Page:The Plays of Euripides Vol. 1- Edward P. Coleridge (1910).djvu/314

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286
EURIPIDES.
[L. 645–724

I think on this, I deem that I am better here than there, father. So let me live on here,[1] for 'tis an equal charm to joy in high estate, or in a humble fortune find a pleasure.

Cho. Well said! if only those I love find their happiness in thy statement of the case.

Xut. Cease such idle talk, and learn to be happy; for on that spot where I discovered thee, my son, will I begin the rites, since I have chanced on the general banquet, open to all comers, and I will offer thy birth sacrifice which aforetime I left undone. And now will I bring thee to the banquet as my guest and rejoice thy heart, and take thee to the Athenian land as a visitor forsooth, not as my own son. For I will not grieve my wife in her childless sorrow by my good fortune. But in time will I seize a happy moment and prevail on her to let thee wield my sceptre o'er the realm. Thy name shall be Ion, in accordance with what happened, for that thou wert the first to cross my path as I came forth from Apollo's sanctuary. Go, gather every friend thou hast, and with them make merry o'er the flesh of sacrifice, on the eve of thy departure from the town of Delphi. On you, ye handmaids, silence I enjoin, for, if ye say one word to my wife, death awaits you.

[Exit Xuthus.

Ion. Well, I will go; one thing my fortune lacks, for if I find not her that gave me birth, life is no life to me, my father; and, if I may make the prayer, Oh may that mother be a daughter of Athens! that from her I may inherit freedom of speech. For if a stranger settle in a city free from aliens, e'en though in name[2] he be a citizen, yet doth he find himself tongue-tied and debarred from open utterance.

[Exit Ion.

Cho. Weeping and lamentation[3] and the beginning of

  1. Reading with Badham ἔα δ᾽ ἔμ᾽ αὐτοῦ for MSS. ἐμαυτῷ.
  2. Conington νόμοισιν.
  3. Reading the emendation of Hermann, ἀλαλαγὰς, which Nauck