<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg002.perseus-eng2:858-929</requestUrn>
            </request>
            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg002.perseus-eng2:858-929</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg002.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="choral"><div type="textpart" subtype="antistrophe" n="2"><sp><l n="858" resp="p">You have touched on my most bitter
                                thought </l><l n="860" resp="p">and moved my ever-renewed pity for my father and for the
                                entire doom ordained for us, the famed house of Labdacus. Oh, the
                                horrors of our mother’s bed! Oh, the slumbers of the wretched mother
                                at the side </l><l n="865" resp="p">of her own son, my own father! What manner of parents
                            gave me my miserable being! It is to them that I go like this, accursed
                            and unwed, to share their home. </l><l n="870" resp="p">Ah, my brother, the marriage you made was doomed, and by dying you
                            killed me still alive!</l></sp></div><milestone unit="card" n="872"/><div type="textpart" subtype="antistrophe" n="3"><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="872" resp="p">Your pious action shows a certain
                            reverence, but an offence against power can no way be tolerated by him
                            who has power in his keeping. </l><l n="875" resp="p">Your
                            self-willed disposition is what has destroyed you.</l></sp></div><milestone unit="card" n="876"/><div type="textpart" subtype="anapests"><sp><speaker>Antigone</speaker><l n="876" resp="p">Unwept, unfriended, without
                            marriage-song, I am led in misery on this journey that cannot be put
                            off. No longer is it permitted me, unhappy girl, </l><l n="880" resp="p">to look up at this sacred eye of the burning
                            sun. But for my fate no tear is shed, no friend moans in sorrow.</l></sp></div></div><milestone unit="card" n="883"/><div type="textpart" subtype="episode"><stage>Enter Creon.</stage><sp><speaker>Creon</speaker><l n="883" resp="p">Do you not know that dirges and
                            wailing before death would never be given up, if it were allowed to make
                            them freely? </l><l n="885" resp="p">Take her away—now!
                            And when you have enshrouded her, as I proclaimed, in her covered tomb,
                            leave her alone, deserted—let her decide whether she wishes to die or to
                            live entombed in such a home. It makes no difference, since our hands
                            are clean so far as regards this girl. </l><l n="890" resp="p">But no matter what, she will be stripped of her home
                            here above.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Antigone</speaker><l n="891" resp="p">Tomb, bridal-chamber, deep-dug eternal prison where I go to find my own,
                            whom in the greatest numbers destruction has seized and Persephone has
                            welcomed among the dead! </l><l n="895" resp="p">Last of
                            them all and in by far the most shameful circumstances, I will descend,
                            even before the fated term of my life is spent. But I cherish strong
                            hopes that I will arrive welcome to my father, and pleasant to you,
                            Mother, and welcome, dear brother, to you. </l><l n="900" resp="p">For, when each of you died, with my own hands I washed
                            and dressed you and poured drink-offerings at your graves. But now,
                            Polyneices, it is for tending your corpse that I win such reward as
                            this. <del>And yet I honored you rightly, as the wise understand.</del></l><l n="905" resp="p"><del>Never, if I had been a mother of children, or if a
                            husband had been rotting after death, would I have taken that burden
                            upon myself in violation of the citizens’ will. For the sake of what
                            law, you ask, do I say that? A husband lost, another might have been
                            found, </del></l><l n="910" resp="p"><del>and if
                            bereft of a child, there could be a second from some other man. But when
                            father and mother are hidden in Hades, no brother could ever bloom for
                            me again. Such was the law whereby I held you first in honor, but for
                            that Creon judged me guilty of wrongdoing</del></l><l n="915" resp="p"><del>and of dreadful outrage, dear brother! And now he leads
                            me thus in his hands’ strong grasp, when I have enjoyed no marriage bed
                            or bridal song and have not received any portion of marriage or the
                            nurture of children. But deserted by friends, </del></l><l n="920" resp="p"><del>in misery I go living to the hollow graves of the
                            dead.</del> What law of the gods have I transgressed? Why should I look to
                            the gods anymore? What ally should I call out to, when by my reverence I
                            have earned a name for irreverence? </l><l n="925" resp="p">Well, then, if these events please the gods, once I have suffered my
                            doom I will come to know my guilt. But if the guilt lies with my judges,
                            I could wish for them no greater evils than they inflict unjustly on
                            me.</l></sp><milestone unit="card" n="929"/><div type="textpart" subtype="anapests"><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="929" resp="p">Still the same tempest of the soul </l></sp></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>