Hippolytus and the Bacchae
HIPPOLYTUS (1)

Euripides

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APHRODITE

Great among men, and not unnamed am I,

The Cyprian, in God's inmost halls on high.

And wheresoe'er from Pontus to the far

Red West men dwell, and see the glad day-star,

And worship Me, the pious heart I bless,

And wreck that life that lives in stubbornness.

For that there is, even in a great God's mind,

That hungereth for the praise of human kind.

So runs my word; and soon the very deed

Shall follow. For this Prince of Theseus' seed,

Hippolytus, child of that dead Amazon,

And reared by saintly Pittheus in his own

Strait ways, hath dared, alone of all Trozên,

To hold me least of spirits and most mean,

And spurns my spell and seeks no woman's kiss,

But great Apollo's sister, Artemis,

He holds of all most high, gives love and praise,

And through the wild dark woods for ever strays,

He and the Maid together, with swift hounds

To slay all angry beasts from out these bounds,

To more than mortal friendship consecrate!

I grudge it not. No grudge know I, nor hate;

Yet, seeing he hath offended, I this day

Shall smite Hippolytus. Long since my way

Was opened, nor needs now much labour more.

For once from Pittheus' castle to the shore

Of Athens came Hippolytus over-seas

Seeking the vision of the Mysteries.

And Phaedra there, his father's Queen high-born;

Saw him, and as she saw, her heart was torn

With great love, by the working of my will.

And for his sake, long since, on Pallas' hill,

Deep in the rock, that Love no more might roam,

She built a shrine, and named it Love-at-home :

And the rock held it, but its face alway

Seeks Trozên o'er the seas. Then came the day

When Theseus, for the blood of kinsmen shed,

Spake doom of exile on himself, and fled,

Phaedra beside him, even to this Trozên.

And here that grievous and amazed Queen,

Wounded and wondering, with ne'er a word,

Wastes slowly; and her secret none hath heard

Nor dreamed.

But never thus this love shall end!

To Theseus' ear some whisper will I send,

And all be bare! And that proud Prince, my foe,

His sire shall slay with curses. Even so

Endeth that boon the great Lord of the Main

To Theseus gave, the Three Prayers not in vain.

And she, not in dishonour, yet shall die.

I would not rate this woman's pain so high

As not to pay mine haters in full fee

That vengeance that shall make all well with me.

But soft, here comes he, striding from the chase,

Our Prince Hippolytus!—I will go my ways.—

And hunters at his heels: and a loud throng

Glorying Artemis with praise and song!

Little he knows that Hell's gates opened are,

And this his last look on the great Day-star!

[APHRODITE withdraws, unseen by HIPPOLYTUS

and a band of huntsmen, who enter from the left, singing.

They pass the Statue of APHRODITE without notice. ]

HIPPOLYTUS

Follow, O follow me,

Singing on your ways

Her in whose hand are we,

Her whose own flock we be,

The Zeus-Child, the Heavenly;

To Artemis be praise!

HUNTSMAN

Hail to thee, Maiden blest,

Proudest and holiest:

God's Daughter, great in bliss,

Leto-born, Artemis!

Hail to thee, Maiden, far

Fairest of all that are,

Yea, and most high thine home,

Child of the Father's hall;

Hear, O most virginal,

Hear, O most fair of all,

In high God's golden dome.

[ The huntsmen have gathered about the altar of ARTEMIS.

HIPPOLYTUS now advances from them, and approaches the Statue

with a wreath in his hand. ]

HIPPOLYTUS

To thee this wreathed garland, from a green

And virgin meadow bear I, O my Queen,

Where never shepherd leads his grazing ewes

Nor scythe has touched. Only the river dews

Gleam, and the spring bee sings, and in the glade

Hath Solitude her mystic garden made.

No evil hand may cull it: only he

Whose heart hath known the heart of Purity,

Unlearned of man, and true whate'er befall.

Take therefore from pure hands this coronal,

O mistress loved, thy golden hair to twine.

For, sole of living men, this grace is mine,

To dwell with thee, and speak, and hear replies

Of voice divine, though none may see thine eyes.

