ACT III
Scene: The assembly ground of the Spartans. Maidens discovered. A dance is ending.
Nac. We limped through that. Apollo! Are there thorns
I' the grass? We'll better it. Come!
Dia. No time. I hear
The senators.
Nac. They wait beyond the bridge
For old Aristogeiton. Come, my maids!
You, Dianessa need to school your toes.
'Twas you played wild-foot—twice!
Art. Save her a slip
When Agis' eye is on her!
Nac. Faith, she'd be
No bride this year!
Dia. What ache for that? His love
Is slight if 't hangs upon my toes.
Nac. My troth!
Less might catch more!
Dia. You, Nacia, are not so lithe
As a ferret in a hoop. An Athens maid
Might labor so in all her skirts.
Nac. Ho, ho!
A little puff blow such a fire? The coals
Were hot then!
Myr. Nay, my girls, we'll douse you both
I' the river yonder if you flame at naught.
How, Dianessa, dance the maids of Athens?
But surely not in skirts!
Dia. My father saw them,
And so he said.
Myr. Why dance at all then? Grace
That cadent girdles the invisible waves
Of flute and harp is born of faining limbs,
And hide them who may see it?
The. No doubt they bob
Like bears in blankets, and believe they dance.
Nac. Pyrrha could say. But since she came from Athens
Who hears her speak?
Art. She keeps from all our games,
And scorns the wrestle, though our noblest youths
Have sent her challenge.
The. Ay! Lets Dianessa wear
The vestal bays, nor cares if Hieron
Be there to see.
Myr. Come, Pyrrha, tell us how
The Athenian maidens dance with shrouded feet.
Pyrr. They wear their robes as Morning does the mist
That makes her beauty greater and her dream
Live on in men.
Dia. Ah, maidens, here's a tale
For the other ear.
Pyrr. The bare and brazen sun
That's up without a cloud, cheers to the hunt,
The fight, the bruited path,—makes careful dames
Send linen to the ford, and say "Zeus grant,
We'll air the beds!"
Nac. Ay, wives must know their season.
Pyrr. But let night-swimming Morn come up
In foamy veil, and her priest-hearted rose
Stays lusty feet and gives adventure's hour
To the achieving soul.
Art. What kin is this
To th' matter?
Pyrr. Why, Artante, when we dance
Half naked as we do before the youths,
They say of us "A bed-mate there, and strong
To bear and breed brave warriors for my house."
But they in Athens who so watch the dance,
See sheatheless Being shine through form that would,
Not softened thus, first fill the ruder eye
And leave unseen the token of a grace
Earth may not shadow.
Dia. Nay, you speak Athenian!
Let's have it in our tongue.
Nac. What grace can be
So badgered in a gown?
Pyrr. Ask flying doves,
That rhythm the air till it doth ache with loss
When they have passed. So have these maidens taught
The silken fold to be their wingèd part.
Myr. Ask her no more. Alack, our Pyrrha drank
Of charmed Ilissus,—must go back to Athens!
Nac. But come! Our dance! We yet are Spartan maids.
Dia. [Taking wreath from her hair] Our flowers are far
from morning. See, these buds
Are pale as they had never known the dew.
But I know where some fleecy clusters blow
And daintily edge the stream. Like tiny birds,
Green-necked and lily-winged, they are alight
A hundred to a stem. I'll have a wreath
Of them.
Myr. And I. These sad things are less bright
Than locks they should adorn.
Art. New garlands, all!
Where grow these favors? Dianessa, lead!
[They go off, rear left. Pyrrha waits a meditative moment, then turns to follow. A bough brushes her cheek. She puts up her hand and plucks a bunch of berries from it]
Pyrr. 'Tis like his ruby. Nature loved them both
With the same kiss,—the berry and the stone.
[Fastens cluster to her bosom]
"Heaven should have its sun." This sun will fade,
But that I threw away had ne'er lost hue
So near my heart, giving and taking fire.
[Something thrown from the bushes falls at her feet. She gazes
at it, not taking it up]
Ah! Biades' jewel! Who.... [Looks about guardedly]
[Biades comes from the woods. He is dressed as a Helot in a scant tunic of goat-skin, and wears a large cap]
Pyrr. Whose slave are you,
Bold Helot?
