Eumenides

Aeschylus

Aeschylus, Volume 2. Smyth, Herbert Weir, translator. London; New York: William Heinemann; G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1926.

  1. May you make more prosperous the offspring of godly men; for I, like a gardener, cherish the race of these just men, free of sorrow. Pointing to the audience. Such blessings are yours to give. I, for my part, will not allow this city to be without honor among mortals,
  2. this city victorious in the glorious contests of deadly war.
Chorus
  1. I will accept a home with Pallas, and I will not dishonor a city which she, with Zeus the omnipotent and Ares, holds as a fortress of the gods,
  2. the bright ornament that guards the altars of the gods of Hellas. I pray for the city, with favorable prophecy, that the bright gleam of the sun may cause blessings that give happiness to life
  3. to spring from the earth, in plenty.
Athena
  1. I act zealously for these citizens in this way, installing here among them divinities great and hard to please.
  2. For they have been appointed to arrange everything among mortals. Yet the one who has not found them grievous does not know where the blows of life come from. For the sins of his fathers
  3. drag him before them; destruction, in silence and hateful wrath, levels him to the dust, for all his loud boasting.
Chorus
  1. May no hurtful wind blow to harm the trees—I declare my favor—
  2. and may no burning heat, stealing the buds from plants, pass the border of its proper place; may no deadly plague draw near to kill the fruit; may the earth nurture the thriving flocks
  3. with twin offspring at the appointed time; and may the rich produce of the earth always pay the gods’ gift of lucky gain.[*](Because the god’s gifts of precious metals (the Athenians have especially silver in mind) must be found, as it were, by luck; and Hermes is the god of lucky finds. ἕρμαιον is an unexpected find.)
Athena
  1. Do you hear, guards of my city,
  2. the things she will accomplish? For the lady Erinys is very powerful, both with the deathless gods and with those below the earth; and in their dealings with mankind, they accomplish matters visibly, perfectly; to some giving songs,
  3. to others a life made dim by tears.
Chorus
  1. I forbid deadly and untimely fate for men; grant to lovely maidens life with a husband,
  2. you that have the rightful power; you, divine Fates, our sisters by one mother, divinities who distribute justly, who have a share in every home,
  3. and whose righteous visitations press heavily at every season, most honored everywhere among the gods!
Athena
  1. I am glad that they are zealously accomplishing these things for my land;
  2. and I am grateful to Persuasion, that her glance kept watch over my tongue and mouth, when I encountered their fierce refusal. But Zeus of the assembly has prevailed.[*](Zeus presides over the assemblies of citizens and directs the speech of public men.) Our rivalry
  3. in doing good is victorious forever.