<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.tlg007.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="episode"><sp><l n="940">that I have done this deed; but because I judged that its people could never be so zealous for my relatives as to support them against my will. And I knew that this people would not receive a parricide and a polluted man,</l><l n="945">a man whose unholy marriage—a marriage with children—had been found out. Such wisdom, I knew, was immemorial on the Areopagus, which does not allow such wanderers to dwell within this city. Trusting in that, I sought to take this prize.</l><l n="950">And I would not have done so, had he not been calling down bitter curses on me and on my race. As I was wronged in this way, I judged that I had a right to this requital. For anger knows no old age, until death comes;</l><l n="955">the dead alone feel no galling pain. <milestone unit="para"/>In response to this, you will do what pleases you; for, though my case is just, the lack of aid makes me weak. Yet in the face of your actions, despite my age, I will endeavor to pay you back.</l></sp><milestone unit="card" n="960"/><sp><speaker>Oedipus</speaker><l n="960">Shameless arrogance, where do you think this outrage falls—on my old age, or on your own? Bloodshed, incest, misery—all this your tongue has launched against me, and all this I have borne in my wretchedness by no choice of mine.</l><l n="965">For this was dear to the gods, who were angry, perhaps, with my race from of old. Taking me alone, you could not find a reproach for any crime, in retribution for which I was driven to commit these sins against myself and against my kin. Tell me now: if, by the voice of an oracle, some divine doom was coming on my father,</l><l n="970">that he should die by a son’s hand, how could you justly reproach me with this, when I was then unborn, when no father had yet begotten me, no mother’s womb conceived me? But if, having been born to misery—as I was born—I came to blows with my father and slew him, ignorant of what</l><l n="975">I was doing and to whom, how could you reasonably blame the unwitting deed? <milestone unit="para"/>And my mother—wretch, do you feel no shame in forcing me to speak of her marriage, when she was your sister, and when it was such as I will now tell?</l><l n="980">For I will not be silent, when you have gone so far in impious speech. Yes, she was my mother, yes—alas, for my miseries! I did not know it, nor did she, and to her shame she bore children to the son whom she had borne.</l><l n="985">But one thing, at least, I know: that you willingly revile her and me, but I did not willingly marry her, and I do not willingly speak now. <milestone unit="para"/>No, I will not be called evil on account of this marriage, nor in the slaying of my father, which you charge me with again and again in bitter insult.</l><l n="990">Answer just one thing of those I ask. If, here and now, someone should come up and try to murder you—you, the just one—would you ask if the murderer was your father, or would you revenge yourself on him straightaway?</l><l n="995">I think that if your life is dear to you, you would requite the criminal, and not look around for a justification. Such then were the evils into which I came, led by the gods; and in this, I think, my father’s soul, could it come back to life, would not contradict me.</l><milestone unit="para"/><l n="1000">But you are not just; you are one who considers it a fine thing to utter every sort of word, both those which are sanctioned and those which are forbidden—such are your taunts against me in the presence of these men. And to you it seems a fine thing to flatter the renowned Theseus, and <placeName key="perseus,Athens">Athens</placeName>, saying how well it is governed.</l><l n="1005">Yet while giving such generous praise, you forget that if any land knows how to worship the gods with honors, this land excels in that. It is from her that you had planned to steal me, a suppliant and an old man, and tried to seize me, having already carried off my daughters.</l><l n="1010">Therefore I now call on the goddesses here, I supplicate them, I beseech them with prayers, to bring me help and to fight on my behalf, that you may learn well what kind of men this city is guarded by.</l></sp><milestone unit="card" n="1014"/><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="1014">The stranger is a good man, lord.</l><l n="1015">His fate has been accursed, but it is worthy of our aid.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Theseus</speaker><l n="1016">Enough of words. The doers of the deed are in flight, while we, the sufferers, stand still.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Creon</speaker><l n="1018">What order, then, do you have for a powerless man?</l></sp><sp><speaker>Theseus</speaker><l n="1019">Guide the way on the path to them while I escort you,</l><l n="1020">in order that if you are keeping the maidens whom we seek in these lands, you yourself may reveal them to me. But if your men are fleeing with the spoils in their grasp, we may spare our trouble; the chase is for others, from whom they will never escape out of this land to thank their gods.</l><milestone unit="para"/><l n="1025">Come, lead the way! And know that the captor has been captured; fate has seized you as you hunted. Gains unjustly got by guile are soon lost. And you will have no ally in your purpose; for I well know that it is not without accomplice or resource that you have come to such</l><l n="1030">outrage, from the daring mood which has inspired you here. There was someone you were trusting in when you did these deeds. This I must consider, and I must not make this city weaker than one man. Do you take my drift?</l><l n="1035">Or do these words seem as empty as the warnings given when you were laying your plans?</l></sp><sp><speaker>Creon</speaker><l n="1036">Say what you wish while you are here; I will not object. But at home I too will know how to act.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Theseus</speaker><l n="1038">Make your threats, then, but go forward. As for you, Oedipus, stay here in peace with my pledge that, unless I die beforehand,</l><l n="1040">I will not cease until I put you in possession of your children.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Oedipus</speaker><l n="1042">Thanks to you, Theseus, for your nobleness and your righteous care for me!  <stage rend="italic">Theseus exits with attendants and Creon.</stage> 
               </l></sp></div><milestone unit="card" n="1044"/><div type="textpart" subtype="choral"><div type="textpart" subtype="strophe" n="1"><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="1044">Oh, to be where the enemy, turned to fight,</l><l n="1045">will soon join in Ares’ clash of bronze, by the shores of Apollo, perhaps, or by that torch-lit beach</l></sp></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>