Bia. [Kneeling] Thine! [Takes off cap, revealing his quantity of
dark curls]
Pyrr. Are you in love with death,
That you have come to Sparta?
Bia. Nay, I come
A banished man.
Pyrr. I've heard how you were plucked.
Bia. No feather left.
Pyrr. Life, sir, is yours, and you
Cast it away in Lacedæmon.
Bia. Nay,—
Pyrr. You whose dark outrage made her honor bleed,
Think on her burning wound to set the foot
Of impudence and live?
Bia. I know the Spartans.
They will exalt my courage above death.
Pyrr. Courage that reckons so bates its own worth
Till a coward might disport it. You will meet
Death's mercy but no other.
Bia. No, the virtue
Dearest in them they'll hold dear in myself.
But if not so,—blow out your candle, Fate,
I'll go to bed.
Pyrr. Why not have fled to Persia?
She's softer mannered,—has no aching pride
Your death would poultice.
Bia. Pyrrha lives in Sparta.
Howe'er I set my feet, love turned them here.
Which way I bent some tingèd thought of thee
Crept as a secret sun to every sense
And made the hidden threads of being blush
Like coral boughs when Aphrodite's foot
Is on the wave.
Pyrr. Athenian, what canst hope
From Stesilaus' daughter?
Bia. I ask naught.
But had a gem of hers that hourly cried
To clasp its mistress, and to bring it thus,
With Death a looker-on, I thought might make
The peasant service shine so sovranly
That even her royal and offended eyes
Might gently entertain it.
Pyrr. Deck the bark
Of yon shag ilex and 'twill wear your trinket
With the same grace and thanks.
Bia. Thy grace is hers
Who walked unrobed from hands of the high gods
Grown jealous of the beauty they had made.
Not this, nor any jewel may adorn it,
Though swartest pebbles might grow ruby proud,
And rubies throb with breath to be so worn.
And for thy thanks, I have not come this way
To ask for them. Keep them for one so poor
He lets his heart for hire.
[Puts locket slowly under his tunic]
And yet my ears
Fed on a sigh when I was hidden there.
Pyrr. Who is so strong as never to have sighed?
That secret moment was my weakest too.
I'm now a Spartan, and my father's name
Is Stesilaus. You may know it, sir,
Who wert of Athens, but whose country now
Is so much ground as you may beg of foes,
And that, Zeus help, they'll measure without grudge.
You're not so tall your grave would scant a field,
Or make a garden less.
[Sounds of approach across bridge, lower right]
Bia. Does Fate come noisy-footed?
I thought she crept, and loved the jungle-leap.
Pyrr. Hide, sir! I'll be as secret as these shrubs,
And not reveal you sooner. With the night
You may steal out of Sparta.
Bia. I'll go out winged
With Spartan ships, and honor as a bride
Shall sail with me!
Pyrr. Are you so mad? Then die!
[Enter ephors and senators, all old men, followed by warriors, then youths, wives, maidens, children, and attendant slaves. Biades draws his cap down and lies slouching on the grass. The ephors and senators take seats which the Helots have prepared for them]
First Ephor. What! Must we wait? Where are these merry slips?
First Senator. The woods are dancing yonder. By that sign
They come.
[Re-enter Dianessa, Myrta, and companions, who dance before the assembly, the figure symbolizing the capture of Persephone. They continue dancing, the youths joining, until every maid has won a partner.]
Ste. [To Archippe] Our Pyrrha does not dance. Why's that?
Arc. No why at all. I'll rate her. Sulky chuff!
Ste. Ay, you'll be on her heels!
Arc. The younger maids
Are chosen. She'll be left. There's Hieron
With eyes like begging moons which way she goes,
But she draws off,—
Ste. Well, well! She'll please herself.
Arc. In Phania, I'd have had a daughter now——
Ste. What, madam? Gabble here? Be done!
Agis. [Among the young men] I thirst.
[To Biades] Up, slave! Fill me a cup. Come, move, you drone!
