Page:Sophocles - Seven Plays, 1900.djvu/72

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
38
ANTIGONE
[1253–1283

Mess. Well, we may learn, if there be aught unseen
Suppressed within her grief-distempered soul,
By going within the palace. Ye say well:
There is a danger, even in too much silence.

Ch. Ah! look where sadly comes our lord the King,
Bearing upon his arm a monument—
If we may speak it—of no foreign woe,
But of his own infirmity the fruit.

Enter Creon with the body of Haemon.

Cr. O error of my insensate soul, I 1
Stubborn, and deadly in the fateful end!
O ye who now behold
Slayer and slain of the same kindred blood!
O bitter consequence of seeming-wise decree!
Alas, my son!
Strange to the world wert thou, and strange the fate
That took thee off, that slew thee; woe is me!
Not for thy rashness, but my folly. Ah me!

Ch. Alas for him who sees the right too late!

Cr. Alas!
I have learnt it now. But then upon my head
Some God had smitten with dire weight of doom;
And plunged me in a furious course, woe is me!
Discomforting and trampling on my joy.
Woe! for the bitterness of mortal pain!

Enter 2nd Messenger.

2nd Mess. My lord and master. Thou art master here
Of nought but sorrows. One within thine arms
Thou bear’st with thee, and in thy palace hall
Thou hast possession of another grief,
Which soon thou shalt behold.

Cr. What more of woe,
Or what more woeful, sounds anew from thee?

2nd Mess. The honoured mother of that corse, thy queen,
Is dead, and bleeding with a new-given wound.