|
The Temple of Poseidon.
Polydaon, Therops, Dercetes, Cydone, Damoetes and a great
number of Syrians, men and women. Iolaus stands bound, a little
to the side: Cepheus and Cassiopea surrounded by armed men.
POLYDAON
Cepheus and Cassiopea, man and woman,
Not sovereigns now, you see what end they have
Who war upon the gods.
CASSIOPEA
To see thy end
My eyes wait only.
POLYDAON
Let them see something likelier,
Is't not thy son who wears those cords and that
An altar ? What! the eyes are drowned in tears
Where fire was once so ready! Where is thy pride,
O Cassiopea ?
CASSIOPEA
There are other gods
Than thy Poseidon, They shall punish thee.
POLYDAON
If thou knew'st who I am, which is most secret,
Thou wouldst not utter vain and foolish wishes.
When thou art slain, I will reveal myself.
CASSIOPEA
Thou hast revealed thyself for what thou art
Already, a madman and inhuman monster.
Page
– 166
CEPHEUS
My queen, refrain from words.
DAMOETES
Perissus comes.
CASSIOPEA
Ah God!
THEROPS
Look, the Queen swoons! Oh, look to her!
Perissus enters.
POLYDAON
Yes, raise her up, bring back her senses: now
I would not have them clouded. News, Perissus!
Thy face is troubled and thy eyes stare wildly.
PERISSUS
Stare, do they ? They may stare, for they have cause.
You too will stare soon. Viceroy Polydaon.
THEROPS
What rare thing happened ? The heavens were troubled
strangely,
Although their rifts were blue. What hast thou seen ?
PERISSUS
I have seen hell and heaven at grips together.
POLYDAON
What do I care for hell or heaven ? Your news!
Did the sea-monster come and eat and go ?
PERISSUS
He came but went not.
Page
– 167
POLYDAON
Was not the maiden seized ?
PERISSUS
Ay, was she, in a close and mighty grasp.
POLYDAON
By the sea-beast?
PERISSUS
Tis said we all are animals;
Then so was he: but 'twas a glorious beast.
POLYDAON
And was she quite devoured ?
PERISSUS
Why, in a manner,—
If kisses eat.
POLYDAON
Ha! ha! such soft caresses
May all my enemies have. She was not torn ?
What, was she taken whole and quite engulfed ?
PERISSUS
Something like that.
POLYDAON
You speak with difficult slowness
And strangely. Where's your blithe robustness gone,
Perissus?
PERISSUS
Coming, with the beast. He lifted her
Mightily from the cliff to heaven.
Page
– 168
POLYDAON
So, Queen,
Nothing is left thee of Andromeda.
PERISSUS
Why, something yet, a sweet and handsome piece.
POLYDAON
You should have brought it here, my merry butcher,
That remnant of her daughter.
PERISSUS
It is coming.
POLYDAON
Ho, ho! then you shall see your daughter. Queen.
DERCETES
This is a horrid and inhuman laughter.
Restrain thy humour, priest! My sword's uneasy.
THEROPS
It is a scandal in Poseidon's temple.
POLYDAON
Do you oppose me ?
(to Therops)
Wilt thou resist Poseidon,
Misguided mortal ?
DERCETES
He glares and his mouth works,
This is a maniac. Does a madman rule us ?
THEROPS
There has been much of violence and mad fierceness,
Such as in tumults may be pardoned. Now
It is the tranquil hour of victory
Page
– 169
When decency should reign and mercy too.
What do we gain by torturing this poor Queen
And most unhappy King?
POLYDAON
Hear him, O people!
He favours great Poseidon's enemies.
Therops turns traitor.
DAMOETES
He rails at the good priest.
CRIES
Therops a traitor!
MEGAS
Therops, thou favour kings ?
Thou traitor to Poseidon and his people ?
GARDAS
I say, hear Therops. He is always right,
Our Therops; he has brains.
CRIES
Hear Therops, Therops !
THEROPS
Let them be punished, but with exile only.
I am no traitor. I worked for you, O people,
When this false priest was with the King of Tyre
Plotting to lay on you a foreign chain.
CRIES
Is it so? Is it the truth? Speak, Polydaon.
