OEDIPUS
KING OF THEBES
BY
SOPHOCLES
TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH RHYMING VERSE WITH EXPLANATORY NOTES BY GILBERT MURRAY LL.D., D.Litt., F.B.A. REGIUS PROFESSOR OF GREEK IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORDFOURTEENTH THOUSAND
LONDON: GEORGE ALLEN & UNWIN LTD. RUSKIN HOUSE 40 MUSEUM STREET, W.C.1
First published |
February |
1911 |
Reprinted |
January |
1912 |
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" |
1912 |
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February |
1912 |
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July |
1917 |
[Pg v]
PREFACE
If I have turned aside from Euripides for a moment and attempted a translation of the great stage masterpiece of Sophocles, my excuse must be the fascination of this play, which has thrown its spell on me as on many other translators. Yet I may plead also that as a rule every diligent student of these great works can add something to the discoveries of his predecessors, and I think I have been able to bring out a few new points in the old and much-studied Oedipus, chiefly points connected with the dramatic technique and the religious atmosphere.
Mythologists tell us that Oedipus was originally a daemon haunting Mount Kithairon, and Jocasta a form of that Earth-Mother who, as Aeschylus puts it, "bringeth all things to being, and when she hath reared them receiveth again their seed into her body" (Choephori, 127: cf. Crusius, Beiträge z. Gr. Myth, 21). That stage of the story lies very far behind the consciousness of Sophocles. But there does cling about both his hero and his heroine a great deal of very primitive atmosphere. There are traces in Oedipus of the pre-hellenic Medicine King, the Basileus who is also a Theos, and can make rain or blue sky, pestilence or fertility. This explains many things in the Priest's first speech, in the attitude of the Chorus, and in Oedipus' own language after [Pg vi]the discovery. It partly explains the hostility of Apollo, who is not a mere motiveless Destroyer but a true Olympian crushing his Earth-born rival. And in the same way the peculiar royalty of Jocasta, which makes Oedipus at times seem not the King but the Consort of the Queen, brings her near to that class of consecrated queens described in Dr. Frazer's Lectures on the Kingship, who are "honoured as no woman now living on the earth."
The story itself, and the whole spirit in which Sophocles has treated it, belong not to the fifth century but to that terrible and romantic past from which the fifth century poets usually drew their material. The atmosphere of brooding dread, the pollution, the curses; the "insane and beastlike cruelty," as an ancient Greek commentator calls it, of piercing the exposed child's feet in order to ensure its death and yet avoid having actually murdered it (Schol. Eur. Phoen., 26); the whole treatment of the parricide and incest, not as moral offences capable of being rationally judged or even excused as unintentional, but as monstrous and inhuman pollutions, the last limit of imaginable horror: all these things take us back to dark regions of pre-classical and even pre-homeric belief. We have no right to suppose that Sophocles thought of the involuntary parricide and metrogamy as the people in his play do. Indeed, considering the general tone of his contemporaries and friends, we may safely assume that he did not. But at any rate he has allowed no breath of later enlightenment to disturb the primaeval gloom of his atmosphere.
Does this in any way make the tragedy insincere? [Pg vii]I think not. We know that people did feel and think about "pollution" in the way which Sophocles represents; and if they so felt, then the tragedy was there.
I think these considerations explain the remarkable absence from this play of any criticism of life or any definite moral judgment. I know that some commentators have found in it a "humble and unquestioning piety," but I cannot help suspecting that what they saw was only a reflection from their own pious and unquestioning minds. Man is indeed shown as a "plaything of Gods," but of Gods strangely and incomprehensibly malignant, whose ways there is no attempt to explain or justify. The original story, indeed, may have had one of its roots in a Theban "moral tale." Aelian (Varia Historia, 2, 7) tells us that the exposure of a child was forbidden by Theban Law. The state of feeling which produced this law, against the immensely strong conception of the patria potestas, may also have produced a folklore story telling how a boy once was exposed, in a peculiarly cruel way, by his wicked parents, and how Heaven preserved him to take upon both of them a vengeance which showed that the unnatural father had no longer a father's sanctity nor the unnatural mother a mother's. But, as far as Sophocles is concerned, if anything in the nature of a criticism of life has been admitted into the play at all, it seems to be only a flash or two of that profound and pessimistic arraignment of the ruling powers which in other plays also opens at times like a sudden abyss across the smooth surface of his art.
[Pg viii]There is not much philosophy in the Oedipus. There is not, in comparison with other Greek plays, much pure poetry. What there is, is drama; drama of amazing grandeur and power. In respect of plot no Greek play comes near it. It contains no doubt a few points of unsophisticated technique such as can be found in all ancient and nearly all modern drama; for instance, the supposition that Oedipus has never inquired into the death of his predecessor on the throne. But such flaws are external, not essential. On the whole, I can only say that the work of translation has made me feel even more strongly than before the extraordinary grip and reality of the dialogue, the deftness of the construction, and, except perhaps for a slight drop in the Creon scene, the unbroken crescendo of tragedy from the opening to the close.
Where plot-interest is as strong as it is in the Oedipus, character-interest is apt to be comparatively weak. Yet in this play every character is interesting, vital, and distinct. Oedipus himself is selected by Aristotle as the most effective kind of tragic hero, because, first, he has been great and glorious, and secondly he has not been "pre-eminently virtuous or just." This is true in its way. Oedipus is too passionate to be just; but he is at least noble in his impetuosity, his devotion, and his absolute truthfulness. It is important to realise that at the beginning of the play he is prepared for an oracle commanding him to die for his people (pp. 6, 7). And he never thinks of refusing that "task" any more than he tries to elude the doom that actually comes, or to conceal [Pg ix]any fact that tells against him. If Oedipus had been an ordinary man the play would have been a very different and a much poorer thing.
Jocasta is a wonderful study. Euripides might have brought her character out more explicitly and more at length, but even he could not have made her more living or more tragic, or represented more subtly in her relation to Oedipus both the mother's protecting love and the mother's authority. As for her "impiety," of which the old commentaries used to speak with much disapproval, the essential fact in her life is that both her innocence and her happiness have, as she believes, been poisoned by the craft of priests. She and Laïus both "believed a bad oracle": her terror and her love for her husband made her consent to an infamous act of cruelty to her own child, an act of which the thought sickens her still, and about which she cannot, when she tries, speak the whole truth. (See note on p. 42.) And after all her crime was for nothing! The oracle proved to be a lie. Never again will she believe a priest.
As to Tiresias, I wish to ask forgiveness for an unintelligent criticism made twelve years ago in my Ancient Greek Literature, p. 240. I assumed then, what I fancy was a common assumption, that Tiresias was a "sympathetic" prophet, compact of wisdom and sanctity and all the qualities which beseem that calling; and I complained that he did not consistently act as such. I was quite wrong. Tiresias is not anything so insipid. He is a study of a real type, and a type which all the tragedians knew. The character of the professional seer or "man of God" has in the imagination of most ages fluctuated between two [Pg x]poles. At one extreme are sanctity and superhuman wisdom; at the other fraud and mental disease, self-worship aping humility and personal malignity in the guise of obedience to God. There is a touch of all these qualities, good and bad alike, in Tiresias. He seems to me a most life-like as well as a most dramatic figure.
As to the Chorus, it generally plays a smaller part in Sophocles than in Euripides and Aeschylus, and the Oedipus forms no exception to that rule. It seems to me that Sophocles was feeling his way towards a technique which would have approached that of the New Comedy or even the Elizabethan stage, and would perhaps have done without a Chorus altogether. In Aeschylus Greek tragedy had been a thing of traditional forms and clear-cut divisions; the religious ritual showed through, and the visible gods and the disguised dancers were allowed their full value. And Euripides in the matter of outward formalism went back to the Aeschylean type and even beyond it: prologue, chorus, messenger, visible god, all the traditional forms were left clear-cut and undisguised and all developed to full effectiveness on separate and specific lines. But Sophocles worked by blurring his structural outlines just as he blurs the ends of his verses. In him the traditional divisions are all made less distinct, all worked over in the direction of greater naturalness, at any rate in externals. This was a very great gain, but of course some price had to be paid for it. Part of the price was that Sophocles could never attempt the tremendous choric effects which Euripides achieves in such plays as the Bacchae and the Trojan Women. His lyrics, great as they [Pg xi]sometimes are, move their wings less boldly. They seem somehow tied to their particular place in the tragedy, and they have not quite the strength to lift the whole drama bodily aloft with them.... At least that is my feeling. But I realise that this may be only the complaint of an unskilful translator, blaming his material for his own defects of vision.
In general, both in lyrics and in dialogue, I believe I have allowed myself rather less freedom than in translating Euripides. This is partly because the writing of Euripides, being less business-like and more penetrated by philosophic reflections and by subtleties of technique, actually needs more thorough re-casting to express it at all adequately; partly because there is in Sophocles, amid all his passion and all his naturalness, a certain severe and classic reticence, which, though impossible really to reproduce by any method, is less misrepresented by occasional insufficiency than by habitual redundance.
I have asked pardon for an ill deed done twelve years ago. I should like to end by speaking of a benefit older still, and express something of the gratitude I feel to my old master, Francis Storr, whose teaching is still vivid in my mind and who first opened my eyes to the grandeur of the Oedipus.
G. M.
[Pg 1]
CHARACTERS IN THE PLAY
Oedipus, supposed son of Polybus, King of Corinth; now elected King of Thebes.
Jocasta, Queen of Thebes; widow of Laïus, the late King, and now wife to Oedipus.
Creon, a Prince of Thebes, brother to Jocasta.
Tiresias, an old blind seer.
Priest of Zeus.
A Stranger from Corinth.
A Shepherd of King Laïus.
A Messenger from the Palace.
Chorus of the Elders of Thebes.
A Crowd of Suppliants, men, women, and children.
The following do not appear in the play but are frequently mentioned:—
Laïus (pronounced as three syllables, Lá-i-us), the last King of Thebes before Oedipus.
Cadmus, the founder of Thebes; son of Agênor, King of Sidon.
Polybus and Meropê, King and Queen of Corinth, supposed to be the father and mother of Oedipus.
Apollo, the God specially presiding over the oracle of Delphi and the island Delos: he is also called Phoebus, the pure; Loxias, supposed to mean "He of the Crooked Words"; and Lykeios, supposed to mean "Wolf-God." He is also the great Averter of Evil, and has names from the cries "I-ê" (pronounced "Ee-ay") and "Paian," cries for healing or for the frightening away of evil influences.
Kithairon, a mass of wild mountain south-west of Thebes.
[Pg 2]
ARGUMENT
While Thebes was under the rule of Laïus and Jocasta there appeared a strange and monstrous creature, "the riddling Sphinx," "the She-Wolf of the woven song," who in some unexplained way sang riddles of death and slew the people of Thebes. Laïus went to ask aid of the oracle of Delphi, but was slain mysteriously on the road. Soon afterwards there came to Thebes a young Prince of Corinth, Oedipus, who had left his home and was wandering. He faced the Sphinx and read her riddle, whereupon she flung herself from her rock and died. The throne being vacant was offered to Oedipus, and with it the hand of the Queen, Jocasta.
Some ten or twelve years afterwards a pestilence has fallen on Thebes. At this point the play begins.
The date of the first production of the play is not known, but was probably about the year 425 B.C.
[Pg 3]
OEDIPUS, KING OF THEBES
Scene.—Before the Palace of Oedipus at Thebes. A crowd of suppliants of all ages are waiting by the altar in front and on the steps of the Palace; among them the Priest of Zeus. As the Palace door opens and Oedipus comes out all the suppliants with a cry move towards him in attitudes of prayer, holding out their olive branches, and then become still again as he speaks.