[Biades slowly rises and goes to spring under trees, rear]
A Young Lord. What Helot's that?
Another. Some dog o' the farms. A staff
On 's back might help his legs.
Another. I'll put mine to 't.
[Biades lazily returns with cup. In handing it to Agis he spills part of the contents]
Agis. [Emptying the cup in Biades' face]
By Dis and Rhadamanthus! Sot! Whose man
Is this?
Bia. My own, you Spartan whelp!
[Gives Agis a blow, so unexpected that it knocks him down. His head strikes the root of a tree and he does not rise. A number of Spartans rush upon Biades. Others bear Agis off, left]
Voices. The dog!
Tread him to earth! Down! down!
Bia. [Springing from them and taking off his cap]
What, Greeks? You'd kill
A brother?
A Voice. Biades!
Bia. My friends——
Voices. Ha, ha! His friends!
Lys. What friending was 't you gave us on the day
You drove us out of Athens? Hoot and club
Then spoke how dear you loved us. We had not
Brought off our lives if your desire had dared
Blow full on Athens' heat.
Gir. Brought off our lives?
Where's Heracordus? Stoned at Athens' gate,
And dead upon the road.
Bia. Nay, brothers——
Gir. Ha!
If you're a brother, weep beside his grave.
I'll show it you.
Lys. And all the graves where lie
The dead we brought two bleeding years ago
From Decalea's wall, where you gave entry
Then broke the truce with charge!
Bia. But hear, my lords——
Gir. Come, wail beside them till they wake and ask
What new calamity brews in your tears!
[Enter Lenon]
Len. Agis yet swoons. That root was edged with death.
We fear he's gone.
Gir. For this alone, Athenian,
You should not live,—though all your else-wrought deeds
Were mercy's pawn for you.
Bia. Ye fathers, hear!
If ye know Justice,—and the world has said
Her lovers dwell in Sparta,—shall he cry
To scorn-shut ears, whose injuries taking voice
Should pass in thunder where your virtues sleep?
Hear one whose wrongs have bruised him to your coast,
And let it not be said that you from safe
Unshaken rocks met suppliant hands with spears!
Ste. Ye noble elders, there's a sort of mercy
On which dishonor feeds. As pasty, soft
As butter in the sun, it chokes the sluice
Of reason,—in marshy obliteration lays
The marks and bounds of justice,—nauseous spreads
Till mind is left no throne. Let it not come
Where sit the guards of honor!
Bia. I grant you so.
But what I ask is not thus natured, sir!
Sages of Lacedæmon, there's a mercy
That veins the very rock of Justice' seat.
It is the agent of divinest mould
In all the world. By it the mind grows fair
With blossoms deity may gather. 'Tis
As precious to the soul as south-lipped winds
To the winter-aching earth. Go bare of it,
Though ye know Virtue ye wear not her pearl.
I beg my life that you in saving me
May save the heavenliest favor given to men,
Nor crush it out of Sparta, leaving her
The scarred and barren terror gods forsake.
Second Ephor. Shall hear his plea? He may have argument
Of worthy note.
Second Senator. 'Tis not our way to judge
The dumb.
Third Ephor. [Very old, creakingly]
Why, if a lion, boar, or pard,
Or any beast, should pause as we did burn
In chase, and beg us hear his cause, I think
Our ears would ope.
Ste. Ay, and the earth too, sir,
Bearing such wonder on it! Folly's self
Would be too wise to listen to this man,
Yet ye would hear him!
Fourth Ephor. More than would. We will.
Bia. This clemency shows like yourselves,—the gem
Of mind's adornment, as ye are the lustre
Of Sparta's matchless race!
Ste. Now he is off.
Will gallop with us to what ditch he choose.
First Senator. Speak, Biades.
Bia. Of Agis then, my lords,—
This newly raw offence,—be my first word.
And I'll not stay for garnish. Truth is bare,
And bravest so. Though 'twas my Helot guise
Drew Agis' insult on me, think you, sirs,
It fell upon a proud and free-born Greek,
And who is here that could with putting on
A slave's vile dress put on his nature too,
Drain off his ancient, high nobility,
And in one brutish instant lose the blood
That made his fathers heroes? Is there one?
