登陆注册
35303000000004

第4章 antistrophe 2(2)

Thy friendly judgment first hath placed these dreamsIn a fair light, confirming the eventBenevolent to my son and to my house.

May all the good be ratified! These ritesShall, at thy bidding, to the powers of heaven,And to the manes of our friends, be paidIn order meet, when I return; meanwhile

Indulge me, friends, who wish to be inform'dWhere, in what clime, the towers of Athens rise.

LEADER

Far in the west, where sets the imperial sun.

ATOSSA

Yet my son will'd the conquest of this town.

LEADER

May Greece through all her states bend to his power!

ATOSSA

Send they embattled numbers to the field?

LEADER

A force that to the Medes hath wrought much wo.

ATOSSA

Have they sufficient treasures in their houses?

LEADER

Their rich earth yields a copious fount of silver.

ATOSSA

From the strong bow wing they the barbed shaft?

LEADER

They grasp the stout spear, and the massy shield.

ATOSSA

What monarch reigns, whose power commands their ranks?

LEADER

Slaves to no lord, they own no kingly power.

ATOSSA

How can they then resist the invading foe?

LEADER

As to spread havoc through the numerous host,That round Darius form'd their glitt'ring files.

ATOSSA

Thy words strike deep, and wound the parent's breastWhose sons are march'd to such a dangerous field.

LEADER

But, if I judge aright, thou soon shalt hearEach circumstance; for this way, mark him, speedsA Persian messenger; he bears, be sure,Tidings of high import, or good or ill.

(A MESSENGER enters.)

MESSENGER

Wo to the towns through Asia's peopled realms!

Wo to the land of Persia, once the port

Of boundless wealth, how is thy glorious stateVanish'd at once, and all thy spreading honoursFall'n, lost! Ah me! unhappy is his taskThat bears unhappy tidings: but constraintCompels me to relate this tale of wo.

Persians, the whole barbaric host is fall'n.

CHORUS (chanting)

O horror, horror! What a baleful train

Of recent ills! Ah, Persians, as he speaksOf ruin, let your tears stream to the earth.

MESSENGER

It is ev'n so, all ruin; and myself,

Beyond all hope returning, view this light.

CHORUS (chanting)

How tedious and oppressive is the weight

Of age, reserved to hear these hopeless ills!

MESSENGER

I speak not from report; but these mine eyesBeheld the ruin which my tongue would utter.

CHORUS (chanting)

Wo, wo is me! Then has the iron storm,

That darken'd from the realms of Asia, pour'dIn vain its arrowy shower on sacred Greece.

MESSENGER

In heaps the unhappy dead lie on the strandOf Salamis, and all the neighbouring shores.

CHORUS (chanting)

Unhappy friends, sunk, perish'd in the sea;Their bodies, mid the wreck of shatter'd ships,Mangled, and rolling on the encumber'd waves!

MESSENGER

Naught did their bows avail, but all the troopsIn the first conflict of the ships were lost.

CHORUS (chanting)

Raise the funereal cry, with dismal notesWailing the wretched Persians. Oh, how illThey plann'd their measures, all their army perish'd!

MESSENGER

O Salamis, how hateful is thy name!

And groans burst from me when I think of Athens.

CHORUS (chanting)

How dreadful to her foes! Call to remembranceHow many Persian dames, wedded in vain,Hath Athens of their noble husbands widow'd?

ATOSSA

Astonied with these ills, my voice thus longHath wanted utterance: griefs like these exceedThe power of speech or question: yet ev'n such,Inflicted by the gods, must mortal manConstrain'd by hard necessity endure.

But tell me all, without distraction tell me,All this calamity, though many a groanBurst from thy labouring heart. Who is not fallen?

What leader must we wail? What sceptred chiefDying hath left his troops without a lord?

MESSENGER

Xerxes himself lives, and beholds the light.

ATOSSA

That word beams comfort on my house, a rayThat brightens through the melancholy gloom.

MESSENGER

Artembares, the potent chief that led

Ten thousand horse, lies slaughtered on the rocksOf rough Sileniae. The great Dadaces,Beneath whose standard march'd a thousand horse,Pierced by a spear, fell headlong from the ship.

Tenagon, bravest of the Bactrians, lies

Roll'd on the wave-worn beach of Ajax' isle.

Lilaeus, Arsames, Argestes, dash

With violence in death against the rocks

Where nest the silver doves. Arcteus, that dweltNear to the fountains of the Egyptian Nile,Adeues, and Pheresba, and Pharnuchus

Fell from one ship. Matallus, Chrysa's chief,That led his dark'ning squadrons, thrice ten thousand,On jet-black steeds, with purple gore distain'dThe yellow of his thick and shaggy beard.

The Magian Arabus, and Artames

From Bactra, mould'ring on the dreary shoreLie low. Amistris, and Amphistreus there

Grasps his war-wear spear; there prostrate liesThe illustrious Ariomardus; long his losShall Sardis weep: thy Mysian Sisames,

And Tharybis, that o'er the burden'd deepLed five times fifty vessels; Lerna gave

The hero birth, and manly race adorn'd

His pleasing form, but low in death he liesUnhappy in his fate. Syennesis,

Cilicia's warlike chief, who dared to frontThe foremost dangers, singly to the foes

A terror, there too found a glorious death.

These chieftains to my sad remembrance rise,Relating but a few of many ills.

ATOSSA

This is the height of ill, ah me! and shameTo Persia, grief, and lamentation loud.

But tell me this, afresh renew thy tale:

What was the number of the Grecian fleet,That in fierce conflict their bold barks should dareRush to encounter with the Persian hosts.

