Contents
-BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Dramatis Personæ
Euripides (480 or 485–406 B.C.). Hippolytus.
The Harvard Classics. 1909–14.
Lines 800–1199
Was it well she came from a joyous homeTo a far King’s bridal across the foam?What joy hath her bridal brought her?Sure some spell upon either handFlew with thee from the Cretan strand,Seeking Athena’s tower divine;And there, where Munychus fronts the brine,Crept by the shore-flung cables’ line,The curse from the Cretan water!And, for that dark spell that about her clings,Sick desires of forbidden thingsThe soul of her rend and sever;The bitter tide of calamityHath risen above her lips; and she,Where bends she her last endeavour?She will hie her alone to her bridal room,And a rope swing slow in the rafters’ gloom;And a fair white neck shall creep to the noose,A-shudder with dread, yet firm to chooseThe one strait way for fame, and loseThe Love and the pain for ever.[The Voice of the NURSE is heard from within, crying, at first inarticulately, then clearly.VOICE
Help ho! The Queen! Help, whoso hearkeneth!Help! Theseus’ spouse caught in a noose of death!A WOMAN
God, is it so soon finished? That bright headSwinging beneath the rafters! Phædra dead!VOICE
O haste! This knot about her throat is madeSo fast! Will no one bring me a swift blade?A WOMAN
Say, friends, what think ye? Should we haste within,And from her own hand’s knotting loose the Queen?ANOTHER
Nay, are there not men there? ’Tis an ill roadIn life, to finger at another’s load.VOICE
Let it lie straight! Alas! the cold white thingThat guards his empty caste for the King!A WOMAN
Ah! “Let it lie straight!” Heard ye what she said?No need for helpers now; the Queen is dead![The Women, intent upon the voices from the Castle, have not noticed the approach of THESEUS. He enters from the left; his dress and the garland on his head show that he has returned from some oracle or special abode of a God. He stands for a moment perplexed.THESEUS
Ho, Women, and what means this loud acclaimWithin the house? The vassals’ outcry cameTo smite mine ears far off. It were more meetTo fling out wide the Castle gates, and greetWith a joy held from God’s Presence![The confusion and horror of the Women’s faces gradually affects him. A dirge-cry comes from the Castle.How?Not Pittheus? Hath Time struck that hoary brow?Old is he, old, I know. But sore it were,Returning thus, to find his empty chair![The Women hesitate; then the Leader comes forward.LEADER
O Theseus, not on any old man’s headThis stroke falls. Young and tender is the dead.THESEUS
Ye Gods! One of my children torn from me?LEADER
Thy motherless children live, most grievouslyTHESEUS
How sayst thou? What? My wife?…Say how she died.LEADER
In a high death-knot that her own hands tied.THESEUS
A fit of the old cold auguish—Tell me all—That held her? Or did some fresh thing befall?LEADER
We know no more. But now arrived we be,Theseus, to mourn for thy calamity.[THESEUS stays for a moment silent, and puts his hand on his brow. He notices the wreath.THESEUS
What? And all garlanded I come to herWith flowers, most evil-starred God’s-messenger!Ho, varlets, loose the porral bars; undoThe bolts; and let me see the bitter viewOf her whose death bath brought me to mine own.[The great central door of the Castle is thrown open wide, and the body of PHAEDRA is seen lying on a bier, surrounded by a group of Handmaids, wailing.THE HANDMAIDS
Ah me, what thou hast suffered and hast done:A deed to wrap this roof in flame!Why was thine hand so strong, thine heart so bold?Wherefore, O dead in anger, dead in shame,The long, long wrestling ere thy breath was cold?O ill-starred Wife,What brought this blackness over all thy life?[A throng of Men and Women has gradually collected.THESEUS
Ah me, this is the last—Hear, O my countrymen!—and bitterestOf Theseus’ labours! Fortune all unblest,How hath thine heavy heel across me passed!Is it the stain of sins done long ago,Some fell God still remembereth,That must so dim and fret my life with death?I cannot win to shore; and the waves flowAbove mine eyes, to be surmounted not.Ah wife, sweet wife, what nameCan fit thine heavy lot?Gone like a wild bird, like a blowing flame,In one swift gust, where all things are forgot!Alas! this misery!Sure ’tis some stroke of God’s great anger rolledFrom age to age on me,For some dire sin wrought by dim kings of old.LEADER
Sire, this great grief bath come to many an one,A true wife lost. Thou art not all alone.THESEUS
Deep, deep beneath the Earth,Dark may my dwelling be,And night my heart’s one comrade, in the dearth,O Love, of thy most sweet society.This is my death, O Phædra, more than thine.[He turns suddenly on the Attendants.Speak who speak can! What was it? What malignSwift stroke, O heart discounselled, leapt on thee?[He bends over PHAEDRA; then, as no one speaks, looks fiercely up.What, will ye speak? Or are they dumb as death,This herd of thralls, my high house harboureth?[There is no answer. He bends again over PHAEDRA.Ah me, why shouldst thou die?A wide and royal grief I here behold,Not to be borne in peace, not to be told.As a lost man am I.My children motherless and my house undone,Since thou art vanished quite,Purest of hearts that e’er the wandering SunTouched, or the star-eyed splendour of the Night.[He throws himself beside the body.CHORUS
