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    Antigone / Oedipus the King / Electra

    Page 8
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      Because your bride must die? Or are you still

      My loyal son, whatever I may do?

      HAEMON. Father, I am your son; may your wise

      judgement

      Rule me, and may I always follow it.

      No marriage shall be thought a greater prize

      For me to win than your good government.

      CREON. So may you ever be resolved, my son,

      In all things to be guided by your father.

      640

      It is for this men pray that they may have

      Obedient children, that they may requite

      Their father’s enemy with enmity

      And honour whom their father loves to honour.

      One who begets unprofitable children

      Makes trouble for himself, and gives his foes

      Nothing but laughter. Therefore do not let

      Your pleasure in a woman overcome

      Your judgement, knowing this, that if you have

      An evil wife to share your house, you’ll find

      Cold comfort in your bed. What other wound

      650

      Can cut so deep as treachery at home?

      So, think this girl your enemy; spit on her,

      And let her find her husband down in Hell!

      She is the only one that I have found

      In all the city disobedient.

      I will not make myself a liar. I

      Have caught her; I will kill her. Let her sing

      Her hymns to Sacred Kinship!* If I breed

      Rebellion in the house, then it is certain

      There’ll be no lack of rebels out of doors.

      660

      No man can rule a city uprightly

      Who is not just in ruling his own household.

      Never will I approve of one who breaks

      And violates the law, or would dictate

      To those who rule. Lawful authority

      Must be obeyed in all things, great or small,

      Just and unjust alike; and such a man

      Would win my confidence both in command

      And as a subject; standing at my side

      In the storm of battle he would hold his ground,

      670

      Not leave me unprotected. But there is

      No greater curse than disobedience.

      This brings destruction on a city, this

      Drives men from hearth and home, this brings about

      A sudden panic in the battle-front.

      Where all goes well, obedience is the cause.

      So we must vindicate the law; we must not be

      Defeated by a woman. Better far

      Be overthrown, if need be, by a man

      Than to be called the victim of a woman.

      680

      CHORUS. Unless the years have stolen away our wits,

      All you say is said most prudently.

      HAEMON. Father, it is the gods who give us wisdom;

      No gift of theirs more precious. I cannot say

      That you are wrong, nor would I ever learn

      That impudence, although perhaps another

      Might fairly say it. But it falls to me,

      Being your son, to note what others say,

      Or do, or censure in you, for your glance

      Intimidates the common citizen;

      690

      He will not say, before your face, what might

      Displease you; I can listen freely, how

      The city mourns this girl. ‘No other woman’,

      So they are saying, ‘so undeservedly

      Has been condemned for such a glorious deed.

      When her own brother had been slain in battle

      She would not let his body lie unburied

      To be devoured by dogs or birds of prey.

      Is not this worthy of a crown of gold?’—

      Such is the muttering that spreads everywhere.

      700

      Father, no greater treasure can I have

      Than your prosperity; no son can find

      A greater prize than his own father’s fame,

      No father than his son’s. Therefore let not

      This single thought possess you: only what

      You say is right, and nothing else. The man

      Who thinks that he alone is wise, that he

      Is best in speech or counsel, such a man

      Brought to the proof is found but emptiness.

      There’s no disgrace, even if one is wise,

      710

      In learning more, and knowing when to yield.

      See how the trees that grow beside a torrent

      Preserve their branches, if they bend; the others,

      Those that resist, are torn out, root and branch.

      So too the captain of a ship; let him

      Refuse to shorten sail, despite the storm—

      He’ll end his voyage bottom uppermost.

      No, let your anger cool, and be persuaded.

      If one who is still young can speak with sense,

      Then I would say that he does best who has

      720

      Most understanding; second best, the man

      Who profits from the wisdom of another.

      CHORUS. My lord, he has not spoken foolishly;

      You each can learn some wisdom from the other.

      CREON. What? men of our age go to school again

      And take a lesson from a very boy?

      HAEMON. If it is worth the taking. I am young,

      But think what should be done, not of my age.

      CREON. What should be done! To honour

      disobedience!

      730

      HAEMON. I would not have you honour criminals.

      CREON. And is this girl then not a criminal?

      HAEMON. The city with a single voice denies it.

      CREON. Must I give orders then by their permission?

      HAEMON. If youth is folly, this is childishness.

      CREON. Am I to rule for them, not for myself?

      HAEMON. That is not government, but tyranny.

      CREON. The king is lord and master of his city.

      HAEMON. Then you had better rule a desert island!

      CREON. This man, it seems, is the ally of the woman.

      740

      HAEMON. If you’re the woman, yes! I fight for you.