OedipusMy children, fruit of Cadmus' ancient treeNew springing, wherefore thus with bended kneePress ye upon us, laden all with wreathsAnd suppliant branches? And the city breathesHeavy with incense, heavy with dim prayerAnd shrieks to affright the Slayer.—Children, careFor this so moves me, I have scorned withalMessage or writing: seeing 'tis I ye call,'Tis I am come, world-honoured Oedipus.Old Man, do thou declare—the rest have thusTheir champion—in what mood stand ye so still,In dread or sure hope? Know ye not, my willIs yours for aid 'gainst all? Stern were indeedThe heart that felt not for so dire a need.vv. 15-39 [Pg 4]Priest.O Oedipus, who holdest in thy handMy city, thou canst see what ages standAt these thine altars; some whose little wingScarce flieth yet, and some with long livingO'erburdened; priests, as I of Zeus am priest,And chosen youths: and wailing hath not ceasedOf thousands in the market-place, and byAthena's two-fold temples and the dryAsh of Ismênus' portent-breathing shore.For all our ship, thou see'st, is weak and soreShaken with storms, and no more lightenethHer head above the waves whose trough is death.She wasteth in the fruitless buds of earth,In parchèd herds and travail without birthOf dying women: yea, and midst of itA burning and a loathly god hath litSudden, and sweeps our land, this Plague of power;Till Cadmus' house grows empty, hour by hour,And Hell's house rich with steam of tears and blood.O King, not God indeed nor peer to GodWe deem thee, that we kneel before thine hearth,Children and old men, praying; but of earthA thing consummate by thy star confessedThou walkest and by converse with the blest;Who came to Thebes so swift, and swept awayThe Sphinx's song, the tribute of dismay,That all were bowed beneath, and made us free.A stranger, thou, naught knowing more than we,Nor taught of any man, but by God's breathFilled, thou didst raise our life. So the world saith;So we say.vv. 40-69 [Pg 5]Therefore now, O Lord and Chief,We come to thee again; we lay our griefOn thy head, if thou find us not some aid.Perchance thou hast heard Gods talking in the shadeOf night, or eke some man: to him that knows,Men say, each chance that falls, each wind that blowsHath life, when he seeks counsel. Up, O chiefOf men, and lift thy city from its grief;Face thine own peril! All our land doth holdThee still our saviour, for that help of old:Shall they that tell of thee hereafter tell"By him was Thebes raised up, and after fell!"Nay, lift us till we slip no more. Oh, letThat bird of old that made us fortunateWing back; be thou our Oedipus again.And let thy kingdom be a land of men,Not emptiness. Walls, towers, and ships, they allAre nothing with no men to keep the wall.Oedipus.My poor, poor children! Surely long agoI have read your trouble. Stricken, well I know,Ye all are, stricken sore: yet verilyNot one so stricken to the heart as I.Your grief, it cometh to each man apartFor his own loss, none other's; but this heartFor thee and me and all of us doth weep.Wherefore it is not to one sunk in sleepYe come with waking. Many tears these daysFor your sake I have wept, and many waysHave wandered on the beating wings of thought.And, finding but one hope, that I have soughtvv. 70-86 [Pg 6]And followed. I have sent Menoikeus' son,Creon, my own wife's brother, forth aloneTo Apollo's House in Delphi, there to askWhat word, what deed of mine, what bitter task,May save my city.And the lapse of daysReckoned, I can but marvel what delaysHis journey. 'Tis beyond all thought that thusHe comes not, beyond need. But when he does,Then call me false and traitor, if I fleeBack from whatever task God sheweth me.Priest.At point of time thou speakest. Mark the cheerYonder. Is that not Creon drawing near?[They all crowd to gaze where Creon is approaching in the distance.Oedipus.O Lord Apollo, help! And be the starThat guides him joyous as his seemings are!Priest.Oh! surely joyous! How else should he bearThat fruited laurel wreathed about his hair?Oedipus.We soon shall know.—'Tis not too far for oneClear-voiced. (Shouting) Ho, brother! Prince! Menoikeus' son,What message from the God?vv. 87-99 [Pg 7]Creon (from a distance).Message of joy!Enter CreonI tell thee, what is now our worst annoy,If the right deed be done, shall turn to good.[The crowd, which has been full of excited hope, falls to doubt and disappointment.Oedipus.Nay, but what is the message? For my bloodRuns neither hot nor cold for words like those.Creon.Shall I speak now, with all these pressing close,Or pass within?—To me both ways are fair.Oedipus.Speak forth to all! The grief that these men bearIs more than any fear for mine own death.Creon.I speak then what I heard from God.—Thus saithPhoebus, our Lord and Seer, in clear command.An unclean thing there is, hid in our land,Eating the soil thereof: this ye shall castOut, and not foster till all help be past.Oedipus.How cast it out? What was the evil deed?vv. 100-113 [Pg 8]Creon.Hunt the men out from Thebes, or make them bleedWho slew. For blood it is that stirs to-day.Oedipus.Who was the man they killed? Doth Phoebus say?Creon.O King, there was of old King LaïusIn Thebes, ere thou didst come to pilot us.Oedipus.I know: not that I ever saw his face.Creon.'Twas he. And Loxias now bids us traceAnd smite the unknown workers of his fall.Oedipus.Where in God's earth are they? Or how withalFind the blurred trail of such an ancient stain?Creon.In Thebes, he said.—That which men seek amainThey find. 'Tis things forgotten that go by.Oedipus.And where did Laïus meet them? Did he dieIn Thebes, or in the hills, or some far land?vv. 114-127 [Pg 9]Creon.To ask God's will in Delphi he had plannedHis journey. Started and returned no more.Oedipus.And came there nothing back? No message, norNone of his company, that ye might hear?Creon.They all were slain, save one man; blind with fearHe came, remembering naught—or almost naught.Oedipus.And what was that? One thing has often broughtOthers, could we but catch one little clue.Creon.'Twas not one man, 'twas robbers—that he knew—Who barred the road and slew him: a great band.Oedipus.Robbers?... What robber, save the work was plannedBy treason here, would dare a risk so plain?Creon.So some men thought. But Laïus lay slain,And none to avenge him in his evil day.vv. 128-148 [Pg 10]Oedipus.And what strange mischief, when your master layThus fallen, held you back from search and deed?Creon.The dark-songed Sphinx was here. We had no heedOf distant sorrows, having death so near.Oedipus.It falls on me then. I will search and clearThis darkness.—Well hath Phoebus done, and thouToo, to recall that dead king, even now,And with you for the right I also stand,To obey the God and succour this dear land.Nor is it as for one that touches meFar off; 'tis for mine own sake I must seeThis sin cast out. Whoe'er it was that slewLaïus, the same wild hand may seek me too:And caring thus for Laïus, is but careFor mine own blood.—Up! Leave this altar-stair,Children. Take from it every suppliant bough.Then call the folk of Thebes. Say, 'tis my vowTo uphold them to the end. So God shall crownOur greatness, or for ever cast us down.[He goes in to the Palace.Priest.My children, rise.—The King most lovinglyHath promised all we came for. And may Hevv. 149-161 [Pg 11]Who sent this answer, Phoebus, come confessedHelper to Thebes, and strong to stay the pest.[The suppliants gather up their boughs and stand at the side. The chorus of Theban elders enter.Chorus.[They speak of the Oracle which they have not yet heard, and cry to Apollo by his special cry "I-ê."A Voice, a Voice, that is borne on the Holy Way!What art thou, O Heavenly One, O Word of the Houses of Gold?Thebes is bright with thee, and my heart it leapeth; yet is it cold,And my spirit faints as I pray.I-ê! I-ê!What task, O Affrighter of Evil, what task shall thy people essay?One new as our new-come affliction,Or an old toil returned with the years?Unveil thee, thou dread benediction,Hope's daughter and Fear's. [They pray to Athena, Artemis, and Apollo.Zeus-Child that knowest not death, to thee I pray,O Pallas; next to thy Sister, who calleth Thebes her own,Artemis, named of Fair Voices, who sitteth her orbèd throneIn the throng of the market way:vv. 162-189 [Pg 12]And I-ê! I-ê!Apollo, the Pure, the Far-smiter; O Three that keep evil away,If of old for our city's desire,When the death-cloud hung close to her brow,Ye have banished the wound and the fire,Oh! come to us now! [They tell of the Pestilence.Wounds beyond telling; my people sick unto death;And where is the counsellor, where is the sword of thought?And Holy Earth in her increase perisheth:The child dies and the mother awaketh not.I-ê! I-ê!We have seen them, one on another, gone as a bird is gone,Souls that are flame; yea, higher,Swifter they pass than fire,To the rocks of the dying Sun. [They end by a prayer to Athena,Their city wasteth unnumbered; their children lieWhere death hath cast them, unpitied, unwept upon.The altars stand, as in seas of storm a highRock standeth, and wives and mothers grey thereonWeep, weep and pray.Lo, joy-cries to fright the Destroyer; a flash in the dark they rise,Then die by the sobs overladen.Send help, O heaven-born Maiden,Let us look on the light of her eyes!vv. 190-217 [Pg 13][To Zeus, that he drive out the Slayer,And Ares, the abhorredSlayer, who bears no sword,But shrieking, wrapped in fire, stands over me,Make that he turn, yea, flyBroken, wind-wasted, highDown the vexed hollow of the Vaster Sea;Or back to his own Thrace,To harbour shelterless.Where Night hath spared, he bringeth end by day.Him, Him, O thou whose handBeareth the lightning brand,O Father Zeus, now with thy thunder, slay and slay![To Apollo, Artemis, and Dionysus.Where is thy gold-strung bow,O Wolf-god, where the flowOf living shafts unconquered, from all illsOur helpers? Where the whiteSpears of thy Sister's light,Far-flashing as she walks the wolf-wild hills?And thou, O Golden-crown,Theban and named our own,O Wine-gleam, Voice of Joy, for ever moreRinged with thy Maenads white,Bacchus, draw near and smite,Smite with thy glad-eyed flame the God whom Gods abhor.[During the last lines Oedipus has come out from the Palace.Oedipus.Thou prayest: but my words if thou wilt hearAnd bow thee to their judgement, strength is nearvv. 218-245 [Pg 14]For help, and a great lightening of ill.Thereof I come to speak, a stranger stillTo all this tale, a stranger to the deed:(Else, save that I were clueless, little needHad I to cast my net so wide and far:)Howbeit, I, being now as all ye are,A Theban, to all Thebans high and lowDo make proclaim: if any here doth knowBy what man's hand died Laïus, your King,Labdacus' son, I charge him that he bringTo me his knowledge. Let him feel no fearIf on a townsman's body he must clearOur guilt: the man shall suffer no great ill,But pass from Thebes, and live where else he will.[No answer.Is it some alien from an alien shoreYe know to have done the deed, screen him no more!Good guerdon waits you now and a King's loveHereafter.Hah! If still ye will not moveBut, fearing for yourselves or some near friend,Reject my charge, then hearken to what endYe drive me.