goddesses three and to that son of Priam, who in days gone by would
wake the music of his pipe around his steading.
CHORUS
Oh may sorrow be averted otherw
hither, and thou be blest!
HELEN
Woe is thee,
unhappy Troy! Thou through deeds not done by the
art ruined, and hast suffered direst woe; for the gift that Cypris
gave to me, hath caused a sea of blood to flow, and many an eye to
weep, with grief on grief and tear on tear. All this hath Ilium
suffered and mothers have lost their children; and
virgin sisters of
the slain have cut off their tresses by the
swollen tide of Phrygian
Scamander. And the land of Hellas hath lifted her voice of woe and
broken forth in wailing, smiting on her head, and making tender cheeks
to
stream with gore beneath the rending nail. Ah blest maid
Callisto, who long ago in Arcady didst find favour with Zeus, in the
semblance of beast four-footed, how much happier was thy lot than my
mother's, for thou hast changed the burden of thy grief and now with
savage eye art
weeping o'er thy
shaggy monster-shape; aye, and hers
was a happier lot, whom on a day Artemis drove from her choir, changed
to a hind with horns of gold, the fair Titanian maid, daughter of
Merops, because of her beauty; but my fair form hath proved the
curse of Dardan Troy and doomed Achaea's sons.
(HELEN and the CHORUS go into the palace. After the doors have
closed upon them, MENELAUS enters. He is alone and clad in rags.)
MENELAUS
Ah! Pelops, easy
victor long ago o'er thy rival Oenomaus in the
chariot-race on Pisa's plain, would thou hadst ended thy career
amongst the gods that day thou wert beguiled into making a
banquet for
them, or ever thou hadst begotten my father Atreus, to whom were
born by Aerope his wife, Agamemnon and myself Menelaus, an illustrious
pair; and
herein I make no idle boast, for 'twas a
mighty host, I
trow, that I their leader carried o'er the sea to Troy, using no
violence to make them follow me, but leading all the
chivalry of
Hellas by
voluntary consent. And some of these must we number 'mid the
slain, and some to their joy have 'scaped the sea,
bearing to their
homes again names long reckoned dead. But I, poor
wretch, go wandering
o'er grey Ocean's swell a weary space, long as that which saw me
sick the towers of Ilium; and for all my
longing to reach my country I
am not counted
worthy of this boon by heaven, but to Libya's desert
cheerless roadsteads have I sailed, to each and all of them; and
whensoe'er I draw me near my native land, the storm-wind drives me
back again, and never yet have favouring breezes filled my sails, to
let me reach my fatherland. And now a
wretched,
shipwrecked mariner,
my friends all lost, am I cast up upon this shore; and my ship is
shattered in a thousand pieces against the rocks; and its keel was
wrested from its
cunning fastenings; thereon did I with difficulty
escape, most
unexpectedly, and Helen also, for her had I rescued
from Troy and had with me. But the name of this country and its people
I know not; for I blushed to
mingle with the crowd to question them,
anxious for very shame to hide my misfortunes which reduce me to these
sorry rags. For when a man of high degree meets with
adversity, he
feels the strangeness of his fallen state more
keenly than a
sufferer of long
standing. Dire want is
wasting me; for I have neither
food, nor
raiment to gird myself
withal; behold the facts before you
to judge from-I am clad in tatters cast up from the ship; while all
the robes I once did wear,
gloriousattire and ornaments, bath the sea
swallowed; and in a cavern's deep recesses have I
hidden my wife,
the cause of all my trouble, and have come
hither, after
straitly
charging the survivors of my friends to watch her. Alone am I come,
seeking for those there left some help, if haply I may find it after
careful search. So when I saw this palace girt with
towering walls and
stately gates of some
prosperous lord, I drew nigh; for I have hope to
obtain somewhat for my sailors from this
wealthy house,
whereas from
houses which have no store, the inmates for all their
goodwill could
furnish
naught. Ho! there, who keeps the gate and will come forth to
bear my tale of woe into the house?
(A PORTRESS comes out of the palace in answer to his call.)
PORTRESS
Who stands before the door? Begone from the housel stand not at
the court-yard gate,
annoying my masters!
otherwise shalt thou die,
for thou art a Hellene born. and with them have we no dealings.
MENELAUS
Mother,
herein sayest thou
rightly on all points. 'Tis well; I
will obey; but
moderate thy words.
PORTRESS
Away! stranger, my orders are to admit no Hellene to this palace.
MENELAUS
Ha! do not seek to push me hence, or
thrust me away by violence.
PORTRESS
Thou dost not heed my words, and
therefore hast thyself to blame.
MENELAUS
Carry my message to thy master in the palace.
PORTRESS
Some one would rue it,
methinks, were I to take thy message.
MENELAUS
I come as a
shipwrecked man and a stranger, whom heaven protects.
PORTRESS
Well, get thee to some other house than this.
MENELAUS
Nay, but I will pass into the house; so listen to me.
PORTRESS
Let me tell thee thou art
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unwelcome, and soon wilt be forcibly
ejected.
MENELAUS
Ah me! where are now those famous troops of mine?
PORTRESS
Elsewhere maybe thou wert a
mighty man; thou art not here.
MENELAUS
O fortune! I have not deserved such insult.
PORTRESS
Why are thy eyes with tear-drops wet? Why so sad?
MENELAUS
'Tis the
contrast with my fortunes erst so blest.
PORTRESS
Hence! then, and give thy friends those tears.
MENELAUS
What land is this? whose is the palace?
PORTRESS
Proteus lives here. It is the land of Egypt.
MENELAUS
Egypt? Woe is me! to think that
hither I have sailed!
PORTRESS
Pray, what fault hast thou to find with the race of Nile?
MENELAUS
'Twas no fault I found; my own disasters I lament.
PORTRESS
There be plenty in evil case; thou art not the only one.
MENELAUS
Is the king, of whom thou speakest, here within?
PORTRESS
There is his tomb; his son rules in his stead.
MENELAUS
And where may he be?
abroad, or in the house?
PORTRESS
He is not within. To Hellas is he a bitter foe.