      CREON. Villain! Do you oppose your father’s will?

      HAEMON. Only because you are opposing Justice.

      CREON. When I regard my own prerogative?

      HAEMON. Opposing God’s, you disregard your own.

      CREON. Scoundrel, so to surrender to a woman!

      HAEMON. But not to anything that brings me shame.

      CREON. Your every word is in defence of her.

      HAEMON. And me, and you—and of the gods below.

      CREON. You shall not marry her this side the grave!

      750

      HAEMON. So, she must die—and will not die alone.

      CREON. What? Threaten me? Are you so insolent?

      HAEMON. It is no threat, if I reply to folly.

      CREON. The fool would teach me sense! You’ll pay for

      it.

      HAEMON. I’d call you mad, if you were not my father.

      CREON. I’ll hear no chatter from a woman’s plaything.

      HAEMON. Would you have all the talk, and hear no

      answer?

      CREON. So?

      I swear to God, you shall not bandy words

      With me and not repent it! Bring her out,

      That loathsome creature! I will have her killed

      760

      At once, before her bridegroom’s very eyes.

      HAEMON. How can you think it? I will not see that,

      Nor shall you ever see my face again.

      Those friends of yours who can must tolerate

      Your raging madness; I will not endure it.

      [Exit HAEMON

      CHORUS. How angrily he went, my lord! The young,

      When they are greatly hurt, grow desperate.

      CREON. Then let his pride and foll
    y do their worst!

      He shall not save these women from their doom.

      CHORUS. Is it your purpose then to kill them both?

      770

      CREON. Not her who had no part in it.—I thank you.

      CHORUS. And for the other: how is she to die?

      CREON. I’ll find a cave in some deserted spot,

      And there I will imprison her alive

      With so much food—no more—as will avert

      Pollution and a curse upon the city.*

      There let her pray to Death, the only god

      Whom she reveres, to rescue her from death,

      Or learn at last, though it be late, that it

      Is wanton folly to respect the dead.

      780

      [CREON remains on the stage

      Strophe

      CHORUS [sings]. Invincible, implacable Love,* O

      Love, that makes havoc of all wealth;

      That peacefully keeps his night-watch

      On tender cheek of a maiden:

      The Sea is no barrier, nor

      Mountainous waste to Love’s flight; for

      No one can escape Love’s domination,

      Man, no, nor immortal god. Love’s

      Prey is possessed by madness.

      790

      Antistrophe

      By Love, the mind even of the just

      Is bent awry; he becomes unjust.

      So here: it is Love that stirred up

      This quarrel of son with father.

      The kindling light of Love in the soft

      Eye of a bride conquers, for

      Love sits on his throne, one of the great Powers;

      Nought else can prevail against

      800

      Invincible Aphrodite.*

      Enter ANTIGONE, under guard. [From this point up to line

      987 everything is sung, except lines 883–928.]

      CHORUS. I too, when I see this sight, cannot stay

      Within bounds; I cannot keep back my tears

      Which rise like a flood. For behold, they bring

      Antigone here, on the journey that all

      Must make, to the silence of Hades.*

      Strophe 1

      ANTIGONE. Behold me, O lords of my native city!

      Now do I make my last journey;

      Now do I see the last

      Sun that ever I shall behold.

      Never another! Death, that lulls

      810

      All to sleep, takes me while I live

      Down to the grim shore of Acheron.*

      No wedding day can be

      Mine, no hymn will be raised to honour

      Marriage of mine; for I

      Go to espouse the bridegroom, Death.

      CHORUS. Yet a glorious death, and rich in fame

      Is yours; you go to the silent tomb

      Not smitten with wasting sickness, nor

      Repaying a debt to the sharp-edged sword;

      820

      But alone among mortals* you go to the home

      Of the dead while yet you are living.

      Antistrophe 1

      ANTIGONE. They tell of how cruelly she did perish,

      Niobe, Queen in Thebes;*

      For, as ivy grows on a tree,

      Strangling it, so she slowly turned to

      Stone on a Phrygian mountain-top.

      Now the rain-storms wear her away—

      So does the story run—and

      Snow clings to her always:

      830

      Tears fall from her weeping eyes for

      Ever and ever. Like to hers, the

      Cruel death that now awaits me.

      CHORUS. But she was a goddess, and born of the

      gods;*

      We are but mortals, of mortals born.

      For a mortal to share in the doom of a god,

      That brings her renown while yet she lives,

      And a glory that long will outlive her.

      Strophe 2

      ANTIGONE. Alas, they laugh! O by the gods of Thebes,

      my native city,

      840

      Mock me, if you must, when I am gone, not to my

     


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