Oh, keep me to the end in this same r

[ An OLD HUNTSMAN, who has stood apart from

the rest, here comes up to HIPPOLYTUS.]

HUNTSMAN

My Prince—for "Master" name I none but God—

Gave I good counsel, wouldst thou welcome it?

HIPPOLYTUS

Right gladly, friend; else were I poor of wit.

HUNTSMAN

Knowest thou one law, that through the world has won?

HIPPOLYTUS

What wouldst thou? And how runs thy law? Say on.

HUNTSMAN

It hates that Pride that speaks not all men fair!

HIPPOLYTUS

And rightly. Pride breeds hatred everywhere.

HUNTSMAN

And good words love, and grace in all men's sight?

HIPPOLYTUS

Aye, and much gain withal, for trouble slight.

HUNTSMAN

How deem'st thou of the Gods? Are they the same?

HIPPOLYTUS

Surely: we are but fashioned on their frame.

HUNTSMAN

Why then wilt thou be proud, and worship not..

HIPPOLYTUS

Whom? If the name be speakable, speak out!

HUNTSMAN

She stands here at thy gate: the Cyprian Queen!

HIPPOLYTUS

I greet her from afar: my life is clean.

HUNTSMAN

Clean? Nay, proud, proud; a mark for all to scan!

HIPPOLYTUS

Each mind hath its own bent, for God or man.

HUNTSMAN

God grant thee happiness.. and wiser thought!

HIPPOLYTUS

These Spirits that reign in darkness like me not.

HUNTSMAN

What the Gods ask, O Son, that man must pay!

HIPPOLYTUS ( turning from him to the others ).

On, huntsmen, to the Castle! Make your way

Straight to the feast room; 'tis a merry thing

After the chase, a board of banqueting.

And see the steeds be groomed, and in array

The chariot dight. I drive them forth to-day

[ He pauses, and makes a slight gesture of reverence to the Statue on

the left. Then to the OLD HUNTSMAN.]

That for thy Cyprian, friend, and nought beside!

[HIPPOLYTUS follows the huntsmen, who stream by the central door in

the Castle. The OLD HUNTSMAN remains]

HUNTSMAN ( approaching the Statue and kneeling )

O Cyprian—for a young man in his pride

I will not follow!—here before thee, meek,

In that one language that a slave may speak,

I pray thee; Oh, if some wild heart in froth

Of youth surges against thee, be not wroth

For ever! Nay, be far and hear not then:

Gods should be gentler and more wise than men!

[ He rises and follows the others into the Castle.]

The Orchestra is empty for a moment, then there enter from right and

left several Trosenian women young and old. Their number eventually

amounts to fifteen.

CHORUS

There riseth a rock-born river,

Of Ocean's tribe, men say;

The crags of it gleam and quiver,

And pitchers dip in the spray:

A woman was there with raiment white

To bathe and spread in the warm sunlight,

And she told a tale to me there by the river

The tale of the Queen and her evil day:

How, ailing beyond allayment,

Within she hath bowed her head,

And with shadow of silken raiment

The bright brown hair bespread.

For three long days she hath lain forlorn,

Her lips untainted of flesh or corn,

For that secret sorrow beyond allayment

That steers to the far sad shore of the dead.

Some Women

Is this some Spirit, O child of man?

Doth Hecat hold thee perchance, or Pan?

Doth she of the Mountains work her ban,

Or the dread Corybantes bind thee?

Others

Nay, is it sin that upon thee lies,

Sin of forgotten sacrifice,

In thine own Dictynna's sea-wild eyes?

Who in Limna here can find thee;

For the Deep's dry floor is her easy way,

And she moves in the salt wet whirl of the spray.

Other Women

Or doth the Lord of Erechtheus' race,

Thy Theseus, watch for a fairer face,

For secret arms in a silent place,

Far from thy love or chiding?

Others

Or hath there landed, amid the loud

Hum of Piraeus' sailor-crowd,

Some Cretan venturer, weary-browed,

Who bears to the Queen some tiding;

Some far home-grief, that hath bowed her low,

And chained her soul to a bed of woe?

