Page:Four Plays of Aeschylus (1908) Morshead.djvu/166

136 Upon a mystic spear-head which he deems

More holy than a godhead and more sure

To find its mark than any glance of eye,

That, will they, nill they, he will storm and sack

The hold of the Cadmeans. Such his oath—

His, the bold warrior, yet of childish years,

A bud of beauty's foremost flower, the son

Of Zeus and of the mountain maid. I mark

How the soft down is waxing on his cheek,

Thick and close-growing in its tender prime—

In name, not mood, is he a maiden's child—

Parthenopaeus; large and bright his eyes

But fierce the wrath wherewith he fronts the gate:

Yet not unheralded he takes his stand

Before the portal; on his brazen shield,

The rounded screen and shelter of his form,

I saw him show the ravening Sphinx, the fiend

That shamed our city—how it glared and moved,

Clamped on the buckler, wrought in high relief!

And in its claws did a Cadmean bear—

Nor heretofore, for any single prey,

Sped she aloft, through such a storm of darts

As now awaits her. So our foe is here—

Like, as I deem, to ply no stinted trade

In blood and broil, but traffick as is meet

In fierce exchange for his long wayfaring!

Ah, may they meet the doom they think to bring—

They and their impious vaunts—from those on high!

So should they sink, hurled down to deepest death!

This foe, at least, by thee Arcadian styled,

Is faced by one who bears no braggart sign,

But his hand sees to smite, where blows avail—