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Six Tragedies

Page 29

by Seneca


  The woods were trembling, the whole ground was shaken,

  making the courtyard totter: it seems to hesitate,

  unsure where it can set its weight. A shooting star

  rushes with a black trail on the left part of the sky;

  the dedicated wine is changed to blood

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  and flows into the fire. His royal crown

  kept falling down. In the temples the statues wept.

  All were aghast, but Atreus himself

  alone remained unmoved, and was the one

  to scare the gods that tried to threaten him.

  Without delay he stood at the altar and scowled.

  Just as in the forests of the Ganges

  a hungry tigress prowls between two bullocks,

  wanting to seize them both, but wonders which

  to pounce on and bite first; she turns her jaws

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  * * *

  thyestes

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  this way and that, keeping her hunger waiting —

  so dreadful Atreus watches the boys whose lives are due

  to his unholy rage. He wonders which

  to slaughter first, and which to butcher second.

  It makes no difference, but he ponders, and enjoys

  order in brutality.

  chorus

  So which did he strike?

  messenger Do not imagine he lacked family feeling:

  first to be killed was his father’s namesake, Tantalus.

  chorus How did the boy behave or look as he was killed?

  messenger He stood there unconcerned and he refused

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  to waste his voice on prayers. But the wild murderer

  buried his sword in a deep thrust, and pressing down

  he fixed his hand on his throat; when he drew out the sword

  the corpse still stood; it was unclear for a while

  where it should fall, but it fell on the uncle.

  Then that barbarian dragged Plisthenes to the altar,

  and added him to his brother. He cut through his neck;

  the body without its head flopped to the ground,

  while the head rolled down, protesting indistinctly.

  chorus After the double murder what did he do?

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  Did he spare the little one, or heap more crime on crime?

  messenger Just as the long-maned lion in Armenia

  lies on his heap of victims after slaughter,

  his jaws dripping with blood, his hunger assuaged,

  he does not set aside his anger, everywhere

  he still pursues the cattle, snarling with tired teeth—

  so Atreus rages and swells with his rage,

  holding out the sword drenched in the two boys’ blood,

  careless where his fury leads him, cruelly,

  he drives the blade in the chest of the child, right through,

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  and all at once it pokes out from his back.

  He fell and put the fires out with his blood,

  wounded on both sides, he died.

  chorus What

  savagery!

  messenger Are you horrified? If the crime stopped there,

  Atreus would be holy.

  chorus

  But can nature allow

  a worse atrocity?

  * * *

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  thyestes

  messenger

  You think this the end of his crime?

  It was the first step.

  chorus

  What more could he do? Did he throw

  the bodies to wild beasts to tear, refuse cremation?

  messenger If only he had! If only they lay unburied,

  uncremated corpses, dragged away

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  to be a dismal dinner for wild beasts.

  This man makes normal pain desirable:

  if only the father could see his children unburied!

  Incredible evil! Historians will deny it.

  The entrails ripped from the living children’s bellies

  quiver, their veins throb, the heart still beats in fear;

  but he sorts through the innards, checks the omens,

  and scans the still-hot markings of the veins.

  Once he was happy with the victims, he devoted himself

  to his brother’s dinner. He himself carved up

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  the body into segments, chopped the broad shoulders

  down to the trunk, sawed through the biceps, laid bare

  the limbs and chopped the bones — the cruel monster!

  He only left the heads and hands — hands given in good faith.

  He sticks the organs to the spits, and over the furnace

  they slowly burn and drip; the boiling water

  tosses them as the pot glows hot. The fire jumps over

  the meat he gives it, and repeatedly

  throws it back to the trembling hearth, resisting

  its orders to stay still; it burns against its will.

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  The liver hisses on the spit; I can hardly say

  whether the bodies or the flame groaned louder. The fire turned

  to pitch-black smoke, and the smoke itself, heavy with smog,

  could not drift upwards, could not move up high;

  the malformed cloud covered even the household gods.

  O all-enduring Sun, though you retreated

  and drowned the broken day in the middle sky,

  you set too late!* The father rips apart his sons,

  putting into his murderous mouth his own dear flesh and blood.

  His hair is wet and shiny with perfume, his body heavy

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  with wine; his mouth is overstuffed, his jaws

  can hardly hold new morsels. O Thyestes,

  your only blessing is your ignorance.

  * * *

  thyestes

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  But you will lose that too. If only Titan

  could turn his chariot, meeting his own face,

  and heavy night sent from the dawn usurp the day,

  to cover up this black deed with new darkness.

  But we must see this evil; all is now revealed.

  chorus Why, Lord of Earth and Sky?

