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PERSEUS THE
DELIVERER
Part - I
The Legend of Perseus
ACRISIUS, the Argive king, warned by an
oracle that his daughter's son would be the agent of his death,
hoped to escape his doom by shutting her up in a brazen tower.
But Zeus, the King of the Gods, descended into her prison in
a shower of gold and Danae bore to him a son named Perseus.
Danaë and her child were exposed in a boat without sail or oar
on the sea, but here too fate and the gods intervened and, guided
by a divine protection, the boat bore her safely to the Island of
Seriphos. There Danaë was received and honoured by the King.
When Perseus had grown to manhood the King, wishing to marry
Danae, decided to send him to his death and to that end ordered
him to slay the Gorgon Medusa in the wild, unknown and snowy
North and bring to him her head the sight of which turned men to
stone. Perseus, aided by Athene, the Goddess of Wisdom, who
gave him the divine sword Herpe, winged shoes to bear him
through the air, her shield or aegis and the cap of invisibility,
succeeded in his quest after many adventures. In his returning he
came to Syria and found Andromeda, daughter of Cepheus and
Cassiopea, King and Queen of Syria, chained to the rocks by the
people to be devoured by a sea-monster as an atonement for her
mother's impiety against the sea-god, Poseidon. Perseus slew the
monster and rescued and wedded Andromeda.
In this piece the ancient legend has been divested of its original character of a heroic myth; it is made the nucleus round
which there could grow the scenes of a romantic story of human
temperament and life-impulses on the Elizabethan model.
The country in which the action is located is a Syria of romance,
not of history. Indeed a Hellenic legend could not at all be set
in the environments of the life of a Semitic people and its early
Aramaean civilisation: the town of Cepheus must be looked at
as a Greek colony with a blonde Achaean dynasty ruling a Hellenised people who worship an old Mediterranean deity under a
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Greek name. In a romantic work of imagination of this type
these outrages on history do not matter. Time there is more than
Einsteinian in its relativity, the creative imagination is its sole
disposer and arranger; fantasy reigns sovereign; the names of
ancient countries and peoples are brought in only as fringes of a
decorative background; anachronisms romp in wherever they
can get an easy admittance, ideas and associations from all
climes and epochs mingle; myth, romance and realism make up
a single whole. For here the stage is the human mind of all
times: the subject is an incident in its passage from a semi-primitive temperament surviving in a fairly advanced outward
civilisation to a brighter intellectualism and humanism — never
quite safe against the resurgence of the dark or violent life-forces
which are always there subdued or subordinated or somnolent
in the make-up of civilised man — and the first promptings of
the deeper and higher psychic and spiritual being which it is his
ultimate destiny to become.
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PERSONS OF THE DRAMA
PALLAS
ATHENE.
POSEIDON.
PERSEUS, son of Zeus and
Danaë.
CEPHEUS, King of Syria.
IOLAUS, son of Cepheus and Cassiopea.
POLYDAON, priest of Poseidon.
PHINEUS, King of Tyre.
THEROPS, a popular leader.
PERISSUS, a citizen butcher.
DERCETES, a Syrian captain.
NEBASSAR, captain of the Chaldean Guard.
CIREAS, a servant in the temple of Poseidon.
MEDES,
an usher in the palace.
CASSIOPEA, princess of Chaldea, Queen of Syria.
ANDROMEDA, daughter of Cepheus and Cassiopea.
CYDONE, mistress of
Iolaus.
PRAXILLA, head of the palace household in the
women's apartments.
DIOMEDE, a slave-girl, servant and playmate of Andromeda.
SCENE
: The city of Cepheus, the seashore, the temple of Poseidon
on the headland and the surrounding country.
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Prologue
The Ocean in tumult, and the sky in storm: Pallas Athene appears
in the heavens, with lightnings playing over her head and under
her feet.
ATHENE
Error of waters rustling through the world,
Vast Ocean, call thy ravenous waves that march
With blue fierce nostrils quivering for prey,
Back to thy feet. Hush thy impatient surges
At my divine command and do my will.
VOICES
OF THE SEA
Who art thou layest thy serene command
Upon the untamed waters ?
ATHENE
I am Pallas,
Daughter of the Omnipotent.
VOICES
What wouldst thou?
For we cannot resist thee; our clamorous hearts
Are hushed in terror at thy marble feet.
ATHENE
Awake your dread Poseidon. Bid him rise
And come before me.
VOICES
Let thy compelling voice
Awake him: for the sea is hushed.
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ATHENE
Arise,
Illimitable Poseidon! let thy blue
And streaming tresses mingle with the foam
Emerging into light.
Poseidon appears upon the waters.
POSEIDON
What quiet voice
Compels me from my rocky pillow piled
Upon the floor of the enormous deep ?
VOICES
A whiteness and a strength is in the skies.
