up and faced the beast

      With fearless challenge and unaltered mien,

      And in a voice as loud as thunder cried:

      ‘This bogey cannot frighten me! I know

      How to fight bulls; it was my father’s trade.’

      But suddenly his horses jumped the reins,

      Swerved off the road, taking the chariot with them,

      And raced across the rocks, this way and that,

      Wherever their wild terror took them. Still,

      Like a ship’s helmsman on a heaving sea

      Holding his course head-on into the breakers,

      Pitting his skill against their force – the youth

      Guided his chariot. Tugging at the bit

      With tightened reins, or flaying with the whip,

      He kept control; while his competitor

      Hung on to him – now drawing level, now

      Wheeling around to face him, scaring him

      From all directions; till at last, full tilt,

      The horrible horned monster of the sea

      Charged from the front, and there was no escaping.

      At this, the maddened horses broke all bounds

      And in their struggle to throw off the yoke

      Reared up, hurling their driver to the ground.

      Headlong he plunged and, in his fall caught up

      In the entangling straps, the more he wrestled

      The more he knotted up the gripping harness.

      The horses knew what they had done; the chariot

      Was lighter, and they had no master now;

      Fear took control, and where it led they followed.

      So was it when the horses in the sky,

      Feeling an unknown rider at their back,

      Hating to have the car of daylight lent

      To a pretender Sun, flung Phaethon down

      From his wild orbit in the upper air.

      The ground was reddened with a trail of blood;

      His head was dashed from rock to rock, his hair

      Torn off by thorns, his handsome face despoiled

      By flinty stones; wound after wound destroyed

      For ever that ill-fated comeliness.

      The speeding wheels trundled the dying body

      Until it caught upon a half-burnt tree-stump,

      Sharp as a stake, which pierced the groin and held him

      Transfixed; and while the man hung there impaled,

      The car stood still, the horses at a loss

      Checked by the accident. Then they break loose,

      Even though they break their master. Now half dead

      His flesh is ripped by brambles, gored by spines

      Of thorny thickets, broken into pieces

      Hanging on every tree. And sadly now

      His servants and companions search the ground

      Wherever the long trail of blood marks out

      The passage of the torn and dragged Hippolytus.

      The dogs join in the melancholy chase

      Tracking the fragments of their master’s body.

      But still the efforts of the searching mourners

      Have not recovered all the corpse. That beauty,

      That form, to come to this! That youth, resplendent

      Beside his royal father, star ascendant,

      Heir to the throne – now they are gathering him

      In scattered remnants to his resting-place

      Upon a funeral pyre.

      THESEUS: O potent nature,

      How strong a bond of blood is thine to tie

      A parent’s heart! Even against our will

      We know and love thee. As my son was guilty,

      I wished him dead; as he is lost, I mourn him.

      MESSENGER: What he has willed, no man may rightly mourn.

      THESEUS: This is the very summit of calamity,

      When fate makes us demand what we must loathe.

      MESSENGER: If you still harbour hate, why are you weeping?

      THESEUS: I weep, not that I lost, but that I killed him.

      CHORUS

      What awful revolutions accident

      Brings in the lives of men!

      Truly the hand of Fate

      Is kinder to the humble; punishment

      From heaven falls less heavily

      On those of less estate.

      Peace and obscurity make most content,

      In lowly homes old age sleeps easily.

      The highest mountain-tops

      Catch every wind that blows, from east, from south,

      The wild assaults of Boreas,

      And rains of Corus.

      Green valleys seldom feel the stroke of thunder,1

      But the high Caucasus

      And Phrygian forests of the Mother Goddess

      Quake at the voice of Jupiter

      And fear his armoury.

      For Jupiter is on his guard

      And strikes whatever comes too near the sky.

      The thunder rumbles round his throne,

      But no great harm can come to common folk

      Who dwell in modest homes.

      The wings of time fly unp
    redictably,

      Fate hurries on, and keeps no promises.

      Here was a man, returning thankfully

      To look upon bright day and starry sky

      After his sojourn in the dark; what sorrow

      Greets his homecoming! In his father’s house

      He has received a welcome far more woeful

      Than in the pit of hell.