POLYDAON
Must I defend myself? Was it not I
Page
– 170
Who led you on to victory and turned
The wrath of dire Poseidon ? If you doubt me,
Be then the sacrifice forbidden; let Cepheus
And Cassiopea reign; but when the dogs
Of grim Poseidon howl again behind you,
Call not to me for help; I will not always pardon.
CRIES
Polydaon, Polydaon, Poseidon's mighty Viceroy! Kill
Therops! Iolaus upon the altar!
POLYDAON
Now you are wise again. Leave this Therops.
Bring Iolaus to the altar here.
Lay bare his bosom for the knife.
THEROPS
Dercetes,
Shall this be allowed?
DERCETES
We must not dare offend
Poseidon. But when it's over, I'll break in
With all my faithful spears and save the King
And Cassiopea. Therops, 'twould be a nightmare,
The rule of that fierce priest and fiercer rabble.
THEROPS
With all the better sort I will support thee.
PERISSUS
Therops, my crowd-compeller, my eloquent Zeus of the market-place, I know thy heart is big with the sweet passion of
repentance, but let it not burst into action yet. Keep thy fleet
sharp spears at rest, Dercetes. There are times, my little captain,
and there is a season. Watch and wait. The gods are at work and Iolaus shall not die.
Page
– 171
POLYDAON
We only wait until our mighty wrath
Is shown you in the mangled worst offender
Against our godhead. Then, O Cassiopea,
I'll watch thy eyes.
PERISSUS
Behold her, Polydaon.
Perseus and Andromeda enter the temple.
CRIES
Andromeda! Andromeda! who has unchained her?
It is Andromeda!
CEPHEUS
It is the spirit of Andromeda.
THEROPS
Shadows were ne'er so bright, had never smile
So sunny! she is given back to earth:
It is the radiant winged Hermes brings her.
DERCETES
'Tis he who baffled us upon the beach.
I see the gods are busy in our Syria.
Andromeda runs to Cassiopea and clasps and kisses
her knees: the soldiers making way for her.
CASSIOPEA
(taking Andromeda's face between her hands)
O my sweet child, thou livest!
ANDROMEDA
Mother, mother!
I live and see the light and grief is ended.
CASSIOPEA
(lifting Andromeda into her arms)
I hold thee living on my bosom. What grief
Page
– 172
Can happen now ?
CEPHEUS
Andromeda, my daughter!
POLYDAON
(awaking from his amazement)
Confusions! Butcher, thou hast betrayed me. Seize them!
They shall all die upon my mighty altar.
Seize them!
PERSEUS
(confronting him)
Priest of Poseidon and of death,
Three days thou gav'st me: it is but the second.
I am here. Dost thou require the sacrifice ?
POLYDAON
Art thou a god ? I am a greater, dreadfuller.
Tremble and go from me: I need thee not.
PERSEUS
Expect thy punishment. Syrians, behold me,
The victim snatched from grim Poseidon's altar.
My sword has rescued sweet Andromeda
And slain the monster of the deep. You asked
For victims? I am here. Whose knife is ready?
Let him approach.
THEROPS
Who art thou, mighty hero ?
Declare unto this people thy renown
And thy unequalled actions. What high godhead
Befriends thee in battle ?
PERSEUS
Syrians, I am Perseus,
The mighty son of Zeus and Danaë.
The blood of gods is in my veins, the strength
Page
– 173
Of gods is in my arm: Athene helps me.
Behold her aegis, which if I uncover
Will blind you with its lightnings; and this sword
Is Herpe, which can pierce the earth and Hades.
What I have done, is by Athene's strength.
Borne from Seriphos through pellucid air
Upon these winged shoes, in the far west
I have traversed unknown lands and nameless continents
And seas where never came the plash of human oars.
On torrid coasts burned by the desert wind
I have seen great Atlas buttressing the sky,
His giant head companion of the stars,
And changed him into a hill; the northern snows
Illimitable I have trod, where Nature
Is awed to silence, chilled to rigid whiteness;
I have entered caverns dim where death was born:
And I have taken from the dim-dwelling Graiae
Their wondrous eye that sees the past and future:
And I have slain the Gorgon, dire Medusa,
Her head that turns the living man to stone
Locking into my wallet: last, today,
In Syria by the loud Aegean surges
I have done this deed that men shall ever speak of.