Unhappy one, O most unhappy one;With what strange evil is this Castle vexed!Mine eyes are molten with the tears that runFor thee and thine; but what thing follows next?I tremble when I think thereon![They have noticed that there is a tablet with writing fastened to the dead woman’s wrist. THESEUS also sees it.THESEUS
Ha, what is this that hangs from her dear hand?A tablet! It would make me understandSome dying wish, some charge about her bedAnd children. ’Twas the last prayer, ere her headWas bowed for ever.[Taking the tablet.Fear not, my lost bride,No woman born shall lie at Theseus’ side,Nor rule in Theseus’ house!A seal! Ah, seeHow her gold signet here looks up at me,Trustfully. Let me tear this thread away,And read what tale the tablet seeks to say.[He proceeds to undo and read the tablet. The Chorus breaks into horrified groups.SOME WOMEN
Woe, woe! God brings to birthA new grief here, close on the other’s tread!My life bath lost its worth.May all go now with what is finishèd!The castle of my King is overthrown,A house no more, a house vanished and gone!OTHER WOMEN
O God, if it may be in any way,Let not this house he wrecked! Help us who pray!I know not what is here: some unseen thingThat shows the Bird of Evil on the wing.[THESEUS has read the tablet and breaks out in uncontrollable emotion.THESEUS
Oh, horror piled on horror!—Here is writ…Nay, who could hear it, who could speak of it?LEADER
What, O my King? If I may hear it, speak!THESEUS
Doth not the tablet cry aloud, yea, shriek,Things not to he forgotten?—Oh, to flyAnd hide mine head! No more a man am I.God what ghastly music echoes here!LEADER
How wild thy voice! Some terrible thing is near.THESEUS
No; my lips’ gates will hold it back no more:This deadly word,That struggles on the brink and will not o’er,Yet will not stay unheard.[He raises his hand, to make proclamation to all present.Ho, hearken all this land![The people gather expectantly about him.Hippolytus by violence bath laid handOn this my wife, forgetting God’s great eye.[Murmurs of amazement and horror; THESEUS, apparently calm, raises both arms to heaven.Therefore, O Thou my Father, hear my cry,Poseidon! Thou didst grant me for mine ownThree prayers; for one of these, slay now my son,Hippolytus; let him not outlive this day,If true thy promise was! Lo, thus I pray.LEADER
Oh, call that wild prayer back! O King, take heed!I know that thou wilt live to rue this deed.THESEUS
It may not be.—And more, I cast him outFrom all my realms. He shall be held aboutBy two great dooms. Or by Poseidon’s breathHe shall fall swiftly to the house of Death;Or wandering, outcast, o’er strange land and sea,Shall live and drain the cup of misery.LEADER
Ah, see! here comes he at the point of need.Shake off that evil mood, O King; have heedFor all thine house and folk.—Great Theseus, hear![THESEUS stands silent in fierce gloom. HIPPOLYTUS comes in from the right.HIPPOLYTUS
Father, I heard thy cry, and sped in fearTo help thee.—But I see not yet the causeThat racked thee so.—Say, Father, what it was.[The murmurs in the crowd, the silent gloom of his Father, and the horror of the Chorus-women gradually work on HIPPOLYTUS and bewilder him. He catches sight of the bier.Ah, what is that! Nay, Father, not the QueenDead![Murmurs in the crowd.’Tis most strange. ’Tis passing strange, I ween.’Twas here I left her. Scarce an hour hath runSince here she stood and looked on this same sun.What is it with her? Wherefore did she die?[THESEUS remains silent. The murmurs increase.Father, to thee I speak. Oh, tell me, why,Why art thou silent? What doth silence knowOf skill to stem the bitter flood of woe?And human hearts in sorrow crave the more,For knowledge, though the knowledge grieve them soreIt is not love, to veil thy sorrows inFrom one most near to thee, and more than kin.THESEUS (to himself)
Fond race of men, so striving and so blind,Ten thousand arts and wisdoms can ye find,Desiring all and all imagining:But ne’er have reached nor understood one thing,To make a true heart there where no heart is!HIPPOLYTUS
That were indeed beyond man’s mysteries,To make a false heart true against his will.But why this subtle talk? It likes me ill,Father; thy speech runs wild beneath this blow.THESEUS (as before)
O would that God had given us here belowSome test of love, some sifting of the soul,To tell the false and true! Or through the wholeOf men two voices ran, one true and right,The other as chance willed it; that we mightConvict the liar by the true man’s tone,And not live duped forever, every one!HIPPOLYTUS (misunderstanding him; then guessing at something of the truth)What? Hath some friend proved false?Or in thine earWhispered some slander? Stand I tainted here,Though utterly innocent?[Murmurs from the crowd.Yea, dazed am I;’Tis thy words daze me, falling all awry,Away from reason, by fell fancies vexed!