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THE SUPPLIANT MAIDENS.

Semi-Chorus.

Ah, but I tremble and quake lest again they should sail to reclaim!
Alas for the sorrow to come, the blood and the carnage of war.
Ah, by whose will was it done that o'er the wide ocean they came,
Guided by favouring winds, and wafted by sail and by oar?


Semi-Chorus.

Peace! for what Fate hath ordained will surely not tarry but come;
Wide is the counsel of Zeus, by no man escaped or withstood:
Only I pray that whate'er, in the end, of this wedlock he doom,
We, as many a maiden of old, may win from the ill to the good.[1]


Semi-Chorus.

Great Zeus, this wedlock turn from me—
Me from the kinsman bridegroom guard!


Semi-Chorus.

Come what come may, 'tis Fate's decree.

  1. The ambiguity of these two lines is reproduced from the original. The Semi-Chorus appear to pray, in one aspiration, that the threatened wedlock may never take place, and, if it does take place, may be for weal, not woe.