Ascending with winged feet the clamorous air
I have cloven Poseidon's monster whose rock-teeth
And fiery mouth swallowed your sons and daughters.
Where now has gone the sea-god's giant stride
That filled with heads of foam your fruitful fields ?
I have dashed back the leaping angry waters;
His Ocean-force has yielded to a mortal.
Even while I speak, the world has changed around you
Syrians, the earth is calm, the heavens smile;
A mighty silence listens on the sea.
All this I have done, and yet not I, but one greater.
Such is Athene's might and theirs who serve her.
You know me now, O Syrians, and my strength
I have concealed not. Let no man hereafter
Page
– 174
Complain that I deceived him to his doom.
Speak now. Which of you all demands a victim ?
He pauses: there is silence.
What, you have howled and maddened, bound sweet women
For slaughter, roared to have the hearts of princes,
And are you silent .now ? Who is for victims ?
Who sacrifices Perseus?
THEROPS
Speak! Is there
A fool so death-devoted ?
PERSEUS
Claims any man victims ?
CRIES
There's none, great Perseus.
PERSEUS
Then, I here release
Andromeda and Iolaus, Syrians,
From the death-doom: to Cepheus give his crown
Once more. Does any man gainsay my action ?
Would any rule in Syria?
CRIES
None, mighty Perseus.
PERSEUS
Iolaus, sweet friend, my work is finished.
He severs his bonds.
IOLAUS
O mighty father, suffer me for thee
To take thy crown from the unworthy soil
Where rude hands tumbled it. 'Twill now sit steady.
Dercetes, art thou loyal once again ?
Page
– 175
DERCETES
For ever.
IOLAUS
Therops!
THEROPS
I have abjured rebellion.
IOLAUS
Lead then my royal parents to their home
With martial pomp and music. And let the people
Cover their foul revolt with meek obedience.
One guiltiest head shall pay you forfeit: the rest,
Since terror and religious frenzy moved
To mutiny, not their sober wills, shall all
Be pardoned.
CRIES
Iolaus! Iolaus!
Long live the Syrian, noble Iolaus!
IOLAUS
Andromeda, and thou, my sweet Cydone,
Go with them.
CEPHEUS
I approve thy sentence, son.
Dercetes and his soldiers, Therops and the
Syrians leave the temple conducting Cepheus
and Cassiopea, Andromeda and Cydone.
IOLAUS
Now, Polydaon, —
POLYDAON
I have seen all and laughed.
Page
– 176
Iolaus, and thou, O Argive Perseus,
You know not who I am. I have endured
Your foolish transient triumph that you might feel
My punishments more bitter-terrible.
Tis time, 'tis time. I will reveal myself.
Your horror-staring eyes shall know me, princes,
When I hurl death and Ocean on your heads.
PERSEUS
The man is frantic.
IOLAUS
Defeat has turned him mad.
PERISSUS
I have seen this coming on him for a season and a half. He
was a fox at first, but this tumult gave him claws and muscles
and he turned tiger. This is the end. What, Polydaon! Good
cheer, priest! Roll not thy eyes: I am thy friend Perissus,
I am thy old loving school-mate; are we not now fellow-craftsmen, priest and butcher?
POLYDAON
Do you not see ? I wave my sapphire locks
And earth is quaking. Quake, earth! rise, my great Ocean!
Earth, shake my foemen from thy back! clasp, sea,
And kiss them dead, thou huge voluptuary.
Come barking from your stables, my sweet monsters:
With blood-stained fangs and fiery mouths avenge me
Mocking their victory. Thou, brother Zeus,
Rain curses from thy skies. What, is all silent?
I'll tear thee. Ocean, into watery bits
And strip thy oozy basal rocks quite naked
If thou obey me not.
IOLAUS
(advancing)
He must be seized
Page
– 177
And bound.
PERSEUS
Pause. See, he foams and clutches!
Polydaon falls to the ground.
He
Is sentenced.
PERISSUS
Polydaon, old crony, grows thy soul too great within thee?
dost thou kick the unworthy earth and hit out with thy noble
fists at Heaven?