An Older Woman

Nay—know yet not?—this burden hath alway lain

On the devious being of woman; yea, burdens twain,

The burden of Wild Will and the burden of Pain.

Through my heart once that wind of terror sped;

But I, in fear confessèd,

Cried from the dark to Her in heavenly bliss,

The Helper of Pain, the Bow-Maid Artemis:

Whose feet I praise for ever, where they tread

Far off among the blessèd!

THE LEADER

But see, the Queen's grey nurse at the door,

Sad-eyed and sterner, methinks, than of yore

With the Queen. Doth she lead her hither

To the wind and sun?—Ah, fain would I know

What strange betiding hath blanched that brow

And made that young life wither.

[ The NURSE comes out from the central door followed by PHAEDRA,

who is supported by two handmaids. They make ready a couch for

PHAEDRA to lie upon.]

NURSE

O sick and sore are the days of men!

What wouldst thou? What shall I change again

Here is the Sun for thee; here is the sky;

And thy weary pillows wind-swept lie,

By the castle door.

But the cloud of thy brow is dark, I ween;

And soon thou wilt back to thy bower within:

So swift to change is the path of thy feet,

And near things hateful, and far things sweet;

So was it before!

Oh, pain were better than tending pain!

For that were single, and this is twain,

With grief of heart and labour of limb.

Yet all man's life is but ailing and dim,

And rest upon earth comes never.

But if any far-off state there be,

Dearer than life to mortality;

The hand of the Dark hath hold thereof,

And mist is under and mist above.

And so we are sick of life, and cling

On earth to this nameless and shining thing.

For other life is a fountain sealed,

And the deeps below are unrevealed,

And we drift on legends for ever!

[PHAEDRA during this has been laid on her couch;

she speaks to the handmaids.]

PHAEDRA

Yes; lift me: not my head so low.

There, hold my arms.—Fair arms they seem!—

My poor limbs scarce obey me now!

Take off that hood that weighs my brow,

And let my long hair stream.

NURSE

Nay, toss not, Child, so feveredly.

The sickness best will win relief

By quiet rest and constancy.

All men have grief.

PHAEDRA ( not noticing her )

Oh for a deep and dewy spring,

With runlets cold to draw and drink!

And a great meadow blossoming,

Long-grassed, and poplars in a ring,

To rest me by the brink!

NURSE

Nay, Child! Shall strangers hear this tone

So wild, and thoughts so fever-flown?

PHAEDRA

Oh, take me to the Mountain! Oh,

Pass the great pines and through the wood,

Up where the lean hounds softly go,

A-whine for wild things' blood,

And madly flies the dappled roe.

O God, to shout and speed them there,

An arrow by my chestnut hair

Drawn tight, and one keen glimmering spear—

Ah! if I could!

NURSE

What wouldst thou with them—fancies all!—

Thy hunting and thy fountain brink?

What wouldst thou? By the city wall

Canst hear our own brook plash and fall

Downhill, if thou wouldst drink.

PHAEDRA

O Mistress of the Sea-lorn Mere

Where horse-hoofs beat the sand and sing,

O Artemis, that I were there

To tame Enetian steeds and steer

Swift chariots in the ring!

NURSE

Nay, mountainward but now thy hands

Yearned out, with craving for the chase;

And now toward the unseaswept sands

Thou roamest, where the coursers pace!

O wild young steed, what prophet knows

The power that holds thy curb, and throws

Thy swift heart from its race?

[ At these words PHAEDRA gradually recovers herself

and pays attention. ]

PHAEDRA

What have I said? Woe's me! And where

Gone straying from my wholesome mind?

What? Did I fall in some god's snare?

—Nurse, veil my head again, and blind

Mine eyes.—There is a tear behind

That lash.—Oh, I am sick with shame!

Aye, but it hath a sting,

To come to reason; yet the name

Of madness is an awful thing.—

Could I but die in one swift flame

Unthinking, unknowing!

