Heracleidae

Euripides

Euripides. The Plays of Euripides, Translated into English Prose from the Text of Paley. Vol. I. Coleridge, Edward P., translator. London: George Bell and Sons, 1906.

  1. Follow me, old friend, for in thy arms I fain would die; stand by and veil my body with my robe, for I will go even to the dreadful doom of sacrifice, seeing whose daughter I avow myself.
Iolaus
  1. I cannot stand by and see thee bleed.
Macaria
  1. At least do thou beg me this boon of the king, that I may breathe out my life in women’s arms instead of men’s.
Demophon
  1. It shall be so, unhappy maid; for this were shame to me to refuse thee honour due, for many reasons: because thou hast a soul so brave; because
  2. ’tis right; and thou hast shown more courage than any of thy sex my eyes have ever seen. Now, if thou hast aught to say to these children or thy aged guide, oh[*](Reading δὴ, with Elmsley, for μοι.)! say the last thou hast to say—then go.
Macaria
  1. Farewell, old friend, farewell! and prithee teach
  2. these children to be like thyself, wise at every point; let them strive no further, for that will suffice them. And seek to save them from death, even as thou art anxious to do; thy children are we, thy care it was that nurtured us. Thou seest how I yield my bridal
  3. bloom to die for them. For you, my brothers gathered here, may you be happy! and may every blessing be yours, for the which my blood shall pay the price![*](Badham proposed σφαλήσεται, certainly an easier reading.) Honour this old friend, and her that is within the house,
  4. Alcmena, the aged mother of my sire, and these strangers too. And if ever heaven for you devise release from trouble and a return to your home, remember the burial due to her that saved you, a funeral fair[*](Nauck, μάλιστα for κάλλιστα.) as I deserve; for I have not failed,
  5. but stood by you, and died to save my race. This shall be my pearl of price instead of children, and for the maiden life I leave, if there be really aught beyond the grave—God grant there may not be! For if, e’en there, we who are to die shall find a life of care,
  6. I know not whither one shall turn; for death is held a sovereign cure for every ill.
Iolaus
  1. Maiden of heroic soul, transcending all thy race, be sure the fame that thou shalt win from us, in life, in death, shall leave the rest of women far behind;
  2. farewell to thee! I dare not say harsh words of her to whom thou art devoted, the goddess-daughter of Demeter. [Exit Macaria.] Children, I am undone, grief unnerves my limbs; take hold and support me to a seat hard by, when ye have drawn my mantle o’er my face, my sons.
  3. For I am grieved at what hath happened, and yet, were it not fulfilled, we could not live; thus were the mischief worse, though this is grief enough.
Chorus
  1. Without the will of heaven none is blest, none curst, I do maintain;
  2. nor doth the same house for ever tread
    the path of bliss; for one kind of fortune follows hard upon another; one man it brings to naught from his high estate, another though of no[*](Reading ἀτίταν, Fix’s emendation for the unmetrical ἀλήταν of MS.) account it crowns with happiness.
  3. To shun what fate decrees, is no wise permitted; none by cunning shall thrust it from him; but he, who vainly would do so, shall have unceasing trouble.
Chorus
  1. Then fall not prostrate thou, but bear what heaven sends, and set a limit
  2. to thy soul’s grief; for she, poor maid! in dying for her brothers and this land, hath won a glorious death, and splendid fame shall be her meed from all mankind;
  3. for virtue’s path leads through troublous ways. Worthy of her father, worthy of her noble birth is this conduct. And if thou dost honour the virtuous dead, I share with thee that sentiment.
Servant (of Hyllus)
  1. All hail, ye children! Where is aged Iolaus? where the mother of your sire, absent from their place at this altar?