First Ephor. We grant you, none.
Bia. Your hearts then struck my blow,
Therefore must pardon it. If Agis' death
Falls from it, 'tis but accident that sleeps
In every motion, and in mine awoke
Untimely. Who, so shorn of wisdom, thinks
That I, a suitor here for barest life,
Meant him a vital stroke that would o'ercry
My prayers and make a mock of suppliance?
I'll mourn with you, my lords, but ask you wring
The neck of Fate, and leave my head where 'tis
To praise the just of Sparta.
Third Senator. So we might
But for the heavier charges that engage
The sighs of mercy 'gainst you ere they blow
This deed a pardon. What of Decalea?
Bia. That was a ruse the Spartans taught me, sir,
When at Eleusis they ensnared my troops
Within the gates, and naught passed out again
Save rivers of their blood. If I must die
For Decalea, die you with me, men,
For red Eleusis.
Fourth Senator. This is justice too.
I saw Eleusis. He is clear on that.
Ste. I warn you, senators! The fleetest wit
That pauses on his guile is honey-mired
And ne'er gets farther.
First Ephor. We'll not keep his road
An inch past justice, but we'll go so far.
Ste. So you resolve, but Hecate at his smile
Would plod beside him like a market lass,
Forgetting vengeance.
Bia. Honored Stesilaus:——
Ste. Honored? Ay, Biades! With gibe and jeer
That shook the walls of Athens! By my staff,
I'll——
Bia. Noble fathers, hear me for yourselves,
Who, loved of Pallas, in this council sit
Her earthly heirs and nature's demigods!
This rage of Stesilaus is itself
Sanction and seal for my adoption here,
A son of Sparta.
Ste. Ha! Now he would drive
The mares of Diomed!
Bia. My lords,——
Ste. Prove this?
Bia. Why made you Stesilaus head and tongue
Of envoy unto Athens? For you thought
His mind, most apt, fluidic, politic,
More quick than danger, would take shape of need,
Repairing your defense fast as you found
Your safety cramped. If I o'ercame him then
With wit that watched with sleepless spear at door
Of Athens' housèd trust, must you not crown in me
The quality held sovereign in him?
Ste. You hear, you elders,—must!
Bia. Ay, must,—and must!
Or at the fontal spring of justice break
Your cups and thirst. No alien dripple may
Content you then.
First Senator. We listen, Biades.
Bia. When swords of an uneven temper meet,
Who scorns the better proved? Nay, you do set
Your love upon it,—in your armory
Give it a burnished place. And I who crossed
With Stesilaus, for my triumph ask
To be of Sparta's armor.
Ste. Our dead shall answer!
Bia. They shall. For every heart my steel made cold,
Is proof how well I served my Athens,—proof
Of loyal heat with which I'll serve the State
That makes me hers! A true-bred Greek, outthrust
And homeless, seeks a foster-land, that he
May lift for her his sword, nor wasteful let
The chiefest virtue in him die unused
While his lost name no more climbs to the gods.
Second Senator. Would you ally with us 'gainst Attica?
Bia. I'm yours for that. By th' mother of the sea,
Her tears shall wash your feet!
Third Senator. What way wouldst take?
Bia. The way to Phernes and the Persian fleet
Now boastful before Rhodes. Grant me a convoy,
I'll forge with Persia Lacedæmon's sword,
And cut the crest from Athens.
Fourth Senator. We have failed
With Phernes.
Bia. You'll not fail again. He's sworn
My friend.
First Senator. Our ships are few.
Bia. But Corinth holds
Her sea-wings spread for any need of yours.
Ste. Hear me, ye warriors! He will lead
Our force afar, then stir up neighbor foes
To scourge unarmored Sparta! Think that one,
Cradled in silk and fed on nectared drops——
Bia. There, sir, I'm bold to say you're off the road
Of truth. My nurse was of your people, brought
From sterner Sparta for my orphan rearing,
By my good uncle Pelagon,—a man
Ye know your friend. From her wise hands I took
Your doughty-nurturing bread, and broth black-brewed,
That drives the shade of fear from veins of men.
