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andromache-第10部分

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master stood there in his gleaming harness like a flash of light; till

from the inmost shrine there came a voice of thrilling horror;

stirring the crowd to make a stand。 Then fell Achilles' son; smitten

through the flank by some Delphian's biting blade; some fellow that

slew him with a host to help; and as he fell; there was not one that

did not stab him; or cast a rock and batter his corpse。 So his whole

body; once so fair; was marred with savage wounds。 At last they cast

the lifeless clay; Iying near the altar; forth from the fragrant fane。

And we gathered up his remains forthwith and are bringing them to

thee; old prince; to mourn and weep and honour with a deep…dug tomb。

    This is how that prince who vouchsafeth oracles to others; that

judge of what is right for all the world; hath revenged himself on

Achilles' son; remembering his ancient quarrel as a wicked man

would。 How then can he be wise?



        (The MESSENGER withdraws as the body of Neoptolemus

             is carried in on a bier。 The following lines

                  between PELEUS and the CHORUS are

                        chanted responsively。)



  CHORUS

    Lo! e'en now our prince is being carried on a bier from Delphi's

land unto his home。 Woe for him and his sad fate; and woe for thee;

old sire! for this is not the welcome thou wouldst give Achilles' son;

the lion's whelp; thyself too by this sad mischance dost share his

evil lot。

  PELEUS

    Ah! woe is me! here is a sad sight for me to see and take unto

my halls! Ah me! ah me! I am undone; thou city of Thessaly! My line

now ends; I have no children left me in my home。 Oh! the sorrows

seem born to endure! What friend can I look to for relief? Ah; dear

lips; and cheeks; and hands! Would thy destiny had slain the 'neath

Ilium's walls beside the banks of Simois!

  CHORUS

    Had he so died; my aged lord; he had won him honour thereby; and

thine had been the happier lot。

  PELEUS

    O marriage; marriage; woe to thee! thou bane of my home; thou

destroyer of my city! Ah my child; my boy; would that the honour of

wedding thee; fraught with evil as it was to my children and house;

had not thrown o'er thee; my son; Hermione's deadly net! that the

thunderbolt had slain her sooner! and that thou; rash mortal; hadst

never charged the great god Phoebus with aiming that murderous shaft

that spilt thy hero…father's blood!

  CHORUS

    Woe! woe! alas! With due observance of funeral rites will I

begin the mourning for my dead master。

  PELEUS

    Alack and well…a…day! I take up the tearful dirge; ah me! old

and wretched as I am。

  CHORUS

    'Tis Heaven's decree; God willed this heavy stroke。

  PELEUS

    O darling child; thou hast left me all alone in my halls; old

and childless by thy loss。

  CHORUS

    Thou shouldst have died; old sire; before thy children。

  PELEUS

    Shall I not tear my hair; and smite upon my head with grievous

blows? O city! of both my children hath Phoebus robbed me。

  CHORUS

    What evils thou hast suffered; what sorrows thou hast seen; thou

poor old man! what shall be thy life hereafter?

  PELEUS

    Childless; desolate; with no limit to my grief; I must drain the

cup of woe; until I die。

  CHORUS

    'Twas all in vain the gods wished thee joy on thy wedding day。

  PELEUS

    All my hopes have flown away; fallen short of my high boasts。

  CHORUS

    A lonely dweller in a lonely home art thou。

  PELEUS

    I have no city any longer; there! on the ground my sceptre do

cast; and thou; daughter of Nereus; 'neath thy dim grotto; shalt see

me grovelling in the dust; a ruined king。

  CHORUS

    Look; look! (A dim form of divine appearance is seen hovering

mid air。) What is that moving? what influence divine am I conscious

of? Look; maidens; mark it well; see; yonder is some deity; wafted

through the lustrous air and alighting on the plains of Phthia; home

of steeds。

  THETIS (from above)

    O Peleus! because of my wedded days with thee now long agone; I

Thetis am come from the halls of Nereus。 And first I counsel thee

not to grieve to excess in thy present distress; for I too who need

ne'er have borne children to my sorrow; have lost the child of our

love; Achilles swift of foot; foremost of the sons of Hellas。 Next

will I declare why I am come; and do thou give ear。 Carry yonder

corpse; Achilles' son; to the Pythian altar and there bury it; a

reproach to Delphi; that his tomb may proclaim the violent death he

met at the hand of Orestes。 And for his captive wife Andromache;…she

must dwell in the Molossian land; united in honourable wedlock with

Helenus; and with her this babe; the sole survivor as he is of all the

line of Aeacus; for from him a succession of prosperous kings of

Molossia is to go on unbroken; for the race that springs from thee and

me; my aged lord; must not thus be brought to naught; no! nor Troy's

line either; for her fate too is cared for by the gods; albeit her

fall was due to the eager wish of Pallas。 Thee too; that thou mayst

know the saving grace of wedding me; will I; a goddess born and

daughter of a god; release from all the ills that flesh is heir to and

make a deity to know not death nor decay。 From henceforth in the halls

of Nereus shalt thou dwell with me; god and goddess together; thence

shalt thou rise dry…shod from out the main and see Achilles; our

dear son; settled in his island…home by the strand of Leuce; that is

girdled by the Euxine sea。 But get thee to Delphi's god…built town;

carrying this corpse with thee; and; after thou hast buried him;

return and settle in the cave which time hath hollowed in the Sepian

rock and there abide; till from the sea I come with choir of fifty

Nereids to be thy escort thence; for fate's decree thou must fulfil;

such is the pleasure of Zeus。 Cease then to mourn the dead; this is

the lot which heaven assigns to all; and all must pay their debt to

death。

  PELEUS

    Great queen; my honoured wife; from Nereus sprung; all hail!

thou art acting herein as befits thyself and thy children。 So I will

stay my grief at thy bidding; goddess; and; when I have buried the

dead; will seek the glens of Pelion; even the place where I took thy

beauteous form to my embrace。 Surely after this every prudent man will

seek to marry a wife of noble stock and give his daughter to a husband

good and true; never setting his heart on a worthless woman; not

even though she bring a sumptuous dowry to his house。 So would men

ne'er suffer ill at heaven's hand。

                                                   (THETIS vanishes。)

  CHORUS (chanting)

    Many are the shapes of Heaven's denizens; and many a thing they

bring to pass contrary to our expectation; that which we thought would

be is not accomplished; while for the unexpected God finds out a

way。 E'en such hath been the issue of this matter。





                                   …THE END…


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