  Why is all beauty gone, why is dark night

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  risen at noon? Why this change of yours,

  why destroy day in the middle of day?

  Why, Phoebus, do you rob us of your face?

  The messenger of night, the Evening Star,

  has not yet called the night-light out;

  the turning of the western wheel

  has not yet set to rest its tired horses;

  day had not yet switched to afternoon,

  the trumpeter had not sounded the ninth hour;*

  the oxen were not weary yet — the ploughman

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  stopped, astonished, at the sudden dinner-time.

  What drove you from your heavenly path?

  Why were your horses flung away

  from their usual track? Is Hell’s dungeon opened

  to reveal the conquered Giants, in a new

  attempt at war? Is Tityos, though his torso

  is weary of wounds, renewing his ancient rage?

  Is Typhoeus throwing the mountain off his body,

  and stretching out his bulk? Have the enemies

  from the Phlegraean Field built up a highway

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  and is Pelion pressed by Thracian Ossa?*

  Are the usual cycles of the sky all gone?

  Will there be no more dawn and no more dusk?

  The rosy mother of first light, the Dawn,

  who normally hands the horses’ reins to Phoebus,

  stops in bewilderment:

  her kingdom’s entryway

  is all gone wrong;* she does not know

  how to damp the tired horses or to soak

 
their manes, which smoke with sweat, into the sea.*

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  The setting Sun is quite surprised to see

  Aurora, an unusual guest to him;

  * * *

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  thyestes

  he tells the shadows to grow long although

  night is not ready yet:

  the stars have not inherited the sky,

  no fire lights up the heavens,

  the heavy Moon does not arrange the shadows.

  But whatever it is, let it be night!

  Our hearts go pitter-patter, struck with such dread

  fearing that everything is shaken and may topple

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  into disaster, chaos come again,

  to overwhelm humanity and gods; Nature

  again may cover up the earth and circling sea

  and all the spangles of the painted sky.

  No longer will the Sun, leader of stars,

  raise his eternal torch and usher in

  the seasons, pointing out the proper times

  for summer and winter. The Moon, whose light reflects

  the flames of Phoebus, will no longer take

  terror from night, beating her brother’s horses

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  as she runs her shorter race.

  The mass of gods

  will be heaped away into a single chasm.

  The Zodiac, bearing the constellations,

  the pathway of the sacred orbs, dividing

  zones at a sideways angle, as it turns the years

  now will slip and see its stars have fallen.

  Aries, who brings back the gentle winds

  to ships, when spring has not yet become kind,

  will plunge down headlong underneath the waves,

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  through which he carried Helle,* terrified.

  The Bull too will be lost, whose shining horns

  display the Hyads; after him fall the Twins

  and the curving claws of the Crab.

  The Herculean Lion, burning and flaming with heat,

  will fall from heaven now a second time;

  the Virgin will fall down to the abandoned earth,

  as will the weights of the level, truthful Scales,

  taking with them cruel Scorpio.

  Old Chiron* holding feather-tipped arrows

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  to his Thessalian bow

  * * *

  thyestes

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  will break his string and the arrows will be lost.

  The icy Goat, who brings numb winter back,

  will fall, and break your urn, Aquarius —

  whoever you are.* With you will disappear

  the last stars of the sky,

  Pisces the Fish.

  The wonders never washed in waves before

  will be drowned in the whirlpool which will cover the world.

  The slimy Snake which divides the Bears in half

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  like a river, and cold Ursa Minor

  covered with hard ice, and joined to the larger Snake,

  and the slow guardian of the Great Bear,

  Arctophylax will topple and rush to ruin.

  Were we from all humanity the ones

  who earned destruction, crushed by the overturning

  of the hinges of the world?

  Will the last days come in our time?

  We were born for a cruel lot,

  whether we, poor things, have lost the sun,

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  or forced him into exile. —

  Enough complaints, enough of fear;

  one would have to be greedy for life not to want

  to die when the world is dying.

  ACT FIVE

  atreus My steps are level with the stars, I rise above the world

  touching heaven’s axis with my exalted head.

  Now royal power and my father’s throne are mine.

  No need of gods! Now all my prayers are answered.

  It is good, it is plenty, it is enough, even for me —

  but why, enough? I will go on, and fill the father up

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  with his children’s death. Shame need not stand in my way:

  the day is over: go on while the sky is empty.

  If only I could prevent the gods from leaving,

  drag them down and force them all to watch

  this vengeance feast! — But let the father see it, that is enough.

  Though day resists, I will shake off the shadows,

  * * *

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  thyestes

  under which your misery is hidden.