—If in this place men there beWho know and speak not, lo, I make decreeThat, while in Thebes I bear the diadem,No man shall greet, no man shall shelter them,Nor give them water in their thirst, nor shareIn sacrifice nor shrift nor dying prayer,But thrust them from our doors, the thing they hideBeing this land's curse. Thus hath the God repliedThis day to me from Delphi, and my swordI draw thus for the dead and for God's word.vv. 246-273 [Pg 15]And lastly for the murderer, be it oneHiding alone or more in unison,I speak on him this curse: even as his soulIs foul within him let his days be foul,And life unfriended grind him till he die.More: if he ever tread my hearth and IKnow it, be every curse upon my headThat I have spoke this day.All I have saidI charge ye strictly to fulfil and makePerfect, for my sake, for Apollo's sake,And this land's sake, deserted of her fruitAnd cast out from her gods. Nay, were all muteAt Delphi, still 'twere strange to leave the thingUnfollowed, when a true man and a KingLay murdered. All should search. But I, as nowOur fortunes fall—his crown is on my brow,His wife lies in my arms, and common fate,Had but his issue been more fortunate,Might well have joined our children—since this redChance hath so stamped its heel on Laïus' head,I am his champion left, and, as I wouldFor mine own father, choose for ill or goodThis quest, to find the man who slew of yoreLabdacus' son, the son of Polydore,Son of great Cadmus whom Agenor oldBegat, of Thebes first master. And, behold,For them that aid me not, I pray no rootNor seed in earth may bear them corn nor fruit,No wife bear children, but this present curseCleave to them close and other woes yet worse.Enough: ye other people of the land,vv. 274-289 [Pg 16]Whose will is one with mine, may Justice standYour helper, and all gods for evermore.[The crowd disperses.Leader.O King, even while thy curse yet hovers o'erMy head, I answer thee. I slew him not,Nor can I shew the slayer. But, God wot,If Phoebus sends this charge, let Phoebus readIts meaning and reveal who did the deed.Oedipus.Aye, that were just, if of his grace he wouldReveal it. How shall man compel his God?Leader.Second to that, methinks, 'twould help us most ...Oedipus.Though it be third, speak! Nothing should be lost.Leader.To our High Seer on earth vision is givenMost like to that High Phoebus hath in heaven.Ask of Tiresias: he could tell thee true.Oedipus.That also have I thought for. Aye, and twoHeralds have sent ere now. 'Twas Creon setMe on.—I marvel that he comes not yet.vv. 290-301 [Pg 17]Leader.Our other clues are weak, old signs and far.Oedipus.What signs? I needs must question all that are.Leader.Some travellers slew him, the tale used to be.Oedipus.The tale, yes: but the witness, where is he?Leader.The man hath heard thy curses. If he knowsThe taste of fear, he will not long stay close.Oedipus.He fear my words, who never feared the deed?Leader.Well, there is one shall find him.—See, they leadHither our Lord Tiresias, in whose mindAll truth is born, alone of human kind.Enter Tiresias led by a young disciple. He is an old blind man in a prophet's robe, dark, unkempt and sinister in appearance.Oedipus.Tiresias, thou whose mind divineth wellAll Truth, the spoken and the unspeakable,vv. 302-321 [Pg 18]The things of heaven and them that walk the earth;Our city ... thou canst see, for all thy dearthOf outward eyes, what clouds are over her.In which, O gracious Lord, no ministerOf help, no champion, can we find at allSave thee. For Phoebus—thou hast heard withalHis message—to our envoy hath decreedOne only way of help in this great need:To find and smite with death or banishing,Him who smote Laïus, our ancient King.Oh, grudge us nothing! Question every cryOf birds, and all roads else of prophecyThou knowest. Save our city: save thine ownGreatness: save me; save all that yet doth groanUnder the dead man's wrong! Lo, in thy handWe lay us. And, methinks, no work so grandHath man yet compassed, as, with all he canOf chance or power, to help his fellow man.Tiresias (to himself).Ah me!A fearful thing is knowledge, when to knowHelpeth no end. I knew this long ago,But crushed it dead. Else had I never come.Oedipus.What means this? Comest thou so deep in gloom?Tiresias.Let me go back! Thy work shall weigh on theeThe less, if thou consent, and mine on me.vv. 322-336 [Pg 19]Oedipus.Prophet, this is not lawful; nay, nor kindTo Thebes, who feeds thee, thus to veil thy mind.Tiresias.'Tis that I like not thy mind, nor the wayIt goeth. Therefore, lest I also stray....[He moves to go off. Oedipus bars his road.Oedipus.Thou shalt not, knowing, turn and leave us! See,We all implore thee, all, on bended knee.Tiresias.All without light!—And never light shall shineOn this dark evil that is mine ... and thine.Oedipus.What wilt thou? Know and speak not? In my needBe false to me, and let thy city bleed?Tiresias.I will not wound myself nor thee. Why seekTo trap and question me? I will not speak.Oedipus.Thou devil![Movement of Leader to check him.Nay; the wrath of any stoneWould rise at him. It lies with thee to have doneAnd speak. Is there no melting in thine eyes!vv. 337-351 [Pg 20]Tiresias.Naught lies with me! With thee, with thee there lies,I warrant, what thou ne'er hast seen nor guessed.Oedipus (to Leader, who tries to calm him.)How can I hear such talk?—he maketh jestOf the land's woe—and keep mine anger dumb?Tiresias.Howe'er I hold it back, 'twill come, 'twill come.Oedipus.The more shouldst thou declare it to thy King.Tiresias.I speak no more. For thee, if passioningDoth comfort thee, on, passion to thy fill![He moves to go.Oedipus.'Fore God, I am in wrath; and speak I will,Nor stint what I see clear. 'Twas thou, 'twas thou,Didst plan this murder; aye, and, save the blow,Wrought it.—I know thou art blind; else I could swearThou, and thou only, art the murderer.Tiresias (returning).So?—I command thee by thine own word's power,To stand accurst, and never from this hourvv. 352-363 [Pg 21]Speak word to me, nor yet to these who ringThy throne. Thou art thyself the unclean thing.Oedipus.Thou front of brass, to fling out injurySo wild! Dost think to bate me and go free?Tiresias.I am free. The strong truth is in this heart.Oedipus.What prompted thee? I swear 'twas not thine art.Tiresias.'Twas thou. I spoke not, save for thy command.Oedipus.Spoke what? What was it? Let me understand.Tiresias.Dost tempt me? Were my words before not plain!Oedipus.Scarce thy full meaning. Speak the words again.Tiresias.Thou seek'st this man of blood: Thyself art he.Oedipus.'Twill cost thee dear, twice to have stabbed at me!vv. 364-377 [Pg 22]Tiresias.Shall I say more, to see thee rage again?Oedipus.Oh, take thy fill of speech: 'twill all be vain.Tiresias.Thou livest with those near to thee in shameMost deadly, seeing not thyself nor them.Oedipus.Thou think'st 'twill help thee, thus to speak and speak?Tiresias.Surely, until the strength of Truth be weak.Oedipus.'Tis weak to none save thee. Thou hast no partIn truth, thou blind man, blind eyes, ears and heart.Tiresias.More blind, more sad thy words of scorn, which noneWho hears but shall cast back on thee: soon, soon.Oedipus.Thou spawn of Night, not I nor any freeAnd seeing man would hurt a thing like thee.Tiresias.God is enough.—'Tis not my doom to fallBy thee. He knows and shall accomplish all.vv. 378-402 [Pg 23]Oedipus (with a flash of discovery).Ha! Creon!—Is it his or thine, this plot?Tiresias.'Tis thyself hates thee. Creon hates thee not.Oedipus.O wealth and majesty, O conquering skillThat carved life's rebel pathways to my will,What is your heart but bitterness, if nowFor this poor crown Thebes bound upon my brow,A gift, a thing I sought not—for this crownCreon the stern and true, Creon mine ownComrade, comes creeping in the dark to banAnd slay me; sending first this magic-manAnd schemer, this false beggar-priest, whose eyeIs bright for gold and blind for prophecy?Speak, thou. When hast thou ever shown thee strongFor aid? The She-Wolf of the woven songCame, and thy art could find no word, no breath,To save thy people from her riddling death.'Twas scarce a secret, that, for common menTo unravel. There was need of Seer-craft then.And thou hadst none to show. No fowl, no flame,No God revealed it thee. 'Twas I that came,Rude Oedipus, unlearned in wizard's lore,And read her secret, and she spoke no more.Whom now thou thinkest to hunt out, and standForemost in honour at King Creon's hand.I think ye will be sorry, thou and heThat shares thy sin-hunt. Thou dost look to mevv. 403-424 [Pg 24]An old man; else, I swear this day should bringOn thee the death thou plottest for thy King.Leader.Lord Oedipus, these be but words of wrath,All thou hast spoke and all the Prophet hath.Which skills not. We must join, for ill or well,In search how best to obey God's oracle.Tiresias.King though thou art, thou needs must bear the rightOf equal answer. Even in me is mightFor thus much, seeing I live no thrall of thine,But Lord Apollo's; neither do I signWhere Creon bids me.I am blind, and thouHast mocked my blindness. Yea, I will speak now.Eyes hast thou, but thy deeds thou canst not seeNor where thou art, nor what things dwell with thee.Whence art thou born? Thou know'st not; and unknown,On quick and dead, on all that were thine own,Thou hast wrought hate. For that across thy pathRising, a mother's and a father's wrath,Two-handed, shod with fire, from the haunts of menShall scourge thee, in thine eyes now light, but thenDarkness. Aye, shriek! What harbour of the sea,What wild Kithairon shall not cry to theeIn answer, when thou hear'st what bridal song,What wind among the torches, bore thy strongSail to its haven, not of peace but blood.Yea, ill things multitude on multitudevv. 425-438 [Pg 25]Thou seest not, which so soon shall lay thee low,Low as thyself, low as thy children.—Go,Heap scorn on Creon and my lips withal:For this I tell thee, never was there fallOf pride, nor shall be, like to thine this day.Oedipus.To brook such words from this thing? Out, I say!Out to perdition! Aye, and quick, before ...[The Leader restrains him.Enough then!—Turn and get thee from my door.Tiresias.I had not come hadst thou not called me here.Oedipus.I knew thee not so dark a fool. I swear'Twere long before I called thee, had I known.Tiresias.Fool, say'st thou? Am I truly such an one?The two who gave thee birth, they held me wise.Oedipus.Birth?... Stop! Who were they? Speak thy prophecies.Tiresias.This day shall give thee birth and blot thee out.vv. 439-455 [Pg 26]Oedipus.Oh, riddles everywhere and words of doubt!Tiresias.Aye. Thou wast their best reader long ago.Oedipus.Laugh on. I swear thou still shalt find me so.Tiresias.That makes thy pride and thy calamity.Oedipus.I have saved this land, and care not if I die.Tiresias.Then I will go.—Give me thine arm, my child.Oedipus.Aye, help him quick.