Read Four Tragedies and Octavia Online
Authors: Seneca
In fearful homage; at whose nod
The Medes, or Indians, neighbours of the sun,
Or Dahians whom the Parthian horsemen fear,
Have sheathed their swords â himself
Fears for his crown,
Anxiously scans the signs of Fate,
Dreads treacherous Time and the swift chance
That can make all things change.
You â to whom the ruler of earth and ocean
Gives the dread power of life and death â be humble;
That overweening face does not become you.
No threat of yours that makes your subjects tremble
Is greater than that your master holds above you.
Kings of the earth must bow to a higher kingdom.
Some, whom the rising sun sees high exalted,
The same sun may see fallen at its departing.
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No man should put his trust in the smile of fortune,
No man abandon hope in a time of trouble.
The Spinner of Fate twines good and bad together,
Never lets fortune rest, keeps all things moving.
Never was man so sure of the good gods' favour
That he could promise himself a safe tomorrow.
Under God's hand, life's circle is ever revolving,
The swift wheel turning.
MESSENGER
: O that some whirling wind would carry me
Away into the sky, or wrap my head
In darkest clouds, to banish from my sight
So foul a deed! O Tantalus, O Pelops!
This house would fill even your souls with shame.
CHORUS
: What is your news?
MESSENGER
:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â What country are we in?
The land of Argos, and of Sparta, where
Two brothers
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dwelt in love and harmony,
Of Corinth, buttress 'twixt two warring seas â
Or in the wild Danubian lands that shelter
Fugitive Vandals, or the eternal snows
Of Caucasus, the nomad Scyths' domain?
What country is it that can be the scene
Of such unspeakable abomination?
CHORUS
: Whatever evil you have seen, reveal it.
MESSENGER
: First let the tumult of my mind be stilled,
And fear release my body from its grip.
A picture of the brutal deed still floats
Before my eyes. Carry me far away,
Wild winds! Far from this place! Take me away
To where the journey of the daylight ends!
CHORUS
: You only hold us longer in suspense;
Describe this deed you shudder at, and name
The author of it; nay, I ask not âwho',
But âwhich of them'. Come, speak without delay.
MESSENGER
: Part of the royal house of Pelops stands
Upon the summit of the citadel,
Facing the west, and at its outer edge
It towers above the city like a mountain
Ready to crush the people, should they rise
In insolent revolt against their kings.
Within this building is a huge apartment
Spacious enough to hold a multitude,
A hall of dazzling brilliance; golden beams
Rest upon handsome many-coloured pillars.
Behind this public space, to which the people
Freely resort, extends the private palace,
Room after room, of great luxuriance.
Deep in the secret heart of this domain,
Down in a hollow, is an ancient grove,
The sanctuary of the royal house.
Here grow no trees of pleasant aspect, none
That any pruner's knife has cultivated;
Yew and dark cypress and black ilex twine
A tangled canopy of shade; above,
A tall oak towers and dominates the grove.
This is the place in which the royal sons
Of Tantalus consult the auspices
And pray for help in danger or defeat.
The trees are hung with offerings, with horns
That called to battle, pieces of the chariot
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Won at the sea of Myrto â when the wheels
Of the defeated car were treacherously
Loosed from the axle; trophies of every crime
Committed by this family are here;
And here is hung the Phrygian crown of Pelops,
A painted cloak from a barbarian foe,
And many other spoils of victory.
A spring, under the shadow of the trees,
Forlornly drips and spreads its sluggish water
Into a sombre pool; like that dark river
Styx, by whose name the gods are known to swear
Under this ground, at dead of night, 'tis said
The gods of death are heard to utter groans;
Chains rattle in the grove, and spirits cry.
There sights are seen that mortals quake to hear of.
The ghosts of men of ancient time emerge
From their old tombs and wander in the wood;
Spectres more strange than any known elsewhere
Invade the place; flames flicker on the trees,
And neighbouring roofs appear to be on fire,
Though no fire burns within. Sometimes the grove
Is filled with sounds of barking, thrice repeated;
Sometimes gigantic phantoms haunt the palace.
Daylight brings no relief from these alarms;
The grove's own darkness is the dark of night,
And even at high noon the ghostly powers
Retain their sway. Here worshippers
Receive responses from the oracles,
And at such times the Fates' decrees are cried
In thundering voices from the shrine; a god
Speaks, and the cave gives forth a hollow sound.
    Into this place came Atreus, like a man
Possessed with madness, with his brother's children
Dragged at his heels. The altars are prepared.â¦
But oh, what words are fit to tell what happened?â¦
He tied the princes' hands behind their backs,
And bound their hapless heads with purple fillets.
Incense was used, and consecrated wine,
The salt and meal dropped from the butcher's knife
Upon the victims' heads, all solemn rites
Fulfilled, to make this act of infamy
A proper ritual.
CHORUS
:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Who held the knife?
MESSENGER
:
He
was the sacrificial priest,
his
voice
Boldly intoned the liturgy of death
And spoke the funeral prayers; beside the altar
He stood alone; and then laid his own hand
Upon the three appointed to be slain,
Placed them before him, and took up the knife.
He saw that all was done; and all was done
According to the rites of sacrifice.
A shudder shook the grove; the palace rocked
Over the trembling earth, and seemed to hang
As if uncertain whether it should fall
This way or that; and on the left a star
Traced out an angry furrow in the sky.
The sacrificial wine was changed to blood;
The diadem upon the royal head
Fell, twice or three times, to the ground; tears dripped
From ivory in the temples. Every man
Was moved to horror at these prodigies;
Atreus alone, intent upon his purpose,
Remained immovable, even defiant
Against the menacing gods. Without delay
He strode up to the altar and there stood
With scowling eyes, glaring this way and that.