  You have been lying there eating, looking safe and cheerful,

  for far too long. You have had enough food, enough wine.

  I need Thyestes sober for this horror.

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  Slaves! All of you! Undo the doors of the palace!

  I want the whole house open; party time!

  How sweet to watch him looking at his children’s heads,

  how sweet to see his altered face, to hear him

  as his first grief gushes out. Look, he is dazed;

  he stands there stiff and breathless. This is my work’s harvest:

  I want to watch the onset of his pain.

  The open halls are bright with many torches;

  he flops around on the gold and purple sofa,

  propping his head on his left hand, befuddled with wine.

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  He belches. Yes! I am God! Highest of all the powers,

  and King of Kings! This is better than I dreamed of.

  He is full up. Now he sips from the silver cup.

  Drink! No holding back! There is still plenty of blood;

  there were so many victims. The vintage wine

  camouflages the blood. May this drink, right here, right now,

  round off his meal — a cocktail of his children’s blood.

  He would have drunk my children otherwise. Look, now

  he calls for festive music. He is wasted, out of his mind!

  thyestes Long suffering has numbed my heart.

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  Now set aside your cares!

  Away with grief, away with fear,

  away with that companion of my exile:

  bitter poverty, and shame which weighs

  heavily on the poor. The sense of loss

  is worse than suffering. — Good for me!

  I fell from a great height, but fixed my feet

  firmly on the ground. Good for me!

  I was oppressed by such calamities,

  but bore the burden of my shattered power;

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  I did not break. I was faithful to my royal blood:

  unconquered, upright in the midst of pain,

  I bore the imposition of disaster.

  But now — cast off the clouds of cruel fate,

  away with all the marks of my bad times;

  * * *

  thyestes

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  time for a happy face to greet my joy.

  The old Thyestes is no longer here.

  Unhappy people tend to have this fault:

  never believing happiness has come.

  But good luck can come back again, although

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  those who have suffered distrust celebrations.—

  Pain, you rise up inside me for no reason!

  Why call me back and tell me not to revel

  in this happy day, why say that I should weep?

  Why do you stop me from binding up my hair

  with lovely flowers? It stops me, stop now, stop!

  The spring-time roses topple from my head,

  my hair, so wet from all this spicy perfume,

  stands up on end with sudden shock.

  I had not meant to weep; I find my cheeks are wet.

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  My words are interrupted by my cries.

  Sorrow loves tears — she is used to them.
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  Unhappy people have a strange desire to cry:

  I feel like letting out unlucky groans,

  I feel like tearing up my fancy clothes, deep-dipped

  in Tyrian purple dye. I feel like screaming.

  The mind gives indications of a grief to come,

  prophet of its future pain.

  Sailors know a major storm is coming

  when the calm waters swell without a wind.

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  Madman, what are you imagining?

  What griefs or storms? Be trustful in your heart

  towards your brother. At this point, whatever happens,

  either your fears are groundless, or too late.

  Poor me! I do not want to feel this way:

  but terror wanders in me and my eyes

  gush with sudden tears. There is no cause.

  Is it grief or fear? Or does great pleasure

  make me cry?

  atreus Brother, let us celebrate together

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  this happy day. Today my throne is solid,

  and we are bound in solid trust, sure peace.

  thyestes I am full of food and full of wine.

  The only thing that could increase my pleasure

  * * *

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  thyestes

  is if my boys could join me in my joy.

  atreus Your boys are here, believe me — held by their father.

  They are here and always will be; no part of your children

  can ever be taken from you. I will give you the faces

  you long to see, I will fill you full with them all.

  Do not worry, you will be satisfied. They are mingling

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  with my own boys, and enjoying a holy meal.

  But they will be summoned. Have a drink.

  This is a family cup.

  thyestes

  Thank you for the gift,

  and here’s to brotherhood. Pour a libation first

  to the gods of our fathers; then drink. But what is this?

  My hands refuse me, the cup is too heavy to hold;

  the wine slips from my very lips and pours

  away from my open mouth. How very frustrating!

  Look, even the table is shaking, the ground trembles;

  the fire flickers out; even the heavy sky

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  is empty, stupefied: not night or day.

  What is this? The mighty dome of heaven slips,

  struck over and over; darkness grows more dense;

  night hides herself in night. All stars are gone.

  Whatever it is, I pray the storm may spare

  my brother and my children. Let it strike

  only my wretched head. Now give my children back!

  atreus I will. And they can never be taken from you.

  thyestes My stomach feels upset. What is this rumbling inside me?

 

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