SCENE III
Darkness. The Temple of Poseidon.
POLYDAON Cireas! Why, Cireas! Cireas! Knave, I call you! Is the rogue drunk or sleeps ? Cireas! you, Cireas! My voice comes echoing from the hollow shrine To tell me of solitude. Where is this drunkard ? A dreadful thing it is to stand alone In this weird temple. Forty years of use Have not accustomed me to its mute threatening. It seems to me as if dead victims moved With awful faces all about this stone Invisibly here palpable. And Ocean Groans ever like a wounded god aloud Against our rocky base, his voice at night Weirdly insistent. I will go and talk With the Chaldeans in their chains: better Their pleasing groans and curses than the hush. He goes out and after a while comes back, disordered.
Wake, sleeping Syria, wake. Thou art violated, Page – 97 He rushes out. A gong sounds for some moments. It is silent and he returns, still more disordered.
Wake! Wake! Do you not hear Poseidon raging The shadow of Poseidon appears, vague and alarming at first, then distinct and terrible in the darkness.
POSEIDON My victims, Polydaon, give me my victims.
POLYDAON (falling prostrate) It was not I, it was not I, but others.
POSEIDON My victims, Polydaon, give me my victims.
POLYDAON
O dire offended god, not upon me
POSEIDON
How art thou innocent, when the Chaldeans
POLYDAON
I know not how they fled nor who released them. Page – 98
Nor slay me with those glaring eyes. Thy voice
POSEIDON Hear me, unworthy priest. While thou art scheming For thy own petty mortal aims abroad, I am insulted in my temple, laughed at By slaves, by children done injurious wrong, My victims snatched from underneath my roof By any casual hand, my dreadful image Looking deserted on: for none avenges.
POLYDAON Declare thy will, O Lord, it shall be done.
POSEIDON
Therefore I will awake, I will arise, Page – 99
POLYDAON O dreadful Lord!
POSEIDON
If thou wouldst shun the doom,
Slaughter on his yet not inanimate bosom, He disappears thundering.
POLYDAON Yes, Lord! shall not thy dreadful will be done? Phineus enters and his Tyrians with torches.
PHINEUS
Wherefore has the gong's ominous voice tonight
POLYDAON (rising) Welcome, King Phineus.
PHINEUS
Who art thou? Page – 100
POLYDAON Yes, I shall speak, of sacrilege and blood, Its terrible forfeit, and the wrath of Heaven.
Cepheus enters with Dercetes and Syrian
CEPHEUS What swift calamity, O Polydaon, Has waked to clamorousness the fatal gong At which all Syria trembles ? What is this face Thou showest like some grim accusing phantom's In the torches' light? Wherefore rang'st thou the bell?
POLYDAON
It rang the doom of thee and all thy house,
CEPHEUS My doom!
PHINEUS (aside)
I glimpse a striking plot
POLYDAON
The victims are released,
CEPHEUS Thou art mad!
POLYDAON 'Tis thou and thy doomed race are seized with madness Who with light hearts offend against Poseidon. But they shall perish. Thou and thy blood shall perish. Page – 101
CEPHEUS
O, thou appal'st me. Wherefore rings out thy voice
POLYDAON
Poseidon's self arose
PHINEUS
Cepheus, let search be made. Perhaps the victims
CEPHEUS
Scour, captain, scour all Syria for the fugitives.
Dercetes and the captains go
POLYDAON
People of Syria, hearken, hearken! Cries and groans. Page – 102
VOICES Spare us, Poseidon, spare us, dread deity!
POLYDAON Would you be spared? Obey Poseidon, people.
THEROPS Thou art our King, command us.
POLYDAON
Bring the woman, Therops and others go out to do his bidding.
PHINEUS What mean you, priest?
CEPHEUS Wherefore my queen and princess ?
POLYDAON
I do the will of terrible Poseidon.
PHINEUS
Thou then art mad!
POLYDAON Phineus, I know not what thou wilt permit: I know what terrible Poseidon wills. Page – 103
PHINEUS Poseidon! thou gross superstitious fool, Hast thou seen shadows in the night and took'st them For angry gods ?
POLYDAON
Refrain from impious words,
PHINEUS
Refrain thyself from impious deeds, or else
POLYDAON (recoiling)
Patience, King Phineus! Dercetes returns.
DERCETES One of the fugitives is seized.
POLYDAON Where, where?
DERCETES
Creeping about the sea-kissed rocks we found him
POLYDAON
Now we shall know the impious hand. Tremble,
CEPHEUS (aside) I am besieged, undone. Page – 104
No doubt it is my rash-brained Iolaus Soldiers enter, driving in Smerdas. SMERDAS (groaning)
I am dragged back to hell.
POLYDAON
Chaldean,
SMERDAS You mock me, mock me!
POLYDAON
No, man! thou shalt have freedom at a price
SMERDAS Price ? price ? I'll give the price.
POLYDAON The names of those whose impious hands released thee;
Which if thou speak not, thou shalt die, not given
SMERDAS
O kind Heaven! Page – 105
POLYDAON It was a woman did this!
SMERDAS I will say no more.
CEPHEUS I breathe again: it was not Iolaus.
