Page:Oedipus, King of Thebes (Murray 1911).djvu/28

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
SOPHOCLES
vv. 162–189

And I-ê! I-ê! Apollo, the Pure, the Far-smiter; O Three that keep evil away,
If of old for our city’s desire,
When the death-cloud hung close to her brow,
Ye have banished the wound and the fire,
Oh! come to us now!


[They tell of the Pestilence

Wounds beyond telling; my people sick unto death;
And where is the counsellor, where is the sword of thought?
And Holy Earth in her increase perisheth:
The child dies and the mother awaketh not.
And I-ê! I-ê!
We have seen them, one on another, gone as a bird is gone,
Souls that are flame; yea, higher,
Swifter they pass than fire,
To the rocks of the dying Sun.


[They end by a prayer to Athena,

Their city wasteth unnumbered; their children lie
Where death hath cast them, unpitied, unwept upon.
The altars stand, as in seas of storm a high
Rock standeth, and wives and mothers grey thereon
Weep, weep and pray.
Lo, joy-cries to fright the Destroyer; a flash in the dark they rise,
Then die by the sobs overladen.
Send help, O heaven-born Maiden,
Let us look on the light of her eyes!

12