NURSE

I veil thy face, Child.—Would that so

Mine own were veiled for evermore,

So sore I love thee!... Though the lore

Of long life mocks me, and I know

How love should be a lightsome thing

Not rooted in the deep o' the heart;

With gentle ties, to twine apart

If need so call, or closer cling.—

Why do I love thee so? O fool,

O fool, the heart that bleeds for twain,

And builds, men tell us, walls of pain,

To walk by love's unswerving rule

The same for ever, stern and true!

For "Thorough" is no word of peace:

'Tis "Naught-too-much" makes trouble cease.

And many a wise man bows thereto.

[ The LEADER OF THE CHORUS here approaches the NURSE.]

LEADER

Nurse of our Queen, thou watcher old and true,

We see her great affliction, but no clue

Have we to learn the sickness. Wouldst thou tell

The name and sort thereof, 'twould like us well.

NURSE

Small leechcraft have I, and she tells no man.

LEADER

Thou know'st no cause? Nor when the unrest began?

NURSE

It all comes to the same. She will not speak.

LEADER ( turning and looking at PHAEDRA).

How she is changed and wasted! And how weak!

NURSE

'Tis the third day she hath fasted utterly.

LEADER

What, is she mad? Or doth she seek to die?

NURSE

I know not. But to death it sure must lead.

LEADER

'Tis strange that Theseus takes hereof no heed.

NURSE

She hides her wound, and vows it is not so.

LEADER

Can he not look into her face and know?

NURSE

Nay, he is on a journey these last days.

LEADER

Canst thou not force her, then? Or think of ways

To trap the secret of the sick heart's pain?

NURSE

Have I not tried all ways, and all in vain?

Yet will I cease not now, and thou shalt tell

If in her grief I serve my mistress well!

[ She goes across to where PHAEDRA lies; and

presently, while speaking, kneels by her.]

Dear daughter mine, all that before was said

Let both of us forget; and thou instead

Be kindlier, and unlock that prisoned brow.

And I, who followed then the wrong r now

Will leave it and be wiser. If thou fear

Some secret sickness, there be women here

To give thee comfort. [PHAEDRA shakes her head.

No; not secret? Then

Is it a sickness meet for aid of men?

Speak, that a leech may tend thee.

Silent still?

Nay, Child, what profits silence? If 'tis ill

This that I counsel, makes me see the wrong:

If well, then yield to me.

Nay, Child, I long

For one kind word, one look!

[PHAEDRA lies motionless. The NURSE rises. ]

Oh, woe is me!

Women, we labour here all fruitlessly,

All as far off as ever from her heart!

She ever scorned me, and now hears no part

Of all my prayers! [ Turning to PHAEDRA again. ]

Nay, hear thou shalt, and be,

If so thou will, more wild than the wild sea;

But know, thou art thy little ones' betrayer!

If thou die now, shall child of thine be heir

To Theseus' castle? Nay, not thine, I ween,

But hers! That barbèd Amazonian Queen

Hath left a child to bend thy children low,

A bastard royal-hearted—sayst not so?—

Hippolytus...

PHAEDRA

Ah!

[ She starts up, sitting, and throws the veil off.]

NURSE

That stings thee?

PHAEDRA

Nurse, most sore

Thou hast hurt me! In God's name, speak that name no more.

NURSE

Thou seest? Thy mind is clear; but with thy mind

Thou wilt not save thy children, nor be kind

To thine own life.

PHAEDRA

My children? Nay, most dear

I love them,—Far, far other grief is here.

NURSE ( after a pause, wondering )

Thy hand is clean, O Child, from stain of blood?

PHAEDRA

My hand is clean; but is my heart, O God?

NURSE

Some enemy's spell hath made thy spirit dim?

PHAEDRA

He hates me not that slays me, nor I him.

NURSE

Theseus, the King, hath wronged thee in man's wise?

PHAEDRA

Ah, could but I stand guiltless in his eyes!

NURSE

O speak! What is this death-fraught mystery?

PHAEDRA

Nay, leave me to my wrong. I wrong not thee.

NURSE ( suddenly throwing herself in supplication at PHAEDRA'S feet )

Not wrong me, whom thou wouldst all desolate leave?

PHAEDRA ( rising and trying to move away )

What wouldst thou? Force me? Clinging to my sleeve?

