Page:Four Plays of Aeschylus (1908) Morshead.djvu/72

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In night. To pilot wise, the adage saith,

Night is a day of wakefulness and pain.

Therefore no force of weaponed men, as yet,

Scatheless can come ashore, before the bark

Lie at her anchorage securely moored.

Bethink thee therefore, nor in panic leave

The shrine of gods whose succour thou hast won.

I go for aid—men shall not blame me long,

Old, but with youth at heart and on my tongue.

[Exit.

O land of hill and dale, O holy land,

What shall befall us? whither shall we flee,

From Apian land to some dark lair of earth?

O would that in vapour of smoke I might rise to the clouds of the sky,

That as dust which flits up without wings I might pass and evanish and die!

I dare not, I dare not abide: my heart yearns, eager to fly;

And dark is the cast of my thought; I shudder and tremble for fear.

My father looked forth and beheld: I die of the sight that draws near.

And for me be the strangling cord, the halter made ready by Fate,

Before to my body draws nigh the man of my horror and hate.

Nay, ere I will own him as lord, as handmaid to Hades I go!

And oh, that aloft in the sky, where the dark clouds are frozen to snow,

A refuge for me might be found, or a mountain-top smooth and too high