Page:Sophocles - Seven Plays, 1900.djvu/69

1146–1179] Come, leader of the starry quire

Quick-panting with their breath of fire!

Lord of high voices of the night,

Child born to him who dwells in light,

Appear with those who, joying in their madness,

Honour the sole dispenser of their gladness,

Thyiads of the Aegean main

Night-long trooping in thy train.

. Neighbours of Cadmus and Amphion’s halls,

No life of mortal, howsoe’er it stand,

Shall once have praise or censure from my mouth;

Since human happiness and human woe

Come even as fickle Fortune smiles or lours;

And none can augur aught from what we see.

Creon erewhile to me was enviable,

Who saved our Thebè from her enemies;

Then, vested with supreme authority,

Ruled her aright; and flourish’d in his home

With noblest progeny. What hath he now?

Nothing. For when a man is lost to joy,

I count him not to live, but reckon him

A living corse. Riches belike are his,

Great riches and the appearance of a King;

But if no gladness come to him, all else

Is shadow of a vapour, weighed with joy.

. What new affliction heaped on sovereignty

Com’st thou to tell?

. They are dead; and they that live

Are guilty of the death.

. The slayer, who?

And who the slain? Declare.

. Haemon is dead,

And by a desperate hand.

. His own, or Creon’s?

. By his own hand, impelled with violent wrath

At Creon for the murder of the maid.

. Ah, Seer! how surely didst thou aim thy word!

. So stands the matter. Make of it what ye list.