—To see him there makes wildMy heart. Once gone, he will not vex me more.Tiresias (turning again as he goes).I fear thee not; nor will I go beforeThat word be spoken which I came to speak.How canst thou ever touch me?—Thou dost seekWith threats and loud proclaim the man whose handSlew Laïus. Lo, I tell thee, he doth standHere. He is called a stranger, but these daysShall prove him Theban true, nor shall he praiseHis birthright. Blind, who once had seeing eyes,Beggared, who once had riches, in strange guise,vv. 456-478 [Pg 27]His staff groping before him, he shall crawlO'er unknown earth, and voices round him call:"Behold the brother-father of his ownChildren, the seed, the sower and the sown,Shame to his mother's blood, and to his sireSon, murderer, incest-worker."Cool thine ireWith thought of these, and if thou find that aughtFaileth, then hold my craft a thing of naught.[He goes out. Oedipus returns to the Palace.Chorus.[They sing of the unknown murderer,What man, what man is he whom the voice of Delphi's cellHath named of the bloody hand, of the deed no tongue may tell?Let him fly, fly, for his needHath found him; oh, where is the speedThat flew with the winds of old, the team of North-Wind's spell?For feet there be that follow. Yea, thunder-shodAnd girt with fire he cometh, the Child of God;And with him are they that fail not, the Sin-Hounds risen from Hell.For the mountain hath spoken, a voice hath flashed from amid the snows,That the wrath of the world go seek for the man whom no man knows.Is he fled to the wild forest,To caves where the eagles nest?O angry bull of the rocks, cast out from thy herd-fellows!vv. 479-512 [Pg 28]Rage in his heart, and rage across his way,He toileth ever to beat from his ears awayThe word that floateth about him, living, where'er he goes.[And of the Prophet's strange accusation.Yet strange, passing strange, the wise augur and his lore;And my heart it cannot speak; I deny not nor assent,But float, float in wonder at things after and before;Did there lie between their houses some old wrath unspent,That Corinth against Cadmus should do murder by the way?No tale thereof they tell, nor no sign thereof they show;Who dares to rise for vengeance and cast Oedipus awayFor a dark, dark death long ago! Ah, Zeus knows, and Apollo, what is dark to mortal eyes;They are Gods. But a prophet, hath he vision more than mine?Who hath seen? Who can answer? There be wise men and unwise.I will wait, I will wait, for the proving of the sign.But I list not nor hearken when they speak Oedipus ill.We saw his face of yore, when the riddling singer passed;And we knew him that he loved us, and we saw him great in skill.Oh, my heart shall uphold him to the last!vv. 513-531 [Pg 29]Enter Creon.Creon.Good brother citizens, a frantic wordI hear is spoken by our chosen LordOedipus against me, and here am comeIndignant. If he dreams, 'mid all this doomThat weighs upon us, he hath had from meOr deed or lightest thought of injury, ...'Fore God, I have no care to see the sunLonger with such a groaning name. Not oneWound is it, but a multitude, if nowAll Thebes must hold me guilty—aye, and thouAnd all who loved me—of a deed so foul.Leader.If words were spoken, it was scarce the soulThat spoke them: 'twas some sudden burst of wrath.Creon.The charge was made, then, that Tiresias hathMade answer false, and that I bribed him, I?Leader.It was—perchance for jest. I know not why.Creon.His heart beat true, his eyes looked steadilyAnd fell not, laying such a charge on me?Leader.I know not. I have no eyes for the thingMy masters do.—But see, here comes the King.vv. 532-550 [Pg 30]Enter Oedipus from the Palace.Oedipus.How now, assassin? Walking at my gateWith eye undimmed, thou plotter demonstrateAgainst this life, and robber of my crown?God help thee! Me! What was it set me downThy butt? So dull a brain hast found in meAforetime, such a faint heart, not to seeThy work betimes, or seeing not to smite?Art thou not rash, this once! It needeth mightOf friends, it needeth gold, to make a throneThy quarry; and I fear me thou hast none.Creon.One thing alone I ask thee. Let me speakAs thou hast spoken; then, with knowledge, wreakThy judgement. I accept it without fear.Oedipus.More skill hast thou to speak than I to hearThee. There is peril found in thee and hate.Creon.That one thing let me answer ere too late.Oedipus.One thing be sure of, that thy plots are known.Creon.The man who thinks that bitter pride aloneCan guide him, without thought—his mind is sick.vv. 551-562 [Pg 31]Oedipus.Who thinks to slay his brother with a trickAnd suffer not himself, his eyes are blind.Creon.Thy words are more than just. But say what kindOf wrong thou fanciest I have done thee. Speak.Oedipus.Didst urge me, or didst urge me not, to seekA counsel from that man of prophecies?Creon.So judged I then, nor now judge otherwise.Oedipus.[Suddenly seeing a mode of attack.How many years have passed since Laïus ...[The words seem to choke him.Creon.Speak on. I cannot understand thee thus.Oedipus.[With an effort.Passed in that bloody tempest from men's sight?Creon.Long years and old. I scarce can tell them right.Oedipus.At that time was this seer in Thebes, or how?vv. 563-573 [Pg 32]Creon.He was; most wise and honoured, even as now.Oedipus.At that time did he ever speak my name?Creon.No. To mine ear at least it never came.Oedipus.Held you no search for those who slew your King?Creon.For sure we did, but found not anything.Oedipus.How came the all-knowing seer to leave it so?Creon.Ask him! I speak not where I cannot know.Oedipus.One thing thou canst, with knowledge full, I wot.Creon.Speak it. If true, I will conceal it not.Oedipus.This: that until he talked with thee, the seerNe'er spoke of me as Laïus' murderer.vv. 574-589 [Pg 33]Creon.I know not if he hath so spoken now.I heard him not.—But let me ask and thouAnswer me true, as I have answered thee.Oedipus.Ask, ask! Thou shalt no murder find in me.Creon.My sister is thy wife this many a day?Oedipus.That charge it is not in me to gainsay.Creon.Thou reignest, giving equal reign to her?Oedipus.Always to her desire I minister.Creon.Were we not all as one, she thou and I?Oedipus.Yes, thou false friend! There lies thy treachery.Creon.Not so! Nay, do but follow me and scanThine own charge close. Think'st thou that any manWould rather rule and be afraid than ruleAnd sleep untroubled? Nay, where lives the fool—vv. 590-613 [Pg 34]I know them not nor am I one of them—Who careth more to bear a monarch's nameThan do a monarch's deeds? As now I standAll my desire I compass at thy hand.Were I the King, full half my deeds were doneTo obey the will of others, not mine own.Were that as sweet, when all the tale were told,As this calm griefless princedom that I holdAnd silent power? Am I so blind of brainThat ease with glory tires me, and I fainMust change them? All men now give me God-speed,All smile to greet me. If a man hath needOf thee, 'tis me he calleth to the gate,As knowing that on my word hangs the fateOf half he craves. Is life like mine a thingTo cast aside and plot to be a King?Doth a sane man turn villain in an hour?For me, I never lusted thus for powerNor bore with any man who turned such lustTo doing.—But enough. I claim but justQuestion. Go first to Pytho; find if wellAnd true I did report God's oracle.Next, seek in Thebes for any plots entwinedBetween this seer and me; which if ye find,Then seize and strike me dead. Myself that dayWill sit with thee as judge and bid thee Slay!But damn me not on one man's guess.—'Tis allUnjust: to call a traitor true, to callA true man traitor with no cause nor end!And this I tell thee. He who plucks a friendOut from his heart hath lost a treasured thingDear as his own dear life.But Time shall bringvv. 614-626 [Pg 35]Truth back. 'Tis Time alone can make men knowWhat hearts are true; the false one day can show.Leader.To one that fears to fall his words are wise,O King; in thought the swift win not the prize.Oedipus.When he is swift who steals against my reignWith plots, then swift am I to plot again.Wait patient, and his work shall have prevailedBefore I move, and mine for ever failed.Creon.How then? To banish me is thy intent?Oedipus.Death is the doom I choose, not banishment.Creon.Wilt never soften, never trust thy friend?Oedipus.First I would see how traitors meet their end.Creon.I see thou wilt not think.Oedipus.I think to saveMy life.vv. 627-633 [Pg 36]Creon.Think, too, of mine.Oedipus.Thine, thou born knave!Creon.Yes.... What, if thou art blind in everything?Oedipus.The King must be obeyed.Creon.Not if the KingDoes evil.Oedipus.To your King! Ho, Thebes, mine own!Creon.Thebes is my country, not the King's alone.[Oedipus has drawn his sword; the Chorus show signs of breaking into two parties to fight for Oedipus or for Creon, when the door opens and Jocasta appears on the steps.Leader.Stay, Princes, stay! See, on the Castle stairThe Queen Jocasta standeth. Show to herYour strife. She will assuage it as is well.vv. 634-648 [Pg 37]Jocasta.Vain men, what would ye with this angry swellOf words heart-blinded? Is there in your eyesNo pity, thus, when all our city liesBleeding, to ply your privy hates?... Alack,My lord, come in!—Thou, Creon, get thee backTo thine own house. And stir not to such stressOf peril griefs that are but nothingness.Creon.Sister, it is the pleasure of thy lord,Our King, to do me deadly wrong. His wordIs passed on me: 'tis banishment or death.Oedipus.I found him ... I deny not what he saith,My Queen ... with craft and malice practisingAgainst my life.Creon.Ye Gods, if such a thingHath once been in my thoughts, may I no moreSee any health on earth, but, festered o'erWith curses, die!—Have done. There is mine oath.Jocasta.In God's name, Oedipus, believe him, bothFor my sake, and for these whose hearts are allThine own, and for my brother's oath withal.vv. 649-664 [Pg 38]Leader.[Strophe.Yield; consent; think! My Lord, I conjure thee!Oedipus.What would ye have me do?Leader.Reject not one who never failed his trothOf old and now is strong in his great oath.Oedipus.Dost know what this prayer means?Leader.Yea, verily!Oedipus.Say then the meaning true.Leader.I would not have thee cast to infamyOf guilt, where none is proved,One who hath sworn and whom thou once hast loved.Oedipus.'Tis that ye seek? For me, then ... understandWell ... ye seek death or exile from the land.Leader.No, by the God of Gods, the all-seeing Sun!May he desert me here, and every friendWith him, to death and utterest malison,vv. 665-680 [Pg 39]If e'er my heart could dream of such an end!But it bleedeth, it bleedeth sore,In a land half slain,If we join to the griefs of yoreGriefs of you twain.Oedipus.Oh, let him go, though it be utterlyMy death, or flight from Thebes in beggary.'Tis thy sad lips, not his, that make me knowPity. Him I shall hate, where'er he go.Creon.I see thy mercy moving full of hateAnd slow; thy wrath came swift and desperate.Methinks, of all the pain that such a heartSpreadeth, itself doth bear the bitterest part.Oedipus.Oh, leave me and begone!Creon.I go, wronged soreBy thee. These friends will trust me as before.