Page:Four Plays of Aeschylus (1908) Morshead.djvu/148

118 Spare ye at least this town, nor root it up,

By violence of the foemen, stock and stem!

For here, from home and hearth, rings Hellas' tongue.

Forbid that e'er the yoke of slavery

Should bow this land of freedom, Cadmus' hold!

Be ye her help! your cause I plead with mine—

A city saved doth honour to her gods!

[Exit, etc. Enter the .

I wail in the stress of my terror, and shrill is my cry of despair.

The foemen roll forth from their camp as a billow, and onward they bear!

Their horsemen are swift in the forefront, the dust rises up to the sky,

A signal, though speechless, of doom, a herald more clear than a cry!

Hoof-trampled, the land of my love bears onward the din to mine ears.

As a torrent descending a mountain, it thunders and echoes and nears!

The doom is unloosened and cometh! O kings and O queens of high Heaven,

Prevail that it fall not upon us! the sign for their onset is given—

They stream to the walls from without, white-shielded and keen for the fray.

They storm to the citadel gates—what god or what goddess can stay

The rush of their feet? to what shrine shall I bow me in terror and pray?