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and DEIANEIRA retires into the house。)
CHORUS (Singing)
strophe 1
O ye who dwell by the warm springs between haven and crag; and
by Oeta's heights; O dwellers by the land…locked waters of the
Malian sea; on the shore sacred to the virgin…goddess of the golden
shafts; where the Greeks meet in famous council at the Gates;
antistrophe 1
Soon shall the glorious voice of the flute go up for you again;
resounding with no harsh strain of grief; but with such music as the
lyre maketh to the gods! For the son whom Alcmena bore to Zeus is
hastening homeward; with the trophies of all prowess。
strophe 2
He was lost utterly to our land; a wanderer over sea; while we
waited through twelve long months; and knew nothing; and his loving
wife; sad dweller with sad thoughts; was ever pining amid her tears。
But now the War…god; roused to fury; hath delivered her from the
days of her mourning。
antistrophe 2
May he come; may he come! Pause not the many…oared ship that
carries him; till he shall have reached this town; leaving the
island altar where; as rumour saith; he is sacrificing! Thence may
he come; full of desire; steeped in love by the specious device of the
robe; on which Persuasion hath spread her sovereign charm!
(DEIANEIRA comes out of the house in agitation。)
DEIANEIRA
Friends; how I fear that I may have gone too far in all that I
have been doing just now!
LEADER
What hath happened; Deianeira; daughter of Oeneus?
DEIANEIRA
I know not; but feel a misgiving that I shall presently be found
to have wrought a great mischief; the issue of a fair hope。
LEADER
It is nothing; surely; that concerns thy gift to Heracles?
DEIANEIRA
Yea; even so。 And henceforth I would say to all; act not with
zeal; if ye act without light。
LEADER
Tell us the cause of thy fear; if it may be told。
DEIANEIRA
A thing hath come to pass; my friends; such that; if I declare it;
ye will hear a marvel whereof none could have dreamed。
That with which I was lately anointing the festal robe;… a white
tuft of fleecy sheep's wool;… hath disappeared;… not consumed by
anything in the house; but self…devoured and self…destroyed; as it
crumbled down from the surface of a stone。 But I must tell the story
More at length; that thou mayest know exactly how this thing befell。
I neglected no part of the precepts which the savage Centaur
gave me; when the bitter barb was rankling in his side: they were in
my memory; like the graven words which no hand may wash from a
tablet of bronze。 Now these were his orders; and I obeyed them:…to
keep this unguent in secret place; always remote from fire and from
the sun's warm ray; until I should apply it; newly spread; where I
wished。 So had I done。 And now; when the moment for action had come; I
performed the anointing privily in the house; with a tuft of soft wool
which I had plucked from a sheep of our home…flock; then I folded up
my gift; and laid it; unvisited by sunlight; within its casket; as
ye saw。
But as I was going back into the house; I beheld a thing too
wondrous for words; and passing the wit of man to understand。 I
happened to have thrown the shred of wool; with which I bad been
preparing the robe; into the full blaze of the sunshine。 As it grew
warm; it shrivelled all away; and quickly crumbled to powder on the
ground; like nothing so much as the dust shed from a saw's teeth where
men work timber。 In such a state it lies as it fell。 And from the
earth; where it was strewn; clots of foam seethed up; as when the rich
juice of the blue fruit from the vine of Bacchus is poured upon the
ground。
So I know not; hapless one; whither to turn my thoughts; I only
see that I have done a fearful deed。 Why or wherefore should the
monster; in his death…throes; have shown good will to me; on whose
account he was dying? Impossible! No; he was cajoling me; in order
to slay the man who had smitten him: and I gain the knowledge of
this too late; when it avails no more。 Yes; I alone… unless my
foreboding prove false… I; wretched one; must destroy him! For I
know that the arrow which made the wound did scathe even to the god
Cheiron; and it kills all beasts that it touches。 And since 'tis
this same black venom in the blood that hath passed out through the
wound of Nessus; must it not kill my lord also? I ween it must。
Howbeit; I am resolved that; if he is to fall; at the same time
I also shall be swept from life; for no woman could bear to live
with an evil name; if she rejoices that her nature is not evil。
LEADER
Mischief must needs be feared; but it is not well to doom our hope
before the event。
DEIANEIRA
Unwise counsels leave no room even for a hope which can lend
courage。
LEADER
Yet towards those who have erred unwittingly; men's anger is
softened; and so it should be towards thee。
DEIANEIRA
Nay; such words are not for one who has borne a part in the ill
deed; but only for him who has no trouble at his own door。
LEADER
'Twere well to refrain from further speech; unless thou would'st
tell aught to thine own son; for he is at hand; who went erewhile to
seek his sire。
(Enter HYLLUS)
HYLLUS
O mother; would that one of three things had befallen thee!
Would that thou wert dead;… or; if living; no mother of mine;… or that
some new and better spirit had passed into thy bosom。
DEIANEIRA
Ah; my son; what cause have I given thee to abhor me?
HYLLUS
I tell thee that thy husband… yea; my sire…bath been done to death
by thee this day
DEIANEIRA
Oh; what word hath passed thy lips; my child!
HYLLUS
A word that shall not fail of fulfilment; for who may undo that
which bath come to pass?
DEIANEIRA
What saidst thou; my son? Who is thy warranty for charging me with
a deed so terrible?
HYLLUS
I have seen my father's grievous fate with mine own eyes; I
speak not from hearsay。
DEIANEIRA
And where didst thou find him;… where didst thou stand at his
side?
HYLLUS
If thou art to hear it; then must all be told。
After sacking the famous town of Eurytus; he went his way with the
trophies and first…fruits of victory。 There is a sea…washed headland
of Euboea; Cape Cenaeum; where he dedicated altars and a sacred
grove to the Zeus of his fathers; and there I first beheld him; with
the joy of yearning love。
He was about to celebrate a great sacrifice; when his own
herald; Lichas; came to him from home; bearing thy gift; the deadly
robe; which he put on; according to thy pre