Iphigenia in Tauris | Page 4

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
than one.?Speak openly, thou know'st I keep my word.
IPHIGENIA.?Its ancient bands reluctantly my tongue?Doth loose, a long-hid secret to divulge;?For once imparted, it resumes no more?The safe asylum of the inmost heart,?But thenceforth, as the powers above decree,?Doth work its ministry of weal or woe.?Attend! I issue from the Titan's race.
THOAS.?A word momentous calmly hast thou spoken.?Him nam'st thou ancestor whom all the world?Knows as a sometime favourite of the gods??Is it that Tantalus, whom Jove himself?Drew to his council and his social board??On whose experienc'd words, with wisdom fraught,?As on the language of an oracle,?E'en gods delighted hung?
IPHIGENIA.
'Tis even he;

But gods should not hold intercourse with men?As with themselves. Too weak the human race,?Not to grow dizzy on unwonted heights.?Ignoble was he not, and no betrayer;?To be the Thunderer's slave, he was too great:?To be his friend and comrade,--but a man.?His crime was human, and their doom severe;?For poets sing, that treachery and pride?Did from Jove's table hurl him headlong down,?To grovel in the depths of Tartarus.?Alas, and his whole race their hate pursues.
THOAS.?Bear they their own guilt, or their ancestors'?
IPHIGENIA.?The Titan's mighty breast and nervous frame?Was his descendant's certain heritage;?But round their brow Jove forg'd a band of brass.?Wisdom and patience, prudence and restraint,?He from their gloomy, fearful eye conceal'd;?In them each passion grew to savage rage,?And headlong rush'd uncheck'd. The Titan's son,?The strong-will'd Pelops, won his beauteous bride,?Hippodamia, child of OEnomaus,?Through treachery and murder; she ere long?Bore him two children, Atreus and Thyestes;?With envy they beheld the growing love?Their father cherish'd for a first-born son?Sprung from another union. Bound by hate,?In secret they contrive their brother's death.?The sire, the crime imputing to his wife,?With savage fury claim'd from her his child,?And she in terror did destroy herself--
THOAS.?Thou'rt silent? Pause not in thy narrative!?Do not repent thy confidence--say on!
IPHIGENIA.?How blest is he who his progenitors?With pride remembers, to the list'ner tells?The story of their greatness, of their deeds,?And, silently rejoicing, sees himself?Link'd to this goodly chain! For the same stock?Bears not the monster and the demigod:?A line, or good or evil, ushers in?The glory or the terror of the world.--?After the death of Pelops, his two sons?Rul'd o'er the city with divided sway.?But such an union could not long endure.?His brother's honour first Thyestes wounds.?In vengeance Atreus drove him from the realm.?Thyestes, planning horrors, long before?Had stealthily procur'd his brother's son,?Whom he in secret nurtur'd as his own.?Revenge and fury in his breast he pour'd,?Then to the royal city sent him forth,?That in his uncle he might slay his sire,?The meditated murder was disclos'd,?And by the king most cruelly aveng'd,?Who slaughter'd, as he thought, his brother's son.?Too late he learn'd whose dying tortures met?His drunken gaze; and seeking to assuage?The insatiate vengeance that possess'd his soul,?He plann'd a deed unheard of. He assum'd?A friendly tone, seem'd reconcil'd, appeas'd.?And lur'd his brother, with his children twain,?Back to his kingdom; these he seiz'd and slew;?Then plac'd the loathsome and abhorrent food?At his first meal before the unconscious sire.?And when Thyestes had his hunger still'd?With his own flesh, a sadness seiz'd his soul;?He for his children ask'd,--their steps, their voice,?Fancied he heard already at the door;?And Atreus, grinning with malicious joy,?Threw in the members of the slaughter'd boys.--?Shudd'ring, O king, thou dost avert thy face:?So did the sun his radiant visage hide,?And swerve his chariot from the eternal path.?These, monarch, are thy priestess' ancestors,?And many a dreadful fate of mortal doom,?And many a deed of the bewilder'd brain,?Dark night doth cover with her sable wing,?Or shroud in gloomy twilight.
THOAS.
Hidden there

Let them abide. A truce to horror now,?And tell me by what miracle thou sprang'st?From race so savage.
IPHIGENIA.
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