NURSE

Yea, to thy knees; and weep; and let not go!

PHAEDRA

Woe to thee, Woman, if thou learn it, woe!

NURSE

I know no bitterer woe than losing thee.

PHAEDRA

Yet the deed shall honour me.

NURSE

Why hide what honours thee? 'Tis all I claim!

PHAEDRA

Why, so I build up honour out of shame!

NURSE

Then speak, and higher still thy fame shall stand.

PHAEDRA

Go, in God's name!—Nay, leave me; loose my hand!

NURSE

Never, until thou grant me what I pray.

PHAEDRA ( yielding, after a pause )

So be it. I dare not tear that hand away.

NURSE ( rising and releasing PHAEDRA )

Tell all thou wilt, Daughter. I speak no more.

PHAEDRA ( after a long pause )

Mother, poor Mother, that didst love so sore!

NURSE

What mean'st thou, Child? The Wild Bull of the Tide?

PHAEDRA

And thou, sad sister, Dionysus' bride!

NURSE

Child! wouldst thou shame the house where thou wast born?

PHAEDRA

And I the third, sinking most all-forlorn!

NURSE ( to herself )

I am all lost and feared. What will she say?

PHAEDRA

From there my grief comes, not from yesterday.

NURSE

I come no nearer to thy parable.

PHAEDRA

Oh, would that thou could'st tell what I must tell!

NURSE

I am no seer in things I wot not of.

PHAEDRA ( again hesitating )

What is it that they mean, who say men...love?

NURSE

A thing most sweet, my Child, yet dolorous.

PHAEDRA

Only the half, belike, hath fallen on us!

NURSE ( starting )

On thee? Love?—Oh, what say'st thou? What man's son?

PHAEDRA

What man's? There was a Queen, an Amazon...

NURSE

Hippolytus, say'st thou?

PHAEDRA ( again wrapping her face in the veil )

Nay, 'twas thou, not I!

[PHAEDRA sinks back on the couch and covers her face again.

The NURSE starts violently from her and walks up and down. ]

NURSE

O God! what wilt thou say, Child? Wouldst thou try

To kill me?—Oh, 'tis more than I can bear;

Women. I will no more of it, this glare

Of hated day, this shining of the sky.

I will fling down my body, and let it lie

Till life be gone!

Women, God rest with you,

My works are over! For the pure and true

Are forced to evil, against their own heart's vow,

And love it!

[ She suddenly sees the Statue of CYPRIS, and

stands with her eyes riveted upon it. ]

Ah, Cyprian! No god art thou,

But more than god, and greater, that hath thrust

Me and my queen and all our house to dust!

[ She throws herself on the ground close to the statue. ]

CHORUS

Some Women

O Women, have ye heard? Nay, dare ye hear

The desolate cry of the young Queen's misery?

A Woman

My Queen, I love thee dear,

Yet liefer were I dead than framed like thee.

Others

Woe, woe to me for this thy bitter bane,

Surely the food man feeds upon is pain!

Others

How wilt thou bear thee through this livelong day,

Lost, and thine evil naked to the light?

Strange things are close upon us—who shall say

How strange?—save one thing that is plain to sight,

The stroke of the Cyprian and the fall thereof

On thee, thou child of the Isle of fearful Love!

[PHAEDRA during this has risen from the couch and comes forward

collectedly. As she speaks the NURSE gradually rouses herself,

and listens more calmly. ]

PHAEDRA

O Women, dwellers in this portal-seat

Of Pelops' land, gazing towards my Crete,

How oft, in other days than these, have I

Through night's long hours thought of man's misery,

And how this life is wrecked! And, to mine eyes,

Not in man's knowledge, not in wisdom, lies

The lack that makes for sorrow. Nay, we scan

And know the right—for wit hath many a man—

But will not to the last end strive and serve.

For some grow too soon weary, and some swerve

To other paths, setting before the Right

The diverse far-off image of Delight:

And many are delights beneath the sun!