[Creon goes. Oedipus stands apart lost in trouble of mind.Leader.[Antistrophe.Queen, wilt thou lead him to his house again?Jocasta.I will, when I have heard.vv. 681-696 [Pg 40]Leader.There fell some word, some blind imaginingBetween them. Things known foolish yet can sting.Jocasta.From both the twain it rose?Leader.From both the twain.Jocasta.Aye, and what was the word?Leader.Surely there is enough of evil stirred,And Thebes heaves on the swellOf storm.—Oh, leave this lying where it fell.Oedipus.So be it, thou wise counsellor! Make slightMy wrong, and blunt my purpose ere it smite.Leader.O King, not once I have answered. VisiblyMad were I, lost to all wise usages,To seek to cast thee from us. 'Twas from theeWe saw of old blue sky and summer seas,When Thebes in the storm and rainReeled, like to die.Oh, if thou canst, againBlue sky, blue sky...!vv. 697-713 [Pg 41]Jocasta.Husband, in God's name, say what hath ensuedOf ill, that thou shouldst seek so dire a feud.Oedipus.I will, wife. I have more regard for theeThan these.—Thy brother plots to murder me.Jocasta.Speak on. Make all thy charge. Only be clear.Oedipus.He says that I am Laïus' murderer.Jocasta.Says it himself? Says he hath witnesses?Oedipus.Nay, of himself he ventures nothing. 'TisThis priest, this hellish seer, makes all the tale.Jocasta.The seer?—Then tear thy terrors like a veilAnd take free breath. A seer? No human thingBorn on the earth hath power for conjuringTruth from the dark of God.Come, I will tellAn old tale. There came once an oracleTo Laïus: I say not from the GodHimself, but from the priests and seers who trodHis sanctuary: if ever son were bredFrom him and me, by that son's hand, it said,vv. 714-732 [Pg 42]Laïus must die. And he, the tale yet staysAmong us, at the crossing of three waysWas slain by robbers, strangers. And my son—God's mercy!—scarcely the third day was goneWhen Laïus took, and by another's handOut on the desert mountain, where the landIs rock, cast him to die. Through both his feetA blade of iron they drove. Thus did we cheatApollo of his will. My child could slayNo father, and the King could cast awayThe fear that dogged him, by his child to dieMurdered.—Behold the fruits of prophecy!Which heed not thou! God needs not that a seerHelp him, when he would make his dark things clear.Oedipus.Woman, what turmoil hath thy story wroughtWithin me! What up-stirring of old thought!Jocasta.What thought? It turns thee like a frightened thing.Oedipus.'Twas at the crossing of three ways this KingWas murdered? So I heard or so I thought.Jocasta.That was the tale. It is not yet forgot.Oedipus.The crossing of three ways! And in what land?vv. 733-746 [Pg 43]Jocasta.Phokis 'tis called. A road on either handFrom Delphi comes and Daulia, in a glen.Oedipus.How many years and months have passed since then?Jocasta.'Twas but a little time before proclaimWas made of thee for king, the tidings came.Oedipus.My God, what hast thou willed to do with me?Jocasta.Oedipus, speak! What is it troubles thee?Oedipus.Ask me not yet. But say, what build, what heightHad Laïus? Rode he full of youth and might?Jocasta.Tall, with the white new gleaming on his browHe walked. In shape just such a man as thou.Oedipus.God help me! I much fear that I have wroughtA curse on mine own head, and knew it not.Jocasta.How sayst thou? O my King, I look on theeAnd tremble.vv. 747-760 [Pg 44]Oedipus (to himself).Horror, if the blind can see!Answer but one thing and 'twill all be clear.Jocasta.Speak. I will answer though I shake with fear.Oedipus.Went he with scant array, or a great bandOf armèd followers, like a lord of land?Jocasta.Four men were with him, one a herald; oneChariot there was, where Laïus rode alone.Oedipus.Aye me! Tis clear now.Woman, who could bringTo Thebes the story of that manslaying?Jocasta.A house-thrall, the one man they failed to slay.Oedipus.The one man...? Is he in the house to-day?Jocasta.Indeed no. When he came that day, and foundThee on the throne where once sat Laïus crowned,He took my hand and prayed me earnestlyvv. 761-779 [Pg 45]To send him to the mountain heights, to beA herdsman, far from any sight or callOf Thebes. And there I sent him. 'Twas a thrallGood-hearted, worthy a far greater boon.Oedipus.Canst find him? I would see this herd, and soon.Jocasta.'Tis easy. But what wouldst thou with the herd?Oedipus.I fear mine own voice, lest it spoke a wordToo much; whereof this man must tell me true.Jocasta.The man shall come.—My lord, methinks I tooShould know what fear doth work thee this despite.Oedipus.Thou shalt. When I am tossed to such an heightOf dark foreboding, woman, when my mindFaceth such straits as these, where should I findA mightier love than thine?My father—thusI tell thee the whole tale—was Polybus,In Corinth King; my mother MeropêOf Dorian line. And I was held to beThe proudest in Corinthia, till one dayA thing befell: strange was it, but no wayMeet for such wonder and such rage as mine.A feast it was, and some one flushed with winevv. 780-807 [Pg 46]Cried out at me that I was no true sonOf Polybus. Oh, I was wroth! That oneDay I kept silence, but the morrow mornI sought my parents, told that tale of scornAnd claimed the truth; and they rose in their prideAnd smote the mocker.... Aye, they satisfiedAll my desire; yet still the cavil gnawedMy heart, and still the story crept abroad.At last I rose—my father knew not, norMy mother—and went forth to Pytho's floorTo ask. And God in that for which I cameRejected me, but round me, like a flame,His voice flashed other answers, things of woe,Terror, and desolation. I must knowMy mother's body and beget thereonA race no mortal eye durst look upon,And spill in murder mine own father's blood.I heard, and, hearing, straight from where I stood,No landmark but the stars to light my way,Fled, fled from the dark south where Corinth lay,To lands far off, where never I might seeMy doom of scorn fulfilled. On bitterlyI strode, and reached the region where, so saithThy tale, that King of Thebes was struck to death....Wife, I will tell thee true. As one in dazeI walked, till, at the crossing of three ways,A herald, like thy tale, and o'er his headA man behind strong horses chariotedMet me. And both would turn me from the path,He and a thrall in front. And I in wrathSmote him that pushed me—'twas a groom who ledThe horses. Not a word the master said,vv. 808-828 [Pg 47]But watched, and as I passed him on the roadDown on my head his iron-branchèd goadStabbed. But, by heaven, he rued it! In a flashI swung my staff and saw the old man crashBack from his car in blood.... Then all of themI slew.Oh, if that man's unspoken nameHad aught of Laïus in him, in God's eyeWhat man doth move more miserable than I,More dogged by the hate of heaven! No man, kinNor stranger, any more may take me in;No man may greet me with a word, but allCast me from out their houses. And withal'Twas mine own self that laid upon my lifeThese curses.—And I hold the dead man's wifeIn these polluting arms that spilt his soul....Am I a thing born evil? Am I foulIn every vein? Thebes now doth banish me,And never in this exile must I seeMine ancient folk of Corinth, never treadThe land that bore me; else my mother's bedShall be defiled, and Polybus, my goodFather, who loved me well, be rolled in blood.If one should dream that such a world beganIn some slow devil's heart, that hated man,Who should deny him?—God, as thou art clean,Suffer not this, oh, suffer not this sinTo be, that e'er I look on such a day!Out of all vision of mankind awayTo darkness let me fall ere such a fateTouch me, so unclean and so desolate!vv. 829-850 [Pg 48]Leader.I tremble too, O King; but till thou hearFrom him who saw, oh, let hope conquer fear.Oedipus.One shred of hope I still have, and thereforeWill wait the herdsman's coming. 'Tis no more.Jocasta.He shall come. But what further dost thou seek?Oedipus.This. If we mark him close and find him speakAs thou hast, then I am lifted from my dread.Jocasta.What mean'st thou? Was there something that I said...?Oedipus.Thou said'st he spoke of robbers, a great band,That slaughtered Laïus' men. If still he standTo the same tale, the guilt comes not my way.One cannot be a band. But if he sayOne lonely loin-girt man, then visiblyThis is God's finger pointing toward me.Jocasta.Be sure of this. He told the story soWhen first he came. All they that heard him know,vv. 850-870 [Pg 49]Not only I. He cannot change againNow. And if change he should, O Lord of men,No change of his can make the prophecyOf Laïus' death fall true. He was to dieSlain by my son. So Loxias spake.... My son!He slew no man, that poor deserted oneThat died.... And I will no more turn mine eyesThis way nor that for all their prophecies.Oedipus.Woman, thou counsellest well. Yet let it notEscape thee. Send and have the herdsman brought.Jocasta.That will I.—Come. Thou knowest I ne'er would doNor think of aught, save thou wouldst have it so.[Jocasta and Oedipus go together into the Palace.Chorus.[They pray to be free from such great sins as they have just heard spoken of. [Strophe.Toward God's great mysteries, oh, let me moveUnstainèd till I dieIn speech or doing; for the Laws thereofAre holy, walkers upon ways above,Born in the far blue sky; Their father is Olympus uncreate;No man hath made nor toldTheir being; neither shall Oblivion setvv. 870-893 [Pg 50]Sleep on their eyes, for in them lives a greatSpirit and grows not old.[Antistrophe.[They wonder if these sins be all due to pride and if Creon has guilty ambitions; 'Tis Pride that breeds the tyrant; drunken deepWith perilous things is she,Which bring not peace: up, reeling, steep on steepShe climbs, till lo, the rock-edge, and the leapTo that which needs must be, The land where the strong foot is no more strong!Yet is there surely PrideThat saves a city; God preserve it long!I judge not. Only through all maze of wrongBe God, not man, my guide.[Strophe.[Or if Tiresias can really be a lying prophet with no fear of God; they feel that all faith in oracles and the things of God is shaken. Is there a priest who moves amid the altarsRuthless in deed and word,Fears not the presence of his god, nor faltersLest Right at last be heard?If such there be, oh, let some doom be givenMeet for his ill-starred pride,Who will not gain his gain where Justice is,Who will not hold his lips from blasphemies,Who hurls rash hands amid the things of heavenFrom man's touch sanctified.In a world where such things be,What spirit hath shield or lancevv. 893-916 [Pg 51]To ward him secretlyFrom the arrow that slays askance?If honour to such things be,Why should I dance my dance? [Antistrophe.I go no more with prayers and adorationsTo Earth's deep Heart of Stone,Nor yet the Abantes' floor, nor where the nationsKneel at Olympia's throne,Till all this dark be lightened, for the fingerOf man to touch and know.O Thou that rulest—if men rightly callThy name on earth—O Zeus, thou Lord of allAnd Strength undying, let not these things lingerUnknown, tossed to and fro. For faint is the oracle,And they thrust it aside, away;And no more visibleApollo to save or slay;And the things of God, they failAs mist on the wind away.