IOLAUS
It was a fit, it is over. He lies back white
And shaking.
POLYDAON
(As he speaks, his utterance is hacked by pauses of silence. He seems unconscious of those around him, his being is withdrawing from the body and he lives only in an inner consciousness and its vision.)
I was Poseidon but this moment.
Now he departs from me and leaves me feeble:
I have become a dull and puny mortal.
(half rising)
It was not I but thou who feared'st, god.
I would have spoken, but thou wert chilled and stone.
What feared'st thou or whom? Wert thou alarmed
By the godhead lurking in man's secret soul
Or deity greater than thy own appalled thee?...
Forgive, forgive! pass not away from me.
Thy power is now my breath and I shall perish
If thou withdraw.... He stands beside me still
Shaking his gloomy locks and glares at me
Saying it was my sin and false ambition
Undid him. Was I not fearless as thou bad'st me ?
Page
– 178
Ah, he has gone into invisible
Vast silences!... Whose, whose is this bright glory?
One stands now in his place and looks at me.
Imperious is his calm Olympian brow,
The sea's blue unfathomed depths gaze from his eyes,
Wide sea-blue locks crown his majestic shape:
A mystic trident arms his tranquil might.
As one new-born to himself and to the world
He turns from me with the surges in his stride
To seek his Ocean empire. Earth bows down
Trembling with awe of his unbearable steps,
Heaven is the mirror of his purple greatness....
But whose was that dimmer and tremendous image?...
A horror of darkness is around me still,
But the joy and might have gone out of my breast
And left me mortal, a poor human thing
With whom death and the fates can do their will....
But his presence yet is with me, near to me....
Was I not something more than earthly man ?...
(with a cry)
It was myself, the shadow, the hostile god!
I am abandoned to my evil self.
That was the darkness!... But there was something more
Insistent, dreadful, other than myself!
Whoever thou art, spare me.... I am gone, I am taken.
In his tremendous clutch he bears me off
Into thick cloud; I see black Hell, the knives
Fire-pointed touch my breast. Spare me, Poseidon....
Save me, O brilliant God, forgive and save.
He falls back dead.
PERSEUS
Who then can save a man from his own self?
IOLAUS
He is ended, his own evil has destroyed him.
Page
– 179
PERSEUS
This man for a few hours became the vessel
Of an occult and formidable Force
And through his form it did fierce terrible things
Unhuman: but his small and gloomy mind
And impure dark heart could not contain the Force.
It turned in him to madness and demoniac
Huge longings. Then the Power withdrew from him
Leaving the broken incapable instrument,
And all its might was split from his body. Better
To be a common man mid common men
And live an unaspiring mortal life
Than call into oneself a Titan strength
Too dire and mighty for its human frame,
That only afflicts the oppressed astonished world,
Then breaks its user.
IOLAUS
But best to be Heaven's child.
Only the sons of gods can harbour gods.
PERISSUS
Art thou then gone, Polydaon ? My monarch of breast-hackers,
this was an evil ending. My heart is full of woe for thee, my
fellow-butcher.
IOLAUS
The gods have punished him for his offences,
Ambition and a hideous cruelty
Ingenious in mere horror.
PERSEUS
Burn him with rites,
If that may help his soul by dark Cocytus.
But let us go and end these strange upheavals:
Call Cireas from his hiding for reward,
Tyrnaus too, and Smerdas from his prison,
Page
– 180
Fair Diomede from Cyclone's house.
Humble or high, let all have their deserts
Who partners were or causes of our troubles.
IOLAUS
There's Phineus will ask reasons.
PERSEUS
He shall be satisfied.
PERISSUS
He cannot be satisfied, his nose is too long; it will not listen
to reason, for it thinks all the reason and policy in the world are
shut up in the small brain to which it is a long hooked outlet.
PERSEUS
Perissus, come with me: for thou wert kind
To my fair sweetness; it shall be remembered.
PERISSUS
There was nothing astonishing in that: I am as chockfull with
natural kindness as a rabbit is with guts; I have bowels, great
Perseus. For am I not Perissus? am I not the butcher?
They go out: the curtain falls.
Page
– 181
HOME
|