’Twas said of old, and ’tis
said to-day,
That wealth to prosperous stature
grown
Begets a birth
of its own:
That a surfeit of evil by good is
prepared,
And sons must bear what allotment
of woe
Their sires were
spared.
But this I refuse to believe:
I know
That impious deeds
conspire
To beget an offspring of impious
deeds
Too like their
ugly sire.
But whoso is just, though his wealth like a river
Flow down, shall be scathless: his house shall
rejoice
In an offspring of beauty for ever.
The heart of the haughty delights
to beget
A haughty heart. From time
to time
In children’s children recurrent
appears
The ancestral
crime.
When the dark hour comes that the gods have decreed
And the Fury burns with wrathful fires,
A demon unholy, with ire unabated,
Lies like black night on the halls
of the fated;
And the recreant Son plunges guiltily
on
To perfect the
guilt of his Sires.
But Justice shines in a lowly cell;
In the homes of poverty, smoke-begrimed,
With the sober-minded she loves to dwell.
But she turns aside
From the rich man’s house with averted eye,
The golden-fretted halls of pride
Where hands with lucre are foul, and the praise
Of counterfeit goodness smoothly sways;
And wisely she guides in the strong man’s despite
All things to an issue of right.
Let me now give you another passage from the “Eumenides”—or
“Furies”—of AEschylus.
Orestes, Prince of Argos, you must remember, has avenged on his mother Clytemnestra the murder of his father, King Agamemnon, on his return from Troy. Pursued by the Furies, he takes refuge in the temple of Apollo at Delphi, and then, still Fury-haunted, goes to Athens, where Pallas Athene, the warrior-maiden, the tutelary goddess of Athens, bids him refer his cause to the Areopagus, the highest court of Athens, Apollo acting as his advocate, and she sitting as umpire in the midst. The white and black balls are thrown into the urn, and are equal; and Orestes is only delivered by the decision of Athene—as the representative of the nearer race of gods, the Olympians, the friends of man, in whose likeness man is made. The Furies are the representatives of the older and darker creed—which yet has a depth of truth in it—of the irreversible dooms which underlie all nature; and which represent the Law, and not the Gospel, the consequence of the mere act, independent of the spirit which has prompted it.