p.15
Hermes
O Zeus, why wand'rest, self-communing, lone,And sicklied o'er with this pale student's hue?Make me the partner of thy sorrow's load,Nor scorn the prattle of a lowly friend.Athene
Yea, sire, great Kronides, our father and highest of rulers,I, the clear-eyed and divine, the Trito-born, clasp thee imploring.Hide not thy grief in thine heart. Tell it forth that thy children may know it.What biting care dost thou hold in thy brain and thy bosom? What anguishWrings that deep groan from thy soul and yellows thy fair, ruddy color?Zeus
There no woe that happens, sooth to tell,No pain, no chance-born theme of tragedy,Of which the godhead beareth not the load.Athene
Great heav'n! What prologue doth begin his tale.p.16
Zeus O earthy offspring of the earth, fell race,
And thou, Prometheus, what woe hast thou wrought! Athene
What is 't? We are the band of thine own kin.Zeus
Thunderbolt, sounding afar, how shall thy hurtling crash save me?Hera Keep your temper, Zeus, since I cannot answer you in comedy metre as the others do, nor have I swallowed Euripides whole so as to take my part in the drama when you give me the cue.