Long hours of converse; and to sit alone

Musing—a deadly happiness!—and Shame:

Though two things there be hidden in one name,

And Shame can be slow poison if it will;

This is the truth I saw then, and see still;

Nor is there any magic that can stain

That white truth for me, or make me blind again.

Come, I will show thee how my spirit hath moved.

When the first stab came, and I knew I loved,

I cast about how best to face mine ill.

And the first thought that came, was to be still

And hide my sickness.—For no trust there is

In man's tongue, that so well admonishes

And counsels and betrays, and waxes fat

With griefs of its own gathering!—After that

I would my madness bravely bear, and try

To conquer by mine own heart's purity.

My third mind, when these two availed me naught

To quell love was to die—

[ Motion of protest among the Women. ]

—the best, best thought— —Gainsay me not—of all that man can say!

I would not have mine honour hidden away;

Why should I have my shame before men's eyes

Kept living? And I knew, in deadly wise,

Shame was the deed and shame the suffering;

And I a woman, too, to face the thing,

Despised of all!

Oh, utterly accurst

Be she of women, whoso dared the first

To cast her honour out to a strange man!

'Twas in some great house, surely, that began

This plague upon us; then the baser kind,

When the good led towards evil, followed blind

And joyous! Cursed be they whose lips are clean

And wise and seemly, but their hearts within

Rank with bad daring! How can they, O Thou

That walkest on the waves, great Cyprian, how

Smile in their husbands' faces, and not fall,

Not cower before the Darkness that knows all,

Aye, dread the dead still chambers, lest one day

The stones find voice, and all be finished!

Nay,

Friends, 'tis for this I die; lest I stand there

Having shamed my husband and the babes I bare.

In ancient Athens they shall some day dwell,

My babes, free men, free-spoken, honourable,

EURIPIDES

And when one asks their mother, proud of me!

For, oh, it cows a man, though bold he be,

To know a mother's or a father's sin.

'Tis written, one way is there, one, to win

This life's race, could man keep it from his birth,

A true clean spirit. And through all this earth

To every false man, that hour comes apace

When Time holds up a mirror to his face,

And girl-like, marvelling, there he stares to see

How foul his heart! Be it not so with me!

LEADER OF CHORUS

Ah, God, how sweet is virtue, and how wise,

And honour its due meed in all men's eyes!

NURSE ( who has now risen and recovered herself )

Mistress, a sharp swift terror struck me low

A moment since, hearing of this thy woe.

But now—I was a coward! And men say

Our second thought the wiser is alway.

This is no monstrous thing; no grief too dire

To meet with quiet thinking. In her ire

A most strong goddess hath swept down on thee.

Thou lovest. Is that so strange? Many there be

Beside thee!... And because thou lovest, wilt fall

And die! And must all lovers die, then? All

That are or shall be? A blithe law for them!

Nay, when in might she swoops, no strength can stem

Cypris; and if man yields him, she is sweet;

But is he proud and stubborn? From his feet

She lifts him, and—how think you?—flings to scorn!

She ranges with the stars of eve and morn,

She wanders in the heaving of the sea,

And all life lives from her.—Aye, this is she

That sows Love's seed and brings Love's fruit to birth;

And great Love's brethren are all we on earth!

Nay, they who con grey of ancient days

Or dwell among the Muses, tell—and praise—

How Zeus himself once yearned for Semelê;

How maiden Es in her radiancy

Swept Kephalos to heaven away, away,

For sore love's sake. And there they dwell, men say,

And fear not, fret not; for a thing too stern

Hath met and crushed them!

And must thou, then, turn

And struggle? Sprang there from thy father's blood

Thy little soul all lonely? Or the god

That rules thee, is he other than our gods?

Nay, yield thee to men's ways, and kiss their rods!

How many, deem'st thou, of men good and wise

Know their own home's blot, and avert their eyes?

How many fathers, when a son has strayed

And toiled beneath the Cyprian, bring him aid,

Not chiding? And man's wisdom e'er hath been

To keep what is not good to see, unseen!

A straight and perfect life is not for man;

Nay, in a shut house, let him, if he can,

'Mid sheltered rooms, make all lines true. But here,

Out in the wide sea fallen, and full of fear,

Hopest thou so easily to swim to land?

