Page:Four Plays of Aeschylus (1908) Morshead.djvu/175

Rh Ah, but when kin meets kin, when sire and child,

Unknowing, are defiled

By shedding common blood, and when the pit

Of death devoureth it,

Drinking the clotted stain, the gory dye—

Who, who can purify?

Who cleanse pollution, where the ancient bane

Rises and reeks again?

Whilome in olden days the sin was wrought,

And swift requital brought—

Yea on the children of the child came still

New heritage of ill!

For thrice Apollo spoke this word divine,

From Delphi's central shrine,

To Laius—''Die thou childless! thus alone''

Can the land's weal be won!

But vainly with his wife's desire he strove,

And gave himself to love,

Begetting Oedipus, by whom he died,

The fateful parricide!

The sacred seed-plot, his own mother's womb,

He sowed, his house's doom,

A root of blood! by frenzy lured, they came

Unto their wedded shame.

And now the waxing surge, the wave of fate,

Rolls on them, triply great—

One billow sinks, the next towers, high and dark,

Above our city's bark—

Only the narrow barrier of the wall

Totters, as soon to fall;

And, if our chieftains in the storm go down,

What chance can save the town?

Curses, inherited from long ago,

Bring heavy freight of woe:

Rich stores of merchandise o'erload the deck,