<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg002.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="episode"><sp><l n="415" resp="p">So time passed, until the disk of the sun stood bright
                            in mid-sky and the heat began to burn. And then suddenly a whirlwind
                            lifted from the earth a storm of dust, a trouble in the sky, and it
                            filled the plain, marring all the foliage of its woods. </l><l n="420" resp="p">Soon the wide air was choked with it. We closed
                            our eyes, and endured the plague from the gods. When, after a long
                            while, this storm had passed, the girl was seen, and she wailed aloud
                            with the sharp cry of a grieving bird, as when inside her
                                empty </l><l n="425" resp="p">nest she sees the bed
                            stripped of its nestlings. So she, too, when she saw the corpse bare,
                            broke into a cry of lamentation and cursed with harsh curses those who
                            had done it. Immediately she took thirsty dust in her hands,</l><l n="430" resp="p">and from a pitcher of beaten bronze held
                            high she crowned the dead with thrice-poured libations. We rushed
                            forward when we saw it, and at once closed upon our quarry, who was not
                            at all dismayed. We then charged her with her past and present
                                doings, </l><l n="435" resp="p">but she made no denial of anything—at once to my joy and
                            to my pain. For to have escaped from trouble one’s self gives the
                            greatest joy, but it stings to lead friends to evil. Naturally, though,
                            all such things are </l><l n="440" resp="p">of less account to me than my own safety.</l></sp><milestone unit="card" n="441"/><sp><speaker>Creon</speaker><l n="441" resp="p">You, you with your face bent to the ground, do you admit, or deny that
                            you did this?</l></sp><sp><speaker>Antigone</speaker><l n="443" resp="p">I declare it and make no denial.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Creon</speaker><stage rend="italic">To the Guard.</stage><l n="444" resp="p">You can take yourself wherever you please, </l><l n="445" resp="p">free and clear of a heavy charge.  <stage rend="italic">Exit
                                Guard.</stage> </l></sp><sp><stage rend="italic">To Antigone.</stage><l n="446" resp="p">You, however, tell me—not at length, but briefly—did you know that an
                            edict had forbidden this?</l></sp><sp><speaker>Antigone</speaker><l n="448" resp="p">I knew it. How could I not? It was public.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Creon</speaker><l n="449" resp="p">And even so you dared overstep that law?</l></sp><sp><speaker>Antigone</speaker><l n="450" resp="p">Yes, since it was not Zeus that
                            published me that edict, and since not of that kind are the laws which
                            Justice who dwells with the gods below established among men. Nor did I
                            think that your decrees were of such force, that a mortal could override
                            the unwritten </l><l n="455" resp="p">and unfailing statutes given us by the gods. For their
                            life is not of today or yesterday, but for all time, and no man knows
                            when they were first put forth. Not for fear of any man’s pride was I
                            about to owe a penalty to the gods for breaking these. </l><l n="460" resp="p">Die I
                            must, that I knew well (how could I not?). That is true even without
                            your edicts. But if I am to die before my time, I count that a gain.
                            When anyone lives as I do, surrounded by evils, how can he not carry off
                            gain by dying? </l><l n="465" resp="p">So for me to meet this doom is a grief of no account.
                            But if I had endured that my mother’s son should in death lie an
                            unburied corpse, that would have grieved me. Yet for this, I am not
                            grieved. And if my present actions are foolish in your sight, </l><l n="470" resp="p">it may
                            be that it is a fool who accuses me of folly.</l></sp><milestone unit="card" n="471"/><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="471" resp="p">She shows herself the wild offspring of a wild father, and does not know
                            how to bend before troubles.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Creon</speaker><l n="473" resp="p">Yet remember that over-hard spirits most often collapse. It is the
                            stiffest iron, baked to </l><l n="475" resp="p">utter hardness in the fire, that you most often see
                            snapped and shivered. And I have witnessed horses with great spirit
                            disciplined by a small bit. For there is no place for pride, when one is
                            his neighbors’ slave. </l><l n="480" resp="p">This girl was already
                            practiced in outrage when she overstepped the published laws. And, that
                            done, this now is a second outrage, that she glories in it and exults in
                            her deed. In truth, then, I am no man, but she is, </l><l n="485" resp="p">if this victory rests with her and brings no penalty.
                            No! Whether she is my sister’s child, or nearer to me in blood than any
                            of my kin that worship Zeus at the altar of our house, she and her
                            sister will not escape a doom most harsh. For in truth</l><l n="490" resp="p">I charge that other with an equal share
                            in the plotting of this burial. Call her out! I saw her inside just now,
                            raving, and not in control of her wits. Before the deed, the mind
                            frequently is convicted of stealthy crimes when conspirators are
                            plotting depravity in the dark. </l><l n="495" resp="p">But, truly, I detest it, too, when one who has been caught in
                            treachery then seeks to make the crime a glory.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Antigone</speaker><l n="497" resp="p">What more do you want than to capture and kill me?</l></sp><sp><speaker>Creon</speaker><l n="498" resp="p">I want nothing else. Having that, I have everything.</l></sp><milestone unit="card" n="499"/><sp><speaker>Antigone</speaker><l n="499" resp="p">Why then do you wait? In none of your maxims </l><l n="500" resp="p">is there anything that pleases me—and may there never
                            be! Similarly to you as well my views must be displeasing. And yet, how
                            could I have won a nobler glory than by giving burial to my own brother?
                            All here would admit that they approve, </l><l n="505" resp="p">if fear did not grip their tongues. But tyranny, blest
                            with so much else, has the power to do and say whatever it pleases.</l></sp></div></div></body></text></TEI>