[Jocasta comes out from the Palace followed by handmaids bearing incense and flowers.Jocasta.Lords of the land, the ways my thought hath trodLead me in worship to these shrines of GodWith flowers and incense flame. So dire a stormDoth shake the King, sin, dread and every formOf grief the world knows. 'Tis the wise man's wayTo judge the morrow by the yester day;vv. 917-933 [Pg 52]Which he doth never, but gives eye and earTo all who speak, will they but speak of fear.And seeing no word of mine hath power to healHis torment, therefore forth to thee I steal,O Slayer of the Wolf, O Lord of Light,Apollo: thou art near us, and of rightDost hold us thine: to thee in prayer I fall.[She kneels at the altar of Apollo Lukeios.Oh, show us still some path that is not allUnclean; for now our captain's eyes are dimWith dread, and the whole ship must follow him.[While she prays a Stranger has entered and begins to accost the Chorus.Stranger.Good masters, is there one of you could bringMy steps to the house of Oedipus, your King?Or, better, to himself if that may be?Leader.This is the house and he within; and sheThou seest, the mother of his royal seed.[Jocasta rises, anxious, from her prayer.Stranger.Being wife to such a man, happy indeedAnd ringed with happy faces may she live!Jocasta.To one so fair of speech may the Gods giveLike blessing, courteous stranger; 'tis thy due.But say what leads thee hither. Can we doThy wish in aught, or hast thou news to bring?vv. 934-947 [Pg 53]Stranger.Good news, O Queen, for thee and for the King.Jocasta.What is it? And from what prince comest thou?Stranger.I come from Corinth.—And my tale, I trow,Will give thee joy, yet haply also pain.Jocasta.What news can have that twofold power? Be plain.Stranger.'Tis spoke in Corinth that the gatheringOf folk will make thy lord our chosen King.Jocasta.How? Is old Polybus in power no more?Stranger.Death has a greater power. His reign is o'er.Jocasta.What say'st thou? Dead?... Oedipus' father dead?Stranger.If I speak false, let me die in his stead.Jocasta.Ho, maiden! To our master! Hie thee fastAnd tell this tale. [The maiden goes.Where stand ye at the lastvv. 948-961 [Pg 54]Ye oracles of God? For many a yearOedipus fled before that man, in fearTo slay him. And behold we find him thusSlain by a chance death, not by Oedipus.[Oedipus comes out from the Palace.Oedipus.O wife, O face I love to look upon,Why call'st thou me from where I sat alone?Jocasta.Give ear, and ponder from what this man tellsHow end these proud priests and their oracles.Oedipus.Whence comes he? And what word hath he for us?Jocasta.From Corinth; bearing news that PolybusThy father is no more. He has found his death.Oedipus.How?—Stranger, speak thyself. This that she saith ...Stranger.Is sure. If that is the first news ye crave,I tell thee, Polybus lieth in his grave.Oedipus.Not murdered?... How? Some passing of disease?Stranger.A slight thing turns an old life to its peace.vv. 962-978 [Pg 55]Oedipus.Poor father!... 'Tis by sickness he is dead?Stranger.The growing years lay heavy on his head.Oedipus.O wife, why then should man fear any moreThe voice of Pytho's dome, or cower beforeThese birds that shriek above us? They foretoldMe for my father's murderer; and behold,He lies in Corinth dead, and here am IAnd never touched the sword.... Or did he dieIn grief for me who left him? In that wayI may have wrought his death.... But come what may,He sleepeth in his grave and with him allThis deadly seercraft, of no worth at all.Jocasta.Dear Lord, long since did I not show thee clear...?Oedipus.Indeed, yes. I was warped by mine own fear.Jocasta.Now thou wilt cast it from thee, and forget.Oedipus.Forget my mother?... It is not over yet.Jocasta.What should man do with fear, who hath but ChanceAbove him, and no sight nor governancevv. 979-993 [Pg 56]Of things to be? To live as life may run,No fear, no fret, were wisest 'neath the sun.And thou, fear not thy mother. Prophets deemA deed wrought that is wrought but in a dream.And he to whom these things are nothing, bestWill bear his burden.Oedipus.All thou counsellestWere good, save that my mother liveth still.And, though thy words be wise, for good or illHer I still fear.Jocasta.Think of thy father's tomb!Like light across our darkness it hath come.Oedipus.Great light; but while she lives I fly from her.Stranger.What woman, Prince, doth fill thee so with fear?Oedipus.Meropê, friend, who dwelt with Polybus.Stranger.What in Queen Meropê should fright thee thus?Oedipus.A voice of God, stranger, of dire import.Stranger.Meet for mine ears? Or of some secret sort?vv. 994-1009 [Pg 57]Oedipus.Nay, thou must hear, and Corinth. Long agoApollo spake a doom, that I should knowMy mother's flesh, and with mine own hand spillMy father's blood.—'Tis that, and not my will,Hath kept me always far from Corinth. So;Life hath dealt kindly with me, yet men knowOn earth no comfort like a mother's face.Stranger.'Tis that, hath kept thee exiled in this place?Oedipus.That, and the fear too of my father's blood.Stranger.Then, surely, Lord ... I came but for thy good ...'Twere well if from that fear I set thee free.Oedipus.Ah, couldst thou! There were rich reward for thee.Stranger.To say truth, I had hoped to lead thee homeNow, and myself to get some good therefrom.Oedipus.Nay; where my parents are I will not go.Stranger.My son, 'tis very clear thou dost not knowWhat road thou goest.Oedipus.How? In God's name, say!How clear?vv. 1010-1019 [Pg 58]Stranger.'Tis this, keeps thee so long awayFrom Corinth?Oedipus.'Tis the fear lest that word breakOne day upon me true.Stranger.Fear lest thou takeDefilement from the two that gave thee birth?Oedipus.'Tis that, old man, 'tis that doth fill the earthWith terror.Stranger.Then thy terror all hath beenFor nothing.Oedipus.How? Were not your King and QueenMy parents?Stranger.Polybus was naught to theeIn blood.Oedipus.How? He, my father!Stranger.That was heAs much as I, but no more.Oedipus.Thou art naught;'Twas he begot me.vv. 1020-1028 [Pg 59]Stranger.'Twas not I begotOedipus, neither was it he.Oedipus.What wildFancy, then, made him name me for his child?Stranger.Thou wast his child—by gift. Long years agoMine own hand brought thee to him.Oedipus.Coming so,From a strange hand, he gave me that great love?Stranger.He had no child, and the desire thereofHeld him.Oedipus.And thou didst find somewhere—or buy—A child for him?Stranger.I found it in a highGlen of Kithairon.[Movement of Jocasta, who stands riveted with dread, unnoticed by the others.Oedipus.Yonder? To what endWast travelling in these parts?Stranger.I came to tendThe flocks here on the mountain.vv. 1029-1037 [Pg 60]Oedipus.Thou wast oneThat wandered, tending sheep for hire?Stranger.My son,That day I was the saviour of a King.Oedipus.How saviour? Was I in some suffering Or peril?Stranger.Thine own feet a tale could speak.Oedipus.Ah me! What ancient pain stirs half awake Within me!Stranger.'Twas a spike through both thy feet.I set thee free.Oedipus.A strange scorn that, to greetA babe new on the earth!Stranger.From that they fainMust call thee Oedipus, "Who-walks-in-pain."Oedipus.Who called me so—father or mother? Oh,In God's name, speak!vv. 1038-1046 [Pg 61]Stranger.I know not. He should knowWho brought thee.Oedipus.So: I was not found by thee.Thou hadst me from another?Stranger.Aye; to meOne of the shepherds gave the babe, to bearFar off.Oedipus.What shepherd? Know'st thou not? DeclareAll that thou knowest.Stranger.By my memory, then,I think they called him one of Laïus' men.Oedipus.That Laïus who was king in Thebes of old?Stranger.The same. My man did herding in his fold.Oedipus.Is he yet living? Can I see his face?Stranger.[Turning to the Chorus.Ye will know that, being natives to the place.vv. 1047-1062 [Pg 62]Oedipus.How?—Is there one of you within my paleStanding, that knows the shepherd of his tale?Ye have seen him on the hills? Or in this town?Speak! For the hour is come that all be known.Leader.I think 'twill be the Peasant Man, the same,Thou hast sought long time to see.—His place and nameOur mistress, if she will, can tell most clear.[Jocasta remains as if she heard nothing.Oedipus.Thou hear'st him, wife. The herd whose presence hereWe craved for, is it he this man would say?Jocasta.He saith ... What of it? Ask not; only pray Not to remember.... Tales are vainly told.Oedipus.'Tis mine own birth. How can I, when I hold Such clues as these, refrain from knowing all?Jocasta.For God's love, no! Not if thou car'st at all For thine own life.... My anguish is enough.Oedipus (bitterly).Fear not!... Though I be thrice of slavish stuffFrom my third grand-dam down, it shames not thee.vv. 1063-1075 [Pg 63]Jocasta.Ask no more. I beseech thee.... Promise me!Oedipus.To leave the Truth half-found? 'Tis not my mood.Jocasta.I understand; and tell thee what is good.Oedipus.Thy good doth weary me.Jocasta.O child of woe,I pray God, I pray God, thou never know!Oedipus (turning from her).Go, fetch the herdsman straight!—This Queen of mine May walk alone to boast her royal line.Jocasta.[She twice draws in her breath through her teeth, as if in some sharp pain.Unhappy one, goodbye! Goodbye beforeI go: this once, and never never more![She comes towards him as though to take a last farewell, then stops suddenly, turns, and rushes into the Palace.Leader.King, what was that? She passed like one who fliesIn very anguish. Dread is o'er mine eyesLest from this silence break some storm of wrong.vv. 1076-1097 [Pg 64]Oedipus.Break what break will! My mind abideth strongTo know the roots, how low soe'er they be,Which grew to Oedipus. This woman, sheIs proud, methinks, and fears my birth and nameWill mar her nobleness. But I, no shameCan ever touch me. I am Fortune's child,Not man's; her mother face hath ever smiledAbove me, and my brethren of the sky,The changing Moons, have changed me low and high.There is my lineage true, which none shall wrestFrom me; who then am I to fear this quest?Chorus.[They sing Oedipus as the foundling of their own Theban mountain, Kithairon, and doubtless of divine birth. [Strophe.If I, O Kithairon, some vision can borrowFrom seercraft, if still there is wit in the old,Long, long, through the deep-orbèd Moon of the morrow—So hear me, Olympus!—thy tale shall be told.O mountain of Thebes, a new Theban shall praise thee,One born of thy bosom, one nursed at thy springs;And the old men shall dance to thy glory, and raise theeTo worship, O bearer of joy to my kings.And thou, we pray,Look down in peace, O Apollo; I-ê, I-ê!vv. 1098-1120 [Pg 65] [Antistrophe.What Oread mother, unaging, unweeping,Did bear thee, O Babe, to the Crag-walker Pan;Or perchance to Apollo? He loveth the leapingOf herds on the rock-ways unhaunted of man.Or was it the lord of Cyllênê, who found thee,Or glad Dionysus, whose home is the height,Who knew thee his own on the mountain, as round theeThe White Brides of Helicon laughed for delight?'Tis there, 'tis there,The joy most liveth of all his dance and prayer.
