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CHORUS
Nay, but let both be granted! Unto her That which she chooseth, unto me my choice, That I, too, may have honour from thy lips. First unto her declare her wanderings, And unto me him who shall set thee free; 'Tis that I long to know. PROMETHEUS
I will resist No further, but to your importunacy All things which ye-desire to learn reveal. And, Io, first to thee I will declare Thy far-driven wanderings; write thou my words In the retentive tablets of thy heart. When thou hast crossed the flood that flows between And is the boundary of two continents, Turn to the sun's uprising, where he treads Printing with fiery steps the eastern sky, And from the roaring of the Pontic surge Do thou pass on, until before thee lies The Gorgonean plain, Kisthene called, Where dwell the gray-haired three, the Phorcides, Old, mumbling maids, swan-shaped, having one eye Betwixt the three, and but a single tooth. On them the sun with his brightbeams ne'er glanceth Nor moon that lamps the night. Not far from them The sisters three, the Gorgons, have their haunt; Winged forms, with snaky locks, hateful to man, Whom nothing mortal looking on can live. Thus much that thou may'st have a care of these. Now of another portent thou shalt hear. Beware the dogs of Zeus that ne'er give tongue, The sharp-beaked gryphons, and the one-eyed horde Of Arimaspians, riding upon horses, Who dwell around the river rolling gold, The ferry and the frith of Pluto's port. Go not thou nigh them. After thou shalt come To a far land, a dark-skinned race, that dwell Beside the fountains of the sun, whence flows The river Ethiops: follow its banks Until thou comest to the steep-down slope Where from the Bibline mountains Nilus old Pours the sweet waters of his holy stream. And thou, the river guiding thee, shalt come To the three-sided, wedge-shaped land of Nile, Where for thyself, Io, and for thy children Long sojourn is appointed. If in aught My story seems to stammer and to er From indirectness, ask and ask again Till all be manifest. I do not lack For leisure, having more than well contents me CHORUS
If there be aught that she must suffer yet, Or aught omitted in the narrative Of her long wanderings, I pray thee speak. But if thou hast told all, then grant the boon We asked and doubtless thou wilt call to mind. PROMETHEUS
Nay, she has heard the last of her long journey. But, as some warrant for her patient hearing I will relate her former sufferings Ere she came hither. Much I will omit That had detained us else with long discourse And touch at once her journey's thus far goal. When thou wast come to the Molossian plain That lies about the high top of Dodona, Where is an oracle and shrine of Zeus Thesprotian, and-portent past belief- The talking oaks, the same from whom the word Flashed clear and nothing questionably hailed the The destined spouse-ah! do I touch old wounds?- Of Zeus, honoured above thy sex; stung thence In torment, where the road runs by the sea, Thou cam'st to the broad gulf of Rhea, whence Beat back by a strong wind, thou didst retrace Most painfully thy course; and it shall be That times to come in memory of thy passage Shall call that inlet the Ionian Sea. Thus much for thee in witness that my mind Beholdeth more than that which leaps to light. Now for the things to come; what I shall say Concerns ye both alike. Return we then And follow our old track. There is a city Yclept Canobus, built at the land's end, Even at the mouth and mounded silt of Nile, And there shall Zeus restore to thee thy mind With touch benign and laying on of hands. And from that touch thou shalt conceive and bear Swarth Epaphus, touch-born; and he shall reap As much of earth as Nilus watereth With his broad-flowing river. In descent The fifth from him there shall come back to Argos, Thine ancient home, but driven by hard hap, Two score and ten maids, daughters of one house, Fleeing pollution of unlawful marriage With their next kin, who winged with wild desire, As hawks that follow hard on cushat-doves, Shall harry prey which they should not pursue And hunt forbidden brides. But God shall be Exceeding jealous for their chastity; And old Pelasgia, for the mortal thrust Of woman's hands and midnight murder done Upon their new-wed lords, shall shelter them; For every wife shall strike her husband down Dipping a two-edged broadsword in his blood. Oh, that mine enemies might wed such wivesl But of the fifty, one alone desire Shall tame, as with the stroke of charming-wand, So that she shall not lift her hands to slay The partner of her bed; yea, melting love Shall blunt her sharp-set will, and she shall choose Rather to be called weak and womanly Than the dark stain of blood; and she shall be Mother of kings in Argos. 'Tis a tale Were't told in full, would occupy us long. For, of her sowing, there shall spring to fame The lion's whelp, the archer bold, whose bow Shall set me free. This is the oracle Themis, my ancient Mother, Titan-born, Disclosed to me; but how and in what wise Were long to tell, nor would it profit thee.
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