| Aeschylus Index |
HERMES
Alas, that Zeus knows not that word, Alas! PROMETHEUS
But ageing Time teacheth all knowledge. HERMES
Time Hath not yet taught thy rash, imperious will Over wild impulse to win mastery. PROMETHEUS
Nay: had Time taught me that, I had not stooped To bandy words with such a slave as thou. HERMES
This, then, is all thine answer: thou'lt not One syllable of what our Father asks. PROMETHEUS
Oh, that I were a debtor to his kindness! I would requite him to the uttermost! HERMES
A cutting speech! You take me for a boy Whom you may taunt and tease. PROMETHEUS
Why art thou not A boy-a very booby-to suppose Thou wilt get aught from me? There is no wrong However shameful, nor no shift of malice Whereby Zeus shall persuade me to unlock My lips until these shackles be cast loose. Therefore let lightning leap with smoke and flame, And all that is be beat and tossed together, With whirl of feathery snowflakes and loud crack Of subterranean thunder; none of these Shall bend my will or force me to disclose By whom 'tis fated he shall fall from power. HERMES
What good can come of this? Think yet again! PROMETHEUS
I long ago have thought and long ago Determined. HERMES
Patience! patience! thou rash fool Have so much patience as to school thy mind To a right judgment in thy present troubles. PROMETHEUS
Lo, I am rockfast, and thy words are wave That weary me in vain. Let not the thought Enter thy mind, that I in awe of Zeus Shall change my nature for a girl's, or beg The Loathed beyond all loathing-with my hands Spread out in woman's fashion-to cast loose These bonds; from that I am utterly removed. HERMES
I have talked much, yet further not my purpose; For thou art in no whit melted or moved By my prolonged entreaties: like a colt New to the harness thou dost back and Plunge. Snap at thy bit and fight against the rein. And yet thy confidence is in a straw; For stubbornness, if one be in the wrong, Is in itself weaker than naught at all. See now, if thou wilt not obey my words, What storm, what triple-crested wave of woe Unshunnable shall come upon thee. First, This rocky chasm shall the Father split With earthquake thunder and his burning bolt, And he shall hide thy form, and thou shalt hang Bolt upright, dandled in the rock's rude arms. Nor till thou hast completed thy long term Shalt thou come back into the light; and then The hound of Zeus, the tawny eagle, Shall violently fall upon thy flesh And rend it as 'twere rags; and every day And all day long shall thine unbidden guest Sit at thy table, feasting on thy liver Till he hath gnawn it black. Look for no term To such an agony till there stand forth Among the Gods one who shall take upon him Thy sufferings and consent to enter hell Far from the light of Sun, yea, the deep pit And mirk of Tartarus, for thee. Be advised; This is not stuffed speech framed to frighten the But woeful truth. For Zeus knows not to lie CHORUS
To our mind The words of Hermes fail not of the mark. For he enjoins thee to let self-will go And follow after prudent counsels. Him Harken; for error in the wise is shame. PROMETHEUS
These are stale tidings I foreknew; Therefore, since suffering is the due A foe must pay his foes, Let curled lightnings clasp and clash And close upon my limbs: loud crash The thunder, and fierce throes Of savage winds convulse calm air: The embowelled blast earth's roots uptear And toss beyond its bars, The rough surge, till the roaring deep In one devouring deluge sweep The pathway of the stars Finally, let him fling my form Down whirling gulfs, the central storm Of being; let me lie Plunged in the black Tartarean gloom; Yet-yet-his sentence shall not doom This deathless self to die!
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