SCENE II
The same.
PERSEUS Rocks on the outland jagged with the sea, You slumbering promontories whose huge backs Jut into azure, and thou, O many-thundered Enormous Ocean, hail! Whatever lands Are ramparted with these forbidding shores, Yet if you hold felicitous roofs of men, Homes of delightful laughter, if you have streams Where chattering girls dip in their pitchers cool And dabble their white feet in the chill lapse Of waters, trees and a green-mantled earth, Cicalas noisy in a million boughs Or happy cheep of common birds, I greet you, Syria or Egypt or Ionian shores, Perseus the son of Danaë, who long Have sojourned only with the hail-thrashed isles Wet with cold mists and by the boreal winds Snow-swathed. The angry voices of the surf Are welcome to me whose ears have long been sealed By rigorous silence in the snows. O even The wail of mortal misery I choose Rather than that intolerable hush;
For this at least is human. Thee I praise, Page – 15
And Gorgon visions of that monstrous world He descends out of sight. Iolaus enters with Cireas, Dercetes and soldiers.
IOLAUS
Prepare your ambush, men, amid these boulders,
CIREAS O Poseidon Ennosigaios, man-swallower, earth-shaker, I have swabbed thee for eighteen years. I pray thee tot up the price of those swabbings and be not dishonest with me nor miserly. Eighteen by three hundred and sixty-five by two, that is the sum of them: and forget not the leap years either, O great Poseidon.
IOLAUS Into our ambush, for I hear them come, They conceal themselves. Perseus returns with Tyrnaus and Smerdas.
PERSEUS Chaldean merchants, would my speed to save Had matched the hawk's when he swoops down for slaughter. So many beautiful bodies of strong men Lost in the surge, so many eager hopes Of happiness now quenched would still have gladdened The sunlight. Yet for two delightful lives Saved to the stir and motion of the world I praise the Gods that help us.
TYRNAUS
Thou radiant youth Page – 16
I thank thee that 'tis saved. Smerdas, discharge
SMERDAS
Three thousand pieces of that wealthy stuff,
TYRNAUS Smerdas, not beggared yet of arm or brain.
SMERDAS The toil-marred peasant has as much.
PERSEUS
Merchant,
SMERDAS
O that the sea had swallowed me and rolled
PERSEUS
Chaldean merchant, Page – 17
SMERDAS Cursed be the moment when we neared its shores! O harsh sea-god, if thou wilt have my wealth, My soul, it was a cruel mercy then to leave This beggared empty body bared of all That made life sweet. Take this too, and everything.
IOLAUS (stepping forward) Thy prayer is granted thee, O Babylonian. The soldiers appear and surround Perseus and the merchants.
CIREAS
All the good stuff drowned ! O unlucky Cireas !
O greedy
SMERDAS Shield us! what are these threatening spear-points ?
TYRNAUS
Fate's.
IOLAUS
Draw not in vain, strive not against the gods.
PERSEUS An evil and harsh religion Page – 18
You practise in your land, stripling of Syria,
TYRNAUS (flinging away his sword)
Take me. They seize Tyrnaus.
SMERDAS
O wicked fool!
PERSEUS Still, merchant, thou wouldst live?
SMERDAS
I am dead with terror
PERSEUS
I war not with the gods for thee. Page – 19 I will protect meanwhile thy head from onset.
SMERDAS
Alas, you mock me! I have no skill with weapons The Syrians seize Smerdas.
Help! I will give thee
PERSEUS My sword is heaven's; it is not to be purchased. Smerdas and Tyrnaus are led away.
IOLAUS Take too this radiance.
PERSEUS (drawing his sword)
Asian stripling, pause.
I would not disarrange thy sunny curls
IOLAUS I too could wish to spare thy joyous body From the black knife, whoe'er thou art, O stranger. But grim compulsion drives and angry will Of the sea's lord, chafing that mortal men Insult with their frail keels his rude strong oceans. Therefore he built his grisly temple here, And all who are broken in the unequal war With surge and tempest, though they evade his rocks, Must belch out anguished blood upon that altar Miserably.
PERSEUS I come not from the Ocean. Page – 20
IOLAUS There is no other way that men could come; For this is ground forbidden to unknown feet. (smiling)
Unless these gaudy pinions on thy shoes
PERSEUS Are there not those who ask nor solid land For footing nor the salt flood to buoy their motions ? Perhaps I am of these.
IOLAUS
Of these thou art not.
PERSEUS
Set on thy war-dogs. Me alive
IOLAUS
Art thou a demigod
PERSEUS
My sword is in my hand and that shall answer.
IOLAUS
Dercetes, wait. His face Page – 21
What wilt thou do with him in thy dank caves Polydaon and Phineus enter from behind.
DERCETES Prince, give the order.
IOLAUS Let this young sungod live.
DERCETES It is forbidden.
IOLAUS But I allow it.
POLYDAON (coming forward)
And when did lenient Heaven
IOLAUS Polydaon—
POLYDAON
Does a royal name on earth
IOLAUS
Our blood! Page – 22 This stranger.
POLYDAON
Captain, take them both. You flinch?
PHINEUS
Be wise, young lolaus. Polydaon,
IOLAUS I need not thy protection, Tyrian Phineus: This is my country. He draws.
PHINEUS (aside to Polydaon)
It were well done to kill him now, his sword
POLYDAON
Will you accept,
DERCETES
Seize them but slay not!
SOLDIERS Poseidon! great Poseidon.
PERSEUS,
lolaus, He shakes his uncovered shield in the
Page – 23 faces of the soldiers. They stagger back covering their eyes.
IOLAUS Gods, what a glory lights up Syria!
POLYDAON
Amazement!
CIREAS Master, master, skedaddle: run, run, good King of Tyre, it is scuttle or be scuttled. Zeus has come down to earth with feathered shoes and a shield made out of phosphorus. He runs off, followed more slowly by Dercetes and the soldiers.
PHINEUS Whate'er thou art, yet thou shalt not outface me.
He advances with sword drawn.
POLYDAON (pulling him back)
Back, Phineus! He goes out with Phineus.
IOLAUS
O radiant strong immortal,
PERSEUS
No, lolaus. Page – 24 Than a brief mortal.
IOLAUS
Art thou only man ?
PERSEUS
Give me thy hands,
IOLAUS
Tell me thy name. What memorable earth
PERSEUS
I am from Argolis,
IOLAUS Come, Perseus, friend, with me: fierce entertainment We have given, unworthy the fair joyousness Thou carriest like a flag, but thou shalt meet A kinder Syria. My royal father Cepheus Shall welcome, my mother give thee a mother's greeting And our Andromeda's delightful smile Persuade thee of a world more full of beauty Than thou hadst dreamed of.
PERSEUS
I shall yet be glad with thee, Page – 25
With orchard walls and green with unripe corn
IOLAUS
Such a village
PERSEUS
Thither They go out.
Page – 26 |