Oedipus.If I may judge, ye Elders, who have ne'erSeen him, methinks I see the shepherd thereWhom we have sought so long. His weight of yearsFits well with our Corinthian messenger's;And, more, I know the men who guide his way,Bondsmen of mine own house.Thou, friend, wilt sayMost surely, who hast known the man of old.Leader.I know him well. A shepherd of the foldOf Laïus, one he trusted more than all.[The Shepherd comes in, led by two thralls. He is an old man and seems terrified.Oedipus.Thou first, our guest from Corinth: say withalIs this the man?vv. 1120-1130 [Pg 66]Stranger.This is the man, O King.Oedipus.[Addressing the Shepherd.Old man! Look up, and answer everythingI ask thee.—Thou wast Laïus' man of old?Shepherd.Born in his house I was, not bought with gold.Oedipus.What kind of work, what way of life, was thine?Shepherd.Most of my days I tended sheep or kine.Oedipus.What was thy camping ground at midsummer?Shepherd.Sometimes Kithairon, sometimes mountains near.Oedipus.Saw'st ever there this man thou seëst now?Shepherd.There, Lord? What doing?—What man meanest thou?Oedipus.[Pointing to the Stranger.Look! Hath he ever crossed thy path before?vv. 1131-1146 [Pg 67]Shepherd.I call him not to mind, I must think more.Stranger.Small wonder that, O King! But I will throwLight on his memories.—Right well I knowHe knows the time when, all Kithairon through,I with one wandering herd and he with two,Three times we neighboured one another, clearFrom spring to autumn stars, a good half-year.At winter's fall we parted; he drove downTo his master's fold, and I back to mine own....Dost call it back, friend? Was it as I say?Shepherd.It was. It was.... 'Tis all so far away.Stranger.Say then: thou gavest me once, there in the wild,A babe to rear far off as mine own child?Shepherd.[His terror returning.What does this mean? To what end askest thou?Stranger.[Pointing to Oedipus.That babe has grown, friend. 'Tis our master now.Shepherd.[He slowly understands, then stands for a moment horror-struck.No, in the name of death!... Fool, hold thy peace.[He lifts his staff at the Stranger.vv. 1147-1157 [Pg 68]Oedipus.Ha, greybeard! Wouldst thou strike him?—'Tis not hisOffences, 'tis thine own we need to mend.Shepherd.Most gentle master, how do I offend?Oedipus.Whence came that babe whereof he questioneth?Shepherd.He doth not know ... 'tis folly ... what he saith.Oedipus.Thou wilt not speak for love; but pain maybe ...Shepherd.I am very old. Ye would not torture me.Oedipus.Back with his arms, ye bondmen! Hold him so.[The thralls drag back the Shepherd's arms, ready for torture.Shepherd.Woe's me! What have I done?... What wouldst thou know?Oedipus.Didst give this man the child, as he doth say?Shepherd.I did.... Would God that I had died this day!vv. 1158-1167 [Pg 69]Oedipus.'Fore heaven, thou shalt yet, if thou speak not true.Shepherd.'Tis more than death and darker, if I do.Oedipus.This dog, it seems, will keep us waiting.Shepherd.Nay,I said at first I gave it.Oedipus.In what wayCame it to thee? Was it thine own child, orAnother's?Shepherd.Nay, it never crossed my door:Another's.Oedipus.Whose? What man, what house, of theseAbout thee?Shepherd.In the name of God who sees,Ask me no more!Oedipus.If once I ask again,Thou diest.Shepherd.From the folk of Laïus, then,It came.vv. 1168-1176 [Pg 70]Oedipus.A slave, or born of Laïus' blood?Shepherd.There comes the word I dread to speak, O God!Oedipus.And I to hear: yet heard it needs must be.Shepherd.Know then, they said 'twas Laïus' child. But sheWithin, thy wife, best knows its fathering.Oedipus.'Twas she that gave it?Shepherd.It was she, O King.Oedipus.And bade you ... what?Shepherd.Destroy it.Oedipus.Her own child?...Cruel!Shepherd.Dark words of God had made her wild.Oedipus.What words?vv. 1176-1192 [Pg 71]Shepherd.The babe must slay his father; so'Twas written.Oedipus.Why didst thou, then, let him goWith this old man?Shepherd.O King, I pitied him.I thought the man would save him to some dimAnd distant land, beyond all fear.... And he,To worse than death, did save him!... Verily,If thou art he whom this man telleth of,To sore affliction thou art born.Oedipus.Enough!All, all, shall be fulfilled.... Oh, on these eyesShed light no more, ye everlasting skiesThat know my sin! I have sinned in birth and breath.I have sinned with Woman. I have sinned with Death.[He rushes into the Palace. The Shepherd is led away by the thralls.Chorus. [Strophe.Nothingness, nothingness,Ye Children of Man, and lessI count you, waking or dreaming!And none among mortals, none,Seeking to live, hath wonMore than to seem, and to ceaseAgain from his seeming.vv. 1193-1212 [Pg 72]While ever before mine eyesOne fate, one ensample, lies—Thine, thine, O Oedipus, soreOf God oppressèd—What thing that is human moreDare I call blessèd? [Antistrophe.Straight his archery flewTo the heart of living; he knewJoy and the fulness of power,O Zeus, when the riddling breathWas stayed and the Maid of DeathSlain, and we saw him throughThe death-cloud, a tower!For that he was called my king;Yea, every precious thingWherewith men are honoured, downWe cast before him,And great Thebes brought her crownAnd kneeled to adore him. [Strophe.But now, what man's story is such bitterness to speak?What life hath Delusion so visited, and Pain,And swiftness of Disaster?O great King, our master,How oped the one haven to the slayer and the slain?And the furrows of thy father, did they turn not nor shriek,Did they bear so long silent thy casting of the grain?vv. 1213-1235 [Pg 73] [Antistrophe.'Tis Time, Time, desireless, hath shown thee what thou art;The long monstrous mating, it is judged and all its race.O child of him that sleepeth,Thy land weepeth, weepeth,Unfathered.... Would God, I had never seen thy face!From thee in great peril fell peace upon my heart,
In thee mine eye clouded and the dark is come apace.[A Messenger rushes out from the Palace.Messenger.O ye above this land in honour oldExalted, what a tale shall ye be told,What sights shall see, and tears of horror shed,If still your hearts be true to them that ledYour sires! There runs no river, well I ween,Not Phasis nor great Ister, shall wash cleanThis house of all within that hideth—nay,Nor all that creepeth forth to front the day,Of purposed horror. And in miseryThat woundeth most which men have willed to be.Leader.No lack there was in what we knew beforeOf food for heaviness. What bring'st thou more?Messenger.One thing I bring thee first.... 'Tis quickly said.Jocasta, our anointed queen, is dead.vv. 1236-1260 [Pg 74]Leader.Unhappy woman! How came death to her?Messenger.By her own hand.... Oh, of what passed in thereYe have been spared the worst. Ye cannot see.Howbeit, with that which still is left in meOf mind and memory, ye shall hear her fate.Like one entranced with passion, through the gateShe passed, the white hands flashing o'er her head,Like blades that tear, and fled, unswerving fled,Toward her old bridal room, and disappearedAnd the doors crashed behind her. But we heardHer voice within, crying to him of old,Her Laïus, long dead; and things untoldOf the old kiss unforgotten, that should bringThe lover's death and leave the loved a thingOf horror, yea, a field beneath the ploughFor sire and son: then wailing bitter-lowAcross that bed of births unreconciled,Husband from husband born and child from child.And, after that, I know not how her deathFound her. For sudden, with a roar of wrath,Burst Oedipus upon us. Then, I ween,We marked no more what passion held the Queen,But him, as in the fury of his stride,"A sword! A sword! And show me here," he cried,"That wife, no wife, that field of bloodstained earthWhere husband, father, sin on sin, had birth,Polluted generations!" While he thusRaged on, some god—for sure 'twas none of us—Showed where she was; and with a shout away,As though some hand had pointed to the prey,vv. 1261-1286 [Pg 75]He dashed him on the chamber door. The straightDoor-bar of oak, it bent beneath his weight,Shook from its sockets free, and in he burstTo the dark chamber.There we saw her firstHanged, swinging from a noose, like a dead bird.He fell back when he saw her. Then we heardA miserable groan, and straight he foundAnd loosed the strangling knot, and on the groundLaid her.—Ah, then the sight of horror came!The pin of gold, broad-beaten like a flame,He tore from off her breast, and, left and right,Down on the shuddering orbits of his sightDashed it: "Out! Out! Ye never more shall seeMe nor the anguish nor the sins of me.Ye looked on lives whose like earth never bore,Ye knew not those my spirit thirsted for:Therefore be dark for ever!"Like a songHis voice rose, and again, again, the strongAnd stabbing hand fell, and the massacredAnd bleeding eyeballs streamed upon his beard,Wild rain, and gouts of hail amid the rain.Behold affliction, yea, afflictions twainFrom man and woman broken, now made oneIn downfall. All the riches yester sunSaw in this house were rich in verity.What call ye now our riches? Agony,Delusion, Death, Shame, all that eye or earHath ever dreamed of misery, is here.Leader.And now how fares he? Doth the storm abate?vv. 1287-1308 [Pg 76]Messenger.He shouts for one to open wide the gateAnd lead him forth, and to all Thebes displayHis father's murderer, his mother's.... Nay,Such words I will not speak. And his intentIs set, to cast himself in banishmentOut to the wild, not walk 'mid human breedBearing the curse he bears. Yet sore his needOf strength and of some guiding hand. For sureHe hath more burden now than man may endure.But see, the gates fall back, and that appearsWhich he who loathes shall pity—yea, with tears.[Oedipus is led in, blinded and bleeding. The Old Men bow down and hide their faces; some of them weep.Chorus.Oh, terrible! Oh, sight of allThis life hath crossed, most terrible!Thou man more wronged than tongue can tell,What madness took thee? Do there crawlLive Things of Evil from the deepTo leap on man? Oh, what a leapWas His that flung thee to thy fall!Leader.O fallen, fallen in ghastly case,
I dare not raise mine eyes to thee;Fain would I look and ask and see,But shudder sickened from thy face.Oedipus.Oh, pain; pain and woe!Whither? Whither?vv. 1308-1328 [Pg 77]They lead me and I go;And my voice drifts on the airFar away.Where, Thing of Evil, whereEndeth thy leaping hither?Leader.In fearful ends, which none may hear nor say.Oedipus.Cloud of the dark, mine own[Strophe.For ever, horrible,Stealing, stealing, silent, unconquerable,Cloud that no wind, no summer can dispel!Again, again I groan,As through my heart together crawl the strongStabs of this pain and memories of old wrong.Leader.Yea, twofold hosts of torment hast thou there,The stain to think on and the pain to bear.Oedipus.O Friend, thou mine own[Antistrophe.Still faithful, ministerSteadfast abiding alone of them that were,Dost bear with me and give the blind man care?Ah me! Not all unknownNor hid thou art. Deep in this dark a callComes and I know thy voice in spite of all.Leader.O fearful sufferer, and could'st thou killThy living orbs? What God made blind thy will?vv. 1329-1351 [Pg 78]Oedipus.'Tis Apollo; all is Apollo,[Strophe.O ye that love me, 'tis he long time hath plannedThese things upon me evilly, evilly,Dark things and full of blood.I knew not; I did but followHis way; but mine the handAnd mine the anguish. What were mine eyes to meWhen naught to be seen was good?Leader.'Tis even so; and Truth doth speak in thee.Oedipus.To see, to endure, to hear words kindly spoken,Should I have joy in such?Out, if ye love your breath,Cast me swift unto solitude, unbrokenBy word or touch.Am I not charged with death,Most charged and filled to the brimWith curses? And what man saithGod hath so hated him?Leader.Thy bitter will, thy hard calamity,Would I had never known nor looked on thee!Oedipus.My curse, my curse upon him,[Antistrophe.That man whom pity held in the wilderness,Who saved the feet alive from the blood-fetterAnd loosed the barb thereof!vv. 1351-1377 [Pg 79]That babe—what grace was done him,Had he died shelterless,He had not laid on himself this grief to bear,And all who gave him love.Leader.I, too, O Friend, I had been happier.Oedipus.Found not the way to his father's blood, nor shakenThe world's scorn on his mother,The child and the groom withal;But now, of murderers born, of God forsaken,Mine own sons' brother;All this, and if aught can fallUpon man more perilousAnd elder in sin, lo, allIs the portion of Oedipus.Leader.How shall I hold this counsel of thy mindTrue? Thou wert better dead than living blind.Oedipus.That this deed is not well and wisely wroughtThou shalt not show me; therefore school me not.Think, with what eyes hereafter in the placeOf shadows could I see my father's face,Or my poor mother's? Both of whom this handHath wronged too deep for man to understand.Or children—born as mine were born, to seeTheir shapes should bring me joy? Great God!To mevv. 1378-1403 [Pg 80]There is no joy in city nor in towerNor temple, from all whom, in this mine hour,I that was chief in Thebes alone, and ateThe King's bread, I have made me separateFor ever. Mine own lips have bid the landCast from it one so evil, one whose handTo sin was dedicate, whom God hath shownBirth-branded ... and my blood the dead King's own!All this myself have proved. And can I thenLook with straight eyes into the eyes of men?I trow not. Nay, if any stop there wereTo dam this fount that welleth in mine earFor hearing, I had never blenched nor stayedTill this vile shell were all one dungeon made,Dark, without sound. 