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小说: andromache 字数: 每页4000字

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                                     430 BC

                                   ANDROMACHE

                                  by Euripides

                         translated by E。 P。 Coleridge




    CHARACTERS IN THE PLAY

  ANDROMACHE

  MAID OF ANDROMACHE

  CHORUS OF PHTHIAN WOMEN

  HERMIONE; daughter of MENELAUS and wife of Neoptolemus

  MENELAUS; King of Sparta

  MOLOSSUS; son of ANDROMACHE and Neoptolemus

  PELEUS; father of Achilles

  NURSE OF HERMIONE

  ORESTES; son of Agamemnon

  MESSENGER

  THETIS; the goddess; wife of PELEUS

  Various attendants





ANDROMACHE

  ANDROMACHE





         (SCENE:…Before the temple of THETIS in Thessaly。

          ANDROMACHE; dressed as a suppliant; is clinging

          to the altar in front of the temple。 The palace

                     of Achilles is nearby。)



  ANDROMACHE

    O CITY of Thebes; glory of Asia; whence on a day I came to Priam's

princely home with many a rich and costly thing in my dower; affianced

unto Hector to be the mother of his children; I Andromache; envied

name in days of yore; but now of all women that have been or yet shall

be the most unfortunate; for I have lived to see my husband Hector

slain by Achilles; and the babe Astyanax; whom I bore my lord;

hurled from the towering battlements; when the Hellenes sacked our

Trojan home; and I myself am come to Hellas as a slave; though I was

esteemed a daughter of a race most free; given to Neoptolemus that

island…prince; and set apart for him as his special prize from the

spoils of Troy。 And here I dwell upon the boundaries of Phthia and

Pharsalia's town; where Thetis erst; the goddess of the sea; abode

with Peleus apart from the world; avoiding the throng of men;

wherefore the folk of Thessaly call it the sacred place of Thetis;

in honour of the goddess's marriage。 Here dwells the son of Achilles

and suffers Peleus still to rule Pharsalia; not wishing to assume

the sceptre while the old man lives。 Within these halls have borne a

boy to the son of Achilles; my master。 Now aforetime for all my misery

I ever had a hope to lead me on; that; if my child were safe; I

might find some help and protection from my woes; but since my lord in

scorn of his bondmaid's charms hath wedded that Spartan Hermione; I am

tormented by her most cruelly; for she saith that I by secret

enchantment am making her barren and distasteful to her husband; and

that I design to take her place in this house; ousting her the

rightful mistress by force; whereas I at first submitted against my

will and now have resigned my place; be almighty Zeus my witness

that it was not of my own free will I became her rival!

    But I cannot convince her; and she longs to kill me; and her

father Menelaus is an accomplice in this。 E'en now is he within;

arrived from Sparta for this very purpose; while I in terror am come

to take up position here in the shrine of Thetis adjoining the

house; if haply it may save me from death; for Peleus and his

descendants hold it in honour as symbol of his marriage with the

Nereid。 My only son am I secretly conveying to a neighbour's house

in fear for his life。 For his sire stands not by my side to lend his

aid and cannot avail his child at all; being absent in the land of

Delphi; where he is offering recompense to Loxias for the madness he

committed; when on a day he went to Pytho and demanded of Phoebus

satisfaction for his father's death; if haply his prayer might avert

those past sins and win for him the god's goodwill hereafter。

                                     (The MAID OF ANDROMACHE enters。)

  MAID

    Mistress mine; be sure I do not hesitate to call thee by that

name; seeing that I thought it thy right in thine own house also; when

we dwelt in Troy…land; as I was ever thy friend and thy husband's

while yet he was alive; so now have I come with strange tidings; in

terror lest any of our masters learn hereof but still out of pity

for thee; for Menelaus and his daughter are forming dire plots against

thee; whereof thou must beware。

  ANDROMACHE

    Ah! kind companion of my bondage; for such thou art to her; who;

erst thy queen; is now sunk in misery; what are they doing? What new

schemes are they devising in their eagerness to take away my

wretched life?

  MAID

    Alas! poor lady; they intend to slay thy son; whom thou hast

privily conveyed from out the house。

  ANDROMACHE

    Ah me! Has she heard that my babe was put out of her reach? Who

told her? Woe is me! how utterly undone!

  MAID

    I know not; but thus much of their schemes I heard myself; and

Menelaus has left the house to fetch him。

  ANDROMACHE

    Then am I lost; ah; my child! those vultures twain will take and

slay thee; while he who is called thy father lingers still in Delphi。

  MAID

    True; for had he been here thou wouldst not have fared so

hardly; am sure; but; as it is; thou art friendless。

  ANDROMACHE

    Have no tidings come that Peleus may arrive?

  MAID

    He is too old to help thee if he came。

  ANDROMACHE

    And yet I sent for him more than once。

  MAID

    Surely thou dost not suppose that any of thy messengers heed thee?

  ANDROMACHE

    Why should they? Wilt thou then go for me?

  MAID

    How shall I explain my long absence from the house?

  ANDROMACHE

    Thou art a woman; thou canst invent a hundred ways。

  MAID

    There is a risk; for Hermione keeps no careless guard。

  ANDROMACHE

    Dost look to that? Thou art disowning thy friends in distress。

  MAID

    Not so; never taunt me with that。 I will go; for of a truth a

woman and a slave is not of much account; e'en if aught befall me。

                                                (The MAID withdraws。)

  ANDROMACHE

    Go then; while I will tell to heaven the lengthy tale of

lamentation; mourning; and weeping; that has ever been my hard lot;

for 'tis woman's way to delight in present misfortunes even to keeping

them always on her tongue and lips。 But I have many reasons; not

merely one for tears;…my city's fall; my Hector's death; the

hardness of the lot to which I am bound; since I fell on slavery's

evil days undeservedly。 'Tis never right to call a son of man happy;

till thou hast seen his end; to judge from the way he passes it how he

will descend to that other world。

                                               (She begins to chant。)

    'Twas no bride Paris took with him to the towers of Ilium; but

curse to his bed when he brought Helen to her bower。 For her sake;

Troy; did eager warriors; sailing from Hellas in a thousand ships;

capture and make thee a prey to fire and sword; and the son of

sea…born Thetis mounted on his chariot dragged my husband Hector round

the walls; ah woe is me! while I was hurried from my chamber to the

beach; with slavery's hateful pall upon me。 And many tear I shed as

I left my city; my bridal bower; and my husband in the dust。 Woe;

woe is me! why should I prolong my life; to serve Hermione? Her

cruelty it is that drives me hither to the image of the goddess to

throw my suppliant arms about it; melting to tears as doth a spring

that gushes from the rock。

                                (The CHORUS OF PHTHIAN WOMEN enters。)

  CHORUS (singing)



                                                            strophe 1



    Lady; thus keeping thy weary station without pause upon the

floor of Thetis' shrine; Phthian though I am; to thee a daughter of

Asia I come; to see if I can devise some remedy for these perplexing

troubles; which have involved thee and Hermione in fell discord;

because to thy sorrow thou sharest with her the love of Achilles' son。



                                                        antistrophe 1



    Recognize thy position; weigh the present evil into the which thou

art come。 Thou art a Trojan captive; thy rival is thy mistress; a

true…born daughter of Sparta。 Leave then this 

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