Stories from the Greek Tragedians eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 188 pages of information about Stories from the Greek Tragedians.

Stories from the Greek Tragedians eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 188 pages of information about Stories from the Greek Tragedians.

But the King was very wroth when he heard this outcry, and cried, “Think ye to make bold the hearts of our men by these lamentations?  Now may the Gods save me from this race of women; for if they be bold no man can endure their insolence, and if they be afraid they vex both their home and their country.  Even so now do ye help them that are without and trouble your own people.  But hearken to this.  He that heareth not my command, be he man or woman, the people shall stone him.  Speak I plainly?”

“But, O son of Oedipus,” the maidens made reply, “we hear the rolling of the chariot wheels, and the rattling of the axles, and the jingling of the bridle reins.”

“What then?” said the King, “if the ship labour in the sea, and the helmsman leave the helm and fly to the prow that he may pray before the image, doeth he well?”

“Nay, blame us not that we came to beseech the Gods when we heard the hailstorm of war rattling on the gates.”

“’Tis well,” cried the King, “yet men say that the Gods leave the city that is at the point to fall.  And mark ye this, that safety is the child of obedience.  But as for duty, ’tis for men to do sacrifice to the Gods, and for women to keep silence and to abide at home.”

But the maidens made reply, “’Tis the Gods who keep this city, nor do they transgress who reverence them.”

“Yes, but let them reverence them in due order.  And now hearken to me.  Keep ye silence.  And when I have made my prayer, raise ye a joyful shout that shall gladden the hearts of our friends and put away all fear from them.  And to the Gods that keep this city I vow that if they give us victory in this war I will sacrifice to them sheep and oxen, and will hang up in their houses the spoils of the enemy.  And now, ye maidens, do ye also make your prayers, but not with vain clamour.  And I will choose seven men, being myself the seventh, who shall meet the seven that come against the gates of our city.”

Then the King departed, and the maidens made their prayer after this fashion:  “My heart feareth as a dove feareth the serpent for her young ones, so cruelly doth the enemy come about this city to destroy it!  Shall ye find elsewhere as fair a land, ye Gods, if ye suffer this to be laid waste, or streams as sweet?  Help us then, for indeed it is a grievous thing when men take a city, for the women, old and young, are dragged by the hair, and the men are slain with the sword, and there is slaughter and burning, while they that plunder cry each man to his comrade, and the fruits of the earth are wasted upon the ground; nor is there any hope but in death.”

And as they made an end, the King came back, and at the same time a messenger bringing tidings of the battle, how the seven chiefs had ranged themselves each against a gate of the city.  And the man’s story was this.

“First Tydeus, the AEtolian, standeth in great fury at the gate of Proetus.  Very wroth is he because the soothsayer, Amphiaraues, suffereth him not to cross the Ismenus, for that the omens promise not victory.  A triple crest he hath, and there are bells of bronze under his shield which ring terribly.  And on his shield he hath this device:  the heaven studded with stars, and in the midst the mightiest of the stars, the eye of night, even the moon.  Whom, O King, will thou set against this man?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Stories from the Greek Tragedians from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.