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68
AESCHYLUS
vv. 1478–1496.

From him is the ache of the flesh
For blood born and increased;
Ere the old sore hath ceased
It oozeth afresh.


Chorus.

—Indeed He is very great,
And heavy his anger, He,
The Daemon who guides the fate
Of the old Tantalidae:
Alas, alas, an evil tale ye tell
Of desolate angers and insatiable!

—Ah me,
And yet 'tis all as Zeus hath willed,
Doer of all and Cause of all;
By His Word every chance doth fall,
No end without Him is fulfilled;
What of these things
But Cometh by high Heaven's counsellings?


[A band of Mourners has gathered within the House.


Mourners.

Ah, sorrow, sorrow! My King, my King!
How shall I weep, what word shall I say?
Caught in the web of this spider thing,
In foul death grasping thy life away!
Woe's me, woe's me, for this slavish lying,
The doom of craft and the lonely dying,
The iron two-edged and the hands that slay!