'Tis thus the mind would fainFind peace, self-prisoned from a world of pain.O wild Kithairon, why was it thy willTo save me? Why not take me quick and kill,Kill, before ever I could make men knowThe thing I am, the thing from which I grow?Thou dead King, Polybus, thou city wallOf Corinth, thou old castle I did callMy father's, what a life did ye begin,What splendour rotted by the worm within,When ye bred me! O Crossing of the Roads,O secret glen and dusk of crowding woods,O narrow footpath creeping to the brinkWhere meet the Three! I gave you blood to drink.Do ye remember? 'Twas my life-blood, hotFrom mine own father's heart. Have ye forgotWhat deed I did among you, and what newAnd direr deed I fled from you to do?O flesh, horror of flesh!...vv. 1409-1431 [Pg 81]But what is shameTo do should not be spoken. In God's name,Take me somewhere far off and cover meFrom sight, or slay, or cast me to the seaWhere never eye may see me any more.What? Do ye fear to touch a man so soreStricken? Nay, tremble not. My miseryIs mine, and shall be borne by none but me.Leader.Lo, yonder comes for answer to thy prayerCreon, to do and to decree. The careOf all our land is his, now thou art weak.Oedipus.Alas, what word to Creon can I speak,How make him trust me more? He hath seen of lateSo vile a heart in me, so full of hate.Enter Creon.Creon.Not to make laughter, Oedipus, nor castAgainst thee any evil of the pastI seek thee, but ... Ah God! ye ministers,Have ye no hearts? Or if for man there stirsNo pity in you, fear at least to callStain on our Lord the Sun, who feedeth all;Nor show in nakedness a horror suchAs this, which never mother Earth may touch,Nor God's clean rain nor sunlight. Quick within!Guide him.—The ills that in a house have beenThey of the house alone should know or hear.vv. 1432-1447 [Pg 82]Oedipus.In God's name, since thou hast undone the fearWithin me, coming thus, all nobleness,To one so vile, grant me one only grace.For thy sake more I crave it than mine own.Creon.Let me first hear what grace thou wouldst be shown.Oedipus.Cast me from Thebes ... now, quick ... where none may seeMy visage more, nor mingle words with me.Creon.That had I done, for sure, save that I stillTremble, and fain would ask Apollo's will.Oedipus.His will was clear enough, to stamp the uncleanThing out, the bloody hand, the heart of sin.Creon.'Twas thus he seemed to speak; but in this soreStrait we must needs learn surer than before.Oedipus.Thou needs must trouble God for one so low?Creon.Surely; thyself will trust his answer now.Oedipus.I charge thee more ... and, if thou fail, my sinShall cleave to thee.... For her who lies within,vv. 1448-1472 [Pg 83]Make as thou wilt her burial. 'Tis thy taskTo tend thine own. But me: let no man askThis ancient city of my sires to giveHarbour in life to me. Set me to liveOn the wild hills and leave my name to thoseDeeps of Kithairon which my father chose,And mother, for my vast and living tomb.As they, my murderers, willed it, let my doomFind me. For this my very heart doth know,No sickness now, nor any mortal blow,Shall slay this body. Never had my breathBeen thus kept burning in the midst of death,Save for some frightful end. So, let my wayGo where it listeth.But my children—Nay,Creon, my sons will ask thee for no care.Men are they, and can find them everywhereWhat life needs. But my two poor desolateMaidens.... There was no table ever setApart for them, but whatso royal fareI tasted, they were with me and had shareIn all.... Creon, I pray, forget them not.And if it may be, go, bid them be brought,[Creon goes and presently returns with the two princesses. Oedipus thinks he is there all the time.That I may touch their faces, and so weep....Go, Prince. Go, noble heart!...If I might touch them, I should seem to keepAnd not to have lost them, now mine eyes are gone....What say I?In God's name, can it be I hear mine ownvv. 1473-1505 [Pg 84]Beloved ones sobbing? Creon of his graceHath brought my two, my dearest, to this place.Is it true?Creon.'Tis true. I brought them, for in them I knowThy joy is, the same now as long ago.Oedipus.God bless thee, and in this hard journey giveSome better guide than mine to help thee live.Children! Where are ye? Hither; come to theseArms of your ... brother, whose wild officesHave brought much darkness on the once bright eyesOf him who grew your garden; who, nowiseSeeing nor understanding, digged a groundThe world shall shudder at. Children, my woundIs yours too, and I cannot meet your gazeNow, as I think me what remaining daysOf bitter living the world hath for you.What dance of damsels shall ye gather to,What feast of Thebes, but quick ye shall turn home,All tears, or ere the feast or dancers come?And, children, when ye reach the years of love,Who shall dare wed you, whose heart rise aboveThe peril, to take on him all the shameThat cleaves to my name and my children's name?God knows, it is enough!...My flowers, ye needs must die, waste things, bereftAnd fruitless.Creon, thou alone art leftTheir father now, since both of us are goneWho cared for them. Oh, leave them not alonevv. 1505-1518 [Pg 85]To wander masterless, these thine own kin,And beggared. Neither think of them such sinAs ye all know in me, but let their fateTouch thee. So young they are, so desolate—Of all save thee. True man, give me thine hand,And promise.[Oedipus and Creon clasp hands.If your age could understand,Children, full many counsels I could give.But now I leave this one word: Pray to liveAs life may suffer you, and find a roadTo travel easier than your father trod.Creon.Enough thy heart hath poured its tears; now back into thine house repair.Oedipus.I dread the house, yet go I must.Creon.Fair season maketh all things fair.Oedipus.One oath then give me, and I go.Creon.Name it, and I will answer thee.Oedipus.To cast me from this land.vv. 1519-1523 [Pg 86]Creon.A gift not mine but God's thou askest me.Oedipus.I am a thing of God abhorred.Creon.The more, then, will he grant thy prayer.Oedipus.Thou givest thine oath?Creon.I see no light; and, seeing not, I may not swear.Oedipus.Then take me hence. I care not.Creon.Go in peace, and give these children o'er.Oedipus.Ah no! Take not away my daughters![They are taken from him.Creon.Seek not to be master more.Did not thy masteries of old forsake thee when the end was near?vv. 1524-1530 [Pg 87]Chorus.Ye citizens of Thebes, behold; 'tis Oedipus that passeth here,Who read the riddle-word of Death, and mightiest stood of mortal men,And Fortune loved him, and the folk that saw him turned and looked again.Lo, he is fallen, and around great storms and the outreaching sea!Therefore, O Man, beware, and look toward the end of things that be,The last of sights, the last of days; and no man's life account as gainEre the full tale be finished and the darkness find him without pain.[Oedipus is led into the house and the doors close on him.[Pg 88]
NOTES TO
OEDIPUS, KING OF THEBES
P. 4, l. 21: Dry Ash of Ismênus.]—Divination by burnt offerings was practised at an altar of Apollo by the river Ismenus in Thebes.
Observe how many traits Oedipus retains of the primitive king, who was at once chief and medicine-man and god. The Priest thinks it necessary to state explicitly that he does not regard Oedipus as a god, but he is clearly not quite like other men. And it seems as if Oedipus himself realised in this scene that the oracle from Delphi might well demand the king's life. Cf. p. 6, "what deed of mine, what bitter task, May save my city"; p. 7, "any fear for mine own death." This thought, present probably in more minds than his, greatly increases the tension of the scene. Cf. Anthropology and the Classics, pp. 74-79.]
P. 7, l. 87, Message of joy.]—Creon says this for the sake of the omen. The first words uttered at such a crisis would be ominous and tend to fulfil themselves.]
Pp. 13-16, ll. 216-275. The long cursing speech of Oedipus.]—Observe that this speech is broken into several divisions, Oedipus at each point expecting an answer and receiving none. Thus it is not mere declamation; it involves action and reaction between [Pg 89]a speaker and a crowd.—Every reader will notice how full it is of "tragic irony." Almost every paragraph carries with it some sinister meaning of which the speaker is unconscious. Cf. such phrases as "if he tread my hearth," "had but his issue been more fortunate," "as I would for mine own father," and of course the whole situation.
P. 25, l. 437, Who were they?]—This momentary doubt of Oedipus, who of course regarded himself as the son of Polybus, King of Corinth, is explained later (p. 46, l. 780).
Pp. 29 ff. The Creon scene.]—The only part of the play which could possibly be said to flag. Creon's defence, p. 34, "from probabilities," as the rhetoricians would have called it, seems less interesting to us than it probably did to the poet's contemporaries. It is remarkably like Hippolytus's defence (pp. 52 f. of my translation), and probably one was suggested by the other. We cannot be sure which was the earlier play.
The scene serves at least to quicken the pace of the drama, to bring out the impetuous and somewhat tyrannical nature of Oedipus, and to prepare the magnificent entrance of Jocasta.
P. 36, l. 630, Thebes is my country.]—It must be remembered that to the Chorus Creon is a real Theban, Oedipus a stranger from Corinth.
P. 41, Conversation of Oedipus and Jocasta.]—The technique of this wonderful scene, an intimate self-revealing conversation between husband and wife about the past, forming the pivot of the play, will remind a modern reader of Ibsen.
P. 42, l. 718.]—Observe that Jocasta does not [Pg 90]tell the whole truth. It was she herself who gave the child to be killed (p. 70, l. 1173).
P. 42, l. 730, Crossing of Three Ways.]—Cross roads always had dark associations. This particular spot was well known to tradition and is still pointed out. "A bare isolated hillock of grey stone stands at the point where our road from Daulia meets the road to Delphi and a third road that stretches to the south.... The road runs up a frowning pass between Parnassus on the right hand and the spurs of the Helicon range on the left. Away to the south a wild and desolate valley opens, running up among the waste places of Helicon, a scene of inexpressible grandeur and desolation" (Jebb, abridged).
P. 44, l. 754, Who could bring, &c.]—Oedipus of course thought he had killed them all. See his next speech.
P. 51.]—Observe the tragic effect of this prayer. Apollo means to destroy Jocasta, not to save her; her prayer is broken across by the entry of the Corinthian Stranger, which seems like a deliverance but is really a link in the chain of destruction. There is a very similar effect in Sophocles' Electra, 636-659, Clytaemnestra's prayer; compare also the prayers to Cypris in Euripides' Hippolytus.
P. 51, l. 899.]—Abae was an ancient oracular shrine in Boeotia; Olympia in Elis was the seat of the Olympian Games and of a great Temple of Zeus.
P. 52, l. 918, O Slayer of the Wolf, O Lord of Light.]—The names Lykeios, Lykios, &c., seem to have two roots, one meaning "Wolf" and the other "Light."
P. 56, l. 987, Thy father's tomb Like light across [Pg 91]our darkness.]—This ghastly line does not show hardness of heart, it shows only the terrible position in which Oedipus and Jocasta are. Naturally Oedipus would give thanks if his father was dead. Compare his question above, p. 54, l. 960, "Not murdered?"—He cannot get the thought of the fated murder out of his mind.
P. 57, l. 994.]—Why does Oedipus tell the Corinthian this oracle, which he has kept a secret even from his wife till to-day?—Perhaps because, if there is any thought of his going back to Corinth, his long voluntary exile must be explained. Perhaps, too, the secret possesses his mind so overpoweringly that it can hardly help coming out.
Pp. 57, 58, ll. 1000-1020.]—It is natural that the Corinthian hesitates before telling a king that he is really not of royal birth.
Pp. 64, 65, ll. 1086-1109.]—This joyous Chorus strikes a curious note. Of course it forms a good contrast with what succeeds, but how can the Elders take such a serenely happy view of the discovery that Oedipus is a foundling just after they have been alarmed at the exit of Jocasta? It seems as if the last triumphant speech of Oedipus, "fey" and almost touched with megalomania as it was, had carried the feeling of the Chorus with it.
P. 66, l. 1122.]—Is there any part in any tragedy so short and yet so effective as that of this Shepherd?
P. 75, l. 1264, Like a dead bird.]—The curious word, [Greek: empeplêgmenên], seems to be taken from Odyssey xxii. 469, where it is applied to birds caught in a snare. As to the motives of Oedipus, his first blind instinct to kill Jocasta as a thing that polluted the [Pg 92]earth; when he saw her already dead, a revulsion came.
P. 76, ll. 1305 ff.]—Observe how a climax of physical horror is immediately veiled and made beautiful by lyrical poetry. Sophocles does not, however, carry this plan of simply flooding the scene with sudden beauty nearly so far as Euripides does. See Hipp., p. 39; Trojan Women, p. 51.
P. 83, ll. 1450 ff., Set me to live on the wild hills.]—These lines serve to explain the conception, existing in the poet's own time, of Oedipus as a daemon or ghost haunting Mount Kithairon.
P. 86, l. 1520, Creon.]—Amid all Creon's whole-hearted forgiveness of Oedipus and his ready kindness there are one or two lines of his which strike a modern reader as tactless if not harsh. Yet I do not think that Sophocles meant to produce that effect. At the present day it is not in the best manners to moralise over a man who is down, any more than it is the part of a comforter to expound and insist upon his friend's misfortunes. But it looks as if ancient manners expected, and even demanded, both. Cf. the attitude of Theseus to Adrastus in Eur., Suppliants.
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