POSEIDON
How art thou white and beautiful and calm,
Yet clothed in tumult! Heaven above thee shakes
Wounded with lightnings, goddess, and the sea
Flees from thy dreadful tranquil feet. Thy calm
Troubles me: who art thou, dweller in the light?
ATHENE
I am Athene.
POSEIDON
Virgin formidable
In beauty, disturber of the ancient world!
Ever thou seekest to enslave to man
The eternal Universe, and our huge motions
That shake the mountains and upheave the seas
Wouldst with the glancing visions of thy brain
Coerce and bridle.
ATHENE
Me the Omnipotent
Made from His being to lead and discipline
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The immortal spirit of man, till it attain
To order and magnificent mastery
Of all his outward world.
POSEIDON
What wouldst thou of me ?
ATHENE
The powers of the earth have kissed my feet
In deep submission, and they yield me tribute,
Olives and corn and all fruit-bearing trees,
And silver from the bowels of the hills,
Marble and iron ore. Fire is my servant.
But thou, Poseidon, with thy kindred gods
And the wild wings of air resist me. I come
To set my feet upon thy azure locks,
O shaker of the cliffs. Adore thy sovereign.
POSEIDON
The anarchy of the enormous seas
Is mine, O terrible Athene: I sway
Their billows with my nod. Man's feeble feet
Leave there no traces, nor his destiny
Has any hold upon the shifting waves.
ATHENE
Thou severest him with thy unmeasured wastes
Whom I would weld in one. But I will lead him
Over thy waters, thou wild thunderer,
Spurning thy tops in hollowed fragile trees.
He shall be confident in me and dare
The immeasurable oceans till the West
Mingles with India, and reach the northern isles
That dwell beneath my dancing aegis bright,
Snow-weary. He shall, armed with clamorous fire,
Rush o'er the angry waters when the whale
Is stunned between two waves and slay his foe
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Betwixt the thunders. Therefore I bid thee not,
O azure strong Poseidon, to abate
Thy savage tumults: rather his march oppose.
For through the shocks of difficulty and death
Man shall attain his godhead.
POSEIDON
What then desir'st thou.
Athene?
ATHENE
On yonder inhospitable coast
Far-venturing merchants from the East, or those
Who put from Tyre towards Atlantic gains,
Are by thy trident fiercely shaken forth
Upon the jagged rocks, and who escape,
The gay and savage Syrians on their altars
Massacre hideously, thee to propitiate,
Moloch-Poseidon of the Syrian coasts,
Dagon of Gaza, lord of many names
And many natures, many forms of power
Who rulest from Philistia to the north,
A terror and a woe. O iron King,
Desist from blood, be glad of kindlier gifts
And suffer men to live.
POSEIDON
Behold, Athene,
My waters! see them lift their foam-white tops
Charging from sky to sky in rapid tumult:
Admire their force, admire their thunderous speed.
With green hooves and white manes they trample onwards.
My mighty voices fill the world, Athene.
Shall I permit the grand anarchic seas
To be a road and the imperious Ocean
A means of merchandise ? Shall the frail keels
Of thy ephemeral mortals score its back
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With servile furrows and petty souls of men
Triumphing tame the illimitable sea?
I am not of the mild and later gods,
But of that elder world; Lemuria
And old Atlantis raised me crimson altars,
And my huge nostrils keep that scent of blood
For which they quiver. Return into thy heavens,
Pallas Athene, I into my deep.
ATHENE
Dash then thy billows up against my aegis
In battle! think not to hide in thy deep oceans;
For I will drive thy waters from the world
And leave thee naked to the light.
POSEIDON
Dread virgin!
I will not war with thee, armipotent.
ATHENE
Then send thy champion forth to meet my champion,
And let their conflict govern ours, Poseidon.
POSEIDON
Who is thy champion ?
ATHENE
Perseus, the Olympian's son,
Whom Danae in her strong brazen tower,
Acrisius' daughter, bore, by heavenly gold
Lapped into slumber: for of that shining rain
He is the beautiful offspring.
POSEIDON
The parricide
That is to be ? But my sea-monster's fangs
And fiery breathings shall prevent that murder.
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Farewell, Athene.
ATHENE
Farewell, until I press
My feet upon thy blue enormous mane
And add thy Ocean to my growing empire.
Poseidon disappears into the sea.
He dives into the deep and with a din
The thunderous divided waters meet
Above his grisly head. Thou wingest, Perseus,
From northern snows to this fair sunny land,
Not knowing in the night what way thou wendest;
But the dawn comes and over earth's far rim
The round sun rises, as thyself shalt rise
On Syria and thy rosy Andromeda,
A thing of light. Rejoice, thou famous hero!
Be glad of love, be glad of life, whose bosom
Harbours the quiet strength of pure Athene.
She disappears into light.
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