Ste. I've bread now in my wallet. Let us see
Your teeth in 't.
[Takes out a piece of coarse, stale bread and offers it to Biades]
Bia. Pardon, sir! I do not hunger.
A Helot shared with me.
Ste. 'Twill keep till you
Would sup. But, you must try our broth, sir. Pulse
Is seething yonder. Youths, bring here a bowl.
We have a guest who'd call his childhood up
In good black brew. Hark, Lenon!
[Whispers to Lenon, who goes off left]
Third Ephor. It is truth.
Amycla was your nurse. I know the year
That she was sent to Athens.
Bia. On her lap
I learned a love for Sparta that returned
In warrior days to blunt my assaulting sword
And wound me from your side. She taught me too
The lyric wafture that dead hero-lips
Send on undying,—songs your young men sing,
And old men flush to hear,—and as a youth
I longed to make my civil Athens street
Echo to Sparta with a brother's call.
Third Ephor. But I am moved.
Fourth Ephor. And I.
Ste. Art grown so old
You'll feed on pap again? Come, Biades,
A song Amycla taught you! One will prove
Your love remembers Sparta.
Bia. Sir, I'm not
Your zany.
Ste. But you'd make my country one,
To antic for you.
[Re-enter Lenon with bowl of broth]
Ste. Here's your portion, sir.
Amycla made no better. Will you drink?
[Gives bowl to Biades, who regards the black mixture dubiously. All are silent, watching him. He looks at Pyrrha]
Bia. [To Pyrrha] Is 't poison?
Pyrr. [Stolid] It may be.
Bia. [To Senators] Your will's in this?
First Senator. It is.
Bia. If this be pledge that binds me yours,
Fellow of board and field, I drink long life
To our compact. But if death waits here,—to you,
O comrade shades, and our good fellowship!
[Drinks. The Spartans applaud]
Ste. You lean to him, and Sparta topples with you!
A Young Man. [Entering] Agis is up! He comes!
And bears no grudge
For a good Greek blow. Says you could give no less.
[Enter Agis]
Bia. High Zeus, I thank thee! Agis, thou dost live
To take my pardon and to give me thine!
[They take hands]
Ste. So soft?
Lys. Better than blows.
Ste. Ha! Like disease
He'll spread the woman till our eyes drop tears
Instead of fire. When Spartan eagles moult,
They'll go no farther than Athenian owls.
Lys. He's valiant.
Ste. There's no braver tongue.
Lys. And friend
To Phernes.
Ste. So he says.
Lys. Nay, that's well known.
Ste. My captain comrades, and ye aged fathers,
If ye had seen him strut, a vanity
As brainless as the monkey at his heels,
With woman velvets making slut of wealth
Trailing foul dust,—a peacock fan at 's cheek
Where a soldier's beard should grow, and bangled ears
Whose swinging jewels tickled a white neck
Soft as a harlot's pillow,—this at time
His city laid such honor on his head
As would have kept a brave man on his knees
For wisdom to uphold it,—had ye looked on this,
Ye'd call the weakest maiden from her wheel
To lead our wars ere trust to Biades!
First Ephor. A picture this,—shakes faith.
Second Ephor. We trust too far.
Ste. Sirs, had ye seen what I but paint——
Bia. My lords,
I'll wrestle with the stoutest Spartan youth
That makes your wars most dreaded, and these limbs,
Now shrunk with fasting, wasted and forsook
By Fortune that once fed them as her own,
Will prove my right to captain Sparta's host!
Ste. Our women could undo you, girl of Athens!
Meet his bold brag with this. One of our maids
Shall throw him! Ay! Then he'll betake his shame
To any shade will hide it.
Hie. Sir, I sue
To lay this boast.
Agis. My prayer be first, my lords!
Voices. A lot! A lot!
Ste. Nay, sons, a fall from you
Would give him hope to pick his honor up
And steal again to favor. He will plead
That you, full-fed, met him in famished hour,
When Fate hung him with bruises leeching strength,
And gave you victory. Let my offer hold.
A maiden to him, and we'll hear no more
Of valorous Biades.
First Ephor. We are agreed.
Second Ephor. Who is our strongest maid?
Lys. We've six whose claims
Push equal. All in public game have won
The bow of Artemis.
First Ephor. We'll choose from these.
Bia. Olympus, shower me woes! I will not cringe,
So they be man's. But save me from a mock
That makes misfortune past seem sweet as drops
From Hera's healing cup!
Dia. A mock? The gods
Have never honored you till now.
Myr. See these,
My bantling? Arms that made Kalides wear
A three months' bruise!
The. And these have locked the strength
Of Lenon in defeat!
Dia. Ask Mirador
If he liked well the sandy bed I gave him.
Nac. Bethink you now how you'll outcrow disgrace,
For you'll be short of breath when you've gone through
The brash I'll give you.
Dia. Then he'll show his reefed
And wattled skin, and say that want of bread
O'ercame him, not our valor.
Art. Look you, maids!
His hollow eyes do beg some pity of us.
We'll give him yet a chance, and mate him with
Our lame Coraina. She's near well again.
Will drop her crutch to be our champion.
Bia. Zeus,
Behold me patient! Furies, though I lack
Some vaunting flesh, the sharpest ill that on
My body ravins feeds a spirit that
Might meet with Heracles and give him need
Of both his arms!
Dia. Ha! Better! Maids, his tongue
Will fight yet!
Ste. Peace! The ephors choose
That Dianessa bear this honor off.
She threw strong Mirador, first of the youths,
Which puts her o'er the rest.
First Ephor. We've else determined
That with the fall the Athenian forfeits life.
Bia. And if I win, my lords? Since life must pay
Defeat, should victory not solicit me
With counterpoisèd prize?
First Ephor. We shall accept you
Leader and comrade, and give escort fair
To bear your suit to Phernes.
Lys. More! The maid
Shall be your bride, and bind you son and brother
To Sparta's love.
Second Ephor. You, Stesilaus, assent?
Ste. Since without risk you may pursue your folly,
I'll not oppose you.
First Ephor. Dianessa, you
Abide our will?
Dia. And welcome it. 'Twill work
Like Mars in me, and make my arm
The gallows of his fame. The Athenian lady!
I'd choose a husband among men.
Bia. And I,
My generous, dear lords, would woo and win
Some mute and humble maid. I would not force
The noble Dianessa bend her head
To one unworthied by a hostile Fate.
First Ephor. Tut, sir! If Fortune's love returns with heat
That makes you conqueror, by that same sun
Her pride will melt, and you will find her meek
As gosling in your hand.
Second Ephor. 'Tis settled so.
Wear what you win.
Pyrr. [Rising] Ye reverend men, and you,
My noble father, may my suit reveal
My love to Sparta and your love to me,
Which has not spoken in this act of yours
That overpeers me and gives up my due
To Dianessa.
First Ephor. Ha?
Pyrr. Though Mirador
Was forced below her, never in a bout
Has she ta'en honors from me, while I oft
Have left her down.
Second Ephor. Speak'st truly?
Pyrr. Hear herself
Avouch it.
Dia. Ay, you overmate me, but
The gap between us will not cast the match
To Biades. And I was chosen.
Fourth Ephor. Nay,
You must give place.
Pyrr. I've other reason, sir.
It is my dear, war-honored father lays
This match on Sparta, and my pride of house
Would bear his counsel through the act that sets
The sage's seal upon it.
First Ephor. A daughter, sir!
Ste. Bare duty might so speak.
Pyrr. This gives me warmth
My maiden comrades lack. By every vein
My father gave me, his time-laurelled brow
Shall never wear a garland less!
Second Ephor. Well sworn!
Pyrr. And for I saw——
Third Ephor. More reasons?
Pyrr. —the rude shame
The Athenian put upon the ambassadors,
And mine own eyes bore him in lowest semblance,
Demeaned from manhood, his dishonor wrapped
In purple cost that left it yet more naked.
I swear he shall not honored lead our wars!
If our gray heroes fail us, we have dames
To choose from,—need not go to Athens!
First Ephor. This speaks! The victory's won where courage makes
Such stout provision.
Pyrr. If I fail, my lords,
Then gods are mongers and their favors sell,
Denying honest prayers.
Lys. Come, Biades.
Art ready?
Bia. Ay, long past!
First Ephor. Your places then.
Ste. Delay you! Biades, with modesty
Unlooked for, but most fit, you gave up claim
To Dianessa.——
Bia. Nay, 'twas but an offer
Whose bounty met refusal.
Ste. I'll accept it
In Pyrrha's name.
Bia. So prudent against loss?
This caution, sir, gives me a victor's heart.
Ste. Triumph is hers a certain thousand times,
And yours a dicer's once, slipped you between
Hiccough and snore of gods at shutting time.
But since that once will have a thousandth chance
To trouble me, I'll grant you free of Pyrrha.
Bia. Wait till 'tis begged. Lysander spoke with kind
And equal honor, which did soften me
To leave his daughter his. And others here
Have tendered me the gentle looks that breed
The answering benison till hearts of earth
Feel heaven's element. But you, whose hate
Should hiss from crawling shape, not upright man's,
Wake fires in me that eat through godly patience
And sweep to battle. I'll endure no further.
Back with your taunts! And if 'twill make you sore
Where pride is daintiest, I'll your daughter wed
Because she is your daughter!
Ste. Bark, you puppy,
But you'll not carry it!
Bia. Were she featured foul
As snaked Medusa,—her brow a hanging night,—
Her figure hooped as age when chin and toes
Are neighbors,—and of speech so scaly, harsh
As Stesilaus,—I, with no more color
Or shade of reason than that you deny me,
Would make her bride. The ephors gave their word,
And what I win I'll wear!
First Ephor. We'll see you do.
Content you, Stesilaus. None will weep
To know your bluff soul matched. To place! To place!
[They wrestle. Pyrrha loses. Silence, then applause for Biades]
A Lord. My heart upheld him, for I know him brave.
Another. I saw his dripping sword on Theban plain
Cut through the knotted fray and make two fields
O' the combat.
Another. He can pray too, Delphi knows!
Another. But when his gallant prayers their action find
The gods themselves rage in them.
First Ephor. [To Pyrrha] Daughter, take
Fair thanks from us for brave support of Sparta,
And having lost, more thanks for giving her
Another soldier. Has defeat made soft
Your heart for swift espousal?
Bia. Let me woo
In slower way, good father. Tho' my boast
Rose high 'gainst Stesilaus' scorn, I'm not
Of heart so rash that I would lose her love
By taking it. With Sparta's aid now mine,
I'll ask her choose a noble guard and sail
With me, that I, by time and fortune graced,
May win a double suit, herself and Persia.
First Ephor. We'll think of it. Our plans are still unthreshed.
Come with us, Biades.
[Ephors, with senators and Biades, lead the way over bridge. All follow except Stesilaus and Pyrrha]
Ste. How was 't he won?
And he was livid famine! Scurfed with weeks
Of beggary! While you—such arms had saved
Antiope from Theseus!
[Pyrrha droops silent]
Up, my daughter!
We'll make this fall our hope. You shall take sail
With Biades——
Pyrr. Gods hear me, no!
Ste. You will.
I know his aim. He will betray our force
To Athens,—pardon's price. Athenian ease
Is in his marrow like a siren sleep,
And all this hardy show is but to buy
His languors back. You'll watch within his ship,
With Hieron a second secret eye,
And when his treachery ripens, take command
And bring him bound to Sparta.
Pyrr. Be so near?
Sail in his ship?
Ste. Be near him as a wife.
Watch close. Lie in his thoughts, though not his bed.
And if he presses to the shrine of favor,
Here is my dagger. This will be your guard.
Let him meet death upon it,—and that death
Be honor's sanctuary. Come! My brow
Must smooth submissive to the senators.
Clear too your face with summer policy.
Thus openly we'll hide. The State's turned fool,
And naught between her and perdition save
An old man and a girl! [Exit]
Pyrr. [Gazing at dagger] If this cold blade
Were seeking traitors 't might look in my heart.
[Curtain]