Persians
Aeschylus
Aeschylus, Volume 1. Smyth, Herbert Weir, translator. London; New York: William Heinemann; G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1922.
- I will make attempt to meet my son; for I will not forsake him whom I love so well in his affliction. Exit
- Oh yes, it was in truth a glorious and good life under civil government that we enjoyed so long as our aged
- and all-powerful king, who did no wrong and did not favor war, god-like Darius, ruled the realm.
- In the first place we showed to the world armies worthy of our fame, and civil institutions, like towers in strength,
- regulated all the state; and our return from war brought back our men, unworn and unsuffering, to happy homes.
- And what a number of cities he captured!—
- without crossing the stream of Halys or even stirring from his own hearth: such as the Acheloan[*](If Acheloan is used, as some report, only of fresh water, the poet may have in mind the pile-dwellings of the Paeonians on Lake Prasias (mentioned by Hdt. 5.16); if Acheloan includes also salt water, the reference may be to the islands off Thrace—Imbros, Thasos, and Samothrace.)cities on the Strymonian sea which is located beside
- the Thracian settlements.
- And those outside the lake, the cities on the mainland, surrounded with a rampart, obeyed him as their king;
- those, too, that boast to be on both sides of the broad Hellespont and Propontis, deeply-recessed, and the outlet of Pontus.
- The sea-washed islands, also, off the projecting arm
- of the sea, lying close to this land of ours, such as Lesbos, and olive-planted Samos, Chios and Paros, Naxos, Mykonos,
- and Andros which lies adjacent to Tenos.
- And he held under his sway the sea-girt islands midway between the continents,
- Lemnos, and the settlement of Icarus, and Rhodes, and Cnidos, and the Cyprian cities Paphos, Soli, and Salamis,
- whose mother-city is now the cause of our lament.
- And the rich and populous cities of the Hellenes in the Ionian heritage
- he controlled by his own will; and at his command he had an unwearied strength of men-at-arms and of allies from every nation. But now,
- worsted completely in war through disasters on the sea, we endure this change of fortune no doubt from the hand of god.