MESSENGER

Know then, in numbers the barbaric fleet

Was far superior: in ten squadrons, each

Of thirty ships, Greece plough'd the deep; of theseOne held a distant station. Xerxes ledA thousand ships; their number well I know;Two hundred more, and seven, that swept the seasWith speediest sail: this was their full amount.

And in the engagement seem'd we not secureOf victory? But unequal fortune sunk

Our scale in fight, discomfiting our host.

ATOSSA

The gods preserve the city of Minerva.

MESSENGER

The walls of Athens are impregnable,

Their firmest bulwarks her heroic sons.

ATOSSA

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 步步惊情:冷少诱爱成婚

    步步惊情:冷少诱爱成婚

    丈夫出轨在先,为制造绯闻让她净身出户,竟将她灌醉扔进陌生男人房间。酒醉的她与全城女人心目中的男神,钻石级单身汉,霸道总裁龙司昊发生纠缠不清的一夜。她占有了他的第一次,他夺去了她的第一次。他助她离婚,帮她斗小三,整前夫。和渣夫离婚后,她本想紧闭心门,他却以雷霆之势,强势挤进她心门,步步逼婚,送上豪宠。
  • 世界级盲盒玩家

    世界级盲盒玩家

    遭遇电子支付诈骗,顾亭被迫花十块钱买下了一台盲盒自动贩售机。只是这台机器出售的盲盒里,装的却不是玩偶,而是些奇奇怪怪的东西。奇怪到什么程度?第一个开出来的盲盒,盒子里面装的,竟然是他自己……
  • 犹见你欢喜

    犹见你欢喜

    姊妹篇《总裁会弯腰》已发,新书求关注【傲娇幼稚谢总裁&娇柔貌美舒老师】谢子谦&舒子沫大二那年,班长在班上询问有没有人拿过国家级证书,可以加学分,沈晗蹭地从椅子上站起来:我我我,我有结婚证沈晗:“我这辈子最大的愿望就是能与你并肩,陪你走过余生的许多年。”何慕瑾闻言往后退了一步,站在与她并排的位置,扭头看着自己的肩膀又低头看了看沈晗的肩膀,挑了挑眉,不紧不慢的开口:“并肩?这辈子有可能吗?”沈晗:“......”这人难道没发现她说的是一句情话???
  • 九州——江山业

    九州——江山业

    慕梓:世人都以为,得玲珑天女者得天下,可天下由谁来统治,其实不在我,而在天,玲珑玲珑,其实是从日昤昽,意为九天之阳普照天下之意。雪含烟:在这个世界上,你如果孤独了,我便陪着你,这样的话,至少在江山大业这条荆棘路上走的时候,你最起码,不会寂寞。楚玉:你知道我这辈子最遗憾一件事是什么吗?那就是,直至现在,我还是只能客气地喊你一声慕姑娘……叶玄:试问九州谁可得,自古英雄叹白头。我叶玄,天定,就是这九州天下,唯一的主。苏洛:我这一生,一直都在守着一个承诺,而直至现在,我都从未放弃,因为,我信他。卫长风:我为了你可以放弃一切,哪怕是我的命,我唯一的要求,就是你心里,先有我,不行吗?君若竹:我一直坚信,惊霜她没有死,我会一直找下去,这是我活在这世上,唯一的意义。白若飞:我们江湖儿女,敢爱敢恨,情之一字,固然重要,但义之一字,我将以命相待。……总而言之,这就是一个关于乱世情爱的故事,每一个人,都身不由己,为了自己心中的光,而付出一切的故事!
  • 我是小妖怪

    我是小妖怪

    普普通通的大一新生伊志奇,渴望过玫瑰色的大学生活,以不普通的高考成绩(他自认为)考上了不普通一本院校(还是自认为),却不幸遇到了3个奇葩舍友。更不幸的是,在刚开始的大学生活中就倒霉的遇上了意外不幸命赴黄泉,可惜可惜,本文终结。伊志奇:“命里有时终须有,命里无时莫强求。命好如我,死而复生,还有了超强的异能,超越了作者,一举成为了人生赢家......作者大大,我错了,我再也不装逼了,把我的头安回去成么?”其实就是一个寝室4个人类妖魔的故事。
  • 龙忍者贰

    龙忍者贰

    鬼王陨落,幽灵败退,和平似已来临。索域之森真的是世界尽头?新的强敌又从何而来?名为骑士的人们拥有的又是何种神妙力量?孤城之龙,岂知世界广大!短暂的和平之后将是前所未有的风暴!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 开天传承记

    开天传承记

    这是神魔的战场,终究也是人与人的战争。每个人都有自己的使命,开路的启,引路的韩,破路的尼···凑成了波澜壮阔的画卷。东戈城那少年张平,带着些许野望,扇动着小小的翅膀,步步而行,悄然改变着这个世界,终究变成了翱翔九天的巨龙。
  • 重生之霸道王爷无情妃

    重生之霸道王爷无情妃

    被浸猪笼,她不后悔,只是舍不下一双儿女。重生回来,再次与他相遇,她只要带着儿女逍遥度日,不愿再做他的唯一……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 小道士猎妖记

    小道士猎妖记

    妖为何物?鬼又是什么?我又是谁?大道三千,我选诡道。人生虚妄,引渡亡魂。天下苍生,真真假假假假真真,我要做第一,我要延续我未完成的事。我的魂在何方?我的心在何处?我的执念!亦为何物?我到底是谁?轮回百世,经历生老病死,我又是为了什么?我的心被谁夺走了?