      Pallas, whom all the Attic race adore:

      Theseus thy son has come back from the dead

      And lives to see the heaven above; but thou,

      Pure goddess, owest no recompense for this

      To thy stern uncle’s grasping hand; death’s king

      Has still his victim, and the debt is paid.

      ACT FIVE

      Theseus, Phaedra

      CHORUS: A voice crying from the high palace! What!

      Phaedra comes, sword in hand, distraught. Ah, why?…

      [Enter Phaedra]

      THESEUS: What is this madness, woman, crazed with grief, Why come you with a sword and loud lament

      Over a body which you hate?

      PHAEDRA: On me,

      On me let the deep ocean’s angry lord

      Let fall his wrath! Let all the blue sea’s monsters,

      All that were ever brought to birth afar

      In the deep lap of Tethys, all that Ocean

      Bears in the farthest tides of his wild waters,

      Come against me. O Theseus, ever cruel!

      Never a bringer of joy on your return

      To those that waited for you; first a father,1

      And now a son, have, died for your homecoming.

      For love of one wife, hatred of another,

      Guilty in both, you have destroyed your house.

      [The remains of Hippolytus have been brought back]

      Hippolytus! Is this how I must find you?

      Is this what I have made of you? What creature –

      Some Sinis, some Procrustes? – Cretan bull

      Bellowing in a Daedalian labyrinth,

      Horned hybrid – can have torn you into pieces?

      Alas, where now is all your beauty gone,

      And where those eyes that were my stars? Can I

      Believe you dead? Come back a little while,

      And hear me speak to you – I’ll speak no shame.

      Then with this hand I’ll pay my debt to you;

      Into this wicked heart I’ll thrust the sword

      That shall set Phaedra free from life and sin.

      So through the waters, through the Stygian stream

      And the Tartarean lake, and burning rivers,1

      I shall still follow you, mad for your love.

      Here is my offering for the dead… this veil…

      And from my wounded brow this lock of hair.…

      Take them. Although we could not live as one,

      We can still die together.…

      Die then, Phaedra;

      If thou art undefiled, die for thy husband;

      If thou hast sinned, die for thy love. For how

      Could I again approach my husband’s bed

      Now that such evil has dishonoured it?

      This would have been the crowning sin, to ask,

      As if repentant, to be loved again.

      O Death, sole remedy for errant love,

      O Death, lost honour’s only ornament,

      To thee I fly; receive me in thy mercy.

      But hear this first, O Athens; hear this, father –

      But more malevolent than any stepmother –

      I told you lies, alleged untruthfully

      The offence on which my own mad heart was set.

      You, father, punished where there was no need.

      The innocent boy, charged with inchastity,

      Lies dead, untouched by sin, untouched by shame.

      Hippolytus, be vindicated now!

      My guilty breast awaits the avenging sword;

      My blood is shed to pay the dues of death

      For one who never sinned. Father, your son

      Is taken from you; let his stepmother

      Teach you your duty now: begone to Hades!

      [She kills herself]

      THESEUS: Hide me, O prison of pale Death! Hide me, ye caves

      Of Taenarus, and Lethe’s river, for whose arms

      The miserable yearn! Let your dank waters drown

      My sins, sink my iniquity in endless pain!

      Come, sea, come, savage monsters of the main, come all

      The brood of Proteus from the ocean’s farthest deep.

      For having triumphed in my evil victory

      Let me be dragged down to the bottom of the sea!

      Father, too ready hast thou been to lend thy ear

      To my impetuous prayers; how can I now deserve

      Merciful death, when I have sent my son to die

      As none have died before, when I have torn his body

      And scattered it afield, when I, making myself

      The ruthless punisher of a fictitious crime,

      Have thrown upon myself the veritable guilt?

      Hell, heaven, and ocean I have sated with my sins;

      Known in three worlds, there is no fourth estate for me.

      Did I return for this? Was I allowed

      A way back to this light, only to see

      Death twice, two violent deaths, lose wife and son

      And with one torch kindle the funeral pyres

      Of one I loved and one whom I begot?

      This light that is my darkness, Hercules,

      You won for me. Let Dis take back his gift!

