The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 548 pages of information about The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I..

The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 548 pages of information about The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I..

Hec.  Let me alone:  who art thou that sufferest not my body to rest? why dost thou, whoever thou art, disturb me from my sadness?

TAL.  I am here, Talthybius, the herald of the Greeks, Agamemnon having sent me for thee, O lady.

Hec.  Hast thou come then, thou dearest of men, it having been decreed by the Greeks to slay me too upon the tomb?  Thou wouldest bring dear news indeed.  Then haste we, let us speed with all our might:  lead on, old man.

TAL.  I am here and come to thee, O lady, that thou mayest entomb thy dead daughter.  Both the two sons of Atreus and the Grecian host send me.

Hec.  Alas! what wilt thou say?  Art thou not come for me as doomed to death, but to bring this cruel message?  Thou art dead, my child, torn from thy mother; and I am childless as far as regards thee; oh! wretch that I am.  But how did ye slay her? was it with becoming reverence?  Or did ye proceed in your butchery as with an enemy, O old man?  Tell me, though you will relate no pleasing tale.

TAL.  Twice, O lady, thou desirest me to indulge in tears through pity for thy daughter; for both now while relating the mournful circumstance shall I bedew this eye, as did I then at the tomb when she perished.  The whole host of the Grecian army was present before the tomb, at the sacrifice of thy daughter.  But the son of Achilles taking Polyxena by the hand, placed her on the summit of the mound; but I stood near him:  and there followed a chosen band of illustrious youths in readiness to restrain with their hands thy daughter’s struggles; then the son of Achilles took a full-crowned goblet of entire gold, and poured forth libations to his deceased father; and makes signal to me to proclaim silence through all the Grecian host.  And I standing forth in the midst, thus spoke:  “Be silent, O ye Greeks, let all the people remain silent; silence, be still:”  and I made the people perfectly still.  But he said, “O son of Peleus, O my father, accept these libations which have the power of soothing, and which speed the dead on their way; and come, that thou mayest drink the pure purple blood of this virgin, which both the army and myself offer unto thee; but be propitious to us, and grant us to weigh anchor, and to loose the cables of our ships, and to return each to his country, having met with a prosperous return from Troy.”  Thus much he said, and all the army joined in the prayer.  Then taking by the hilt his sword decked with gold, he drew it from its scabbard, and made signs to the chosen youths of the Greeks to hold the virgin.  But she, when she perceived it,[11] uttered this speech:  “O Argives, ye that destroyed my city, I die willingly; let none touch my body; for I will offer my neck to the sword with a good heart.  But, by the Gods, let me go free while ye kill me, that I may die free, for to be classed as a slave among the dead, when a queen, is what I am ashamed of.”  But the people murmured assent, and king Agamemnon

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The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.