of betraying my own cause. Tell me, proud young wife, what assurance
can make me
confident of wresting from thee thy
lawful lord? Is it
that Laconia's capital yields to Phrygia? is it that my fortune
outstrips thine? or that in me thou seest a free woman? Am I so elated
by my youth, my full
healthy figure, the
extent of my city, the number
of my friends that I wish to
supplant thee in thy home? Is my
purpose to take thy place and rear myself a race of slaves, mere
appendages to my
misery? or, supposing thou bear no children, will any
one
endure that sons of mine should rule o'er Phthia? Ah no! there
is the love that Hellas bears me, both for Hector's sake and for my
own
humble rank forsooth, that never knew a queen's
estate in Troy.
'Tis not my sorcery that makes thy husband hate thee, nay, but thy own
failure to prove thyself his help-meet. Herein lies love's only charm;
'tis not beauty, lady, but
virtuous acts that win our husbands'
hearts. And though it gall thee to be told so,
albeit thy city in
Laconia is no doubt
mighty fact, yet thou findest no place for his
Scyros, displaying
wealth 'midst
poverty and
setting Menelaus above
Achilles: and that is what alienates thy lord. Take heed; for a woman,
though bestowed upon
worthless husband, must be with him content,
and ne'er advance presumptuous claims. Suppose thou hadst
wedded a
prince of Thrace, the land of flood and melting snow, where one lord
shares his affections with a host of wives, wouldst thou have slain
them? If so, thou wouldst have set a
stigma of insatiate lust on all
our sex. A
shameful charge! And yet
herein we suffer more than men,
though we make a good stand against it. Ah! my dear lord Hector, for
thy sake would I e'en brook a rival, if ever Cypris led thee astray,
and oft in days gone by I held thy
bastard babes to my own breast,
to spare thee any cause for grief. By this course I bound my husband
to me by
virtue's chains,
whereas thou wilt never so much as let the
drops of dew from heaven above settle on thy lord, in thy jealous
fear. Oh! seek not to
surpass thy mother in hankering after men, for
'tis well that all wise children should avoid the habits of such
evil mothers.
LEADER
Mistress mine, be persuaded to come to terms with her, as far as
readily comes within thy power.
HERMIONE
Why this
haughty tone, this bandying of words, as if, forsooth,
thou, not I, wert the
virtuous wife?
ANDROMACHE
Thy present claims at any rate give thee small title thereto.
HERMIONE
Woman, may my bosom never harbour such ideas as thine!
ANDROMACHE
Thou art young to speak on such a theme as this.
HERMIONE
As for thee, thou dost not speak thereof, but, as thou canst, dost
put it into action against me.
ANDROMACHE
Canst thou not
conceal thy pangs of jealousy?
HERMIONE
What! doth not every woman put this first of all?
ANDROMACHE
Yes, if her experiences are happy;
otherwise, there is no honour
in
speaking of them.
HERMIONE
Barbarians' laws are not a standard for our city.
ANDROMACHE
Alike in Asia and in Hellas infamy attends base actions.
HERMIONE
Clever, clever quibbler! yet die thou must and shalt.
ANDROMACHE
Dost see the image of Thetis with her eye upon thee?
HERMIONE
A bitter foe to thy country because of the death of Achilles.
ANDROMACHE
'Twas not I that slew him, but Helen that mother of thine.
HERMIONE
Pray, is it thy
intention to probe my wounds yet deeper?
ANDROMACHE
Behold, I am dumb, my lips are closed.
HERMIONE
Tell me that which was my only reason for coming hither.
ANDROMACHE
No! all I tell thee is, thou hast less
wisdom than thou needest.
HERMIONE
Wilt thou leave these
hallowed precincts of the sea-
goddess?
ANDROMACHE
Yes, if I am not to die for it;
otherwise, I never will.
HERMIONE
Since that is thy
resolve, I shall not even wait my lord's return.
ANDROMACHE
Nor yet will I, at any rate ere that,
surrender to thee.
HERMIONE
I will bring fire to bear on thee, and pay no heed to thy
entreaties.
ANDROMACHE
Kindle thy blaze then; the gods will
witness it.
HERMIONE
And make thy flesh to
writhe by cruel wounds.
ANDROMACHE
Begin thy butchery, stain the altar of the
goddess with blood, for
she will visit thy iniquity.
HERMIONE
Barbarian creature, hardened in impudence, wilt thou brave death
itself? Still will I find
speedy means to make these quit this seat of
thy free will; such a bait have I to lure thee with. But I will hide
my meaning, which the event itself shall soon declare. Yes, keep thy
seat, for I will make thee rise, though
molten lead is
holding thee
there, before Achilles' son, thy trusted
champion, arrive.
(HERMIONE departs.)
ANDROMACHE
My trusted
champion, yes! how strange it is, that though some
god hath devised cures for mortals against the venom of reptiles, no
man ever yet hath discovered aught to cure a woman's venom, which is
far worse than viper's sting or scorching flame; so terrible a curse
are we to mankind.
CHORUS (singing)
strophe 1
Ah! what sorrows did the son of Zeus and Maia
herald, in the day
he came to Ida's glen, guiding that fair young trio of
goddesses,
all girded for the fray in bitter
rivalry about their beauty, to the
shepherd's fold where dwelt the
youthfulherdsman all alone by the
hearth of his
lonely hut.
antistrophe 1
Soon as they reached the
wooded glen, in gushing mountain
springs they bathed their dazzling skin, then sought the son of Priam,
comparing their rival charms in more than rancorous
phrase. But Cypris
won the day by her
deceitful promises, sweet-sounding words, but
fraught with
ruthlessoverthrow to Phrygia's
hapless town and
Ilium's towers.
strophe 2
Would God his mother had
smitten him a cruel death-blow on the
head before he made his home on Ida's slopes, in the hour Cassandra,
standing by the holy bay-tree, cried out, "Slay him, for he will bring
most
grievous bane on Priam's town." To every
prince she went, to
every elder sued for the babe's destruction.
antistrophe 2
Ah! had they listened, Ilium's daughters neer had felt the yoke of
slavery, and thou, lady, hadst been established in the royal palace;