Canst thou but set thine ill days on one hand

And more good days on the other, verily,

O child of woman, life is well with thee!

[ She pauses, and then draws nearer to PHAEDRA.]

Nay, dear my daughter, cease thine evil mind,

Cease thy fierce pride! For pride it is, and blind,

To seek to outpass gods!—Love on and dare:

A god hath willed it! And, since pain is there,

Make the pain sleep! Songs are there to bring calm,

And magic words. And I shall find the balm,

Be sure, to heal thee. Else in sore dismay

Were men, could not we women find our way!

LEADER OF THE CHORUS

Help is there, Queen, in all this woman says,

To ease thy suffering. But 'tis thee I praise;

Albeit that praise is harder to thine ear

Than all her chiding was, and bitterer!

PHAEDRA

Oh, this it is hath flung to dogs and birds

Men's lives and homes and cities-fair false word!

Oh, why speak things to please our ears? We crave

Not that. Tis honour, honour, we must save!

NURSE

Why prate so proud! 'Tis no words, brave nor base

Thou cravest; 'tis a man's arms!

[PHAEDRA moves indignantly.]

Up and face

The truth of what thou art, and name it straight!

Were not thy life thrown open here for Fate

To beat on; hadst thou been a woman pure

Or wise or strong; never had I for lure

Of joy nor heartache led thee on to this!

But when a whole life one great battle is,

To win or lose—no man can blame me then.

PHAEDRA

Shame on thee! Lock those lips, and ne'er again

Let word nor thought so foul have harbour there!

NURSE

Foul, if thou wilt: but better than the fair

For thee and me. And better, too, the deed

Behind them, if it save thee in thy need,

Than that word Honour thou wilt die to win!

PHAEDRA

Nay, in God's name,—such wisdom and such sin

Are all about thy lips!—urge me no more.

For all the soul within me is wrought o'er

By Love; and if thou speak and speak, I may

Be spent, and drift where now I shrink away.

NURSE

Well, if thou wilt!—'Twere best never to err,

But, having erred, to take a counsellor

Is second.—Mark me now. I have within

love-philtres, to make peace where storm hath been,

That, with no shame, no scathe of mind, shall save

Thy life from anguish; wilt but thou be brave!

[ To herself, rejecting.]

Ah, but from him, the well-beloved, some sign

We need, or word, or raiment's hem, to twine

Amid the charm, and one spell knit from twain.

PHAEDRA

Is it a potion or a salve? Be plain.

NURSE

Who knows? Seek to be helped, Child, not to know.

PHAEDRA

Why art thou ever subtle? I dread thee, so.

NURSE

Thou wouldst dread everything!—What dost thou dread?

PHAEDRA

Least to his ear some word be whispered.

NURSE

Let be, Child! I will make all well with thee!

—Only do thou, O Cyprian of the Sea,

Be with me! And mine own heart, come what may,

Shall know what ear to seek, what word to say!

[ The NURSE, having spoken these last words in prayer apart to the

Statue of CYPRIS, turns back and goes into the house. PHAEDRA sits

pensive again on her couch till towards the end of the following Song,

when she rises and bends close to the door.]

CHORUS

Ers, Ers, who blindest, tear by tear,

Men's eyes with hunger; thou swift Foe

that pliest

Deep in our hearts joy like an edgèd spear;

Come not to me with Evil haunting near,

Wrath on the wind, nor jarring of the clear

Wing's music as thou fliest!

There is no shaft that burneth, not in fire,

Not in wild stars, far off and flinging fear,

As in thine hands the shaft of All Desire,

Ers, Child of the Highest!

In vain, in vain, by old Alpheüs' shore

The blood of many bulls doth stain the river

And all Greece bows on Phoebus' Pythian floor;

Yet bring we to the Master of Man no store

The Keybearer, who standeth at the door

Close-barred, where hideth ever

The heart of the shrine. Yea, though he sack

man's life

Like a sacked city, and moveth evermore

Girt with calamity and strange ways of strife,

Him have we worshipped never!

This book comes from:m.funovel.com。

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