POLYDAON
Seize him and twist him into anguished knots!
SMERDAS O spare me, spare me: I will tell all.
POLYDAON
Speak truth and I will give thee
SMERDAS Gold? Gold? Shall I have gold?
POLYDAON Thou shalt.
SMERDAS (after a pause)
The youth
POLYDAON Palter not! Who was with him? Thou shalt have gold. Page – 106
SMERDAS Young Iolaus.
CEPHEUS Alas!
PHINEUS Thus far is well.
POLYDAON Thou hast a shifty look about the eyes. Thou spokest of a woman. Was't the Queen? Hast thou told all? His face grows pale. To torment!
SMERDAS (groaning)
I will tell all. Swear then I shall have gold
POLYDAON By grim Poseidon's head I swear.
SMERDAS
O hard necessity! The fair child princess, There is a deep silence of amazement.
PHINEUS
I'll not believe this! could that gentle child
POLYDAON
He has the accent of unwilling truth. Page – 107
PHINEUS (low) Shall I have Syria?
POLYDAON When it is mine to give thee. Therops returns.
THEROPS The Queen arrives.
POLYDAON Remove the merchant.
The soldiers take Smerdas into the background,
CASSIOPEA
Keep ready hands upon your swords, Chaldeans.
POLYDAON Com'st thou with foreign falchions, Cassiopea, To brave the Syrian gods? Abandon her, Chaldeans. 'Tis a doomed head your swords encompass.
CASSIOPEA
Since when dost thou give thy commands in Syria
POLYDAON Let him. There stands he.
CASSIOPEA
Why hidest thou thine eyes, monarch of Syria, Page – 108 Unkingly? What grief o'ertakes thee?
POLYDAON
You see he speaks not. My people ?
THEROPS Tis so.
POLYDAON Stand forth, Andromeda.
CASSIOPEA What would you with my child? I stand here for her.
POLYDAON
She is accused of impious sacrilege,
CASSIOPEA (shuddering) Die! Who accuses her?
POLYDAON Bring the Chaldean.
DIOMEDE
Oh, the merchant's seized
ANDROMEDA
Oh poor, poor merchant!
DIOMEDE Say nothing. Page – 109
ANDROMEDA
And why should I conceal it, Diomede?
DIOMEDE But they will kill us both.
ANDROMEDA
I am a princess. Meanwhile the soldiers have brought Smerdas to the front.
POLYDAON
Look, merchant. Say before all who rescued thee?
SMERDAS
It is she. Oh, do not look
POLYDAON Is this the slave-girl?
SMERDAS It is she.
CASSIOPEA
This wretch
POLYDAON I'll not permit it.
PERISSUS
Why man, it is the law. We'll not believe Page – 110
CASSIOPEA
Syrians!
PERISSUS This sounds probable.
VOICES
Does he misuse Poseidon's name? unbind
CASSIOPEA
Look how he pales, O people!
CRIES Let him be strangled!
PHINEUS This is a royal woman.
POLYDAON Well, let the merchant then be put to question.
PERISSUS
Come and be tickled, merchant. I am the butcher. Page – 111
SMERDAS O help me, save me, lady Andromeda.
ANDROMEDA
Oh, do not lay your cruel hands upon him.
CASSIOPEA Ah, child Andromeda.
PERISSUS You, little princess! Wherefore did you this ?
ANDROMEDA
Because I would not have their human hearts
POLYDAON Now, Cassiopea! You are silent. Queen. Lo, Syrians, lo, my forgeries and fictions! Lo, my vile plottings! Enough. Poseidon wills That on the beach this criminal be bound For monsters of the sea to rend in fragments, And all the royal ancient blood of Syria Must be poured richly forth to appease and cleanse.
CASSIOPEA
Swords from the scabbard! gyre in your King from harm, Page – 112 POLYDAON What dost thou, Babylonian? CASSIOPEA To the palace, My trusty countrymen!
POLYDAON
Oppose them, soldiers!
DERCETES We are few: And how shall we lay hands on royalty ?
POLYDAON Nebassar, darest thou oppose the gods ?
NEBASSAR Out of my sword's way, priest! I do my duty.
POLYDAON Draw, King of Tyre!
PHINEUS 'Tis not my quarrel, priest.
Nebassar and the Chaldeans with drawn swords
POLYDAON
People of Syria, you have let them pass!
PERISSUS Would you have us spitted upon the Chaldean swords? Mad Page – 113 priest, must we be broached like joints and tossed like pan-cakes? We have no weapons. Tomorrow we will go to the Palace and what must be done shall be done. But 'tis not just that many should be slain for the crime of one and the house of Syria outrooted. Follow me and observe my commands, brave aristocracy of the shop, gallant commoners of the lathe and anvil, follow Perissus. I will lead you tonight to your soft downy beds and tomorrow to the Palace. All the Syrians go out led by Therops and Perissus.
PHINEUS
Thou hast done foolishly in this, O priest. He goes out with his Tyrians.
POLYDAON
O terrible Poseidon, He remains sunk in thought for a while, then raises his head. Tomorrow, Syrian? tomorrow is Poseidon's.
C u r t a i n Page – 114 |