A hungry tiger in an Indian forest,
Coming upon two steers, will stand in doubt,
Greedy for both, which victim to attack,
Baring his teeth at one, then at the other,
Holding his ravenous appetite in check
While making up his mind. Just so was Atreus
Eyeing the victims doomed to satisfy
His impious vengeance: which shall be the first
For slaughter, which the second head to fall?
As if it mattered! But he won't be hurried â
He wants to have his ghastly deed performed
In proper order.
CHORUS
:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Which was slaughtered first?
MESSENGER
: The first â no one can say that Atreus failed
In duty to his ancestors! â the first
Was dedicated to his grandfather:
The first to be dispatched was Tantalus.
CHORUS
: What look, what bearing did the young man show
In face of death?
MESSENGER
:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â He held himself erect,
Unflinching; prayers, that would have died unheard,
He scorned to utter. With a savage blow
The king drove in the sword, and pressed it home
Until his hand was at the throat; the body
Stood, with the sword plucked out, as if deciding
Which way to fall, then fell against the king.
Immediately the brutal murderer
Seized Plisthenes and dragged him to the altar
To add his body to his brother's, struck
And hacked the head off; the truncated corpse
Fell forward to the ground, and from the head
That rolled away a faint last sob was heard.
CHORUS
: And after those two butcheries, what next?
A third, or did he spare the youngest child?
MESSENGER
: Think of a tawny lion in Armenia
Crouching amid the vanquished carcases
Of a whole herd of oxen, jaws agape
And wet with blood, his hunger satisfied
But not his fury; he will stalk the bulls
This way and that, and still with flagging speed
And slackening mouth make passes at the calves:
So Atreus, still with fury unassuaged,
His sword now reeking with two victims' blood,
Fell on the third, and with no thought of mercy
For the defenceless child whom he attacked
So violently, pierced the body through;
The sword that entered by the breast was seen
Protruding from the back; the boy fell dead,
His spurting blood damped out the altar fires
And through both wounds his spirit fled away.
CHORUS
: Inhuman outrage.
MESSENGER
:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Do you shudder now?
If this had been the end of his foul deed,
You could have called him innocent.
CHORUS
:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â What more?
What more stupendous, more atrocious crime
Can man conceive?
MESSENGER
:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â No, this was not the end,
Only a step upon the villain's way.
CHORUS
: Could he do more? He threw the bodies out
For beasts to maul â denied them funeral fire?
MESSENGER
: Denied them fire! Ah, would that that were so!
Would that he had denied them burial,
Denied them the consuming flames, left them
To be a meal for birds, a hideous banquet
For savage beasts! Well might their father pray
For what most fathers would abhor to see â
The unburied bodies of his sons. O sin
Incredible to any age of man,
And for the men of ages yet to come
A thing to be declared impossible!â¦
The entrails torn from the warm bodies lay
Quivering, veins still throbbing, shocked hearts beating.
Atreus picked at the pieces, scrutinized
The message of the Fates, noted the signs
In the internal organs hot with blood.
Finding no blemish in the sacrifice,
He was content, and ready to prepare
The banquet for his brother; hacked the bodies
Limb from limb â detached the outstretched arms
Close to the shoulders â severed the ligaments
That tie the elbow joints â stripped every part
And roughly wrenched each separate bone away â
All this he did himself; only the faces,
And trusting suppliant hands, he left intact.
And soon the meat is on the spits, the fat
Drips over a slow fire, while other parts
Are tossed to boil in singing copper pans.
The fire seems loth to touch the roasting flesh;
Two or three times it has to be repaired
To feed the crackling hearth, and still, reluctant
To do as it is told, burns sulkily.
The liver on the spits was heard to squeal;
Which cried the more, the bodies or the fires,
It would be hard to say. Above the flames
A pitch-black smoke ascended, and this too
Refused to rise up to the roof, but hung
A thick and noisome cloud, filling the house
With hideous vapours. Then⦠O patient Phoebus!
Thy light was sunk in darkness at mid-day
And thou hadst fled â thou shouldst have left us sooner!
The father bites into his children's bodies,
Chews his own flesh in his accursed mouth.
Drowsy with wine, his glistening hair anointed
With scented oil, he crams his mouth with food
Till it can hold no more. O doomed Thyestes!
This is the one good part of your misfortune:
You know not what you suffer. Not for long
Will this be true. The Lord of Heaven, the Sun
May turn his chariot back and drive away;
Black night may rise untimely from the east,
And total darkness in the midst of day
Veil this atrocious deed; but you must see
And know your own misfortune to the full.
O Father of all earth and all that lives,
Whose rising banishes the lesser lights
That make the dark night beautiful:
Why hast thou turned aside
From thy appointed path?
Why hast thou blotted out the day
And fled from heaven's centre? Why,
O Phoebus, hast thou turned thy face from us?
Vesper, the herald of the close of day,
Is not yet here to usher in the stars;
Thy wheel has not yet passed the western gate
Where, with their day's work done,
Thy steeds should be unyoked. We have not heard
The third note of the trumpet telling us
That day is over.
Ploughmen will stand amazed â
Suddenly supper-time, and oxen not yet ready to rest!
What can have forced you, Sun, from your heavenly road?
What can have made your horses bolt from their fixed course?
Are the Giants escaped from their prison and threatening war?
Has tortured Tityos found strength in his breast again to renew his old aggression?
Or has Typhoeus stretched his muscles to throw off his mountain burden?
Is Ossa to be piled on Pelion again
To build a bridge for the Phlegrean Giants' assault?
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Is all the order of the universe plunged into chaos?
Will there be no more East and no more West?
The mother of the daylight, dewy Dawn,
Who never fails to give the chariot-reins
Into the hands of Phoebus, now with horror sees
Her kingdom's frontiers in confusion;