Page:Tragedies of Sophocles (Plumptre 1878).djvu/576

478 Rejoiceth more than he who tells the tale,

And has but taunts and jeers

For all the sorrows that o'er thee prevail;

For if one takes his aim

Against the great,

He shall not fail, attacking their fair fame;

But one who should relate

Such tales of me would little credence gain;

For envy still attends on high estate:

And yet the poor but little may sustain,

Weak tower and bulwark they,

Who have not great and mighty men their stay;

And still the great must own

The poor and weak the best props of their throne.

Yet men are slow to see,

Senseless and blind, the truth of laws like these.

And now, Ο king, on thee

Such men pour idle clamour, as they please,

And we are weak and frail,

And without thee to ward them off we fail;

But when thy form shall fill their souls with fear,

As flocks of wingèd birds in fluttering haste,

When swoops a vulture near,

Raise din and chattering loud,

So, should'st thou once appear,

They too would crouch in dread, a dumb and voiceless crowd.

Yes, of a truth, the huntress Artemis,

Daughter of Zeus, the wild bull bringing low,

(O dark and evil fame!

Ο mother of my shame!)

She, she hath urged and driven thee on to this,