      Let me rejoin the dead!… Blasphemous prayer –

      And vain – to ask a second chance of death.

      Devise your own fit sentence, man of blood!

      You have a skill in murder, have invented

      Wondrous devices of terrible destruction.

      How should I do it?… a pine-branch bent to the ground,

      Pegged down, then loosed, to fly into the air,

      Ripping a body in half, like a sawn plank?

      Or the steep drop from the Scironian cliffs?1

      Or worse things, such as I myself have seen

      Men suffer under Phlegethon, damned souls

      Imprisoned in a sea of fire. I know

      What punishment, what resting-place, awaits me.

      Sinners in hell, resign your tasks to me!

      The stone of aged Sisyphus shall rest

      Upon these shoulders, these two hands shall toil

      Under the weight of it. Elusive water,

      Just out of reach, shall tantalize these lips.

      The deadly vulture shall leave Tityos alone

      And fly at me, mine shall those entrails be

      That grow for ever to supply fresh food

      For suffering. The father2 of my friend

      Peirithous shall rest, and in his place

      My body shall be carried round and round

      Upon the ever-turning wheel. Be opened,

      Earth! And receive me, awful emptiness!

      This time my journey to the shadow world

      Will have just cause: I go to seek my son.

      King of the dead, have no more fear of me;

      I come with pure intent. Make me a guest

      In your eternal home, where I shall stay

      For ever.… Ah, the gods are deaf to prayers –

      Yet they would answer readily enough

      If I were praying for some evil purpose.

      CHORUS: Theseus, time without end is time enough

      For your lament. Now let due rites be done

      In your son’s honour; let us put away

      This vilely ravaged and dismembered body.

      THESEUS: Yes, bring your burden, bring me those remains

      Of his beloved body, though the parts

      Be heaped in no right order. Can this be

      Hippolytus? Oh, what a sin was mine!

      I murdered you; and more, as if one crime

      Were not enough, nor I alone to blame,

      I had
    to ask my father for his aid

      In plotting this vile act against my son.

      Now I can thank him for his generosity!…

      What sorrow can be greater than bereavement

      At life’s dead end? Unhappy man,

      Take in your arms these relics, all you have

      That was your son! Kneel and embrace these limbs

      And take them to your sorrow-laden breast.

      CHORUS: You, sir, shall set in order these remains

      Of your son’s broken body, and restore

      The mingled fragments to their place. Put here

      His strong right hand… and here the left,

      Which used to hold the reins so skilfully.…

      I recognize the shape of this left side.

      Alas, how much of him is lost, and lies

      Far from our weeping!

      THESEUS: Trembling hands, be firm

      For this sad service; cheeks, dry up your tears!

      Here is a father building, limb by limb,

      A body for his son.… Here is a piece,

      Misshapen, horrible, each side of it

      Injured and torn. What part of you it is

      I cannot tell, but it is part of you.

      So… put it there… not where it ought to be,

      But where there is a place for it. Was this

      The face that shone as brightly as a star,

      The face that turned all enemies’ eyes aside?

      Has so much beauty come to this? O cruelty

      Of Fate! O kindness, ill-bestowed, of gods!

      See how a father’s prayer brought back his son!…

      Receive these last gifts from your father’s hand;

      These, as each part of you is borne to burial,

      Shall go into the fire.…

      Open the doors

      Of this polluted palace, fouled with blood!

      Let there be lamentation loud and full

      Through all this Attic land!… Let some prepare

      The royal pyre; others, search the fields

      For any portions of the corpse still lost.…

      This one… let a deep pit of earth conceal,

      And soil lie heavy on her cursed head.

      Exeunt

      THE TROJAN WOMEN

      TROY has fallen. Outside the ruined and smouldering city, a group of Trojan women are waiting to be carried away on the Greek ships to the homes of their captors. Two acts of vengeance remain to be consummated: the destruction of Hector’s son Astyanax, the last heir to Troy’s defeated royal house; and the sacrifice of Polyxena, daughter of Priam, as an expiation due to the ghost of Achilles. Prominent among the captive women are Hecuba, the widow of Priam, and Andromache, the widow of Hector, the two mothers on whom the shock of these brutal blows most heavily falls.

     


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