Page:Four Plays of Aeschylus (Cookson).djvu/94

82 Xerxes the King (Oh King unwise!)

Steered in the wake of doom his orient argosies!

How fell it that Darius, lord of the bow,

In Susa long ago,

Fair fortune had? That then

He who ruled Persia won the hearts of men?

The ships, the swarthy ships, with brow of gloom

And wide wings woven on the weary loom,

Landsmen and mariners haled to that far shore!

The ships, the black ships whelmed them evermore!

They struck, they split, they filled,

They sank: and, oh, death's throes Ionian vengeance stilled.

And now by plain and pass, rude, wild and bare,

In the frore Thracian air,

After long wandering,

Scarce 'scaped with life, comes home our lord the King.

But they on that wild water,

Firstlings of death and slaughter,

Roam, where the long waves lash Kychrean sands;

Roam, but no wave shall lift them,

Nor ebb nor flood-tide drift them

To this dear earth beloved above all lands.

Wide as the sky, and deep

As those dark waters sweep,

Wail! let grief gnaw your heart, and wring your hands!

Combed with no tender combing,

Where angry waves break foaming,

Children of Ocean's unpolluted tide

Flesh their dumb mouths, and tear

The dead men once so fair: