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MACMILLAN'S LATIN CLASSICS
Edited by JAMES C. EGBERT, PhJ).
Professor of Latin, Colvmibia University
THREE TRAGEDIES OP SENECA
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^^^^
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
NEW YORK • BOSTON • CHICAGO
ATLANTA • SAN FRANCISCO
MACMILLAN & CO., Limited
LONDON • BOMBAY • CALCUTTA
MELBOURNE
THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, Ltd.
TORONTO
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THREE TRAGEDIES OF
SENECA
HERCULES FURENS
TROADES
MEDEA
WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND NOTES
BT
HUGH MACMASTER KINGERY, Ph.D.
PBOFISSOB m WABABH COLUSS
Wttogotft
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
1908
All rights reserved
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COPTBIGHT, 1908,
By the MACMILLAN COMPANY.
Set up and electrotyped. Published February, 2908.
Notfsoob 9tc00
J. 8. Gushing Co. — Berwick & Smith Co.
Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
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PREFACE
The last decade has seen a revival of interest in the
Latin Tragedy, which had long been neglected. In many
colleges and universities the plays are studied now either
in independent courses or as supplementary to work in the
Comedy. The neglect, no doubt, was due in part to the want
of available editions with English notes. On the Continent
of Europe, especially in Germany, much labor has been de-
voted to the constitution of the text, and many monographs
on various phases of the subject have been published. In
England and America, on the other hand, little has been
done for many years.
It has been the fashion to dismiss the Senecan tragedies
airily as unworthy of serious attention ; but such criticism
seems to have been based in most cases on slight first-
hand acquaintance with them. Undeniably they have their
faults, yet have withal a real interest and value, first as the
sole remains of an important branch of Eoman literature,
second for their own content and style, and third for their
direct and powerful influence upon the English drama of
the Elizabethan age. Most of them, furthermore, may be
compared directly with their Greek originals, an advantage
we do not enjoy in studying the Latin Comedy.
In this edition no attempt at a critical treatment of the
text has been made, but the aim throughout has been to
give such aid as will enable an intelligent student of aver-
age preparation to understand and appreciate the plays
themselves. The mythological lore in which they are so
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vi PREFACE
rich is explained or illustrated in the notes by frequent
citation of Latin (and occasionally of Greek) authors. Such
original authorities as Apollodorus for Hercules and Apol-
lonius Rhodius for Medea and the Argonauts have been
consulted, but, being outside the range of works usually
studied by undergraduates, are quoted very sparingly. Sen-
eca's indebtedness to Ovid and Vergil is illustrated by nu-
merous quotations from those poets.
It'is assumed that the student of these tragedies has a
good reading knowledge of the Latin of Vergil, Horace and
Ovid ; hence little notice is taken of ordinary questions of
form or syntax, and no direct reference to the grammars is
given. Particular reference to the dictionary is made for a
few extraordinary word-meanings, but in general all neces-
sary explanation is given in the notes, which are very
full.
The treatment of versification in the introduction has
been governed by a desire to present the essentials in
simple and •practical form with a minimum of technical
terminology. Especially may the discussion of iambic verse
appear to some unduly elementary ; but in view of the un-
satisfactory handling of the subject in our school grammars
it has seemed wise to err on the side of too great rather
than too little fullness. For the same reason, in the in-
terest of simplicity, the glyconic and ascl^piadean measures
are presented as choriambic instead of logaoedic. As a
guide to the reading of the verse the principal ictus of
each measure is indicated in the text by printed accents,
as is common in editions of Plautus and Terence.
The text in the main follows Leo (Berlin, 1879), modi-
fied in a few instances by reference to Richter's edition of
1902. In most cases any departure from Leo's text is men-
tioned in the notes; but for the purpose of this series it has
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PREFACE vii
not been thought desirable either to print the variants or to
devote much space to discussion of textual questions.
Acknowledgment is due to Professor James C. Egbert,
the general editor of the series, for his courtesy and helpful
suggestions^ and to my colleague, Professor Daniel D. Hains,
for assistance in the difficult work of reading proof on the
Latin text.
Wabash Collbqs.
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CONTENTS
Introduction p^^^j
Tragic Literature at Rome . ....... 1
The Senecan Tragedies 3
Greek Models 6
Stage Setting 8
The Question of Authorship 9
Seneca's Life 11
The Language and Style 14
Seneca's Works. 15
Versification 16
Iambic Measures 16
Trochaic Measures 19
The Sapphic 19
Choriambic Measures .20
Dactylic Verse 21
Anapestic Verse 21
Manuscripts 23
Editions 23
Text
Hercules Furens 27
Troades 73
Medea 115
Notes
On the Hercules Furens 153
On the Troades 211
On the Medea 265
iz
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ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE INTRODUCTION AND
NOTES
A., Aen. Aeneid.
Ach. Achilleis (Statius).
Ag. Agamemnon (Seneca).
Am. Amores (Ovid).
Ann. Annales (Tacitus).
A.P. Ars Poetica.
Brev. Vit. De Brevitate Vitae
(Seneca).
C., Carm. The Odes of Horace or
Catullus.
C.8. Carmen Saeculare.
Pf Prov. De Providentia (Seneca).
£. Eclogues of Vergil.
Epig. Epigrams (Seneca).
Spist. Epistles (Cicero, Seneca,
Pliny).
Eur. Euripides.
P. Fasti (Ovid).
Fab. Fabulae (Hyginus).
frag. Fragments of Latin tragedy.
G. Georgics of Vergil.
Germ. Germania (Tacitus).
Hec. Hecuba (Euripides).
H.P. Hercules Furens (Euripides,
Seneca).
H.O. Hercules Oetaeus (Seneca).
n. Diad.
I.O. Institutio Oratoria (Quin-
tilian).
H., Met. Metamorphoses.
Med. Medea (Seneca).
N.D. De NaturaDeorum (Cicero).
N.H. Naturalis Historia (Pliny).
N.Q. Naturales Quaestiones
(Seneca).
Oct. Octavia (Seneca).
Od. Odyssey.
Oed. Oedipus (Seneca).
Phaed. Phaedra (Seneca).
Phars. Pharsalia (Lucan).
Phil. Philippics (Cicero).
Rem. Am. Remedium Amori8(Ovid).
R.N. De Rerum Natura (Lucretius).
S . , Sat . Satires (Horace, Juvenal) .
Tac. Tacitus.
Theb. Thebais (Statius).
Thy. Thyestes (Seneca).
Tr . , Trist . Tristia (Ovid) .
Tro. Troades (Euripides, Seneca).
art., artt. article, articles.
of. confer, compare.
CI. Diet. Classical Dictionary.
f., ff. following.
fin. at or near the end.
init. at or near the beginning.
lit. literally.
n. note.
p., pp. page, pages.
80. scilicet, understand, supply.
tr. translate.
v., w. verse, verses.
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THREE TRAGEDIES OF SENECA
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INTRODUCTION
Tragic Literature at Rome
For the first five centuries of her history Rome was too
busily engaged in maintaining her existence against the
perils of dissension within and the attacks 6f hostile neigh-
bors to give much attention to the gentler arts. By the
end of that time she had extended her control over the
whole of Italy (except the valley of the Po), and had come
into contact with the Greek colonies that fringed the
southern coasts. Educated Greeks were brought to
Rome as captives, and to some of them was given the
duty of teaching the young. This led to the development
of the first formal Uterature of Rome.
One of the prisoners so employed was L. Livius An-
dronicus, who in the year of the city 514 (b.c. 240) pro-
duced the first formal play ever given at Rome. Prob-
ably it was little more than a translation of some Greek
play, but it was a revelation to the uncultured Romans,
and so appealed to their fancy that other works soon were
produced by Livius and his imitators.
Gradually practice and rivalry brought about an im-
provement in form and workmanship, and presently one
and another ventured to introduce new features. In
place of mere translation, whether bald or free, came the
interpolation of incidents and dialogue not in the original,
the welding together of two plots (contaminatio) and the
B 1
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2 * THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
introduction of bits of local color to render the scenes
more intelligible to the untraveled Roman. Especially
was this done in the Comedy, as is seen in the extant plays
of Plautus and Terence.
In Tragedy the. earliest names after Livius are those of
Naevius, Ennius and Pacuvius. All these borrowed freely
from the Greek ; but presently the Romanes national pride
suggested an attempt at a national drama, and the result
is seen in the fabulae praetextae of Naevius and his suc-
cessors. In these, while the form of the Greek play was
preserved, both plot and characters were purely Roman.
We meet such titles as the Romulus of Naevius, the
Paullus of Pacuvius, and the Brutus and the Aeneadae of
Accius.
Unfortunately we have of these earliest products of the
Roman tragic muse nothing more than a list of titles and
a few of the merest fragments — too meager data for the
formation of any independent judgment of their merits.
For this we must rely on the opinions of ancient critics
who had access to the plays in their entirety. Cicero
constantly professed a great admiration for Ennius,
though rather as an epic than as a tragic poet. Varro is
quoted as having declared Pacuvius a model of richness
in diction. To Pacuvius and Accius Quintilian assigns
the foremost place among the early tragic writers in vigor
of thought and expression and in the dignity of the char-
acters they had created. The popularity still enjoyed by
these old productions in the time of Augustus provoked
the sarcastic protest of Horace (see especially Epist. 2. 1.
18-75). In general, the Roman critics of later times ad-
mitted the courage and vigor of these pioneers in litera-
ture, while at the same time they deplored the rudeness
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INTRODUCTION 3
of their style; but this, as Quintilian observes, was due
less to themselves than to their time.
Interest in Tragedy soon was overshadowed by the
growing popularity of the Comedy, which appealed more
powerfully to the Roman taste ; and, while the comedies
of Plautus and Terence were still popular in the Augustan
Age, the custom of presenting tragedies on the stage seems
soon to have died out. A natural result was the diversion
of literary effort into other channels, and in the half
century following the death of Accius there was but one
tragic writer of any note — L. Julius Caesar Strabo.
After Accius, indeed, it is probable that works of this sort
were composed rather as literary experiments and for
private reading or at most for declamation than for ex-
hibition on the stage. Many of the later poets tried their
skill in tragic composition, among them Q. Cicero, Varro,
Varius, Asinius Pollio, Ovid, Pomponius Secundus and
Seneca — some of them with considerable success, if we
may accept the judgment of Quintilian (I.O. 10. 1. 98).
In all we meet the names of thirty-six Roman poets who
wrought or dabbled in this field, and the number of their
works amounts to about one hundred and fifty.
The Senecan Tragedies
Of all this mass of tragic literature we have to-day,
aside from inconsiderable fragments, only the plays which
bear the name of Seneca. Nine of the ten are adapta-
tions from the Greek, while one, the Octavia, is a prae-
texta. Fortunately most of the Greek originals are ex-
tant, so that comparison with them is possible — an
advantage we do not enjoy in studying the Latin Comedy.
Thus we find that Seneca's Agamemnon was borrowed
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4 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
from Aeschylus, the Oedipus from Sophocles, and no less
than five of the others — the Medea, the Hippolytus or
Phaedra^ the Hercules Furens, the Troades or Hecuba,
and the Phoenissae — from Euripides. In fact, it is
worthy of note that from the first it was not the solemn,
stately idealism of Aeschylus and Sophocles but the human
realism of Euripides that most attracted the Romans.
From the time of Ennius down it was Euripides who was
copied most often.
t,^In most cases the Senecan characters bear the same
names as in the Greek originals, and in essential features
are the same; though they differ in matters of detail
and often are inferior in distinctness of conception and
consistency of development. In plot the Roman author
has not ventured to vary far from his models, though
here and there he has altered the arrangement as well as
the relative importance of certain scenes. For instance,
the Hercules Furens opens with a scene, not in Euripides,
in which Juno foreshadows the catastrophe; and the
Troades is a contamination of two plays of Euripides.
As a rule the Latin plays are considerably shorter than
their Greek prototypes. New characters are not intro-
duced, but frequently one or another is omitted.
The chorus is retained as in the Greek, though (since I
the orchestral pit in the Roman theater was occupied by
seats for the senators) there was no space provided for
the choral dance. In early times the chorus may have
had a place on the stage, and its retention in tragic com-
position after public representation ceased was due prob- t
ably to tradition and to the opp ortunitv thu s afforded for I
experiment in lyrRrpssSSgSs! Horace's precept, Actoris
partes chorus . . . defendat, can hardly be said to have j
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INTRODUCTION 5
been observed in these plays. There is little of that direct
participation in the development of the plot which is
assigned the chorus by the Greeks and especially by
Aeschylus. Its^ part here is more formal and artificial —
it is rather a set passage~on "some lyric theme suggested
more or less directly by the context than an integral part
of^^thejwholfe. In this as in his handling of the charac-
ters our author carries to an extreme an innovation of
Euripides.
The Octavia is constructed on the same general plan as
the other nine tragedies, having its dialogue and choruses,
but differing of course in plot and scene and presenting
also some pecuHarities of versification. Scholars are
pretty generally agreed now that it is later than the age
of Nero, though its author evidently was a close student
of Seneca's thought and style.
While the Senecan tragedies are not arranged in trilo-
gies, there are some pairs in which both plays contain the
same principal characters. These are (1) the Oedipus
and the Phoenissae or Thebais, in which the downfall and
exile of the hapless Theban king are portrayed; (2) the
Thyestes and the Agamemnon, whose theme is the house
of Pelops and its dark destiny; and (3) the two tragedies
in which the hero Hercules overshadows all the other
characters — the Hercules Furens and the Hercules
Oetaeus, The remaining plays are unconnected — the
Hippolytus or Phaedra, whose double title suggests its
plot; the Troades or Hecvha, dealing with the fo»->T:*i€o of
the royal house after the fall of Troy; and the Medea.
The three presented in this edition are the best, though
others, notably Thyestes, Agamemnon, Phaedra and
Octavia, are well worthy of study.
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THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Greek Models
The three plays contained in this volume conform
closely to corresponding plays of Euripides. The title
Hercules Furens is the Latin translation of the Greek
*H/oaicX^9 Matvo/i€vo5, and the content of the two tragedies
is practically identicaLjf The action of each begins with
a scene in which Amphitryon and Megara are standing
near the altar and the usurper Lycus enters to them. In
each Lycus threatens the others with death. In each
Hercules returns opportunely and kills the tyrant. In
each the hero becomes violently insane, kills his wife and
children, and then wakens to remorse and despair. There
is some difference in the machinery of the plot, however.
Euripides represents the frenzy of Hercules as caused by
the actual apparition of Lyssa, the spirit of madness, led
in by Juno's messenger. Iris. This is omitted by the Latin
author, who instead introduces Juno in the first scene,
declaring her purpose to use Hercules' power against him-
self as the only possible means of subduing him. This is
less repellent to our modern taste, and by foreshadowing
the hero's madness makes that the natural climax of the
plot and gives it unity. Seneca also introduces a new
element in making Lycus propose marriage to Megara,
whose spirited refusal adds a new motive for his attempt
to take her Hfe. Again, Euripides makes Theseus come
to Thebes^after the madness of his friend. Seneca repre-
him as coming with Hercules in the first place, and
so opens the way naturally for the description of the in-
fernal world which he gives to Amphitryon and Megara
during Hercules' absence in search of Lycusj^
^\ Though there is Uttle doubt that Seneca OTew upon
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INTRODUCTION 7
other sources and may have originated portions of the
plot himself, it is fair to say that the Troades is a con-
tamination of two plays of Euripides. In the Hecvba of
the Greek poet the scene is laid in the Thracian Cher-
sonesus and the catastrophe is the death of Polyxena; in
his Troades the scene is Troy and the climax the death of
Astyanax. Seneca in his Troades skillfully weaves the
two plots together, laying the scene at Troy immediately
after its capture and working up naturally to the double
tragedy, which is reported to the Trojan women by a
messenger in the closing sceng.^Many differences of de-
tail may be pointed out: e,g, mat in the Greek play it
is Ulysses who prevails on the Grecian leaders to sacrifice
Polyxena and who himself comes to lead her away; that
in the Greek she speaks at length and with spirit, but in
the Latin utters not a word; that Euripides makes the
herald announce the result of the lot to the captive
women, while Seneca lays this duty upon Helen, and so on.
-f' In the Med/a of Euripides as well as that of Seneca
time and scene are the same ; in both she protests against
the injustice of her banishment and gains a respite of a
single day; in both she seeks a final interview with Jason
and upbraids him with his faithlessness, listening with
scorn to his excuses ; in both she tries at first to recall her
recreant husband to his duty, and, failing in that, dis- ,*
sembles her wrath but begins to plot her revengerf (Of the^v^
Euripidean characters Seneca omits the paedagogos and
A^eus, king of Athens, and makes the two boys purely
mtUae personae.) He omits Medea's long address to the
chorus and the latter 's promise of silence. On the other-
hand, the entire fourth act of the Latin play is new. In
both versions the heroine is by far the strongest character,
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8 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
but she overshadows the rest more completely in the
Latin than in the Greek. Jason in the one play aflBrms
that his purpose in wedding the Corinthian princess is to
gain means of protection and support for Medea and her
children; in the other he frankly confesses that fear is
his motive. In the one case he is a smooth-tongued
egoist, in the other a self-confessed coward*^
These are but typical points at which the Latin author
has departed from his Greek models; it will be an in-
teresting and valuable exercise for the student to make
the comparison exhaustive for one or more of the trage-
dies. One matter should not be forgotten: that while
Seneca undoubtedly had these plays of Euripides before
him as his ultimate models, he certainly was familiar with
later Greek versions and with some of them in Latin.
He was a great reader and imitator of Ovid, and Ovid
was the author of a Medea, now lost, of which Roman
critics (e.g, Quintilian and Tacitus) speak in the highest
terms. There were Latin tragedies also which dealt with
the scenes attending the fall of Troy. (e,g. the Troades
and the Astyanax of Accius), and it* is hkely that so alert
and omnivorous a reader as Seneca was acquainted with
them all.
Stage Setting
Permanent theaters were long unknown at Rome. Of
those that finally were built the general plan was the
same.- The stage was very long and narrow, with a per-
manent background representing the street front of one
or more houses which might stand for whatever scene
the particular play required. Immediately before the
stage and somewhat lower was a large space exactly semi-
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INTRODUCTION 9
circular, filled with seats for the magistrates and those of
senatorial rank ; and back of these rose the cavea, or gen-
eral seating, in semicircular tiers. The cavea often would
accommodate many thousands of spectators. There was
no roof, though sometimes an awning was stretched over-
head to keep off the heat of the sun.
In the Hercules Furens the background would represent
the temple of Jupiter — possibly also the royal house —
with an altar in the foreground. For the Troades it is
possible we must think of the scene as changing. Cer-
tainly in Act III the action must take place before the
tomb of Hector, while the interview of Pyrrhus with
Agamemnon and the later scenes of the play would find
a fitter place within the burning city or in the Grecian
camp. For the Medea the background would represent
the royal palace and the home of Medea, and the final
appearance of the latter would be on the flat roof of her
house.
Two elements are recognized in the text of each play —
the diverhium or dialogue proper, and the cantica or
passages which were chanted to musical accompaniment.
In general the iambic verse represents dialogue and the
other meters cantica, though exceptions may be pointed
out.
The Question of Authorship
While all the manuscripts ascribe these tragedies to
"Seneca," there are circumstances which open the way'
for the raising of a "S^necan question," and critics have
not been slow to embrace it. The several theories ad-
vanced are (1) that the plays are the work of the well-
known philosopher; (2) that some of them are his and
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10 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
the remainder from another hand, or other hands;
(3) that all are the product of collaboration by Marcus
and Lucius Seneca, the latter's brother Mela and the
young poet Lucan; and (4) that all are the work of an
entirely different person, whose real or assumed name was
Seneca.
It is impossible here to discuss these theories at length.
The opinion now prevails that the Octavia is not Lucius
Seneca's, and that the other nine are his, with the pos-
sible exception of the Agamemnon and the Hercules
Oetaeus. Of external evidence in support of this con-
clusion we have the mention of Seneca as a poet by
Quintilian, Pliny and Tacitus, the citation of the Medea
as his by QuintiUan (see Med. 453 n.), the ascription of
four other tragedies in this collection to him by well-
known writers in the early centuries of our era (Oedipus,
Phaedra, Thyestes and Troades), and the negative fact
that we hjjsie— ae-proofof^he existence of a separate
Seneca tragicus. Of internal evidence we have the occa-
sional reference to contemporary events in which Seneca
was deeply interested ; the close parallel in philosophical
principles and general tone of thought between the trage-
dies and the prose works which are indisputably his;
and the identity of literary style.
The case of the Octavia is different. Its omission from
the oldest and best manuscript, the fact that the phi-
losopher himself is one of the dramatis personae, the re-
markable forecasting (629-631) of the fate that befell
Nero three years after Seneca's death, and certain pecul-
iarities of style and meter, all have been cited as going
to prove a later origin ; and, while none of these arguments
is conclusive in itself, their cumulative force is consider-
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INTRODUCTION 11
able. Various dates have been assigned for its composi-
tion, as early as the reign of Domitian and as late as that
of Hadrian or even later, but no definite conclusion has
been reached. Historically the Octavia agrees almost
perfectly with Tacitus. It is of especial interest as the
only example extant of the fabtUa praetexta.
Seneca's Life
Like so many other literary men of the Silver Age —
e.g. M. Seneca, Lucan, Martial, Quintilian — L. Annaeus
Seneca was a native of Spain. Born at Corduba (modern
Cordova) about the beginning of the Christian era, he
was brought to Rome at an early age and received a
liberal education. His natural taste led him in the direc-
tion of philosophy, and he seems to have studied the
theories of all the schools. Sotion the Alexandrian in-
spired in him a great admiration of Pythagoras and his
doctrines, and at one time he actually began to abstain
from the eating of flesh in accordance with the rules of
that sect; but later he received a deeper and more lasting
impression from association with his instructor Attains
the Stoic, and his own philosophy, so far as it can be
assigned to any school, is Stoic.
Under the advice of his father, the distinguished rhetori-
cian M. Annaeus Seneca, he entered public life as an advo-
cate. Here his pleadings were so successful as to arouse
the jealousy of the emperor Caligula, and he prudently
went into retirement. But other perils awaited him.
Claudius mounted the throne in a.d. 41, and almost
immediately was persuaded by his wife Messalina to
order Seneca's banishment to Corsica. There he solaced
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12 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
his grief and discontent by study and literary work.
It was at this time that he composed his epigrams, two
treatises "on consolation '' {ad Polyhium and ad Helviam),
and probably the tragedy Medea,
On Messalina's death in 49 her successor Agrippina
procured Seneca's recall and made him tutor to her son,
L. Domitius, afterward the emperor Nero. The next
five years were comparatively uneventful for Seneca, but
were marked by the gradual development of Agrippina 's
ambitious plans. She secured her son's adoption by the
emperor and his marriage with Claudius' daughter
Octavia; and on the emperor's death (a.d. 54) her prompt
action caused the recognition of Nero as his successor
instead of his own son Britannicus.
From this time on the life of Seneca is linked insepa-
rably with the history of Nero and his reign. As secretary
of the young monarch he composed the eulogy on Claudius
which Nero delivered in the senate, and shortly after
produced the Apocolocyntosis, a bitter satire on the dead
emperor. He is thought also to have prepared most of
the state papers during the early years of Nero's reign.
During his first five years of power the young prince
was almost wholly under the influence of his counselors
Burrus and Seneca, and governed with such wisdom and
moderation that the quinquennium Neronis was long
remembered for its peace and happiness. Agrippina,
however, whose courage and determination had advanced
her son to his high station, felt she was entitled to a con-
trolling voice in affairs, and soon came into conflict with
his more politic advisers. Enraged at being thwarted in
her plans, she began to utter threats of displacing Nero
with the true heir, Britannicus; and this led to the first
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INTRODUCTION 13
act in the career of bloodshed that has rendered the name
of Nero forever infamous. FeeHng that he could not be
safe while Britannicus lived, Nero had him taken off by
poison (a.d. 55). Then he began to treat his young wife
Octavia with coldness and cruelty. In time his mistress
Acte was displaced by Poppaea Sabina, who soon aspired
to be his lawful wife. Agrippina stood in the way of this
design, and she in turn was assassinated (a.d. 59); but
it was not till three years later that Nero finally dared to
divorce Octavia and marry Poppaea. In Jime of a.d. 62
Octavia was banished to the island Pandataria, and
shortly after was murdered.
Meantime Seneca had maintained his position amid
increasing difficulties. He saw but dared not vigorously
oppose the growing depravity of his ward. He opposed
Agrippina's ambitious schemes, yet it can scarcely be
believed that he advocated her death; though he prob-
ably wrote the dispatches in which Nero reported that
event to the senate, and Tacitus (Ann. 14. 11) says that
he incurred the hatred of the people by his attempt to
gloss over a deed so unnatural.
In A.D. 62 Seneca's friend and fellow-counselor Burrus
died, and thenceforth his own influence rapidly waned.
Soon he begged permission to go into retirement. For
three years more he lived, a mere spectator of events,
employing his enforced leisure in writing, as he had done
in Corsica. At last the blow fell. He was accused* of
compUcity in the plot of Piso (a.d. 65), and without a
trial was commanded to die. The story of his calm for-
titude in the closing scene is too familiar to require
repetition.
Seneca has been criticised severely both as man and as
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14 THREE PLAYS OF SfiNECA
author. He has been accused of insincerity and incon-
sistency in his life and of empty verbosity in his writings.
It certainly is unfortunate for his fame that he lived under
such conditions. Inheriting wealth and rising early into
prominence, he could know the sweets of poverty, of which
he wrote so glibly, only in theory and not by experience.
His learning and ability cannot be questioned, and the
range and variety of his works prove his industry as an
author. In spite of some inconsistencies his philosophy
is pure and elevated, and his ethics so nearly Christian
as to have caused the belief in early times that he had
known and been influenced by the Apostle Paul, whose
first imprisonment in Rome occurred in Seneca's lifetime.
It was his misfortune that his relations with Nero were
such as to render his practice of these principles so
difficult.
The Language and Style
In regard to word forms and syntax the Latin of Seneca
is essentially that of the Golden Age. Occasionally he
uses in his prose constructions which earlier were admissi-
ble only in verse, and gives this word and that a slightly
different shade of meaning, but in the main the mastery
of Cicero, Ovid and Vergil gives one the .key to Seneca's
grammar. It was in his rhetoric that he founded a new
school. Ovid had made a beginning, but Seneca went
much further. Form became the essential thing. An
affectation of brevity, a straining after antithesis and epi-
gram, came to be the characteristics of his work and that
of his imitators (see Quintilian's criticism, I.O. 10. 1. 129).
In spite, however, of undeniable faults of style, there is
much that is good and more that is pleasing, and both for
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INTRODUCTION 15
his own works and on account of his great influence no
study of Roman literature can afiford to leave Seneca out
of account.
Seneca's Works
Seneca was a proUfic and versatile writer. Of his prose
works the best known are some of the twelve books classed
as dialogi : (1) -De Providentia, (2) De Constantia Sapien-
tis, (3-5) De Ira, (6) De Consolatione ad Marciam,
(7) De Vita Beata, (8) De Otio, (9) De Tranquillitate
Animi, (10) De Brevitate Vitae, (11) De Consolatione ad
Polyhium, (12) Ad Helviam Matrem de Consolatione,
His other prose works still extant are: (a) two books
de dementia ; (b) seven books de Beneficiis ; (c) Naturales
Quaestiones, a compilation of contemporary science in
seven books; (d) Epistulae Morales, a collection of 124
letters or moral essays in the form of letters, addressed
to Lucilius; and (e) fourteen short letters, indorsed as
genuine by St. Jerome but usually regarded as spurious,
purporting to have passed between Seneca and the Apostle
Paul (eight written by Seneca, six by Paul).
All together the prose works of Seneca now extant,
counting only those admitted to be authentic, cover more
than a thousand closely printed duodecimo pages. From
fragments, and citations in later writers, moreover, we
know that he wrote much in the fields of science, philoso-
phy and history that has been lost. Mention has been
made also of letters addressed to Novatus, and it is well
known that he composed many speeches and state papers
for Nero. His literary activity therefore must have been
very great.
The Apocolocyntosis, partly in prose, partly in verse,
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16 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
is the only complete example known to be extant of the
Satura Menippea. Its theme is the search of the lately
deceased emperor Claudius for his proper place in the
other world, and while it displays a good deal of ingenuity
and talent of a certain order, its flippancy and irreverence
make it distasteful to the modern reader.
The purely poetical works ascribed to Seneca are the
epigrams and the ten tragedies already discussed. All
display skill in the use of metrical forms, without, how-
ever, any high endowment of poetic genius.
The approximate order of composition has been placed
as follows: Before a.d. 41 the consolation ad Marciam;
during the period of exile (41-49) some of the tragedies,
including possibly the Medea, the epigrams, and two
treatises on consolation, ad Polyhium and ad Helviam ;
within the next five years dialogues 3, 4, 5, 9, 10; within
the eight years following Nero's succession (54-62) De
dementia, De Beneficiis, dialogues 2 and 7, and the
Apocolocyntosis ; and in the last three years of his life
dialogues 1 and 8, the Naturales QvxiestioneSy and the
Epistulae. The remaining tragedies were composed at
uncertain intervals. The Octavia must, of course, have
been written after 62 a.d.
Versification
lanibic
Th^ standard verse for dramatic dialogue in both Greek
and Latin was the iambic trimeter. The characteristic
foot is the iambus (w_), arranged in pairs or dipodies
(wZ.w_), three of which constitute a line. In the
dipody the ictus or metrical stress was stronger on the first
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INTRODUCTION
17
than on the second member, and it isusual in printing to
represent only this heavier ictus. The theoretical form
of the trimeter, therefore, is wjIw — wjIw^w-^w — , as
seen in Horace's Bedtus ille qui procvi negdtiiSy Epod.
2. 1, and throughout Catullus 4,
This theoretical form, however, is rarely met in prac-
tice, and if used constantly would have proved extremely
monotonous. To secure variety, or, as Horace put it
(A.P. 251), "that it might come to the ears more slowly
and with greater weight,'' the iambus came to be replaced
by the equivalent tribrach (kj6 \j), or, in the first foot
of each measure (the first, third and fifth feet of the
line), by the spondee (_Z.), and the typical form of the
dipody became _ Z. w _ . From this it was but a short
step to the substitution of any equivalent of the spondee,
and so we meet its various resolutions — the anapest
(v^wZ.) or the dactyl (^6\j) as the first member of
any dipody, and rarely the proceleusmatic (ww^v^)
only in the first foot of the verse. The sixth foot always
is dissyllabic, either iambic or pyrrhic (\j 6). The sub-
joined tables show the variations found in each foot, and
in each dipody.
The Various Feet
1
2
3
4
5
6
KJ —
\j —
KJ
KJ
\j —
w^
K^ \J \J
\j \j \j
KJ KJ KJ
\J \J \J
K^ \J —
KJKJ
WW —
\J KJ
KJ KJ
— \j \j
\J \J KJ \J
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18
THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
The Various Measures
1
2
3
w — w —
W W —
w— wi-i
W \J KJ KJ
w — www
\^ \J \J W
\J Ky \J WWW
W —
w_
wl«f
WWW
www
WW— W
W W W —
w w — wS^
WW WWW
w v^ — www
W W W
— W V^ W
— WW w :^
— WW www
— WW www
W W W W W —
It will be observed that the iambus may occur in any
of the six places, though it is rare in the fifth, which as a
rule is either spondee or anapest. In theory the tribrach
might appear in any foot except the last, but actually it
is found only in the first four. The remaining feet, the
spondee and its equivalents, each of four moraey can occur,
of course, only in the odd-numbered placea, that is in the
first half of each dipody (see, however, notes on Tro. 264
and 932) ; and the proceleusmatic only in the first place.
The sixth foot is always dissyllabic, either iambus (w _)
or pyrrhic (ww), the final syllable being anceps.
It is an interesting fact that the ictus of the third foot
(the second printed accent) almost invariably coincides
with the prose accent. Sometimes the word is an unim-
portant monosyllable, but the only exceptions to the rule
are found in a few polysyllables, usually containing several
short syllables, whose original accent is supposed to have
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INTRODUCTION 19
been recessive. If we regard this original accent as sur-
viving here the apparent exceptions become no excep-
tions at all. Examples are Ddnaides, H. F. 757; cineribuSy
Tro. 195; miserias, Med. 253; sceleribns , 499 ; fdcinorunij
561. MdchinatriXj Med. 266, and cdniugi (for cdniugii),
481, can be explained on the same principle. Sigeon,
Tro. 932, is discussed in the note on that line.
In Med. 771-786 the trimeter alternates with the iambic
dimoter, in which the same principles of quantity are
observed. The only other iambic verse met in these three
plays is in the short chorus, Med. 849-878, in anacreontics
(iambic dimeter catalectic), each stanza or strophe clos-
ing with a Une one syllable shorter (iambic dimeter
brachycatalectic) .
Trochaic
The only simple trochaic verses found in these three
tragedies are in Med. 740-751 ; these are in the trochaic
tetrameter catalectic, often called the trochflic septenarius.
This consists in theory of seven trochees plus one long
syllable, the thesis of an incomplete foot; or, to state it
differently, of four trochaic dipodies (/.v^__j^), lacking
the arsis or final short syllable of the last. In practice
the first member of a dipody often is a tribrach (a trochee
resolved), and the second member either a spondee or
one of its resolutions, anapest or dactyl.
The Sapphic
Seneca uses the lesser sapphic in several of his choruses.
In H.F. 830-874 is a series of sapphics uninterrupted.
In Tro. 814-860 the series is broken up into stanzas of
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20 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
irregular length by the insertion of three adonics, and the
chorus in Tro. 1009-1055 contains one adonic. In Med.
579-669 by supplying o»e hemistich (half verse) in 660
we have fourteen sapphic stanzas or strophes, seven of
four lines each (as in Horace's odes) and seven of nine
lines each, the last of each strophe being an adonic.
The lesser sapphic may be regarded as composed of
two trochaic dipodies (Z.w ) separated by a (cyc-
Uc) dactyl, the normal scheme of the whole line being
±\j -dwwZ.w — ^, from which there are few varia-
tions. In Tro. 836, 1051, and in Med. 636 the arsis of the
second foot is resolved, bringing two dactyls in succession.
In Tro. 824 and 853 the dactyl in the third foot is re-
placed by a spondee, and the same is true of 852 unless we
regard cui in cuicumque as having two short syllables
instead of one long one. The caesura, always masculine,
occurs regularly in the third foot.
Choriambic
The lesser asclepiadean and the glyconic may be re-
garded as variations of trochaic verse, but more simply as
choriambic. Each line opens with a spondee and closes
with an iambus (or pyrrhic) ; between these the glyconic
has one choriambus and the lesser asclepiadean two.
Their schemes, therefore, which are invariable, are : For
the glyconic Z.^\ Z.kjw Z.\ \j ^, and for the lesser ascle-
piadean jL^\ ^yjKj jL\ Z.KJ Kj Z.\ Kj ^. The latter is
met m H.F. 524-591, Tro. 371-407 (408 being incomplete
with the scheme j1_^ v^ v^ ^), Med. 56-74, 93-109. The
glyconic occurs in H.F. 875-894, Med. 75-92.
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INTRODUCTION 21
Dactylic
Seneca makes little use of the dactylic hexameter, the
six verses at the close of the first chorus in the Medea
(110-115) being the only examples in the plays here
treated. Of these v. 113 is spondaic.
Anapestic
The favorite choral measure in all the tragedies (occur-
ring twice in each of our three plays) is the anapestic
dimeter, consisting of four anapests or their equivalent.
In spite of its name there is no one of the four places
in which some substitute does not occur oftener than
the anapest itself. Thus the spondee is the favorite in
the first, second and fourth positions, and the dactyl in
the third. The dactyl does not occur at all in the second
or fourth place. Occasionally a short syllable is allowed
to stand at the end of the line, making a trochee instead of
a spondee or a tribrach instead of an anapest; but this
is relatively rare, being met but five times in Hercules
Fur ens, eight times in Troades, and twice in Medea; and
nearly all of these examples come at a drstinct pause in
the sense. In order to preserve the quantity at the end
of a verse it often is necessary to count its final conso-
nant with the initial consonant of the following verse
to "make position.'' Hiatus between verses, which the
Greeks did not allow in this measure, is admitted by
Seneca; there are five instances in the Medea and six
each in Hercules Furens and Troades. Seneca does not
use the paroemiac, with which the Greeks regularly con-
cluded an anapestic passage.
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22
THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
At irregular intervals throughout the anapestic pas-
sages appear monometers, or half-lines. In parts of the
first chorus in the Troades these may have been intro-
duced to assist in producing the effect of strophe and anti-
strophe, but in most cases there is no apparent law
governing their appearance.
In the following tables it is shown what feet occur in
each place, and also what combinations are found in each
dipody.
The Various Feet
1
2
3
4
w w_
WW
w w —
W W
— V ^
— WW
w w w^
www
_w^
w
The Various Measures
Arraiiged according to their frequency of occurrence
1
2
WW
WW
W W —
WW WW
WW WW
W W w w w^
WW w^
WW
W W
W W w w
WW
— WW w
www
^ Only in monometers.
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INTRODUCTION 23
Manuscripts
The manuscripts of the Senecan tragedies are grouped
in two general . classes. The first of these includes the
Codex Etruscus {LaurerUianus 37, 6), the oldest complete
copy (which, however, does not contain the Octavia), dat-
ing from the eleventh or twelfth century; the Ambro-
sianus (D276) and the Vaticanus (lat. 1769), both of the
fourteenth century and derived from a lost copy of the
Codex Etruscus, but containing the Octavia; and frag-
ments of a much older manuscript (fragmenta Am-
brosiana) containing detached portions of the Oedipus
and the Medea (of the latter vv. 196-274, 694^708 and
722-744). The remains of the Codex Thyaneus, of the
ninth or tenth century, have only fragmentary passages
from three plays (Tro. 64-164, Med. 579-594, and a few
scattered lines from the Oedipus),
To the second class are referred a considerable number
of copies, more or less corrupt, derived from a common
archetype of unknown date. This is supposed to have
been the work of a man of some learning, who did not
hesitate to modify the text when it suited his convenience.
Of all the manuscripts the Etruscan has been accepted
since the days of Gronovius as most authoritative.
Editions
The literature now accessible to the student of the
tragedies is relatively scanty. The most recent and
authoritative editions of the text are those of F. Leo,
Berlin, 1879, and G. Richter, Leipzig, 1902.
The old annotations in Latin by Delrius, Lipsius,
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24 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Gruter, Scriverius, Gronovius and Schroeder have become
very rare. Two plays were edited with brief English
notes two generations ago by Professor Charles Beck of
Harvard College — Medea, 1834; Hercules FurenSy 1845
— but these little volumes are long out of print and hard
to find.
In the latter part of the sixteenth century a considerable
interest was taken in the tragedies of Seneca, and there
can be no question that they, with Ovid's poems, exercised
a marked influence upon the English literature of that
period. A collection of English translations by different
hands was pubUshed in London in 1581 under the title
"The Tenne. Tragedies," and this was reprinted some
years ago by the Spenser Society of Great Britain. There
is a German translation and commentary in three vol-
umes (two volumes of translation and one of notes) by
W. A. Swoboda, published at Prague, 1828-1830. Quite
recently an English metrical version was published by
Ella Isabel Harris, Ph.D. (The Clarendon Press, 1904).
An English translation in verse has just appeared from the
pen of Professor Frank J. Miller, Ph.D., of the University
of Chicago.
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HERCULES
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
lUNO
Amphitryon
Megara
Ltcus
Hercxtles
Theseus
Chorus
SCAENA ThEBIS
THE PARTS TAKEN BY EACH ACTOR
I Hercules
Ltcus
II Amphitryon
lUNO
III Theseus
Megara
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HERCULES
lUNO .^,
Sor6r Tonantis (h6c enim soliim mihi
nom^n relictum est) semper alieniim lovem
ac t^mpla summi vidua deserui a^theris
lociimque caelo piilsa paelicibiis dedi ;
tellus colenda est : pa^lices caeliim tenent. 5
hinc Arctos alta pdrte glacialis poli
sublime classes sldus Argolicd,s agit;
hinc, qud recenti v6re laxatiir dies,
Tyria^ per undas vector Europa^ nitet;
illinc timendum rdtibus ac pont6 gregem lo
passim vagantes ^xerunt AtMntides.
ferrd minax hinc turret Ori6n deos
sudsque Perseus aureus stellds habet ;
hinc cldra gemini signa Tyndarida^ micant
quibiisque natis m6bilis tellus stetit. 15
nee ipse tantum Bdcchus aut Bacchi parens
adi^re superos : n^ qua pars probr6 vacet,
mundiis puellae s^rta Cnosiaca^ gerit.
Sed Vetera querimur — lina me dira Ac fera
Thebdna tellus sparsa nuribus impiis ao
quoti^ns novercam f6cit I escenddt licet
meumque victrix t^neat Alcmen^ locum,
parit^rque natus dstra promissa 6ccupet,
in cuius ortus miandus impendit diem
27
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28 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
tardiisque Eoo Phoebus effulsft man 25
retin^re mersum iussus Ocean6 iubar —
non sfc abibunt 6dia; vivac6s aget
viol^ntus iras d,nimus et saeviis dolor
aet^rna bella pd,ce sublatd geret.
Quae b^lla ? quidquid h6rridum telliis creat 30
inimica, quidquid p6iitus aut a^r tulit
terrfbile dirum p^stilens atrox ferum,
fractum d,tque domitum est. siiperat et cresclt malis
irdque nostra friiitur; in laud^s suas
mea v^rtit odia : diim nimis saeva f mpero, 35
patr6m probavi, gl6riae fed locum,
qua S61 reducens qud,que depon^ns diem
bin6s propinqua tlnguit Aethiopds face,
ind6mita virtus c61itur et tot6 deus
narrdtur orbe. m6nstra iam desiint mihi 40
min6rque labor est H^rculi iussa ^xequi,
quam mlhi iubere : la^tus imperia ^xcipit.
quae f6ra tyranni iura violent6 queant
noc^re iuveni ? n^mpe pro telfs gerit
quae tlmuit et quae fiidit : armatiis venit 45
le6ne et hydra. n6c satis terra^ patent:
effr^git ecce limen infernl lovis
et opfma victi r^gis ad super6s refert. 48
vidi fpsa, vidi n6cte discussa fnferum so
et Dite domito spolia iactant^m patri
frat^rna. cur non vfnctum et oppressiim trahit
ipsum catenis pdria sortitiim lovi
Ereboque capto potitur et retegf t Styga ?
parum ^st reverti, fo^dus umbrariam perit: 49
patefacta ab imis mdnibus retr6 via est 55
et sdcra dirae m6rtis in apert6 iacent.
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HERCULES ' 29
at file, rupto cdrcere umbrarum ferox,
de m^ triumphat 6t superbificd manu
atriim per urbes ducit Argolic^s canem.
vis6 labantem C^rbero vidl diem 60
pavidiimque Solem; m6 quoque invaslt tremor,
et t^rna monstri c611a devicti fntuens
timui fmperasse. l^via sed nimiiim queror;
cael6 timendum est, r^gna ne summa 6ccupet
qui vfcit ima: sc6ptra praeripi^t patri. .- ' . 65
nee in dstra lenta v^niet ut Bacchus via?^
it6r ruina qua^ret et vacu6 volet
regndre mundo. r6bore experto tumet,
et p6sse caelum vlribus vincf suis
didiclt ferendo ; subdidit mund6 caput 70
nee fl^xit umeros m61is immensa^ labor
meliiisque coUo s^dit Hercule6 polus.
imm6ta cervix sfdera et caelum tulit
et m6 prementem : qua^rit ad super6s viam.
Perge Ira, perge et magna meditantem 6pprime, 75
congr^dere, manibus ipsa dilacerd tuis :
quid tdnta mandas 6dia ? disceddnt ferae,
ipse fmperando f^ssus Eurystheiis vacet.
Titdnas ausos riimpere imperium lovis
emftte, Siculi v^rticis laxd specum, 80
telMs gigante D6ris excuss6 tremens
supposita monstri c611a terrificf levet — 82
sed vfcit ista. qua^ris Alcida6 parem ?
)611a iam secum gerat. 85
•i fundo 6xcitae '^
Immeae spargdnt comae,
ra incutidnt manus.
itum sed^s pete.
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30 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
humdna temne. idm Styga et man^s feros 90
fuglsse credis ? hlc tibi ostendam Inferos.
revocdbo in alta c6nditam callgine,
ultrd nocentum exflia, discord^m deam
quam miinit ingens m6ntis oppositf specus;
ediicam et imo Dftis e regno 6xtraham 9S
quidquld relictum est : v^niet invisilm Scelus
suiimque lambens sdnguinem Impietds ferox
Err6rque et in se semper armatiis Furor —
hoc h6c ministro n6ster utatilr dolor.
Inclpite, famulae Dftis, ardent^m citae 100
conciitite pinum et dgmen horrendum dnguibus
Mega^ra ducat d,tque luctificd manu
vastdm rogo flagrante corripid,t trabem.
hoc dgite, poenas petite vitiata6 Stygis.
conciitite pectus, dcrior mentem 6xcoquat 105
quam qui caminis f gnis Aetnaels furit :
ut p6ssit animo cdptus Alcid^s agi,
magn6 furore p^rcitus, vobis prius
insdniendum est — Iilno, cur nondiim furis ?
me m6, sorores, m^nte deiectdm mea no
versdte primam, fdcere si quicquam dpparo
digniim noverca; v6ta mutentiir mea:
nat6s reversus vldeat incolum6s precor
maniique fortis r6deat. invenl diem,
invlsa quo nos H^rcuhs virtiis iuvet. 115
me vfcit ; et se vfncat et cupidt mori
ab Inferis reversus. hie prosit mihi
love ^sse genitum. stdbo et, ut certo 6xeant
emlssa nervo t^la, librab6 manu,
regdm furentis drma, pugnanti H^rculi 120
tandem favebo — sc^lere perfect6 licet
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HERCULES 31
admlttat illas g^nitor in caelilm manus.
Mov^nda iam sunt Wlla : clarescit dies
ortiique Titan liicidus croce6 subit.
Chorus
lam rdra micant sid^ra prono 125
langulda mundo; nox vlcta vagos
contrdhit ignes luc6 renata,
cogft nitidum Phosph6ros agmen;
signiim celsi glacidle poli 129
luc^m verso tem6ne vocat. 131
iam ca6ruleis ev^ctus equis
Titdn summa prospfcit Oeta;
iam Cddmeis incMta Bacchis
asp6rsa die dum^ta rubent 135
Phoebfque fugit reditiira soror.
labor ^xoritur dunis et omnes
agitdt curas aperftque domos.
Past6r gelida cand pmina
grege dlmisso pabiila carpit; 140
ludlt prato lib^r aperto
nondiim rupta fronts iuvencus,
vacua6 reparant ub^ra matres;
errdt cursu levis Incerto
mollf petulans haediis in herba; 145
pend^t summo stridiila ramo
penndsque novo trad^re soli
gestft querulos int^r nidos
Thracfa paelex, turbdque circa
conMsa sonat murmiire mixto 150
testdta diem.
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32 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
carbdsa ventis credit dubius
navfta vitae, lax6s aura
compl6nte sinus, hie 6xesis
pendens scopulis aut d^ceptos 155
instriiit hamos aut suspensus
spectdt pressa praemla dextra :
sentlt tremulum lin^a piscem.
Haec, Innocuae quibus 6st vitae
tranquflla quies et la^ta suo i6o
parv6que domus; spes f mmanes
urbf bus errant trepidf que metus : 163
1116 superbos aditiis regum
durdsque fores exp^rs somni 165
colit, hlc nullo fin^ beatas
comp6nit opes gazls inhians
et c6ngesto pauper in auro;
ilMm populi favor dttonitum
fluctiique magis mobile vulgus 170
aurd tumidum tollft inani;
hie cldmosi rabi6sa fori
iurgfa vendens impr6bus iras
et v^rba locat. novft paucos
seciira quies, qui v^locis 175
memor^s aevi temp6ra numquam
reditiira tenent. Dum fdta sinunt
vivite laeti : properdt cursu
vitd citato volucrfque die
rota pra^cipitis vertftur anni; 180
dura6 peragunt pensd sorores
nee sua retro fild, revolvunt.
at g^ns hominum flattir rapidis
obvfa fatis inc^rta sui :
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HERCULES 33
Stygids ultro quaerfmus undas. 185
nimium, Alcide, pectore forti
properds maestos vis^re manes :
cert6 veniunt temp6re Parcae,
null! iusso cessare licet,
null! scriptum prof^rre diem : 190
reciplt populos urna citatos.
Aliiim multis gloria terris
traddt et omnes famd, per urbes
garriila laudet cael6que parem
tolldt et astris ; aliiis curru 195
subUmis eat : me m^a tellus
lare s^creto tut6que tegat..*.
venit dd pigros cana senectus,
humiUque loco sed c^rta sedet
sordlda parvae f ortuna domus : 200
alt^ virtus anim6sa cadit. . —
Sed ma^sta venit crin^ soluto
Megard parvum comitdta gregem,
tarddsque senio grdditur Alcida^ parens.
Amphitryon
O m^gne Olympi rector et mundi drbiter, 205
iam stdtue tandem grdvibus aerumnfs modum
fin^mque cladi. niilla lux umqud,m mihi
seciira fulsit . . .
. . . finis alteriiis mali
gradus 6st futuri : pr6tinus reducf novus
pardtur hostis; dntequam laetdm domum 210
contfngat, aliud iiissus ad belMm meat;
nee lilla requies t^mpus aut uUiim vacat,
D
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34 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
nisi diim iubetur. s^quitur a prim6 statim
inf^sta luno : niimquid immunls f uit
infdntis aetas ? m6nstra superavlt prius ais
quam n6sse posset, g^mina cristatf caput
angu^s ferebant 6ra, quos contra 6bvius
reptdbat infans Igneos serp^ntium
ocul6s remisso Mmine ac placido Intuens;
art6s serenis vialtibus nod6s Hiulit, 220
et tiimida tenera giittura elifens manu
proWsit hydrae. Ma^nali pernlx fera,
mult6 decorum pra6ferens auro caput,
depr^nsa cursu est ; mdximus Nemea^ timor
presses lacertis g^muit Herculefs leo. 225
quid std,bula memorem dlra Bistonif gregis
sulsque regem pdbulum armentfs datum,
solitiimque densis hfspidum Erymanthf iugis
Arcddia quatere n^mora Maenaliiim suem,
taurijmque centum n6n levem populfs metum ? 230
int^r remotos g^ntis Hesperian greges
past6r triformis Iftoris Tart^sii
per^mptus, acta est pra^da ab occasu tiltimo ;
notiim Cithaeron pdvit Ocean6 pecus.
penetrdre iussus s61is aestivi plagas 235
et adiista medius r^gna quae torr^t dies
utrfmque montes s61vit ac rupto 6bice
latd,m ruenti f^cit Ocean6 viam.
post ha6c adortus n^moris opulentf domos
aurffera vigilis sp61ia serpentfs tulit; 240
quid ? sa^va Lernae m6nstra, numerosiim malum,
non fgne demupi vlcit et docuft mori,
solitdsque pennis c6ndere obductfs diem
petf t ab ipsis nubibus Stymphdlidas ?
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HERCULES 35
non vfcit ilium ca61ibis semper tori 245
regfna gentis vidua Thennod6iitiae,
nee ad 6mne clarum fdcinus audac^s manus
stabulf fugavit tiirpis Augel labor.
Quid ista prosunt ? 6rbe defens6 caret.
sens6re terrae pdcis auctor^m suae 350
ab^sse : rursus pr6sperum ac felfx scelus
virtiis vocatur; s6ntibus parent boni,
ius ^st in armis, 6pprimit leg^s timor.
ante 6ra vidi ndstra truculentd, manu
nat6s paterni cddere regni vfndices 255
ipsiimque, Cadmi ndbilis stirpem liltimam,
occfdere, vidi r^gium capitf deeus
cum cdpite raptum — quls satis Thebds fleat ?
f erdx deorum t^rra, quem dominium tremis ?
e ciiius arvis 6que fecund6 sinu 360
strict6 iuventus 6rta cum ferr6 stetit
cuiusque muros ndtus Amphi6n love
struxit canoro sdxa modulatii trahens,
in cilius urbem n6n semel diviim parens
cael6 relicto v^nit, haec quae ca^lites a6s
rec^pit et quae f^cit et (fas sft loqui)
fortdsse faciet, s6rdido premitiir iugo.
Cadm^a proles dtque Ophioniiim genus,
quo r^ccidistis ? tr^mitis ignavum ^xulem,
sufs carentem ffnibus, nostris gravem. 370
qui sc^lera terra qufque persequitiir man
jonfringft manu
lue quae fierf vetat,
Ierculed,s Lycus.
t et poends petet 27s
6rget ; inveni6t viam
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36 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
aut fdciet. adsis s6spes et reme^s precor
tand^mque venias victor ad victim domum.
Megara
Emerge, coniunx, dtque dispukds manu
abnimpe tenebras; niilla si retr6 via 280
it^rque clusum est, 6rbe diduct6 redi
et qnldquid atra n6cte possessum latet
emftte tecum, dlrutis quails iugis
praec^ps citato fliimini quaer^ns iter
quondam stetisti, sclssa cum vasto Impetu 285
patu^re Tempe; p^ctore impulsiis tuo
hue m6ns et illuc c^ssit et rupto dggere
novd, cucurrit Th^ssalus torr^ns via :
tails, parentes Uberos patrid,m petens,
erumpe rerum t^rminos tecum ^fferens, 290
et quldquid avida t6t per annonim gradus
absc6ndit aetas r^dde et oblit6s sui
luclsque pavidos dnte te popul6s age.
indlgna te sunt sp61ia, si tantum refers
quantum Imperatum est. mdgna sed nimiiim loquor 295
igndra nostrae s6rtis. unde ilium mihi
quo t6 tuamque d^xteram amplectdr diem
reditiisque lentos n^c mei memor^s querar?
tibi, 6 deorum dilctor, indomitl ferent
cent^na tauri c611a; tibi, frugiim potens, 300
secr6ta reddam sdcra : tibi mutd fide
longds Eleusin tdcita iactablt faces.
tum r^stitutas frdtribus reb6r meis
animds et ipsum regna moderant^m sua
flor^re patrem. si qua te mai6r tenet 305
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HERCULES 37
clausiim potestas, s6quimur: aut omn6s tuo
def^nde reditu s6spes aut omn^s trahe —
trah^s nee ullus ^riget fract6s deus.
Amph. O s6cia nostri sanguinis, castd fide
servdns torum natdsque magnanimi H6rculis, 310
ineli6ra mente c6ncipe atque animum 6xcita.
aderf t profecto, qudlis ex omnf solet
lab6re, maior. Meg. Qu6d nimis miserf volunt
hoc fdcile credunt. Amph. fmmo quod metuiint nimis
numqudm moveri p6sse nee toll! putant: 315
prona 6st timoris semper in peius fides.
Meg. Dem^rsus ac defdssus et toto fnsuper
oppr^ssus orbe qudm viam ad super6s habet ?
Amph. Quam tune habebat cum per arent^m plagam
et fliictuantes m6re turbatf maris 320
adit harenas bfsque disced^ns fretum .
et bis recurrens, eiimque desertd rate
depr^nsus haesit Syrtium brevibiis vadis
et piippe fixa mdria superavft pedes.
Meg. Inlqua raro mdximis virtiatibus 325
f ortiina parcit ; n^mo se tut6 diu
peri culis off^rre tam crebrfs potest :
quem sa6pe transit cdsus, aliquando fnvenit.
Sed ^cce saevus dc minas vultu gerens
et qud,lis animo est tdlis incessii venit 330
ali^na dextra sc^ptra concuti^ns Lycus.
Lycus
Urbfs regens opul^nta Thebanad loca
et 6mne quidquid uberi cingft solo
oblfqua Phocis, quidquid Ismen6s rigat,
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38 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
quidquld Cithaeron v^rtice excels6 videt, 335
et blna findens Isthmos exiUs freta
non Vetera patriae iiira posside6 domus
ignd,vus heres; n6biles non sdnt mihi
avf nee altis inclitum titulfs genus,
sed cMra virtus : qui genus iactdt suum, 340
ali^na laudat. rdpta sed trepid^ manu
sceptra 6btinentur ; 6mnis in f erro 6&t salus :
quod cfvibus tenure te invitfs scias
strictiis tuetur 6nsis. alieno fn loco
haut stdbile regnum est; lina sed nostrd,s potest 345
funddre vires idncta regali face
thalamf sque Megara : diicet e genere f nclito
novitds colorem n6stra. non equid^m reor
fore ut recuset dc meos sperndt toros;
quod si fmpotenti p^rtinax animo dbnuet, 350
stat t611ere omnem p^nitus Herculedm domum.
invf dia factum ac s^rmo popularfs premet ?
ars prima regni est p6sse f invidiam pati.
tempt^mus igitur, f6rs dedit nobis locum.
namque fpsa, tristi v6stis obtentu caput 355
veMta, iuxta pra^sides astdt deos
laterique adhaeret v^rus Alcida^ sator.
Meg. Quidnam fste, nostri generis exitium dc lues,
novl parat ? quid t^mptat ? Lyc. O clartim trahens
a stirpe nomen r^gia, facilis mea 360
parumper aure v^rba patienti 6xcipe.
si aet^rna semper 6dia mortal6s gerant
nee co^ptus umquam c^dat ex animls furor,
sed arma felix t^neat infellx paret,
nihil relinquent b611a ; tum vastf s ager 365
squal^bit arvis, siibdita tectis face
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HERCULES 39
altiis sepultas 6bruet gent^s cinis.
pac^m reduci v^lle victori ^xpedit,
vict6 necesse est — pd,rticeps regn6 veni ;
soci^mur animis, pfgnus hoc fidel cape : 370
contfnge dextram. quid truci vultii siles ?
Meg. Egone lit parentis sd,nguine aspersdm manum
f ratnimque gemina ca^de contingdm ? prius
extfnguet ortus, r^feret occasiis diem,
pax d,nte fida nlvibus et flammfs erit 375
et Sc;f Ha Siculum iunget Ausoni6 latus,
pritisque multo vlcibus alternfs fugax
Eurfpus unda stdbit Euboicd, piger.
patrem dbstulisti, r6gna, germaa6s, larem
patrium — quid ultra est ? una res super^st mihi 380
f ratre dc parente cd,rior, regno dc lare :
odiiim tui, quod 6sse cum popul6 mihi
commiine doleo : pdrs quota ex ill6 mea est ?
domindre tumidus, spfritus alt6s gere :
sequitiir superbos liltor a terg6 deus. 385
Thebdna novi r^gna : quid matr^s loquar
passes et ausas sc^lera ? quid geminiim nefas
mixtiimque nomen c6niugis nati patris ?
quid blna f ratrum cdstra ? quid totid^m rogos ?
rig^t superba Tdntalis luctii parens 390
maestdfeque Phrygio mdnat in Sipyl6 lapis.
quin fpse torvum subrigens crista caput
Ill^rica Cadmus r6gna permensus fuga
longds reliquit c6rporis tractf notas.
haec t& manent ex^mpla : dominare lit libet, 39s
dum 861ita regni Mta te nostri vocent.
Lyc. Agedum ^fferatas rdbida voces d,move
et dfsce regum imp^ria ab Alcid^ pati.
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40 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
ego rapta quamvis sc^ptra victricf geram
dextrd regamque cuncta sine legum metu 400
quas drma vincunt, paijca pro causd loquar
nostrd. cruento c^cidit in bell6 pater?
cecid6re f ratres ? drma non servant modum ;
nee t6mperari Mcile nee reprimf potest
strict! 6nsis ira, b^lla delectdt cruor. 405
sed ille regno pr6 suo, nos Improba
cupldine acti ? qua^ritur belli ^xitus,
non caiisa. sed nunc p^reat omnis m^moria:
cum victor arma p6suit, et victum decet
dep6nere odia. n6n ut inflex6 genu 410
regnd-ntem adores p^timus : hoc ipsum placet
anim6 ruinas qu6d capis magn6 tuas;
es r6ge coniunx dfgna : sociemus toros.
Meg. Gelidus per artus vddit exangu^s tremor.
quod fdcinus aures p^pulit ? haut equidem h6rrui, 415
cum pdce rupta bdllicus mur6s fragor
circijmsonaret, p^rtuli intrepide 6mnia :
thalam6s tremesco; cdpta nunc vide6r mihi.
gravdnt catenae c6rpus et longd fame
mors pr6trahatur l^nta : non vinc^t fidem 420
vis ulla nostram; m6riar, Alcid6, tua.
Lyc. Anim6sne mersus inferis coniiinx facit ?
Meg. Inf^rna tetigit, p6sset ut supera dssequi.
Lyc. Telluris ilium p6ndus immensa^ premit.
Meg. Nu116 premetur 6nere, qui caelum tulit. 425
Lyc. Cog^re. Meg. Cogi quf potest nescft mori.
Lyc. Effdre potius, qu6d novis thalamfs parem
Regale munus. Meg. Aut tuam mortem aut meam.
Lyc. Moridre demens. Meg. C6niugi occurrdm meo.
Lyc. Sceptr6ne nostro f dmulus est poti6r tibi ? 430
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HERCULES 41
Meg. Quot iste famulus trddidit reg^s neci.
Lyc. Cur 6rgo regi sdrvit et patitur iugum ?
Meg. Imp^ria dura t611e: quid virtiis erit?
Lyc. Obicl feris monstrisque virtut^m putas ?
Meg. Virtiitis est domd,re quae cunctf pavent. 435
Lyc. Tenebrde loquentem md,gna Tartarean premunt.
Meg. Non ^st ad astra m611is e terrfs via.
Lyc. Quo pdtre.genitus ca^litum sperdt domos?
Amph. Miserdnda coniunx H^rculis magnl, sile:
partes meae sunt r^ddere Alcida^ patrem 440
geniisque verum. p6st tot ingentis viri
memordnda facta p6stque pacatum manu
quodciimque Titan 6rtus et lab^ns videt,
post m6nstra tot perd6mita, post Phlegram Impio
sparsdm cruore p6stque defens6s deos 445
nondum liquet de pdtre ? mentimiir lovem ?
Iun6nis odio cr^de. Lyc. Quid violds lovem ?
mortdle caelo n6n potest iungf genus.
Amph. Communis ista pluribus causa 6st deis.
Lyc. FamuUne fuerant dnte quam fier^nt dei ? 450
Amph. Past6r Pheraeos D^lius pavit greges —
Lyc. Sed n6n per omnes ^xul erravlt plagas.
Amph. Quem pr6fuga terra mdter errante 6didit.
Lyc. Num m6nstra saeva Phoebus aut timult feras ?
Amph. Primus sagittas Imbuit Phoebf draco. 45s
Lyc. Quam grdvia parvus tulerit ignores mala ?
Amph. E mdtris utero fiilmine eiectus puer
mox fiilminanti pr6ximus patri stetit.
quid ? qui gubernat d,stra, qui nub^s quatit,
non Idtuit inf ans riipis Idaea^ specu ? 460
sollfcita tanti pr^tia natal^s habent
semp^rque magno c6nstitit nascf deum.
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42 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Lyc. Quemctimque miserum vlderis, homin^m scias.
Amph. Quemciimque fortem videris, miserum neges.
Lyc. Fort4m vocemus ciiius ex umerfs leo, 465
doniim puellae fdctus, et clava ^xcidit
fulsf tque pictum v^ste Sidonid latus ?
fortem vocemus ciiius horrent^s comae
madu6re nardo, laiide qui notds manus
ad n6n virilem timpani movft sonum, 470
mitrd ferocem Mrbara front^m premens ?
Amph. Non ^rubescit Bdcchus effus6s teher
sparsfsse crines n^c manu mollf levem
vibrd,re thyrsum, ciim parum fortf gradu
aur6 decorum syrma barbaric6 trahit : 475
post multa virtus 6pera laxarf solet.
Lyc. Hoc Euryti fat^tur eversf domus
pecortimque ritu vfrginum oppressf greges;
hoc nulla luno, niillus Eurystheiis itibet :
ipsius haec sunt 6pera. Amph. Non nosti 6mnia: 480
ipsfus opus est caestibus fractiis suis
Eryx et Eryci iiinctus Antaeus Libys,
et qui h6spitali cdede manant^s foci
bib6re iustum sdnguinem Buslridis;
ipsfus opus est viilneri et ferro fnvius 485
mortem doactus Integer Cycniis pati
nee unus una G^ryon victils manu.
eris fnter istos — qui tamen null6 stupro
laes^re thalamos. Lyc. Qu6d lovi hoc regf licet:
lovi dedisti c6niugem, regf dabit; 490
et t^ magistro n6n novum hoc disc^t nurus,
eti^m viro probante meliorem sequi.
sin c6pulari p^rtinax taedfs negat,
vel 6x coacta n6bilem partdm feram.
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HERCULES 43
Meg. Umbrae Creontis 6t peuates Ld,bdaci 495
et nuptiales Impii Oedipodde faces,
nunc s61ita nostro fdta coniugi6 date.
nunc, niiuc, cruentae r6gis Aegypti nurus,
ad^ste multo sd,nguine infectde manus.
dest lina numero Ddnais: expleb6 nefas. scx)
Lyc. Coniugia quoniam p^rvicax nostra dbnuis
reg^mque terres, sc^ptra quid possfnt scies.
compl^ctere aras : niillus eripi^t deus
te mfhi, nee orbe si remolit6 queat
ad supera victor mimina Alcid^s vehi. 505
cong^rite gilvas: t^mpla supplicibiis suis
ini^cta flagrent, c6niugem et totiim gregem
consiimat unus Igne subiect6 rogus.
Amph. Hoc miinus a te g^nitor Alcidde peto,
rogdre quod me d^ceat, ut primus cadam. 510
Lyc. Qui m6rte cunctos Were suppliciiim iubet
nescft tyrannus 6sse; di versa fnroga;
miserum veta perfre, felic^m iube.
ego, diim cremandis trabibus accrescft rogus,
sacr6 regentem mdria votiv6 eolam. 515
Amph. Pro numinum vis stjmma, pro cael^stium
rect6r parensque, cuius excussis tremunt
bumdna telis, impiam regis feri
comp^sce dextram — quid deos f rustrd, precor ?
ubiciimqua es, audi, ndte. cur subit6 labant 520
agitata motu t^mpla? cur mugft solum?
audlmur, est est sdnitus Herculel gradus. s^
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44 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Chorus
Fortiina virfs Invida f6rtibus,
qudm non a^qua bonfs pra^mia dividis. ^ 525
' Eurystheus f aciU r^gnet in 6tio ;
Alcmend genitiis b611a per 6mnia
mdnstris 6xagit6t ca^liferdm manum :
s^rpentfs resect t c611a ferdcia,
d^ceptfs referdt mdla sor6ribus, 530
cum somn6 dederft p^rvigil^s genas
p6mis divitibus pra^positus draco.'
Intravlt Scythia4 mialtivagds domos
6t gent^s patrifs s^dibus h6spitas,
cdlcavitque fretl t^rga rig^ntia 535
6t mutis tacitiim litoribus mare,
illic diira car6nt a^quora Mctibus,
6t qua pl^na rat^s carbasa t^nderant,
fntonsls teritur s^mita Sd,rmatis.
stdt pontiis, vicibiis mdbilis dnnuis, 540
ndvem niinc facilis nunc equit6m pati.
lUic qua^ vidufe g^ntibus Imperat,
aurat6 religdns Ilia bd,lteo,
d^traxlt spolium n6bile c6rpori
^t peltam ^t nivef vlncula pectoris, 545
vlctor6m posit6 suspicions genu.
Qud spe praOcipitOs dctus ad Inferos,
aiidax Ire vids fnremedbiles,
vfdistl SicuIaO rOgna ProsOrpinae ?
illic nulla Not6 nulla Fav6nio 550
c6nsurgunt tumidis fluctibus aOquora;
n6n illic geminum TyndaridaO genus
siiccurriant timidis sfdera ndvibus:
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HERCULES 46
stdt Iiigr6 pelagiis gilrgite languidum,
6t cum M6rs avidls pdllida d^ntibus 555
g^ntes Innumerds mdnibus fntulit,
lino t6t popull r^mige trdnseunt.
ifivincds utindm iiira fera6 Stygis
Pdrcanimque col6s n6n revocdbiles.
hlc qui r6x popuHs pluribus Imperat, 560
b^llo ciim peter^s N6storedm Pylon,
t^cum c6nseruft p^stiferds manus
t^lum t^rgemind ciispide pra^ferens :
6fifugft tenul viilnere saiicius
6t mortfs dominiis p^rtimult mori. 565
fdtum nimpe manii, trlstibus fnferis
pr6spectiis patedt Mcis et fnvius
limes d6t facil^s dd super6s vias.
fmmit^s potult fl^ctere cdntibus
umbranim domin6s ^t prece supplici 570
6rpheus, Eiirydic6n diim repetlt suam.
qua6 silvds et av^s sdxaque trdxerat
drs, quae pra^buerat fluminibiis moras,
dd cuiiis sonittlm c6nstiterdnt ferae,
miilcet n6n solitls v6cibus inferos 575
^t surdls resondt cldrius In locis.
d^flent Eiirydic6n Thr^icia^ nurus,
d^flent ^t lacrimls dffiicil^s dei,
^t qui fr6nte nimis crlmina t^trica
qua^runt dc veter^s ^xcutiiint reos 580
fl^ntes Eurydic^n iuridicf sedent.
tdndem m6rtis aft Wincimur' drbiter,
'4vade dd super6s, l^ge tam^n data:
tu post t^rga tuf p^rge virl comes,
tii non dnte tudm r^spice c6niugem, 585
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46 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
qudm cum cldra de6s 6btulerft dies
Spdrtanlque aderit ianua Taenari.'
6dit v^rus am6r n^c patitur moras:
miinus dum properdt c^rnere, p^rdicjit.
Qua6 vincl potult r^gia cdrmine, 590
ha6c vincf poterit r^gia vlribus.
Hercules
Itlcis almae rector et caelf decus,
qui alt^rna curru spdtia flammifero dmbiens
inliistre latis ^xeris terrfs caput,
da, Phoebe, veniam, sf quid inlicitiim tui 595
vid^re vultus : iiissus in lucem ^xtuli
arcana mundi. tiique, caelestum drbiter
parensque, visus fulmine opposit6 tege;
et tii, secundo mdria qui sceptr6 regis,
imds pete undas. qufsquis ex alto dspicit 600
terr^na, facie p611ui metu^ns nova,
aci^m refleetat oraque in caelum 6rigat
port^nta fugiens : h6c nefas cerndnt duo,
qui adv^xit et quae iussit. in poends meas
atque fn labores n6n satis terrde patent 605
Iun6nis odio: vfdi inaccessa 6mnibus,
ign6ta Phoebo qudeque deteri6r polus
obscura diro spdtia concessit lovi;
et, sf placerent H^rtiae sortisloca,
regndre potui : n6ctis aeternde chaos 610
et n6cte quiddam grSvius et trist^s deos
et fata vidi, m6rte contempts redi —
quid r^stat aliud? vidi et ostendi Inferos,
da sf quid ultra est, iam diu paterfs manus
Digitized by VjOOQIC
HERCULES 4^
cessdre nostras, Iiino ; quae vincl iubes ? 615
Sed t6mpla quare miles infestus tenet
lim^nque sacrum terror armorum 6bsidet ?
Amphitryon
Utrtimne visus v6ta decipWnt meos,
an file domitor 6rbis et Graiiim decus
tristl silentem niibilo liqult domum ? 620
estne file natus ? membra laetitid stupent.
o ndte, certa at s4ra Thebariim salus,
tene6ne in auras ^ditum an vand fruor
dec^ptus umbra ? tdrie es ? agnosc6 tofos
umer6sque et alto n6biletn trunc6 manum. 625
Herc. Unde iste, genitor, squdlof et lugijbribus
amlcta coniunx ? linde tatn foedo dbsiti
paed6re nati ? qude domum clad^s gravat ?
Amph. Socer ^st peremptus, r^gna possedft Lycus,
nat6s parentem c6niugem let6 petit. 630
Herc. Ingrdta tellus, n^mo ad Herculede domus
auxf lia venit ? vfdit hoc tantiim nefas
def^nsus orbis ? — cur diem questii teto ?
mact^tur hostia, hdnc ferat virtils notam
fidtque summus h6stis Alcidde Lycus. 635
ad haiiriendum sdnguinem initnicum feror,
Thes^u; resiste, n^ qua vis subita fngruat.
me b^lla poscunt, dfffer amplexils, parens,
cotiidnxque differ, niintiet t)itl Lycus
me idm redisse.
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48 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Theseus
Fl^bilem ex oculls fuga, 640
regfna, vultum, tuque nato s6spite
lacrimds cadentes r^prime : si novi H^rculem,
Lyciis Creonti d^bitas poends dabit.
lentum 6st dabit : dat; h6c quoque est lenttlm : dedit.
Amph. Votum secundet qui potest nostrum deus 645
rebiisque lapsis ddsit. magnl comes
magndnime nati, pdnde virtutum 6rdinem,
quam 16nga maestos ducat ad man^s via,
ut vlncla tulerit diira Tartaretis canis.
Thes. Memordre cogis dcta securde quoque 650
hori^nda menti. vix adhuc certa 6st fides
vitd,lis aurae, t6rpet acies Itlminum
hebet^sque visus vix diem insuetum ferunt.
Amph. Pervlnce, Theseu, qufdquid alto in p^ctore
reman^t pavoris n^ve te fructu 6ptimo 655
frauds laborum: qude fuit durum pati,
meminlsse dulce est. fdre casus h6rridos.
Thes. Fas 6mne mundi t^que dominant^m precor
regno capaci t^que quam amotam Inrita
quaesivit Enna mdter, ut iura dbdita 660
et op^rta terris Uceat impune 61oqui.
Spartdna tellus n6bile attoIUt iugum,
densfs ubi aequor Ta^narus silvis premit;
hie 6ra solvit Dftis invisi domus
hidtque rupes dlta et immens6 specu 665
ing^ns vorago faucibrfs vastis patet
latiimque pandit 6mnibus populfs iter,
non ca^ca tenebris Incipit prim6 via;
tenuis relictae liicis a terg6 nitor
Digitized by VjOOQIC
HERCULES 49
fulg6rque dubius s61is adflictf cadit 670
et ludit aciem : n6cte sic mixtd solet
praeb^re lumen primus aut senis dies.
hinc dmpla vacuis spdtia laxantiir locis,
in quae 6mne versum pr6perat himianum genus.
nee Ire labor est ; Ipsa deduclt via : 675
ut sa6pe puppes a^stus invitds rapit,
sic pr6nus aer lirguet atque avidtim chaos,
gradtimque retro fl^ctere haut umquam sinunt
umbra6 tenaces. fntus immensf sinus
placid6 quieta Idbitur Leth6 vado 680
demltque curas, n^ve remeandi dmplius
patedt facultas, fl^xibus multfs gravem
inv61vit amnem : qudlis incertfs vagus
Maednder undis ludit et cedlt sibi
instdtque dubius lltus an font^m petat. 685
palus inertis fo^da Cocytl iacet;
hie viiltur, ilUc luctifer bub6 gemit
om^nque triste r^sonat infausta^ strigis.
horrent opaca fr6nde nigrant^s comae,
taxum fmminentem qud tenet segnfs Sopor 690
Fam^sque maesta tdbido rictii iacet
Pud6rque serus c6nscios vultus tegit.
Metds Pavorque fiirvus et frend^ns Dolor
at^rque Luctus s^quitur et Morbils tremens
et clncta ferro B^lla ; in extremo dbdita 695
in^rs Senectus ddiuvat bacul6 gradum.
Amph. Estne dliqua tellus C^reris aut Bacchi ferax ?
Thes. Non prdta viridi la^ta facie g^rminant
nee adiilta leni fluctuat Zephyr6 seges;
non lilla ramos sflva pomifer6s habet : 700
sterilis profundi vastitas squalet soli
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50 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
et fo6da tellus t6rpet aetern6 situ. .702
imm6tus aer ha^ret et pigr6 sedet
nox dtra mundo : ciincta maerore h6rrida 705
ipsdque morte p6ior est mortfs locus.
Amph. Quid llle opaca qui regit scpptr6 loca,
qua s6de positus t^mperat popul6s leves ?
Thes. Est in recessu Tdrtari obscur6 locus,
quern grdvibus umbris spfssa caligo alligat. 710
a f6nte discors m^nat hinc un6 latex,
alt^r quieto slmilis (hunc iurdnt dei)
tac^nte sacram d^vehens fluvi6 Styga;
at hie tumultu rdpitur ingentl ferox
et sdxa fluctu v61vit Acheron invius 715
rendvigari. eingitur duplici vado
adv^rsa Ditis r^gia, atque ing^ns domus
umbrdnte luco t^gitur. hie vast6 specu
pendant tyranni llmina, hoc umbris iter,
haec p6rta regni. cdmpus hanc circd, iacet, 720
in qu6 superbo digerit vultii sedens
animds recentes dira maiestds dei.
frons torva, fratrum qua^ tamen speci6m gerat
gentisque tantae, vultus est illi lovis,
sed fulminantis : mdgna pars regni trucis 725
est ipse dominus, ctiius aspectias timet
quidquid timetur. Amph. V6rane est fama inferis
tarn sera reddi iiira et oblit6s sui
sceleris nocentes d^bitas poends dare ?
quis iste veri rector atque aequi Arbiter ? 730
Thes. Non linus alta s^de quaesit6r sedens
iudicia trepidis s^ra sortitilr reis.
aditur illo Cnosius Min6s foro,
Rhadamdnthus illo, Th^tidis hoc audit socer.
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HERCULES 51
quod qufsque fecit, pdtitur; auctor^m scelus 735
repetf t suoque prdmitur exempl6 nocens :
vidf cruentos cdrcere includf duces
et fmpotentis t^rga plebeid manu
scindl tyranni. qulsquis est placid^ potens
dominusque vitae s^rvat innocuds manus 740
et incruentum mfti^ imperiiim regit
anim6que parcit, 16nga permensiis diu
felfcis aevi Spatia vel caelum petit
vel la6ta felix n^moris Elysil loca,
iud^x futurus. sanguine humano dbstine 745
quiciimque regnas : sc^lera taxanttir modo
mai6re vestra. Amph. C^rtus inclus6s tenet
locds nocentes ? utque fert fama, fmpios
suppUcia vinclis sa6va perpetufs domant ?
Thes. Rapitiir volucri t6rtus Ixi6n rota; 750
cervfce saxum grdnde Sisyphid sedet;
in dmne medio failcibus siccls senex
sectdtur undas, dlluit mentum latex,
fid^mque cum iam sa^pe decept6 dedit,
perit linda in ore; p6ma destituilnt famem. 755
praeb^t volucri Tityos aeternds dapes
urndsque frustra Ddnaides plends gerunt;
errdnt furentes impiae Cadm^ides
terr^tque mensas dvida Phineds avis.
Amph. Nunc ^de nati n6bilem pugndm mei. ' 760
patruf volentis munus an spolitim refert ?
Thes. Ferdle tardis fmminet saxum vadis,
stup^nt ubi undae, s^gne torpescit fretum.
hunc s^rvat amnem ciiltu et aspectu h6rridus
pavid6sque manes squdlidus vectd,t senex. 765
inp^xa pendet bdrba, deform^m sinum
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52 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
nodus coercet, c6ncavae squal^nt genae;
regit Ipse longo portitor cont6 ratem.
hie 6nere vacuam Utori puppem dpplicans
repet^bat umbras; p6scit Alcides viam 770
ced6nte turba ; dirus exclamdt Charon :
'quo p^rgis, audax? slste properant^m gradum.'
non pdssus uUas ndtus Alemend moras
ips6 coactum ndvitam eonto domat
scandltque puppem. bumba populorum eapax 775
succubuit uni : sfdit et gravi6r ratis
utrimque Lethen latere titubantl bibit.
tum vfcta trepidant m6nstra, Cetitauri truces
Lapitha^que multo in bella succensi mero;
Stygia^ paludis ultimos quaer^ns sinus 780
feciinda mergit cdpita Lernaeiis labor.
post ha6c avari Dltis appar^t domus :
hie sa^vus umbras t-^rritat Stygius canis,
qui t^rna vasto cdpita concuti^ns sono
regnilm tuetur. s6rdidum tab6 caput 785
lambiint colubrae, vfperis horrent iubae
longusque torta slbilat caudd draco.
par Ira formae: s^nsit ut motus pedum,
att6nit hirtas dngue vibrat6 comas
missilmque captat aure subrectd, sonum, 790
sentlre et umbras s61itus. ut propi6r stetit
love ndtus, antro s6dit incertiis canis
levity rque timuit — ^cce latratii gravi
loca miita terret; sibilat totos minax
serpens per armos. v6cis horrenda^ fragor 795
per 6ra missus t6rna felic^s quoque
ext^rret umbras. s61vit a laevd feros
tunc Ipse rictus ^t Cleonaeiim caput
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HERCULES 53
opp6nit ac se t^gmine ingentl tegit,
victrlce magnum d^xtera robur gerens. 800
hue nunc et illuc v^rbere assidu6 rotat,
ing^minat ictus. d6mitus infreglt minas
et ciincta lassus cdpita summisft canis
antr6que toto c6ssit. extimult sedens
ut^rque solio d6minus et ducf iubet ; 805
me qu6que petenti munus Alcida^ dedit.
Tum grdvia monstri c611a permulc6ns manu
adamdnte texto vlncit; oblitus sui
cust6s opaci p^rvigil regnl canis
comp6nit aures tfmidus et pati^ns trahi 810
enimque fassus, 6re summisso 6bsequens,
utrumque cauda piilsat anguiferd latus.
postquam 4st ad oras Ta^^nari ventum ^t nitor
perciissit oculos lucislgnota^ novus,
resiimit animos vlctus et vastus furens 815
quassdt catenas; pa6ne victorem dbstulit
pronuihque retro v^xit et movft gradu.
tunc 6t meas resp6xit Alcid^s manus;
geminfs uterque vfribus tractiim canem
ird furentem et b^lla temptantem Inrita 820
intiilimus orbi. vfdit ut clanim diem
et piira nitidi spdtia conspexit poli, 822
compr^ssit oculos 6t diem invisum ^xpulit
faci^mque retro fl^xit atque omni petit 825
cervf ce terram ; ttlm sub Herculeds caput
abscondit umbras. — d^nsa sed laet6 venit
clam6re turba fr6ntibus launim gerens
magnlque meritas H^rculis laud^s canit.
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54 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Chorus
Ndtus Eurystheiis properdnte partu 830
iusserat mundl penetrare fundum :
d^rat hoc solum numer6 laborum,
t^rtiae reg^m spolidre sortis.
ausus es caec6s aditiis inire,
diicit ad man6s via qud remotos 835
trfstis et nigrd metu^nda silva,
s^d frequens magnd comitdnte turba.
Qudntus incedit popuMs per urbes
dd novi lud6s avidus theatri,
qudntus Eleiim ruit ad Tonantem, 840
quf nta cum sacnim revocdvit aestas ;
quanta, cum longa6 redit h6ra nocti
cr6scere et somn6s cupi6ns quietos
libra Phoebe6s tenet a^qua currus,
turba secretdm Cerer^m frequentat 845
^t citi tectfs properdnt relictis
Attici noct^m celebrdre mystae :
tdnta per camp6s agitur silentes
turba ; pars tardd graditiir senecta,
trlstis et longa satidta vita; 850
pdrs adhuc eurrf t meli6ris aevi :
vfrgines nondum thalamis iugatae
^t comis nondum positis ephebi
mdtris et nom^n modo d6ctus infans.
his datum soils, minus ut timerent, 855
Igne praelat6 relevdre noctem ;
c^teri vadunt per opdca tristes.
qudlis est vobls animus, remota
luce cum maestus sibi qulsque sensit
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HERCULES 55
obrutum totd caput ^sse terra ? 860
stdt chaos densum tenebra^que turpes
6t color noctls malus dc silentis
6tium mundl vacua^que nubes.
S^ra nos ill6 referdt senectus :
n^mo ad id ser6 venit, Unde numquam, 865
cum semel venlt, potult reverti ;
quid iuvat dunim properdre f atum ?
6mnis haec magnfs vaga tiirba terris
ibit ad man^s faci^tque inerti
v^la Cocyt6 : tibi cr^scit omne, 870
^t quod occasils videt 6t quod ortus
— pdrce Venturis — tibi, m6rs, paramur.
sis licet segnls, properdmus ipsi :
prima quae vitdm dedit h6ra, carpit.
Th^bis la^ta di^s adest. 875
dras tdngite siapplices,
plngues ca6dite vlctimas ;
p^ripixta^ maribils nurus
s611emn^s agit^nt choros;
c^ssent d^posit6 iugo 880
drvi f^rtilis Incolae.
Pdx est H6rculed manu
Aiiroram Inter et H^sperum,
^t qua s61 medium tenens
iimbras c6rporibiis negat; 885
qu6dcumque dlluitiir solum
16ngo T^thyos dmbitu,
Alcida^ domult labor.
trdnsvectus vada Tdrtari
pdcatls redit Inf eris ; 890
idm nullus super^st timor :
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66 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
nil ultrd iacet inferos.
Stdntes sdcrificiis comas
dllectd tege p6pulo.
Hercules
Victrice dextra fiisus advers6 Lycus 895
terrdm cecidit 6re ; turn quisquis comes
fuerdt tyranni iacuit et poena^ comes,
nunc sdcra patri victor et superfs feram
caeslsque meritas vlctimis ards colam.
Te t6 laborum s6cia et adiutrfx precor, 900
bellfgera Pallas, cuius in laevd ciet
aegis feroces 6re saxific6 minas;
adsit Lycurgi d6mitor et rubri maris,
tectd,m virente cdspidem thyrs6 gerens,
geminiimque numen Phoebus et Phoebi soror: 905
soror sagittis dptior, Phoebus lyrae ;
frat^rque quisquis incolit caelum mens
non 6x noverca frdter. hue app^llite
greg^s opimos; quidquid Indorum seges
Arabesque odoris quidquid arboribiis legunt 910
conKrte in aras, pinguis exundet vapor,
popiilea nostras drbor exorn^t comas,
te rdmus oleae fronde gentili tegat,
Thesetl; Tonantem nostra adorabit manus,
tu conditores iirbis et silvestria 915
trucis dntra Zethi, n6bilis Dirc^n aquae
laremque regis ddvenae Tyriiim coles,
date tura flammis. Amph. Ndte, manant^s prius
maniis cruenta ca^de et hostili 6xpia.
Herc. Utindm cruore capitis invisi deis 920
libdre possem : grdtior nulMs liquor
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HERCULES 57
tinxfsset aras; vfctima haut ulla dmplior
potest magisque oplma mactarl lovi,
quam r6x iniquus. Amph. Finiat genit6r tuos
optd labores, d6tur aliquando 6tium 925
qui^sque fessis. Herc. Ipse concipidm preces
love m^que dignas. st6t suo caeMm loco
telliisque et aequor; dstra inoffens6s agant
aet^rna cursus. dlta pax gent^s alat;
femim 6mne teneat niris innocul labor 930
ens^sque lateant. nulla tempestds fretum
viol^nta turbet, ndllus irat6 love
exlliat ignis, ndllus hibernd nive
nutrftus agros dmnis evers6s trahat.
ven^na cessent, niilla nocitur6 gravis 935
sue6 tumescat h^rba. non saevi dc truces
regnant tyranni ; sf quod etiamnum 4st scelus
latdra tellus, pr6peret, et si qu6d parat
monstnim, meum sit. s^d quid hoc ? mediilm diem
cinx6re tenebrae. Phoebus obscur6 meat 940
sine niibe vultu. qufs diem retr6 fugat
agltque in ortus ? linde nox atrum caput
ign6ta profert ? unde tot stella^ polum
implant diurnae ? primus en nost^r labor
caell refulget pdrte non minimd leo 945
irdque totus f^rvet et morsiis parat.
iam rdpiet aliquod sfdus: ingentf minax
stat 6re et ignes 6fflat et rutild iubam
cervlce iactans quidquid autumniis gravis
hi^msque gelido frfgida spati6 refert 950
uno fmpetu transfliet et vernl petet
frang6tque tauri c611a. Amph. Quod subitum h6c malum
est?
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58 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
quo, Mte, vultus hue et hue acr^s refers
aci^que f alsum tiirbida caelum vides ?
Herc. Perd6mita tellus, tiimida cesserunt freta, 955
inf^rna nostros r^gna sensere Impetus :
immune caelum est, dlgnus Aleid6 labor.
in dlta mundi spdtia subUmfs ferar,
petdtur aether — astra promittit pater.
quid, si negaret? n6n capit terra H^rculem 960
tandemque superis r^ddit. en ultr6 vocat
omnis deorum coitus et laxat fores,
und vetante. r6cipis et reserds polum ?
an c6ntumacis idnuam mundl traho ?
dubitatur etiam ? vf ncla Saturno exuam 965
contrdque patris fmpii regnum fmpotens
avum resolvam; b^lla Titan^s parent,
me duce furentes; sdxa cum silvfs feram
rapidmque dextra pl^na Centaurls iuga.
iam m6nte gemino limitem ad super6s agam : 970
videdt sub Ossa P^lion Chir6n suum,
in caelum Olympus t^rtio positus gradu
perv^niet aut mitt^tur. Amph. Infand6s procul
av^rte sensus; pectoris sanf parum
magni tamen comp^sce dementem Impetum. 975
Herc. Quid h6c? Gigantes drma pestiferi movent.
profugit umbras Tftyos ac laceriim gerens
et indne pectus qudm prope a caelo stetit.
labdt Cithaeron, dlta Pellen6 tremit
Macetiimque Tempe. rdpuit hie Pindl iuga, 980
hie rdpuit Oeten, sa^vit horrendiim Mimans.
flammlfera Erinys v^rbere excuss6 sonat
rogfsque adustas pr6pius ac propius sudes
in 6ra tendit; sa^va Tisiphon^, caput
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HERCULES 59
serp^ntibus valldta, post raptilm canem 98s
portdm vacantem claiisit opposite face — - -
sed ^cce proles r6gis inimicl latet.
Lycf nef andum s^men : invis6 patri
haec d^xtra iam vos r^ddet. excutidt leves
nervris sagittas — t^la sic mittl decet 990
Herculea. Amph. Quo se caucus impeglt furor?
vastiim coactis fl^xit arcum c6rnibus
pharetrdmque solvit, strfdet emissa fmpetu
hanlndo — medio splculum coll6 fugit
vuln^re relicto. Herc. C^teram prolem 4ruam 995
omn^sque latebras. quid moror ? maius mihi
bellum Mycenis r^stat, ut Cycl6pia
ev^rsa manibus sdxa nostris c6ncidant.
hue ^at et illuc vdlva deiecto 6bice
rumpdtque postes ; ciilmen impulstim labet. 1000
perlucet omnis r^gia : hie video dbditum
natum scelesti pdtris. Amph. En blandds manus
ad g6nua tendens v6ce miserandd rogat —
scelus nefandum, trlste et aspectu h6rridum !
dextrd precantem rdpuit et eircd furens 1005
bis t^r rotatum mf sit ; ast illl caput
sonult, cerebro t^cta dispers6 madent.
at misera, parvum pr6tegens natum sinu,
Megarjl furenti slmilis e latebrls fugit.
Herc. Lic^t Tonantis pr6fuga condaris sinu, loio
petet lindecumque t4met haec dextra ^t feret.
Amph. Quo mfsera pergis? qudm fugam aut latebrdm
petis ?
nulMs salutis H^rcule infesto ^st locus,
ampl^ctere ipsum p6tius et blandd prece
lenlre tempta. Meg. Parce iam, coniilnx, precor, 1015
Digitized by VjOOQIC
60 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
agnosce Megaram. natus hie vultus tuos
habitusque reddit ; c^rnis, ut tenddt manus ?
Herc. Tene6 novercam. s^quere, da poends mihi
iug6que pressum libera turpi lovem ;
sed dnte matrem pdrvulum hoc monstrum occidat. 1020
Meg. Quo t^ndis amens ? sdnguinem fundus tuum ?
Amph. Pavefdctus infans fgneo vultu patris
perit d-nte vulnus, spfritum eripuit timor.
in coniugem nunc cldva libratur gravis —
perfr^git ossa, corpori trunc6 caput 1025
ab^st nee usquam est. c^rnere hoc aud^s, nimis
vivdx senectus ? si piget luctus, habes
mortem paratam : pectus in tela Indue,
vel stipitem istuc ca^de nostrorum Inlitum
conv^rte. falsum ac nomini turp^m tuo 1030
remov^ parentem, n^ tuae laudi obstrepat.
Chor. Quo te ipse, senior, 6bvium morti Ingeris?
quo p^rgis amens ? pr6fuge et obtectiis late
unumque manibus aufer Herculels scelus.
Herc. Bene hab^t, pudendi r^gis excisa ^st domus. 1035
tibi hunc dicatum, mdximi coniunx lovis,
greg^m cecidi ; vota persolvl libens
te dlgna, et Argos vlctimas alids dabit.
Amph. Nondum litasti, nate: consummd sacrum.
stat ^cce ad aras hostia, expectdt manum 1040
cervlce prona ; praebeo occurro Insequor :
mactd, — quid hoc est ? ^rrat acies luminum
visusque marcor h^betat ; an video H^rculis
manus trementes ? vultus in somniim cadit
et f^ssa cervix cdpite summisso labat ; 1045
flexo genu iam t6tus ad terrdm ruit,
ut ca^sa silvis 6rnus aut portum mari
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HERCULES 61
datura moles, vfvis an Iet6 dedit
id^m tuos qui mf sit ad mortem furor ?
sopor ^st: reciprocos spfritus motus agit. - 1050
detur quieti t^mpus, ut somn6 gravi
vis victa morbi pectus oppressum levet.
remov^te, famuli, t41a, ne repetdt furens.
Chorus
Luged,t aether magnusque, parens
aeth^ris alti tellusque ferax 1055
et vdga ponti mobilis unda,
tuque d,nte omnes qui p^r terras
tractusque maris fundis radios
noct^mque fugas or^ decoro,
fervlde Titan : obitiis pariter 1060
tecum Xlcides vidit et ortus
novftque tuas utrdsque domos.
Solvite tantis animiim monstris,
• solvfte superi, caecam in melius
fleet! te mentem. tuque, 6, domitor 1065
Somn^ malorum, requi^s animi,
pars hiimanae melior vitae,
volucre 6 matris genus -istraeae,
frat^r durae langufde Mortis,
verls miscens falsd, futuri 1070
certus et idem pessfmus auctor,
pax ^rrorum, portus vitae,
lucfs requies noctisque comes,
qui pdr regi famuloque venis,
pavidiim leti genus humanum 1075
cogis longam disc^re noctem :
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62 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
placidus fessum lenfsque fove,
preme d^vinctum torp6re gravi ;
sopor indomitos alliget artus
nee t6rva prius pect6ra linquat, 1080
quam m^ns repetat pristlna cursum.
En Wsus humi saevd, feroci
cord^ volutat somnf a : nondum est
tantf pestis superdta mali ;
clava^que gravi lassum solitus • 1085
manddre caput quaerft vacua
pond^ra dextra, motii iactans
bracchfa vano. nee adhiic omnes
expiilit aestus, sed ut ingenti
vexdta Noto servd,t longos 1090
undd tumultus et id,m vento
cessdnte tumet . . . pelle fnsanos
fluctus animi, reded, t pietas
virtusque viro. vel sft potius
mens v^sano concf ta motu : 1095
err6r caecus qua co^pit eat;
solus te iam praestdre potest
furor insontem : proxf ma puris
. sors ^st manibus nescfre nefas.
Nunc H^rculeis perciissa sonent no©
pect6ra palmis, mundum solitos
ferr^ lacertos verb^ra pulsent
victrice manu; gemitus vastos
audiat aether, audfat atri
regfna poll vastlsque ferox 1105
qui c611a gerit vinctd catenis
im6 latitans Cerberus antro ;
reson^t maesto clam6re chaos
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HERCULES 63
latf que patens unda profundi : 1109
pectora tantis obs^ssa malis ma
non sunt ictu feri^nda levi,
U06 planctu tria r6gna sonent.
40i tii collo decus d,c telum 1115
susp^nsa diu, fortis harundo,
pharetra^que graves, date sa^va fero
verb^ra tergo; caedd,nt umeros
robora fortes stipesque potens
duris oneret pect6ra nodis : nao
plangd,nt tantos armd dolores.
Ite fnfaustum genus, 6 pueri, 1135
notl per iter trist^ laboris, 1136
non v6s patriae laudfs comites 1122
ultf saevos vuln^re reges,
non Argiva membrd, palaestra
flect^re docti fortes caestu 1125
fort6sque manu (1130) nondumque ferae
tergd iubatae . . . iam tdmen ausi 1126
telum Scythicis leve c6rytis
missiim certa librdre manu
tut6sque fuga figure cervos : 1129
ite dd Stygios, umbra^, portus 1131
ite, fnnocuae, quas In primo
limine vitae s(3^1us 6ppressit
patriusque furor : 1134
ite, Iratos visfte reges. 1137
Hercules
Quis hfc locus, quae r^gio, quae mundl plaga?
ubi sum ? sub ortu s61is, an sub cdrdine
glaci^lis ursae? numquid Hesperil maris 1140
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64 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
extr^ma tellus hunc dat Ocean6 modum ?
quas trdhimus auras ? qu6d solum fess6 subest ?
cert^ redimus — linde prostrata M domum
vide6 cruenta corpora ? an nondum ^xuit
simuldcra mens inf^rna ? post reditiis quoque 1145
ob^rrat oculis turba feralfs meis ?
pud^t fateri : pdveo ; nescio qu6d mihi,
nesci6 quod animus grdnde praesagft malum.
ubi ^s, parens ? ubi Ilia natonim grege
animosa coniunx? cur latus laeviim vacat 1150
spoli6 leonis ? quonam abit tegim^n meum
id^mque somno m611is Herculeo torus ?
ubi t^la ? ubi arcus ? drma quis viv6 mihi
detrahere potuit ? spolia quis tanta d,bstulit
ipsumque quis non H^rculis somnum h6rruit ? 1155
lib^t meum vid^re victor^m, libet.
exurge, virtus, qu^m novum cael6 pater
genult relicto, cuius in fetu stetit
nox 16ngior quam n6stra — quod cerno nef as ?
natl cruenta ca^de confecti iacent, 1160
per^mpta coniunx. qufs Lycus regnum 6btinet
quis tanta Thebis sc^lera moliri ausus est
Hercule re verso ? quisquis Ismeni loca,
Actaea quisquis drva, qui gemin6 mari
pulsdta Pelopis r^gna Dardanil colis, 1165
succurre, saevae clddis auctorem Indica.
ruat f ra in omnes : hostis est quisquis mihi
non monstrat hostem. victor Alcida^, lates?
procede, seu tu vindicas currus truces
Thracis cruenti sive Geryona^ pecus 1170
Libya^ve dominos, niilla pugnandi mora est.
en nudus asto; v61 meis armis Hcet
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HERCULES 65
petds inermem. cur meos Theseus fugit
pat^rque vultus ? ora cur condiint sua ?
differte fletus; quis meos dederft neci 117s
omn^s simul, profdre — quid, genitor, siles?
at tu 6de, Theseu, s^d tua, Theseu, fide,
ut^rque tacitus 6ra pudibunda obtegit
furtlmque lacrimas fiindit. in tantfs malis
quid ^st pudendum? mimquid Argivae fmpotens 1180
domindtor urbis, numquid infestiim Lyci
pereiintis agmen clade nos tanta obruit ?
per t^ meorum fdcinorum laud6m precor,
genit6r, tuique n6mims semper mihi
num^n secundum, fdre. quis fudft domum ? 1185
cui pra^da iacui ? Amph. Tdcita sic abeant mala.
Herc. Ut intiltus ego sim ? Amph. Sa^pe vindicta obfuit.
Herc. Quisqudmne segnis tdnta toleravit mala ?
Amph. Mai6ra quisquis timuit. Herc. His etidm, pater,
quicqudm timeri md,ius aut gravius potest ? 1190
Amph. Cladis tuae pars Ista quani nostf quota est ?
Herc. Miserere, genitor, supplices tend6 manus.
quid h6c ? manus refugit — hie errdt scelus.
unde hlc cruor ? quid lUa puerill madens
harundo leto ? tlncta Lernaea ^st nece — 119s
iam t^la video n6stra. non quaer6 manum.
quis p6tuit arcum fl^ctere aut quae d^xtera
sinudre nervum vix recedent^m mihi ?
ad v6s revertor; genitor, hoc nostrum ^st scelus?
tacu^re — nostrum est. Amph. Luctus est istic tuus, 1200
crimen novercae : cdsus hie culpd caret.
Herc. Nunc pdrte ab omni, genitor, iratus tona,
obllte nostri vfndica serd manu
salt^m nepotes. stelliger mundiis sonet
p
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66 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
flammdsque et hie et llle iaculetttr polus; 1205
rup^s ligatum Cd,spiae corpus trahant
atque dies avida — ciir Promethel vacant
scopull ? vacat cur v^rtice immens6 feras
volucr^sque pascens Caiicasi abruptum latus
nudumque silvis ? Ilia quae pontdm Scythen 1210
Sympl^gas artat hfnc et hinc vinctds manus
dist^ndat alto, ciimque revocatd vice
in s^ coibunt saxaque in caelum ^xpriment
actls utrimque rupibus mediiim mare,
ego Inquieta m6ntium iacedm mora. 1215
quin structum acervans n^more congesto dggerem
cru6re corpus Impio sparsdm cremo ?
sic, sic agendum est : Inferis reddam H^rculem.
Amph. Nondum tumultu pectus attonit6 carets
mutdvit iras qu6dque habet propriiim furor, laao
in se Ipse saevit. Herc. Dfra Furianim loca
et inferorum cdrcer et sontf plaga
decr^ta turbae — sf quod exiliiim latet
ult^rius Erebo, C^rbero ignotum ^t mihi :
hoc me abde, tellus ; Tdrtari ad finem liltimum 1225
mansiirus ibo. pectus o nimiiam ferum !
quis v6s per omnem, liberi, spars6s domum
defl^re digne p6terit ? hie durtis malis
lacrimd,re vultus n^scit. hue arctim date,
date hvic sagittas, stfpitem hue vastUm date. 1230
tibi t^la frangam nostra, tibi nostr6s, puer,
rump^mus arcus; At tuis stipes gravis
ard^bit umbris ; ipsa Lernaef s f requens
pharetra telis f n tuos ibf t rogos :
dent drma poenas. v6s quoque infaustd,s meis 1235
cremd-bo telis, 6 novercal^s manus.
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HERCULES 67
Amph. Quis n6men usquam sc^leris errori Addidit?
Herc. Saepe ^rror ingens sc^leris obtinuit locum.
Amph. Nunc H^rcule opus est : p^rfer banc mol6m mali.
Herc. Non sic furore c6ssit extinctus pudor, 1240
popul6s ut omnes fmpio aspectu fugem.
arma, drma, Theseu, flagito proper^ mihi
subtrdcta reddi — sdna si mens ^st mihi,
ref ^rte manibus t^la ; si reman^t furor,
pat6r, recede : m6rtis invenidm viam. 1245
Amph. Per sancta generis sdcra, per ius n6minis
utnimque nostri, sfve me altor^m vocas
seu tu parentem, p^rque venerand6s piis
can6s, senectae pd,rce deserta6, precor,
annfsque fessis ; linicum lapsa^ domtis 1250
firmd-men, unum lumen afflict6 malis
tem^t reserva. niillus ex te c6ntigit
f ructijs laborum ; semper aut dubiiim mare
aut m6nstra timui ; qulsquis in tot6 f urit
rex sa^vus orbe, mdnibus aut arls nocens, 1255
a m^ timetur; semper absentfs pater
fructum tui tactiimque et aspectum peto.
Herc. Cur dnimam in ista luce detineam Amplius
mor^rque nil est : ciincta iam amisl bona,
mentem drma famam c6niugem nat6s manus, ia6o
etid,m furorem. n^mo pollut6 queat
anim6 mederi : m6rte sanandum ^st scelus.
Amph. Perim^s parentem. Herc. Fdcere ne possim,
6ccidam.
Amph. Genit6re coram? Herc. C^mere hunc docul
nefas.
Amph. Memoranda potius 6mnibus facta intuens 1265
unfus a te criminis venidm pete.
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68 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Herc. Venidm dabit sibi ipse, qui nuUi dedit ?
laudanda feci iussus : hoc unum meum est.
succurre, genitor; sive te pietas movet
seu triste fatum sfve violatiim decus 1270
virtutis : effer drma ; vincatur mea
fortiina dextra. Thes. Sunt quidem patriae preces
satis ^fficaces, s^d tamen nostr6 quoque
mov^re fletu. surge et ad versa fmpetu
perfringe solito. nunc tuum nulli Imparem 1275
animum malo resume, nunc magnd tibi
virtute agendum est : H^rculem irasci veta.
Herc. Si vivo, feci sc^lera,- si mori6r, tuli.
purgdre terras pr6pero — iamdudiam mihi
monstrum fmpium saeviimque et immite dc ferum 1280
ob^rrat : agedum dextra, conare dggredi
ing^ns opus, lab6re bis seno dmplius.
ignava cessas, fortis in pueros modo
paviddsque matres ? drma nisi dantur mihi,
aut omne Pindi Thrdcis excidd-m nemus - 1285
Bacchlque lucos ^t Cithaeronis iuga
mecum cremabo, aut tota cum domibds suis
dominisque tecta, cum deis templa 6mnibus
Thebdna supra corpus excipid-m meum
atque urbe versa condar, et, si f6rtibus 1290
leve p6ndus umeris mo^nia immissa incident
septemque opertus n6n satis portis premar,
onus omne media parte quod mundi sedet
dirimitque superos, fn meum vertd,m caput.
Amph. Reddo d,rma — Herc. Vox est dlgna genitore
H^rculis. 1295
hoc ^n peremptus splculo cecidit puer —
Amph. Hoc luno telum minibus immisft tuis.
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HERCULES 69
Herc. Hoc niinc ego utar. Amph. £cce quam misenSm
metu
cor pdlpitat pectusque sollicitum ferit.
Herc. Aptdta harundo est. Amph. !ficce iam facife
scelus 1300
vol^ns sciensque. Herc. Pdnde, quid fieri iubes?
Amph. Nihil rogamus : n6ster in tuto ^st dolor,
natiim potes servdre tu soMs mihi,
eripere nee tu; maximum evasl metum:
miserum haiit potes me fdcere, felic^m potes. 1305
sic stdtue, quidquid stdtuis, ut causdm tuam
f amdmque in arto stdre et ancipitf scias :
aut vlvis aut occldis — banc animdm levem
fessdmque senio n^c minus fessdm malis
in 6re primo t4neo. tam tard^ patri 1310
vitdm dat aliquis ? n6n feram ulterius moram,
letdle ferro pectus impresso Induam :
hie, hie iacebit H^rculis sani scelus.
Herc. Iam pdrce, genitor, p^rce, iam revocd manum.
succiimbe, virtus, p^rfer imperium patris. 1315
eat ^d labores hie quoque Hercule6s labor:
vivdmus. artus dlleva afflict6s solo,
Theseii, parentis, d^xtra contactus pios
scelerdta refugit. Amph. Hdnc manum amplect6r libens,
hac nisus ibo, p6ctori hanc aegro d,dmovens 1320
pelldm dolores. Herc. Qu^m locum profugiis petam ?
ubi m^ recondam qudve tellure 6bruar ?
quis Tdnais aut quis Nilus aut quis P^rsica
viol^ntus unda Tigris aut Rhenus ferox
Tagiisve Hibera turbidus gazd fluens 1325
abliiere dextram p6terit ? arctoiim licet
Mae6tis in me g61ida transfunddt mare
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70 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
et t6ta Tethys p6r meas currdt manus,
haer^bit altum Mcinus. in quas Impius
terrds recedes ? 6rtum an occasiim petes ? 1330
ublque notus p^rdidi exili6 locum.
me r^fugit orbis, dstra transvers6s agunt
oblfqua cursus, Ipse Titan C6rberum
meli6re vultu vfdit. o fidiim caput,
Theseii, latebram quaere longinquam dbditam; 1335
quonidmque semper sc^leris alieni'drbiter
amds nocentes, grdtiam meritls refer
vic6mque nostris : r^dde me infernls precor
umbrfs reductum, m^que subiectiim tuis
substitue vinclis : file me abscond^t locus — 1340
sed et file novit. Thes. N6stra te telWs manet.
illlc solutam ca^de Gradivus manum
restftuit armis : Ilia te, Alcid^, vocat,
facere Innocentes t^rra quae super6s solet.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
TROADES
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
Hecuba
Talthybius
Pyrrhus
Agamemno
Calchas
Andromacha
Senex
astyanax
Ulixes
Helena
NUNTIUS
polyxena tacita
Chorus
SCAENA TrOIAE
THE PARTS TAKEN BY EACH ACTOR
I Andromacha
Pyrrhus
II Hecuba
Agamemno
Ulixes
m Talthybius
Calchas
Senex
Helena
NUNTIUS
Digitized by VjOOQIC
■Digitized by Google
TEOADES
Hecuba
Quiciimque regno fldit et magnA potens
domindtur aula n^c leves metult deos
animiimque rebus cr^dulum laetls dedit,
me vldeat et te, Tr6ia : non umqudm tulit
docum^nta fors mai6ra, quam fragill loco 5
star^nt superbi. c61ui]len eversUm 6ccidit
poll^ntis Asiae, ca^litum egregius labor;
ad ciiius anna v^nit et qui frigidum
sept^na Tanain 6ra pandent^m bibit
et quf renatum primus excipi^ns diem lo
tepidiim rubenti Tfgrin immisc^t freto,
et qua6 vagos vicfna prospici^ns Scythas
ripdm catervis P6nticam viduls ferit.
excfsa ferro est, P^rgamum incubult sibi.
en Alta muri decora congestfs iacent 15
tectfs adusti ; r^giam flammae dmbiunt
omnfsque late fiimat Assaracf domus.
non pr6hibet avidas fldmma victoris manus :
diripitur ardens Tr6ia. nee caelum patet
unddnte fumo : niibe ceu densa 6bsitus 20
at^r favilla squd-let Iliacd dies.
Stat Avidus irae victor et lentum Ilium
metftur oculis dc decern tandem ferus
ign6scit annis; h6rret afflictdm quoque,
73
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74 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
victAmque quamvis vfdeat, haut credit sibi 35
potufsse vinci. sp61ia populat6r rapit
Darddnia; praedam mlUe non capiiint rates.
Test6r deorum ndmen adversiim mihi,
patria^que cineres t^que rector^m Phrygum
quem Tr6ia toto conditum regn6 tegit, 30
tu6sque manes qu6 stetit stante Ilium,
et v6s meorum llberum magnf greges,
umbra6 minores : qufdquid adversi Accidit,
quaectimque Phoebas 6re lymphatd furens
credl deo vetdnte praedixlt mala, 35
prior Hecuba vidi grdvida nee tacul metus
et vdna vates Ante Cassandrdm fui.
non caiitus ignes f thacus aut Ithacl comes
noctiirnus in yos spdrsit aut f alMx Sinon :
mens Ignis iste est, fdcibus ardetls meis. 40
sed quid ruinas tirbis eversa^ gemis,
vivdx senectus ? r^spice infellx ad hos
luctus recentes : Tr6ia iam vetus 6st malum.'
vidi 6xecrandum r^giae caedfs nefas
ips^sque ad aras mdius admissiim scelus 45
AeAcidis armis, cdm ferox, scaevd manu
comd reflectens r^gium tortd caput,
alt6 nefandum vulneri ferrum dbdidit;
quod p^nitus actum ciim recepiss^t libens,
ensfs senili siccus e iugul6 redit. s©
placd-re quem non p6tuit a caede ^ffera
mortdlis aevi cdrdinem extremiim premens
superfque testes sc^leris et quodddm sacrum
regnf iacentis ? file tot regiim parens
car^t sepulcro Prfamus et flamma Indiget $5
ard^nte Troia. n6n tamen superfs sat est :
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TROADES 75
dominum 4cce Priami niiribus et natfs legens
sortltur urna pra6daque en vilfs sequar.
hie H^ctoris coniiigia despond^t sibi,
hie 6ptat Heleni e6niugem, hie Ant^noris; 60
nee d^st tuos, Cassdndra, qui thalam6s petat —
mea sors timetur, s61a sum Danals metus.
Lam^nta eessant ? turba eaptiva^ mea,
ferfte palmis p^etora et plancMs date
et iusta Troiae Meite — iamdudilm sonet 65
fatdlis Ide, iddieis dirf domus.
Chorus
Non nide vulgus laerimfsque novum
lug^re iubes : hoe e6ntinuis
egimus annis, ex qu6 tetigit
Phrygius Graias hosp^s Amyelas 70
seeultque fretum pinus matri
saerd Cybebae.
deei^ns nivibus eanuit Ide,
deei^ns nostris nuddta rogis,
et Slgeis trepidiis eampis 75
deeumds seeuit mess6r aristas,
ut niilla dies maer6re earet.
sed n6va fletus eausd ministrat :
ite ad planetus, miserdmque leva,
regfna, manum. vulgus dominam 80
vil^ sequemur : non fndoeiles
lug^re sumus.
Hec. Fida6 easus nostrl eomites,
solvfte erinem, per c611a fluant
maestd capilli tepid6 Troiae 85
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76 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
pulv^re turpes: (102 b) complete manus,
hoc 6x Troia sumpsfsse licet. 103
paret ^xertos turbd lacertos; 87
vest^ remissa substrlnge sinus
uter6que tenus patednt artus.
cui c6niugio pect6ra velas, 90
captive pudor ?
cingdt tunicas palld solutas,
vacet dd crebri verb^ra planctus
furibunda manus — placet hfc habitus,
placet : dgnosco Trodda turbam. 9S
itenim luctus redednt veteres,
solitiim flendi vinclte morem :
Hect6ra flemus.
Chor. Solvfmus omnes lacerdm multo
fun^re crinem; comd demissa est 100
libera nodo sparsftque cinis
fervldus ora.
cadit ^x umeris vestfs apertis 104
imiimque tegit suffiilta latus; 105
iam niida vocant pect6ra dextras :
nunc, niinc vires expr6me, dolor.
Rhoet^a sonent lit6ra planctu,
habitdnsque cavis montlbus Echo
non, lit solita est, extr^ma brevis no
verbd remittat, tot6s reddat
Troia^ gemitus : audfat omnis
pontiis et aether, saevlte, manus,
pulsii pectus tundfte vasto,
non sum solito cont^nta sono :
Hect6ra flemus.
Hec. Tibi n6stra ferit dextrd lacertos
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1^5
TROADES 77
umer6sque ferit tibi sdnguineos,
tibi n6stra caput dext^ra pulsat,
tibi mdternis ub^ra palmis 120
lanidta iacent : fluat ^t multo
sanguine manet quamcumque tuo
fun^re feci ruptd cicatrix.
colum^n patriae, mora fdtorum,
tu pra^sidium Phrygibiis fessis, 125
tu miirus eras umerlsque tuis
stetit f 11a decern f ultd per annos :
teciim cecidit summiisque dies
Hect6ris idem patria^que fuit.
Vertf te planctus : Priam6 vestros 130
fundlte fletus, satis Hector habet.
C^OR. Accfpe, rector Phrygian, planctus,
acclpe fletus, bis cdpte senex.
nil Tr6ia semel te r^ge tulit,
bis piilsari Darddna Graio 13s
moenla ferro bisqu6 pharetras
passa H^rculeas. post ^latos
Hecuba^ partus regiimque gregem
postr^ma pater fun^ra cludis
magn6que lovi victlma caesus 140
Sig^a premis lit6ra truncus.
Hec. Ali6 lacrimas flectlte vestras :
non ^st Priami miserd-nda mei
mors, fliades — 'felfx Priamus'
diclte cunctae : lib^r manes 145
vadft ad imos, nee f^ret umquam
victd. Graium cervice iugum ;
non file duos videt Atridas
nee fdllacem cernft Vlixen;
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78 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
non -irgolici praedd triumphi 150
subi^cta feret colld tropaeis;
non ddsuetas ad sc6ptra manus
post t^rga dabit cumisque sequens
Agam^mnonios aur^a dextra
vincilla gestans latls fiet iss
pompd Mycenis.
Chor. ' Felix Priamus ' diclmus omnes :
secum ^xcedens sua r^gna tulit ;
nunc ]filysii nemorfs tutis
errdt in umbris int^rque pias 160
fellx animas Hect6ra quaerit.
felfx Priamus, felfx quisquis
beI16 moriens omnia secum
consiimpta tulit.
Talthybius
O 16nga Danais s6mper in portii mora,
seu p^tere bellum, p^tere seu patridm volunt. 165
Chor. Quae cailsa ratibus fdciat et Danais moram,
effdre, reduces quls deus clauddt vias.
Tal. Pavet dnimus, artus h6rridus quassdt tremor.
mai6ra veris m6nstra vix capiiint fidem —
vidi Ipse, vidi. siimma iam Titdn iuga 170
string^bat ortu, vlcerat noct^m dies, 170 b
cum subito caeco t^rra mugitd fremens
conciissa totos trdxit ex im6 sinus;
mov^re silvae cdpita et excelsiim nemus
frag6re vasto t6nuit et lucus sacer;
Ida^a ruptis sdxa ceciderdnt iugis. 175
nee t^rra solum tr^muit : et pontus suum
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TROADES 79
ad^ssG Achillen sensit ac stravlt vada.
turn sclssa vallis dperit immens6s specus
et hidtus Erebi p^rvium ad super6s iter
telMre fracta pra^bet ac tumuliim levat. 180
emf cuit ingens umbra Thessalicl ducis,
Threlcia qualis drma prolud6ns tuis
iam, Tr6ia, fatis str^vit aut Neptiinium
cand nitentem p^rculit iuven^m coma,
aut cum fnter acies Mdrte violent6 furens 185
corp6ribus amnes clilsit et quaer^ns iter
tardiis cruento Xdnthus erravft vado,
aut ciim superbo victor in curni stetit
egftque habenas H^ctorem et Troidm trahens.
impl^vit omne If tus iratl sonus : 190
' ite, Ite inertes, mdnibus meis d^bitos
auf^rte honores, s6hite ingratds rates
per n6stra ituri mdria — non parv6 luit
irds Achillis Gra^cia et magn6 luet.
desp6nsa nostris clneribus Pol5^xene 195
Pyrrhi manu mact^tur et tumuMm riget.'
haec fdtus alta n6cte divislt diem
repet^nsque Ditem m^rsus ingent^m specum
coeiinte terra iiSnxit. immotf iacent
tranquflla pelagi, v^ntus abieclt minas 200
placidumque fluctu miirmurat lenl mare,
Trit6num ab alto c^cinit hymenaeiim chorus.
Pybrhus
Cum la^ta pelago v^la redituriis dares,
excfdit Achilles ciiius unius manu
impulsa Troia, qufdquid adieclt morae 205
ill6 remoto, ddbia quo cader^t stetit.
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80 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
veils licet quod p^titur ac proper^s dare,
sero ^s daturus : idm suum cunctl duces
tul^re pretium. qua^ minor merc^s potest
tanta^ dari virtu tis ? an meruit parum aio
qui, fugere bellum iussus et longd sedens
aevum senecta diicere ac Pylif senis
transc^ndere annos, ^xuit matrfs dolos
falsdsque vestes, fdssus est armls virum ?
inhdspitali T^lephus regno Impotens, 215
dum M^siae fer6cis introitus negat,
rud^m cruore r^gio dextram Imbuit
fort^mque eandem s^nsit et mit^m manum.
cecid^re Thebae, vldit Eeti6n capi
sua r^gna victus; cldde sub versa 6st pari 220
app6sita celso pdrva Lyrnes6s iugo,
captdque tellus n6bilis Bris^ide
et caiisa litis r^gibus Chrys^ iacet
et n6ta fama T^nedos et quae pdscuo
feciinda pingui Thrdcios nutrft greges 225
Scyr6s fretumque Lesbos Aegaetim secans
et cdra Phoebo Cilia; quid quas dlluit
vernls Caycus gurgitem attoll^ns aquis ?
haec tdnta clades gentium ac tantus pavor,
sparsa^ tot urbes turbinis vastl modo 230
alt^rius esset gl6ria ac summiim decus :
iter 6st Achillis; sic meus venlt pater
et tdnta gessit b^lla, dum bellum parat.
ut dlia sileam merita, non uniis satis
Hect6r f uisset ? Ilium vixjlt pater, 235
vos dlruistis. Inclitas laud^s iuvat
et f d-cta magni cldra genitorls sequi :
iaciilt peremptus Hector ante ocul6s.patris
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TROADES 81
patrufque Memnon, ciiius ob lucMm parens
pall^nte maestum pr6tulit vulM diem ; 240
sulque victor 6peris exemplum h6rruit
didicltque Achilles 6t dea nat6s mori.
turn sa^va Amazon liltimus cecidft metus —
deb^s Achilli, m^rita si digne a^stimas,
et si 6x Mycenis vfrginem atque Argls petat. 245
dubitdtur et iam pld-cita nunc subito fmprobas
Priamlque natam P^lei nat6 ferum
mactdre credis ? dt tuam natdm parens
Helenae Immolasti : s61ita iam et facta 6xpeto.
Agam. luvenlle vitium est r^gere non posse Impetum ; 250
aetdtis alios fervor hie primiis rapit,
P3a'rhiim paternus. splritus quonddm truces
mindsque tumidi l^ntus Aeacida6 tuli :
quo pliira possis, pliira patient6r feras.
Quid ca^de dira n6biles clari ducis 255
asp^rgis umbras ? n6scere hoc primiim decet,
quid fdcere victor d^beat, victiis pati.
viol^nta nemo imp^ria continult diu,
moderdta durant ; qu6que Fortuna dltius
ev6xit ac levdvit humands opes, 260
hoc s^ magis supprlmere felic^m decet
vari6sque casus tr6mere metuent^m deos
nimiiim faventes. mdgna momento 6brui
vinc^ndo didici. Tr6ia nos tumid6s facit
nimium dc feroces ? stdmus hoc Danal loco, 265
unde Ilia cecidit. fdteor, aUquando Impotens
regno dc superbus dltius mem^t tuli ;
sed fr^git illos splritus haec qua^ dare
potufssef aliis caiisa, Fortuna^ favor,
tu m6 superbum, Prfame, tu timiddm facis. 270
Q
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82 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
ego 6sse quicquam sc^ptra nisi van6 putem
fulg6re tectum n6men et fals6 comam
vincl6 decentem ? cdsus haec rapist brevis,
nee mille forsan rdtibus aut annls decern.
non 6mnibus fortiina tarn lenta fmminet. 275
equid^m fatebor (pdce dixisse h6c tua,
Arglva tellils, Uceat) affligf Phrygas
vinclque volui : rdere et aequarf solo
utinam drcuissem. s4d regi frenis nequit
et Ira et ardens h6stis et vict6ria 280
commissa nocti. qufdquid indignum aut ferum
cuiqudm videri p6tuit, hoc fecit dolor
tenebra^que, per quas Ipse se irritdt furor,
gladiusque felix, ciiius infectl semel
vec6rs libido est. qufdquid eversa^ potest 285
super^sse Troiae, mdneat : exactiim satis
poendrum et ultra est. r^gia ut virgo 6ccidat
tumul6que donum d^tur et ciner^s riget
et fdcinus atrox caddis ut thalam6s vocent,
non pdtiar. in me culpa cunctonim redit : 290
qui n6n vetat peccdre, cum possft, iubet.
Pyrrh. Nullumne Achillis pra6mium man^s ferent?
Agam. Ferent, et ilium laiidibus cunctl canent
magniimque terrae n6men ignotae audient.
quod sf levatur sdnguine infus6 cinis, 295
opfma Phrygii c611a caedantiir greges
fludtque nulli fl^bilis matri cruor.
quis Iste mos est ? qudndo in inferids homo est
imp6nsus hominis ? d^trahe invidiam tuo
odiumque patri, qu^m coli poend iubes. 300
Pyrrh. tumide, rerum diim secundarum status
ext611it animos, tfmide cum increpuft metus,
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TROADES 83
regum tyranne ! idmne flammatum geris
am6re subito pectus ac veneris novae ?
solusne totiens sp61ia de nobis feres ? 305
hac d^xtra Achilli vlctimam redddm suam.
quam si negas retin^sque, maior6m dabo
digndmque quam det P^rrhus ; et nimium diu
a ca^de nostra r^gia cessdt manus
par^mque poscit Prlamus. Agam. Hand equid^m nego 310
hoc 6sse Pyrrhi maximum in bell6 decus,
saev6 peremptus ^nse quod Priamiis iacet,
suppl^x paternus. Pyrrh. Siipplices nostri patris
host^sque eosdem n6vimus. Priamds tamen
praes^ns rogavit; tii gravi pavidias metu, 315
nee dd rogandum f6rtis, Aiacl preces
Ithae6que mandas clatisus atque host^m tremens.
Agam. At n6n timebat tiinc tuus, fate6r, parens,
int^rque caedes Gra^ciae atque ustds rates
segnls iacebat b611i et armorum Immemor, 320
levl canoram v^rberans plectr6 chelyn.
Pyrrh. Tunc mdgnus Hector, drma cohtemn6ns tua,
cantiis Achillis tlmuit et tanto In metu
navdlibus pax d-lta Thessalicls fuit.
Agam. Nempe Isdem in istis Th^ssalis navdlibus 325
pax dlta rursus H^ctoris patrl fuit.
Pyrrh. Est r6gis alti splritum regl dare.
Agam. Cur d^xtra regi splritum eripult tua ?
Pyrrh. Mortem misericors sa^pe pro vitd dabit.
Agam. Et mine misericors vlrginem bust6 petis ? 330
Pyrrh. lamne Immolari vlrgines credls nefas ?
Agam. Praef^rre patriam Uberis reg6m decet.
Pyrrh. Lex nulla capto pdrcit aut poenam Impedit.
Agam. Quod n6n vetat lex, h6c vetat fieri pudor.
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84 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Pyrrh. Quodcumque libuit fdcere victori licet. 335
Agam. Minimum decet lib^re cui multum licet.
Pyrrh. His fsta iactas, qu6s decem annonim gravi
regn6 subactos P^rrhus exsolvlt iugo ?
Agam. Hos Sc^rus animos ? Pyrrh. Sc6Iere quae f ratnim
caret.
Agam. Inclusa fluctu -^ Pyrrh. N^mpe cognatl maris : 340
Atrei ^t Thyestae n6bilem novl domum.
Agam. Ex virginis conc^pte furtiv6 stupro
et ^x Achille ndte, sed nondiim viro —
Pyrrh. IUo 6x Achille, g^nere qui mundilm suo
sparsiis per omne ca^litum regniim tenet : 345
Thetide a^quor, umbras A^aco, caeMm love.
Agam. Illo 6x Achille, qui manu Paridfs iacet.
Pyrrh. Quem n^c deorum c6mminus quisqudm petit.
Agam. Comp6scere equidem v^rba et audac^m malo
poterdm domare; s^d meus captls quoque 350
scit pd-rcere ensis. p6tius interpr^s deum
Calchds vocetur : f dta si posc^nt, dabo.
Tu qui Pelasgae vincla solvistf rati
mordsque bellis, d-rte qui reserds polum,
cui vlscerum secr^ta, cui mundf fragor 355
et Stella longa s^mitam flammd trahens
dant sfgna fati, ciiius ingentl mihi
merc^de constant 6ra : quid iubedt deus
effdre, Calchas, n6sque consili6 rege.
Calchas
Dant fdta Danais qu6 solent preti6 viam : 360
mactdnda virgo est Th^ssali bust6 ducis;
sed qu6 iugari Th^ssalae cultii solent
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TROADES 85
I6nidesve v61 Mycenaea^ nurus,
PyrrMs parent! c6niugem traddt suo :
sic rite dabitur. n6n tamen nostras tenet 365
haec lina puppes causa : nobili6r tuo,
Pol^xene, cru6re debetiir cruor.
quern fdta quaerunt, tiirre de summd cadat
Priaml nepos Hect6reus et letum 6ppetat.
turn milie velis fmpleat classls freta. 370
Chorus
V4rum est &n timid6s fdbula d^cipit
timbras c6rporibiis vfvere c6nditis,
ctim conidnx oculls fmposuf t manum
siipremiisque di^s s61ibus 6bstitit
6t tristfs ciner^s lirna co6rcuit ? 375
n6n prod^st animdm trddere Mneri,
s^d restdt miseris vfvere 16ngius ?
&n totf morimiir nuUaque pdrs manet
n6stri, ciim profug6 splritus hdlitu
ImmixtiSs nebulfs c^ssit in dera 380
6t nudiim tetiglt stabdita fdx latus ?
Quldquid s61 ori^ns, quldquid et 6ccidens
n6vit, ca^rulefs 6ceanus fretis
qufdquid bfs veni^ns 6t fugi^ns lavat,
a^tas P^gase6 c6rripi6t gradu. 38s
qu6 bis s6na yoldnt sldera tiirbine,
qu6 cursii properdt v61vere sa^cula
dstrordm dominiis, qu6 properdt modo
6bllqufs Hecat6 ciirrere fl^xibus :
h6c omn6s petimils fdta nee dmplius, 390
i6rat6s superis qui tetiglt lacus,
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86 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
iSsquam est; dt calidfs fumus ab jgnibus
vdnesclt, spatiiim p6r breve s6rdidus,
lit nub^s, gravidas qu^s modo vidimus,
drctol Boreal dlssicit f mpetus : 395
sfc hie, qu6 regimur, spiritus 6fl9uet.
p6st mort6m nihil 6st ipsaque m6rs nihil,
v^locf s spatif m6ta novlssima ;
sp^m pondnt avidl, s611icitf metum :
t^mpus n6s avidilm d6vorat ^t chaos. 400
m6rs indlvidua ^st, n6xia c6rpori
n^c parc^ns animal : Ta^nara et dspero
r^gnum siib domin6 llmen et 6bsidens
ciistos n6n facill Cerberus 6stio
rdmor^s vacul v6rbaque indnia 405
6t par s611icit6 Mbula s6mnio.
qua6ris qu6 iaceds p6st obitiim loco ?
qu6 non ndta iac^nt. —
Andromacha
Quid, ma^sta Phrygiae tiirba, laceratis comas
miserdmque tunsae pectus eflFus6 genas 410
fletii rigatis ? 16via perpessa^ sumus,
si fl^nda patimur. f Hum vobfs modo,
mihi c^cidit olim, ciim ferus cumi Incito
mea membra raperet 6t gravi gemer^t sono
Pellacus axis p6ndere Hectore6 tremens. 415
tunc 6bruta atque ev^rsa quodcumque dccidit
torp^ns malis rig^nsque sine sensu fero.
iam er^pta Danais c6niugem sequer^r meum,
nisi hie teneret : hlc meos anim6s domat
morlque prohibet; c6git hie ahquld deos 420
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TROADES 87
adMc rogare — t^mpus aerumnae dddidit.
hie mihi malorum mdximum fructum dbstulit,
nihil timere : pr6speris rebiis locus
er^ptus omnis, dfra qua venidnt habent.
mis^rrimum est timbre, cum sperms nihil. 435
Senex
Quis t^ repens comm6vit afflictdm metus?
Andr. Ex6ritur aliquod mdius ex magn6 malum.
nondiim mentis llii fattim stetit.
Sen. Et quds reperiet, lit velit, clad^s deus ?
Andr. Stygls profundae clailstra et obscurf specus 430
laxdntur et, ne d6sit eversfs metus,
host^s ab imo c6nditi Dite Exeunt —
soUsne retro p^rviiun est Danafs iter ?
certe a6qua mors est : tiirbat atque agitd,t Phrygas
communis iste terror; hlc propria meum 435
ext^rret animum n6ctis horrenda6 sopor.
Sen. Quae visa portas? ^ffer in medium metus.
Andr. Partes fere nox dlma transierdt duas ^
clardmque septem v^rterant stella6 iugum;
ign6ta tandem v^nit afl9icta6 quies 440
brevlsque fessis s6mnus obrepslt genis,
si s6mnus ille est mentis attonita6 stupor :
cum siibito nostros Hector ante ocul6s stetit,
non qudlis ultro b^lla in Argiv6s ferens
Graids petebat fdcibus Idaels rates, 445
nee ca6de multa qudlis in Dana6s furens
vera 4x Aehille sp61ia simulat6 tulit,
non lUe vultus Mmmeum intend^ns iubar,
sed f^ssus ac delictus et fletii gravis
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simillsque nostro, squdlida obtectiis coma. 450
iuvdt tamen vidisse; turn quassdns caput:
'dispone somnos' Inquit 'et natum^ripe,
o flda coniunx : Idteat, haec una 6st salus.
omf tte fletus — Tr6ia quod cecidlt gemis ?
utindm iaceret t6ta. festina, dmove 455
quocumque nostrae pdrvulam stirp6m domus.'
mihi g^lidus horror dc tremor somnum ^xpulit,
ocul6sque nunc hue pdvida, nunc illuc ferens
obhta nati mlsera quaesivi H^ctorem:
falldx per ipsos ilmbra complexiis abit. 460
ndte, magni c^rta progenies patris,
spes iina Phrygibus, linica afflicta^ domus,
veterisque suboles sanguinis nimium Incliti
nimiiimque patri sfmilis : hos vultiis meus
hab^bat Hector, tdhs incessti fuit 465
habitiique talis, sic tulit fortes manus,
sic c^lsus umeris, fr6nte sic torvd minax
cervf ce f usam dfssipans iactd comam —
o ndte sero Phrygibus, o matri cito,
erltne tempus f llud ac felfx dies 470
quo Tr6ici defensor et vind^x soli
rediviva ponas P^rgama et spars6s fuga
civ^s reducas, n6men et patriae suum
Phrygibusque rfeddas ? s^d mei f atf memor
tam mdgna timeo v6ta — quod captls sat est, 475
vivdmus. heu me, quls locus fidiis meo
erf t timori qudve te sede 6cculam ?
arx Ilia pollens 6pibus et muris deum,
gent^s per omnes cMra et invidiam gravis,
nunc pulvis altus, strdta sunt flamma 6mnia 480
super^stque vasta ex lirbe ne tantiim quidem,
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TROADES 89
quo Idteat inf ans — qu^m locum f raudf legam ?
est tdnjulus ingens c6mugis cari sacer,
ver^ndus hosti, m61e quern immensd parens
opibiisque magnis strdxit, in luctus suos 485
rex n6n avarus : 6ptime creddm patri —
sud6r per artus f rigidus tot6s cadit :
om^n tremesco mlsera feralfs loci. 488
Sen. Miser 6ccupet praesfdia, secunls legat. 497
Andr. Quid qu6d latere sfne metu magn6 nequit, 496
ne pr6dat aliquis ? Sen. -imove testes doli. 492
Andr. Si qua^ret hostis ? Sen. T3"rbe in eversd perit : 493
haec caiisa multos lina ab interitu drcuit, 489
credf perisse. Andr. Vfx spei quicquam ^st super:
grave p6ndus ilium mdgna nobilitds premit; 491
quid pr6derit latufsse redituro fn manus? 494
Sen. Vict6r feroces Impetus 'prim6s habet. 49s
Andr. Quis t^ locus, quae r^gio seducta, fnvia 498
tut6 reponet? quis feret trepidfs opem?
quis pr6teget ? qui semper, etiam mine tuos, 500
Hect6r, tuere: c6niugis furtiim piae
serva 6t fideli cfnere victurum 4xcipe.
succ^de tumulo, ndte — quid retr6 fugis
tutd-sque latebras sp^mis? agnosco fndolem:
pud6t timere. spfritus magn6s fuga 505
anim6sque veteres, siime quos casiis dedit.
en fntuere, tiirba quae simiis super:
tumuWs, puer, captfva: cedendum 6st malis.
sanctds parentis c6nditi sed^s age
aud^ subire. fdta si miser6s iuvant, 510
hab^s sa'utem ; i&ta. si vitdm negant,
hab^s sepulchrum. Sen. Claustra commisstim tegunt;
quem n6 tuus prodiicat in mediiim timor,
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90 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
procul hlnc recede t6que diversam dmove.
Andr. LevWs solet tim6re, qui propiiis timet; 515
sed, si placet, referdmus hinc ali6 pedem.
Sen. Cohib^ parumper 6ra questusque 6pprime:
gressiis nefandos diix Cephallanum ddmovet.
Andr. Dehisce tellus tiique, coniunx, liltimo
specu revulsam sclnde tellurem 6t Stygis 520
sinii profundo c6nde depositiim meum. •
ad6st Ulixes, 6t quidem dubi6 gradu
vultiique: nectit p6ctore astus cdllidos.
Ulixes
Dura6 minister s6rtis hoc primdm peto,
ut, 6re quamvis v6rba dicantiir meo, 525
non 6sse credas n6stra: Graiorum 6mmum *
procerumque vox est, p6tere quos serds domos
Hect6rea suboles pr6hibet : hanc fata 6xpetunt.
solUcita Danaos pdcis incerta6 fides
semper tenebit, s6mper a terg6 timor 530
resplcere coget drma nee poni sinet,
dum Phr^gibus animos ndtus eversis dabit,
Andr6macha, vester. aiigur haec Calchds canit;
et, si taceret aiigur haec Calchds, tamen
dic6bat Hector, ctiius et stirpem h6rreo : 535
gener6sa in ortus s6mina exurgtint suos.
sic lUe magni pdrvus armentl comes
primlsque nondum c6rnibus find6ns cutem
cervlce subito c^lsus et fronte drduus
greg^m paternum diicit ac pecori Imperat; 540
quae t^nera caeso vlrga de trunc6 stetit,
par Ipsa matri tempore exigu6 subit
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TROADES 91
I
umbrAsque terris r^ddit et cael6 nemus;
sic mdle relictus Igne de magn6 cinis
vir6s resumit. 6st quidem iniustiis dolor 545
rerum a^stimator: si tamen tecum ^xigas, .^-,
venidm dabis, quod b^Ua post hiem^s decern
totid^mque messes idm senex mil6s timet
alidsque clades rursus ac numqudm bene
Troidm iacentem. mdgna res Dana6s movet, ^ 550
futiirus Hector: libera Grai6s metu.
haec lina naves caiisa deductds tenet,
hac cld,ssis haeret. n^ve crudel^m putes,
quod s6rte iussus H^ctoris nattim petam :
petlssem Oresten. pdtere quod vict6r tulit. 555
. Andr. Utindm quidem esses, ndte, materna In manu,
noss6mque quis te cdsus ereptiim mihi
ten^ret, aut quae r^gio — non hostllibus
conf6ssa telis pectus ac vincUs manus
secdntibus praestrlcta, non acrl latus 560
utnimque flamma clncta materndm fidem
imiquam ^xuissem. ndte, quis te mine locus,
fortiina quae poss^dit ? errore dvio
vagus drva lustras ? vdstus an patriae vapor
corrlpuit artus ? sa6vus an vict6r tuo 565
luslt cruore ? niimquid immanls ferae
morsu peremptus pd,scis Idaeds aves ?
Ulix. Simuldta remove v6rba; non facile ^st tibi
declpere Ulixen : vlcimus matnim dolos
etidm dearum. cdssa consilia dmove; 570
ubi ndtus est ? Andr. . Ubi Hector ? ubi cunctl Phryges ?
ubi Prlamus? unum qua^ris: ego quaero 6mnia.
Ulix. Codcta dices sp6nte quod fari dbnuis.
Andr. Tuta ^st, perire qua^ potest deb^t cupit.
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92 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Ulix. Magnffica verba m6rs prope admota ^xcutit. 575
Andr. Si vis, Ulixe, c6gere Andromachdm metu,
vitdm minare: ndm mori votum 6st mihi. ,
Ulix. Verb6ribus igni m6rte cruciatu 61oqm
quodcilmque celas ddiget invitdm dolor
et p^ctore imo c6ndita arcana 6ruet : 580
nec6ssitas plus p6sse quam pietds solet.
Andr. Prop6ne flammas, viilnera et dirds mali
dol6ris artes 6t famem et saevdm sitim
variAsque pestes lindique, et femim inditum
visc^ribus istis, cdrceris caeci luem, 585
et quidquid audet victor irattis timens :
anim6sa nuUos mdter admittlt metus. 588
Ulix. Hie Ipse, quo nunc c6ntumax perstds, amor
consdlere parvis Uberis Dana6s monet. 590
post drma tarn longlnqua, post ann6s decern
minus timerem qu6s facit Calehds metus,
si mlhi timerem : b^Ua Telemach6 paras.
Andr. Invlta, Ulixe, gaiidium Danals dabo :
dandum^st; fatere qu6s premis luetics, dolor. 595
gaud^te, Atridae, tiique laetifica, lit soles,
ref6r Pelasgis : H6ctoris proles obit.
Ulix. Et 6sse verum hoc qud probas Danals fide ?
Andr. Ita qu6d minari maximum vict6r potest
contlngat et me fdta maturo 6xitu 600
facillque solvant Ac meo conddnt solo
et pdtria tellus H^ctorem levit^r premat,
ut Mce cassus Inter extinct6s iacet
datiisque tumulo d^bita exanimls tulit.
Ulix. Expl^ta fata stlrpe sublata H^ctoris 605
soliddmque pacem la^tus ad Dana6s feram —
quid dgis, Ulixe ? Ddnaidae credent tibi :
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TROADES 93
tu cul ? parenti — f Ingit an quisquam h6c parens,
nee ab6minandae m6rtis auspicium pavet ?
auspicia ^l^tuunt qui nihil maiiis timent. 6io
fidem dlligavit iiire iurand6 suam —
si p^ierat, tim6re quid graviiis potest ?
nunc ddvoca astus, dnime, nunc fraud6s, dolos,
nunc t6tum Ulixen; Veritas numqudm pent.
scrutdre matrem. ma^ret, inlacrimdt, gemit; 615
sed et htic et illuc dnxios gressus refert
missdsque voces atire soUicita 6xcipit :
magis ha6c timet, quam ma^ret. ingenio 6st opus.
Ali6s parentes dlloqui in luctii decet :
tibi grdtulandum est, misera, quod nat6 cares, 630
quem m6rs manebat sa6va praecipit^m datum
e ttirre, lapsis s6la quae murfs manet.
Andr. Reliquit animus m6mbra, quatiuntiir, labant
torp6tque vinctus frlgido sanguis gelu.
Ulix. Intr^muit : hac, hac pdrte quaerenda 6st mihi ; 625
matr6m timor det^xit : iterab6 metum. —
ite, Ite celeres, fraiide materna dbditum
host^m, Pelasgi n6minis pestem liltimam,
ubiciimque latitat, 6rutam in mediiim date,
bene 6st : tenetur. p6rge, festina, dttrahe — 630
quid r^spicis trepiddsque ? iam cert6 pent.
Andr. Utindm timerem. s6Iitus ex longo 6st metus :
dedlscit animus sa6pe quod didicft diu.
Ulix. Lustrdle quoniam d6bitum murfs puer
sacnim dntecessit n6c potest vat^m sequi 635
meli6re fato rdptus, hoc Calchds ait
mod6 piari p6sse rediturds rates,
si pldcet undas H6ctoris sparsf cinis
ac tdmulus imo t6tus aequetiir solo.
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94 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
nunc llle quoniam d^bitam eflfuglt necem, 640
erit ddmovenda s6dibus sacrls manus.
Andr. Quid dgimus ? animum dlstrahit gemintis timor :
hinc ndtus, illinc c6mugis sacrl cinis.
pars dtra vincet ? t^stor immit^s deos,
de6sque veros c6niugis man^s mei : 645
non dliud, Hector, In meo nat6 mihi
plac6re quam te. vlvat, ut posslt tuos
ref^rre vultus — pr6rutus tumul6 cinis
merg^tur? ossa fliictibus spargl sinam
disi^cta vastis ? p6tius hie mortem 6ppetat. — 650
poterls nefandae d^ditum mat6r neci
vid6re ? poteris c61sa per fastlgia
missum rotari ? p6tero, perpetidr, feram,
dum n6n mens post fdta victorls manu
iact^tur Hector. — hlc suam poendm potest 655
sentlre, at ilium fdta iam in tut6 locant —
quid Mctuaris? stdtue, quem poenae 6xtrahas.
ingrdta, dubitas ? H6ctor est illinc tuus —
errds: utrimque est H6ctor; hie sensiis potens,
forsdn futurus ultor extinctl patris — 660
utrlque parei n6n potest : quid idm f acis ?
serva 6 duobus, dnime, quem Danal timent.
Ulix. Resp6nsa peragam : fiinditus busta 6ruam.
Andr. Quae v^ndidistis? Ulix. P^rgam et e summo
dggere
trahdm sepulchra. Andr. Ca^litum appell6 fidem 665
fid^mque Achillis: Pjrrhe, genitorfs tui
muniis tuere. Ulix. Tumulus hie camp6 statim
tot6 iaeebit. Andr. Fiierat hoc prorsiis nefas
Danals inausum. t6mpla violastis, deos
etidm faventes : busta transierdt furor. 670
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TROADES 96
reslstam, inermes 6fferam armatls manus,
dabit Ira vires, qudlis Argolicds ferox
tunnds Amazon strdvit, aut quails deo
perciissa Maenas ^ntheo silvds gradu
armdta thyrso turret atque exp^rs sui 675
vulniis dedit nee s^nsit, in medi6s ruam
tumul6que cineris s6cia defens6 cadam.
Ulix. Cessdtis et vos fl^bilis clam6r movet
furdrque cassus f^minae ? iussa dcius
perdgite. Andr. Me, me st^rnite hie ferrd prius. 680
rep^llor, heu me. nimpe fatorum moras,
mollre terras. Hector, ut Ulix6n domes,
vel limbra satis es — drma concussit manu,
iaculdtur ignes — c6rnitis, Danai, H^ctorem ?
an s61a video ? Ulix. Fiinditus cuncta 6ruam. 685
Andr. Quid agls ? ruina pdriter et natum 6t virum
prost6rnis una? f6rsitan Dana6s prece
placdre poteris. c6nditum illid^t statim
immdne busti p6ndus — interedt miser
ubicumque potius, n^ pater natum 6bruat 690
premdtque patrem ndtus. — Ad genua dccido
suppl^x, Ulixe, qudmque nulliiis pedes
nov^re dextram p^dibus admove6 tuis.
miserere matris 6t preces placidds pias
pati^nsque recipe, qu6que te celsum dltius 695
superl levarunt, mltius laps6s preme :
miser6 datur quodciimque, fortuna6 datur.
sic t6 revisat c6niugis sancta6 torus,
ann6sque, dum te r^cipit, extenddt suos
La^rta; sic te iiivenis aspicidt tuus, 7«>
et v6ta vincens v^stra felici indole
aetdte avum transc6ndat, ingeni6 patrem.
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96 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
miserere matris : linicum adflicta6 mihi
soldmen hie est. Ulix. fixhibe natum ^t roga.
a/ Andr. Hue ^ latebris proe6de tuis, ' 705
flebile matris furtum miserae.
hie ^st, hie est terr6r, UUxe,
mill^ carinis. submltte manus
dominlque pedes suppllce dextra
stratiis adora nee tiirpe puta 710
quidquld miseros fortiina iubet.
pone ^x animo reg^s atavos
magnlque senis iurA per omnes
ineliita terras, exeldat Heetor,
gere cdptivum posit6que genu, 715
si tiia nondum fun^ra sentis,
matris fletus imitdre tuae.
Vidlt pueri regis laerimas
et Tr6ia prior, parviisque minas
trueis Aleidae flexlt Priamus. 720
ille, lUe ferox, euiiis vastis
virlbus omnes eess^re ferae,
qui p6rfraeto limine Ditis-
caeeiim retro patef^cit iter,
hostls parvi vietiis laerimis : 725
'suselpe' dixit 'reet6r habenas
patri6que sede celsiis solio;
sed se^ptra fide meli6re tene.'
hoe Mit illo viet6re capi :
diselte mites Herciilis iras. - 730
an s61a plaeent Hereulis arma?
iaeet dnte pedes non minor illo
suppllee supplex vitdmque petit —
regniim Troiae quoedmque volet
Fortiina ferat. 735
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^. TROADES 97
Ulix. Matris quidem me ma^ror attonita^ movet,
magls Pelasgae m4 tamen matins movent,
quarum iste magnos cr6scit in luctiis puer.
Andr. Has, Ms ruinas lirbis in ciner6m datae
hie 6xcitabit ? ha6 manus Troiam 6rigent ? 740
nullds habet spes Tr6ia, si tal6s habet.
non sic iacemus Tr6es, ut cuiqudm metus
posslmus esse, splritus genit6r facit ?
sed n6mpe tracius. Ipse post Troidm pater
posulsset animos, mAgna quos frangiint mala. 745
si po6na petitur, qua6 peti gravidr potest ?
famuMre collo n6bili subedt iugum,
servlre liceat. Aliquis hoc regl negat ?
Ulix. Non h6c Ulixes, s6d negat Calchds tibi.
Andr. O mAchinator fraiidis et scelerum Artifex, 750
virtiite cuius b^llica nemo 6ccidit,
dolls et astu mdleficae mentis iacent
etidm Pelasgi, vdtem et insont^s deos
praet^ndis? hoc est pectoris faciniis tui.
nocttirne miles, f6rtis in puerl necem 75s
iam s61us audes ^liquid et olar6 die.
Ulix. Virttis Ulixis Ddnaidis nota ^st satis
nimlsque Phrygibus. n6n vacat vanls diem
cont^rere verbis : dncoras classls legit.
Andr. Brev6m moram larglre, dum officitim parens 760
nat6 supremum r6ddo et amplexu tiltimo
avid6s dolores sdtio. Ulix. Misererl tui
utindm Uceret. qu6d tamen soliim licet,
temptis moramque ddbimus. arbitri6 tuo
implore lacrimis : flatus aerumnds levat. 765
Andr. O diilce pignus, 6 decus lapsa6 domus
summtimque Troiae Mnus, o Danaiim timor, .
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98 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
genetrlcis o spes vdna, cui demons ego
laud6s parentis b^llicas, ann6s avi
demons precabar, v6ta destitult deus. 770
lUaca non tu sc6ptra regall potens
gestdbis aula, Mra nee populis dabis
victdsque gentes sub tuum mitt^s iugum,
non Grdia caedes t6rga, non Pyrrhum trahes;
non drma tenera pdrva tractabfs manu 775
sparsdsque passim sdltibus latfs feras
auddx sequeris n^c stato lustrl die,
soll6mne referens Tr6ici lusds sacrum,
pu^r citatas n6bilis turmds ages;
non Inter aras m6bili vel6x pede, ' 780
rebodnte flexo c6ncitos cornii modos,
barbdrica prisco t^mpla saltatii coles.
o Mdrte diro trlstius letl genus !
flebllius aliquid H^ctoris magnl nece
murl videbunt. Ulix. Rumpe iam fletiis, parens : 785
magniis sibi ipse n6n facit fin6m dolor.
Andr. Lacrimfs, Ulixe, pdrva quam petimds mora est;
concede paucas, lit mea conddln manu
viv6ntis oculos. 6ccidis parvus quidem,
sed idm timendus. Tr6ia te expectdt tua : 790
i, vdde liber, llberos Trods vide.
AsTYAN. Miserere, mater. Andr. Quid meos retinas sinus
maniisque matris cdssa praesidia 6ccupas?
fremiti leonis qudlis audit6 tener
timidiim iuvencus dpplicat matrl latus, 79s
at ille saevus mdtre summotd leo
praeddm minorem m6rsibus vastfs tenens
franglt vehitque : tdlis e nostr6 sinu
te rdpiet hostis. 6scula et fletiis, puer,
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TROADES 99
lacer6sque crines 6xcipe et plentis mei 800
occiirre patri ; paiica maternal tamen
perf^r querelae v^rba : ' si man6s habent
curds priores n6c perit flammls amor,
servlre Graio pdteris Andromach^n uiro,
crud^lis Hector? l^ntus et segnfs iaces? 80s
redit Achilles.' sume nunc itenim comas •
et sume lacrimas, quldquid e miser6 viri
fun6re relictum est, siime quae reddds tuo
osciila parenti. mdtris hanc soldcio
rellnque vestem: tiimulus hanc tetigit meus Sio
man6sque cari. si quid hie cinerls latet,
scrutdbor ore. Ulix. Niillus est flendl modus:
abrlpite propere cldssis Argolica6 moram.
Chorus
Qude vocat sed6s habitdnda captas ?
Th6ssaU months et opdca Tempe, 815
dn viros telliis dare mllitares
dptior Phthi6 meli6rque fetu
f6rtis armentl lapid6sa Trachin,
dn maris vastl domitrfx lolcos?
lirbibus centiim spati6sa Crete, 830
pdrva Gortynis sterillsque Tricce,
dn frequens rivls levibiis Mothone,
qua^ sub Oetaeis latebr6sa silvis
mlsit infest6s Troia6 minis
n6n semel drcus ? 835
6lenos tectls habitdta raris,
vlrgini Pleur6n inimlca divae,
dn maris- latl sinu6sa Troezen ?
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100 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
P6lion regniim Prothoi superbum,
t^rtius cael6 gradus ? '(hlc recumbens 830
m6ntis exesf spati6sus antro
idm trucis Chir6n puerl magister,
tlnnulas plectr6 feri6nte chordas,
tiinc quoque ingent6s acu6bat iras
b^Ua can6ndo) 835
An ferax varil lapidis Carystos,
An premens litiis maris Inquieti
semper Eurip6 properdnte Chalcis ?
qu61ibet vent6 facil6s Calydnae,
dn carens numqudm Gono^ssa vento 840
qtia^que f ormiddt Boredn Enispe ?
Attica pendens Pepar^thos ora,
dn sacris gaud^ns tacitls Eleusin ?
niimquid Aiacfs Salamlna veri
aiit fera notdm Calydona saeva, 845
qudsque perfundlt subiturus aequor
s^gnibus terrds Titar^ssos undis ?
B^ssan et Scarph^n, Pylon An senilem ?
Phdrin an Pisds lovis ^t coronis
ifilida cldram? 850
Qu6libet tristis miserds procella
mfttat et don^t cuiciimque terrae,
diim luem tantAm Troiae dtque Achivis
qua6 tulit, Spart6, procul dbsit, absit
Argos et saevl Pelopls Mycenae, 855
N^ritos parvd brevi6r Zacyntho
6t nocens saxfs Ithac6 dolosis.
Qu6d manet fatiim domin\isque quis te,
atit quibus terris, Hecubd, videndam
dticet? in cuiiis mori^re regno ? 860
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TROADES 101
Helena
Quictimque hymen fun6stus, inlaetdbilis
lam6nta caedes sd,nguinem gemitiis habet
est allspice Helena dignus. eversls quoque
noc^re cogor Phr^gibus : ego Pyrrhl toros .
narrdre falsos itibeor, ego culttis dare 865
habiMsque Graios. drte capietur mea
medque fraude c6ncidet Paridls soror.
falldtur; ipsi I6vius hoc equid^m reor:
optdnda mors est sine metu mortfs mori.
quid iiissa cessas Agere ? ad auctor^m redit 870
sceleris coacti ciilpa. — Dardania6 domus
gener6sa virgo, m^lior aflaict6s deus
resplcere coepit t6que felici parat
dotdre thalp-mo ; tdle coniugiiim tibi
non Ipsa sospes Tr6ia, non Priamiis daret. 875
nam t^ Pelasgae maximum gentls decus,
cui r^gna campi Idta Thessalicl patent, 878
ad sdncta lecti iiira legitiml petit. 877
te mdgna Tethys t^que tot pelagf deae
placidiimque numen a^quoris tumidf Thetis 880
sudm vocabunt, t^ datam Pyrrh6 socer
Peleiis nurum vocdbit et Nereils nurum.
dep6ne cultus squAIidos, fest6s cape,
dedlsce captam; d^prime horrent^s comas
crin^mque docta pdtere distingui manu. 885
hie f6rsitan te cAsus excels6 magis
S0U6 reponet. pr6fuit multfs capi.
Andromacha
Hoc d^rat unum Phr^gibus eversfs malum,
gaud^re — flagrant strdta passim P6rgama :
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102 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
o c6niugale t^mpus I an quisquam addeat 890
negdre ? quisquam diibius ad thalam6s eat,
quos Helena suadet ? p^stis exitiiim lues
utriusque populi, c6riiis hos tumul6s ducum
et niida totis 6ssa quae passim iacent
inhumdta campis ? ha6c hymen sparsit tuus. 895
tibi fluxit Asiae, fliixit Europa^ cruor,
cum dlmicantes la^ta prospicer6s viros,
inc6rta voti — p^rge, thalamos dppara.
taedls quid opus est quidve sollemnf face ?
quid Igne ? thalamis Tr6ia praeluc^t novis. 900
celebrdte Pyrrhi, Tr6ades, coniibia, ^
celebrate digne : pldnctus et gemittis sonet.
Hel. Rati6ne quamvis cdreat et flectl neget
magnus dolor soci6sque nonnumqudm sui
maer6ris ipsos 6derit: causd-m tamen 905
possum tueri iiidice infest6 meam,
gravidra passa. liiget Andromacha H6ctorem
et H6cuba Priamum : s61us occulta Paris
lug6ndus Helenae est. dtirum et invisum 4t grave est
servitia f erre ? potior hoc olfm iugum, 910
annls decem captlva. prostratum Ilium est,
versl penates ? p^rdere est patridm grave,
graviiis timere. v6s levat tanti mali
comitdtus : in me victor et victds furit.
quam qulsque famulam trdheret incert6 diu 915
casii pependit : m6 meus traxlt statim
.sine s6rte dominus. caiisa bellonim fui
tanta^que Teucris clddis ? hoc verum puta,
Spartd,na puppis v6stra si secult freta;
sin rdpta Phrygiis pra6da remigibiis fui 920
dedltque donum iiidici victrlx dea,
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TROADES 103
ign6sce praedae. Wdicem iratdm mea
habitura causa est : Ista Menelaiim manent
arbltria. nunc banc liictibus pauMm tuis,
Andromacha, omissis fl6cte — vix lacrimds queo 925
retin^re. Andr. Quantum est Helena quod lacrimdt
malum,
cur Idcrimat autem ? f dre quos Ithaciis dolos,
quae sc61era nectat; litrum ab Idaefs iugis
iactdnda virgo est, drcis an celsae 6dito
mitt^nda saxo ? ntim per has vastum In mare 930
volV6nda rupes, latere quas sciss6 levat
altiim vadoso Slgeon spectdns sinu ?
die, fdre, quidquid siibdolo vultii tegis.
Ievi6ra mala sunt cuncta, quam Priamf gener
Hecuba^que Pyrrhus. fdre, quam poendm pares 935
expr6me et unum hoc d6me nostris clddibus,
falll : paratas p6rpeti mortem vides.
Hel. Utindm iuberet m6 quoque interpi^s demn
abrumpere ense Mcis invisa^ moras
vel AchlUis ante btista furibundd manu 946
occfdere Pyrrhi, fdta comitant6m tua,
Polyxene miserdnda, quam tradi sibi
ciner^mque Achilles dnte mactarf suum,
camp6 maritus lit sit Elysi6, iubet.
Andr. Vide ut d;nimus ingens la^tus audierit necem. 945
cultiis decoros r6giae vestls petit
et ddmoveri crfnibus patitiir manum.
mortem putabat lllud, hoc thalam6s putat.
at mlsera luctu mdter audit6 stupet ;
labefdcta mens succiibuit. assurge, dlleva 950
animum &t cadentem, mlsera, firma spfritum.
quam tenuis anima vinculo pend^t levi —
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104 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
minimum 6st quod Hecubam Mcere felic^m potest.
spird,t, revixit. prima mors miser6s fugit.
Hec. Adhuc Achilles vlvit in poends Phrygum? 955
adhiic rebellat ? 6 manum Paridis levem.
cinis ipse nostrum sdnguinem ac tumuWs sitit.
modo ttirba felix Idtera cingebdt mea,
lassdbar in tot 6scula et tantum gregem
divfdere matrem; s61a nunc haec ^st supeir 960
votiim, comes, levdmen afflicta^, quies;
haec t6tus Hecubae f6tus, hac sold vocor
iam v6ce mater, diira et infellx age
eldbere anima, d^nique hoc unum mihi
remltte funus. Inrigat fletus genas 965
imb^rque victo siibitus e vultii cadit.
Andr. Nos H6cuba, nos, nos, Hecuba, lugenda^ sumus,969
quas m6ta classis hiic et hue sparsds f eret ; 970
hanc cdra tellus s6dibus patriis teget.
Hel. Magis invidebis, si tuam sort^m scies.
Andr. An dliqua poenae pdrs meae ignota 6st mihi ?
Hel. Versdta dominos tima captivls dedit.
Andr. Cui Mmula trador ? ^de; quemdomintimvoco?97s
.Hel. Te s6rte prima Sc^rius iuvenfs tulit.
Andr. Cassdndra felix, qudm furor sorti 6ximit
Phoebiisque. Hel. Regum hanc mdximus rect6r tenet. 978
Hec. Laetdre, gaude, ndta. quam vell^t tuos 967
Cassdndra thalamos, v^llet Andromache tuos. 968
estne dhquis, Hecubam quf suam diet velit? 979
Hel. Ithaco 6btigisti pra^da nolentl brevis. 980
Hec. Quis tam Impotens ac durus et iniqua^ ferus
sortftor urnae r^gibus reg6s dedit ?
quis tdm sinister dfvidit captds deus ?
quis drbiter crud^lis et miseris gravis
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TROADES 105
ellgere dominos n^scit et matrem H^ctoris 985
armls Achillis mlscet ? ad Ulix^n vocor : 987
nunc victa, nunc captiva, nunc cunctis mihi
obs^ssa videor clddibus — dominl pudet, 989
non s^rvitutis. st^rilis et saevis fretis 991
inclusa tellus n6n capit tumul6s meos —
due, diic, Ulixe, nil moror, dominiim sequor;
me m6a sequentur fdta : non pelag6 quies
tranqulUa veniet, sa^viet ventis mare, 995
*♦♦♦*♦♦♦
et b^Ua et ignes 6t mea et Priami mala,
dumque ista veniant, interim hoc poena^ loco est :
sortem 6ccupavi, pra^mium eripuf tibi. —
Sed 6n citato P^rrhus accurrlt gradu
vultuque torvo. P^rrhe, quid cessds ? age 1000
recMde ferro pectus et Achillis tui
coniiinge soceros. p6rge, mactat6r senum,
et hie decet te sanguis : abreptdm trahe.
maculdte superos ca^de funestd deos,
maculdte manes — quid precer vobis ? precor 1005
his digna sacris a^quora : hoc classi dccidat
toti Pelasgae, rdtibus hoc mille dccidat
mea^ precabor, ciim vehar, quidquid rati.
Chorus
Diilce maerenti popuMs dolentum,
diilce lamentis resondre gentes; loio
l^nius luctiis lacrima^que mordent,
tiirba quas fletii similis frequentat.
semper ah semp6r dolor ^st malignus :
gaiSdet in mult6s sua Mta mitti
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106 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
s^que non soMm placulsse poenae. 1015
Krre quam sort^m patMntur omnes,
n6mo reciisat.
T611e felic^s : misenim, licet sit,
n6mo se credit ; remov6te multo
divites aur6, remov^te centum 1020
nira qui scindunt opul^nta bubus :
paiiperi surg^nt animl iacentes —
6st miser nem6 nisi c6mparatus.
dulce in immensis posit6 minis,
n^minem laet6s habuisse vultus : 1025
ille deplordt queritiirque fatum,
qui secans fluctiim rate singulari
•niidus in portiis cecidit petitos;
a^quior casiim tulit ^t procellas,
mlUe qui pont6 parit^r carinas 1030
6brui vidlt tabuldque vectus
nailfraga, terrls mare diim coactis
fluctibus Corus prohibit, revertit.
qu^stus est Hell^n cecidfsse Phrixus,
ciim gregis duct6r radidnte villo 1035
aiireo f ratr^m simul d.c jsororem
stistulit terg6 medi6que iactum
f6cit in pont6 ; tenult querelas
6t vir et Pyrrhd, mare cum viderent,
^t nihil praetor mare ciim viderent 1040
linici terrls homines relicti.
S61vet hunc questiim lacrimdsque nostras
spdrget hue illuc agitata classis,
9|6 1* *p n* n* ^F ^h ^
^t tuba iussl dare v61a nautae
cilm simul ventls properd,nte remo 1045
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TROADES 107
pr^nderint altilm fugi^tque litus.
quls status mentis miserfs, ubi omnis
t^rra decresc6t pelagiisque crescet,
c^lsa cum long^ latitdbit Ide ?
tilm puer matrl genetrlxque nato, 1050
Tr6ia qua iacedt regi6ne monstrans,
dicet et long^ digit6 notabit :
'Ilium est illfc, ubi filmus alte
s^rpit in caelum nebula^que turpes/
Tr6es hoc sign6 patriam vid^bunt. 1055
NuNTius, Hecuba, Andromacha
O dilra fata, sa^va miseranda h6rrida !
quod tdm ferum, tam trlste bis quinls scelus
Mars vidit annis ? quid prius refer^ns gemam,
tu6sne potius, dn tuos lUctiis, anus ?
Hec. Quosciimque luctus fl^veris, flebfs meos : 1060
sua qu^mque tantum, me 6mnium clad^s premit;
mihi ciincta pereunt : qufsquis est, Hecubae ^st, miser.
NuNT. Mactdta virgo est, missus e murls puer;
sed ut^rque letum m6nte generosd tulit.
Andr. Exp6ne seriem caddis, et duplex nefas 1065
pers^quere : gaudet mdgnus aerumnds dolor
tractdre totas. 6de et enarra 6mnia.
NuNT. Est lina magna tiirris e Troid super,
adsu^ta Priamo, ciiius e fastlgio
summfsque pinnis Arbiter belli sedens 1070
reg^bat acies. tiirre in hac bland6 sinu
fov6ns nepotem, cilm metu vers6s gravi
Dana6s fugaret Hector et ferro 6t face,
pat^rna puero b611a monstrabdt senex.
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108 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
haec n6ta quondam turns et murl decus, 1075
nunc s61a cautes, undique adfusd ducum
plebfsqueturba cfngitur; to turn coit
ratibus relictis viilgus. his collls procul
aci^m patent! Ifberam praeb^t loco,
his dlta rupes, cuius in caciimine 1080
electa summos turba libravlt pedes.
hunc pinus, ilium laurus, hunc fagiis gerit
et t6ta populo sllva suspens6 tremit.
extr6ma montis ille praeruptf petit,
semusta at ille t6cta vel saxum Imminens 1085
murl cadentis pr^ssit, atque aliquls (nefas)
tumul6 ferus spectator Hectore6 sedet.
per spdtia late pl^na subliml gradu
inc^dit Ithacus pdrvulum dextrd tfahens
Priami nepotem, n6c gradu segnl puer 1090
ad dlta pergit mo6nia. ut summd, stetit
pro tune, vultus hue et hue acr6s tulit
intr^piduQ animo. qudlis ingentis ferae
parvus tenerque f^tus et nondum potens
saevlre dente idm tamen tolUt minas 1095
morsiisque inanes t^mptat atque animis tumet :
sic file dextra pr^nsus hostili puer
fer6x superbe. m6verat vulgum dc duces
ipsumque Ulixen. n6n flet e turba 6mnium
qui fl^tur; ac, dum v6rba fatidici 6t preces hoo
concfpit Ulixes vdtis et saev6s ciet
ad sdcra superos, sp6nte desiluft sua
in m^dia Priami r^gna. —
Andr. Quis C61chus hoc, quis s^dis incerta6 Scytha
commfsit, aut quae Cdspium tang^ns mare 1105
gens iuris expers aiisa ? non Busiridis
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TROADES 109
puerflis aras sanguis aspersft feri,
nee pdrva gregibus membra Diomed^s snis
epuldnda posuit. quls tuos artiis leget
tumul6que tradet ? Nunt. Qu6s enim praec^ps locus mo
relfquit artus? 6ssa disiecta 6t gravi
ellsa casu; signa clari c6rporis,
et 6ra et illas n6biles patrls notas,
conMdit imam p6ndus ad terrdm datum;
soMta cervix sflicis impulsii, caput ms
ruptilm cerebro p^nitus express6 — iacet
def6rme corpus. Andr. Sic quoque est simills patri.
Nunt. Praec6ps ut altis c^cidit e murls puer
flevltque Achivum tiirba quod fecft nefas,
idem llle populus dliud ad faciniis redit nao
tumuMmque Achillis. ctiius extremiim latus
Rhoet^a leni v^rberant fluctti vada;
adv^rsa cingit cdmpus et cliv6 levi
electa medium vdllis includ^ns locum.
crescft theatri m6re concursils frequens, 1125
impl^vit omne lltus : hi classis moram
hac m6rte solvi r^ntur, hi stirpem h6stium
gaud^nt recidi. mdgna pars vulgi levis
odft scelus, spectd.tque; nee Tro6s minus
suiim frequentant Mnus et pavidl metu 1130
partem mentis liltimam Troia6 vident :
cum silbito thalami m6re praecediint faces
et pr6nuba illi T^ndaris, maestilm caput
demfssa. ' tali nilbat Hermion6 modo '
Phryges precantur ' sf c viro turpfs suo 1135
redddtur Helena.' terror attonit6s tenet
utr6sque populos. ipsa deiect6s gerit
vultiis pudore, s6d tamen fulgent genae
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110 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
magfsque solito spl^ndet extremiis decor,
ut ^sse Phoebi diilcius lum6n solet 1140
iam idm cadentis, dstra cum repetiint vices
premitiirque dubius nocte vieind dies.
stupet 6mne vulgus — 6t fere cuncti magis
peritura laudant. hos movet formal decus,
hos mollis aetas, h6s vagae rerdm vices; lus
movet dnimus omnes f6rtis et leto 6bvius.
Pyrrhum dntecedit; 6mnium mentis tremunt,
mirdntur ac miserdntur. ut primum drdui
sublime montis t^tigit atque alte 6dito
iuvenis paterni v6rtice in bust! stetit, 1150
auddx virago n6n tulit retr6 gradum ;
conv6rsa ad ictum stdt truci vultii ferox.
tam f6rtis animus 6mnium mentis ferit
noviimque monstnim est P^rrhus ad caed6m piger.
ut d^xtra ferrum p^nitus exactum dbdidit, 1155
subitils recepta m6rte prorupft cruor
per vulnus ingens. n6c tamen morions adhuc
deponit animos : c^cidit, ut Achilli gravem
factiira terram, pr6na et irato impetu.
ut^rque flevit coitus; at timidiim Phryges n6o
mis6re gemitum, cldrius vict6r gemit.
hie ordo sacri. n6n stetit fusiis cruor
hum6ve summa fliixit : obduxlt statim
saeviisque totum sdnguinem tumulus bibit.
Hec. Ite, Ite, Danai, petite iam tutf domos; 1165
optdta velis mdria diffusls secet
secura classis: c6ncidit virgo dc puer;
belMm peractum est. qu6 meas lacrimds feram ?
ubi hdnc anilis 6xpuam leti moram ?
natam &n nepotem, c6niugem an patrlam fleam ? 1170
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TROADES 111
an 6miiia an me s61a ? Mors votiim meum,
infdntibus, viol^nta, virginibiis venis,
ubique properas, sa6va : me soldm times
vitdsque, gladios Inter ac tela 6t faces
quaeslta tota n6cte, cupient^m fugis. 1175
non h6stis aut rulna, non ignis meos
absiimpsit artus : qudm prope a Priam6 steti.
NuNT. Hepatite celeri mdria, captiva^, gradu :
iam v61a puppis Idxat et classls movet.
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MEDEA
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
Medea,
NUTRIX
Cbeo
Iason
NUNTIUS
Chorus
.Scaena Corinthi
THE PARTS TAKEN BY EACH ACTOR
I Medea
II Jaso
Creo
III NUTRIX
NUNTIUS
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MEDEA
Di c6niugales tiique genialls tori,
Lucina, custos qua^que domiturdm freta
Tiph^n novam frendre docuistf ratem,
et tu, profundi sa^ve dominat6r maris,
clanimque Titan dfvidens orbi diem, $
tacitisque praebens c6nscium sacrfs iubar
Hecate triformis, qu6sque iuravft mihi
de6s lason, qu6sque Medea^ magis
fas 6st precari : n6ctis aeterna^ chaos,
av^rsa superis r6gna manesque Impios to
dominiimque regni trfstis et domindm fide
meli6re raptam, v6ce non faustd precor.
nunc, mine adeste, sc^leris ultric^s deae,
crin6m solutis squdlidae serp^ntibus,
atrdm cruentis mdnibus amplexa^ facem, 15
adeste, thalamis h6rridae quondam meis
qualms stetistis: c6niugi letiim novae
letiimque socero et regiae stirpi date,
mihi p^ius aliquid, qu6d precer spons6, manet:
vivdt. per urbes ^rret ignotd,s egens 90
exul pavens invisus incerti laris,
iam n6tus hospes limen alienum 6xpetat,
me c6niugem optet qu6que non aUiid queam
peius precari, Uberos similes patri
simil^sque matri — pdrta iam, parta liltio est: 25
peperi. querelas v^rbaque in cassum sero?
115
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116 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
non Ibo in hostes ? mdnibus excutidm faces ^
cael6que lucem — sp6ctat hoc nostrf sator
Sol generis, et spectdtur, et curru Insidens
per s61ita puri spdtia decurrf t poll ? 30
non r^dit in ortus 6t remetitur diem ?
da, dd per auras ciirribus patrils vehi,
commltte habenas, g^nitor, et flagrdntibus
ignlfera loris trlbue moderarl iiiga :
gemin6 Corinthos Iftore oppon^ns moras 35
crem^ta flammis mdria committdt duo.
hoc r^stat unum, pr6nubam thalam6 feram
ut Ipsa pinum p6stque sacrificd^ preces
caeddm dicatis vlctimas altdribus.
per viscera ipsa quaere supplici6 viam, 40
si vlvis, anime, si quid antiqul tibi
reman^t vigoris; p611e femine6s metus
et inh6spitalem Cailcasum mente Indue.
quodciimque vidit P6ntus aut Phasls nefas,
vid^bit Isthmos. 6ffera, ignota, h6rrida, 45
trem^nda caelo pdriter ac terrls mala
mens Intus agitat : viilnera et caedem ^t vagum
funiis per artus — 16 via memoravl nimis :
haec vlrgo feci; grdvior exurgdt dolor:
mai6ra iam me sc^lera post partds decent. 50
acclngere ira t^que in exitiiim para
fur6re to to. pdria narrentiir tua
repudia thalamis : qu6 virum linqu^s modo ?
hoc qu6 secuta es. nimpe iam segn^s moras :
quae sc61ere parta est, sc61ere linquenda 6st domus. 55
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MEDEA 117
Chorus
Ad regum thalam6s niimine pr6spero
qui caelum superl qulque regiint fretum
ddsint ciim populis rite fav^ntibus.
prlmum sc^ptriferis c611a Tondntibus
taiirus c^lsa ferdt t^rgore cdndido; 60
Lucindm nivei f^mina c6rporis
intemptdta iug6 placet, et dsperi
Mdrtis sdnguineds qua^ cohib^t manus,
qua6 dat b^Uigerls fo^dera g^ntibus
6t cornii retin^t dlvite c6piam, ~ 65
d6netiir tenerd mftior h6stia.
^t tu, qui facibus Mgitimls ades,
n6ctem dlscuti^ns auspice d6xtera
hue inc^de gradii mdrcidus 6brio,
pra6cing6ns rose6 t^mpora vinculo. 70
6t tu qua^, geminl pra^via t^mporis,
tdrde, st^Ua, redls semper amdntibus :
t^ matr6s, avid6 t^ cupiiint nurus
qudm primiim radi6s spdrgere liicidos.
Vlncit vlrgineiis decor 75
16nge C^cropias nurus,
6t quas Tdygetl iugis
6xerc^t iuveniim modo
milris qu6d caret 6ppidum,
6t quas Aoniiis latex 80
-ilphe6sque sac6r lavat.
si formd velit dspici,
cedent A^soni6 duci
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118 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
pr61es fiilminis Improbi
^ptat qui iuga tfgribus, 85
n6c non, qui tripodds movet,
frdter vlrginis dsperae, ]
c^det Cdstore ciim suo
P611ux ca^stibus dptior.
sic, sic, ca41icola4, precor, * 90 1
vlncat f^mina c6niuges,
vlr long6 super^t viros. I
Ha6o cum f6mine6 c6nstitit In choro,
liniiis facias pra^nitet 6innibus.
sic cum s61e perit sidereus decor, 95
^t densi latitdnt Pl^iadum greges
ciim Phoeb6 solidum liimine n6n suo
6rbem circuitis cornibus dlligat.
6stro sic jiiveiis punice6 color
p^rfusus rubuit, sic nitidiim iubar 100
pdstor Mce novd r6scidus dspicit.
^reptils thalamis Phdsidis h6rridi,
^ffrena^ solitiis p^ctora c6niugis
invitd, trepidus pr^ndere d^xtera,
f^lix A^olidm c6rripe virginem 105
mine primiim soceris, sp6nse, vol^ntibus.
c6ncess6, invents, Mdite iiirgio,
hinc illinc, invents, mittite cdrmina :
rdra est in domin6s iusta lic^ntia.
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MEDEA 119
Cdndida thyrsigerl proles generosa Lyaei, no
multifidam iam t^mpus erat succ^ndere pinum :
(§xcute sollemn^m digitis marc^ntibus ignem.
f^sta dicax funddt convicia f^scenninus,
s61vat turba ioc6s — tacitis eat Ilia tenebris,
sf qua peregrin6 nubit fugitiva marito. 115
Medea
Occfdimus, aures p6pulit hymenaeiis meas.
vix ipsa tantum, vix adhuc cred6 malum,
hoc fdcere Jason p6tuit, erept6 patre
patria dtque regno s^dibus solam 6xteris '
des^rere durus ? m^rita contempslt mea lao
qui sc^lere flammas vlderat vinci ^t mare ?
ade6ne credit 6mne consumptiim nef as ?
inc^rta vaecors m^nte vaesand feror
partes in omnes; linde me ulciscf queam?
utinam 6sset illi frdter ! est coniilnx : in hanc 12$
f errum 6xigatur. h6c meis satis ^st malis ?
si qu6d Pelasgae, sf quod urbes bd,rbarae
nov6re facinus qu6d tuae ignorant manus,
nunc ^st parandum. sc^lera te hortentur tua
et cuncta redeant : inclitum regni decus 130
raptum 6t nefandae virginis parvils comes
divisus ense, Mnus ingestilm patri
sparsumque ponto c6rpus et Pelia4 senis
decocta aeno membra: funestum Impie
quam sa^pe fudi «dnguinem, et nullum scelus 135
irdta feci : m6vit infellx amor.
Quid tdmen lason p6tuit, alieni drbitri
iurfsque factus ? d^buit ferro 6bvium
oflf^rre pectus — melius, ah meliiis, dolor
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120 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
furi6se, loquere. si potest, vivdt meus, 140
ut fuit, lason; si minus, vivdt tamen
niein6rque nostri muneri parcdt meo.
culpa 6st Creontis t6ta, qui sceptro Impotens
coniiigia solvit qulque genetricem dbstrahit
natls et arte plgnore astrictdm fidem 145
dirimlt : petatur, s61us hie poends luat
quas d^bet. alto clnere cumulab6 domum;
vid^bit atrum v^rticem flammls agi
Mal^a longas ndvibus flect^ns moras.
NuTR. Sile, obsecro, questusque secreto dbditos 150
mand4 dolori. grdvia quisquis viilnera
pati^nte et aequo mutus animo p^rtulit,
ref^rre potuit : Ira quae tegitur nocet ;
prof^ssa perdunt 6dia vindicta^ locum.
Med. Levis ^st dolor qui cdpere consiliuiji potest 155
et cl^pere sese : mdgna non latitdnt mala,
libet Ire contra. Nutr. Siste furialem Impetum,
aliimna : vix te tdcita defendlt quies.
Med. Fortiina fortes m^tuit, ignavos premit.
Nutr. Tunc ^st probanda, si locum virtds habet. 160
Med. Numqudm potest non ^sse virtutl locus.
Nutr. Spes milla rebus monstrat adflictls viam.
Med. Qui nil potest sperdre, desper6t nihil.
, Nutr. Abi^re Colchi, c6niugis nulla ^st fides
nihllque superest 6pibus e tantls tibi. 165
Med. Med^a superest, hic mare et terrds vides
fernimque et ignes ^t deos et fulmina.
Nutr. Rex ^st timendus. Med. R^x meus fuerdt pater.
Nutr. Non m6tuis arma ? Med. Slnt licet terra ^dita.
Nutr. Mori6re. Med. Cupio. Nutr. Profuge. Med.
Paenitult fugae. 170
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MEDEA 121
NuTR. Med^a — Med. Fiam. Nutr. Mdter es. Med.
• Cui sim vides.
Nutr. Profiigere dubitas? Med. Fiigiam, at ulciscdr
prius.
Nutr. Vind^x sequetur. Med. F6rsan invenidm moras.
Nutr. Comp^sce verba, pdrce iam, demons, minis
aiiim6sque minue: t^mpori aptari decet. 17s
Med. Fortiina opes auf^rre, non animiim potest,
sed ciiius ictu r^gius card6 strepit ?
ipse 6st Pelasgo tumidus imperi6 Creo.
Creo
Med6a, Colchi n6xium Aeeta6 genus,
nondijm meis exp6rtat e regnis pedem ? 180
moUtur aliquid : n6ta fraus, nota 6st manus.
cui pdrcet ilia qu^mve secunim sinet ?
abol^re propere p^ssimam f err6 luem
equid^m parabam : pr^cibus eviclt gener.
conc6ssa vita est, llbecet fin^s metu 185
abedtque tuta. f^rt gradum contrd ferox
mindxque nostros pr6pius affatiis petit,
arc^te, famuli, tdctu et accessii procul,
iub^te sileat. r^gium imperiiim pati
^liqudndo discat. vdde veloel fuga 190
monstnimque saevum horribile iamdudum dvehe.
Med. Quod crimen aut quae ciilpa multatur fuga?
Cr. Quae caiisa pellat, fnnocens muli^r rogat.
Med. Si iiidicas, cogn6sce. si regnds, iube.
Cr. Aequum dtque iniquum r6gis imperiiim feras. 195
Med. Iniqua numquam r^gna perpetu6 manent.
Cr. I, qu^rere Colchis. Med. R^deo : qui avexlt, ferat.
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122 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Cr. Vox c6nstituto s^ra decreto venit.
Med. Qui stdtuit aliquid pdrte inaudita dltera,
aequilm licet statuerit, baud aequus fuit. 200
Cr. Audltus a te P41ia supplicium tulit ?
sed fdre, causae d^tur egregia^ locus.
Med. Difficile quam sit dnimum ab ira fl^ctere
iam c6ncitatum qudmque regale hoc putet
sceptris superbas qufsquis admovit manus, 205
qua coi^pit ire, r^gia didicl mea.
quamvis enim sim cldde miseranda obruta,
expiilsa supplex sola deserta, undique
afflicta, quondam n6bili fulsl patre
av6que clarum Sole deduxl genus. 210
quodciimque placidis fl^xibus Phasls rigat
Pontiisque quidquid Scjthicus a terg6 videt,
palustribiis qua mdria dulcesciint aquis,
armdta peltis quidquid exterr^t cohors
inclusa ripis vidua Thermod6ntiis, 215
hoc 6mne noster g^nitor imperi6 regit.
gener6sa, felix, d^core regall potens
fulsl : petebant tiinc meos thalam6s proci,
qui nunc petuntur. rdpida fortuna dc levis
praec6psque regno erlpuit, exili6 dedit. 220
confide regnis, cum levis magnds opes
hue f^rat et illuc cdsus — hoc reg^s habent
magnlficum et ingens, nulla quod rapiat dies :
prod6sse miseris, supplices fido lare
prot^gere. solum hoc C61chico regno ^xtuli, 225
decus lllud ingens Gra^ciae et florem Inclitum,
praesldia Achivae g^ntis et prol^m deum
servdsse memet. munus est Orpheiis meum,
qui sdxa cantu mulcet et silvds trahit,
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MEDEA 123
geminlque munus Cdstor et PolMx meum est 230
satique Borea qulque trans Pontiim quoque
sumin6ta Lyncetis lumine immiss6 videt,
omn^sque Minyae : ndm ducem tace6 ducum,
pro qu6 nihil deb^tur : hunc nulli Imputo ;
vobis revexi c^teros, uniim mihi. 235
inc^sse nunc et cuncta flagitia ingere.
fat^bor : obici crimen hoc soWm potest,
Arg6 reversa. vlrgini placedt pudor
pat^rque placeat : t6ta cum ducibiis met
Peldsga tellus, hlc tuus primiim gener 840
tauri ferocis 6re flammanti 6ccidet.
fortiina causam qua^ volet nostrum premat,
non pa^nitet servdsse tot regum decus.
quodciimque culpa pra^mium ex omnl tuli,
hoc ^st penes te. sf placet, damnd ream ; 245
sed r6dde crimen, sum nocens, fate6r, Creo :
tal^m sciebas ^sse, cum genua dttigi
fid^mque supplex pra^sidis dextra^ peti ;
iterum miseriis dngulum ac sed^m rogo
latebrdsque viles : lirbe si pelU placet, 250
detur remotus dliquis in regnls locus.
Cr. Non 6sse me qui sc^ptra violentus geram
nee qui superbo mlserias calc^m pede, ^f ' '
testdtus equidem vldeor haud clar^ parum
generum ^xulem leg^ndo et afBictum 6t gravi 255
terr6re pavidum, qulppe quem poenae ^xpetit
let6que Acastus r^grla Thessalica 6ptinens.'
seni6 trementem d^bili atque aev6 gravem
patr^m peremptum qu^ritur et caesl senis
disclssa membra, cum dolo capta6 tuo 260
pia^ sorores Impium auder^nt nefas.
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124 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
potest lason, sf tuam causam amoves,
sudm tueri : niallus innocuum cruor
contdminavit, dfuit ferr6 manus
prociilque vestro piirus a coetii stetit. 265
tu, tii malorum mdchinatrix fdcinorum,
femlnea cui nequltia ad audenda 6mnia,
robur virile est, nulla famae m^moria,
egr^dere, purga r6gna, letal6s simul
tecum aiifer herbas, libera civ^s metu, 270
alia sedens tellure sollicitd deos.
Med. ProMgere cogis ? r^dde fugienti ratem
et r^dde comitem — f ugere cur soldm iubes ?
non s61a veni. b^lla si metuls pati,
utnimque regno pelle. cur souths duos 275
distlnguis ? illi P^lia, non nobis iacet ;
fugdm, rapinas ddice, desertum patrem
lacerumque fratrem, qufdquid etiam mine novas
doc6t maritus coniuges, non 6st meum :
toti^ns nocens suni fdcta, sed numqudm mihi. 280
Cr. lam exisse decuit. quid seris fand6 moras ?
Med. Suppl^x recedens lllud extremum precor,
ne culpa natos mdtris insont^s trahat.
Cr. Vade : h6s paterno ut g^nitor excipidm sinu.
Med. Per ego auspicates r^gii thalaml toros, 285
per sp4s futuras p^rque regnorum status,
Fortuna varia dubia quos agitdt vice,
precor, brevem larglre fugienti moram,
dum extr^ma natis mdter infigo 6scula,
fortdsse moriens. Cr. Fraiidibus tempds petis. 290
Med. Quae fraus timeri tempore exiguo potest ?
Cr. Nullum dd nocendum t^mpus angustum ^st malis.
Med. Panimne miserae t^mporis lacrimls negas ?
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MEDEA 125
Cr. Etsl repugnat pr^cibus infixds timor,
unus parando ddbitur exili6 dies. 295
Med. Nimis ^st, recidas dliquid ex ist6 licet :
et Ipsa propero. Cr. Cdpite suppliciiim lues,
clarum priusquam Phoebus attolldt diem
nisi c^dis Isthmo. sdcra me thalaml vocant,
vocdt precari f6stus Hymenae6 dies. 300
Chorus
Auddx nimium qui fr^ta primus
rate tdm fragili perffda rupit
terrdsque suas post t6rga videns
animdm levibus credfdit auris,
dubi6que secans aequora cursu 305
potuit tenui fid6re ligno
int^r vitae mortlsque vias
nimium gracili limfte ducto.
Candida nostri saecula patres 329
vid^re, procul frauds remota. 330
sua qulsque piger lit6ra tangens
patri6que senex factus in arvo,
parv6 dives, nisi quds tulerat
natdle solum, non norat opes : ' 334
nondiam quisquam sid^ra norat, 309
stelllsque quibus pingftur aether 310
non 6rat usus, nonddm pluvias
Hyadds poterat vitdre ratis,
non 6leniae lumfna caprae,
nee qua6 sequitur fleetltque senex
Attfea tardus pjaustrd Bootes; Grca-^ ^^^^r ^^^
nondum Boreas, nondilm Zephyrus
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126 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
nom6n habebant. .
Ausiis Tiphys pand^re vasto
carbdsa ponto leg^sque novas
scrib^re ventis: nunc Hna sinu '^^ "^ 320
tend^re toto, nunc pr61ato
pede trdnsversos captdre Notos;
nunc dntemnas medio tutas
pon^re malo, nunc In summo
religdre loco, cum idm totos 325
avidiis nimium navlta flatus
optdt et alto rubicunda tremunt
sipdra velo. 328
bene dlssaepti foed^ra mundi 33s
traxlt in unum Thessala pinus
iussltque pati verb^ra pontum,
part^mque metus fieri nostri
mare s^positum.
dedit Ilia graves improba poenas 340
per tdm longos ductd timores,
cum diao montes, claustrd profundi,
hinc dtque illinc subito Impulsu
velut a^therio gemer^nt sonitu,
sparg6ret arces nub^sque ipsas
mare d^prensum. 34s
palluit audax Tiphys et omnes
lab^nte manu mislt habenas,
Orpheus tacuit torpente lyra ' ■- "' ^-r.
ipsdque vocem perdidit Argo.
quid cum Siculi virg6 Pelori, 350
rabid6s utero succlncta canes,
omn^s pariter solvit hiatus ?
quis n6n totos horniit artus
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MEDEA 127
toti^ns uno latrdnte malo ?
quid cum Ausonium dira^ pestes 355
voc6 canora mare miilcerent,
cum Pferia resondns cithara
Thraclus Orpheus solitdm cantu
retin^re rates paen6 coegit
Sir6na sequi ? quod f uit huius 360
pretMm cursus ? aur^a pellis
maiusque mari Med^a malum,
merces prima dignd carina.
Nunc idm cessit pontics et omnea
patitiir leges : non Palladia 365
A/// cqmpdcta manu regilmque ferens
incllta remos quaerf tur Argo —
quaellbet altum ciimba pererrat;
terminus omnis motus et urbes
mur6s terra posu^re nova, 3^0
nil qud fuerat sed^ reliquit
pervius orbis :
Indus gelidum potdt Araxen,
Albf n Persae Rhemimque bibunt —
veni^nt annis saeciila seris, 375
quibus 6ceanus vinciila rerum
lax6t et ingens patedt tellus
Teth^sque novos det^gat orbes
nee sit terris ultima Thule.
NUTRIX
AMmna, celerem qu6 rapis tectls pedem ? 380
reslste et iras c6mprime ac retine Impetum.
Inc6rta qualis ^ntheos gressiis tulit ^
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128 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
cum idm recepto mannas insanlt deo
Pindl nivalis v^rtice aut Nysa^ iugis,
tails recursat Mc et hue motu 6ffero, 385
fur6ris ore slgna lymphatl gerens.
flammdta facies splritum ex alt6 citat,
procldmat, oculos liberi fletil rigat, rr '^ ^ ^^^/"
renidet: omnis sp^ciiQen affecMs capit. ^^'-^^ 389
quo p6ndus animi v^rgat, ubi pondt minas, 391 ^
haer^t : minatur a^stuat queritiir gemit. 390
ubi se Iste fluctus f rdnget ? exunddt furor. 392
non fdcile secum v^rsat aut medium scelus;
se vincet : irae n6vimus veterls notas.
magnum dliquid instat, ^fferum immane Impium : 395
vultiim furoris e6rno. di falldnt metum I
Medea
Si qua^ris odio, mfsera, quem statuds modum :
imitdre amorem. r^gias egone lit faces
iniilta patiar? s^gnis hie iblt dies,
tanto petitus dmbitu, tant6 datus ? 400
dum t^rra caelum m^dia libratum feret
nitidusque eertas mundus evolv^t vices,
numerusque harenis d6rit et sol^m dies,
noct^m sequentur dstra, dum siccus polus
versdbit Arctos, flumina in pontiim cadent, 405
numqudm mens cessdbit in poends furor
cresc^tque semper — qua^ ferarum immdnitas,
quae Sc^Ua, quae Char^bdis Ausoniiim mare
SieuMmque sorbens qua^ve anhelant^m premens
Titdna tantis A^tna ferveblt minis ? 410
non rdpidus amnis, n6n procellosdm mare
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MEDEA 129
Pontiisve Coro sa6vus aut vis Ignium
adiiita flatu p6ssit imitari Impetum
irdsque nostras : st^rnam et evertam 6mnia.
Timult Creontem ac b^Ua Thessalicl ducis ? 415
am6r timere n^minem venis potest,
sed c^sserit codctus et dederi t manus :
adlre certe et c6niugem extremo dlloqui
senn6ne potuit — h6c quoque extimuit ferox;
laxdre certe t^mpus immitls fugae 420
gener6 licebat — llberis unus dies
datus 6st duobus. n6n queror tempiis breve :
multiim patebit. fdciet hie faci^t dies
quod niillus umquam tdceat — invaddm deos
et ciineta quatiam. Nutr. Recipe turbatiim mails, 425
era, pectus, animum mltiga. Med. Sola 6st quies,
mecum ruina ctincta si video 6bruta :
meeum 6mnia abeant. trdhere, cum pereds, libet.
Nutr. Quam miilta sint tim^nda, si perstds, vide :
nem6 potentes dggredi tutiis potest. 430
Iason
diSra fata semper et sortem dsperam,
cum^a6vit et cum pdrcit ex aequ6 malam I
rem^dift quotiens Invenit nobis deus
perlculis pei6ra : si vellum fidem
praestAre meritis c6niugis, let6 fuit 43s
caput 6fferendum; si mori noll^m, fide
miser6 carendum. n6n timor viclt fidem,
sed tr^pida pietas : qulppe sequeretiir necem
prol6s parentum. sdncta si caelum Incolis
lustltia, numen Invoco ac test6r tuum : * 440
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130 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
natl patrem vic^re. quin ipsdm quoque,
etsl ferox est c6rde nee pati^ns iugi,
consulere natis mdlle quam thalamls reor.
constltuit animus pr^cibus iratam dggredi.
atque ^cce, viso m^met exilult, furit, 445
fert 6dia prae se : t6tus in vultu 6st dolor.
Med. Fuglmus, lason : fSgimus — hoc non 6st novum,
mutdre sedes; cailsa fugiendl nova est:
pro t^ solebam Mgere. discedo 6xeo,
pendtibus prof ugere quam cogf s tuis : 450
at qu6 remittis ? Phdsin et Colch6s petam
patriiimque regnum qua^que fraterniis cruor
perfudit arva? quds peti terrds iubes?
quae mdria monstras ? P6ntici fauces freti
per quds revexi n6bilem regdm manum 45s
adiilterum secuta per Sympl^gadas ?
parvdmne lolcon, Th^ssala an Temp4 petam ?
quascumque aperui tlbi vias, clausl mihi —
quo m^ remittis ? ^xuli exilium Imperas
nee dds. eatur. r^gius iusslt gener : 460
nihil recuso. dfra supplicia f ngere :
merul. cruentis pa^licejn poenis premat
regdlis ira, vinculis oner^t manus
elausdmque saxo n6ctis aeternae 6bruat:'
min6ra meritis pdtiar — ingratiim caput/ • 465
rev61vat animus Igneos tauri hdlitus
hostlsque subiti t^la, cum iussii meo 469
terrfgena miles mutua <jaede 6ccidit; 470
adice ^xpetita sp61ia Phrixei drietis
somn6que iussum Mmina ignot6 dare
ins6mne monstrum, trdditum fratr^m neci
et sc^lere in uno n6n semel factum scelus,
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MEDEA. 131
ausdsque natas fraiide deceptds mea 47s
secdre membra n6n revicturl senis :
per sp^s tuorum llberum et certum larem, 478
per vlcta monstra, p^r manus, pro t^ quibus
numqudm peperci, p^rque praeteritos metus, 480
per caelum et undas, c6niugi testes mei,
miserere, redde sijpplici fellx vicem. 482
ali^na quaerens r^gna deserui mea : 477
ex 6pibus illis, quds procul raptds Scythae 483
usque d perustis Indiae populls agunt,
quas quia referta vix domus gazd capit, , - ' 485
orndmus auro n^mora, nil exiil tuli
nisi f rdtris artus : h6s quoque impendl tibi ;
tibi pdtria cessit, tfbi pater, f rat^r, pudor —
hac d6te nupsi. r^dde fugientf sua.
Ias. Perlmej:fi cum te v^llet infestus Creo, k'/ ^^
lacrimis meis evictus exilium dedit.
Med. Poendm putabam : mtinus ut video 6st fuga.
Ias. Dum If cet abire, pr6fuge teque hinc 6ripe :
gravis fra regum est semper. Med. Hoe suad^s mihi,
praestds Creusae : pa^licem invisam dmoves. 495
Ias. Med^a amores 6bicit ? Med. Et caedem 6t dolos.
Ias. Obf cere tandem qu6d potes crimen mihi ?
Med. Quodciimque feci. Ias. R^stat hoc unum Insuper,
tuls ut etiam sc^leribus fidm nocens.
Med. Tua f 11a, tua sunt f 11a : cui prod^st scelus 500
is f^cit — omnes c6niugem infamem drguant,
soWs tuere, s61us insont^m voca :
tibi fnnocens sit qulsquis est pro t4 nocens.
Ias. Ingrdta vita est ciiius accepta^ pudet.
Med. Retin^nda non est cuius accepta^ pudet. 505
Ias. Quin p6tius ira c6rtcitum pectiis doma,
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132 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
placdre natis. Med. Abdico eiuro dbnuo —
mels Creusa If beris f ratr^s dabit ?
Ias. Reglna natis 6xuluin, afflictls potens.
Med. Non v^niat umquam tdm malus miseris dies 510
qui prole foeda mlsceat prolem Inclitam,
Phoebl nepotes Slsyphi nep6tibus.
Ias. Quid, mlsera, meque t6que in exitiiim trahis ?
absc^de quaeso. Med. Supplicem audivft Creo.
Ias. Quid fdcere possim, 16quere. Med. Pro me? v^l
scelus. 515
Ias. Hinc r6x et illinc — Med. fet et his mai6r metus:
Med^a. nos confllgere. certemiis sine :
sit pr^tium lason. Ias. C^do defessiis malis.
et Ipsa casus sa^pe iam expert6s time.
Med. Fortuna semper omnis infra m^ stetit. 520
Ias. Acdstus instat. Med. Pr6pior est hostls Creo :
utrdmque profuge. n6n ut in soceriim manus
arm6s nee ut te ca^de cognata fnquines
Med^a cogit : Innocens meciim fuge.
Ias. Et quls resistet, gemina si bella Ingruant, 525
Creo dtque Acastus drma si iungdnt sua?
Med. His ddice Colchos, ddice et Aeet^n ducem,
ScytMs Pelasgis idnge : demers6s dabo.
Ias. Alta ^xtimesco sc^ptra. Med. Ne cupids vide.
Ias. Susp^cta ne sint, longa coUoquia dmputa. 530
Med. Nunc summe toto Iiippiter cael6 tona,
intrude dextram, vlndices flammas para
omn^mque ruptis nubibus mundiim quate.
nee d^ligenti t^la librentur manu
vel m6 vel istum: quisquis e nobis cadet 535
noc6ns peribit, n6n potest in n6s tuum
errdre fulmen. Ias. Sdna meditari fncipe
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by Google
MEDEA 133
et pldcida fare, si quod ex socerl domo
potest fugam levdre solam^n, pete.
Med. Cont^mnere animus r^gias, ut scfs, opes - 540
potest soletque; llberos tan turn fugae
habere comites llceat in quonlm sinu
lacrimds profundam. t6 novi natl manent.
Ias. Par^re precibus ciipere me fate6r tuis;
pietds vetat : namque Istud ut posslm pati, 545
non Ipse memet c6gat et rex 6t socer.
haec caiisa vitae est, h6c perusti pectoris
curls levamen. splritu citiiis queam
car^re, membris, luce. Med. Sic natos amat?
bene ^st, tenetur, villneri patult locus. — 550
supr^ma certe llceat abeunt^m loqui
manddta, liceat liltimum amplexilm dare :
gratum 6st et illud. v6ce iam extremd peto,
ne, si qua noster diibius effudlt dolor,
manednt in animo v6rba : meliorls tibi 555
mem6ria nostri s^deat ; haec ira^ data
oblltterentur. Ias. 6mnia ex animo ^xpuli
prec6rque et ipse, f^rvidam ut ment^m regas
placid^que tractes : mlserias lenlt quies.
Med. Disc^ssit. itane est ? vddis oblitiis mei 560
et t6t meorum fdcinorum ? excidimus tibi ?
numquam 6xcidemus. h6c age, omnes ddvoca
vir^s et artes. fnictus est scelenim tibi
nuUiim scelus putare. vlx fraudi ^st locus :
tim^mur. hac aggr^dere, qua nem6 potest 565
quicqudm timere. p^rge nunc, aude, Incipe
quidquld potest Med^a, quidquid n6n potest.
Tu, flda nutrix, s6cia maerorls mei ^
varilque casus, mlsera consilia ddiuva.
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134 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
est pdlla nobis, miinus aetheritim, domus 570
decusque regni, plgnus Aeeta6 datum
a S61e generis, ^st et auro t^xtili
monfle fulgens qu6dque gemmarum nitor
distlnguit aurum, qu6 solent cingf comae.
haec n6stra nati d6na nubentl ferant, 575
sed dnte diris Inlita ac tincta drtibus. ^' . ^ /^ J•/^r^>
voc^tur Hecate, sdcra letifica dppara :
statudntur arae, Mmma iam tectfs sonet.
Chorus
N]llla vis flamma^ tumidlve venti
tdnta, nee telf metu^nda torti, 580
qudnta cum coniiinx vidudta taedis
drdet et odit;
n6n ubi hibem6s nebul6sus imbres
Aiister advexft properatque torrene
Hlster et iunct6s vetat 6sse pontes 585
dc vagus errat;
n6n ubi impelUt Rhodaniis profundum,
atit ubi in riv6s nivibus solutis
s61e iam fortl medi6que vere
tdbuit Haemus. 590
caucus est ignfs stimuldtus ira
n6c regi curdt patiturve frenos
atit timet mortem : cupit Ire in ipsos
6bvius enses.
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MEDEA 135
parcite, o divl, venidm precamur, 595
vlvat ut tutiis mare qui subegit.
s^d furit vinci dominiis profundi
r^gna secunda.
&ixs\is aetern6s agitdre currus
fmmemor meta^ iuvenls pateruae 600
qu6s polo sparsft furi6sus ignes
ipse recepit.
c6nstitit nulli via n6ta magno :
vdde qua tutiim popul6 priori,
nimpe nee sacr6, viol^nte, sancta - 605
fo6dera mundi.
Quisquis audacls tetigft carinae
n6bfles rem6s nemorfsqUe sacri
P^lion densd spolidvit umbra,
qufsquis intravlt scopulos vagantes 6io
. 6t tot emeiisiis pelagf labores ^* ^ V '^^* ""
bdrbara fun^m religavit ora
rdptor externl reditiirus auri,
6xitu dir6 temer4ta ponti '^ '^'^'L
iiira piavit. 615
6xigit poends mare pr6vocatum :
Tlphys in primfs, domit6r profundi,
If quit indoct6 regimen magistro; ^'' ^^'/
litore extern6, procul k paternis
6ccidens regnis tumul6que vili 620
t6ctus ignotds iacet Inter umbras.
Aiilis amissf memor fnde regis
p6rtibus lentis retin^t carinas
stdre querentes.
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136 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
file vocali genitiis Camena, 625
cuius ad chordds moduldnte plectro
r^stitit torr^ns, silu6re venti,
ciim suo cantii volucrfs relicto
ddfuit tota comitdnte silva,
Thracios sparsiis iacuit per agros, 630
At caput tristl fluitdvit Hebro :
c6ntigit notdm Styga Tdrtarumque,
n6n rediturus.
strdvit Alcid^s Aquil6ne natos,
pdtre Neptun6 genittim necavit 635
sumere innumerds solitiim figuras :
ipse post terra^ pelaglque pacem,
p6st feri Ditfs patefacta regna,
vlvus ardent! recubdns in Oeta
pra^buit saevls sua membra flammis, 640
tdbe consumptiis geminl cruoris
munere nuptae.
strdvit Ancaeum viol^ntus ictu
sa^ tiger; fratr^m, Meledgre, matris
Impius mactds morerfsque dextra 645
mdtris irata6. meru^re cuncti
m6rte quod crimen tener ^xpiavit
H^rculi magn6 puer Inrepertus, ♦^ ''^ -JtrvT^H oii-f-
rdptus, heu, tutds puer inter undas.
Ite nunc fortes perardte pontum 650
f6nte tinjendo.
Idmonem, quamvfs bene fdta nosset,
c6ndidit serpens Libycls harenis;
6mnibus verdx, sibi falsus uni
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MEDEA 137
c6ncidit Mopstis carultque Thebis. 655
file si ver6 cecinit futura,
6xul errabft Thetidls maritus. 657
fulmine et pont6 morions Oileus; 661
. . . patri6que pendet 660
prfmine poenas.
Igne f allaci nocitiirus Argis 658
Naiiplius praec^ps cadet In profundum; 659
coniugis fatilm redim^ns Pheraei 662
lixor, impend^s animdm marito.
Ipse qui praedam spoliumque iussit
aiireum primd revehi carina, 665
listus accens6 Pelids aeno
drsit angustds vagus inter undas.
idm satis, divf, mare vlndicastis^
pdrcite iusso.
NUTRIX
Pavet dnimus, horret, mdgna pernici6s adest. 670
immdne quantum aug^scit et sem^t dolor
acc^ndit ipse vlmque praeteritam fntegrat. ^-/ n apts^
vidi furentem sa^pe et aggressdm deos,
caeWm trahentem : mdius his, maiiis parat
Med6a monstrum. ndmque ut attonit6 gradu 675
evdsit et penetrdle funestum dttigit,
totds opes effiindit et quidquld diu
etiam Ipsa timuit pr6mit atque omnem ^xplicat i^ > ''/I
turbdm malorum, arcdna secreta dbdita,
et triste laeva c6mprecans sacrum manu 680
. pest^s vocat quasciimque ferventls creat
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138 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
har^na Libyae qudsque perpetud, nive
Taunis cohercet frigore Arctoo rigens,
et 6mne monstrum. trdcta magicis cdntibus
squamffera latebris Mrba desertfs adest. 685
hie sa6va serpens c6rpus immensilm trahit
trifiddmque linguam ex^rtat et quaerit quibus
mortifera veniat : cdrmine audit6 stupet
tumidiimque nodis c6rpus aggestis plicat
cogitque in orbes. *pdrva sunt' inqnit 'mala 690
et vf le telum est, ima quod telltis creat :
cael6 petam ven^na. iam iam t^mpus est
aliquid movere fraiide vulgari dltius.
hue Hie vasti m6re torrentis iacens
desc6ndat anguis, euius immens6s duae, 695
mai6r minorque, s^ntiunt nod6s ferae
(mai6r Pelasgis Apta, Sidonifs minor)
pressdsque tandem s61vat Ophiuchils manus
vinisque f undat ; ddsit ad cantiis meos
lac^ssere ausus g^mina Python niimina. 700
et H^dra et omnis r^deat Hereuled manu
sucelsa serpens, ea4de se repardns sua.
tu qu6que relictis p^rvigil Colehfs ades,
sopite primum edntibus, serpens, meis.'
Postquam 6vocavit 6mne serpentiim genus, 705
cong^rit in unum f rugis inf austa^ mala :
quaeciimque generat fnvius saxls Eryx,
quae f6rt opertis hieme perpetud iugis
sparsus eruore Caiicasus Prom^thei,
et quis sagittas dlvites Arab^s linunt 711
pharetrdque pugnax M6dus aut Parthi leves, ,710
aut qu6s sub axe frigido suc6s legunt 712
lucis Suebae n6 biles Herc^niis ;
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MEDEA 139
quodctimque tellus v6re nidific6 creat
aut rlgida cum iam brtima discussft decus 715
nemorum 6t nivali ciincta constrinxit gelu,
quodciimque gramen fl6^ mortifer6 viret, •
quictlmque tortis sucus in radlcibus
causes nocendi gignit, attrectdt manu.
Haem6nius illas c6ntulit pest^s Athos, 720
has Pindus ingens, ilia Pangaei iugis
tenerdm cruenta Mice deposuf t comam ;
has dluit altum giirgitem Tigris premens,
Daniivius illas, hds per arent^s plagas
tepidis Hydaspes g^mmifer curr^ns aquis, ' 725
nom^nque terris qui dedit Baetis suis
Hesp6ria pulsans mdria languenti vado.
haec pdssa ferrum est, dtim parat PhoeMs diem,
illius alta n6cte succisiis frutex; ^ ^- ^ ^^
at hiiius ungue s6cta cantat6 seges. 730
Mortifera carpit grdmina ac serp^ntium
saniem 6xprimit misc6tque et obscends aves
maestique cor bubdnis et rauca6 strigis ' ^'
exs^cta vivae viscera, haec scelerum drtifex
discr^ta ponit; his rapax vis ignium, 735
tis g61ida pigri frigoris glaci6s inest.
addit venenis v6rba non illis minus
metu^nda. sonuit ^cce vesan6 gradu
canitque. mundus v6cibus pripnis tremit.
Medea
C6mprecor vulgiis silentum v6sque feral6s deos 740
^t Chaos caecum dtque opacam Ditis umbrosi domum,
Tdrtari ripis ligatos squdlidae Mortis. specus.
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140 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
supplicis, animal, remissis ciirrite ad thalam6s novos:
r6ta resistat membra torquens, tangat Ixi6n humum,
Tdntalus seciirus undas haiiriat Pir^nidas. 745
grdvior uni po^na sedeat c6niugis socer6 mei :
lubricus per sdxa retro Sisyphum' volvdt lapis.
v6s quoque, urnis quds foratis inritus ludlt labor, "' ^'^
Ddnaides, coite : vestras hie dies quaerf t manus. —
niinc meis vocdta sacris, n6ctium sidiis, veni 750
p6ssimos indiita yultus, fr6nte non und minax.
Tibi m6re gentis vinculo solv6ns comam
secr^ta nudo n^mora lustravi pede
et 6vocavi nubibus sicels aquas
eglque ad imum mdria, et Oceaniis graves 755
int^rius undas a^stibus victfs dedit;
parit^rque mundus l^ge confusa a^theris
et s61em et astra vfdit, et vetitiim mare
tetigfstis, ursae. t^mporum flexl vices :
aestiva tellus fl6ruit cantil meo, 760
t codcta messgin vldit hiberndm Ceres;
viol6nta Phasis v6rtit in font^m vada
et Hfster, in tot 6ra divisus, truces
compr6ssit undas 6mnibus ripis piger.
Sonu^re fluctus, ttimuit insaniim mare 765
tac6nte vento ; n^moris antiqui domus
amlsit umbras, v6cis imperi6 meae
di6 reducto ; Phoebus in medi6 stetit
Hyad^sque nostris cantibus mota^ labant :
ad^sse sacris t^mpus est, Phoebe, tuis. * 770
tibi ha^c cruenta s^rta texuntiir manu, j}w ^''' '^ ^
nov6na quae serpens ligat,
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MEDEA 141
tibi ha6c Typhoeus membra quae disc6rs tulit, ^^/^ ^ '"/
qui r6gna concussft lovis.
ca^r^'^^ vectoris istic p6rfidi sanguis inest, 775
quem N^ssus expirdns dedit.
Oeta^us isto clnere defecit rogus, 7^^' / ^' ^'
qui virus Herculeum bibit.
pia^ sororis, Impiae matrls, facem
ultrfcis Althaea^ vides. 780
reliquit istas Invio plumd^s specu ;> v / /
Harpyfa, dum Zet^n fugit.
his ddice pinnas saiiciae StympMlidos
Lerna^a passae splcula.
sonulstis, arae, trlpodas agnosc6 meos 785
fav6nte commot6s dea.
Vide6 Triviae curnis agiles,
non qu6s pleno lucida vultu
pem6x agitat, sed qu6s facie
lur^a maesta, cum Th6ssalicis 790
vexdta minis caeliim freno
propi6re legit, sic fdce tristem
pallida lucem fund6 per auras,
horr6re novo terr^ populos
inque aiixilium, Dict;f nna, tuum 79s
preti6sa sonent aer^ Corinthi.
tibi sdnguineo caesplte sacrum
soll6mne damus, tibi d6 medio
raptd sepulchro fax n6ctumos
sustiilit ignes, tibi m6ta caput 800
flexd voces cervlce dedi,
tibi fiinereo de m6re iacens
pass6s cingit vittd capillos,
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142 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
tibi idctatur tristfs Stygia
ramus ab unda, tibi niidato 805
pect6re maenas sacr6 feriam
bracchfa cultro. man^t noster
sanguis ad aras : assu^sce, manus,
string^re ferrum car6sque pati
poss6 cruores — sacnim laticem 810
percussa dedi.
quodsi nimium saep6 vocari
quereris votis, ign6sce precor:
causd vocandi, Pers^i, tuos
saepfus arcus una dtque eadem est 815
semper, lason.
tu nunc vestes ting^ Creusae,
quas ciim primum sumps6rit, imas
urdt seipens flammd medullas.
ignis fulvo clusiis in auro 820
latet 6bscurus, quem mlhi caeli
qui furta luit visc^re feto r^r,. '-^ ^ *^^^r ' - . ?w^
dedit 6t docuit cond^re vires
art6, Prometheus, dedit 6t tenui
sulphiire tectos Mulclber ignes, 825
et vlvacis fulgura flammae
de c6gnato Phaeth6nte tuli.
habe6 mediae don^ Chimaerae,
habe6 flammas ust6 tauri
gutture raptas, quas p^rmixto 830
fell^ Medusae tacitiim iussi
servdre malum.
add^ venenis stimul6s, Hecate,
donlsque meis semlna flammae
condlta serva. falMnt visus 835
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MEDEA 143
tactiisque ferant, meet in pectus (-^ '^W^'^ -
vendsque calor, still^nt artus ff^.o
ossdque fument vincdtque suas
flagrante coma nova nupta faces.
Votd tenentur : ter Mtratus 840
auddx Hecate dedit ^t sacros
edfdit ignes face liicifera.
Perdcta vis est 6mnis : hue nat6s voca,
preti6sa per quos d6na nubenti feras.
ite, ite, nati, mdtris infausta^ genus, 84s
placdte vobis mtinere et multd prece
dominam dc novercam. vddite et ceteris domum ^^ ^o - /• >^ ' ^
ref^rte gressus, tiltimo amplexu lit fniar.
Chorus
Quondm cruenta mannas
praec^ps amore sa^vo 850
rapitiir? qiiod impotent!
f acinus parat fur6re ?
vulttis citatus Ira
riget 6t caput fer6ci
quati6ns superba m6tu 855
regi minatur iiltro.
quis cr^dat exul6m ?
\
flagrdnt genae rub^ntes, r /i p c <_^
pall6r fugat rub6rem,
nuIMm vagante f6rma 860
servdt diu col6rem.
hue f6rt pedes et illuc,
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144 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
ut tigris orba ndtis ^^-r'\ Wo?
cursti furente Mstrat
Gang^ticum nemiis. 865
frendre nescit iras
Med6a, non am6res;
nunc Ira amorque caiisam
iunx^re: quid sequ^tur?
quando 6fferet Peldsgis 870
nefdnda Colchis drvis
gressiim metuque s61vet
regniim simulque r^ges ?
nunc, Pho6be, mitte cilrrus
null6 morante 16ro, 87s
nox c6ndat alma lucem,
mergdt diem tim^ndum
dux n6ctis Hesperds.
NUNTIUS
Peri^re cuncta, c6ncidit regnl status,
nata dtque genitor cinere permixt6 iacent. 880
Chor. Qua fratide capti ? Nunt. Qud solent reg^s capi :
donls. Chor. In illis 6sse quis potuit dolus ?
Nunt. Et Ipse miror vlxque iam fact6 malo
potulsse fieri cr^do. Chor. Quis cladis modus ?
Nunt. Avidus per omnem r^giae partem furit 885
ut iussus ignis : idm domus tota 6ccidit,
urbf timetur. Chor. tJnda flammas 6pprimat.
Nunt. Et h6c in ista cMde mirandum dccidit :
alit tinda flammas, qu6que prohibetiir magis,
magis drdet ignis : Ipsa praesidia 6ccupat. 890
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MEDEA 145
NUTRIX
Efif6r citatum s6de Peloped gradum,
Med6a, praeceps qudslibet terrds pete.
Medea
Egone ut recedam? si profugiss^m prius,
ad h6c redirem. niiptias spect6 novas,
quid, dnime, cessas ? s^quere f elicem impetum. 895
pars illtionis ista, qua gaud6s, quota est? //f^J r/>i^/(
amds adhuc, furi6se, si satis 6st tibi
rjo^^cael^bs lason. quaere poenarum genus
haut lisitatum idmque sic tem^t para :
fas 6mne cedat, dbeat expulsiis pudor; " 900
vindlcta levis est qudm ferunt pura^ manus.
inctimbe in iras t^que languentem ^xcita
penittisque veteres p^ctore ex imo impetus
viol^ntus hauri. quidquid admissum 6st adhuc,
pietds vocetur. h6c age et faxis sciant 905
quam l^via fuerint qudmque vulgaris notae
quae c6mmo(iayi sc^lera. prolusf t dolor /^ > ^ ' ^ ^. ^^^/ ^ ^
per Ista noster : quid manus poterdnt rudes
aud^re magnum? quid puellarls furor?
Med6a nunc sum; cr6vit ingenium malis. 910
luvdt, iuvat rapulsse fratemiim caput;
artiis iuvat seculsse et arcan6 patrem
spolidsse sacro, iuvat in exitiiim senis
armdsse natas. quaere materidm, dolor :
ad 6mne facinus n6n rudem dextram dfferes. 915
Quo te Igitur, ira, mlttis, aut quae p6rfido
int^ndis hosti t^la ? nescio quid ferox
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146 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
decr^vit animus Intus et nondiim sibi
aud6t fateri. stulta properavl nimis :
rv(.:i. ex pa^lice utinam Hberos hostfs meus 920
aliqu6s haberet — quldquid ex ill6 tuum est,
Creiisa peperit. pldcuit hoc poena^ genus,
merit6que placuit : ultimum, agnosc6, scelus
anim6 parandum est — llberi quonddm mei,
vos pr6 paternis sc61eribus poends date. 925
Cor p6pulit horror, membra torpesciint gelu
pectusque tremuit. ira discessft loco
mat^rque tota c6niuge expulsd redit.
egone tit meorum liberum ac proHs meae
funddm cruorem? m6Uus, ah, demons furor! x 930
inc6gnitum istud Mcinus ac dinim nefas
a m& quogue absit; qu6d scelus miserl luent?
scelus 6srIason g^nitor et maMs scelus
.i Med6a mater — 6ccidant, non siint mei. —
' ,, perednt? mei sunt; crfmine et culpd carent. — 935
• sunt fnnocentes : fdteor, et frat^r fuit.
quid, dnime, ti tubas? 6ra quid lacrimal rigant 'iri4-/t
variamque nunc hue Ira, nunc ilMc amor
didiicit? anceps a^stus incertdm rapit;
ut sa^va rapidi b^lla cum ventf gerunt 940
utri mque fluctus mdria discord^s. agunt
dubiiimque fervet p61agus, haut alitor meum
cor fliictuatur. ira pietat^m fugat
irdmque pietas — c^de pietati, dolor.
Hue, cdra proles, unicum afflicta^ domus 945
soMmen, hue vos f^rte et infus6s mihi
coniiingite artus. hdbeat incolum6s pater,
dum et mdter habeat — lirget exilium dc fuga.
iam idm meo rapi^ntur avulsi 6 sinu,
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MEDEA 147
flent^s, gementes 6sculis — perednt patri, 95©
peri^re matri. nirsus increscft dolor
et f6rvet odium, r^petit invitam manum
antlqua Erinys — ira, qua duels, sequor.
utindm superbae tiirba Tantalid6s meo
exisset utero bf sque septen6s parens 9SS
nat6s tulissem ! st6rilis in poends fui —
fratrf patrique qu6d sat est, peperi duos.
Quonam Ista tendit tiirba Furiarum impotens?
quem quderit aut quo Mmmeos ictus parat,
aut cul cruentas dgmen infemtim faces 960
int^ntat ? ingens dnguis excuss6 sonat
tortus flagello. qu6m trabe infestd petit
Mega^ra ? — cuius iSmbra dispersis venit
inc^rta membris ? frdter est, poends petit —
dabimiis, sed omnes. fige luminibiis faces, 965
lanid, perure, pectus en Funis patet.
Disc^dere a me, frdter, ultric^s deas
man^sque ad imos Ire secures iube :
mihi m6 relinque et litere hac, frat^r, manu
quae strlnxit ensem — vlctima man6s tuos 970
placdmus ista. quid repens aff^rt sonus ?
pardntur anna m6que in exitiiim petunt.
exc^lsa nostrae t^cta conscenddm domus
caede Incohata. p^rge tu meciim comes,
tuiim quoque ipsa c6rpus hinc mecum dveham. 975
nunc h6c age, anime : n6n in occult6 tibi est
perd^nda virtus; dpproba popul6 manum.
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148 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Iason
Quiciimque regum clddibus fidus doles,
Conciirre, ut ipsam sc^leris auctorem h6rridi
Capidmus. hue, hue f6rtis armiferi cohors 980
Conf6rte tela, v6rtite ex nn6 domum.
Med. lam idm reeepi se^ptra, germanum, patrem,
spolidmque Colehi p6cudis aura?ta6 tenent;
redi6re regna, rdpta virginitds redit.
o pldeida tandem niimina, o festiim diem, 9^
o nuptialem ! vdde, perfeetum 6st seelus;
vindlcta nondum : parage, dum faeiilnt manus.
quid mine moraris, dnime? quid dubitds potens?
iam c^cidit ira. pa^nitet facti, pudet.
quid, mlsera, feci ? mf sera ? paenitedt lieet, 990
feei — voluptas mdgna me invitdm subit,
et 6ece ereseit. d6rat hoQ umim mihi,
spectator iste. nil adhuc facti reor:
quidquld sine isto f^cimus scelerfs pent.
Ias. En ipsa tecti pdrte praecipiti imminet. 995
hue rdpiat ignes dliquis, ut flammis eadat
suis perusta. Med. C6ngere extremiSm tuis
natis, Iason, fiinus, ac tumuMm strue :
eoniunx soeerque iusta iam functis habent,
a m6 sepulti; ndtus hie fatum tulit, 1000
hie iA vidente ddbitur exiti6 pari.
Ias. Per niimen omne p^rque communis fugas
tor6sque, quos non n6stra violavit fides,
iam pdree nato. si quod est erim6n, meum est :
me d^do morti ; n6xium maetd caput. 1005
Med. Hac qud reeusas, qud doles, ferrum 6xigam.
i ntlne, superbe, virginum thalam6s pete,
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MEDEA 149
relfnque matres. Ias. TTnus est poena^ satis.
Med. Si p6sset una ca^de satiari ha^c manus,
nulldm petisset. iit duos perim^m, tamen loio
nimium 6st dolori niimerus angustiis meo.
Ias. lam parage coeptum fdcinus, haut ultrd precor, 1014
mordmque saltern supplicis dbnd meis. 1015
Med. Perf riiere lento sc^lere, ne properd, dolor :
meus dies est; tempore accepto iitimur.
Ias. Inf^sta, memet p^rime. Med. Misereri iubes.
bene 6st, peractum est. pMra non habul, dolor,
quae tlbi litarem. Mmina hue tumida dlleva, 1020
ingrdte lason. c6niugem agnoscis tuam ?
sic Mgere soleo. pdtuit in caeMm via :
squam6sa gemini c611a serpent^s iugo
summlssa praebent. recipe iam nat6s, parens;
ego inter auras dliti curru vehar. 1025
Ias. Per dlta vade spdtia sublimi a^there,
testdre nullos 6sse, qua veherls, deos.
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THE STORY OF HERCULES
Hercules was the son of Jupiter and Alcmena, afterward wife
of Amphitryon. The goddess Juno, always jealous of her rivals
in Jupiter's affections, was bitterly hostile to Alcmena and her
son from the first. As it had been foretold that a child bom at a
certain time would have the mastery over his neighbors, Juno as
Lucina delayed the birth of Hercules and hastened that of Eurys-
theus, son of Sthenelus, so that the latter was the elder and so
mast-er of the other.
Her persecution of the infant Hercules began in his very cradle.
Two serpents were sent to destroy him, but the child of a few hours
seized them and strangled them to death. When he reached
maturity he was made servant to Eurystheus for a certain time
and required to perform whatever tasks he might impose. With
Juno's aid tasks were assigned which seemed impossible of per-
formance, and these are known as "the twelve labors." They
were: (1) killing the Nemean lion; (2) the hydra; (3) capturing
the hind of Maenalus; (4) the boar of Erymanthus; (5) cleansing
the stables of Augeas; (6) killing the Stymphalian birds; (7) cap-
turing the Cretan bull; (8) the mares of Diomede; (9) the girdle
of Hippolyte, queen of the Amazons; (10) Geryon and his cattle;
(11) the apples of the Hesperides; (12) the capture of Cerberus.
Besides these assigned labors he performed many voluntary
exploits, known as parerga, and constituted himself the champion
of the oppressed and the foe of tyrants. In this capacity he is
represented as bringing about peace and happiness throughout
the world.
Meantime he had married Megara, daughter of Creon, king of
Thebes, who was left at home with her three children during his
absence on the last adventure. While he was in the infernal
world Creon and his sons were killed and the royal power usurped
by Lycus, an adventurer from Euboea.
At this point begins the action of the play, which is introduced
by a soliloquy of Jimo's, expressing her disgust at his constant
success and resolving to turn his might against himself and so
destroy him,
151
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS
ACT I
Dramatis Personae: In the Greek drama the rule was strictly
observed tliat not more than three speaking characters might
appear on the stage at once. The classification here given —
which is borrowed from Richter — shows how Seneca probably
had the same rule in mind. It was violated constantly by Plautus
and Terence in their comedies. All the parts were taken by men,
as female actors were unheard of.
Scene 1 (w. 1-124). — The goddess Juno expresses her vexa-
tion at her husband's infidelity and the honors shown her rivals.
Especially is she troubled by the prowess of Hercules, the son of
Alcmena, who has overcome every monster that can be sent against
him, and even has invaded the lower world and captured its guard,
the three-headed dog Cerberus. She resolves to make him his
own destroyer, and smnmons the Furies to her aid.
1. soror: appositive to the subject of deserui, 3. — Tonantis:
Jupiter.
2. nomen: soror. She regards her claim to the title of wife as
vitiated by her husband's infidelity (cf. Dido's words, Veigil, A.
4. 323): Hospes, hoc solum nomen quoniam de convuge restat —
Guest J since only this nam£ remains from that of husband. — semper
alienum: alxoays another* s lover. — lovem: this and templa are
objects of deserui. She is leaving her home in heaven.
6. colenda est; sc. mihi — I must dwell on the earth. — paelices:
the mortal women whom Jupiter had loved, and who as constella-
tions had been given place in the skies; she names or describes
Callisto (6), Europa (9), the Pleiades (11), Danae (13), Leda (14),
Latona (15), Semele (16) and Alcmena (22).
6-15. hinc, hinc, illinc, hinc, hinc: on this side and on that,
pointing to the constellations which immortalized her rivals. —
153
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154 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
Arctos: nom. sing. Ursa Major, which according to one account
is the translated nymph Callisto, who had been loved by Jupiter.
Their son Areas was placed in the heavens with his mother as the
constellation Arctophylax. Ursa Major was known to the Greeks
very early, and hence is said (7) to guide the fleet of Argolis.
8. hinc . . . nitet: on this side, where the day is lengthened in
the early spring^ shines the hearer of Tyrian Europa over the seas.
The sun passes out of the zodiacal sign Aries into Taurus about
April 20, when the spring is young.
9. vectoi;; the snow-white bull which carried off Europa from
Sidon to Crete (Ovid, M. 2. 833-875), and by way of reward was
made the constellation Taurus:
10. timendum . . . gregem: the Pleiades, daughters of Atlas
(called Atlantides in 11), three of whom — Mala, Electra and
Taygete — had enjoyed the favor of Jove, and were the mothers
respectively of Mercury, Dardanus and Lacedaemon. The poet
here ascribes to them the malign influence upon the weather
which ordinarily belonged to the Hyades (see note on Med. 311),
who also were daughters of Atlas. As their times of rising and
setting varied with the seasons, and they thus appeared to change
position, they are called, in 11, vagantes.
11. exerunt: for exserunt, the superfluous s being omitted
after x.
12. Orion: for his adventures on eartlrsee Classical Dictionary.
As a constellation he is represented as a giant armed with club and
sword and continuing in the heavens the pursuit of the Pleiades
which he had begun while a mortal. Though not a son of Jupiter,
like Areas, Perseus and the others here mentioned, he is looked
upon by Jimo as an interloper.
13. Perseus the golden has his own stars. The allusion in suas
Stellas may be to the constellation Perseus alone, or to Andromeda
with it, as her rescue from tl;e sea-monster was one of his greatest
exploits. He was a son of Jupiter and Danae, whom the god visited
in a shower of gold (hence aureus).
14. Tjmdaridae: Castor and Pollux, sons of Jupiter and Leda,
known in the heavens as the constellation Gemini, which the an-
cients always associated with fair weather {clara signa; cf. fr aires
Helenae, lucida aidera, Horace, C. 1. 3, 2).
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 165
15. quibus: sc. u. Apollo and Diana were the twin children
of Jupiter and Latona. As the time of their birth drew near the
ever watchful Juno secured from the eajiih a pledge that she would
grant the mother no resting-place. In her distress Latona ap-
pealed to the sea, and the island Ortygia, which hitherto had
floated beneath the surface of the Aegean, emerged and became
stationary (rnobUis ieUua stetU). This island, on account of its
having first appeared at this time, was known thenceforth as
Deloa (from dijXO, appear), and was a favorite resort of the twin
deities.
16. Bacchi fMrens: Semele, translated to the skies by her
son.
18. The universe wears the wreath of the Cretan maid. This was
Ariadne, daughter of Minos. Having saved the life of Theseus
by giving him a clew to the windings of the lab3rrinth, she fled with
him axkd was abandoned on the island Nf^os, where she was found
and loved by Bacchus. Her bridal wreath (serta) was himg in
the heavens as the constellation Corona^ Thus not only Bacchus
and his mother (16) but his mistress, too, had invaded the skies.
20. ntiribus: in its wider sense of women, with especial reference
to Jupiter's favorites there.
21. novercam fecit: Juno calls herself the stepmother of all the
sons of Jupiter who were not her own; of these Bacchus the son
of Semele, Amphion and Zethus the sons of Antiope, and Hercules
the son of Alcmena all were Thebans. — eacendat: not merely
m^unt up to heaven (which would be ascendat), but rise out of her
proper sphere.
22. The catalogue of Juno's grievances against her faithless
husband reaches its cUmax in the mention of Alcmena, the mother
of Hercules. The name here appears In its Greek form Alcmene,
for the sake of long ultima. She is irictrix in the person of her in-
vincible son. Translate, Though Alcmena, victorious, should . . .
hold my place, and her son with her possess the promised stars, etc.
24. impendit diem: at Hercules' conception the sun, bidden to
keep his brightness sunk in the ocean, failed to rise at all one day.
27. non sic abibunt: apodosis of escendat licet (22) and occu-
pet (23). — odia: sc. mea, and meus with animus (28).
80. quae b«Ua: sc. saevus dolor geret.
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156 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
32. A striking case of the asyndeton which is so marked a
characteristic of Seneca's style (cf. 1260, where six nouns without
connectives constitute the line).
33. fractum . . . est: sc. a& Hercvle, Hercules is to be under-
stood as subject of the verbs that follow — superat, crescit, fruitur,
vertU. — crescit malis: he thrives upon misfortune.
34. ira fruitur: cf. fruitur dis iratis (Juvenal, Sat. 1. 49), enjoys
the wrath of the gods. — in laudes . . . vertit: he turns my hate to
his own glory by succeeding in spite of it. Throughout his career
Juno was the bitter foe of Hercules, devising for him labors that
seemed impossible and doing her utmost to prevent his success.
36. patrem prot>avi: / have succeeded only in proving Jove his
father.
38. bines . . . Aethiopas: in the Odyssey (1. 22-24) we read of
''The Ethiopians, most remote of men. Two tribes there are:
one dwells beneath the rising, one beneath the setting sun." —
(Bryant's translation.)
40. monstra . . . desunt: the most fearful monsters in the
universe — lion, hydra, and now Cerberus — had fallen before him,
and the goddess was in despair of finding new ones to take their
place.
41. minorque . . . iubere: His a less task for Hercules to do my
bidding than for me to bid (cf . Hercules' own words in Ovid, M. 9.
198 : Defessa iubendo est lovis coniunXj ego sum indefessus agendo
— weary of commanding is Jupiter* s wife, but I am unwearied in
doing). — Herculi: dat.
43. tyranni: Eurystheus, to whom it was fated that Hercules
should be subject for a time. — violento: forceful, mighty.
45. armatus . . . hydra: after sla3ring the Nemean Hon the
hero constantly carried its impenetrable skin as a shield (cf . 797,
1150), while his arrows were poisoned by dipping into the hydra's
gall (cf. 1195). Hence he is said in 44 to carry as weapons what
he had feared and afterward defeated.
47. infemi lovis: Pluto (cf. diro lovi, 608; lovi Stygio, Vergil,
A. 4. 638).
48. opima: tor spolia opima (see 51; and for the origin of the
phrase cf. Livy, 1. 10) ; or perhaps used substantively as in Pliny's
panegjrric, 17, in the sense spoils of honor. — ad superos: to the
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 157
land of the living as contrasted with the subterranean abode of the
•dead (cf. Vergil, A. 6. 481).
60. mfenim: gen. plu., here contrasted with superoa, 48: /
saw him, myself I saw him, after having riven the darkness of the
underworld and vanquished Pluto, displaying to his father the spoils
of that father* s brother.
61. iactantem: sc. Herculem, object oi vidi. — patri: Jupiter,
who was Hercules' father and Pluto's brother (hence /ra^erna, 52).
63. ipsum: Pluto. — paria sortitum: in the Iliad (15. 184 flf.)
Neptune says : —
" We ar^ three brothers — Jupiter and I
And Pluto, regent of the realms below.
Three parts were made of all existing things,
And each of us received his heritage.
The lots were shaken, and to me it fell
To dwell forever in the hoary deep;
And Pluto took the gloomy realm of night;
And, lastly, Jupiter the ample heaven
And air and clouds." — (Bryant's translation.)
In the same connection the sea-god Neptune claims "rights equal
to Jove's own." His domain repeatedly in these tragedies is called
regna secunda (e.g. Med. 598; cf. secundo sceptro, 599), and Pluto's
"the third lot" (tertiae sortis, 609).
49. foedus: the agreement whereby each of the three domains
was to be inviolable (cf. foedera mundi, Med. 606 n.). A son of
Jupiter now had invaded Pluto's kingdom and carried off the
three-headed dog, thus violating the compact.
66. A way back from deepest Hades has been opened, and the
mysteries of grim death have been revealed, since Hercules has re-
turned imharmed.
67. ille: Hercules. — ferox: exuUant.
68. superbifica: a word found nowhere else, lit., pride-creaiing,
but perhaps not greatly different in force from superba.
69. atrum: an attribute rather of the underworld itself, but
transferred by a common license to persons and things belonging
there (cf. ater CocytuSf Horace, C. 2. 14. 17; furvae Proserpinae,
Horace, C. 2. 13. 21).
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168 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
60. At any surpassingly unnatural sight the stm was supposed
to hide his face or retrace his course in horror (cf. 941, 1333),
notably at the feast of Thyestes (cf. Med. 28 n.).
63. tiniui imperasse: I was alarmed at having given such com-
mand. All the labors of Hercules were imposed upon him by
Eurystheus, but at Juno's suggestion. — levia: trifling when
compared with what may come (cf. Med. 906).
64. caelo: toe must fear for heaven itself — summa . . . ima:
Olympus and Hades, the respective abodes of the di superi and di
inferi.
66. patri: Hercules vntl snatch away the scepter from his father,
as he from Saturn.
66. lenta: with via. Bacchus had established his divinity by
a relatively peaceful conquest, and been admitted to Olympus by
the gods. Jimo fears that Hercules will force his way thither
by violence.
70. ferendo: by hearing it up he has learned that heaven can be
overmatched by his strength. When Hercules, in quest of the apples
of the Hesperides, had come to where Atlas stood supporting the
heavens, the latter volunteered to procure the golden fruit if Her-
cules would meantime take his place. The hero consented and
received the burden, which he bore with ease; hence, melius . . .
$edit, 72 (cf. 425, 528, 1101).
72. melius: better than on the shoulders of Atlas.
74. me prementem: Juno, in heaven, had lent her weight in the
hope of crushing the upstart. — meditantem: sc. Herculem.
76. Perge, Ira, perge : on, wrath, on! Crush him as he meditates
great plans! Meet him! Tear him yourself with your own hands!
Why do you commit the satisfaction of such hate (to any one else) ?
77. ferae: the monsters overcome (see the labors detailed,
222-248).
78. vacet: be relieved of his precarious mastery over Hercules.
For Eurystheus see 43 n. — fessus: cf. 41 n., especially the quota-
tion from Ovid.
79. Titanas: the sons of Caelus and Terra (Heaven and Earth),
who overthrew their father and set up in his place the younge&t
of their number, Kronos or Saturn. Later the majority of the
Titans, including descendants of the original twelve, supported
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 159
Jupiter in his successful attempt to dethrone Saturn. Only the
family of lapetus, embracing Prometheus, Epimetheus and their
descendants, dared oppose him, and it is to them that reference
is made here.
80, kxa: imperative. — SiouU verticig: Mt. Aetna,
81. tellus . . . Doris: Sicily, which was colonized largely by
Dorians from Corinth. — gigante: Enceladus, who, in his flight
after the defeat of the giants in their attack on Jupiter, was buried
under the island of Sicily, cast upon him by Minerva (cf. Med.
410 n., where he is called a Titan ; Vergil, A. 3. 578-582). Hercules
had been Jupiter's ally on that occasion; hence vicit ista, 83. -^ tre-
mens: cf. Vergil, A. 3. 581 : (Fama est) fessum quotiens mutet
lotus f intremere omnem . . . Trinacriam — The atory ia that whenever
he turns his weary body, all Sicily shakes, -^xaomtrU Enceladus.
85. bella . . . gerat: an intimation of Juno's plan, serving to
make the hero's madness the natural climax of the plot and to give
unity to the whole. Do you seek a match for Hercules f There is
nons hut himself; then let him wage war with himself,
89<-91. The speaker apostrophizes Hercules.
91. fugifiwe: sc. te as subject. — hie: here, on earth.
93. discordem deam: Furor, the personification of madness
(see 98), corresponding to Lyssa, introduced by Euripides as an
acting character in his Herakles Mainomenos, which most likely
was Seneca's immediate model. Farnabius suggests that deam
refers to the fury Megaera (102), and this is consistent with the
idea in 94, whom a great cavern of the mountain, set over her, guards,
for in an Orphic hymn the Furies are represented as dwelling in
caverns near the waters of the Styx.
96. quidquid relictum est: whatever is left in Hades since Cer-
berus has been dragged forth. — Scelua, Impietas, Error, Furor :
personifications summoned as more terrible than any concrete
being (cf. Vergil's description of the horrid forms met at the
entrance to the infernal world, A. 6. 273-281). All these now
are to assail the hero and contribute to the horror of his obsession
and his crime
98. in se armatus: Madness, ever armed agaii%st itself. Here,
as in 85, we have an intimation of the form Juno's vengeance was
to take.
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160 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
100. famulae Ditis: the Furies — Alecto, Megaera, Tisiphone.
101. pinum: the blazing torch carried by each Fury (cf. trabem,
103). — agmen: company, a term often used in speaking of the
three sisters.
103. rogo: a torch taken from a funeral pyre would be of evil
omen, and hence appropriate to the fiendish work now contem-
plated (cf . de medio rapta sepulchro fax, Med. 798; faces de funere
raptas, Ovid, M. 6. 430).
104. hoc agite: this do, to the exclusion of all else (cf. Med.
562 n.).
106. pectus, mentem: your heart and mind. — ezcoquat: the
subject is ignis,
107. animo captus: possessed, maddened. — ut possit . . .
insaniendum est: for both thought and form cf. Horace's dictum,
A. P. 102: Si vis me flere dolendum est primum ipsi tibi — // you
would have me weep, you first must grieve yourself.
110. sorores: not my sisters, but ye sisters three — the Furies.
112. dignum noverca: cf. vota te digna, 1038, said by Hercules
to the same goddess Juno. The cruelty of a stepmother was pro-
verbial. — vota mutentur: hitherto her desire has been to effect
Hercules' destruction; now it is that he may live to return and meet
a more fearful fate.
114. manu fortis: strong of hand to do the deed I purpose for
him. — inveni: perfect tense.
116. capiat mori: see 1245, 1263, 1278.
117. hie: the adverb.
119. tela: the shafts that were to be aimed at his children
(991 fif.). — librabo manu: I will aim the arrows with my own hand.
122. genitor: though when the crime is done his father may admit
those hands to heaven (cf. promissa astra occupet, 23; astra promittit
pater, 959).
124. croceo: a stock poetic epithet of dawn (cf. Vergil, A. 4. 585).
Scene 2 (w. 125-204). — The chorus describes the approach
of day and is led to think of the various activities to which men
awake, and so to speak of the last daring labor of Hercules. It
closes with a eulogy of a life spent in repose and retirement. The
measure is the anapestic dimeter.
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 161
125. rara: fewer stars are visible as the daylight brightens. —
prono: descending, describing the western sky where the stars are
setting (cf. Ovid, M. 2. 67: ultima prona via est).
126. languida: growing dim. — vagos . . . ignes: the plan-
ets.
128. Phosphoros: a Greek noun in nom. sing. Both this word
and its Latin synonym hucifer have the literal meaning light-
bringeTy and refer to the morning star, which, immediately preced-
ing the advancing sun, brings up the rear (cogit . . . agmen) of the
starry host as it retreats.
129. signum: Ursa Major, often thought of as a wagon on ac-
count of the figm-e outlined by its brightest stars (see note on Med.
315). This accoimts for temone, 131.
131. verso temone: in its apparent revolution about the pole.
133. Titan: the sun, as often (cf. Med. 5). — Geta: Mt. Oeta
was not east but west from Thebes, where the scene of this play
is laid, and was more than sixty miles distant. In Here. Oet. 1440
it is called cvhile noctis. No doubt its inconsistent introduction
here as the scene of the sun's rising is due to its constant and close
association with the life and death of Hercules. We must not
scrutinize too closely a poet's geography — or history either.
134. Now the thickets famed for the ba>cchantes, daughters of Cad-
mus, flooded with daylight are blushing. Mt. Cithaeron is meant,
which Ovid (M. 3. 702) calls Cithaeron, electus /acienda ad sacra
— set apart for celebrating the rites (of Bacchv^s). — Bacchis: the
bacchantes. Agave, etc.
136. sorer: Phoebe, the moon goddess. — reditura: to return
at night.
137. labor: the day's toil for men.
139. Observe the quantities and agreement of the words ending
in a — gelida, cana, pruina, pabiUa.
140. dimisso: from the fold, where they had been kept over-
night.
142. nondum rupta: by the growth of horns (cf . nondum comibus
findens cutem, Tro. .538; frons turgida comibus, Horace, C. 3.
13. 4). '
143. The kine at leisure fill again (with milk) their udders, which
were drained this morning.
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162 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
146-149. The nightingale, shrill-voiced, hangs upon the topmost
boughs and yearns, amid her chirping young, to spread her vrings to
the new morning.
149. thracia paelex: the nightingale. Philomela, fleeing with
her sister Procne from the latter's husband Tereus, was changed
into a nightingale (Ovid, M. 6. 667-670). — turba . . . confusa
sonat: cf. Chaucer, Parlament of FotUes, 190 flf.
164. hie: a fisherman.
166. inatruit : either rebaits his hooks, robbed of their lure {decep-
tos), or excitedly {suspensus) gazes upon his catch, his hand closed
tight upon U.
158. li^M: nom.
169. haec: sc. agunt ii — these are the occupations of those who
enjoy the tranquil repose of a guileless life and a home that is happy
with a little^ all its ovm. For laeta . . . parvo, cf. Horace, C. 3.
16. 43.
162. With this the chorus now contrasts the complicated life of
the city. Note in 164-173 the precise alternation of demonstratives
— lUe, hie, iUum^ hie, and cf . Med. 720-725.
164. ille: the courtier or client. — super bos aditus regum: cf.
Horace, Epod. 2. 7: superba dvium potentiorum limina — the proud
thresholds of the more influential citizens.
166. expers somni: clients at Rome in Seneca's day rose very
early in order to be among the first in paying their respects to their
patrons (cf. Juvenal, 5. 19: Trebius . . . is worried lest the whole
throng of clients may have finished the round of visits while the
stars are just growing faint, or even at midnight; also 3. 126-130).
166. hie: the miser. — beatas: cf. beaiis gazis, Horace, C. 1. 29. 1.
167. inhians: cf. saccis indormis inhians, Horace, S. 1. 1. 70.
168. Cf . Horace, C. 3. 16. 28 : magnas inter opes inops.
169. ilium: the politician.
170. The mob, more changeful than the sea (cf. mobilium turba
quiritium, Horace, C. 1. 1. 7).
171. tumidtun: puffed up — ace. agreeing with ilium.
172. hie: the advocate. — elamosi . . . fori: cf. Pliny's descrip-
tion of the centumviral court, Epist. 2. 14. '
173. vendens: originally at Rome an advocate received no fee
for his services, but felt he was rewarded by the devotion and
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 163
politioal support of his client. In time this custom was modified
by the offering and accepting of gifts, and finally pleading became
a profession which many entered for the sake of gain (see Quintilian's
discussion of the proper charge, I.O. 12. 7. 8-12). — iras . . ,
locat: offers for hire hia words and his emotions.
176. tempera numqtiam reditura: a thought which is common
in all of Seneca's writings, e.g. Brev. Vitae, 8. 5; cf. 182 below.
177. dum . . . laeti: Horace's philosophy exactly, e.g. C. 1.
9. 13-18; 2. 3. 13-16, and often.
180. rota: nom., cycle.
181. peragunt: carry through to the end. — pensa: tasks as-
signed for spinning, here with reference to the thread of life spun
by the Fates. — aorores: the three Fates, not the Furies as in 110.
The Fates, while hard (durae) and implacable, were not malicious
like the Furies.
186. quaerimus: alluding to Hercules' invasion of the lower
world, as is seen from what follows.
187. properas . . . visere: i.e. before your time. — maestos:
the same epithet is applied to the manes in 647, and is used often
by Vergil in the sixth book of his Aeneid,
189. iusso: when summoned,
190. scriptum: appointed; lit., written in the book of fate.
191. uma: a change of figmre. Horace (C. 2. 3. 26 ff.; 3. 1. 16)
represents the Fates as shaking an van in which is a lot for every
living man, who must die when his lot falls out. According to
Vergil (Aen. 6. 432) it is Minos the judge who shakes the urn.
192 ff. A favorite theme with the author of these tragedies
{e.g. Oed. 882-913; Ag. 57-107; Oct. 379-386): Let glory hand
down another to many lands, and prattling fame praise him throughout
the cities and extol him as on a plane with the sky and the stars,
198, pigroi: unambitious (cf. Med. 331)..
199. In lowly sphere, yet safe, abides the mean lot of the dtoeller in
a cottage.
201. alte: far. The idea is either **from a great height" or
" to a great depth." — animosa: high-spirited, ambitious. For the
thought cf. Horace, C. 2. 10. 9-12: 'Tis the great pine that is
shaken oftener by the winds, and lofty towers fall with a heavier
crash, and thunderbolts smite the mountain tops.
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164 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
203. parvum gregem: her three small children. The ace. may
be regarded as the object of comitata deponent, or an imitation
(with comitata passive) of the construction with induta. — Megara:
nom., here scanned with long a in the ultima, as a Greek noim.
204. Alcidae parens: Amphitryon, who was the husband of
Alcmena and putative father of Hercules. In the Amphitryon of
Plautus, where the dramatic time is before the birth of Hercules,
Amphitryon is represented as a strong and vigorous warrior; here
he is old and relatively feeble.
ACT II
Scene 1 (w. 205-278). — Amphitryon reviews the labors of
Hercules, laments his absence on the desperate quest of Cerberus,
and prays for his safe return.
207. cladi: this, like aerumnisy refers to the evil fate that al-
lowed Hercules no peace or repose.
209. futuri: used instead of alteriusy which we should expect
as correlative to alterius in 208. The end of one misfortune only
marks the approach of its successor. — reduci: the adjective, as
shown by iX; sc. Hercvli,
211. contingat . . . meat: sc. Hercvlea,
213. dum iubetur: the brief interval in which he is receiving
his new orders. — a prime : from his very birth. As is told in the fol-
lowing verses, two serpents were sent by Juno to destroy the infant
Hercules, but were seized by him and strangled to death.
216. cristati caput : crested as to head, with crested head,
218. reptabat: frequentative for simple verb, common in the
Silver Age.
219. remisso Itmiiiie: with eye not strained by fear, t.e. with
fearless gaze and calm.
221. Crushing their swelling necks with tender hand.
222. Cf . the review of the twelve labors by the chorus, 527-546
(Ag. 808-866; Ovid, M. 9. 182-199). The order is given variously
by various authors, but the nmnbers assigned the labors in these
notes are those of ApoUodorus. — prolusit hydrae: practiced before-
hand for his battle with the great serpent, the hydrae (cf . proludens
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 165
fatis, Tro. 182; proltcsit per ista, Med. 907). Hydrae is dat. —
fera: the third labor was the taking alive of the hind of Mt. Maena-
lus, which was sacred to Diana. The chase lasted a year and ex-
tended as far as the upper Danube, but was finally successful. The
hind had horns of gold and hoofs of brass.
226. leo: the first labor. As the lion's skin was impenetrable,
Hercules killed it by strangling (pressus lacertis).
226. Bistonii gregis: the eighth labor was to bring the man-
eating mares of Diomede, king of the Thracian Bistones (not the
Homeric hero), to Mycenae. The king had been in the habit of
feeding these animals with the flesh of strangers who entered his
land. Hercules overcame him and made him the victim of his
own custom (227).
229. suem: the boa^ of Erjnnanthus — the fourth labor. Suem
is modified by solitum and hispidum in the preceding line as well
as by Maenalium here. This verse is notable for its large propor-
tion of short syllables, the scheme being, —
230. tatirum: the seventh labor. A mad bull which had been
ravaging Oete was brought by Hercules to Mycenae and there
released. — centum . . . populis: dat. The island of Crete,
early settled and thickly populated, often is called " the land of
a hundred cities *' {e.g. urhibus centum spatiosa Crete, Tro. 820; cf.
Phaed. 150; H.O. 27). In the Odyssey (19. 174) it is ninety.
231. greges: as his tenth labor the hero sought the scarlet
cattle of Geryon, the three-bodied monster who dwelt on the island
of Erytheia in the western ocean (pccasu ultimo). Having found
the object of his search he slew the giant keeper {pastor triformis),
and with many adventures drove the cattle through Spain and
Gaul, Illjrricum and Thrace, to Mycenae.
234. pavit: from pasco. As his course naturally would take
him through Boeotia, his cattle are said here to have grazed upon
the Boeotian moimtain. Cithaeron is subject and pecus object of
pavit.
236. soils . . . plagas: ApoUodorus (2. 5. 10) tells us that Her-
cules came to the place of the sun's setting and obtained from
him the use of the golden bowl in which as in a boat he crossed the
western sea. Of course the next verse — the parched realms which
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166 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
the midday sun scorches — would naturally suggest the south, but
237 fixes the scene of this adventure at Gibraltar, and reminds us
that the places of sunrise and sunset were thought of as exposed
to the sun's greatest heat (cf. 38 n.).
237. There is a myth to the effect that in the earliest times
there was no communication between the Mediterranean Sea and
the ocean, and that the passage now known as the Strait of Gibral-
tar was made by Hercules' tearing of the mountains asunder
(Pliny, N.H., proem, to 3). With this compare the similar ex-
ploit in opening the Vale of Tempe (283-288).
240. q>oiia: the golden apples of the Hesperides — the eleventii
labor. They were guarded by a sleepless dragon (vigilis ser-
perUis).
241. Lemae monstra: the hydra — second labor. The plural
monstra and the words numerosum malum allude to the creature's
having had nine heads and to the fact that when one was lopped
off two sprang up in its place. By searing the wound (igne, 242)
as each was cut off the hero finally was able to check the multi-
plication and tea^h it to die.
243. condere: complement of solitas. The killing of these birds
was the sixth labor.
244. petit: perfect, contracted from petiit, as often in these
tragedies (cf. adit, 321; perit, Med. 994, etc.).
246. caelibis . . . tori: gen. of quality. The same idea is
repeated in vidua (246; cf. viduis getUibus, 542), which means
no more nor less than unmarried, not necessarily widowed. The
ninth labor was the obtaining of the girdle worn by Hippolyte,
queen of the Amazons, who dwelt beside the Thermodon River
(cf. Med. 214).
247. ad . . . f acinus: after audaces — bold for every glorious
deed. Note the antitheas between clarum and turpis (248).
248. Cleansing the stables of Augeas was the fifth labor.
249. orbe defenso: the same phrase recurs in 633. — caret:
after having defended the world from these monsters and the
oppression of many t3rrants, whose destruction constituted his nu-
merous parerga or side-labors, Hercules himself is banished from
it and sent to the underworld.
251. rursus: as before his achievements.
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 167
262. virtus: predicate. The reference is to Lycus' successful
usurpation, as is shown in what follows.
266. nates: the sons of Creon, king of Thebes and father of
Megara.
266. ipsumque: Creon.
267. capiti decus: the crown.
269. ferax deorum: Bacchus, Amphion, Hercules (cf. 21 n.). —
quern: for qualem, used contemptuously of Oeon (cf. sordido
iugOf 267; tremitis ignavum exuZem, 269). Though Lycus was
a son of Neptime, he speaks of himself (338) as being of lowly
origin as compared with Megara, who was a descendant of Cadmus,
characterized in 256 as nobilis,
261. iuventus: the terrigenae, who sprang full-armed from the
earth on the sowing of the dragon's teeth by Cadmus (Ovid, M. 3.
101 ff.').
262. In the days of Cadmus, its founder, Thebes had no fortifica-
tions. Amphion charmed the stones with his music and led them
to their places, and so reared the walls (Ovid, M. 6. 178).
264. non semel: not once, but often (cf. 20) — a common litotes.
266. haec: sc. terra, from 269, antecedent of cuius in 260,
262, 264.
266. iedt: has given birth to gods ; ao f octet, 2&7 . For a different
sense of facere deos, cf. Oct. 449, where Nero says: Stulte verebor,
ipse cum faciam, deos — / shall be foolish to reverence the gods, when
I create them myself, i.e. when I can decree the deification of whom
I wiU.
267. sordido: mean, degrading, because imposed by the low-
born Lycus.
268. Ophionium genus: descendants of Ophion, one of the
terrigenae.
269. exulem: the same term is repeated in 274. It refers to
Lycus, who was a native of Euboea (cf . suis carentem finibus, 270;
Euripides, H.F. 32).
271. qui: the antecedent is Hercules, subject of servit and of
fert, 273.
272. Agreements can be determined by scansion.
273. servit: sc. Eurysthei, — quae . . . vetat: oppression (cf,
272, 249 n.).
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168 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
275. The subject of tenehit is Lycus; of the next five verbs
Hercules.
276. ad astra: not to heaven y but from the darkness of the
underworld to the light of the stars which shine on the earth (cf .
note on ad superos, 48, and Shakespeare's "glimpses of the moon/'
Hamlet, 1. 4. 53).
277. adsis: an apostrophe to the absent hero.
278. Note the alliteration and cf. Med. 360 n.
Scene 2 (w. 279-331). — Megara, the wife of Hercules, unites
with Amphitryon in bewailing the woes of their house and coun-
try and the absence of their natural defender.
280. tenebras: the darkness of Hades. — retro via: cf. 55 n.
281. orbe diducto: abl. abs., rend the earth asunder and return.
283. dirutis . . . iugis: it was a common belief that originally
the Vale of Tempe was separated from the sea by the range of
which Olympus and Ossa are peaks, and that some terrific con-
vulsion of nature cleft the barrier and so gave the Peneus River
an outlet. Here and often the change is ascribed to Hercules.
In his Naturales Quaestiones Seneca gives this (6. 25. 2): " If you
care to believe it, they say that Olympus once was attached to
Ossa, then was separated from it by an earthquake and the one
great mountain cleft in two. Then the Peneus found an outlet,
and dried up the marshes under which Thessaly had labored,
draining their water into itself." For another like exploit of
Hercules see 237 n.
284. praeceps: adverbial modifier of citato — the headlong-rushing
river. — flumini: the Peneus; so Thessalus torrens, 288.
290. terminos: object of efferens. Its meaning may be literally
the physical boimdary between the living and the dead (cf. 280-
283), or, figuratively, the limitations imposed on man's activity by
nature and precedent.
293. lucisque pavidos: cf. Cerberus' fear of the unfamiliar
light, 814. — populos: the races of dead men.
294. indigna ... est: the great labors imposed on Hercules
had usually been accompanied by incidental voluntary exploits
(see CI. Diet., artt. ''Antaeus," "Busiris," "Cacus," etc.). These
were called parerga (see note on caret, 249).
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 169
296. ilium . . . diem : object of some verb understood, perhaps
petam or exspectem (cf. Horace, S. 2. 5. 102: Unde mihi tarn fortem
tamque fidelem — Where shall I seek one so strong and so faithful P).
So here. Whence shall I seek that day on which I may clasp thee f
298. nee . . . memores: with reditus, thy return, tardy and
forgetful of me.
299. deormn ductor: Jupiter, to whom the appropriate sacrifice
was a white bull which had never been " broken *' to work {in-
domiti). — ferent colla: shaU yield their hundred throats — a
hecatomb is promised.
300. ^oigimi potens: Ceres or Demeter, goddess of growth in
nature. Her special worship was celebrated at the Attic village
of Eleusin, and came to be one of the most famous cults of an-
tiquity (see 844 n.). For many centuries it was considered a high
privilege to receive initiation into the " Eleusinian mysteries."
The revelation of any of the secrets of the initiation was visited
with vengeance of the gods (hence secreta sacra, muta fide, Eleusin
tacita; cf. sacris gaudens tacitis Eleusin, Tro. 843). Hercules had
sought initiation before setting out on his last labor.
302. longas: alluding to the great procession of torch-bearing
initiates (see 838 ff.).
303. fratribus: the sons of Creon, slain by Lycus (254 ff.).
304. ipsum: here as in 256 refers to Creon.
306. maior: greater than yourself, — te: object of tenet.
306. sequimur: to death; present for future, after the analogy
of ire.
308. Her speech ends in a wail of despair.
313. nimis: with volunt, as with metuunt in 314.
318. ad superos: as in 48.
319. quam: the antecedent is viam. — plagam: the desert; per-
haps to be compared with solis aestivi plagam, 235. In this and
the following verses are gathered a group of Hercules' adventiu-es
in or near Africa.
321. adit: perfect (cf. petit, 244 n.); the way he had when he went
through the burning desert and the sands surging like a stormy sea,
and through the sea twice ebbing and twice flowing; and when, caught
in the shoals of the Syrtes, he came to a standstill, and leaving his
vessel aground overpassed the seas on foot.
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1*?0 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
323. Sjrrtium: a famous reach of quicksands north of Africa
(Pliny, N.H. 5. 4; Vergil, A. 1. Ill, 146).
324. fixa: with puppe. — pedes: nom. sing.
330. Such in gait as he is in spirit.
Scene 3 (w. 332-523). — The t3rrant Lycus, feeling the disad-
vantage of his low origin, proposes to marry Megara, whose high
birth would add strength to his position. On her spirited refusal
he threatens her and hers with destruction.
333. All that slanting Phods bounds with its rich lands.
334. obliqua: suggested by the sinuosities of its coast. See the
map.
33t. Though master (by usurpation) of all these regions, I have
not the ancient rights of an ancestral line (patriae domus). The
same thought is continued in the next two lines.
339. tituiis: a Roman word and idea, hence an anachronism
here. — Clara virtus: / have not birth, but brilliant courage.
340. tliii . . . laudat: this idea is developed at length and illus-
trated in JuvenaPs eighth satire.
34i. rapta: poivi^lr usurped is held with if ambling hand, i.6. in
constant fear of losing it by another revolution or by assassination.
. 343. sciais: ihe "general '* second person — wh'dt you knouo you
keep against your subjects* will, the sivord protects.
345. haUt: haud. — una: with Megara — only Megara. This
plah of Lycus to strengthen himself by means of a marriage with
the Theban princess is not found in Euripides. It may he aH
invention of the Latin author, or he may haVe borrowed it from
some intervening version.
348. no vitas: probably suggested to Seneca by his familiarity
with the suspicion the Roman patricians had of any noims homo
who rose to prominence.
361. stat: my determination is fixed. — toUere: as he already
had destroyed King Creon and his sons (254-258).
352. Will th6 people* s hate and comment check the deed f
353. Cf. Oed. 703: Odia qui nimium timet regnare neBcii — h^
knows not how to reign who too much fears men*s hatred. The line
as it stands involves an unusual hiatus, but ho sure emendation
has been offered.
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 171
354. Then let me try, since chance has given me opportunity
(locum, as in Med. 160). It is at this point that he first sees
Megara, his speech thus far having been soliloquy.
356. velata: her head veiled (veiled as to her head) with the dismal
covering of her raiment, as it is not unheard of to-day for a woman
to throw her apron over her head in her grief. — praesides: pro-
tecting.
357. verussator: the usurper was very willing to think of Hercu-
les as mortal, and therefore calls Amphitryon his true father.
359. novi: partitive with quidnam. — trahens: deriving, in-
heriting.
364. The victors retain, the vanquished prepare their weapons, for
a renewal of the conflict.
365. relinquent: the futiu-e indicative in the conclusion after
the subjunctive condition represents the result as more imminent
and vivid (cf. Med. 23S-241).
366. tectis: dat. after subdita.
368. reduci: contrast this passive infinitive with the adjective
of like spelling in 209, and note the quantity of the t*. — expedit:
it is expedient.
369. regno: the rare dat. with particeps. — Teni: imperative.
371. He offers her his hand, which she refuses to touch.
372. Egone ut contingam: a question of surprise and horror,
Am I to touch that hand f (cf . egone ui recedam, Med. 893).
374. Sooner wiU the sun reverse his course/
376. And Scylla unite the Sicilian to the Italian shore, at the Strait
of Messina, where Scylla and Charybdis were supposed to lurk on
opposite sides.
378. Euripus: the strait between Euboea and the mainland of
Greece. Its waters were constantly shifting the direction of their
flow, under the influence of various winds and currents, and the
ancients had the idea that the tide there ebbed and flowed
(vidbus aUernis, 377) seven times each day (Tro. 838; H.O. 779 :
"Euripus shifts its wandering waters, and rolls up seven tides and
ebbs as often*')- Livy (28. 6. 10) gives this more rational account
of it: "The strait of Euripus does not ebb and flow, as the story
goes> seven times a day at stated horn's, but as the sea turns now in
this direction, now in that after the fashion of the wind, it hur-
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172 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
ries along like a torrent rolling down a precipitous mountain
side. Thus no rest is given vessels sailing there, either night or
day."
382. odium tui: my hate of you! appositive to res, 380. — quod
. . . doleo: Farnabius gives two suggestions as to the meaning
of this: (1) that Megara wishes the universal hatred of Lycus
might be concentrated in herself, so that her loathing of him might
be adequate; and (2) that she grieves over the oppression of her
people, which arouses them to hatred and may bring down fmrther
wrath upon them.
383. How small a part of it is mine! For quota, cf. Med. 896 n.
385. Pride goeth before destruction.
386. novi: from nosco. — quid . . . scelera: why should I name
the (Theban) matrons who have dared or suffered wrong? — Ino,
Agave, etc.
388. coniugis, nati, patris: by his marriage with Jocasta Oedipus
became his mother's husband and his own stepfather — hence
husband, son and father (cf. Oed. 1009, 1039).
389. fratrum: Eteocles and Polynices, sons of Oedipus and
Jocasta. Polynices, deprived of his rights by his brother, returned
with the hosts of the "seven against Thebes" (bina contra). When
all the other leaders were slain the war was ended by a single com-
bat between the two brothers, in which each killed the other.
Their mutual hatred was so implacable that when their bodies were
laid on the pjrre for burning the very flames parted, and consumed
the bodies separately (totidem rogos) ; cf. Statins, Theb. 12. 429 ff.:
" Behold, the brothers again I When the devouring flame touched
their bodies the pile quivered and the newcomer was thrust from
the pyre. The flames siu-ged with divided crest."
390. riget . . . Tantalis: Niobe, daughter of Tantalus and wife
of Amphion, tauntingly contrasted her family of seven sons and
seven daughters (cf. Med. 954-956 n.) with Latona's two, Apollo
and Diana. To avenge the insult to his mother Apollo with his
arrows shot to death all the children of Niobe, and she in her
grief hardened (riget) into a rock down whose face trickled (ma-
nat) " tears " of spring water (Ovid, M. 6. 301-312). Mt. Sipylus in
Phrygia, presenting from one point of view the rude outline of a
woman's form, used to be pointed out as the petrified Niobe.
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 173
392-394. Cadmus finally left the Thebes which he had founded,
became king of Illjrricum, and at last both he and his wife Har-
monia were transformed into serpents (Ovid, M. 4. 563-603).
394. notas: the mark of a serpent's body dragged on the ground.
396. haec . . . exempla: these instances, and hence the fate
they illustrate, will befall you, like all the other kings of Thebes. —
dominare . . . vocent: lord it as you will, till the wonted fate of
our kingdom overtakes you.
397-398. rabida: voc; come, now, mad woman, learn submission
from your husband, Hercules, who is and has been the slave of
Eurystheus (430, 432).
399. Though I wield a scepter seized by a victor's hand, and
govern ail things without fear of the laws, which force overcomes, I
will say a few words for my own cause. — victrici: abl., in agree-
ment with manu, which is implied in dextra.
402. He claims that Creon and his sons fell in battle.
406. sed: for at, introducing an anticipated objection to his
reasoning. — ille: pater, 402. Creon, of course, is meant. Supply
the proper forms of pugnare with ille and nos.
407. quaeritur . . . causa: the issue of a war is asked, not its
justice, a bit of specious argiunent not without its illustrations in
history, ancient and modem.
409. et: also, introducing the main clause.
411. petimus: / do not demand that you do homage to me on
bended knee as your sovereign. — hoc: explained by the clause quod
capis, in apposition.
413. exangues: for exsangues (cf. exerunt, 11 n.).
418. thalamos tremesco: / do shudder at the thought of marriage.
420. mors . . . lenta: a lingering death. The subjunctives in
gravent and protrahatur are concessive in effect (cf. Med. 417).
421. Alcide: voc. She apostrophizes the absent Hercules, who
is referred to also in coniunx, next line.
423. supera: the reference here is not, as in 48, to the earth's
surface as contrasted with the infernal world, but to the heavens
above, which he was to reach through his promised apotheosis
(cf. 23, 122, etc.). For the antithesis of infema and supera, cf.
note on summa, 64.
426. qui caelum tulit: cf. 70 n.
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174 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
426. cogfire: future, as is moriere, 429.
427. quod . . . parem: indirect question; parent is from
parare,
429. coniugi: Hercules, who though living was already in the
world of the dead. The thought is, if, as you say, I am to die, I shaU
simply he going to rejoin my husband.
430. sceptro: abl. after the comparative. — famulus: Lycus
dwells persistently on Hercules' subjection to Eurystheus as the
only counterpoise to his own inferiority of birth (398, 432, 450). —
potior: more to be desired.
431. iste: that slave, as you call him. Note the accurate refer-
ence of iste, the "demonstrative of the second person."
432. ergo: the short o is rare in the later poets. — regi: Eurys-
theus.
433. Here we meet a case of parataxis — two co5rdinate clauses
to convey a thought more usually expressed by a complex sentence.
The imperative suggests a condition of which quid . . . erit is
the conclusion — take away the harsh commands, and where wUl be
the valor f
434. Do you suppose that valor is wasted upon (lit. thrown away
upon) wild animals and monsters f The implication is that the
hero's conquests over inferior animals were less glorious than vic-
tories won in war.
436. Virtutis: predicate gen. — His valor's part.
436. loquentem magna: boaster, braggart. — magna: cognate
ace. (cf. dulce rideritem, dulce loquentem, Horace, C. 1. 22. 23;
Catullus, 51. 5). — premunt: cf. premit, 424.
438. quo patre: cf. 36, 118, 122, 357 n. — domos: mansions.
Here the dialogue between Lycus and Megara is interrupted by
the aged Amphitryon, who claims the right to speak for his house
(partes meae sunt).
442. post pacattun: after the conquest by his hand of whatever the
risen and the sinking sun beholds. Pacatum agrees with the ante-
cedent of quodcumque. — memoranda: memorable.
444. Phlegram: one of the three parallel peninsulas on the coast
of Macedonia. Its later name was Pallene (979). This was the
scene of the battle between the giants and the gods, in which Hercu-
les supported the latter (defensos deos, 445; cf. 81 n.).
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 175
446. mentiinur: do we falsely claim Jove as his sire f Why
then does Juno hate him so ?
449. ista causa: that condition {of servitude, ^ee famuli, 450, and
cf. 430) which you are harping on is common to many gods, i.e.
many have been in the same position. Observe again the force of
ista, referring the idea to the person addressed (cf. 431 n.).
451. pastor . . . Delius: Apollo, who as punishment for having
slain the Cyclopes was required to tend the flocks of Admetus,
king of Pherae {Pheraeos greges) for a year.
463. pfofuga: nom. with mater. — terra errante: see note on 15.
455. imbuit: stained with blood. — draco: the python at Delphi.
460. Having been answered in every attempt to show that the
career of Hercules had been inconsistent with divinity, Lycus re-
minds Amphitryon of the misfortunes that had pursued him from
his very infancy (cf. 213 ff. and note). In reply the elder shows
that Bacchus and even Jove himself had suffered similar trials.
The subject of tulerit, of course, is Hercules.
45Y. puer: Bacchus. His mother Semele, daughter of Cadmus,
beguiled by Juno, desired that Jove should visit her as he visited
his sister-wife; but when he did appear to her in the midst of thun-
derings and lightning flashes she perished of fright. The child
. Was dared for by Ino, his mother's sister, and afterward by the
nymphs at Nysa, whence he Was called Dionysus. In Med. 84
Bacchus is called proles fulminis improhi.
460. itifaiis: Jupiter, who was hidden in his infancy from his
father Saturn in a cave near the Cretan Mt» Ida.
461. tanti . . . natales: such high birth.
462. It has ever been costly to be born a god. — magno: abl. of
price (see note on Med. 603).
466. leo: the lioyi's skin: As atonement fof having killed
Iphitus, son of Eurytus (see 477 n.), Hercules bound himself for
three years as a servant to Omphale, queen of Lydia. She took
from him and wore herself the lion's skin (hence donum puellae
foetus), while he was clad in soft raiment (veste Sidonia, 467) and
spim among her maids (cf. Phaed. 317 ff.: "The son of Alcmena
laid aside his quiver and the menacing hide of the huge lion . . .
and with his hand, in which but now he had carried the club, he
drew out the threads as the shuttle flew"). The verses that follow
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176 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
here describe the effeminacy of the hero's habit at that time.
Amphitryon in his rejoinder (472-476) points out the fact that
Bacchus, whose divinity was not questioned, had indulged in the
very same luxuries which Lycus had cited as evidence of Hercules'
unworthiness.
470. non: with virUem — unmasculine, effeminate.
471. barbara: not Greek (cf. Med. 612 n.).
473. sparsisse: to have sprinkled his flowing locks with perfume.
474. thjrrsum: the thjrrsus was the wand and weapon of Bacchus
and the bacchantes. It was a rod ornamented with leaves of the
grape or ivy, and is supposed to have been originally a spear with
its point thus concealed (cf. 904, bearing a spearpoint covered with
the green thyrsus). Vibrare thyrsum is to wave or brandish the
thyrsus. — parum forti: not the bold, free step of a warrior, but
the languid movement of a debauchee.
475. barbarico: outlandish (cf. barbara, 471 n.).
477. Euryti . . . eversi: Eurytus was a king of Oechalia who
refused his daughter lole to Hercules after the latter had fulfilled
the conditions imposed, and who was slain by him, with all his
house. — Hoc fatetur: a sarcastic indorsement of Amphitryon's
last statement, that valor must be relaxed.
478. pecorum ritu: like the beasts of the field. — virginum greges:
the fifty daughters of Thespius, king of Thespiae, all of whom were
given to Hercules.
480. ipsius: sc. Herculis. Note the sneer — no Juno, no Eurys-
theus imposed this task; these are labors of his own.
482. Eryx: a son of Butes and Venus, who challenged all comers
to fight with the caestus (at boxing). Hercules on his way home
with the cattle of Geryon accepted the challenge and in the fight
killed Erjrx suis caestibus — that is, with the weapons of Eryx's
own choosing. His name was given to a mountain in western
Sicily, made famous afterward by Hamilcar's defense in the first
Punic war (Med. 707 n.). — Antaeus: an African (Libys) giant,
invincible as long as he was in contact with his mother^ earth.
Hercules wrestled with him and overcame and killed him by lift-
ing him up and strangling him.
483. qui: in agreement with its antecedent foci, here incor-
porated in the relative clause. — hospitali caede: Busiris, to insure
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 177
good harvests, offered on the altar of Jupiter all strangers who
entered Egypt. Hercules, visiting there, was about to be sacri-
ficed when he burst his bonds and laid the king on his own altar
(iustum sanguinem).
484. bib€re: perfect, with gwi /oci as subject. — iustum: justly
486. Cycnus: our author here confuses two mythical characters
of this name. The first was a son of Mars and was killed by
Hercules with a spear; while the second was a son of Neptune,
slain at the siege of Troy by Achilles (Tro. 183; Ag. 215). It
was the second who was invulnerable (vulneri . . . invius, 485),
and Achilles was obliged to strangle him (hence integer, un-
wounded; see Ovid, M. 12. 72-145 for the story in detail).
487. Nee unus: Geryon had three bodies (pastor triformis, 232).
— una . . . manu: single-handed.
488. eris inter istos: you will share their fate. — tamen: yet they
were less guilty, for they never assailed his honor, as you are
doing.
489. quod lovi: sc. licet.
490. You gave your wife (Alcmena) up to Jove, he (Hercules)
shall give up his to a king (Lycus).
491. hoc: explained by the infinitive clause meliorem sequi,
appositive to it. — nurus: Megara.
493. taedis: in lawful wedlock.
496. Labdaci: a Theban king, father of Laius. An evil fate
pursued the whole line, culminating in the incestuous marriage,
blindness and death of Oedipus (388 n.).
496. Oedipodae: an a- declension form for the more regular
Oedipodis (Oed. 943).
498. nurfis: the daughters of Danaus, who slew their husbands
(Med. 749 n.).
499. mantis: ace. of specification.
600. dest: for deest (cf. derat, 832). — una: one of the fifty
Danaides, Hypemmestra, had spared her husband. Megara
determines, in case of being forced into a marriage with Lycus, to
take his life and so qualify herself to take her place with the
guilty forty-nine (cf. H.O. 948: Va^at una Danais, has ego
explebo vices — one of the Danaides is missing; I will fill her place.
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178 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
502. terres: attempt to terrify by your threat — conative use of
present.
603. complectere: said tauntingly as he sees Megara lay her
hand upon the altar, claiming the right of asylum.
604. nee: not even. — remolito: a passive use of the participle
from the deponent remoUor. In Tro. 682 the simple verb has its
regular active force, molire terras — force open the earth.
606. congerite silvas: said to his attendants. For the phrase
cf. congeriem sUvae in Ovid's account of Hercules' cremation on
Oeta (M. 9. 235), and nemore congesto, 1216. — templa: though
pliu-al (so in 521, 616, etc.) this refers to the one temple in which
she was seeking to take refuge with her children. Let the temple
be cast down upon its suppliant worshipers, and let one pyre, with
fire applied, consume his (HerctUes^) wife and children. — gregem:
the children.
609. genitor Alcidae: appositive to the subject of peto. Hoc
munus anticipates the clause ut . . . cadam.
512. diversa inroga: impose various penalties — forbid the wretched
man to die, but compel the happy man. These imperatives are in
the "general" second person and are used to enunciate the policy
of a t3rrant.
613. While the pyre is being buiU by my servants I will pay to
Neptune the offerings I vowed for the success of my war against
Creon. — trabibus: abl. of means or of material. Lycus had
appealed for success to Neptune, his own father, as larbas prayed
to Jupiter Hammon (Vergil, A. 4. 205 flf.), and as Hercules does
to his father in 914 ff.
616. pro: the interjection, often spelled proh (cf. O-and oh).
618. telis: the thunderbolts.
520. nate: Hercules, Why do I make vain appeal to the gods?
Wherever thou art, hear thou, my son! — cur: he hears the sound
of Hercules' approach. — mugit solum: an expression often used
to describe the sounds attending the coming of one from the lower
world (cf. terra mugitu fremens, Tro. 171; sub pedibv^ mugire
solum, Vergil, A. 6. 256).
Scene 4 (w. 524-591). — The chorus recounts the deeds of
Hercules, recalls the return of Orpheus from the land of shadows,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 179
and expresses the hope that Hercules also will come back. The
measure is the minor asclepiadean.
626. quam non aequa . . . praemia: what unequal favors.
628. caeliferam manum: the hand that bore the heavens (cf.
70 n.; 425). Vergil (A. 6. 796) applies the same epithet to
Atlas.
629. serpentis: the hydra. — coila feracia: see 241 n.
630. m&la: apples (Greek nijXd). — sororibus: the Hesperides
(240).
633. multivagas: nomadic (cf. vagi passim Scythae, Thy. 631).
634. patriis . . . hospitas: strangers to the homes of their fathers.
For hospita see Harper's Dictionary imder hospes, II. D. jS. The
statement imder hospitus in the same dictionary that "only the
form hospita, fern. sing, and neut. plu., occurs," is manifestly in-
correct.
636. terga rigentia: the frozen surface. The adjectives in the
next two lines, muiis, taciturn, dura, also express effects of the
intense cold. With this description cf. Ovid, T. 3. 10: Quaque rates
ierant, pedibus nunc itur, et undas \ frigore concretas ungvla pvlsat
equi; . . . durum calcavimus aequor — where vessels had gone we
now go afoot, and the horse's hoof pounds the waters made solid by
the cold;.. . . I have walked on the hardened sea.
639. intonsis: unshorn, hence uncivilized, barbarous. The
Romans of the late republican and imperial days as a rule were
smooth-shaven — though Seneca himself wore a beard — and
often spoke of their forefathers by contrast as intonsi (Ovid, F. 2.
30). The elder Pliny (N.H. 7. 59. 211) says that " Barbers came to
Rome in the year of the city 454 (300 b.c), and before that the
Romans were intonsi.^' It is a Roman idea unconsciously assigned
by the author to a Greek chorus. — semita : a footpath across the
frozen sea (541).
640. vicibus mobilis: changing with the seasons.
641. facilis pati: easily able to bear now the ship, now the horse--
man. For the construction of pati cf. facilis perrumpi, Tac. H.
4. 39; audax ire, 548.
642. quae . . . imperat: Hippolyte, queen of the Amazons
{d. 245 n.).
Digitized by VjOOQIC
180 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
644. spolium nobile: the far-famed spoil — the girdle (Jbalteo,
543) of Hippolyte, given her by Mars on account of her surpassing
bravery. When a Roman leader killed his foe in battle he would
strip off the dead man's armor and carry it home in triumph as
apolia opima (48 n.). Our author here employs the same term,
though in the singular, to designate the prize taken by Hercules
from a woman.
646. Looking up, on bended knee, to her conqueror.
647. praecipites: the epithet is transferred from the road
(cf. 675 flf.) that must be traveled to the travelers themselves, the
spirits of the dead.
648. vias: cognate object with ire. — irremeabiles: cf. Vergil,
A. 6. 126 flf. : Facilis descensus Avemi; sed revocare gradum super-
asque evader e auras f hoc opus, hie labor est. — audax ire: cf. av4ax
perpeti, Horace, C. 1. 3. 25.
649. vidisti: the subject is Hercules, here apostrophized. —
Siculae: so called because stolen from Sicily by Pluto (Ovid,
M. 5. 385 ff.).
660. There is no breeze; the air, like all else in that world of
the dead, is sluggish and heavy (cf . 703). — Note: not the participle
of nosco.
662. geminum Tyndaridae genus: a favorite arrangement of
appositives in Seneca (cf. fortis armiferi cohors, Med. 980; turba
captivae mea, Tro. 63). Sidera is another appositive. For the
meaning of 553 see 14 n. ; Horace, C. 1. 3. 2.
664. pelagus: the St3rx. — nigro: cf. note on airum, 59. —
languidum: see note on 550 and for the adjective cf. languido
jiumine, Horace, C. 2. 14. 17.
666. Mors pallida: Horace uses the same phrase (C. 1. 4. 13).
666. manibus: dat. Note the quantity of a. — innumeras:
Vergil (A. 6. 706) has innumerae gentes.
667. remige: Charon (Vergil, A. 6. 298-304).
668. that thou mayst overcome the laws of the cruel Styx and
the irreversible spinning of the Fates. The reference is to the
thread of life, whose length was determined by the Fates with no
possibility of appeal.
660. hie: Pluto. This incident is mentioned by Apollodorus
(2. 7. 3. 1), who says that Hercules woimded Hades (Pluto) as the
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 181
latter was bearing aid to the Pylians. Homer (II. 5. 395) tells
us the god was wounded by the arrows of Hercules if tiJXv,
which some have interpreted as meaning not at the city of Pylos
but in the gateway of Inferno. — populis pluribus: cf. 556.
662. ConseruU manus is common enough in the sense joined
battle ; the novel thing here is the adjective with manus, making it
loathsome hatUe.
663. tergemina cuspide: abl. of quality. The trident properly
belonged to Neptune {triplice cuspide, Ovid, M. 12. 594).
667. prospectus . . . lucis: a view of the light.
672-^74. Cf. Med. 625-629.
676. non solitis: unwonted.
57B. surdis: silent (lit. deaf; cf. the double sense of caecus).
BTf. Threiciae: the reading is doubtful and the sense obscure.
Famabius suggests that the souls of Thracian women, Eurydice's
neighbors, are meant.
678. lacrimis: dat. with difficiles (cf. diffUnlem precihus,
Ovid, Ex Ponto, 2. 2. 20). The whole expression is not very differ-
ent from Horace^s iUacrimabilem Plutona (C. 2, 14. 6). — del: Pluto
and Proserpina, of course.
679. qui: relating to iuridici, 581. — nimis: with tetrica, the
phrase meaning with brow too stem.
680. Cf. 727-729; Vergil, A. 6. 567-569.
681. Eurydicen: ace. sing. (Greek), object of flentes. — iuridici:
Minos, Rhadamanthus and Aeacus.
682. mortis . . . arbiter: Pluto.
683. lege: condition.
684. 686. tu, tu: Eurydice, Orpheus. = — ante: the adverb,
followed by quam in 586.
686. decs: the heavens, with the divinities of the sun, moon and
stars.
687. Taenari: the Greeks placed the entrance to the lower
world at Taenarus, a promontory in Laconia (cf. 663), as the
Romans did near Cimiae (Vergil, A. 6. 441-460).
689. perdidit: Orpheus did look back as they neared the en-
trance, and so lost the wife he had regained.
691. viribus: the strength of Hercules; what a mere song could
accomplish, his power can surely do.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
182 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
ACT III
Scene 1 (w. 592-617). — Hercules enters, rejoicing at his
escape from the horrors of the underworld.
692. rector, decus: the sun-god, Phoebus (595).
503. altema . . . spatia: above the earth by day, beneath U at
night.
594. ezeris: exseris (see 11 n.).
696. si . . . videre: if thine eyes have seen aught that is not
permitted. The eyes of the sun were supposed to see all that is on
earth, but never to penetrate the realm of Pluto. The reference
here is to Cerberus, whom the speaker had brought with him
from below (cf. 60-63, 813-827, and arcana mundi, 597).
596. iussus: \mder orders (cf. iusso, Med. 669 n.).
598. parens: Jupiter. — visus . . .-tege: veil thine eyes behind
a thunderbolt.
69a. Neptune (cf. 53 n.).
600. imas . . . undas: hide in deepest ocean to escape this
sight. — quisquis ex alto: whoever from on high looks upon the
things of earth, let him, fearing to be defiled by this strange sight,
turn back his gaze.
604. qui, quae: Hercules and Juno, respectively.
606. non . . . patent: Juno's own words (46).
607. ignota Phoebo: cf. 595 n. — quae . . . lovi: dark regions
which a lower heaven has yielded to a grim Jove. The comparison
of the infernal king with the king of heaven is a common one
(cf . inferni lovis, 47 n. ; nigri lovis, H.O. 1705 ; lovi Stygio, Vergil,
A. 4. 638).
609. tertiae sortis: see 53 n., 833. — placerent: sc. mihi.
612. redi: for redii.
614. Just returned from his greatest labor the speaker challenges
his persecutor: if there is any task greater than this, impose it, and
adds, ironically, you have let my hands rest idle too long, Juno
(cf. 208).
616. He sees the imwonted condition of things and takes
alarm.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 183
Scene 2 (w. 618-640). — Hercules leams from Amphitryon
what has happened and leaves the stage in search of Lycns.
618. vota: desires (cf. quod . . . credunt, 313).
620. That sUent abode, with its dismal atmosphere — Hades.
622. sera: because he had not returned in time to save Creon
and his sons,
623. editum: sc. ^e. — vana umbra: empty apparition.
626. trunco: the great club, cut in the Nemean wood.
626. squalor: mournful sight. — lugubribus: mourning garb.
630. leto: dat. of end or purpose.
633. defensus orbis: cf. orbe defenso, 249; ingrata telluSj 631. —
tero: why do I waste the day in idle lamentation f
634. Hercules' contempt for Lycus is shown in several strokes
here. He calls him not hostis, but hostia, helpless victim; notam
suggests that he considers it a shameful thing to deal with such
a foe; and the sentence ends with their two names in anti-
climax — Alcidae Lycus — let this victim be offered up, let my
valor accept this mark of shame, and let the last and greatest foe
of Hercules be — Lycus!
637. Theseu: voc. Euripides does not introduce Theseus till
near the close of his tragedy (v. 1154), after the madness of
Hercules has passed away. — resiste: in its literal sense, stand
back, stay here, and the reason is added, lest any sudden violence
assail my wife and children.
638. me: emphatic; His I the war demands. — differ: postpone.
639. nuntiet Diti: a common figure in such threats (cf. 988:
This hand will restore you to your hated father, who was dead;
Vergil, A. 2. 547-549: " You shall be my messenger to my dead
father . . . now die ")•
Scene 3 (w. 640-829). — Theseus, at the request of Amphi-
tryon, gives an account of the lower world and the capture of
Cerberus.
640. fug&: imperative — drive that m^ournful look from your eyes.
641. regina: Megara. — tu: Amphitryon.
644. dabit: subject of est, with lervtum as predicate. Though
not yet accomplished the deed is so certain that Theseus is not
Digitized by VjOOQIC
184 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
satisfied to say it will be done, or even that it is doing— It has been
done.
646. May the yod who can second our desire and favor our fallen
estate.
647. virtutum: his valorous deeds, abstract for concrete.
648. 649. Indirect question clauses, how long a road leads down
and how (tU) Cerberus bore his bonds.
650. securae . . . menti: dreadful even to a mind at ease.
Theseus long before this time had aided his friend iPirithous in an
attempt to cany off Proserpina, but they had been detected and
placed by Pluto on an enchanted rock from which they could not
stir. Hercules on his visit to the underworld released Theseus,
but could not do the same for Pirithous. Theseus here represents
his escape as too recent to enable him to contemplate the afifair
calmly.
666. fructu Optimo: do not cheat yourself out of the best fruit of
your sufferings, the recalling of them. With this passage to
dulce est cf. Vergil, A. 1. 203: forsan et haec olim meminisse
iuvabit.
668. Fas omne: here almost in the sense of numen, divinity
(cf, audiatfas, Livy 1. 32. 6). — te: Pluto.
669. regno: dat. after dominantem. — te: Proserpina. —
amotam: carried away by Pluto. — inrita: nom. with mater;
translate vainly sought. The Latin often uses an adjective with
the subject where we should use an adverb.
660. Enna: abl. of place from which. Enna was the chief seat
of the worship of Ceres in Sicily, and it was near there that her
daughter Proserpina was seized and carried off by Pluto (Ovid,
M. 5. 385-401). The mother sought far and wide and finally
learned from the tale of Arethusa where her daughter was (Ovid,
M. 5. 504). — ut liceat: cf. Vergil's prayer, A. 6. 264-267.
663. Taenarus: see note on 587. — premit: borders dose upon
the sea.
664. ora solvit: opens its jaws, affords an entrance. This
expression together with Mat, vorago and faudhv^ in the following
lines represents the imseen world as a voracious monster eager to
devour the nations (jpopulis). — invisi: "AtJiys, unseen; to be dis-
tinguished from the participle met in 824.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 185
668. Cf. Vergil, A. 6. 268-272, where the light is described
as like that of the moon half hidden by the clouds.
671. ludit aciem: mocks the sight. — nocte sic mixta: the night
thiLS mingled with the day — twilight (cf. gemini temporis, Med. 71).
672. primus . . . dies: dawn or evening.
676. See 548 n.
677. pronus aer: downward current. — avidum: see 664 n.
679. umbrae: shadows or shadowy regions, not shades of the
dead. — tenaces: unwilling to yield up what has come into their
embrace. — inmiensi sinus: gen. of quality, of measureless
sweep (cf. Tro. 178 n.).
680. With the cumulative idea in placido, quieta, labitur, cf . 762
and Vergil's a^quora tuta silent, A. 1. 168. For Lethe and its
function cf. Vergil, A. 6. 703-715, 749-751.
682. gravem . . . amnem: winds its sluggish stream.
684. Maeander: the well-known stream in Asia Minor, famous
for its winding com*se and taken by classic writers as the type of
sinuosity (Strabo, 577). — cedit sibi: makes way for itself, one
bend appearing to have no other purpose than to leave space for
another within it.
687. For the horrors of the entrance to Hades cf . Vergil, A. 6. 273-
289, where many of the personified ills here named {Sopor, Fames,
MetviS, LuctviS, Morbus, Bellum, Senectu^), together with others
(Curae, Egestas, Letum, Labor), and various mythological mon-
sters, such as the centaurs, Scylla, the hydra, the chimaera, the
gorgons and the harpies, are given. — vultur: repulsive, as being
a carrion bird. — bubo: the horned owl, whose presence was of evil
omen (Pliny, N.H. 10. 16; cf. Vergil, A. 4. 462, ferali carmine bubo).
Both the bubo and the strix (688) were associated with the lower
world and the powers of darkness, and were addressed in incanta-
tions (Med. 733; Ovid, M. 7. 269).
689. opaca, nigrantes: note how the idea of darkness is dwelt
upon and reiterated in this scene and the following chorus. We
meet furvus (693), ater (694), obscurus (709), caligo (710), um-
brante (718), caecos (834), nigra (836), noctem (856). — comae:
the foliage, as often.
690. Cf. Vergil's elm, with a dream imder every leaf (A. 6.
283).
Digitized by VjOOQIC
186 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
691. tabido rictu: with starving mouth agape.
692. serus: because the virtue should have been practiced in
Ufe and not left till after death (cf . Vergil, A. 6. 569).
697. Cereris aut Bacchi: grain or vrine. Lucretius (R.N. 2.
652 flf.), in protesting against the superstitious belief of men in the
gods, says: " If one has determined to call the sea Neptune and
grain Ceres, and prefers to misuse the name of Bacchus rather than
to utter the appropriate word ' wine,' let us grant him the privi-
lege*, provided he refrains in fact from defiling his mind with base
superstition.''
699. Zephyro: in 550 the absence of wind is noted, here the
want of both wind and fields of grain (cf. 704). Note the aptness
of the verb fluctuat.
702. situ: probably with suggestion of a twofold thought —
repulsive in appearance, and abhorrent for its uselessness (Harper's
Diet. s.v. II. A. 1; II. B. 1.).
708. leves: incorporeal (cf. Vergil, A. 6. 292). Of course iUe qui
regit is Pluto.
712. quieto: sc. loJtid — like a stream asleep. — hunc iurant del:
the only oath that was binding on the gods above was one sworn by
the Styx (Vergil, A. 6. 324); hence sacram Styga.
714. hie: for alter, correlative with alter in 712; agrees with
Acheron.
716. renavigari: an instance of the rare complementary in-
finitive with invius. — duplici vado: with double moat. — adversa:
turned toward, i.e. facing those who approached.
719. hoc . . . iter: this is the road for the spirits.
721. digerit: separates, appoints each to his place.
722. recentes: newly come (cf. recens Dido, Vergil, A. 6. 450). —
dira maiestas del: Claudian (de Raptu Proserpinae, 1. 79-83) thus
describes Pluto : Ipse rudi fuUus solio nigraque verendus maiestate
sedet; squalent immaniafoedo sceptra situ, sublime caput maestissima
nubes asperat et dirae riget inclem^ntia formae; terrorem dolor
augebat — Pluto himself sits supported on a rude throne, a being to be
feared for his dark dignity; his enormous scepter is covered with ford
grime, a gloomy cloud adds fierceness to his lofty head, and the stern-
ness of his grim form is unchanging; his own gloomy expression
augments the terror he inspires.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 187
723. fratrum: Jupiter and Neptune. — quae . . . gerat: a
characteristic clause modifying frons.
726. fulminantis: hehaa the face of Jove — bvi Jove when hurling
his thunderbolts, i.e. Jove in anger.
726. aspect&s: ace. plu.
727. quidquid timetur: the monsters of Inferno.
728. reddi iura: their dues are awarded, rewards to the pious,
punishment to the guilty (cf. Vergil, A. 6. 566-627, especially 567-
732. sera: tardy , not following immediately upon the sin (cf.
728 n.). — sortitur: allots.
738. foro: a Roman word and idea (cf. titiUis, 339). As the
Roman courts were about the forum (hence " forensic *') it is a
natural word for Seneca to use. — illo, illo, hoc: this, that, the
other. The three judges here named were traditional.
734. Thetidis socer: Aeacus, father of the Peleus who married
Thetis, the goddess of the sea, and became father of Achilles.
736. quod . . . patitur: what each has done he suffers (Vergil,
A. 6. 743 : quisque suos manes patimur — we suffer each his penalty) ;
the doctrine of stern retribution, retaliation, " eye for eye, tooth
for tooth." — auctorem . . . repetit: cf. our proverb, "Curses
are like young chickens, and still come home to roost."
738. terga . . . tyranni: the back of a tyrant scourged by a
plebeian hand in retaliation for oppression.
740. innocuas: predicate, has kept his hands free of guUt.
741. imperium: cognate — wields power without bloodshed.
742. animo parcit: spares his own soul, guards it from the con-
tamination of wrong doing. Another reading here is animae,
spares life.
743. caelum petit: is deified, like Bacchus, Castor and Pollux,
etc.
746. futurus iudez: like Minos, Aeacus and Rhadamanthus,
all of whom had hved on earth. — sanguine . . . vestra: abstain
from bloodshed, ye who reign; your sins are judged more sternly than
those of men in humbler station.
760 ff. These are the stock examples of punishment in the after
life, and are repeated over and over by the poets {e.g. Med. 744-
749; Oct. 619-623; H.O. 942-948, 1068-1078; Vergil, A. 6.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
188 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
595 flP., etc.), and to them Theseus now adds the names of Theban
women who had sinned — Agave, Ino and Autonog — and also
Phineus, a brother of Cadmus, the founder of Thebes.
760. rapitur: emphatic from its position — it is true that Ixion is
whirled, etc.; so praebet, 756.
762. senez: Tantalus.
764. decepto: dat. — when it has held out its promise (of drink)
to him, already often disappointed.
766. aeternas dapes: his liver, which grew as fast as it was con-
sumed by the vulture (cf. viscere feto, Med. 822; fecundum iecur,
Ag. 18; fibris renatis, Vergil, A. 6. 600).
768. Cadmeides: Agave, Autonoe and Ino, daughters of Cad-
mus. When the worship of Bacchus was introduced they became
his devotees, and when Pentheus, son of Agave and king of Thebes,
opposed the new cult they tore him to pieces in their frenzy (Ovid,
M.S. 511-733). Here they are represented as wandering forever
in their madness in the other world.
769. avis: the harpy (Vergil, A. 3. 210-218). — mensas Phineas:
the table of Phineus, whose food the harpies either stole or
defiled.
761. patrui: Pluto, as the brother of Jove, of course was pairuus
to Hercules. It is noteworthy that Amphitryon in 760 says nati
mei, and in the very next line calls Hercules the nephew of Pluto and
so the son of Jove. Like inconsistencies are common throughout
the play. — volentis: Amphitryon assumes that Hercules has been
successful, and asks only whether he received the dog as a willing
gift of his uncle or had to take it by force as from an enemy in
war (spolium).
762. Note the cumulative effect of tardis, stupent, segne, torpescit,
and cf . 680 n. .
766. vectat: frequentative. — senex: Charon (Vergil. A. 6.
298-304).
767. nodus: a knot confines, his iU-fiUing tunic. — squalent:
are rough, unshaven, shaggy. The reading is doubtful, and for
squalent various editors have conjectured lurent, lucent or fulgent.
769. onere: abl. of separation with vacuam.
770. poscit . . . turba: Hercules cries out, " Make way f " as
the throng of spirits falls back before him.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 189
776. cumba . . . bibit: The boat had carried whole nations of
disembodied spirits, but the fleshly body of one man was too heavy
for it (cf. Vergil, A. 6. 413). Our author has followed Vergil in
many details throughout this description.
777. Lethen: here confused with the Styx (see also 680), from
which Vergil is careful to distinguish it (A. 6. 323, 705).
779. Lapithae: a rude Thessalian people. At the marriage of
their king Pirithous with Hippodamia some of the centaurs present,
being heated with wine, tried to carry off the bride, and a fierce
battle ensued (Ovid, M. 12. 210 flf.). Here the shades of both
parties are pictured as trembling at sight of Hercules, who often
had defeated the centaurs. Cf. the terror of the ghosts of the
Greeks at seeing their old foe Aeneas (Vergil, A. 6. 489-493).
781. fecunda . . . capita: cf. coUa feracia^ 529; numerosum
malum, 241. — Lemaeus labor: the hydra, whose ghost now, at
sight of its conqueror, flees to the farthest pools of the Stjrx.
782. avari: so called because he keeps the precious metals close
in the earth. Cf. the Greek name IIXoiJtwi', Pluto, " rich,'* and
the Latin DiSy Dives , which has the same meaning. Cicero (N.D.
2. 26. 66) says, " He is called Dives, among the Greeks Pluto,
because all things fall to the earth and spring from the earth."
Possibly allusion is made in avari to the fact that none of the dead
who came under his sway were released.
783. territat: frequentative (cf. 765). — canis: Cerberus.
With the line cf. Vergil's ingena ianitor . . . terreat umbras
(A. 6. 400). Like the Furies and the Gorgons he had live serpents
for hair (786).
791. sentire et umbras: toont to hear even the shades.
794. muta: any one who has visited a great cavern, like those
found for example in the Ohio valley, can appreciate the stress
laid upon the two features of darkness and silence by the poets
who try to describe the underworld.
796. per armos: aU over his shoulders , the serpents in his mane
{iuhaey 786).
796. felices quoque: even the blest, who had no need to fear him.
798. ipse: Hercules. — rictus: ace, lit. the open jaws of the
lion, whose hide and head he wore as a shield on his left arm
(a laeva, 797; cf. 1150). — Cleonaeum: Nemean.
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190 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
799. tegmine: cf. tegimen, 1161, the lion's hide, which was
impenetrable.
800. robur: the club (cf. trunco, 625; clava, 1024; tela, 1153).
802. domitus: with canis, subject of the next three verbs. In
the preceding sentence the subject was Hercules.
806. uterque . . . dominus: Pluto and Proserpina. — duel:
sc. canem — bade him take the dog.
806. me: cf. 650 n. — munus: appositive to me. According to
Apollodorus (2. 5. 12. 6) Hercules released Theseus without Pluto's
permission, and was deterred only by an earthquake from freeing
Pirithous in the same manner.
808. vincit: from vincire, not vincere.
809. Note the alternation of the words in agreement.
812. Cauda . . . anguifera: quantities determine the case.
818. Taenari: the gateway of Hades (663 n.).
814. oculOd: sc. canis.
818. respexit: looked to me for aid.
821. orbi: for orbi terrarum (Med. 5), here the earth's surface as
distinguished from the underworld.
824. invisum: hated. For the other invieits see 664.
826. petit: perfect. — omul . . . cervice: d.ore&ummiado,Sll,
827. umbras: Hercules' shadow, the old "plural of preemi-
nence." — venit: present. Theseus has finished his narrative
and now sees the throng of jubilant Thebans approaching.
SoBNB 4 (w. 830-894). — Thinking of the scene of the hero's
latest exploit the chorus is led to sing of the countless number of
the dead and to pray for long life on earth; and then celebrates
the return of peace and happiness under the rule of Hercules.
The measure to 874 is the sapphic, from there to the end gly conic.
830. properante partu: through the agency of Juno as Lucina
the birth of Eurystheus had been hastened and that of Hercules
retarded in order that the former might be the senior and so mas-
ter of the other.
832. derat: for deer at, a common contraction (cf. dest, 500)*
833. tertiae . . . sortis: see 53 n.; 609.
834. caecos aditus: dark entrance. With the double meaning of
caecum, blind and dark, cf. surdis locis, 576 n.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 191
836. nigra . . . silva: abl., giving the cause of metuenda.
Both metuenda and frequens modify via.
838-847. The crowds thronging to the games of the amphi-
theater (quantus popiUus, 838), to the Olympic games (qiLantus,
840), and to the celebration of the Eleusinian mysteries (quanta
. . . turba, 842), are used by the poet to convey to the minds
of his (Roman) readers some idea of the multitudes of spirits con-
stantly traveling the road to Pluto's domain. All this is in illus-
tration oi frequens, 837.
840. Eleum . . . Tonantem: the Olympian Jove, represented
in classic art by a famous chryselephantine statue, the work of
Phidias, which was counted one of the seven wonders of the world.
The temple of Zeus (Jupiter), stood in Elis, near which town the
Olympic games were celebrated, and it is to these games that the
crowd is supposed to be hastening in this verse.
841. quinta . . . aestas: the olympiad consisted of four years,
yet quinta aestas is correct according to the Roman method of
counting, which reckoned both the summer of its beginning and
that of its close. On the same principle they would call a week,
say from Sunday to Sunday, eight days {e.g. Gospel of St. John
20:26). In music we still retain a like notation, speaking of
"thirds,'' "fifths" and "octaves." — sacrum: the Olympic
games, which were sacred to Jupiter.
842. cum . . . crescere: when the season returns for the night
to lengthen. — longae: proleptic. — hora: equivalent to tempus
with the following infinitive. The time of the autumnal equinox
is meant, when the nights begin to exceed the days in length.
844. libra . . . aequa: the even balance between day and night,
which then are equal. Ldbra is subject of tenet, and is modified
by cupiens. It can be said to be desirous of peaceful slumber
in the sense that the longer nights conduce to rest. — Phoebeos
currus: the chariots of both sun and moon. The celebration of
the Eleusinian mysteries (see 300 n.) was in commemoration of
Proserpina's descent to Hades as the bride of Pluto (660 n.) and
the sorrowing search of her mother Ceres for her. There were two
degrees, the lesser and the greater. The former was celebrated
in the early spring, and its initiates were known as mystae (847).
Only these were eligible to the final initiation, which occupied
Digitized by VjOOQIC
192 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
nine days, beginning about the middle of September. On the sixth
day of the celebration (the night of the equinox) the mystae in
countless numbers marched in procession to Eleusin, where the
final initiation took place in the succeeding nights.
846. secretam Cererem: the mysteries of Ceres (300 n.; secreta
sacra, 301). These mysteries were so sacred that one who divulged
them was accursed in the sight of gods and men.
847. Attici: Eleusin was in Attica, twelve miles from Athens. —
noctem . , . celebrare: to throng the night. We should expect
quot or quam muUi with mystae, which, however, may be thought
of as a loosely connected elaboration of the collective noun turba
in 845.
848. tanta . . . turba: so great a multitude; the main clause,
to which all from 838 to this point is subordinate. Vergil (A. 6.
305-312) enumerates the same classes, old and young, youths and
maidens and the infant.
851. meliorisaevi: gen. of quahty — youth (cf. bona aetas, Cicero
de Senectute, 14). Note also the verbs used, graditur for old age,
currit for youth.
853. comis nondtmi positis: Seneca is writing with Roman
customs in mind. At an age not rigidly fixed the Roman boy
exchanged his boyish garments /or the toga virilis, and at the same
time the hair, which till then had been worn long^ was trimmed
short. These words therefore characterize those who were still
boys. — ephebi: the Greek ^^lyjSot, here corresponding nearly to the
Latin pueri.
854. The infant, just taught to lisp the name of mother,
856. To these alone, that they may be less afraid, it is permitted to
temper the darkness with a torch, borne before them. In early times
it was customary at Rome to bury the dead at night, and the
practice was continued in the case of poor persons and children.
867. ceteri: the rest, excepting the children.
868. The chorus suddenly apostrophizes the dead.
862. color malus: black.
863. otium: lethargy of the sUent world (cf. 550-554, 699, 702-
705).
866. Even the latest hour comes too soon for such a jour-
ney.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 193
867. Why does it please us to hasten our cruel fate f i.e. by rushing
into needless dangers, or even by suicide.
868. vaga: equivalent to vac^ans. — omnis . . . turba: all that
live must die.
870. Cocjrto: abl. Here is more geographical confusion (see
777 n.). — tibi: mors (872). — crescit: for accrescit — is added to
your possessions.
871. The ends of the earth (cf. 883).
874. The hour of birth, which gave us life, also plucks it away
(cf. Oed. 988: primv^que dies dedit extremum — the first day has
given the last; de Prov. 5. 5: quantum cuique temporis restat,
prima naacentium hora disposuit — our first hour ai birth has
determined how much time remains for each). This is the Stoic
doctrine of causation.
876. The lighter glyconic verse corresponds to the change in
thought.
876. supplices: nom.
881. The tillers of the fertile field.
882. By Hercules' might there is peace from the rising to the
setting of the sun, and (in the south) where the sun overhead refuses
the body a shadow.
887. Tethyos: Greek gen. sing, of Tethys, whose name here
stands for sea (cf. Tethys, 1328).
889. vada Tartari: the Styx.
892. An unconscious answer to 614.
893. sacrificus: used, for the sake of quantity, in place of the
ordinary vocative form sacrifice. Stantes comas represents the
priest's frenzy of inspiration.
894. p6pulo: the poplar was sacred to Hercules (cf. 912;
populvA Alcidae gratissima, Vergil, E. 7. 61).
ACT IV
Scene 1 (w. 895-1053). — Hercules returns in triumph from
his slaying of the usm-per Lycus, and is on the point of ofifering
sacrifice himself to Jupiter when he is seized with madness, shoots
to death his wife and children, and finally falls into a deep sleep.
896. cecidit: from caedo, lit. has smitten the earth,
o
Digitized by VjOOQIC
194 TITREE PLAYS OF SENECA
897. et poenae: a sharer of his punishment as well.
902. satifico: the aegis, or round shield of Pallas (Minerva),
had at its center the face of Medusa the Gorgon, which Perseus
had given her.
903. Lycurgi domitor: Bacchus. Lycurgus, son of Dryas, was
a king of the Thracian Edoni, who expelled Bacchus from his king-
dom and in consequence was stricken with madness and afterward
slain. — rubri maris: not what we call the Red Sea, but that part
of the Indian Ocean lying west of Hindostan, including the Persian
Gulf (cf. rubentifreto, Tro. 11; pdagi ruhentis, Oed. 120). Bacchus
is said to have made a triumphal progress along its coasts.
904. Cf . 474 n.
906. geminum numen: see 15 n. Med. 700 has the plural, ^emina
nurnina.
907. frater: whatever son of Jove (cf. Jimo's wrathful declara-
tion, 5-18).
908. non ex noverca: a child of Juno's might be expected to
share her hatred of the hero. For the word noverca see 112. —
appellite: he orders that victims and incense be brought for a
sacrifice.
909. quidquid ... seges: whatever the fields of the Hindus
(yield), cinnamon, cassia and other spices. Note the literal
meaning of seges here, grain field. The reading here is doubtful;
if it be correct a verb such as dot or reddit must be supplied.
910. odoris quidquid: ^i/s, frankincense. — arboribus: frankin-
cense is a kind of gum resin that oozes from certain trees in Arabia
(cf. cinnami sUvis Arabes heatos, Oed. 117 — the Arabs, fortunate
in their forests of cinnamon).
912. populea . . . arbor: see 894 n.
913. te: Theseus. — gentili: the ohve was the national tree of
Athens, the home of Theseus, and was sacred to Pallas Athene.
916. conditores urbis: Cadmus, who founded the city, and
Amphion and Zethus, who reared its walls (262 n.).
916. trucis . . . Zethi: of the twin brothers, Amphion devoted
himself to the art of music, Zethus to the care of cattle, living in the
wilds (silvestria antra), and from his uncouthness is called trucis. —
nobilis Dircen aquae: Dirce, of the far-famed water. Queen Dirce
had been killed by Amphion and Zethus on accoimt of her cruelty
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 195
to their mother, and at death was converted into a great spring,
the pride of Thebes. Dircen is a Greek form, ace. sing.
917. advenae: Cadmus was a Phoenician by birth, but came to
Boeotia in the course of his search for his sister Europa, and there
under direction of the gods built the city Thebes (Ovid, M. 3. 1-130).
919. expia: purification before performing sacrifice was re-
garded as essential (cf. Vergil, A. 2. 717-720; Livy 1. 45. 6).
921. libare: it was customary to make a preliminary offering
of some liquid, usually wine; here Hercules wishes he could make
a libation of his enemy's blood. — capitis iavisi: Lycus.
924. finiat: sc. tU, omitted after opta. — genitor : Jupiter — pray
that your father may put an end to your labors.
927. love . . . dignas: instead of the purely personal petition
suggested by Amphitryon, Hercules offers a prayer for universal
peace — may heaven, earth and sea abide each in its ovm places i.e, not
invade one another's rights.
928. inoffensos: unobstructed.
930. Cf . Isaiah 2 : 4, repeated in Micah 4:3:" They shall beat
their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning
hooks.''
934. nutritus: swollen. — trahat: lay waste.
938. // earth is to produce any wickednesSy may she hasten to do U
while I am living; and if she is creating any monster ^ may it he mine
to meet and kill.
939. quid hoc: sc. est. In the midst of his haughty challenge
he is overtaken by madness. The passage that follows gives in
bold strokes the visions of his distorted imagination.
941. quis . . . fugat: he sees the sun darkened, though there
is no cloud, and moving back toward its rising as if it saw some
imnatural sight on earth (cf. 60 n.).
944. primus . . . labor: the Nemean lion (225 n.), now the
constellation Leo, which in Thy. 855 is called Leo Herculeus.
945. Shines in no small part oj the sky. It is one of the twelve
signs of the zodiac.
949-962. At one bound will spring over all that fruitful autumn
and chill winter yield, and will attack and crush the neck of the Bull
of spring. The sun enters Leo in July and Taurus in April (verni;
cf. 8 n.). Hercules imagines that the starry lion is crouching for
Digitized by VjOOQIC
196 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
a leap which will cany it over all the intervening constellations
and enable it to attack the Bull.
964. acieque turbida: with eye confused. — falsum: unreal.
955. Perdomita: sc. est. — cessenmt freta: in the affair of
Geryon and several of the parerga.
957. Earth has been subdued, two of the three realms of the gods
have felt my prowess, and only the heavens remain (cf . Juno's fear,
64-74).
968. sublimis: nom. — ferar: subjunctive (cf. petatur).
959. promittit: cf. astra promissa, 23. The story of Hercules'
choice between the two careers offered him in the wilderness by
Virtue and Pleasure respectively, and of the former's offer of im-
mortality as a prize, is told by Prodicus, as quoted in Xenophon's
Memorabilia, 2. 21-34.
960. capit: contain.
963. una vetante: Juno, who is addressed in the question that
follows — a question which implies a threat — Are you going
to admit me, or must I force my way f In recipis and reseras, also
traho and dubitatur, the present is used where we should expect the
future.
966. Saturno: dat. of interest. Saturn had been dethroned
by his sons (53 n.), and according to one account confined in
Tartarus (Ovid, M. 1. 113). Hercules in his frenzy proposes to re-
lease the fallen god (avum resolvam) and aid him in recovering his
kingdom.
966. patris: Jupiter. — impii: unfUial toward his own father,
Saturn. — impotens: best taken with regnum, in the sense of
violently won.
967. avum: Saturn. — Titanes: these had dethroned Uranus,
or Caelus, in favor of Saturn (79 n.). Hyginus (Fab. 150) repre-
sents Juno as trying to incite the Titans against her husband, as
Hercules here speaks of doing.
969. With my right hand I will catch up the mountains full
of cerUaurs, i.e. the mountains of Thessaly, where the centaurs
dwelt.
970. monte gemino: Ossa and Pelion, which with Olympus
(972 n.) were piled one on the other to make a ladder whereby the
Titans might reach heaven.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 197
971. Chiron: nom. — suum: the centaur Chiron dwelt in a
cave near the summit of Mt. Pelion (Tro. 830 flf.; Statius, Ach.
1. 106-108; Ovid, F. 5. 383 flf.); where he received as pupils such
heroes as Jason, Hercules, Aesculapius- and Achilles, teaching them
the arts of music and of healing and giving them the fruits of his
long experience in Ufe and war.
972. Cf. Tro. 829: Pelion . . . tertius caelo gradus; Vergil, G. 1.
281: Ter sunt conati imponere Pelio Ossam \ scilicet atque Ossae
frondosum involvere Olympum — thrice they tried to place Ossa on
Pelion, you see, and to roll the^ leafy Olympus on Ossa. As the
mountains were piled one upon the other, Olympus was the third
step ascending. Apollodorus (1. 7. 4. 2-4), in telling of the attempt
of the Aloidae (Otos and Ephialtes), has the mountains piled in
inverse order.
974. averte: a prayer — avert these dread imaginings. — parum:
modifies sani — not sane, yet great.
976. qiiid hoc: a continuation of the vision (939 n.). In the
following verses the attack of the Giants on heaven is described
(cf. Thy. 805-812).
977. proffigit: perfect. The madman imagines that Tityos has
escaped from Tartarus. For his torment there see 756 n. and
VergU, A. 6. 595-600.
978. inane: emp^y, the liver gone. — quam . . . caelo: how near
to heaven his giant stature has raised him. Vergil makes him cover
nine iugera.
979. Pellene: perhaps better written Pallene, the peninsula
also known as Phlegra (444 n.), where the conflict of the gods and
Titans took place. It shakes here with the shock of battle.
980. Macetiim: Macetarum, the Macedonians. Though the
Vale of Tempe was in Thessaly, not Macedon, it was so near the
border as to make the expression easy. — rapuit: one {giant) has
caught up the range of Pindus, another Oeta, with intent to pile them
up as a ladder to the sky (971 n.).
981. Mimans: Mima^, mentioned by Horace (C. 3. 4. 53) as
one of the Giants. — horrendum: a cognate ace. with saevit (cf.
belu^ Lernae horrendum stridens, Vergil, A. 6. 288).
982. Erinys: the Fury. With this and the next verse cf. 102,
103.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
198 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
984. in ora tendit: holds up the torches (sudes) in my face (cf.
fige luminibus faces, Med. 965). — Tisiphone: since Cerberus has
been stolen away cruel Tisiphone, her head vyreathed vnih serpents,
has guarded the vacant portal, with torch presented.
987. ecce: he catches sight of his children and thinks they are
his enemy's.
989. reddet: see 639 n.
990. sic: he draws his bow and aims an arrow at one
of the little children (cf. same scene in Euripides, H.F. 962-
1010).
992. coactis comibus: the tips dravm forcibly together in string-
ing the bow (for this sense of cornu see Ovid, M. 1. 455). Translate:
He has strung his mighty bow, he opens the quiver, the speeding shaft
whizzes in its rush — the point flees from the child's mid neck,
leaving the wound behind it. This is Amphitryon's description of
the first child's fate. It is not quite certain whether we should
think of this tragic scene as actually occurring on the stage as
does the killing of Medea's two sons (Med. 970, 1017), or whether
the action itself took place behind the scenes. In favor of the
latter view is the fact that it all is described by Amphitryon as
facundia praesens, but on the other hand Hercules himself speaks
repeatedly, and in 1015 we hear his wife's appeal. The best Roman
critics condemned the presentation of such horribly unnatural
scenes, e.g. Horace, A. P. 183-188: " Remove from the sight of the
audience many incidents which a messenger (facundia praesens)
may later narrate. Don't have Medea kill her boys in the people's
presence, nor the wicked Atreus publicly prepare human flesh
for the banquet. . . . Whatever you present to me so I reject
with loathing increduhty." In Thy. 970-1034 and Med. 970,
1017, our author does precisely what Horace declares he ought not
to do. Euripides (H.F. 870-1010) leaves it to chorus and messen-
ger to tell the tale.
994. harimdo, spiculum: the shaft (lit. reed) and tip of the
arrow respectively. — fugit: present — has passed through the neck
and is coming out, as if fleeing from its horrid work.
995. eniam: this verb has two related meanings here, one with
each object (a case of zeugma) : / mU unearth the rest of my enemy^s
offspring, and will overturn their every hiding place. Megara and
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 199
her two remaining children had fled for refuge into the temple,
whither Hercules now follows.
997. bellum: against Eurystheus, whose mastery now is ended
(830 n.). His home was at Mycenae. — Cyclopia . . . saxa: the
massive masonry of the ancient buildings at Mycenae and Tiryns
is described by Schliemann (chapters 1 and 2 of his Mycenae), and
mentioned by Pausanias (2. 16) and Euripides (H.F. 939, 940).
999. eat . . . valvar let one of the double doors fly this way and
the other that. He is attacking the doors of the temple in order to
come at his victims. — obice: the same noun is used in 237 of
natural mountain barriers.
1000. rumpat: the subject is valva — it is to be flung open with
such violence as to carry away its supports and even cause the roof
to totter. This is accomplished when in the next line he exclaims,
The whole temple (regia) is exposed to the light.
1002. patris: Lycus. He sees one of his own little boys, but
still supposes it the child of his enemy. — blandas: coaxing,
caressing.
1003. manus . . . tendens: of. Med. 247 n. and Tro. 691 n. —
rogat: entreats.
1006. bis . . . misit: /los swung it twice or thrice about his head
and hurled it frorn him. The object, of course, is the child, who is
referred to also in illi . . . sonuit — his head crashed against the
stones.
1010. Tonantis: Jupiter's very bosom instead of his temple. —
condaris: middle voice — though you hide yourself.
1012. misera: Amphitryon here, as Hercules in 1010, addresses
Megara.
1017. habitusque reddit: reflects your image. She holds the
child up to his father in the hope of arousing some recognition
in the madman's mind. — ut manus: how he holds out his little
hands to you.
1018. Teneo novercam: he fancies it is Juno who is before him,
and proposes by destroying her to relieve the king of the gods
from her espionage. The next instant, however, he imagines that
the woman before him is the mother of his enemy's (Lycus') chil-
dren, and in 1036 he speaks, perhaps ironically, of the whole
massacre as a sacrifice to Juno.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
200 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
1020. hoc monstrum : the infant, which Megara had been guard-
ing in her bosom (1008).
1021. tuum: your own blood, flowing in the veins of your
child.
1026. nee usquam est: her head is utterly annihilated by the
blow.
1027. vivax senectus: addressing himself (cf. same phrase in
Tro. 42 n.). — luctus: gen.; sc. te, ace.
1028. pectus in tela: courage against those deadly weapons.
1029. istuc: turn upon yourself that dub, stained with the blood
of our children. Istuc is used instead of hu^ because the speaker
is addressing himself in the second person. Note the inconsistency
of nostrorum in connection with istuc.
1031. remove parentem: do away with your false and earth-
born (turpem) father, lest he sound a discord in the chorus of your
praises. This is said to Hercules.
1033. quo: whither f In 1032 it rather meant to ie?/ia^ purpose f
— latfi: imperative.
1034. unum . . . scelus: save him the one sin yet possible —
parricide.
1035. bene habet: it is well. — regis: Lycus, whose children
the hero still thinks he has slain (987 n.).
1038. te digna: vows worthy of thee. — Argos: For Mycenae,
the home of Eurystheus, who was to be the next victim.
1040. hostia: the speaker himself (cf. 1027-1031).
1041. praebeo: / offer myself, I hasten to meet my slayer, I even
follow him up in my eager desire to be sacrificed.
1042. The frenzy leaves Hercules and with it his strength and
his consciousness. Euripides (H.F. 997-1001) makes Pallas
appear and cast the hero down senseless.
1047. The fall of Hercules is compared with that of a tree in the
forest (cf. Vergil, A. 2. 626-631), or of a mass of rock sUpping from a
cliflf into the sea in such a way as to form a breakwater and create
a harbor. Vergil's more elaborate simile for the fall of Bitias
(A. 9. 710-714: "So falls sometimes a pier of rock which, reared
beforehand in mighty mass, men cast into the sea," etc.) evidently
refers to an artificial structure, and Seneca here may have had the
same idea in mind.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 201
1048. vivis: the verb, as appears from the quantities. — dedit:
sc. te. The subject, of course, is idem furor.
1049. tuos: object of misit. Hercules' wife and children are
meant.
1060. reciprocos . . . agit: the breath causes the breast to rise
and fall. Spiritus is subject and motus object.
Scene 2 (w. 1054-1137). — The chorus, gazing on the sleeping
Hercules, prays for his release from the evil spell that has befallen
him, anticipates the agonies of his remorse, and closes with an
apostrophe to the slain children. The meter is the anapestic
dimeter.
1054. aether: heaven, and so the gods. — parens: Jupiter.
Heaven, earth and sea are called upon to mourn this tragedy.
1066. unda: nom. It is a rare thing for a dimeter in these
tragedies to close with a trochee, except in the Octavia, whose
authorship is doubtful. ^
1068. tractus: ace. plu.
1060. Titan: here as often for Phoebus or Sol.
1062. utrasque domes: both the rising and the setting, as above.
1068. matris . . . Astraeae: Somnus, as well as Mors (frater,
1069), is represented usually as the son of Erebus and Nox. Far-
nabius suggests that Astraea is here called his mother because it is
by the favor of justice that we sleep in safety and security.
1069. frater . . . Mortis: cf. Vergil, A. 6. 278: Cohsanguineus
Leti Sopor.
1070. veris . . . falsa: in dreams. — futuri certus: in all ages
beUef in the prophetic character of dreams has been prevalent.
Often, too, they have so impressed the dreamer's mind as to lead
him into the act suggested, hence idem pessimus auctor, 1071.
1073. lucis: objective gen. with requies. In 1066 the same
noun is followed by animi, subjective. The genitives in this sen-
tence are worthy of study.
1076. • pavidum leti: the human race, so fearful of death (cf. lucis
pavidos, 293).
1076. longam . . . noctem: death, as if our sleep were but a
preparation (jprolusio) for the longer sleep which it so nearly
resembles.
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202 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
1077. fessum: sc. Herculem; so with devinctum.
1085. clavae: as a pillow.
1086. vacua: abl., with dextra.
1089. aestus: the hot surgings of fever and madness.
1091. vento cessante: abl. abs. of concession.
1092. To complete the sentence, whose conclusion evidently is
wanting, Leo has suggested sic pristina adhuc qucUU ira virum — so
does his late frenzy stiU shake the hero. PeUe then will begin a new
sentence.
1094. vel ait potius: a new thought occurs to the chorus, that
such a crime could be venial only if the criminal were insane
(1097, 1098); with the additional idea that the next best thing to
innocence is ignorance of one's guUt (1098, 1099). Therefore the
petition is changed, may the madness continue.
1100. percussa . . . palmis: for this mode of expressing deep-
est grief or despair see Tro. 64, 79, 93, etc. Note the alliteration
here and in Tro. 64.
1101. mundum . . . lacertos: see 70 n., 528.
1106. atri regina poll: Proserpina (cf. infemi lovis, 47 n.).
Translate, let his mighty moans be heard in heaven and heU. The
subjects of audiai are aether, regina and Cerberus.
1114. triaregna: heaven, sea and hell (53 n.).
1116. cello: after suspensa. — decus, telum: appositive to
harundo. The arrows and their quiver are exhorted to lash their
master and aid in the expression of his boimdless despair.
1119. robora, stipes: the club (cf. robur, 800; trunco, 626).
1136. Ite: the chorus apostrophizes the dead sons of Hercules.
Leo's arrangement of the verses is retained in spite of its apparent
violence.
1136. noti: with laboris — along the gloomy path of your father's
far-famed labor (the taking of Cerberus), i.e. the road to Pluto's
realm.
1123. As Hercules had done in many cases, most recently in
that of Lycus (895).
1126. Between the two halves of this verse Leo has inserted
1130 entire (nondumque . . . iubatae), and has assumed a further
lacuna whose sense he attempts to supply as follows: vulnere gaesi
frangere torti. Accepting this we shall have as the general sense
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 203
of 1124-1128: You who have not been trained in the heavier exer-
cises of the arena nor taught to hunt the lion, still have ventured
already to aim with sure hand the light arrow such as boys can use,
i.e. though not yet able for manly sports they have indulged in
such as their years and strength permitted (cf. Andromache's
lament over her son in Tro. 775-782). — fortes: with vos (1122),
as are ulti, docti and ausi. The infinitive frangere, supplied by
Leo, depends on docti, while the two that follow (librare and
figere) depend on aim.
1131. Oo to the haven of the Styx, ye shades, go as innocent
spirits, whom a father^s sin and madness have overwhelmed on the
very threshold of life.
1137. iratos . . . reges: Pluto and Proserpina, angered at
Hercules' invasion of their world. Farnabius suggests as an alter-
native meaning that iratos here may be equivalent to tristes in
611 (but cf. lovis, sed fulminantis, 724). It is possible, too, that
reges may refer to the shades of the many tyrants {reges, 1123)
whom Hercules had slain.
ACT V
Scene 1 (w. 1138-1343). — Hercules awakes in his right mind,
learns what he has done, and in his despair proposes self-destruc-
tion, but finally is induced to seek purification instead.
1138. This whole passage, depicting the hero's awakening from
his trance, is admirably done. With it cf. Euripides, H.F. 1079-
1099.
1139. cardine: the pole star.
1140. Hesperii: western — am I in the far east, the north, or the
west?
1142. fesso: sc. mihi.
1143. redimus: perfect — surely I returned from Hades. The
plural may be "editorial," or it may include Theseus with the
speaker.
1144. an . . . infema: am I still dreaming of what I saw there?
1146. turba fetalis: the countless throng of the dead (838-849).
1149. grege animosa: proud of her brood (cf. vobis animosa
creatis, Ovid, M. 6. 206).
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204 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
1161. spolio leonis: the lion's skin, which he had worn on his
left shoulder and arm as a shield (tegimen; cf. 797 ff.)- — abit:
perfect, for abiit.
1152. torus: the lion's skin was his shield by day (45) and his
couch by night; so his club was his weapon of offense (45 n.) and
also his pillow (1085).
1154. spolia: properly the arms of an enemy slain in battle
(cf. opima, 48 n.).
1157. ezurge: for exsurge. — virtus: brave hero, abstract for
concrete, and in that sense followed by a masculine relative, qitem.
— novum: later horn than I.
1159. nox longior: cf. 24 n. Hercules imagines he has been
mastered in his sleep by some hero, still unseen, who can be the
son of none other than Jupiter, and whose generation must have
cost more than the day involved in that of Alcmena's son. —
quod cerno: he begins to recognize the scene, which before had
seemed to him but a horrid nightmare or a lingering impression of
what he had witnessed in the world of the dead (cf. 1143-1146).
1161. Lycus had usurped the throne of Thebes in Hercules'
absence; what greater Lycus had now done the same after his
retiu:n?
1163-1166. He appeals for aid to the men of Thebes, of Athens
(Actaea arva), and of Corinth. — gemino marl : the Aegean Sea and
the Corinthian Gulf, separated near Corinth by a narrow isthmus
(cf. gemino lUore, Med. 35 n.).
1169-1171. He fancies he has been despoiled of his weapons by
the successor and avenger of some one of his victims. — Thracis
cruenti: Diomede (226 n.). — Geryonae: see 231 n. This name
is more usually of the third declension (487). — Libyae: Africa in
general. — dominos: Atlas, Antaeus, Busiris, etc.
1172. nudus: unarmored and unarmed. — meis armis: which
had been taken from him as he slept.
1175. He has noticed the averted faces of his father and his
friend, and now appeals to them to postpone their lamentations
and tell who has done the bloody deed.
1177. tua . . . fide: on your honor (cf. mea fide spondeo ego,
Pliny, Epist. 1. 14 fin.).
1181. dominator: Eurystheus.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 205
1183. per : with laudem and numen — hy the glory of my deeds. —
te: object of precor.
1186. numen secundum: next after that of Jove; yet the phrase
may well mean favoring divinity,
1186. cui . . . iacui: to whom have I faUenpreyf I acere often
means lie slain, and here the figure is carried a step further.
1187. ut . . . sim: indignant question (cf. 372 n.).
1191. quota: how small (cf. Med. 896).
1193. refflgit: perfect — he shrunk from my touchy
1194. hie cruor: he sees a blood stain on his own hand.
1195. Lemaea nece: the hydra's deadly poison (45 n.).
1196. The terrible tfuth begins to dawn upon him.
1198. vix recedentem: which hardly yields to my own strength.
1199. nostrum: my.
1200. luctus: emphatic — nonscelussedlitcttis. It is contrasted
also with crimen — the sorrow is yours, the guilt is Juno^s. — istic:
in that act to which you point.
1202. genitor: Jupiter. In 1176, 1184, 1192, 1199, Amphitryon
is so addressed.
1203. oblite: the participle often implies a concession — though
thou hast forgotten me, at least avenge with tardy hand thy grand-
sons. In leaving him to Juno's persecution the king of the gods
had seemed to forget his great son.
1204 ff. Let all the forces of nature conspire to punish this
crime.
1206. rupes Caspiae: the rock in the Caucasus (scopuli, vertice,
1208; latus, 1209) to which Prometheus had been bound while a
vulture (ales avida, feras volucres) preyed upon his liver. He had
been released by Hercules.
1201. For the aposiopesis cf. Vergil, A. 1. 135: quos ego —
1208. vertice inmienso: abl. of quality with latus.
1210. The S3rmplegades, two islands in the Euxine, identified
by Pliny (N.H. 4. 13. 27) with the insulae Cyaneae, just north of
the entrance to the Bosporus. Whenever any object passed
between them they dashed violently together (cf. Med. 342 n.).
In his agony Hercules demands that he be bound with one hand
fast to each of these islands, that he may be alternately racked
and crushed by their oscillation.
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206 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
1214. mare: object of exprimerU. For the sense cf. Med.
345 n.
1215. mora: an obstacle to be crushed between them.
1216. quin: in its literal sense, why not? — nemore: forest
(cf. congerite aUvas, 506). He here forecasts the fate that finally
did befall him.
1218. reddam: restore him who had braved the infernal gods
and escaped.
1220. quod: the antecedent is the clause in se ipse saevU (cf.
in se semper armatus Furor y 98).
1228. hie . . . nescit: this countenance of mine, hardened by ill
fortune, knows not how to weep.
1231-1234. tibi, tibi, tuis, tuos: addressing in turn each of his
victims — the three children and their mother (see 990, 1004,
1022, 1025) . For one he would sacrifice the arrows, for another
the bow, for a third the club, and for the last the quiver.
1233. umbris: for thy shade my club shall burn. — frequens: full.
1236. novercales manus: his own hands, which had done this
deed at Juno's instance (cf. 1297). — cremabo: cf. 1216, 1217.
1239. Amphitryon appeals to Hercules' pride by reminding him
of how he had relieved Atlas and borne the heavens on his shoul-
ders (see 70 n.).
1240. My sense of shame has not been so far quenched by madness
as to let me shock and repel all men by the sight of my unnatural
self. He fears that all would shrink from him as his own father
had done.
1245. Cf. 1218, and Juno's purpose as stated in 116.
1246. per . . . nostri: by the rights implied in either name,
father or foster father.
1249. senectae parce: not spare my life (see 1039-1041), but
spare yourself to me (cf. 1252, 1256, 1257, 1303).
1250. unicum: all the rest of his line were gone.
1251. afflicto: sc. mihi.
1255. aris: alluding to Busiris (483 n.).
1257. fructum: enjoyment; so in 1253.
1258. cur . . . est: there is no reason why I should live longer.
1261. etiam furorem: I have lost all . . . even the madness
which alone could render me innocent (cf. 1097). Note the
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 207
asyndeton in 1260. — polluto . . . mederi: minister to a mind
diseased.
1263. In reply to Amphitryon's cry, you wUl destroy your
father (by destroying yourself), Hercules answers, /- mill die that 1
may not he able to destroy you (in some new fit of madness).
1266. Rather consider your great deeds, which are worthy to he
sung by all men, and seek from yourself forgiveness of your one sin,
1268. iussus: by Eurystheus and Juno. — hoc est: of. 477-
480.
1271: vincatur . . . deztra: let my ill fortune he overcome hy
my own hand.
1272. patriae: an adjective.
1274. mo vera: imperative.
1276. tuum . . . malo: a match for any misfortune.
1278. tuli: sc. seder a.
1280. que, et, ac : the force of these conjunctions was practically
leveled in the Silver Age.
1282. To destroy the hero of the twelve labors would be a
labor greater than all the twelve.
1283. ignava: feminine because it is dextra that is addressed. —
fortis . . . matres: brave only against women and children (cf.
fortis in pueri necem, Tro. 755).
1286-1287. Cf . 506-508, 1216, 1217. — domlbus: households. —
suis: their, referring not as is usual to the grammatical subject,
but to the nearest substantive for its antecedent.
1290-1294. And if the falling walls shall come as a trifling weight
upon my mighty shoulders, and if I shall not he crushed sufficiently
when covered hy the seven gales, I will overturn upon my head the
whole mass which rests at the- center of the universe and separates sky
from sky. — condar: he buried. — septem: Boeotian Thebes had
seven gates; Thebes in Egypt a hundred.
1297. manibus: abl. of means; *Twas Juno^s deed, not thine
(cf. 118).
1299. pectus: ace, object of ferit, smites.
1300. Aptata ... est: sc. nervo. — iam: emphatic; now you
will commit a crime willingly and knowingly.
1301. Pande . . . iubes: Parataxis, in place of the more com-
monplace indirect question, quid iuheas.
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208 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
1302. Sorrow is assured for me in any case.
1304. nee tu: sc. potes — not even you can take him from me, i.e.
I will share your lot, be it life or death.
1306. Make your decision, knowing that your cause and your
fame are at stake.
1308. aut . . . occidis: sc. me; either you live, or you slay me.
1310. in ore prime: on my very lips, ready to let it go (cf. Tro.
952 n.). The aged man has declared that Hercules' death would
involve his own, and now, seeing him hesitate, asks, Does any one
grant life so reluctantly to his own father f
1312. / will deck my breast, resolved on death, with the steel
pressed home (cf. induere se hastis, Livy 44. 41. 9, and with a
different sense pectus in tela indue, 1028). Amphitryon here
threatens to kill himself with one of Hercules' arrows.
1313. Here, here wUl rest the crime of Hercules sane, a deadlier
sin because committed without the excuse of madness (cf. 1094-
1099, 1300).
1316. eat: he added. — hie . . . labor: in a kind of loose
apposition to vivamus.
1318. dextra . . . refugit: cf. 1193, 1241, though there the
others shrunk from him and here the relation is reversed. In
1319 Amphitryon clasps the hand of his son and gives utterance
to his joy.
1323 flf. The rivers named are at the ends of the earth — in
Scythia, Egypt, Armenia, Germany, Spain.
1326. Hibera . . . gaza: the golden sands which were thought
to abound in the bed of the Tagus.
1326. abluere: purify with flowing water (cf. 919 n.).
1330. recedes: said to himself.
1333. obliqua: askant. A poetical fancy based on the fact that
the apparent motion of the stars is not directly over our heads
but includes a swerve toward the south. In his guilty self -con-
sciousness Hercules imagines that the very stars are turning out
of their way to avoid passing near him. — Titan . . . vidit:
cf. 60, 61.
1336. semper . . . arbiter: Theseus had been witness of
Pirithous' impious attempt upon Proserpina, and now of Her-
cules* fearful crime.
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NOTES ON THE HERCULES FURENS 209
1337. Show gratitude and make return for my service to you, by
delivering me to Pluto in your stead. Hercules had rescued Theseus
from his imprisonment by Pluto (806 n.).
1341. ille: sc. locus. Even Hades knows me. — nostra . . .
tellus: Attica (cf. 913).
1342. solutam caede: acquitted of the charge of murder. —
Gradivus: Mars, who was tried before the gods, sitting as a court
in the Areopagus at Athens, for the murder of Halirrothius, a son
of Neptune, and was acquitted. Reading restituit (perfect) we
must take manum as the hand of Mars and read, " There Mars
restored to the sword his hand, acquitted of murder; and that
land, which is wont to prove gods innocent, is calling you."
This is better than to read restituet and understand the sense to be
that Mars will acquit Hercules.
1343. superos: in using this word Theseus delicately flatters
his friend, implying that he is entitled already to rank as a god
(cf. 121, 122, 959).
Digitized by VjOOQIC
THE STORY OF THE TROADES
Paris, the Trojan prince, had decided that the beauty of Venus
J urpassed that of her rivals, Juno and Minerva, and was to receive
. as his reward the most beautiful woman in the world. This was
Helen, who already was the wife of the Spartan Menelaus. Under
the guidance of Venus Paris visited Sparta «uid persuaded Helen
to elope with him. All Greece united to avenge the wrong, and
"the thousand ships'' assembled at the Boeotian port of Aulis.
There they were detained by opposing winds imtil the com-
m£uider-in-chief, Agamemnon, sacrificed his daughter Iphigenia
to the ofifended divinity, when they sailed and presently landed on
the Trojan coast.
The siege lasted for ten years, with many deeds of valor on both
sides. Achilles being the strongest champion of the Greeks and
Hector of the Trojans, at length these two met in single combat.
Hector was slain and his body dragged away behind the victor's
chariot. The corpse was ransomed by King Priam and given
decent burial.
Without its chief defender the city could not long hold out. It
was taken by a stratagem at night and sacked and burnt. Most
of its men were slain and its women made captive. It is at this
point that the play begins.
210
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NOTES ON THE TROADES
ACT I
Scene 1 (w. 1-66). — Queen Hecuba mourns the misfortunes
of hor house and kingdom, showing from what a height to what a
depth they have fallen.
1. Whoever puts his trust in royal power and lords it mightily in
his proud palace, and has not feared the fickleness of the gods but ha^
committed his trustful soul to prosperity, should look upon me and thee,
O Troy, A similar thought is elaborated in Oct. 34 fif.
6. dociunenta: warnings. — quam . . . loco: in what perilous
position.
6. coltunen: Troy, here thought of as the bulwark of the Orient
against aggression from the west.
7. caelitum . . . labor: the walls of Troy were built by Nep-
tune and Apollo. The perfidy of King Laomedon, who after the
work was finished refused to pay the promised price, provoked
Neptune to send a sea monster which ravaged the Trojan coast.
The exposure of his daughter Hesione as an expiatory victim,
her rescue by Hercules, Laomedon 's second breach of faith and
Hercules' destruction of the city in revenge (133 n., 718 n.), are
familiar myths, for which see articles Laomedon, Hesione, etc., in
Classical Dictionary.
8. ad . . . venit: as auxiliaries. Those most commonly
named of the allies who came to the aid of Troy are Rhesus,
Memnon and the Amazons. Leo's retention of quae, with his
deletion of w. 12, 13, results in the entire omission of any mention
of the first, and therefore I follow Richter and the older editors in
this place. — qui . . . bibit: Rhesus, king of Thirace (cf. Vergil, A.
1. 469-473). It is true the king of Thrace can hardly be said to
"drink the waters of the Don," which river is far to the east and
was regarded as the boimdary between Asia and Europe. It
211
Digitized by VjOOQIC
212 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
happens, however, that Seneca in another place (N.Q. 6. 7. 1) has
made the same mistake of confusing the Don with the Danube,
which did border upon Thrace. He speaks of " the Danube, which
checks the inroads of the Sarmatians and separates Eiurope and
Asia." — frigidtun Tanain: this river, now known as the Don,
empties into the Palus Maeotis (Sea of Azov) by two principal
mouths (Pliny, N.H. 6. 7). The niunber given in the text,
septena, is traditional, being the number of branches ascribed to
the delta of the Nile and thence transferred to other rivers as if it
were a standard (Med. 763 n.).
10. qui . . . immiscet: Memnon, son of Tithonus and Aurora
(cf. 239), who is said to have led the Persians to the aid of Priam,
his father's brother (patrui, 239 n.). Memnon often is described
as black (Ag. 212; Vergil, A. 1. 489), and sometimes as king of the
Ethiopians. — renatum: yesterday's sun, reborn to-day (cf. Hor-
ace's address to the sun god, Aliusque et idem nasceriSy C.S. 10 :
Thou art horn another and yet the same).
11. rubenti . . . freto: the Mare Rubrum, Greek 'Epv0p6p,
^EpvdpaTov, not the modern Red Sea, but the Indian Ocean west of
Hindostan, and especially the Persian Gulf. Pliny (N.H. 6. 28)
quotes four theories as to the origin of the name: (1) From a
mythical King Erylhras; (2) from the color caused by a peculiar
reflection of the sun's rays; (3) from the reddish tint of the sandy
bottom; (4) from some peculiarity of the water itself. The
Tigris does not fall directly into the sea, as suggested by the text,
but into the Euphrates. Noticing the absurdity of saying that
Memnon "mingles the Tigris with the sea," Leo suggests mero
in place of freto.
12. quae . . . ferit: the Amazon leader, who, looking forth as a
neighbor upon the nomadic Scythians, scourges the Pontic shore with
her unwedded troops. The Amazons were generally assigned to a
region on the southern shore of the Black Sea, along the Thermodon
River (H.F. 246; Med. 215; Vergil, A. 11. 659). They came to the
aid of the Trojans (673; Ag. 218; Vergil, A. 1. 490-493), and their
queen Penthesilea was slain by Achilles.
14. excisa est: sc. Troia, implied antecedent of cuiv^ (8).
The same thought is repeated in Pergamum incvhuit sibi, with
which cf. Vergil's description in A. 2. 624-631.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE TROADES 213
16. congestis . . . tectis: heaped together, as if to form a funeral
pyre for the city and its people (cf. congerite sUvas, H.F. 506;
nemore congesto, H.F. 1216).
17. Assaraci: Assaracus, an early king of Troy.
19. diripitur . . . Troia: the inversion adds emphasis to the
thought — Troy is being pillaged even while burning. — nee . . .
patet: is enshrottded.
22. avidus irae: greedy of {the gratification of) his wrath. —
lentum: alow to yield (cf. the ideas in decern annis and haud credit
> ^ below).
24. ignoscit annis: forgives the long delay , because of what it has
brought him at last. — horret: the victor shudders with fear at
sight of Troy, even though she is prostrate. — afflictam: sc.
Troiam; so with victam, and as subject of potuisse (26).
27. mille: not to be taken too literally, but as a roimd niunber
often used by the poets in speaking of the Grecian fleet before
Troy (e.g. mille carinis, 708; mille velis, 370; mille carinas, Vergil,
A. 2, 198, etc.). Homer's catalogue of the ships (II. 2. 484-759)
gives a total of 1186, and the numbers stated by Hyginus and
others vary considerably. — non capiunt: the thousand ships do
not {cannot) contain the booty.
28. tester: / call to witness the divinity of the gods, ever hostile to
me, I call to witness Priam and Hector and all my children . . . that I
foresaw and foretold all this (36). Testor takes one or more personal
objects and a secondary object which here is the independent clause
beginning with prior.
29. te: Priam.
30. toto conditum regno: buried beneath a whole kingdom (cf.
the idea in 158).
31. quo . . . stante: abl. abs.; during whose lifetime Troy
lived, i.e. while he stood Troy stood, and at his fall the city fell.
Hector, of course, is meant (cf. 204-206).
32. magni greges: cf. turba, 958. Priam was the father of
many children. In the Iliad (24. 495 fif.) he is made to say: —
" Fifty were with me when the men of Greece
Arrived upon our coast; nineteen of these
Owned the same mother." — (Bryant's translation.)
Digitized by VjOOQIC
214 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
"The same mother," of course, was Hecuba. Hyginus (Fab. 90)
gives a list of fifty-four sons and daughters of Priam, and other
Greek and Roman writers give various numbers {e.g. Vergil, A. 2.
501-503). In the Hecuba of Euripides (v. 421) the aged queen
is made to speak of herself as "bereft of fifty children."
33. umbrae minores: shades less than those of Priam and
Hector {manes, 31).
34. Phoebas: nom. sing. Cassandra, who had rejected the
suit of Phoebus after having received from him the gift of prophecy,
and as pimishment was doomed to see all her predictions disbe-.
lieved and disregarded {credi deo vetante, 35; vana vates ante
Cassandram, 37; falsa vates, Ag. 725; Vergil, A. 2. 247, etc.). She is
called Phoebas, priestess of Phoebus, by Ovid also (Am. 2. 8. 12;
Trist. 2. 400), and in Ag. 588, 710. Prophetic inspiration was
regarded as akin to madness, hence ore lymphato furens.
36. credi: dependent on vetante. — deo: Phoebus.
86. prior: before Cassandra (see next line). — gravida: nom.
sing. — nee tacui metus: nor did I keep my fears to myself. Before
the birth of Paris his mother dreamed that she had borne a fire-
brand which was destined to be the destruction of Troy (see 40).
She told her fears, and on the advice of prophet Aesacus the child
was exposed on Mt. Ida as soon as it was bom; but hke Romulus
and Remus of Roman legend he was found and brought up by a
shepherd (see note on 66).
38-40. It was not Ulysses nor Diomede nor Sinon that kindled
this fire; it is mine. — cautus . . . Ithacus: Ulysses, the tjrpe of
craft as opposed to brute force in war. His Homeric epithet is
iroXiJ/iiyTtf, while his enemies, of course, employed terms less com-
plimentary. In all, however, was the same general idea (see
notes on 613, 614, 750 fif., 857, etc., and cf. fallacem, 149, and
Vergil's pellax, A. 2. 90). — Ithaci comes: Diomede, who was
Ulysses' comrade in several notable exploits, such as the cap-
ture of the spy Dolon and of the Palladium, the attack upon
Rhesus and the adventure of the wooden horse. As a rule these
adventiures occurred in the night {nocturniis); hence Ovid
(Met. 13. 100) makes Ajax say of Ulysses, Luce nihil gestum,
nihil est Diomede remoto — no deed was done by day, none apart
from Diomede,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE TROADES 215
39. For the story of Sinon and the wooden horse see Vergil, A. 2.
57fif.
42. vivax senectus: an abstract noun for concrete, old age for
aged woman (cf. nimia viva>x senectus, H.F. 1027). She is ad-
dressing herself. — respice: not literally look hack but have regard
to.
43. Troia . . . vetus . . . malum: the downfall of Troy was
now an old story, because of the more personal sorrows that had
crowded upon her since.
44 ff. For the death of Priam see Vei^l; A. 2. 533-558, where
many of the same details are given.
46. Aeacidis: Pyrrhus (Neoptolemus), son of Achilles and de-
scended from Aeacus. The reading is doubtful, and is accepted
merely as a makeshift. Aeacidis properly is a feminine patro-
nymic. The proper masculine form occurs in 253, Aea/^idaej but
would be Impossible metrically here. — scaeva . . . torta: th^ hair
twined abotU his left hand.
47. reflectens: here in its literal sense, bending hack.
48. vulneri: the poetical dative with ahdidit (cf. Vergil's laieri
dhdidit ensem, A. 2. 553, in describing the same scene).
60. siccus: bloodless, unstained (cf. Ag. 656-658: Vidi\senis in
iugulo telum Pyrrhi] vix exiguo sanguine tingui — / saw that Pyrrhus'
sword in the old king*s throat wa^ hardly stained with his scanty
blood). This is an exaggeration based on the well-known
fact that in old age the blood flows more sluggishly than in
youth. Seneca's own death supplies an illustration (Tac. Ann.
15. 63, 64). The reading of one MS., tinctiLS, gives a very differ-
ent sense.
61-64. Whom could such a sight not appease and hold ha^ik from
cruel murder f The subjects of potuit are Priamus (implied with
premens), superi and quoddam sacrum, in the sense of " a kind of
inner sanctuary of the fallen kingdom." The altar at which the
aged king had sought refuge, and the sight of his grief and his
humiliation should have given his miurderer pause.
64. regum: princes (see 32 n. and cf. Med. 56).
66. flamma: the flame of the funeral pyre. The king's body
could not be burned as it should, though the city was blazing all
about him. ArderUe Troia is abl. abs. concessive.
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216 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
66. superis: the gods, not satisfied with the destruction of the
city and the death of its king, are permitting the reduction of its
noble women to the rank of slaves and concubines. For the
agency of the gods see Vergil, A. 2. 604-623.
67. 68. The captives are being apportioned by lot among the
victors (cf. 974 fif.).
68. praeda: appositive to the subject of sequar — / ahaU follow
my new master as an unprized captive. — vilis: cheap, unprized,
in comparison with the younger women (cf. 62, 980).
69. hie, hie, hie: one of the victors, another and a third. — Hee-
toris eoniugia: Andromache. In coniu^ia is met another instance
of the use of an abstract for a concrete noim (cf. senectus,
42; and coniugio, Vergil, A. 3. 296, where it is said of this same
Andromache). Hector's wife fell into the hands of Pyrrhus
(976), and after his death became the wife of her brother-
in-law Helenus (Vergil, A. 3. 294-297). — despondet sibi: in
Roman phrase the father betrothed (spopondit) his daughter
to her husband. Here the victors ask the consent of none but
themselves.
60. Helenus and Antenor are named here simply as representa-
tive Trojans. The name of Helenus' wife is not known; Ante-
nor's was Theano (II. 6. 298).
61. dest: a common contraction for deest (cf. derat, Med. 992;
derit, Med. 403). — tuos . . . petat: Agamenmon (see 978;
Ag. 191).
62. Each fears that the lot may assign to him the old and
feeble Hecuba; she alone remains a terror to the Greeks (cf. vUis,
58; Ithaco nolenti, 980).
63. turba captivae mea: a favorite arrangement of appositives
in Seneca (cf. alta muri decora, 15; maesta Phrygiae turba, 409;
foriis anniferi cohors, Med. 980). The queen here addresses the
chorus of Trojfiui women.
64. planetus: the beating of the breasts in utter abandonment
of grief (cf. 79, 93, etc.; H.F. 1100-1103). The alliteration here is
noticeable.
66. iusta Troiae: the service, here the formal lamentation, due
the fallen city «uid its dead (cf. iusta functis, Med. 999; ivsta
patri, Oed. 998). — sonet: let Mt. Ida reecho our wailing.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE TROADES 217
66. Ide : the Greek form corresponding to the Latin /da, used
when a long ultima is desired. — iudicis diri: Paris, who when
exposed (see 36 n.) had been Toimd and reared as a shepherd on
Mt. Ida and there had given the verdict upon the relative beauty
of Jimo, Minerva and Venus which had proved so fatal to. his
coimtry (hence fatalis Ide; cf. fatalis pastor, Ag. 730). In Ide
the Greek form is used for the sake of its long ultima (cf. 74;
Polyxene, 367; Alcmene, H.F. 22, etc.).
Scene 2 (w. 67-164). — The chorus of Trojan women, respond-
ing to Hecuba's direction, laments the fate of Troy, of Hector and
of Priam. The meter is the anapestic dimeter, with several
monometers interspersed.
67. non rude: not wanting in experience (cf. non indocUis
lugere, 81; non rudem, Med. 915). — vulgus: a company of people
sharing a conamon lot (cf. vulgus vile, 80).
69. ex quo: sc. anno or tempore.
70. Phrygius . . . hospes: Paris, who employed his oppor-
tunities as Menelaus' guest to alienate his wife's affections. —
Amyclas: a Laconian town near Sparta, here named in place of
the latter.
72. Cybebae: a form used for Cybele when the meter requires a
long penult. This goddess was worshiped extensively in Asia
Minor and especially among the Phrygians (see Lucretius, R.N.
2. 600-643, where an extended account is given; cf. Vergil, A. 9. 80;
Catullus, 63). High places were sacred to her, and here the timber
(pinus) which had. stood on Mt. Ida also is called sacra Cybebae.
Here, as often, pinv^ stands by metonymy for ship.
74. nudata rogis: denuded of its woods for our funeral pyres.
76. decumas . . . aristas: his tenth harvest. The form decumas
for decimal illustrates the interchangeability of the two close
vowels when they are short — seen also in the dative and ablative
plural of the fourth declension, e.g. artubus or artihus.
77. ut: temporal, while.
79. leva . . . manum: lift your hand to lead the chorus (cf.
the handling of his baton by the conductor of a modern orchestra).
84-89. Common manifestations of grief or despair (cf. our
familiar " sackcloth and ashes '0- ,
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218 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
85. tepido: still warm from the burning of the city.
102 b. complete manus: sc. pvlvere or pulveris.
103. Ashes toe may take, thottgh the enemy claim aU else.
87. paret: let the chorus make ready their bared shotUders, for
the planctiLS detailed in 93 fif. Scansion will determine mood and
meaning of paret. — exertos: for exsertos.
88. Having loosed the robe (from its position about the shoulders)
bind its folds (to prevent its falling too far) and let the body be un-
covered as far as the waist.
90. coniugio: husband (see note on coniugia, 59) — what call
for modesty now, when our husbands are slain and all is lost f
92. Let the palla bind the loosened tunic. This is a more par-
ticular form of the instruction given in 88. The tunic was a long,
loose, sleeveless gown worn imder the more formal articles of
dress. The palla, instead of being employed as usual for orna-
ment, here- is to be boimd around the waist as a girdle to keep
the loose tunic in place and leave the hand, which otherwise must
hold it up, free (vacet) to beat the breast.
94. placet . . . turbam: this guise meets my approval; I
recognize now the Trojan chorus, in its appropriate garb of mourn-
ing. — Troada: ace. sing., used as an adjective modifier of turbam.
96, 97. veteres, solitum: old and habitual, from the ten years
of terror and woe (cf. solitus ex longo est metus, 632). — vincite:
outdo.
99. solvimus: perfect, as is seen from the following coSrdinate
verbs — we have loosed our hair and sprinkled it with ashes as bidden
(in 83-95).
101. cinis fervidus: cf. tepido pulvere, 86.
104, 106. Our raiment falls away from our shoulders, thus un-
covered, and hangs about the waist (cf . 92 n.). — suffulta: girt up by
the palla.
106-115. The planctus mentioned in 93, 108, 114, etc. — vocant:
invite.
109. Echo: originally a beautiful nymph, but changed by Juno
into a stationary echo, unable to speak of itself or to remain silent
when another spoke (Ovid, M. 3. 339-401). This is a good example
of the personification which lies back of most of our mythology.
Lei Echo not, as she is wont to do, briefly repeat the last words only,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE TROADES 219
but let her give back Troy's whole dirge (cf . the very siinilar pas-
sage in H.F. 1100 fif.).
116. The chorus's response (antistrophe) closes in nearly the
same terms as Hecuba's invitation (strophe) in 97, 98.
117. tiW: Hector is apostrophized. — ferit: not from /ero.
121, 122. Whatever scar I made on my body at your burial, let
it break open anew and flow and well with plenteous blood. — fltiat,
manet: the subject is cicatrix, 123. Mood and meaning of manet
are determined by scansion.
124. mora fatonun: Hector's heroism could only delay, not
avert, the fall of Troy.
126. praesidium: followed here by the dat., like its primitive
pra£sideo.
127. ilia: sc. patria, found in 124 and 129.
128. tecum cecidit: cf. 31 n.
130. Hecuba now suggests a new theme, which the chorus
takes up in 132.
133. bis capte: fu*st by Hercules (7 n.), when Priam alone was
spared of the royal family (cf. ,718, 729), and now by the
Greeks.
184. nU . . . semel: there ia no HI that Troy has suffered but
once in your reign, having twice endured the battering of its waUs by
Oredan steel and twice felt the arrows of Hercules.
137. Herculeas: the Greeks learned from the oracle that they
could hope to take Troy only with the aid of Hercules' arrows,
which then were in possession of Philoctetes. He therefore was
sent for and contributed materially to the final result (see 824,
825). — post . . . partus: after the burial of Hecuba's sons.
188. regum: cf. 54 n. — gregem: cf. magni greges, 32 n.
Gregem is to be read with elatos, like partus.
139. pater: voc, or appositive to subject of cludis and premis,
140. Priam was slain near the altar of Zeus (Jupiter).
141. truncus: appositive to the subject of premis; for the same
word, used in the same connection, cf . Vergil, A. 2. 557.
144. feliz Priamus: the phrase as a whole is the thought object
of dicite, as of dicimus in 157. For a similar construction see
Horace, C. 3. 24. 27: Si quaeret "pater urbium" subscribi statuis —
if he desire the inscription ** father of cities " carved beneath his bv^t.
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220 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
148. duos . . . Atridas: Agamemnon, commander-in-chief of
the Greek forces, and* Menelaus, the husband of Helen, both
naturally mentioned as foremost enemies of Troy.
149. fallacem . . . Ulixen: cf. 38 n., 568, 613, etc.
150. praeda: appositive to Priamus, easily imderstood as
subject of feret.
162. manus . . . dabit: submit to be bound.
163-156. Suggested by the Roman triumphua.
166. fiet pompa: be made a spectacle.
158. Cf. 30 n.
162-164. Cf. Vergil, A. 1. 94-101.
ACT II
Scene 1 (Vv. 164-202). — Talthybius, the Greek herald, in
response to a request of the chorus, tells of the apparition of
Achilles' ghost and his demand for the sacrifice of Polyxena.
Talthybius: the herald plays a much more conspicuous part in
the plays of Euripides than in those of Seneca. This is his only
appearance here, while in the Troades of Euripides he appears
repeatedly and in the Hecuba describes to the aged queen the
death of her daughter Pol5rxena — a task assigned in the present
piece to an unnamed nuntius. In the Medea of the two poets we
note the same difiference in the importance of the herald.
164, 165. As the Greeks had been detained at Aulis in setting
out for Troy {petere bellum) till the ofifended Diana had been
appeased by the sacrifice of Iphigenia, so now they were delayed
in beginning their homeward voyage {petere patriam) by the
necessity of appeasing the angry shade of Achilles (see 191-196,
360-370; Euripides, Hec. 35-44; Ovid, M. 13. 441 fif.).
167. reduces: homeward, in agreement with vias.
168. This verse opens with the rare proceleusmatic, never found
in Seneca except in the first place. The same words are found at
the beginning of Med. 670.
170. vidi ipse, vidi: seeing is believing, and it is thus that the
herald solves the doubt expressed in the preceding verse. This
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE TROADES * 221
apparition is described as having occurred at dawij instead of
midnight, when ghosts are commonly supposed to walk (cf.
Andromache's vision of her dead husband, 438).
171. caeco: whose source was unseen.
172. The precise meaning of this verse is open to question.
Perhaps the most satisfactory solution is that ofifered by Grono-
vius, who explains totos . . . sinu^ as meaning earth uncovered
and brought to light her inmost recesses.
173. mdvftre: perfect. — nemus: on Mt. Ida; so lucus, 174.
176. suum Achillen: as the son of Thetis, who was one of the
daughters of the sea-god Nereus (cf . te ... tot pelagi deae . . .
8uam vocabunt, 879).
177. stravit: stilled (cf. stravere verUos, Horace, C. 1. 9. 10; and
for the sense cf . immoti iacent tranquUla pelagi, 199).
178. immensos specus: caverns measureless to man (cf. immensi
specus, H.F. 679).
179. superos: living men, as in H.F. 48, and often.
180. tumulmn: the tomb of Achilles (Euripides, Hec. 37).
181. Thessalici duels: Achilles, whose home was at Larisa in
Thessaly. The following verses mention his principal exploits.
182. proludens . . . fatis: pra^icing for thy destruction (cf.
proluMt hydrae, H.F. 222; Med. 907). — Threicia arma: referring
to Cisseus, father of Hecuba, who came with his Thracian forces
to the relief of Troy and was defeated by Achilles.
183. Neptunium iuvenem: Cycnus (Ovid, M. 12. 72-145), who on
hisdeathat the hands of Achilles became a swan; hence cana . . .
coma (cf. nivea proles Cycnus aequorea dei, Ag. 215).
185. Marte: war, battle (so in 1058).
186. In the Iliad (21. 7 fif.) we.read that " The roaring stream of
Xanthus thus was filled before Achilles with a mingled crowd of
steeds and men."
187. tardus: because its usually swift current was checked by
the bodies.
189. Hectorem et Troiam: the story of Hector's having been
dragged behind his conqueror's chariot is familiar (II. 22. 395 flf.;
24. 14-21; Vergil, A. 1. 483; 2. 272). The coupling here of his name
with that of the city implies that his fate necessarily involved the
like destruction of his country (cf. 31, 124).
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222 * THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
190. irati; sc. AchiUis. In the Hecuba of Euripides (37) he
appears above his tomb {ifir^p Hii^ov) with the same demand.
191. manibus: the quamtity of a determines the meaning. — ■
meis; monosyllabic by synizesis.
192. honores: the spoils that should have been his (cf. 292-
294, 360-370).
193. nostra maria: cf. suurrty 176 n. — luit: perfect; Greece
has paid for the wrath of Achilles at no small price, and shall atone
for it now at great cost. The allusion is to the hero's withdrawal
from the Greek camp before Troy (II. 1 init.) and its disastrous
consequences to the besiegers, and it is threatened that their
present neglect of his rights shall prove as costly. — non parvo,
magno: abl. of price.
196. PoljTxene: a daughter of Priam and Hecuba. AchiUes
had been attracted by her beauty and made repeated proposals
for her hand, but the terms offered him were too hard. Finally,
according to one account, he was invited to a conference on the
subject, led into an ambush, and slain by Paris (347). His shade
now demands that the maiden be offered by Fjmrhus as an expiatory
sacrifice to his manes (Ovid, M. 13. 441 ff.), which demand is rein-
forced by the decision of the seer Calchas (360-370). The name ap-
pears throughout this play in its Greek form Polyxene for the sake
of the long ultima (cf. Ide, 66 n.). Andromache, on the other
hand, is met in both forms, with final e in 968, and with final a in
533, where see note.
196. riget: from rigare.
197. Text and sense are doubtful. We have retained the
reading of the Florentine MS. {codex Etruscus), whose authority in
most cases is decisive. The explanation has been offered that the
apparition, occurring after dawn and accompanied by a darkness
of its own, divided the day with its deep night. Another version
has voce dimisit — with deep voice he bade farewell to the day.
198. specum iunxit: closed the cavern, by bringing its walls to-
gether. This is the converse of aperit . . . specus, 178.
199. immoti: gen. with pelagi. It would be more natural, if it
were possible metrically, to read immota, with tranquilla — the
tranquil deeps lie motionless. Such hypallage is common, how-
ever, and does not alter the sense.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE TROADES 223
202. hymenaeum: the wedding song of Achilles and Polyxena.
The last three lines of the scene, with their smooth movement and
abounding liquids, echo the change of spirit from the fierce wrath
of the hero to the peace that followed his departure.
Scene 2 (w. 203-359). — Pyrrhus recounts the deeds of his
father Achilles, and when his declared purpose to sacrifice Poljrx-
ena is opposed by Agamemnon a violent quarrel ensues. The
matter at last is referred to Calchas the seer.
204. excidit: was forgotten j lit., fell from the memory (cf. 714;
Med. 561 n.). In this sense excidere may be followed by an abl.
with de or ex, or by a simple abl., or may be used absolutely as
here. In Med. 561 a dative of the person forgetting occurs.
— cuius . . . Btetit: Troy received her death blow when Hector
fell before Achilles, and though her final destruction was de-
layed a little by the removal of her greatest foe (guidquid . . .
remoto) the issue never was in doubt.
206. dubia quo caderet: like a tree, which stands tottering after
its stem is cut through, as if hesitating in what direction it should
fall. Vergil (A. 2. 624-631) compares the downfall of Troy with
that of a great tree.
207. dare: with velis as well as properes. — quod petitur: what
the shade of Achilles demands.
208. iam . . . pretium: the living leaders have made their
choice of the spoils and left little for Achilles.
211 flf. Thetis, the mother of Achilles, did all in her power to
prevent his going to the Trojan war (see 214 n.). Among other
things she foretold that if he went his life would be short and
glorious, while if he remained at home he would enjoy a long and
peaceful old age (II. 9. 410-416).
212. Pylii senis: Nestor, whose great age and wisdom were
proverbial (II. 1. 247-252).
214. falsasque vestes: his feminine disguise (sumptae fallacia
vestis — the trick of a dress put on, Ovid , M. 13. 1 64 ) . Placed by his
mother at the age of nine in the court of Lycomedes, king of Scyros,
the future hero grew up there as a maid among maids until he
was detected by an artifice of Ulysses (570 n.). The latter brought
Digitized by VjOOQIC
224 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
gifts of laces and jewels for the girls, and also some pieces of
armor. While they were examining their gifts a trumpet suddenly-
sounded, and Achilles, forgetting his assumed character, seized
the armor and hastily put it on (fctssus est armis virum). The
whole story is told briefly by Hyginus (Fab. 96), and in greater
detail by Statius (Achilleis 1. 207 ff.; 670-674).
215-218. Telephus, king of Mysia, opposed the landing of the
Greeks and was wounded by Achilles. When at the point of
death he was told by an oracle that the woimd could be healed
only with the weapon that had inflicted it. In answer to his
appeal Achilles applied some rust from the spear point and the
patient recovered (Ovid, M. 12. 112: opusque meae bis sensit Tele-
phus hastae — Telephus twice felt the power of my spear.)
217. rudem: cf. 67 n. and Med. 908. This was Achilles' first
warlike exploit. — ^^rfigio: an adjective. — dextram: sc. AchUlis;
Telephus stained the heroes unpracticed hand with the blood of a
king (his own), and found the same hand strong (in battle) and gentle
(in healing).
219. Thebae: Thebe, a city of Mysia, ruled by Andromache's
father, Eetion (II. 1. 366). Achilles took the town and slew its
king (II. 6. 414-419; Ovid, M. 12. 110).
221. Lyrnesos: a town of the Troas, the home of Mines, who
was the husband of Briseis. The latter was a native of Pedasus,
a neighboring village, referred to in 222 as the land renowned
for the captive Briseis. This was the captive over whom Aga-
memnon and Achilles quarreled (II. 1).
, 223. Chryse: the home of the priest Chryses, whose repulse by
Agamemnon when he came to reclaim his daughter provoked
Apollo to send a pestilence upon the Greeks and led finally to the
rupture between the two leaders (causa liti^ regibus). — iacet:
lies prostrate by Achilles' hand.
224. Tenedos: Taken by Achilles (II. 11. 624). — quae . . .
nutrit: It seems that our poet here carelessly ascribes to Scyros
the characteristics assigned by Homer (Od. 15. 515 flf.) to Sjrros,
another island in the Aegean: —
" It is not large,
But fruitful, fit for pasturage, and rich
In flocks, abounding both in wheat and wine."
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE TROADES 225
The taking of Scyros by Achilles is referred to by Homer (II. 9.
668), and possibly by Ovid (M. 13. 175), though the common
reading there is Syron. It is not unlikely that the present passage
was suggested by the one just referred to in Ovid, as the latter
names many of the same places — Thebae, Tenedos, Lesbos, Chryse,
Cilia, Scyros (?), Ljrmesos — and mentions the fate of Telephus.
226. Lesbos: Achilles' capture of this island is referred to by
Agamemnon (II. 9. 129).
227. Cilia: a town in the Troas, sacred like Chryse to Apollo
Smintheus (Chrysenque et Cillam, Apollinis urbes, Ovid, M. 13.
174). — quid: sc. memorem terras (or urbes) — why should I tell
of the lands that the Caycus laves f
228. vemis . . . aquis: the river Caycus (in the Troas)
swollen by the rains and the melted snows of spring.
230. sparsae: the wrecks of so many cities, scattered by him as by
a tornado.
232. iter est Achillis: what would have constituted another's
full claim to renown (231) is but the preparation of Achilles for
greater achievements (see next verse, and cf. proludens, 182 n.).
236. Would not his defeat of Hector alone have been sufficient f
Yet my father conquered all Troy — and you have plundered it.
237. sequi: pursue (the subject of) my father's deeds. Sequi is
the subject of the impersonal iuvat.
239. patrui: sc. ante oculos. Both patris (238) and patrui here
refer to Priam — Hector lay slain before his father's eyes, Memnon
before his imcle's. Both Tithonus, the father of Memnon, and
Priam were sons of Laomedon, hence either would be patruus
to the other's children. — parens: Aurora, goddess of the dawn.
With her manifestation of grief on this occasion cf . that of Phoebus
the sun-god over the fate of Phaethon (Ovid, M. 2. 329-331) : " The
father, pitiable in his sickening sorrow, had covered and hidden his
face; and, if we believe the tale, they say that one day passed
without the sunlight."
242. et: even. — dea nates mori: that even the sons of a goddess
may die. As the son of Aurora had fallen, so might his slayer, thi;
son of another divinity.
243. Amazon: see 12 n. — ultimus . . . metus: appositive to
Amazon. These female warriors came to the aid of the Trojans
Digitized by VjOOQIC
226 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
in the last year of the war, and with their defeat disappeared all
hope of relief from without.
244. debes : sc. earn from virginem, 245 — even if he should demand
(the sacrifice of) a Grecian maiden instead of a Trojan, you owe it to
him to grant his desire. This, like iam placita below, may contain
an allusion to the sacrifice of Agamemnon's daughter Iphigenia at
Aulis (cf. 164 n.).
246. improbas: the verb. P5m'hus here addresses Agamemnon,
who though he had not yet spoken may be supposed to have given
some token of dissent — Do you disapprove now, all at once, su^h an
act as met your favor awhile ago at Aulis f
247. ferum . . . credis: deem it cruel.
249. Helenae: for Helen's sake, because the sacrifice of Iphi-
genia was made in order that the fleet might be permitted to sail
to Troy for the recovery of Helen. — solita . . . expeto: / am
asking (no new thing, but) what is customary with you and htis been
done before.
261. aetatis . . . fervor: the glow of youth (cf. iuvenile, 250;
and Horace's pectoris in dulci iuventa fervor, C. 1. 16. 22). The
stately Agamemnon assumes an attitude of contemptuous toler-
ance toward the youthful Pyrrhus, whose natural ardor as a young
man was intensified by his inheritance of his father's fiery spirit
(paternus, 252). Agamemnon could speak from experience of
Achilles' wrath.
253. lentus . . . tuli: / bore unmoved, on occasion of the
famous quarrel.
264. possis, feras: the "general" second person — the greater
your power the more should you patiently bear. Sc. eo correlative to
quo.
266. caede dira: of Polyxena.
266 ff. We should consider first the rights of victor and vanquished.
These, however, were not carefully defined in ancient times (see
333, 335). The tone of this speech is not quite consistent with
the spirit displayed by "the king of men" in the first Iliad, and we
cannot help suspecting that he is indulging in a bit of special plead-
ing against his old foe.
269. quo: correlative to hoc, 261. The higher fortune has raised
him the more does it befit a man to hold himself in check.
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 227
262. caerils tremere: this transitive use of tremere is poetic and
late (cf. hostem tremens^ 317).
263. nimium faventes: too indulgent (cf. vento nimium secundo,
Horace, C. 2. 10. 23).
264. vincendo: the final o in the ablative is naturally long, and
unless we regard it here as shortened in arsi, having neither word
accent nor metrical ictxiSy this is a notable exception to the rule
that the second foot of a dipody must begin with a short syllable
(c(.Sigeon,.932n.):
265. hoc . . . loco: at the zenith of power and warlike re-
nown.
266. ilia: Troia (from 264). — impotens regni: carried away
by the possession of power, not self -controlled (as if impotens sui).
267. altius memet tuli: have borne myself too loftily , e.g. in
dealing with Achilles.
268. My pride has been humbled by this cause — the favor of
fortune — which might have been a source of pride to other men.
270. superbum, timidum: in antithesis, to emphasize the lesson
of Priam's fall — proud at once, and fearful.
271. nisi: with vano, not with piUem — am I to consider kingly
power aught but an empty name, a brow adorned with a coronet whose
promise of happiness is delusive f
274. My power perhaps may vanish in less time and for less cause
than Priam^s. For mille see 27 n.
277. afSigi . . . volui: / would have had Troy humbled but not
destroyed.
279. sed . . . ira: cf. H.F. 404, 405; Med. 591-594, where
the subject is love spurred on by wrath. — regi : the infinitive ; note
•the quantity of e.
281. commissa nocti: the sack of a city by night, when the dark-
ness conceals and encourages excesses (cf . tenebrae below).
284. felix: victorious. — infect!: sc. sanguine. Observe the
personification — the sword, the lust of which, once stained with blood,
is frantic.
' 289. thalamos: predicate — call the foul deed marriage.
291. A fine expression of the responsibility that goes with power*
— cum . . . pewit: to be connected with vetat.
296. levator . . . infuse: appeased by the shedding of blood.
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228 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
296. opima: may be taken literally, rich, fat (cf. greges opimoSf
H.F. 909), or may mean rich spoils of battle (cf. H.F. 48 n.). Aga-
memnon proposes to release Poljrxena and substitute a sacrifice
of cattle. — colla: appositive to greges.
297. matri: no human mother,
298. iste: that which you propose. — quando . . . hominis:
when was a human victim ever offered to the shades of a man f
301, 302. Note the antithesis between the two vocatives tumide,
timide.
303. tyranne: used here in its original Greek sense of usurper,
as if Agamemnon had no valid claim to the title he boasted, " king
of kings " (cf . regum rector , 978; rex regum, ductor dvu^um^ Ag. 39).
— iamne . . . novae: do you now wear a heart fired with a sudden
love J and love of a new object f Pjrrrhus intimates that the true rea-
son for Agamemnon's opposition may be a newly kindled desire to
possess Polyxena himself — as formerly he had taken Briseis from
Achilles (cf. 305).
308. dignam: sc. victimam (also with maiorem, 307). This
is a veiled threat against Agamemnon himself. He would be a
victima digna quam det Pyrrhus and par Priamo (310). The same
menace is implied in nimium . . . manus — His long since I have
slain a king, the allusion of course being to the death of Priam
at his hands (44-56; Vergil, A. 2. 550 flf.).
310 ff. baud . . . patemus: intensely sarcastic — yes, it is true
that your greatest warlike achievement was the slaughter of a helpless
old man; one, furthermore, who had knelt at your father^s feet, i.e.
in seeking to recover the body of his son Hector (D. 24.571-601;
Vergil, A. 1. 483-487).
313. supplices . . . novimus: I recognize my father's suppliant
(spared because he was a suppliant), and the same man as an enemy
(whom I slew because he was an enemy in arms). Though plural,
supplices and hostes refer to Priam.
316. praesens: yet Priam came in person to Achilles, a thing
you dared not do (see next note).
316. nee: emphatic, not even. — Aiaci . . . clausus: when
disaster to the Grecian fleet had followed Achilles' withdrawal
Agamemnon sought a reconciliation; but instead of venturing
himself into the offended hero's presence he sent an embassy com-
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 229
posed of Ulysses, Ajax and Phoenix (II. 9. 165 flf.). — hostem:
Achilles. For the construction with tremens cf. casus tremere,
262 n.
318. tunc: at the time of the embassy. — fateor: ironical, as
is the whole sentence — of course your father was not afraid. . . .
He lay idle, forgetful of war and arms, thrumming the tuneful lyre
with polished plectrum,
321. levi: note the long e. For the sense cf. II. 9. 150 flf.:
Achilles there drew solace from the music of a harp, sweet-toned and
shapely, in a silver frame. ... To soothe his mood he sang the
deeds of heroes.
322 flf. Though Hector despised your warlike efforts, he feared this
very mu^ic (because it indicated the presence of Achilles, whom alone
he dreaded), and, secure in this fear of his, my father^ s Thessalian
naval camp enjoyed deep peace.
326, 326. Agamemnon retorts that in that same Thessalian
camp an enemy (Priam) was permitted to go and come in safety.
327. spiritum: life (so in 328, 379). Pyrrhus maintains that it
was a kingly act to spare a king's life, and so lays himself open to
his opponent's next thrust, why then did you not spare him too f
330. Is it in mercy now that you seek to sacrifice this maiden f
331. lamne : emphatic, as in 303 — have you come now to believe ?
The allusion is to the oflfering of Iphigenia to Diana (see 249 n.).
The father's defense is given in 332.
336. libere: infinitive of the impersonal libet; lit. it should please
him to do least {in the way of cruelty to the vanquished) to whom much
is permitted, i.e. the more power one has the less should he use it
wantonly (cf. Seneca's words to Nero, Oct. 450: Hoc plus verere
quod licet tantum tibi — you should fear the gods all the more because
so much is committed to you) .
337. Do you make these boasts to the Greeks, whom I {by my part
in ending the war, and now by my defiance of you) have just released
from your ten years* tyranny f The implication is that Agamem-
non's actions and the lofty sentiments just uttered are not in har-
mony.
339. hos . . . animos: Does tiny Scyros assume such airs?
The reference, of course, is to Pjrrrhus' native place (342, 343 n.;
Scyrius iuvenis, 976). — Scelere . . . caret: in allusion to the
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230 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
tragic feast of Thyestes (Ag. 26. 27; Thy. 970-1034, etc.), prepared
by Agamemnon's father, Atreus. The antecedent of quae is
Scyrtis — U is clear of stich sins of brothers as has stained your house
(cf. 341).
340. inclusa: in agreement with Seyms, Pyrrhus interrupts. —
maris: dependent on /wc^w. It is called co^no/i as being the home
of Achilles' mother (Pyrrhus* grandmother), Thetis (cf. suum,
176 n.).
341. Cf. 339 n. — nobilem: ironical (cf. the like double mean-
ing of famosus).
342. 343. Pjrrrhus was the son of Achilles and Deidamia, one
of his associates in the court of Lycomedes, where he lived dis-
guised as a girl (see 214 n. and the references there given); hence
nondum viro.
346. omne . . . regnum: each of the three realms into which
the universe {mundum, 344) was divided on the fall of Saturn
(see H.F. 53 n.). These are mentioned in the following verse,
where the groimd of Achilles' claim to recognition in each is given
— the sea through his mother Thetis (176 n.), the imderworld
through his paternal grandfather Aeacus, who was a judge there
(Ovid, M. 13. 25; Horace, C. 2. 13. 22), and the heavens through
Jupiter, the father of Aeacus.
347. Illo ex Achilla: senate from 343. — manu Paridis: ac-
cording to the usual account Achilles was woimded in his vulnerable
heel by Paris, the arrow being guided by Apollo (cf. II. 22. 359 flf.,
where the dying Hector foretells his conqueror's fate; Ovid, M. 12.
597-606; Vergil, A. 6. 56 : "Phoebus, who didst guide the arrows of
Paris into the body of Achilles "). The speaker says contemp-
tuously, That AchiUes whom the effeminate Paris slew,
348. Though the gods often baffled Achilles by rescuing his
intended victims (e.g, Aeneas, rescued by Neptime, II. 20. 318-329;
Hector by Apollo, II. 20. 443-446), they did not meet him in direct
conflict. — petit: perfect.
349. malo: cf . the familiar malum and mala res of the comedy —
/ could check your speech and tame your hold self with punish-
ment,
360.' captis quoque: even captives, another allusion to Pyrrhus'
cruel proposal regarding Polyxena (cf. 333).
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 231
362. Calchas: the chief diviner of the Greeks, to whom all
important questions regarding the will of the gods were referred
(II. 1. 68; Vergil, A. 2. 122 flf.). — poscent: sc. Polyxenam; also
with dabo,
363. Tu: Calchas. — qui . . . solvisti: by arranging for the
sacrifice of Iphigenia at Aulis and so appeasing the angry Diana.
366. viscerum: the entrails of animals offered in sacrifice, a
common method of divination. — mundi fragor : thunder.
366. Cf. VergH, A. 2. 693-698. —longa: abl.
368. mercede: abl. of price — whose responses are of great cost to
me. The allusion probably is to the requirement through Calchas
of the sacrifice of Agamenmon'S daughter (249 n.), and perhaps
to the enforced return of Chryse to her father (II. 1. 92-100). In
II. 1. 106 Agamemnon protests to Calchas, Prophet of evil, never
hadst thou yet a cheerful word for me. — ora: for oracula.
Scene 3 (w. 360-370). — The seer's response.
360. Cf. Vergil, A. 2. 110-119 — with blood and a maiden's death
you appeased the winds when first you came to Trojan shores; with
Mood your return must be soughtj and atonement must be made with
a Grecian life.
362. Let her be clad in Grecian marriage robes (cf. 865, 1132).
369. nepos Hectoreus: Astyanax (461-474, 503-512; Hector ea
subolesy 528). In the Iliad (6. 400) he is described as an infant in
arms.
Scene 4 (w. 371-408). — The chorus speculates concerning a
future life, and concludes that there is none. The measure is
the minor asclepiadean, the last verse incomplete.
372. corporibus conditis: abl. abs. of concession — is it true thai
the souls live on though the bodies are buried, or does a myth beguile
us?
374. When the last day of life has stood in the way of the sun,
and prevented its rising again for us. — solibus: plural, as if a
new one rose each day (cf. Horace's aliusque et idem nasceris — art
born another, yet the same, C.S. 10).
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232 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
377. miseris: dat. — longius: i.e. after death. In their de-
spair immortality seems to the Trojan women a curse instead of a
blessing.
378. Cf. Horace's declaration, in a somewhat different sense,
non omnis mortar, multaque 'pars mei vUabit Libitinam, C. 3.
30.6.
379. spiritus : life, as in 327 — when with the fleeting breath the life
has fled into the air, mingling with the vapors.
381. subdita fax: the torch appHed to the funeral p3rre.
382-385. Cf. Epig. 7: Devouring time feasts upon all things,
grasps all things, removes all things from their place, lets nothing long
exist, . . . Death claims all things. . . . Sometime this universe
will he nothing.
384. bis . . . fugiens: in the ebb and flow of the tides.
386. Pega^eo . . . gradu: with the swift pace of Pegasus, the
flying horse.
386. bis sena . . . sidera: the twelve signs of the zodiac. —
turbine: the apparent revolution of the heavens about the earth.
388. astrorum dominus: the sun (cf. dux astrorum. Thy. 836),
whose apparent motions give us the day and the year, and so the
saecula (387).
389. Hecate: Luna (Med. 7 n.). — obliquis . . . flexibus: in
the sidelong curve of her orbit. The moon does not pass westward
directly overhead at this latitude, but apparently swerves to the
southward (cf. H.F. 1333 n.).
390. hoc: sc. modo from 388. — nee amplius . . . usqtiam est:
nevermore does he exist. For the phrase cf. H.F. 1025: capvl abest
nee usquam est.
391. iuratos super is . . . lacus: the Stjrx, by which the gods of
heaven swore and were bound inviolably (Vergil, A. 6. 324: di cuius
iurare timent et faUere numen — the Styx, by whose divinity the gods
fear to swear and prove false, tetigit: ha^ died and been ferried
over the Styx.
396. dissicit: for disicit (cf. Lucretius, R.N. 3. 639).
397. Cf. Lucretius, R.N. 3. 830: nil igitur mors est, ad nos neque
pertinet hilum — therefore death is nothing, and concerns us not ai all;
Seneca, Epist. 54. 3: Mors est non esse.
398. The final goal of a swift race.
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 233
401. individua: explained by noxia . . . nee parcens — Death is
indivisible; it is fated to the body and does not spare the soul. The
idea, consistent with the thought of the whole passage, is that
death cannot attack the body and leave the soul alive. In his
third book Lucretius gives an elaborate argument, based in part
on the sours nature as conceived by the Epicureans, and in part
on analogy drawn from physical existence, to prove the soul's
mortality.
402. Taenara: the Greeks (H.F. 662 flf.) located the entrance to
the lower world near Spartan Taenarus (here in the neuter plural
form), as Vergil did in the volcanic region about Cumae. — aspero
domino: Pluto. Taenara, regnum, Cerberus (with cv^tos in appo-
sition) are the subjects and rumores, verba and fabula predicate
noims with sunt, suggested by est in 401. Limen is object -of
obsidens, and itself is modified by the descriptive ablative non
facUi ostio, of no easy passage.
405, 406. Idle tales, empty words, a myth of no more weight than
a troubled dream.
408. quo: sc. loco. — non nata: the unborn, things not created.
ACT III
Scene 1 (w. 409-425)., — Andromache, the widow of Hector,
declares that the woes of Troy are too deep for tears, and that only
her duty to her son induces her to live on.
409. maesta Phrygiae turba: addressing the chorus. Maesta
turba is appositive to Phrygiae (cf. turba captivae mea, 63 n.).
Phrygiae, meaning Trojan women, is found in Vergil, A. 6. 518.
411. levia . . . patimur: we have suffered light evUs if we suffer
what can be expressed with tears.
413. olim: for me Troy fell long ago, when Hector fell. One of
the finest passages in the Iliad contains Andromache's lament over
the death of her husband (22. 437-515).
414. mea membra: in the person of Hector.
415. Peliacus: i.e. of Achilles, son of Peleus. For the dragging
of Hector's body see 189 n. — pondere . . . tremens: cf. gravi
gemeret sono, 414. It was a common thing to represent the heroes
of the epic as gigantic in size and strength.
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234 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
416. tunc . . . fero: since then I have borne.
418. erepta Danais: rescued from the Greeks by death. The sense
of erepta is proleptic. — sequerer: / would have followed him to the
tomb.
419. hie: pointing to her child, Astyanax, who now constituted
the only tie holding her to life {mori prohibet, 420).
422. He has stolen from me the greatest good of misfortune —
the ability to fear nothing (cf. 632, 633; frudus est scderum tibi
nuUum scelus puiare, Med. 563).
424. qua veniant: bui scyrrow has a place where {aside on which)
U may assail me — in the person of my son.
426. A general statement, but with special reference to her
own position.
Scene 2 (w. 426-523). — Andromache expresses her fears for
the safety of her son, and on consultation with an aged man hides
the boy in his father's tomb.
428. stetit: paused — it has not yet attained its full measure.
429. What new calamity will the god find for VrS even if he desire it f
430 ff . From this it would appear that the apparition of Achilles,
described by Talthybius in 170 flf., was known to Andromache and
the other Trojans, though not its precise object (927 flf.).
432. hostes . . . conditi: the enemy, though dead and buried.
As but one is meant, hostes perhaps is the "plural of preeminence ''
(cf. supplicesy hostes y 313), though it is not unlike the plural of
proper names often used in English in general statements.
433. retro: Back from the land of the dead (cf. H.F. 55 for a
similar expression). The thought is. Could not Hector have re-
turned as well as his enemy? (cf. redit Achilles, 806 n.).
434. Surely death is impartial! — turbat . . . terror: that
terror {Achilles* appearance), common to Greeks and Trojans alike,
troubles and disturbs us.
436. hie . . . sopor: this dream terrifies my sotU in particur-
lar.
438. It is not always certain whether Seneca's phrases refer to
Greek or to Roman customs : if to the latter, here the time would
be midnight; if to the former, it would be near dawn, when two of
the three watches had elapsed. This would correspond to the
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 235
time of the apparition of Achilles (170 n.). — alma: a common
*" epithet of sol, dies, lux, and words of kindred meaning, here applied
to nox, as in Med. 876.
439. septem ... stellae: in the constellation Ursa Major. —
iugum: wagon, cart (cf. curium temone iugum, Juvenal, Sat. 10.
135). The same constellation is called plaustra by the Latin
writers (e.g. in Med. 315), and in England is still known as " Charles'
wain."
440. ignota: unfamiliar. — afflictae: sc. mihi, or take in a
general sense, unfamiliar to one stricken with grief.
442. somnus! a predicate noun. Compare the account of this
vision .with that given of another apparition of Hector by Vergil
(A. 2. 268 flf.), which is similar in several details and may have
been Seneca's model.
446. E.g. in II. 15. 704 to end (cf. Danaum Phrygios iaculatus
puppibus ignes, Vergil, A. 2. 276).
447. While still unwilling to aid the Greeks in person, Achilles
was persuaded at a critical point in the siege to lend his armor
(vera spolia) to his friend Patroclus (Achille simulaio), who, after
creating dismay among the Trojans by his appearance, finally
was encoimtered and slain by Hector (II. 16. 783 to end). Hec-
tor's triumphant donning of Achilles' armor is described in II.
17. 188 flf. (cf. Vergil, A. 2. 275: he returned clad in the spoils of
Achilles).
448. His eye flashing fire. Vultus is nom. sing.
460. nostro: sc. vultui; like my own. — squalida: Vergil (A.
2. 277) has squalentem barbam et concretos sanguine crines.
466. utinam . . . tota: there was a tower still standing, and
from this the boy was to be cast (368, 621, 1068).
466. quocumque: as if quocumque possis.
458. The feminine adjectives, of coiu*se, modify ego, subject of
guaesivi — Trembling, turning my eyes this way and that, forgetful
of my son, I sought, unhappy woman that I am, to clasp Hector in
my arms.
460. fallaz: elusive (cf. Aeneas' experience, A. 2. 792-794;
6. 700-702: Thrice I tried to cast my arms about her neck; thrice
the apparition, vainly clasped, fled through my hands like the light
winds and very like a fleeting dream).
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236 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
461. Here for the first time Andromache addresses her son,
Astyanax, who of course has been with her throughout the
scene. — carta progenies: note the points of resemblance enumer-
ated below: vultuSf 464; incessu, 465; habUUjinanuSf^QQ; umeris,
f route, 467 ; cervicej comam, 468.
462. Observe the two different constructions with spes, dative
in Phrygibus, genitive in domus.
464. similis: ^hat case? — hos . . . Hector: my Hector had
these features, i.e. the same which are now to be seen in his son.
467. celsus, minax: sc. fuit.
468. iacta: thrown proudly back.
469. Bom too late to save Troy, too soon for your mother^ s goody
i.e. so soon as to share these perils and add to her anxieties (cf . 418-
425).
472. rediviva . . . Pergama: restore the towers of Troy.
474. sed . . . vivamus: remembering my condition, I fear to
cherish such high hopes — life is all a captive can expect (cf .
732-735).
478. deum: gen. Apollo and Neptune are meant (see 7 n.).
479. invidiae gravis: this may be a genitive of quality, char-
acterized by the burden of envy it bore; or gravis may be nom. and
invidiae a kind of specifying genitive, which was used so freely
in the Silver Age.
481. ne . . . infans: not even so much as will serve to conceal a
child.
482. quo lateat: result. — fraudi: stratagem, the concealment
of the boy.
483. coniugis: Hector. The genitive with sacer is the classical
usage.
484. verendus hosti: which the enemy should reverence. — quern:
the antecedent is tumulus. — parens: Priam.
485. in luctus . . . non a varus: liberal in spending money
upon the objects of his grief. Another illustration is found in
his ransoming of Hector's body (II. 24. 571-601; Vergil, A. 1.
484).
486. credam patri: intrust the boy to his father.
488. To hide the child in a tomb was too suggestive and
ominous.
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 237
497 ff. Verse numbers here represent their arrangement in the
oldest MS., but the sense was so obscure that modern editors have
rearranged them.
497. The sense is general — Let the unfortunate take what refuge
he can; let him choose who is safe. In this case, of course, there
was no choice.
492. doll: same idea as fraudiy 482 — exclude all witnesses of the
act.
493. petit: Perfect. The sense is, // an enemy seek him, give it
out that he lost his life in the sack of the city. This is the course the
mother actually attempted (556 ff.).
489. causa: explained'by its appositive, credi perisse — that they
were believed to have perished.
490. est super: for superest (cf. 507, 960, 1068).
491. pondus: appositive to nohilitas.
494. redituro: conditional in force; what vnll it avail him to
have hidden, if he is to fall again into their hands f
496. His safety lies in the cooling of the victor's rage after its
first flush.
498. te: again addressing the boy. — in via: inaccessible.
600. qui semper: sc. tuitus es.
601. furttun: abstract for concrete, like senectus, 42; coniugia,
59, etc. It here stands for the boy himself, stolen from the enemy
and hidden (cf. the same word in 706). The sense is. Guard
our son, thus stealthily intrusted to thy keeping.
602. victurum : from vivo ; note its antithesis to cinere.
605. fugi: imperative.
606. quos: sc. animus — assume the spirit fate has permitted.
607. See what a company of us remain — explained by tumulus,
puer, captiva — dead father, infant son, and captive mother. — simus
super: see 490 n.
612. claustra . . . tegunt: the boy has been hidden and the
entrance to the tomb closed. — commisstun: sc. eum tumulo; or
commissum may be regarded as a neuter substantive, your trust
(cf. depositum, 521; furtum, 501).
613. The old man fears that the mother's agitation may arouse
suspicion if she is seen lingering near the tomb. — quern: ante-
cedent is eum, implied in commissum.
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238 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
617. cohibe . . . ora: be silent, do not speak,
618. dux Cephallanum: Ulysses, who enters at 524. Cephal-
lania was a large island near Ithaca, and its inhabitants are spoken
of by Homer (II. 2. 631) as subjects of Ulysses.
619. tuque: she appeals to her dead husband, as in 500 — Cleave
asunder the earth, riven from its deepest abyss. In 684 she fancies
he has come.
621. depositum: a technical term in Roman law denoting an
object of value intrusted to another for safe-keeping. Here, of
course, it is said of Astyanax (cf. commissum, 512).
622. dubiO: the hesitating step of one approaching a difficult
task and debating within himself the* manner of its perform-
ances.
623. astus callidos: the characteristic of Ulysses at all times
(cf. 38, 568, 613, 750, 857, 927).
Scene 3 (w. 524-813). — On UlyBses' demand for the surrender
of her son Andromache pretends, almost successfully, that he is
dead; but finally, when he proposes to demolish the tomb of Hec-
tor, she yields and gives up the child.
624. sortis: the response given by Calchas, 360-370.
627. seras: cf. 164. Qiws is subject and domos object of petere.
628. hanc: sc. svholem, i.e. Astyanax. — fata: speaking through
Calchas.
631. arma . . . sinet: and wiU not permit their weapons to be
laid aside.
633. Andromacha : the Latin form of the name, used for the sake
of the short ultima. In other cases (e.g. 968), where a long syl-
lable is required, the Greek form Andromache is written. For
accusatives in -am and -en see 576 and 804.
636. dicebat Hector: An instance is foimd in II. 6. 476-
481: —
" O Jupiter and all ye deities.
Vouchsafe that this my son may yet become
Among the Trojans eminent like me.
And nobly rule in Ilium. May they say,
* This man is greater than his father was ! '
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 239
When they behold him from the battlefield
Bring back the bloody spoil of the slain foe —
That so his mother may be glad at heart." — (Bryant.)
et: intensive; even.
636. generosa . . . semina: the children of those nobly bom. —
exurgunt: exaurgunt.
637. ille . . . parvus comes: the calf following its dam.
639. subito: speedily. As the young bullock soon reaches ma-
turity, so will Hector's son.
641. The figure is changed, and an illustration taken from the
vegetable worid — the sprout that shoots up from a fallen tree
or its stimip soon grows into a great tree, the nucleus of a
forest.
644. A third illustration, from the rekindling of a smoldering
fire. The sense of the whole passage is this: as a yoimg bullock
soon develops into the strength and spirit of his sire; as a tiny
shoot quickly grows to be a tree; as the coals of a fire apparently
dead may be fanned into new life, so may this infant become
another Hector, and be the scourge of Greece.
646. iniustus : with aestimator. — dolor : your present grief imfits
you to weigh considerations fairly. In the Hecuba of Euripides
(299-331) Ulysses makes a very similar plea to Hecuba.
646. ezigas: consider.
647. bella: object of timet, next line.
649. numquam bene . . . iacentem: Troy had been prostrate
before (718-731), but had recovered.
661. futurus Hector: see 461-474; here appositive to magna
res.
662. deductas: launched, ready to sail. During the war they
had been drawn on up the beach.
663. hac: sc. causa. — crudelem: sc. me. — neve . . . putes:
prohibitive.
664. sorte: as in 524.
666. petissem Oresten: sc. si sors iussisset. Orestes was the
son of Agamemnon, and Ulysses says in substance, Had the fates
demanded f I should have sought for sacrifice the son of the Greek
instead of the Trojan leader. The idea was suggested, of course,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
240 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
by the fact that Agamemnon had offered up his daughter at Aulis
(249 n.), and there is the same allusion in quod victor tulit. —
patere: imperative.
666. Andromache attempts to deceive Ulysses, as had been
advised in 493.
669. confossa: in agreement Y^th the subject of exuisseniy 562;
so praestricta and cincta. Pectus and lotus are adverbial accusa-
tives.
660. secantibus: that cut into the flesh.
664. patriae vapor: the heat of the burning city.
666. numquid: can it be that — f
670. etiam dearum: alluding to Thetis, the mother of Achilles,
whose attempt to save her son from his fate at Troy by concealing
him at the court of Lycomedes had been defeated by the cunning
of Ulysses (see 214 n., and cf. Statins, Ach. 2. 166 ff.).
673. coacta: nom. sing.; you shall tell under compulsion what
you will not of your own accord.
674. perire: complement of the three verbs that follow.
676. Andromacham: see note on 533.
677. Threaten me with life, not death.
679. invitam: sc. te.
686. istis: this body which you threaten. Istis is used in prefer-
ence to his because the speaker is addressing the man who had
threatened the torture, and in a sense is repeating his thought. —
caeci: as black as blindness.
686. iratus timens: the victor , enraged at the resistance he has
met, and still fearful of its renewal (530, 548, 551).
690. Because Astyanax grown up may avenge the woes of his
parents upon the Greeks of the coming generation (cf . Telemacho
beUa paras f 593).
696. premis: are concealing (cf. curam premebat, Vergil, A. 4.
332).
696. gaudete Atridae: apostrophe. — laetifica: glad tidings,
object of refer. — ut soles: Ulysses had been a conspicuous actor
in nearly all the spectacular exploits of the Greeks — the repulse
of Sarpedon, the capture of Rhesus, the taking of the palladium,
etc. (38 n.).
697. obit: for obiit (cf. peril, 493).
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 241
699. So may the greatest ill the conqueror can threaten (i.e. death,
which to her would seem a blessing, 418 ff., 577) befall me ... as
he lies among the dead. This imprecation is constructed very in-
geniously so that while the speaker is telling the literal truth she
conveys a false impression.
604. debita exanimis: what is due the dead, i.e. the funeral
rites (cf. iu^ta Troiae, 65; iusta functis, Med. 999). — exanimis:
dat. plur., though usually of the consonant declension.
606. ril gladly bear word to the Greeks that the oracle has been
fulfilled by the removal of Hectares offspring. For the moment
Ulysses is convinced, but doubt returns immediately (607).
607-618. Spoken aside.
608. tu Old: sc. credis. — fingit . . . pavet: to the Greeks and
Romans the thought of death was so abhorrent that periphrases
were commonly used in order to avoid direct mention of it (e.g.
Si quid mihi humanitus accidisset, Cicero, Phil. 1.4). Here Ulysses
can hardly believe that Andromache would dare pretend so hor-
rible a thing as the death of her own son, as if the very pretense
might prove an omen (av^picium) of its reality (cf. the mother's
own fears, 488).
610. Ulysses answers his own question — They fear omens who
have nothing worse to fear.
614. totum Ulizen: as the incarnation of craft.
616. maeret: she does show signs of grief, as might a mother
bereft of her child, but her gait and anxious listening to every
Soimd suggest another emotion.
618. It is more fear of something still to come than grief for the
pa^t.
619. alloqui in luctu: commiserate.
621, 622. He states for the first time his precise purpose, and
watches the effect. For sola . . . manet cf . 1068. Andromache's
speech which follows and the first two lines of Ulysses' next speech
(625, 626) are aside.
627. ite celeres: to his attendants.
630. Aside, bene est; tenetur: she is caught! (cf. Med.
550).
631. Tauntingly to Andromache, iam certe perit: in mocking
allusion to her attempted deceit (556-567). — perit: perfect.
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242 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
632. Would my son were living, that I might fear for him. What
you take for signs of terror are hut the result of long habit.
633. Long familiarity with any emotion often begets insensi-
bility to it (cf. 422 n.).
634-641. We need not suppose that Ulysses had any suspicion
as to where the boy was hidden, but merely that he seizes on this
idea as a means of torturing his victim into some expression that
may supply a clew. It is ingeniously conceived. — lustrale sacrum :
rites of purification.
638. pl&cet: from placare. — sparsi: in agreement with Hec-
toris by hypallage (cf. 643). The real idea of course is "the scat-
tering of Hector's ashes."
640. ille: Astyanax. — efiiigit: perfect.
642-662. Aside, quid agimus: what am I to do? We should
expect the subjunctive in such a question, but the connection shows
clearly enough what is meant.
644. pars utra vincet: by giving up her son she might save her
husband's ashes from profanation; by remaining silent she might
possibly find opportunity to spirit away the boy and leave the tomb
to its fate. A modern mother would not hesitate long between the
living and the dead; but to Andromache, believing that burial
was essential to the happiness of the dead, it was a fearful dilemma.
Hence it is not strange that she wavered, inclining now to save the
child (647, 651, 655, 659, 662), and now to guard the father's
ashes (648, 653, 658), finally deciding upon the latter (691 ff.). —
immites decs: the gods who have permitted all the woes that have
befallen her.
646. manes: appositive to deos veros.
646. non aliud . . . quam te: 'tis his likeness to you that most
endears my son to me (cf. 461-468). This infinitive clause is object
of the "witness" idea in testor.
649. mergetur: shall his ashes he sunk in the sea f — as proposed
in 638.
660. hie: Astyanax (so in 655, 659).
662. poteris: sc. videre, fastigia: cf. turre, 368, 622, 1068.
664. fata: death.
666. ilium: Hector; he is beyond their reach.
669. sensus: gen. with potens (cf. mentis potenti, Ovid, Tr. 2. 139).
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 243
660. Cf. 470-474, 550, 551.
663. responsa peragam: / tvUI fulfill the oracle (639).
664. quae vendidistis: alluding to the ransom of Hector's body
by his father (485 n.). Note the number of vendidistis — destroy
the tomb which ye Greeks have sold f Quae, of course, is relative,
with busta for its antecedent.
666. Caelitum fidem: the protection of the gods; fidem Achillis,
on the other hand, may mean the good faith of Achilles as pledged
in restoring Hector's body for burial.
667. munus tuere: protect your father* s gift, do not desecrate the
body which he gave up for burial.
669. decs . . . faventes: In II. 20. 38-40 Mars, Apollo,
Diana, Latona, Xanthus and Venus are named as taking the side
of the Trojans; while Juno, Minerva, Neptune, Mercury and
Vulcan favored the Greeks. In the sack of the city the temples
of all suffered alike (Vergil, A. 2. 763, 764), and in particular was
Minerva insulted by the attempt of Ajax Oileus to drag Cassandra
from her shrine. Up to this time, however, the resting-places of
the dead had been respected (busta transierat furor). Note the
force of the tense in fuerat and transierat.
673. Amazon: see 12 n. In Phaed. 399-403 the Amazons^ are
spoken of as having invaded Attica. The reference here may be
to that or to their attempt to relieve Troy, in the course of which
they may be said to have " laid low many of the Grecian (Argolicas)
troops." The gentle Andromache threatens to play the Am-
azon.
674. maenas: the maenades were female devotees of Bacchus,
famous for their wild orgies. With deo percussa cf . recepto maenas
insanit deo, Med. 383; and with entheo gradu cf. entheos gressus,
Med. 382.
676. armata thyrso: cf. H.F. 474 n. — expers sui: beside her-
self.
676. Talis is understood with the subject of ruam, correlative
to qualis, 672, 673.
678. To his attendants.
681. repellor: Andromache is thrust aside, and her outburst of
martial energy gives way to despair.
682. molire terras: heave up the earth.
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244 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
683. vel umbra: even as a shade (ghost) you are equal to the task
— arma . . . ignes: in her frenzy she imagines that her desire is
realized and that Hector is coming.
686-691. Spoken aside, to herself.
688. conditum: sc. natum — the enormous weight of the falling
tomb wiU straightway crush him, buried there.
690. ubicumque: any wheresoever.
691. ad genua: she prostrates herself at the feet of Ulysses,
clasping them, or his knees, with the hand that no one's knees have
ever known before (for this mode of expressing submission and '
appeal see Med. 247 n.).
696. mitius: sc. eo, correlative to qu^ in 695. For the Senti-
ment cf . 336 n.
697. " He that hath pity upon the poor lendeth to the Lord/'
Proverbs 19: 17.
698. coniugis sanctae: chaste wife — Penelope.
700. Laerta: Latin form of the Greek Laertes, which latter is
found in Thy. 587 (cf . Andromacha, 533 n.). — iuvenis tuus:
Telemachus (cf. 593).
704. avum, patrem: Laertes, famous for his great age, Ulysses
for his unrivaled craft and wisdom. Her adjuration is, according
as you pity me, so may you see wife and father and son again.
704. hie: the child; so in 707. — exhibe . . . roga: produce
the boy, then ask your boon.
706. The change of measure indicates the speaker's agitation,
and the passage, in anapests, has almost the effect of a chorus. —
precede: come forth — addressed to Astyanax.
706. furtum: as in 501.
707. This, Ulysses, this helpless babe, is that source of terror to
the thousand ships! (cf. 550).
708. submitte : to Astyanax — lower your hands, and with appeal-
ing touch entreat your master's feet (691 n.).
712. Put away from your thoughts your royal ancestry (Horace
has atavis regibus, C. 1. 1. 1).
713. senis: Priam.
714. excidat: be forgotten (cf. 204 n.).
716. gere captivum: play the captive (cf. dedisce captam,
884).
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 245
718 ff. Troy was taken and its king Laomedon slain on account
of his breach of faith with Hercules (7 n., 133 n.). Priam, then a
child {pueri regis)^ known as Podarces, was spared by the victor
(or, according to Apollodorus, was ransomed by his sister Hesione
and hence called Priam from rplaffdai, to ransom), and ascended
the throne.
721, 722. Cf. H.F. 30-42, and the enumeration of Hercules'
labors in H.F. 215-248 and Ovid, M. 9. 182-199.
723, 724. In quest of Cerberus (H.F. 46^56, 807-827).
726. hostisparvi: Fri&m (pueri regis, 7 IS).
727. sedft: imperative.
728. fide meliore: the treachery of Laomedon was proverbial,
and his name was applied as a term of reproach to his descendants
(e.g. LaomedorUiadae, Vergil, A. 3. 248; Laomedonteae periuria
gentia, 4. 542).
729. This it w<m to be taken by such a conqueror,
731. WiU you emulate only his prowess (and not his
mercy) t
732. non minor . . . supplex: a suppliant (Astyanax) not in-
ferior to that suppliant (Priam) whom Hercules spared.
737, 738. a. 529-535, 550-553. —crescit: see 534-545.
739. Shall this child fan to life these ruins of the city, now reduced
to ashes f (cf . Ulysses' figure of the supposedly dead fire in 645). —
ezcitabit: cf. vires resumit, 545.
742. non sic: we Trojans do not yield while we have any strength
left to harm our foes.
743. spiritus: pride (so animos, 745). — genitor: Hector — does
the thought of his father give him pride f But surely he was dragged
behind his chariot by Achilles.
14tl. Let the yoke of a slave be placed upon his highborn neck;
let the privilege of being a slave be granted him — does any refuse
this to a prince f Note the antithesis between famulare and nobUi,
servire and regi.
761. Andromache is unfair to Ulysses here, for he had courage
as well as cunning (see 757).
763. etiam Pelasgi: e.g. Iphigenia (249 n.), Palamedes (Vergil, A.
2. 82), and Ajax, who killed himself in a fit of Insanity after being
defeated by Ulysses in the contest for the arms of Achilles (Ovid,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
246 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
M. 13. 382-398). — vatem praetendis: do you screen yourself behind
a seer and the blameless gods f
764. This is the deed of your own heart, i.e. you have controlled
the response you quote. Vergil (A. 2. 122 ff.) makes Sinon
ascribe to Ulysses a similar mastery over Calchas.
766. nocturne miles: brave only in secret attack (cf . Ovid, M. 13.
100, quoted in note on 38).
766. No other would dare (i.e. be shameless enough) to attack an
infant in the light of day ; or, This is one deed you dare do alone,
without Diomede's help (see 38 n.).
768. non vacat: there is not leisure.
769. ancoras . . . legit: is weighing anchor (cf. naves deductas,
662 n.).
762. misereri: so far as to spare the child.
766. implere: used as a middle.
767. summum: last (see 41&-425).
768-770. Cf. 700-702.
770. demens: a doubtful reading, repeated from 768; MSS.
have medios, while Leo suggests toties.
774. caedes: the verb. — terga: implying their cowardly flight.
— non Pyrrhum trahes: in retaliation for his father's treatment of
your father's body.
776. tenera, parva: agreement may be determined by scansion.
For the thought cf. H.F. 1126 n.
777. sequeris: tense is shown by scansion. — lustri: a Roman
word and idea (cf. 782 n.).
778. referens: reproducing. — sollemne . . . sacrum: the
Liwiw Troicus or Ludus Troiae was very popular in the time of the
early Empire at Rome. It consisted of an exhibition of skillful
riding by boys or youths of the noblest families (see Vergil's
description, A. 5. 545-603).
780. The reference is to the wild worship of Cybele, which had
its origin and chief seat near Troy, and in later times was intro-
duced at Rome. The spirit of it is well reproduced in the Attis
of Catullus (C. 63).
781. flezo . . . comu: while the curving trumpet echoes back
the stirring measures.
782. barbarica: Phrygian. To the Greeks, and to the Romans
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 247
who copied their literature, barbarus, barbaricusy etc., meant simply
not Grecian. Of course the word is hardly appropriate in the
mouth of a Trojan woman.
783. So inglorious a form of death was worse than the cruelties
of war.
786. muri videbunt: the towers on the walls of Troy had been a
favorite vantage point for those who would watch the combats in
theplainbeneath (11.3. 145-153; Ovid, M. 13. 415-417 — "Those
towers from which Astyanax used often to see his father, pointed
out by his mother, as he fought for himself and his ancestral king-
dom '*). It was from the wall that Hector's parents had seen his
fall, and there Andromache had fainted at sight of his body
dragged away by his victorious enemy (II. 22. 462 ff.). Here, by
an easy figure, the walls themselves are said to see. — nunpe . . .
flatus: Ulysses forgets the promise implied in his words arbitrio
tuo implere lacrimis, 764.
788. paucas: ^a. lacrimaa. — condam: dose.
789. viventis: bc. pueri. — occidis: said to her son.
790. expectat: awaits you in the land of the dead. — tua: the
Troy that is worthy of you; all who survive are slaves (cf . liberoa
Troas),
792. The only speech of Astyanax. His fellow-victim, Polyxena,
does not speak at all.
793. cassa praesidia: appositive to manua.
802. perfer: carry to your father, — si . . . priores: in Oct. 138
it is declared that "To the dead, among the spirits, remains no
care of their offspring." — flammis: the funeral fire, which con-
sumed the body.
804. Andromachen: see 533 n. and cf. Andromacham, 576.
806. redit Achilles: i.e. his ghost (181-186). The thought is,
// Achillea has been able to return, why may not Hector f (cf. 433 n.,
434 n.). — redit: for rediit. — sume . . . comas: cf. laceros
crines excipe, 800. The reference is to the tearing of the hair in
grief (99, 100). — iterum: now, over our son, as formerly at your
death.
807. viri: my husband.
809. parenti: Hector. — hanc . . . vestem: as a memento,
810. tumulus . . . meus: cf. mea membra, 414.
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248 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
811. siquid . . . ore: if any of his ashss remain in this garment,
I will search it out with my kisses.
813. abripite: to his attendants. — moram: with a double
reference — to the actual delay, which he is impatient to see ended,
and to Astyanax as the cause of the delay (552).
Scene 4 (w. 814-860). — The chorus wonders to what part of
Greece each of the captive women will be dragged, and prays that
the lot may not send any to Sparta, Mycenae or Ithaca, the homes
of Troy's worst foes. The measiu*e is an irregular arrangement of
sapphic and adonic verses.
814. vocat: the subject is not only sedes, but each nominative
place-name in 815-843. The whole is little more than a list of
names, taken with the exception of four — Tempe, Peparethos,
Eleusin and Pisae — from the Homeric catalogue of the ships
(II. 2. 484-789). A similar choral passage, much less extended, is
met in the Hecuba of Euripides (444-481). — captas: sc. Troadas.
817. PhthiS: Ionic Greek form of Phthia, the birthplace of
Achilles — hence viros tellus dare mUitares aptior.
818. lapidosa Trachin: cf. aspera Trachin, H.O. 195; a village
near the most rugged portion of Mt. Oeta, said to have been foimded
by Hercules.
819. maris . . . domitrix: it was from lolcos that the Argo
sailed, the first Greek vessel to attempt a long sea voyage (cf.
Med. 596, where Jason, its captain, is characterized as mare qui
subegit).
820. Crete, early settled and thickly populated, is often called
"the land of a hundred cities'' (see H.F. 230 n.). This, of course,
as well as "the thousand ships" (27 n.), is merely a round niunber,
like the trecenti so often used by the Romans. In the Odyssey the
number of cities is given as ninety.
821. Gortjmis: Gortyn, Gortyna, Gortyne (all these forms are
met) was a CJretan town. As its introduction here after the whole
island has been characterized seems awkward, it has been con-
jectured that Gjnrtone was meant, which, like Tricce in the same
line, was a Thessalian town. Both are mentioned by Pliny (N.H. 4)
in his account of their respective regions.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE TROADES 249
822. Mofhone : this is hard to explain. There was a Mothone
in Messenia, but it was not the home of Philoctetes (137 n.)
and so did not send the bow twice for the ruin of Troy (824).
Another reading is Methone, described in II. 2. 715-719 as the
home of Philoctetes, but in the first place its initial syllable is long
and will not fit the measure, and in the second place it was nowhere
near Mt. Oeta. Gronovius suggested making the question end
with this line and a new one begin with quae.
826, 827. Olenos, Pleuron: towns in Aetolia. — virgin! . . .
divae: Diana. Oeneus, king of Calydon, the portion of Aetolia
in which these towns stood, neglected this goddess while offering
sacrifice to all the others, and in pimishment his lands were ravaged
by a monstrous boar (845), whose capture was the object of the
famous Calydonian hunt, described at length by Ovid (M. 8.
260-439).
828. Troezen: situated on a fine bay of the Aegean, hence
maris lati sinuosa.
829, 830. regnum . . . superbum: Prothous was leader of the
Magnesians, in whose territory PeUon stood, against Troy. —
tertius . . . gradus: the third step in passing from earth to heaven.
The Titans of the line of lapetus attempted to dethrone Jupiter,
who had succeeded his father Saturn, and in order to scale the
heavens piled one mountain upon another to make a ladder (see
note on H.F. 972).
830-836. A digression suggested by the fact that on Mt. Pelion
the terrible Achilles had received his early training (see H.F. 971 n.).
831. antro: in Statins, Ach. 1. 106, we read that "A lofty hall
penetrates the mountain and supports Pelion on a long arch.
Part was excavated by hand and part was the work of time."
In this cave dwelt the centaur Chiron, who was tutor of both
Hercules and Achilles. lam trucis pueri refers to the latter.
836. Carystos: a town of Euboea, noted for its marble (varii
lapidis).
838. Chalcis: also in Euboea, at the narrowest part of the
channel Euripus, whose current, flowing swiftly and changing
direction repeatedly under the influence of wind and tide, was
believed to ebb and flow seven times each day (see note on H.F.
378 for fuller explanation).
Digitized by VjOOQIC
250 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
839. Calydnae: a group of islands near the coast of Caria,
especially exposed to winds from all directions.
840. Gonoessa: called by Homer alTeiv^, lofty, and so assailed
by every wind that blows.
841. Enispe: a town of Arcadia, called by Homer "wind-swept."
842. Peparethos: there is an island of this name off the coast
not of Attica but of Thessaly. Some have explained the name here
as that of an Attic deme instead of the island.
843. Eleusin: not in the Homeric catalogue, but probably
selected in place of its old and successful rival, Athens, as repre-
Bentative of Attica. It was the seat of the celebration of the
mysteries of Ceres (cf. notes on H.F. 300, 844). To reveal the
Eleusinian mysteries to any but a regular initiate was an offense
against gods and men (hence sacris tacitis).
844. The abrupt change of construction here suggests the pos-
sible loss of one or more verses. Hitherto the geographical names
have been nominative, but from here on are accusative. -Scaliger
attempted to supply the thought-connection thus: Qicove iactatae
pelago feremur exules ? ad quae loca, quas ad urbes f — Tossed on
what sea shall we he borne as exiles — to what places, to what cities f
This will make Salamina, etc., appositives to urbes. — Salamina:
the island near Athens, as the Cyprian city was not founded till
after the Trojan war. — veri: a doubtful reading. As printed
Aiacis veri would mean the greater as distinguished from the lesser
Ajax, son of Oileus. Veram, which has been suggested, would
agree with Salamina and mean the original as contrasted with the
later Salamis, in Cyprus. This would involve an anachronism in
the speech of the Trojan chorus.
846. fera: the great boar (see note on divae, 827). — Calydona:
ace. sing.
846. quas . . . terras: Thessaly. — Titaressos: an affi&ent of
the Peneus. Its current was less rapid than that of the larger
stream (segnibus undis). — subiturus aequor: as the Titaressos
entered the Peneus but a short distance from its mouth this may
be understood as meaning soon to enter the sea, which is suflfi-
ciently commonplace. A more satisfactory sense is suggested by
the old belief that it had its source in the infernal world (Lucan,
Phars. 6. 378: Hunc Jama est Stygiis manare paludibus amnem,
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 551
Tfie story is that this stream flows forth from the Stygian waters), and
is destined to plunge beneath the sea in returning.
848. Bessan et Scarphen: towns in Locris. — senilepi: belong-
ing to Nestor, who was noted for his great age.
849. Pharin: in Laconia. — Pisas: Pisae or Pisa, situated near
Elis and an old rival of that city for the honor of celebrating the
Oljnnpian games. It is mentioned often in that connection, either
with Elis as here, or as a substitute for it {e.g. Thy. 123; Juvenal
13. 99). — lovis: belonging to Jupiter , whose temple, containing
the famous Phidian statue of the Oljnnpian Zeus, stood near the
athletic field. — coronis: the prizes took the form of wreaths.
860. Elida: Elis, the scene in classic times of the Olympic
games (hence coronis claram). Of course all this reference by
the chorus to the Olympic games is anachronistic.
861-867. Let it be any land but Sparta (the home of Helen and
source of all the woes of Troy), or Argolis (the realm of Agamemnon ,
who commanded the besiegers), or Ithaca (whence came the cunning
Ulysses, most dreaded and hated of all). — procella mittat: let the
wind bear us where it will.
863. dum . . . absit: conditional. — luem: either destruction
in the abstract, or Helen as the concrete cause (cf. lues, 892,
applied to the same Helen; luem, Med. 183, applied to Medea).
864. Sparte : Sparta, in its Greek form.
866. saevi Pelopis: father of Atreus and so ancestor of the two
Greek leaders, Agamemnon and Menelaus. His particular act of
perfidy and cruelty was the killing of Myrtilus, son of Mercury,
who had helped him win his bride, Hippodamia.
866. Neritos, Zacyntho: two islands near Ithaca and employed
to suggest it and its king, as was Cephallania in 518. — brevier:
smaller.
867. dolosis: the stock epithet of Ulysses, here and often applied
to places and things associated with him.
869. Hecuba: the ultima is long, either arbitrarily so in thesi
or from retaining the quantity of its Greek form 'Eica/SiJ.
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252 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
ACT IV
Scene 1 (w. 861-887). — Helen comes to lead Polyxena away
on pretense of marriage to Pyxrhus.
Helena: according to Euripides (Hec. 218) it is Ulysses who
brings the news to Hecuba.
861-663. Whatever marriage, fatal and joyless, involves mourrin
ing and bloodshed, deserves Helen for its priestess. — eversis quoque:
even when overthrovm.
864. Pyrrhi toros: for Polyxena (see 871-887).
866. cultus, habitus: dress, costume (cf. cidtu, 362 n.; 1132).
For the bride of a Greek general this naturally would be Grecian
(Graios).
868. fallatur: let her be lured to death under pretext of marriage, —
ipsi: Polyxena. — levius: a less evil than otherwise she would
suffer. In 967, 968, her sisters, doomed to live, are represented as
envying her.
869. mors, mori: predicate and subject respectively with est.
Note the alliteration.
870. iussa: nom. sing. — why, when bidden, do you hesitate to act f
The fault of a crime that is forced recoils upon its author. This is a
comfortable evasion of responsibility, with which may be com-
pared the chorus' prayer for Jason in [Med. 669: Pardte iusso —
Spare him; he acted under orders. In cessas the speaker addresses
herself.
872. virgo: Polyxena, who here is addressed. Euripides
(Hec. 175-437) assigns her a spirited part in the dialogue between
herself and her mother on the one side, and Ulysses, who has
come to lead her away, on the other; in this play she does not speak
at all.
876. sospes: Troy in her best days (lit. when safe) could not give
you such a match, nor could Priam.
876. decus: Achilles had been and Pyrrhus now was the glory
of the Greeks. There is a double sense running through this
passage. On the surface Helen's proposition appears to be that
Polyxena shall be wedded to Pyrrhus; yet all she says is equally
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 253
true on the supposition that the captive is to become the bride of
the dead Achilles.
879. deae: the Nereides, sisters of Thetis, the mother of
Achilles.
882. Peleus, Nereus: the fathers respectively of Achilles and
Thetis.
883. Put off your mourning , don your festal garb.
884. dedisce captam: unlearn the rdle of captive (cf. gere capti-
vum, 715 n.). — deprime: smooth, arrange the hair, disheveled in
mourning.
886. crinem . . . distingui: in allusion to the Roman custom
of parting the bride's hair into six locks (Festus, p. 339: Senis
crinifyus nubentes ornantur — Brides are adorned with six locks of
hair; Ovid, F. 2. 560: Comat virgineas hasta recurva comas — The
hooked pike dresses her maiden locks; cf. Browning, Sordello,
Book II: —
" A Roman bride, when they'd dispart
Her unbound tresses with the Sabine dart,
Holding the famous rape in memory still.
Felt creep into her curls the iron chill."
patere: imperative.
886. ezcelso magis: more exalted than that of Troy.
Scene 2 (w. 888-954). — To Andromache's reproaches and
laments Helen replies that her own lot, hated by all and forced to
mourn in secret, is the hardest. The former then renews her
lamentation.
888. Though Helen had addressed Polyxena it is Andromache
who replies.
889. gaudere: a marriage was regarded as an occasion essen-
tially festive and joyous, with which death and mourning were
utterly incongruous. Hence a wedding amid the ruins of Troy
would be out of place, an aggravation of their misery, and might
fittingly be characterized as a new kind of marriage (novis thala-
miSf 900; cf. Med. 743, and nuptias novas, Med. 894).
890-892. Note the keen irony.
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254 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
892. lues utriusque populi: the bane of both Greece and Troy
(cf . Troiae et patriae communis ErinySf applied to the same Helen
by Aeneas, Vergil, A. 2. 573).
896. The ancients believed that if the body were not buried
the soul must stray about in outer darkness for a hundred years
before it could be admitted to its proper place in the other world
(Vergil, A. 6. 327-330), and so inhumata suggested a greater horror
to them than it would to us. — haec . . . tuus: your own marriage
(to Paris) hc^ sown these bones broadcast (cf. Helen's own expres-
sion in 861-863).
897. dimicantes . . . vires: you joyfully beheld your two hus-
bands fighting. The reference is to the combat between Menelaus
and Paris, described in II. 3. — prospiceres: Helen viewed the
combat from the city wall near the Scaean gate (see 785 n.; cf. II.
3. 145-153, 383, 384).
898. incerta voti: undecided as to your desire, i.e. for whose vic-
tory she should wish.
900. igne: in post- Augustan Latin this form prevailed over the
earlier igni. It here depends on opus. — thalamis novis: see
889 n. — Troia praelucet: no need of specially prepared torches
(taedis, face, igne) when the whole city, burning, lights up the
bride's path.
902. planctus . . . sonet: these expressions of grief would
celebrate fittingly {digne) the marriage proposed. Distinguish
the sense of planctus and gemitus.
903-906. Cf. Ulysses' words, 645, 546.
906-926. A fine bit of special pleading, in which Helen makes
out that her own lot is the hardest of all and that she herself is
wholly innocent (cf. Euripides, Tro. 920 flf.).
906. / can maintain my cause, even before a hostile judge. — iudice
infesto: concessive abl. abs. The iudex, of course, is Andromache,
who had received Helen's proposal with such sarcasm.
907. graviora passa: cf. Aeneas' address to his men, O passi
graviora, Vergil, A. 1. 199.
908. occulte: you can mourn your dead; I dare not mourn my
Paris (cf . Octavia's lament that she dares not show her grief for
father and brother, Oct. 65-69; Tac. Ann. 13. 16. 7).
910. patior . . . captiva: / have borne this yoke (of slavery)
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 255
long, a captive for ten years. Annis is abl. of time within
which.
913. gravius timere: bad as it is to lose one's native land, it is
worse to fear it as I do. — levat tanti mall comitatus: cf . our prov-
erb, "Misery loves company," in a slightly different sense (cf.
1009 flf.).
916. m^. . . dominus: Helen complains that she was deprived of
the pleasant suspense (incerto . . . pependit) of being assigned to a
husband by lot, which the Trojan captives had enjoyed (57, 974),
but had been fated from the first to return to Menelaus.
919. Spartana puppis: of course it was in Paris' ship, not Spar-
tan but> Trojan, that Helen had been brought to Troy; and she
had come undeniably as praeda (920, 922; cf. captiva, 911),
though certainly as the willing prize of her lover.
921. donum: appositive to me, understood as the object of
dedit. — iudici: Paris, whose award of the prize of beauty to
Venus (victrix dea) and her gift to him of Helen had led to the war
and the downfall of Troy (cf. 66 n.).
922. ignoscepraedae: sc. mihi — forgive me, the passive prize. —
iudicem iratum: Menelaus. Euripides (Tro. 862 ff.) represents
Menelaus as seeking Helen after the captiu'e of the city with the
avowed intention of giving her up to death as the cause of all the
sufferings of the Greek besiegers — and as relenting when he came
under the influence of her charm.
924. hanc . . . fleeter leave off your mourning for a little and
persuade this maiden (Polyxena) to accede to my proposal; I can
scarce restrain my tears at the thought of my own misfortunes,
and so cannot argue the matter with her myself.
927. fare . . . nectat: Andromache sees through Helen's
assumption of sympathy and bluntly demands that she tell her
errand and reveal what new mischief Ulysses has devised.
929. Is the maiden to share the fate of my Astyanax f (eee 368-
370, 621, 1068-1117).
931. latere scisso: of sheer aide — the sheer-faced cliffs which
Sigeon rears, as he looks forth from his shallow hay upon the deep,
932. Sigeon: the penult of this Greek name is properly long
(cf. Sigeis, 75), which gives us a spondee in the fourth foot, in
^dolation of all the laws of the iambic trimeter (cf . vincendo, 264),
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256 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
In pure Latin words a vowel before another is usually short, and
it may be that the poet "felt" the 6 to be so here. As a rule
Seneca's verse is very accurate.
934. quam . . . Pyrrhus: than that Pyrrhus should he, etc.
937. falli: appositive to hoc unum. — paratas: sc. nos.
938. Helen here throws off the mask and with real or pretended
feeling reveals the plot of which she is the agent (861-867). — in-
terpres: Calchas.
939. lucis invisae: hated life (cf. Vergil's lucem perosi, 6. 435).
941. occidere: the i is short. — comitantem: agrees with me,
938.
946. animus: of Polyxena (cf. 1146-1152, where her courage in
death is described). — necem: doom.
946. cultus decoros: the becoming garb. With 946, 947, cf.
883-885 n.
948. illud, hoc: the marriage with P3rrrhus, and actual death.
Note the accurate use of the demonstratives.
949. Andromache's attention is attracted to the aged Hecuba,
who now approaches. — luctu . . . audito: abl. abs. — at word of
this new grief.
952. quam: best taken with levi — on how slight a thread hangs
the frail life.
953. minimum: a very litUe thing, i.e. the snapping of the
thread.
954. prima . . . fugit: death is the first to flee.
Scene 3 (w. 955-1008). — Hecuba and Andromache lament the
hapless fate imposed upon them by the fall of Troy and the issue
of the lot. Pyrrhus enters and drags away Polyxena, followed by
her mother's cry of despair.
956. rebellat: does he still renew the wart — o . . . levem:
too light the hand that smote Achilles, if he still return to plague us
(347 n.).
957. cinis, tumulus: cf. Hecuba's words in Ovid, M. 13. 503:
Cinis ipse sepulti \ in genus hoc saevit; tumulo quoque sensimv^a
hostem — The very ashes of the buried foe are fierce against our race;
from the tomb itself we have felt our enemy.
958. turba: see 32 n., and cf. gregem, next line.
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 257
960. matrem : motherly care and affection. — haec : Polyxena,
as in 924, 962, 971. — est super: for superest, as in 490, 507, 1068.
963 ff . She calls upon her soul to flee away- by the gate of death
and spare her (remitte) the sight of this last cruel deed — the mur-
der of her daughter.
970. hue et hue: with sparsas (cf. the chorus, 814-860).
972. invidebis: sc. huic. — si: almost temporal in its force.
974. uma: see 57, 58, and cf. sorte, 917. In the Troades of
Euripides (230 ff.) it is the herald Talthybius who announces the
issue of the lot to the captives.
976. Scyrius iuvenis: Pyrrhus (339 n.).
977. furor . . . Phoebusque: in reference to her well-known
inspiration and supposed madness (34 n.), which it is assumed wiU
exempt her from the common fate.
978. regum . . . rector: Agamemnon (cf. Pyrrhus' phrase,
regum tyranne, 303). In all accounts Cassandra is represented as
having fallen into Agamemnon's hands on this occasion, and
having shared his fate at Mycenae.
967. nata: Polyxena. — quam vellet: how Cassandra and
Andromache would choose your marriage (to the dead) in preference
to that assigned them by the lot ! (cf . Vergil, A. 3. 321-323 : " O maiden,
happy above all others, who wast bidden to die at the enemy's
tomb, not subject to the outcome of the lot!").
980. nolenti brevis: two words which give a peculiarly brutal
tone to the speech, as the one implies that Hecuba had been forced
upon her future master and the other reminds her of her worn-out
life. — brevis: short-lived.
982. regibus reges: has made princes the slaves of princes. Of
coui'se the word means royal personages in general, women as well
as men (Med. 56).
985. matrem . . miscet: gives Hecuba to the man who had
won the arms of AchiUeSy her son^s slayer. After Achilles' death
Ulysses and Ajax argued their respective claims to his armor,
and the former won (Ovid, M. 13. 1-383).
991. sterilis . . . meos: barren Ithaca does not contain my
tomb, i.e. I am not to be buried in Ithaca. The common story of
her fate is that she was transformed into a dog before the Grecian
fleet left the Chersonesus, leaped into the sea, and was drowned
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258 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
near a point of land which from that circumstance was known
thereafter as Cynossema, "the sign of the dog" (Ovid, M. 13. 567).
994. me . . . sequentur: my iU fortune (cf. mea . . . mala,
996) shall follow me and involve all those about me (cf . 1006-1008).
non . . . mare: a prophecy of the disastrous storm that befell
the Greek fleet on its homeward way (Ag. 460-578).
After 995 there appears to be a break in the sense, due probably
to the loss of one or more lines. Leo attempts to restore the gen-
eral meaning by supplying the line, sociosque merget, obruent
reducem quoque. If this be adopted we must make reducem agree
with te (Ulysses) supplied, and take the nouns in 996 as subjects
of obruent. The whole then will read, The sea shall rage and over-
whelm your comradesj and war and fire and my fate and Priam's
shall overtake you, even when restored to your home.
997. ista: sc. mala. — hoc: explained by its appositive, the
sentence in 998: Meantime this serves instead of vengeance: that
I have fallen to ^you in the drawing of lots, and so prevented your
securing a more desirable prize (cf. praeda vilis, 58; pra^da brevis,
980).
999. Pyrrhus enters in quest of Polj^ena, to complete the sacri-
fice.
1001. reclude . . . pectus: cf. Vergil's pectus mucrone recludit,
A. 10. 601; reserat . . . pectora, Oct. 367). With pectus sc. meum,
1002. coniungesoceros: reunite Achilles' parents-in-law, i.e., As
you have slain this maiden' 8 father (310-312; Vergil, A. 2. 550-558),
so slay her mother now. The word soceros is used of the same per-
sons, Priam and Hecuba, by Vergil (A. 2. 457; cf. Med. 106). —
mactator senum: the same taunt is uttered by Agamemnon, 310-
312.
1003. hie: this blood of mine. — decet: the very rare personal
use of this verb. — abreptam: sc. Polyxenam. The change of
thought is abrupt, but may be explained by the intense emotion
of the speaker.
1006. vobis: you Greeks.
1006. his . . . aequora: a sea cruel enough and treacherous
enough to match your cowardly murder of this maiden.
1008. meae . . . rati: sc. accidai — whatever befalls my ship,
when I am carried away as a captive, may the same befall the whole
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 259
s
fleet. The allusion is to her prophecy (992) that she would not
live to see Greece, and amounts to a prayer for destruction upon
her foes.
Scene 4 (w. 1009-1055). — The chorus finds comfort in the
thought that the calamity of the Trojans is universal, none faring
better than his neighbor. The measure is sapphic, with one
adonic.
1009. For the sentiment of. 913, 1016 and notes — To a mourner
the sight of a nation of mourners is pleasant, that is, misery loves
company,
1011. Tears which a multitude unite in shedding sting less
sharply.
1016. fcrre: depends on recusat. The younger Pliny, in de-
scribing his experience during the eruption of Vesuvius, a.d. 79,
utters much the same sentiment : " I might boast that I uttered no
groan, no cowardly word, amid such perils, if I had not believed
that all things were perishing with me — a pitiful but powerful
solace in mortal peril" (Epist. 6. 20 fin.).
1018. The imperatives in this and the following verses suggest
a conditional idea, with credet and surgent as apodoses.
1020. centum: with bubus. Supply eos as object of removete
and antecedent of qui.
1022. iacentes: downcast.
1024. posito: dat.
1027. singulari: one alone as compared with the thousand
vessels of 1030.
1029. aequior: with greater equanimity.
1032. terris: poetic dat. of place whither.
1034. Hellen: ace. sing. For the story see artt. Phrixus and
Helle in Classical Dictionary.
1036. gregis ductor: the ram of the golden fleece.
1037. iactum fecit: like iacturam fecit — threw overboard.
1038. tenuit: restrained. Phrixus, having suffered bereavement
which left him alone, had mourned; but the two survivors of the
deluge, being together in misfortune, did not.
1039. Pyrrha: though nom., this word retains its long a from
the Greek. — vir: Deucalion. The succession of two verses of
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260 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
like ending here probably is imitated from Ovid's account of the
situation of Deucalion and Psnrha in M. 1. 361, 362: —
Namque ego, crede mihi, si te quoque pontus haberet,
te sequerer, coniunXf et me quoque porUus haberet.
1042, 1043. The fleet, driven hither and thither, will break up this
assemblage of mourners (questum), and scatter wide our tears. —
hue, illuc: possibly with sparget, better with agitata.
1044. Some editors have regarded nautae as a second subject of
sparget. To avoid the awkwardness of the sense thus made, Leo
has suggested supplying some such line as this: Caede cum pontus
fuerit piatv^ — When the sea has been appeased by the slaying
of Astyanax and Polyxena. Nautae then becomes the subject of
prenderint. — tuba: case can be determined by scansion.
1046 . simul : practically equivalent to cum (cf . simul his, Horace,
S. 1. 10. 86). — properante remo: abl. abs. The sense is. When the
sailors shaU steer out into the deep, with wind and oar both aiding,
and the shore slip away from our sight, etc.
1047. miseris: sc. captivis.
1049. When even lofty Ida shall sink beneath the horizon.
ACT V
Scene 1 (w. 1056-1179). — A messenger announces that he
bears woeful tidings. In response to Andromache's command he
describes in detail the death of Astyanax and Polyxena; Hecuba
gives voice to her hopeless woe; and the captives are ordered to
embark for exile in Greece.
1058. quid: equivalent to utrum, which of the two, as is shown by
the degree of prius. — referens: relating.
1059. tuosne: sc.luctus. The first fuos is addressed to Androm-
ache, the second to Hecuba {anus).
1061. sua: sc. clades. — tantum: only.
1062. miser: predicate with the first est; whoever is unfortunate
is Hecuba's. '
1063. The double sacrifice (duplex nefas, 1065) commanded by
Calchas has been consummated. In this instance Seneca has
followed the Greek poets and complied with the law enunciated
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 261
by Horace forbidding the representation of such unnatural scenes
on the stage (see note on H.F. 992).
1064. generosa: vrith noble spirit, such as befits one highly bom.
1067. tractare: to dwell upon.
1068. tma: cf. turre sola quae manet, 622. — magna: with
Troia.
1069-1071. Cf..785n.
1070. pinnis: pinnacles or battlements (cf. Vergil, A. 7. 159).
— arbiter: sitting as witness of the war.
1072. nepotem:. Astyanax.
1073. face: torchy with which attempts were made to fire the
fleet (cf. facibusy 445 n.).
1076. cautes: a precipitous mass of stones — a ruin.
1078-1087. A very natural picture of a crowd eager to see what
is going on. — his, his, hunc, ilium, hunc, ille, ille, aliquis: several
groups or individuals in the crowd.
1079. aciem: a view,
1081. Stood on tiptoe (lit., balanced tiptoes). — erecta: either in
its literal sense of erect, stretched to their full height, or, figuratively,
alert, attent.
1085. imminens: with saxum.
1087. ferus: unfeeling.
1068. plena: thronged vrith people.
1090. trahens: leading.
1098. superbe: the reading is doubtful. One conjecture is
superhus, another superbit. The latter has the advantage of com-
pleting the sentence and the formal, balanced comparison so
characteristic of the Latin. Of coiu^e it is possible to retain the
adverb and supply some such verb as stetit or se tulit. Translate,
bore himself proudly.
1100. qui fletur: Astyanax; he alone of all the multitude re-
frains from tears. — fatidici . . . vatis: Calchas.
1103. in . . . regna: cf. 158: Priam, passing away, bore his
kingdom with him. The verse ^is incomplete, as if interrupted by
the exclamation of the victim's mother.
1104-1106. What barbarian, in the uttermost parts of the earth t
— sedis incertae: gen. of quality, nomadic (cf. Scythiae muUivagas
domos, H.F. 533).
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262 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
1106. gens: probably referring to the Hyrcani, who from their
remoteness were often taken as typical barbarians (cLHyrcanae
tigres, Vergil, A. 4. 367). — Busiridis: Busiris, the Egjrptian king who
offered human sacrifices to Jupiter and finally was slain at his own
altar by Hercules (H.F. 484 n.)- Yet not even he, cruel as he was,
murdered young children as the Greeks were doing. The same is
said of Diomede in 1108.
1108. parva . . . membra: bodies of children. For the tale of
Diomede and his flesh-eating mares (gregtbus auia) see H.F. 226;
Ovid, M. 9. 194-196. This of course ia not the Diomede men-
tioned in 38 n., but a mythical king of Thrace.
1109. tuos: apostrophizing Astyanax. For the supposed neces-
sity of burial see 895 n.
1118. patrit notai: see 461-468.
1117. tic . . . patri: so, too, is ke like his father! The body of
Hector had been disfigm-ed by being dragged behind his con-
queror's chariot (189 n.; 744), and now his son is crushed and
mutilated too.
1118. ut: temporal.
1119. Wept over the wrong themselves had done,
1120. aliud f acinus: the sacrifice of Polyxena. Euripides
(Hec. 35) lays the scene of this event in the Thracian Chersonesus,
where Achilles' ghost appears and demands it as the price of the
fleet's freedom to proceed on the voyage already begun. With ttie
narrative here given cf. that in Eur. Hec. 516-580, where Tal-
thybius the herald relates it to Hecuba (cf. also Ovid, M. 13.
449-480, where Euripides is followed closely).
1123. adversa: neuter plural, object of cingit — the parts facing
toward the city are bounded by the plain and valley. Another
reading is aversa, meaning the opposite side from the sea.
1130. suum: i.e. of one of their own people (cf. mea membra,
414).
1132. thalami more: as ordered by Calchas (362-365, 865).
1133. pronuba: a matron of honor who walked with the bride
in the marriage procession. — Tyndaris: Helen, as in Vergil, A. 2.
569 and often.
1134. Hermione: Helen's daughter. The prayer is that Helen's
own return to her husband, and her daughter's marriage, may be
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NOTES ON THE TROADES 263
as sad as this scene. Hermione was married to P3rrrhus, though
betrothed to Orestes, son of Agamemnon. Pyrrhus was killed by
his disappointed rival, who then married Hermione.
1135. viro: Menelaus (cf. dominua, 917).
1137. ipsa: Polyxena; for her behavior cf. Em*. Hec. 541-668;
Ovid, M. 13. 453, where the scene is described at some length.
1138. pudore: modesty. — fulgent: glow.
1144. peritura: neuter plural. We should expect perituram,
but the meter forbids. It may have a general sense. Most men
praise the things that are passing away, Blessings brighten as they
take their flight (cf . Horace, C. 3. 24. 30, " Alas, we hate virtue
when it is with us, and mourn it when taken away")-
1145. vagae . . . vices: vicissitvdes of fortune.
1146. animus: of the victim (cf. 945; Em-. Hec. 342-382,
541-568). It may be, however, a general statement. Such courage
affects men always.
1148. mirantur, miserantur: note the assonance.
1150. iuvenis: nom., Pjrrrhus. — patemi: of Achilles.
1154. est: the subject is the composite idea Pyrrhus ad caedem
piger.
1157. moriens: concessive, as is shown by tamen. — nee . . .
adhuc: nondum.
1160. uterque coetus: Greek and Trojan.
1161. misfire: uttered, clarius: more loudly, victor: with col-
lective sense.
1164. saevus: not in absorbing the blood but in requiring the
sacrifice.
1165-1168. Intense irony and sarcasm are seen in the reiteration
of the idea in tuti and secura, and in the antithesis of concidit virgo
ac puer and helium per actum est (cf. 705 flf.).
1169. expuam: for exspuam — put from me with loathing.
1171. The Florentine MS. (Etruscus) has solam, which is good
grammatically but metrically impossible (cf. peritura, 1144).
Gronovius makes the question end with me, taking sola with mors.
As it stands we may read, ShaU I mourn all, ,or, being left alone,
bewail myself? — votum: appositive to mors.
1172. infantibus, virginibus: she is thinking of Astyanax and
Polyxena.
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264 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
1175. quaesita: in agreement with mors, as are violenta and
sdeva above.
1177. quam prope . . . steti: how near I stood to Priam,
when he was slain — yet death passed me by.
1179. movet: in its rare intransitive use (of. Livy 35. 40. 7).
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THE STORY OF MEDEA
The introduction of the sorceress Medea to the western world is
traceable ultimately to the flight of Phrixus and his sister Helle
from Orchomenus. They were carried on the back of a flying ram
with fleece of gold. Helle fell off and was drowned in the strait
now known as Hellespont, but Phrixus rode safely on to Colchis, at
the eastern end of the Euxine (Black Sea), where the ram was
sacrificed to Jupiter and its fleece nailed to a tree.
At the Theban city of lolcos the aged king Aeson had been
displaced by his brother Pelias, to the exclusion of his son Jason.
The latter protested, and Pelias promised to restore the throne to
the rightful heir if the latter would find and bring him the golden
fleece. A vessel, the Argo, was built under the direction of Pallas,
was manned by fifty heroes, and under the captaincy of Jason set
out on its long voyage. After many perilous adventures they
reached Colchis and demanded the fleece.
The Colchian king Aeetes did not refuse outright, but imposed
certain conditions — that Jason should harness a team of fire-
breathing bulls and with them plow a piece of land; should then
sow a quantity of dragon's teeth and garner the crop that should
result. The very first condition seemed impossible, for the fiery
breath of the* bulls was deadly to any mortal.
At this point the king's daughter Medea enters the story. She
saw the young leader of the Argonauts and loved him at sight.
Mistress of all magic, she made and gave him an ointment to protect
him from the fiery exhalations, and then advised and aided him
at every step till he had fulfilled all the conditions. It still re-
mained to secure the fleece, which was guarded by a sleepless
dragon. This was drugged by Medea, and the Argo sailed away
with its prize and the princess as well. Her father followed, but
Medea had taken her young brother along and now she killed him
and cut his body into pieces, which she threw one after another
265
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266 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
into the water as the pursuers drew near. They stopped to collect
the fragments and thus the Argo escaped and finally reached
Greece, where Jason and Medea were married.
At lolcos Medea with her magic arts restored old Aeson to
youth. Pelias' daughters desired the same gift for their father,
but when on her direction they had cut up his body Medea refused
to do her part. Before the vengeance of Pelias' children she fled
with her husband to Corinth, where presently he saw opportunity
to better his fortunes by wedding lie daughter of King Creon.
It is here, on the wedding day, that the play begins.
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA
ACT I
Scene 1 (w. 1-55). — Medea invokes the vengeance of the gods
above and beneath on King Creon and his daughter, who have
won her husband from her, and at the close vows that her repudi-
ation shall be marked by scenes as terrible as had attended her
marriage with Jason.
2. Ludna: a name often applied to Juno and to Diana, here to
the former. — quaeque . . . docuisti: sc. tu as antecedent of qiuiei
Pallas (Minerva) is meant. It was under her direction that the
materials of the Argo were chosen and the vessel built (of. 365-
367).
3. Tiphyn: the pilot of the Argo. For his fate see 616-624. —
novam: the Argo was thought of as the first Grecian vessel to
attempt a long sea voyage.
4. profundi . . . dominator maris: Neptime (of. domintia pro-
fundi, 597).
5. Titan: Helios, the sim god. In 410 Titan refers to Encela-
dus. — orbi: sc. terrarum. Orbiia indirect object of dividena
(cf.feminia . . . carmina divides, Horace, C. 1. 15. 14); tr. appor^
Honing dear light to the world.
6. tacitus . . . iubar: lending thy bright face ae rmtneas to the
silent mysteries (of night),
7. Hecate triformis: cf. frorUe non una, 751; triceps Hecate,
Ovid, M. 7. 194; diva triformis, Horace, C. 3. 22. 4. This goddess
was thought of as having fimctions in heaven, on earth and in the
infernal world, and accordingly was identified or confused with
Selene or Phoebe (Lima), with Artemis (Diana) and with Perseph-
one (Proserpina). — quosque: ace. after iuravit: tr. by whom
Jason swore. The antecedent is deos, attracted from the vocative,
in which it naturally would be, to the case of the relative.
.267
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268 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
10. manesque impios: ghosts of the wicked dead, mvoked with
their rulers, Pluto and Proserpina, named in next line.
11. dominum: Pluto. — dominam . . . raptam: Proserpina,
who had been carried off by Pluto and made his bride (Ovid, M. 5.
359-424), but not deserted later, as Medea had been. Hence the
phrase, with better faith. — voce non fausta: because invocation of
the powers of darkness was of evil omen.
13. adeste: be present to aid, a common form of invocation (cf.
ades, 703). — deae: the Furies (Alecto, Megaera and Tisiphone),
whose function it was to torment men for their evil deeds (cf.
959-961; H.F. 100-106).
14. crinem: ace. of specification, defining squalidae. — ser-
pentibus: the hair of the Furies, like that of the Gorgons, was
composed of living serpents.
16. thalamis: a^ once you stood for my marriage.
17. coniugi . . . novae: the princess Glauce, or Creusa, whom
Jason was about to marry.
18. socero: King Creon. — regiae stirpi: the whole royal house
of Corinth.
19. mihipeiusaliquid: having called down destruction upon her
rival's family, she now prays that a fate still worse may befall her
faithless husband (with 20-25 cf . Dido's curse on Aeneas, Vergil,
A. 4. 612-620).
20. 21. Cf. frag. X of the Medea of Accius (found in Ribbeck,
V. 415) : Exul inter hostes, exspes, expers, deserttts, vagus — An exile
amid enemies^ hopeless and portionless, a lonely wanderer. Note
in 21 the asyndeton (or omission of conjunctions), which is very
common in these tragedies. — incerti laris: gen. of quality — of no
certain home, hence homeless.
22. Known as an alien, may he seek another* s door.
23. quo: abl. after the comparative — than which I can pray
for nothing worse.
24. liberos: object of optet and antecedent of qv^ (23). — similes
. . . matri: like their father in faithlessness, like their mother in
wickedness.
26. peperi: the mention of her children suggests the thought
that in some way (not necessarily definite yet) she may punish
their father through them; hence her exclamation, Vengeance is
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 269
horn, I have borne it! (cf. 40, 549, 550). — querelas . . . hostes:
it is time for action, not for mere words.
27. manibus: dat., from their hands. — faces: torches, carried
in the procession from the bride's home to that of her new husband.
28. caelo: same construction as manibus. Medea was credited
(Ovid, M. 7. 207-209) with power to darken the heavens (see her own
accoimt of her control of natural phenomena in 754-769). — spec-
tat .. . poll: does the sun god, my ancestor, see this, and does he
still show his face and glide on in his wonted course f The allusion
here and in 31 is to the sun's having hidden his face and retraced his
course in horror at sight of the feast of Thyestes. — nostri sator
generis: Phoebus, who was the father of Aeetes and so Medea's
grandfather.
32-34. An evident allusion to Phaethon's adventure (Ovid, M.
2. 1-328).
36. Corinthos: Greek form of nom. sing.; the Latin is Corin-
thus. — gemino . . . litore: abl. quality (cf. gemino mari pulsata
. . . regna, H.F. 1164). — opponens moras: by compelling vessels
to sail around the Peloponnesus (cf. flectens moras, 149). Many
attempts were made in ancient times to pierce the Corinthian
isthmus, but it was not till our own day (1894) that a canal was
completed. It follows the line surveyed in a.d. 67 for Nero, who
himself broke ground for it (Suetonius, Nero 19).
36. cremata: nom. with Corinthos. — flammis . . . duo: unite
the two seas with flame.
37. pronubam . . . pinum: a torch (cf. faces, 27) borne in the
marriage procession by a young matron. Pronubam here is
adjective, and the same phrase occurs in the pseudo-Vergilian
Oris, V. 439.
39. Slay the victims on the consecrated altar. Such a sacrifice was
an essential part of the Roman marriage ceremony.
40. per viscera ipsa: in your very offspring. The idea already
hinted at in peperi, 26. Another rendering suggested by the con-
nection is, Through the very entrails of the victims (39) seek a way
for your revenge, i.e. divine the future by augury.
41. anime: apostrophizing her own spirit (cf. 895).
43. Caucasum: i.e. the coldness and hardness of the rugged
range near whose base her childhood had been spent.
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270 THREE PLAYS OF SENfcCA
44. Pontus, Phasis: the Euxine (Black Sea) and the river Phasis,
familiar features of her native land, Colchis.
46. Isthmos: nom. sing., like Corinthos, 35. — effera, ignota,
etc. : neuter.
47. vulnera, caedem, funus: appositive to mala. — vagum
funus per artus: death (or burial) limb by limb, in allusion to her
treatment of her brother (130 n.).
49. haec . . . feci: all this I did as a girl (cf. 909). — exurgat:
exsurgat (cf. exerunt for exserunt, H.F. 11).
61. accingere: the so-called "middle" use of the passive, gird
yourself.
62. paria . . . thalamis: her marriage with Jason had involved
her betrayal of coimtry and father and the murder of her brother.
She now proposes to celebrate her rejection with crimes as dread-
ful.
64. hoc: sc. modo.
Scene 2 (w. 56-115). — A chorus of Corinthian women ap-
proaches, chanting the epithalamion, or marriage song, of Jason
and Creusa. First the gods above are invoked (56-74), then the
beauty of the bride (75-81, 93-101) and of the groom (82-89) is
praised, the youth are challenged to make the most of the unusual
license granted them by the occasion (107-114), and a parting
taunt is flung at the rejected wife (114, 115). The meter to 74
and again in 93-109 is the minor asclepiadean, 75-92 glyoonic,
110-115 dactylic hexameter.
66. May the gods above, who rule the sky, and they who rule the
seas, attend with their divine favor this marriage of princes, together
with their peoples, duly silent.
68. faventibus: at Rome a solemn ceremony was opened with
an exhortation to all present to refrain from any speech which
might offend the gods and so invalidate the rites. As the only sure
way to effect this was not to speak at all, the formula Ore favete
omnes (Vergil, A. 5. 71; cf. Favete Unguis, Horace, C. 3. 1. 2)
came to be understood as a call for silent attention.
69. Tonantibus: the proper epithet of Jupiter here is made
plural to include his sister-wife Jimo as well, though she is men-
tioned as Lucina in 61. The white bull and white cow (femina, 61,
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 271
-is adjective with bos understood) were the appropriate victims
for sacrifice to Jupiter and Juno respectively. Furthermore they
must never have been used for draught or burden, hence intemp-
tata iugo, 62. The victims to the infernal gods were black.
62. placet: from placare, not placere.
63. quae . . . retinet: Pax, the personification and goddess of-
peace. Lucretius, however (R.N. 1. 31)* Invoking Fcnus declares,
" Thou alone canst bless mortals with peace, since Mars controls
the fimctions of war, and he . . . feasts his eager eyes upon
thee."
66. Holds plenty in her bounteous horn. There are still extant
coins of Augustus and of Vespasian representing Pax with her
comu copiae. Ovid (M. 9. 86-88) makes the river-god Achelous
conclude the story of his struggle with Hercules thus: ".As he held
my horn he broke it and tore it from my brow. The Naides filled
it with fruits and sweet-scented flowers and consecrated it; and
^ Bona Copia, the goddess of plenty, now is enriched by my full
horn."
66. tenera . . . hostia: abl. The lender victim was a lamb.
— mitior: agrees with the subject of donetur, implied in the rela-
tive qv4ie, 63.
67. tu qui . . . ades: Hymen (see 110 n.). — facibus legiti-
mis: dat. The phrase, of courae fUieajis lawful marriage. Catullus
(61. 6-16) thus invokes Hjrmen: Bind thy brows with the blossoms
of the sweet smelling marjoram; take the bridal veil and hither come
vnth rejoicing, wearing on snowy foot the saffron-colored sandal; and,
inspired by this joyous day, chanting the wedding song with high,
dear voice, beat the earth vnth thy feet and with thy hand wave (quote)
' the pine-torch. So our author in 68: Dashing aside the night with
auspicious hand.
69. Hither come, reeling with drunken step (cf. 110-112, where
Hymen is called the son of Bacchus, the god of wine, and is ex-
horted to light his torch and brandish it with languid fingers).
71. tu quae . . . redis: Hesperus (Vesper), the evening star
(cf. Catullus 62. 2: Vesper . . . expectata diu vix tandem lumina
tollit — The evening star at length tardily lifts up his long-expected
rays). — gemini praevia temporis: forerunner of the twilight (cf.
dux noctis, 878).
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272 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
76-109. A passage arranged in strophe and antistrophe, as in a
Greek chorus (cf. Catullus, 62; Horace, C.S.). One part of the
company sings the strophes, 75-81 and 93-101, in praise of the
bride, the other the antistrophes, 82-92 and 102-109, in honor of
the groom.
76. Cecropias nurus: daugfUera of Cecrops, i.e. Athenian
maidens.
77. Those whom the city that Incks walls (Sparta) trains like
young men on the slopes of Taygetus. Sparta was famous for the
vigor of her women as well as her men. — Taygetus: four syllables;
a mountain range near Sparta.
80. Aonius: Boeotian or Theban.
81. Alph^os: an Arcadian stream. The bride is said to outshine
the maidens of all these regions, the fairest of all Greece.
82. fonn&: abl. of respect.
83. Aesonio duel: Jason, so called as the son of Aeson.
84. proles fulminis improbi: Bacchus; the allusion is to the
manner in which Jupiter visited Semele, with lightning flashes
and thunder, before the birth of the wine-god (Ovid, M. 3.
253-315).
86. Bacchus is represented as driving a team of tigers with har-
ness of vines (cf. Vergil, A. 6. 804: Qui pampineis victor iugaflectit
habenis \ Liber, agens celso Nysae de vertice tigris — Liber, who vic-
toriously guides his chariot with reins of vine, driving tigers, down
from the high crest of Nysa).
86. qui tripodas movet: Phoebus Apollo, the god of prophecy,
who inspired especially the oracle at Delphi, where the priestess
occupied a tripod, or three-legged seat, while uttering her re-
sponses. In 785 tripodas is used in a more general sense.
87. virginis asperae: Diana.
89. Of the Dioscuri or Gemini Homer (II. 3. 237) calls "Castor
the horse-tamer and Pollux good with the fist." Horace (Sat.
2. 1. 26) declares that "Castor rejoices in horses, his brother in
boxing" Oit. "in fists").
90-92. Having lauded the beauty of Creusa and set Jason above
the four gods most noted for youth and beauty, the chorus prays
that this preeminence of both may continue. — vincat, superet:
surpass, excel.
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 273
/■
93. haec: the bride; her beauty is compared with the sun's
brilliance. — constitit: has taken her place.
96. cum sole: with (at) the coming of the sun.
97. FhoebS: note the long e (cf. the words in 770 and 874 and
distinguish them by quantities). When Phoebe, with a light not
her own, incloses a solid disk with her circling tips, i.e. with the
extended tips of the crescent. — non sue: reflected.
98. The sense here appears to be incomplete, and Leo suggests
two lines to restore the probable connection: Talent dum iuvenis
conspicitf en rubor \ perfudit subito purpureus genas — While the young
husband regards her thus, lo, a glowing blush has suddenly suffused
her cheeks. So does the snowy hue (of wool or linen) blush when
drenched with the scarlet dye; such does the shepherd behold the rising
sun.
101. luce nova: at dawn. — roscidus: moist with dew after his
night watch in the open air.
102-109. The new-made husband is exhorted to forget Medea
and fearlessly receive his bride. — Phasidis horrid!: gen. The
river's name here represents the country, but the reference is to
his marriage with Medea. Ereptv^, solitus and trepidus, like felix,
modify tu, the implied subject of corripe, 105.
106. Aeoliam virginem: Jason's bride, Creusa, was a descendant
of Aeolus, the son of Hellen — not the ruler of the winds.
106. Medea's father had been hostile to Jason; this time his
intended father-in-law is willing. The plural soceris may be
meant to include both Creon and his wife, as soceros in Tro. 1002
and Vergil, A. 2. 457 refers to both Priam and his wife Hecuba.
107. iurgio: cf. fescenninus, 113 n.
108. hinc illinc . . . mittite cannina: sing responsively.
110. Fair and noble scion of Bacchus. Hymen, the god of
marriage, is sometimes called the son of Bacchus and Venus, wine
and love, though other accounts are given of his parentage (see
Classical Dictionary, art. Hymen).
111. multifidam . . . pinum: a stick of \i\xie frayed out at the
end so as to burn readily (cf. multifidas faces, Ovid, M. 7. 259).
113. dicax . . . fescenninus: cf. procax fescenninus, Catullus
61. 126, where an example is given. The fescennine verses, con-
taining rude banter (iurgio, 107) and coarse jests, were used in
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274 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
very early times by the rustics of central Italy on various occasions
of public merrymaking, but later were restricted to the wedding
feast. To make a Corinthian chorus of Medea's time use the word
of course involves an anachronism. V. 113 is spondaic.
114. tacitis . . . marito: let her pass away in silent gloom who
runs away and weds a foreign husband. The reference, of course,
is to Medea, but the indefinite si qua makes it more general than
the relative quae would have been.
ACT II
Scene 1 (w. 116-178). — Medef, hearing the hymenaeus,
realizes that she actually has been deserted, calls to mind her
claims on Jason's gratitude and repeats her vow to seek revenge.
Her old nurse cautions her Eigainst speaking too freely, but in vain.
116. hymenaeus: the chant of the marriage procession in the
last scene.
118. hoc: explained by its appositive deserere, 120. — erepto . . .
regno: after having deprived me of father, native land and royal state,
119. solam: sc. me.
121. ^elere: a term which Medea does not hesitate to apply
to her own acts, e.g. in 129, 135, 500, 1016 (cf . nefas, 122). —
flammas: the fiery breath of the bulls, igneos tauri halitus, 466.
122. Does he forsooth think all my resources of evil are spent f
123. Scansion easily determines agreement of incerta and of
vaesana.
126. Would he had a brother, who might be slain in retaliation
for my own (see 130 n.). — est coniunx: sc. Uli. — in hanc femim
exigatur: into her let the sword be plunged. For the sense, cf.
Seneca, Consolatio ad Marciam 16. 3: Tela quae {Fortuna) in
Scipiones . . . exegit — The weapons which fortune thrust into the
Scipios; also ferrum exigam, 1006.
128. tuae: addressing herself; so tua, next line.
130-134. The noun-participle phrases decus raptum, comes
divisus, funus ingestum, corpus sparsum and decocta membra are
appositive to scelera, 129. It is worthy of note that the Latin
commonly uses a concrete noun with an adjective modifier, glory
stolen, companion cut to pieces, etc., where our idiom would be an
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 275
abstract noun with a prepositional phrase, the theft of our kingdom^ s
glory, the cutting to pieces of the maiden's companion, etc. — incU-
tum decus: the golden fleece, the recovery of which was the pur-
pose of the . Argonautic expedition. — parvus comes: Medea's
brother, not named in the play, but comiponly called Absyrtus.
Seneca follows the more common of several versions of his story,
that while still a boy he was carried off by his sister in her flight
from Colchis, and, when her father was about to overtake them,
was cut to pieces and his limbs thrown one by one into the sea,
that the pursuit might be delayed while- they were gathered up
(cf. 47 n., 473, 963). This was the crime which troubled her most.
132. funus ingestum patri: his burial imposed upon my father.
133. Peliae tenia: Jason's uncle, who had deprived him of his
father's throne and sent him in search of the golden fleece in hope
he would not return {qui iussit, 664). On reaching lolcos with
her lover Medea had shown her magic power in restoring the aged
Aeson to youth (Ovid, M. 7. 162-293), and the daughters of Pelias
desired her to do the same for their father. Medea agreed, but
when by her direction they had cut up his body and placed it in
a caldron {aeno), she refused to do her part. It was in their flight
from the wrath of Pelias' son Acastus (415, 475, 664-667) that
Medea and Jason had come to Corinth.
134. funestum . . . sanguinem: lifeblood. — nullum . . .
amor: not anger, but love, had prompted all her crimes.
136. movit: sc. scelera or r^ie.
137. By a sudden turn of thought she is led to seek excuses for
her husband. — alien! . . . f actus: brougfU under artother's will
and authority (cf . the common phrase sui iuris, meaning independ-
ent of any other's authority). — arbitri: gen. of arbitrium.
139. a: the interjection ah.
142. nottri . . . meo: this confusion of number in the first
personal pronoun is frequent, especially in colloquial Latin. —
muneri . . . meo: my gift, i.e. his life.
143. impotens: headstrong, insolent, as if impotens suL
144. genetricem . . . natis: according to Euripides (Med. 275)
Medea is commanded to take her children with her into exile.
Seneca (cf. 284, 541-546) represents her as desiring to do so, but
forbidden by Jason. — natis: dat.
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276 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
146. petatur: sc. Creon.
149. Malea: a promontory at the southeastern extremity of
the Peloponnesus, a hundred miles from Corinth. — flectens
moras: cf. opponens moras j 35.
163. referre: repay, take vengeance. — nocet: does harm to its
object.
166. clepere: a rare verb meaning steal, here withdraw or hide.
This is its only certain occurrence in the tragedies, though one MS.
has depit instead of tegit in H.F. 799.
167. ire contra: sc. hostes (cf. non ibo in hastes, 27).
169. Fortuna fortes metuit: a proverbial expression, quoted
with unessential variations by Terence (Phormio 203, fortes
fortuna adiuvat), Vergil (A. 10. 284: auderUes fortuna iuvat),
Ovid (M. 10. 586: auderUes deus ipse iuvat) and Pliny (Epist. 6. 16:
fortes fortuna iuvat).
160. est probanda: the subject is virtus, courage. — locum:
opportunity.
166. hie: here, in me.
169. sint . . . edita: no, though they spring from the earth — in
allusion to the terrigenae (469, 470), whom Jason had vanquished
by her aid.
171. fiam: in the nurse's unfinished speech Meden doubtless is
vocative, but her mistress interrupts and makes it predicate with
fiam — I shall become Medea (cf. Medea nunc sum, 910). — cui sim
vides: you see whose mother I am, i.e. no one's, since my sons have
been taken from me.
173. Forsan . . . moras: alluding to the manner in which she-
had delayed her father's pursuit (see 130 n.).
176. animos: spirit, pride. — aptari: middle voice, adapt
one^s self.
177. cardo strepit : the door of a Greek house hung not on hinges
but on upright pivots (cardines), usually of wood, whose turning
in their stone sockets was far from noiseless. In Plautus and
Terence the entrance of an actor often is heralded by some refer-
ence to the creaking of the pivot.
Scene 2 (w. 179-300). — King Creon appears, declaring that
Medea must leave his realm at once. She boldly accuses him of
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 277
having wronged her and claims Jaspn^s guilt at least equals her
own. The king asserts that his own power is endangered by her
presence, and repeats his order to depart. Finally, in response to
her entreaties, he grants a respite of one day.
179. Aeetae genus: for Aeeta nata, as often.
183. • luem : offscourings a term of contempt applied here to
Medea and in H.F. 358 to Lycus.
184. gener: Jason. For the truth of the statement, cf. 490.
186. Uberet . . . mctu: cf. 270, 872.
186. contra: to meet me.
189. iubete sileat: a post- Augustan usage for the classical
iubete earn sUere.
192. fuga: exUe.
193. Either innocens is ironical here, or it is said as a general
truth — (only) an innocent woman asks. Quae . . . pellat, of
course j is indirect question.
194. // you are sitting as judge , hear the case; if you are acting
the despot, issv^ your orders.
197. Colchis: dat. — complain to your countrymen. — qui avezit:
Jason. This demand is repeated in substance at 246, 272, and to
Jason himself, 489.
199. parte . . . altera: without having heard the other side.
200. Though he may have given a fair decision, he has not been fair,
201. Pelia: the Latin form of the Greek PeZia«. For the mean-
ing, cf. 133 n. As a retort to Medea^s last speech Creon asks.
Had Pelias a hearing ?
203-206. / learned in my royal home how hard it is to bend from
wrath a mind once roused, and how kingly one who has laid his
proud hand upon the scepter considers it to persist in a course once
entered upon.
207. Read miser anda with clade and the next six adjectives,
obruta . . . affiicta, with the subject of sim.
209. fulsi: from fulgere; so in 218.
211. placidis flexibus: somewhat inconsistently she speaks of
its current in 762 as violenta vada.
212. a tergo videt: sees astern. There is a strong current from
the Black Sea (Pontus) to the Aegean, and one sailing with the
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278 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
current would naturally leave Colchis, at the head of the Pontus,
a tergo.
218. maria dulcescunt: the Black Sea, naturally saline, receives
a considerable amount of fresh water from the numerous rivers
that flow into it. Pliny (N.H. 4. 24) asserts that the Danube, on
account of its powerful, current, sweetens the waters of the sea for
forty miles out. See also Polybius, 4. 41.
216. vidua: unwedded. — Thermodontiis: the Amazons, accord-
ing to the usual accounts, dwelt near the Thermodon River, in
Asia Minor (cf. regina gentis vidua Thermodontiaef H.F. 245).
218. Then I was sought; now I myself am forced to woo my hus-
band.
219. rapida: this adjective contains the same root as eripuU
(220) and erepto (118), and here suggests the same idea of snatch-
ing away (cf. rapax fortuna, Horace, C. 1. 34. 14). — Icvis: fickle,
as often (cf. levis casus, 221).
220. eripuit, dedit: sc. me.
222. hoc: explained by its appositives prodesse, protegere: so
in 225 solum hoc anticipates its appositive servasse, 228.
226. decus, florem, praesidia, prolem: the Argonauts — fifty
heroes, the very flower of Greece, some of whom she proceeds to
enumerate.
228. memet: subject of servasse. — Orpheus: for his story see
625 n.
231. sati Borea: Calais and Zetes (cf. AquUone natos, 634). —
quique: and Lynceus, who with far-flung gaze beholds objects
removed (summota) across the sea.
233. ducem . . . ducum: Jason, who was commander of the
Argo.
236. vobis: for you Greeks. — unum mihi: him alone for myself.
237. obici . . . re versa: only this one crime can be charged
against me {by you) — that the Argo came back. — Argo reversa:
appositive to crimen.
238. The tenses in 238-241 suggest the rhetorical figure of
vision — she is dwelling upon the scene as if it were now before
her eyes and the consequences were still in the futiu'e. — placeat:
suppose it should please.
240. gener: Jason, as in 184.
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 279
242. Let what fortune will, overwhelm my cause. A parallel ex-
pression occurs in Seneca's Brev. Vit. 7. 5 : Fors fortuna ut volet
ordinet.
244. All the reward of all my crimes is now toithin your power.
246. damnA: an imperative.
246. redde crimen: condemn the accused if you willy hut restore
the object for which the crime was committed (cf. 197, 272, 489).
Jason is meant.
247. genua attigi: in token of submission and appeal (cf. ad
genua accido . . . dextramque pedibu>s admoveo, Tro. 691; genua
tangentes, Brev. Vit. 8. 2).
248. peti: petii, petivi (cf. redit, 984). Such contraction is fre-
quent.
250. urbe . . . placet: sc. me tibi — if it please you that I he
driven out.
262-266. By choosing an exUe as my son-in-law I seem to have
shown dearly enough that I am not one to . . . spurn the unfortunate.
— miserias: an abstract noim used concretely (cf. senectus, H.F.
1027; Tro. 42).
266. quippe: this word, in connection with a relative as here,
or alone as in 438, regularly introduces a clause of cause or
reason.
257. Acastus: son and successor of Pelias as king of lolcos
(133 n.). Jason^s fear of him is expressed in 521, 526.
258. trementem: shaking with palsy — Acastus complains that
his father, palsied hy feeble old age and heavy with years, wcls slain
and his members cut asunder (133 n., 475, 664-667).
261. piae: affectionate (see note on pietas, 438). Note the
antithesis between piae and impium, and cf. Ovid (M. 7. 339) on
the same scene: His, ut quaeque pia est, hortatibus impia prima
est — In these exhortations each is foremost — unnatural daughter! —
in proportion as she is fond of her father.
265. vestro: the plural idea in this possessive serves to identify
Medea with the powers of evil she had invoked.
267. You . . . who have a woman^s recklessness, ... a man's
strength, and no regard for reputation, go!
270. libera : imperative. For the thought cf. 185, 872. —
herbas: those employed in her magic rites (see 706 fif.).
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280 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
271. soUicita: imperative. For the thought cf. invadam deos,
424; vidi aggressam deos, 673.
276. For himj not for me, was Peliaa slain. Medea argues that
Jason, who had profited by her acts, was at least as guilty as her-
self, who had done them. She puts it still more strongly to Jason
himself in 500 (cf. sontes duos, 275). The kindred idea that not
the agent but the principal is responsible is implied in parcUe
iusso, 669, and distinctly stated in Tro. 870; Ad auctorem redit
scderis coacti culpa — The guilt of a compulsory crime recoils upon
its avihor.
277. To the murder of Pelias add my flight from home, my theft
of the golden fleece, etc.
279. Whaiever crim^ even now he is teaching his new wife, as
if any marriage of Jason's must involve the necessity for crime.
The pliu'al coniuges implies a reflection on his fickleness.
' 281. ezisse: sc. te.
282. illud: explained by the appositive clause, ne . . . trahat.
284. utgenitor: as a father.
286. Per . . . status: by this marriage, of happy omen, etc. —
ego: subject of precor, 288.
287. Fortuna dubia: both words are known to be nom. because
their final syllables, in the arses of the second and fourth feet
respectively, must be short. Final a in varia, in the arsis of the
third foot, may be either quantity, here no doubt long, making it
abl. in agreement with vice.
292. malis: masculine — for wicked people.
293. Do you deny me a respite, even one which is too short for my
tears {at parting with my children) f
296. 'Tis more than enough, though you should strike off a
portion.
297. propero: of course hasty flight would be necessary after
the deed she was planning. — Capite . . Isthmo: in a fragment
of Ennius' tragedy, Medea Exul (Ribbeck, 226, 227), Creon says:
Si te secundo lumine hie offendero moriere — // / find you here at the
coming dawn, you shall die. — lues: a verb.
299. Isthmo: abl. of place whence. — sacra thalami: the mar-
riage rites.
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 281
Scene 3 (w. 301-379). — The chorus sings of the daring of him
who first sailed the seas, the bliss of the Golden Age, the perils of
the Argo's voyage, and the final conquest of the ocean. The meter
is the anapestic dimeter.
308. Having drawn too narrow a hound between the ways of life
and death. The old Latin note of Farnabius will bear translation
here: "When Anacharsis had learned that the thickness of the
ship's bottom was only four inches, he exclaimed, ' So far from
death are they who sail the seas I ' "
329-334. These lines seemed out of place in their MS. position,
and modern editors usually, though not invariably, insert them
after 308.
329. Candida: pure, unspotted. — patres: forefathers. The
Golden Age, of which some features are described in the following
lines, was a favorite theme with the Latin poets of the Empire,
who found pleasiu-e in dwelling upon the simple life of primeval
man by way of contrast and relief from the complex and corrupt
society of their own day.
331. piger: unambitious , content (cf. H.F. 198).
333. parvo dives: the philosophy of contentment was much
preached by the Latin poets, and by Seneca and Horace in par-
ticular. — nisi . . . opes: knew no riches but those his native soil
had yielded.
309. sidera: the constellations, from whose positions the ancient
sailor determined the points of the compass.
311. pluvias Hyadas: a constellation whose setting, when it
came at the evening or morning twilight, in April or November,
coincided with a rainy season. Ovid (Fasti, 5. 166) says: Navita
quas Hyadas Graecus ab imbre vocat — The Greek sailor calls them
HyadeSyfrom rain, the Greek verb rain being veti' (Jiyein). The
form hyadas is ace. plu. of the Greek third declension.
313. Oleniae . . . caprae: Amalthea, nurse of the infant
Jupiter,, described now as a beautiful woman (see Classical Dic-
tionary, artt. Aega, Amalthea), now as a she-goat, in either case
translated to the skies and made a constellation.
316. plaustra: the constellation Ursa Major (Greek arctos,
405), often called "wagon'' by the ancients from its shape and still
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282 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
known in England as "Charles* wain.'* From its position near
the pole it was an object of deep interest to the mariner. — Attica:
one form of the myth makes Bootes identical with Icarius, an
Athenian. This would justify the epithet Attica, transferred
from ■ Bootes to the wagon he seems to be driving. — tardus:
because the constellation, close to the pole, appears almost mo-
tionless.
318. Tiphys: see v. 3, and for his fate 617 S.
321. tendere: sc. ausus est. — toto sinu: with yards squared to
catch the stern wind. Vv. 320-322 refer to the angle at which the
yards and hence the sails are set to catch the breeze from astern
or from either quarter, while 323-328 regard the extent to which
the sail was unfurled by hoisting the yard to midmast or topmast.
— prolato . . . Notes: catch the breeze with yards trimmed, tack,
sail close to the wind.
322. pede: the pedes were "sheets'* or ropes attached to the
lower corners of the square sail and used in making them fast to
the vessel's sides. In the position here indicated they were not
fastened amidships, but the sheet on one side was carried aft and
the other forward, holding the sail obliquely across the deck,
so as to catch the side wind. — captare: in$n. of purpose.
326. a vidua nimium: too eager to reach his destination, and
therefore reckless in carrying sail.
328. sipara : small topsails, thought by some to have been tri-
angular and set with the apex below. They showed ruddy (rubi-
cunda) in the sunlight.
336. bene : modifies dissaepti, not traxit — the Thessalian vessel
has drawn together lands well separated before (cf. Horace, C. 1. 3. 22 :
Deus abscidit | prudens oceano dissodabili \ terras — God in his provi-
dence separated the lands by means of the estranging ocean) . Foedera
mundi by association of ideas suggests the regions which under
these laws of the universe had been separated from one another
(cf. 606 n.).
336. Thessala pinus : the Argo, commanded by Jason^^ of lolcos
in Thessaly.
338. partem metus : nature had terrors enough for man before,
but his conquest of the sea added new ones.
339. mare sepositum : (formerly) an element apart.
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 283
340. ilia . . . improba: that impioua hark; the Argo, of course.
342. duo montes: the S3anplegades, floating islands of rock
which dashed together and crushed whatever tried to pass between
them. The Argo barely escaped, with the loss of her rudder (cf .
456; scopulos vagarUeSf 610; H.F. 1210 n.), and ever after the rocks
remained fixed.
344. aetherio sonitu: with thundering sound.
346. mare: subject of «pargfere^ — when the sea, caught {between
the moving rocks), splashed their tops and the very clouds (cf. H.F.
1213, 1214).
347. Let slip the tiller from his faltering hand.
349. vocem perdidit: referring to the Argons figurehead, hewn
from the speaking oak of Dodona and itself possessed of the power
of speech.
360. virgo: Scylla, once a beautiful maiden, transformed into
a monster which dwelt in a cave on the shore of Sicily opposite
the maelstrom Charybdis. Her story is told by Ovid (M. 14. 1^74).
Vergil (A. 3. 426-428) thus describes her appearance: "First the
face of a human being, a maiden, of beautiful form as far as the
waist, but at last a sea monster of huge size, uniting the tails of
dolphins with the bellies of wolves."
364. male: monster; Scylla.
366. dirae pestes: the sirens.
367. resonans: sounding back, in rivalry with the sirens.
360. sirena: ace. sing. (Greek form). Orpheus almost compelled
the siren to follow him, though she was wont to hold ships captive
with her song. For the power of Orpheus see 626, 629, and Ovid, M.
10. 86 ff. — huius cursus: this voyage. The alliteration in 359-362
may be accidental, but it is by no means uncommon in these plays
and doubtless is sometimes intended.
362. Medea, an evil greater than the sea, a cargo worthy the first
ship. The sin of overstepping the bounds appointed by the Crea-
tor (335 n.) has brought its own punishment. The use of the word
merces suggests that the myth of the Argo and the golden fleece
may represent allegorically the beginning of foreign commerce for
the Greeks.
364. Nunc iam: now, transferring the thought from the Argo 'a
own time to that of the cHorus.
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284 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
365. Palladi&: buiU by Pallas (2 n.)- Abl. in agreement with
manu — no far-famed Argo, wrought by the hand of Pallas and bearing
the oars of princes , is required — any little boat now sails the deep.
369. motus: sc. est, with orbis as subject.
372. pervius: become traversable. — orbis: Uke orbi, 5 n.
373. The Hindu drinks of the cold Araxes, the Persian of the
Elbe and Rhine. The names are selected to show how the ends
of the earth are brought together by commerce.
375-379. This passage would be still more remarkable if we
could suppose that Seneca meant by it anything more than a
vague reference to some ideal Atlantis, such as Plato had described.
One fanciful critic long ago suggested that the Spaniard Seneca is
here foretelling the discovery of America by his countrymen under
Christopher Columbus ! Still more interesting is a marginal note
written by Ferdinand Columbus in his copy of the tragedies,
opposite these lines: Haec prophetia expleta e per patre meuj
Cristoforu Colo almirantlj anno 1492 — This prophecy was fulfilled
by my father, the Admiral Christopher Columbus, in the year 1492.
379. Thule: an island, not now positively identified, lying to
the north and west of Britannia, and assumed to be the remotest
fragment of land in the great ocean that rolled roimd the ancient
world.
ACT III
Scene 1 (w. 380-430). — The nurse describes Medea's fierce
passion as shown by her features and behavior. Medea expresses
her contempt for Jason's cowardice, reiterates her purpose, and
overrides the nurse's timid protest.
380. tectis: cf. I sthmo, 299 n.; penatibv^, 4,50.
381. resiste: pause.
382. incerta: possibly to be taken with Medea, understood as
subject of recursat (385), but better with maenas — as the maenad
guides her frenzied steps uncertainly when she raves on the coming
of her god . . . so Medea runs this way and that with frantic motion.
— entheos: a Greek adjective meaning literally God in, and hence
inspired. This form may be nom. sing, with the subject of tvlit,
but better ace. plu. with gressus (cf . entheo gradu, Tro. 674).
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 285
383. recepto deo: the poets appear to have thought of the in-
spiration of the bacchantes, the pythoness, the sibyl, etc., as an
actual indwelling of the god (cf . pleno Bacchi pectore, Horace, C. 2.
19. 6; Quo me rapis, Bacche, tui plenum, Horace, C. 3. 25. 1). —
maenas: the maenades (bacchantes, thyiades) were the female
devotees of Bacchus, noted for their wild orgies. In 806 Medea
applies the t^rm to herself, and in 849 it is given her by the
chorus.
384. Nysae: a city in India, where according to one account
Bacchus was reared. One of his Greek names (Dionysus) has
been supposed to be a derivative of this.
386. One of the two fragments certainly preserved of Ovid's
tragedy of Medea, which was highly praised by Quintilian and
Tacitus, reads thus: Feror-hilc Uluc, vae, pUna deo — / am hurried
this way and that, ah me, possessed by the god. The speaker is a
woman (plena). The meter is anapestic.
387. fades: though the plural of this noun when it denotes the
human countenance is rare, the sense is much simpler if we take
it as ace. of specification and supply Medea as the subject of citat,
as we do with the verbs that follow. Tr. her face aflame (lit. aflume
as to her face), she fetches her breath from deep, i.e. sighs, sobs.
389. onmis . . . capit: every passion claims expression.
391. quo . .. . haeret: she hesitates on which side to incline the
weight of her wrath. The figure is that of a balance whose opposing
weights are so nearly equal that it is doubtful which will go down.
393. facile: adjective with scelus.
394. vincet: outdo. — irae . . . veteris: as displayed in the
cases of Pelias and her brother Absyrtus.
397. odio: dat. — misera: voc, addressing herself. — quem . . .
modum: what limit you should set — indirect question.
398. imitare amorem: copy your love, which knew no limits, but
sacrificed all to itself. — regias . . . faces: the marriage of Jason
and Creusa (cf. regum thalamos, 56).
399. ShaU this day pa^s idly, this day obtained by such solicita-
tion and granted for such solicitation (ambitu)? She means the
day of respite she had obtained from Creon (288-295).
401. As long as Earth at the center shall bear the heavens poised
(cf. Ovid, M. 1. 12: Circumfuso pendebat in aere tellus \ ponderibus
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286 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
librcUa suis — Earth hung in the enveloping atmosphere, poised by her
own weight).
403. derit: deerit (cf. derat, 992). — dies: sc. sequetur (from
sequentur).
404. siccas: never setting (lit. dry). In the latitude of Greece
and Rome, as in our own, the Arctoe (Ursa Major and Ursa Minor)
are always above the horizon — do not dip into the surrounding
ocean as constellations farther from the pole were thought to do
(cf. vetitum mare, 768).
407. quae; interrogative — Whai ferocity of beasts, what ScyUa,
. . . what Aetna, shall bum with such threats as If -
410. Titana: a Greek ace. sing. (cf. sirena, 360). The reference
is to Enceladus, who was confined under Mt. Aetna (Vergil, A. 3.
678-682; cf. H.F. 80 n.) after the attempt to capture the heavens
and dethrone Jupiter. Ovid (M. 5. 348) follows Aeschylus in
making it Typhoeus who was thus punished. The myths of the
Titans and the Giants are greatly confused.
413. impetum irasque: the sweep of my wrath, a case of hen-
diadys.
4ip. timuit: sc. lason. — Thessalici duels: Aeastus (257 n.),
who was demanding that Medea be given up as guilty of the
murder of his father.
417. cesserit . . . dederit: suppose he has (cf. placeat, 238).
418. certe: at least. — contugem: Medea.
419. ferox: said in irony, and rendered very emphatic by its
unusual position and its antithesis to extimuit.
420. certe: surely a king's son-in-law might defer the time of my
cruel exile. For the meaning of laxare cf. Quintilian, 10. 5. 22:
laxare dicendi necessitaiem — postpone the necessity of speaking.
There is a sneer implied in the use of genero here as in regius gener,
460.
422. non queror : note the sudden change of tone — J do not com-
plain that the time is (too) short; it will go far (cf. Seneca, Brev.Vit.
16. 3: Sapientis multum patet vita — A wise man's life goes far).
424. nullus: sc. dies. — invadam decs: cf. 271, 673.
428. pereas: the " general " second person. With the thought
cf. Tro. 1009-1041, especially 1016 n. — trahere: to drag down
others (cf . Samson's death, Judges 16 : 28-30).
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 287
Scene 2 (w. 431-578). — Jason enters, lamenting his hard fate,
which has placed him in such a position that he must either desert
Medea or lose his own life. Medea urges him to fly with her, re-
counts her services and sacrifices for him, declares him equally-
guilty with herself, and, when he confesses his fear of the king and
leaves her, bursts forth into a torrent of passionate reproaches
and at once begins preparation for the consummation of her re-
venge.
432. malam: with sor^em, ace. in exclamation — evU alike when
it smites and when it spares.
434. fidem praestare: show fidelity y i.e. he faUhfvl,
437. misero: sc.mihi; apparent agent.
438. pietas: reverent affection, commonly that of a child for its
parents, here of a father for his children. In 779 piae is said of
Althaea's love for her brother; in Oct. 52 and 737 it stands for
the nurse's love for her foster child; and in Oct. 844 for the pre-
fect's devotion to his imperial master. See also w. 545 and 943
of this play. — quippe: causal as in 256, but here without the
relative. — sequeretur: ]it. follow, hence share.
439. parentum: dependent on necem.
441. ipsam: sc. Medeam; so with iratam, 444.
443. Would rather have regard for her children than for her
marriage.
446. vise memet: abl. abs. — o< iight of me.
446. fert prae se: displays, exhtbUs. --- 66itii the plural of an
abstract noun, where we should use the singular.
451. at quo: MSS. have ad quos. Sc. me as object of remittis —
You send me hack, hut whither f A fragment of Ennius' Medea
Exul (Ribbeck, 231) reads: Quo niinc me 'vortam? qudd iter in-
cipiam ingredi f \ Domiim paternamne dnnt ad Peliae filias f —
Whither now can I turn? What course shall I begin to pursuit
To my father's house or to Pelias' daughters f
453. quas peti terras iubes: cf. Euripides, Med^ 502 flF» This
question is quoted by Quintilian (I.O. 9. 2. 8) to illustrate one use
of the rhetorical question, which he sajrs is employed, to ca^t odium
on the person addressed, a« Medea says in Seneca, Quas peti terras
iubes f
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288 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
454. fauces: object of monstras. She asks, What lands (453),
what seas (454), and then in reverse order particularizes — the nar-
rows of the Pontic sea, the Symplegades, lolcos, Tempe f
457. Shall I seek little lolcos (where Pelias was slain), or Thes-
salian Tempe f — Tempe: a Greek ace. plu., the name of a beauti-
ful valley in Thessaly.
459. exuli: you impose exile on one already an exile — and
give no place to dwell:
460. eatur: impersonal. — gener: as in 421.
461. nihil: cognate object — / make no protest.
462. paelieem: a favorite word in the speech of Seneca's hero-
ines. Here and in 495 Medea applies it with pathetic irony to
herself, but usually it is a term of reproach to a rival, as in 920.
464. saxo: a prison of stone, perhaps suggested to Seneca by
the famous TuUianum. — noctis aetemae: gen. of quality, of
everlasting darkness.
466. ingratum caput: voc. — ungrateful man!
469. hostis subiti: the terrigenae, warriors who sprang into life
fully armed when Jason had sown the dragon's teeth (169 n.;
Ovid, M. 7. 130).
470. miles: used collectively (cf. Vergil, A. 2. 20, milite).
471. For thought and form in the following passage cf . 130 n. —
spolia . . . arietis: the golden fleece. It was Phrixus who was
carried on the ram's back to Colchis, losing his sister Helle on the
way — see these names in Classical Dictionary — arietis: a trisyl-
lable, pronounced as if spelled ar-ye-tis.
473. monstrum: the sleepless dragon which guarded the fleece
in Colchis. It was drugged by Medea (Ovid, M. 7. 149-156), who
thus enabled her lover to secure the prize (see also 703). — fratrem:
Absyrtus (see 130 n.).
474. Crime done not once (hut many times) in one act of crime —
not only was her brother slain, but his body was mutilated and
cast imburied into the sea.
476. natas: sc. Pelid (or Peliae); see 133 n.
476. revicturi: from revivo.
479. monstra: the fire-breathing bulls, the terrigenae and the
guardian serpent enimierated just above. — manus: these hands of
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOTES ON THE MEDEA 289
481. coniugi: gen. of coniugium.
482. miserere: used absolutely, /wive p%. — redde . . . vicem:
reciprocate.
483. Scythae: a name of rather vague application, here given
by Medea to her own people, the Colchians (cf. 628).
485. quas: = et eas — and, as the palace, filled with riches, could
hardly contain this, treasure, we decked the woods with gold. The
reference is to the golden fleece, which was hung upon a tree and
there guarded by the dragon.
488. The first dipody may be treated as composed of anapest-
anapest {tibi pat \ ria ces), but better as proceleusmatic-iambus
{tihi patri\a ces)', cf. 670.
489. redde . . . sua: for the reference of sua cf. Vergil, A. 1. 461 :
surU hie sua praemia laudL For the idea cf. Medea's demand
from Creon in 197, 246, 272.
490. The truthfulness of this pitiful plea is confirmed by Creon's
statement in 184.
492. poenam putabam : sc. fugam — I thought exile a punishment.
Note the antithesis between poenam and munus, and the strong
irony of the latter. This is one of many places where Seneca has
followed Ovid — cf. M. 2. 99: poenam pro munere poscis.
494. Hoc . . . Creusae: you urge this upon me and offer it
(as a wedding gift) to Creusa. Hoc means Medea's departure, urged
in 493.
496. obicit: throw up to me Sisa. reproachful reminder. Caedem
and dolo's, like amores, are objects of obicit.
600. tua . . . fecit: cf. 275-278.
601. arguant: subjunctive with concessive force — though all
shovM accuse.
603. You should hold him guiltless who for your sake is guilty.
604. cuius acceptae pudet: which one is ashamed of having re-
ceived (cf. 130 n. and the famiUar ab urbe condita of Livy).
607. placarenatis: calm yourself for the children^ s sake — middle
voice. — abdico: / reject, forswear, disown them.
609. regina: sc. fratres dahit.
610. non: with the optative subjimctive we should expect ne,
but cf. non Teucros agat, Vergil, A. 12. 78. — miseris: for my un-
fortunate boys.
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290 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
612. Phoebi: see 28 n. — Sisyphi: the royal house of Corinth
was descended from Sisjrphus, whose ancestry ran back through
Aeolus (105 n.), Hellen, Deucalion, Prometheus to lapetus, one of
the original Titans. Compared with the divine progeny of Phoebus,
son of Jupiter, his offspring would befoeda (511).
514. supplicem: sc. me.
517. nos . . . sine: the reading here is corrupt and the sense
obscure. Of nos confligere nothing can be made. The rest then
will mean let tis {myself and the kings you fear) contend, and let
Jason he the prize.
521. Acastus . . . Creo: these are the king on this side and on
that of 516.
522-624. Medea does not require that you arm your hands against
your father-in-law, nor that you stain yourself with a kinsman^a
blood. — caede cognata: Jason and Acastus were cousins.
628. demersos dabo: / wUl overwhelrn them all. The verb do
often is used with a participle in the ace. in a causative sense.
529. ne cupias vide; sc. sceptra. To his statement that he
feared the royal power she retorts. See that you do not desire it, i.e.
that your true motive he not amhition rather than fear.
534. Let not thy hoUs he hurled with a hand thai discriminates
hetween v>s (cf . 275 : cur sontes duos distinguis f).
541. tantum: only.
646. pietas: see 438 n. — ut possim: cogat here has two objects,
one memet, representing the person, and ut possim, the act required.
Two accusatives, or ace. and infinitive, would be more usual.
647. penisti: seared. In 484 perustis had its more literal
meaning, sunburnt, swarthy.
660. tenetur: I have him! The same expression, borrowed from
the arena, occurs in Tro. 630. — Sic . . . locus: this idea of attack-
ing him through his children has been hinted at repeatedly (26, 40),
but has not perhaps even yet taken definite form in her mind.
With vulneri . . . locus cf . 565, 1006.
561. abeuntem: in agreement here with the subject {me) of
the infinitive. The most common construction after licet would
have been abeunti loqui.
653. et: even that, i.e. if I may not keep my children, even a last
embrace will he grateful.
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 291
665. meliotis . . . nostri: my better self.
566. haec: sc. verba.
661. excidimus: sc. memoria — have I been forgotten (Ut. faUen
from your recollection) f The same expression occurs in H.O.
1332 (cf. excidat Hector, Tro. 714).
562. hoc age: do this to the exclusion of every other interest.
She is addressing herself.
663. fructus . . . putare: the fruit of sin is to deem no ad d
sin (cf . malorum fructum ... nihil timere, Tro. 422).
665. hac . . . timere: attack on a side where none mn dfetim of
danger f alluding again to the inhuman purpose now maturing in
her mind (cf. hac qua . . . doles, 1006).
571. decus: appositive, like munus and pignus, to pdUd — / havt
a robe, a gift from heaven, the glory of our house dnd kingdom, etc.
In 130 the golden fleece is referred to as regni decus. — pignud . . .
generis: as an earnest of his birth (cf. the pignora demanded of the
same god for the same purpose by Phaethon, Ovid, M. 2. 8).
578. quodque . . . comae: a third gift of gold which the
sparkle of jewels adorns, with which the hair is bound.
576. nati: sc. mei. — nubenti: the bride, who was s«dd by the
Romans to veil herself for her husband.
578. arae: in preparation for her invocation of the powefS
of darkness (740 ff.).
Scene 3 (w. 579-669). — The chorus likens a woman's fury to
the fiercest forces of nature, then recalls in detail the fate that has
befallen many of the Argonauts, and prays that the gods may
consider their punishment sufficient expiation and spare their
leader, Jason. The meter is the lesser ftapphic, with an adonic at
the close of each stanza.
680. metuenda: not predicate, but attributive with vis — no
fearful force of hurtling spear is so great.
586. iunctos . . . errat: sweeps away the bridges (of boeUs) and
wanders afield, i.e. overflows its banks.
690. Haemus: a mountain range to the north of Thrace, be-
lieved by the ancients to be of amazing height (Pliny, N.H. 4. 18,
says six miles, but may mean one must travel that distance to
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292 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
reach the top). The disappearance of the white snow on its sum-
mit in spring would produce for rustic onlookers at a distance much
the same effect as if the mountain itself were melting away.
591. ignis: the fire of passion (love) — Love spurred on by vrrath
is blind, cares not to be controlled, etc.
695. parcite: used absolutely, i.e. without an object — Show
mercy, ye gods ; we beseech your favor, that he may live in safety
who vanquished the sea. Jason, of course, is meant.
597. vinci: the subject is re^na. — dominus profundi: Neptune
(cf. profundi . . . dominator maris, 4).
598. regna secunda: the sea (for the meaning of secunda see
note on H.F. 53, and cf. secunda maria sceptro regis, H.F. 599;
secundum fluctibus regnum moves, Phaedra 904). Pluto's share,
the third {tertia sors), is mentioned in H.F. 609.
699. ausus . . . iuvenis: the youth who dared to drive the ever-
lasting chariot of the sun was Phaethon, whose story is told at length
by Ovid (M. 2. 1-328).
600. metae: course (lit. goal). Forgetful of his father^ s qpurse
he caught himself the fire which he madly scattered in the sky.
603. constitit . . . magno: the beaten track has proved costly
to none. Constare gives us the English word cost, and magno here
is abl. of price.
604. tutum: sc. fuit. — populo priori: former generations.
606. sacro . . . sancta: sacrosancta, divided by tmesis; the
sense is inviolable, immutable. — violente: voc, best translated by
an English adverb.
606. foedera mundi: the laws of nature (cf. 335, where the same
phrase occurs, in a different shade of meaning; see also foedus
umbrarum, H.F. 49 n.). For the sentiment cf. Ovid, M. 10. 353:
Neve . . . naturae pollue foedus — Do not dishonor the law of nature.
The particular law referred to was that by which the gods were
supposed to have confined man's sphere of conquest to the land
and forbidden him the sea (cf. 335 n.; Horace, C. 1. 3. 21 ff.).
In the following stanzas is detailed the punishment inflicted on the
various Argonauts for their part in this sin.
610. scopulos vagantes: the Symplegades (342 n. ; 456).
612. funem: the cable with which the vessel was moored. —
barbara: anything not Greek was barbarian (Romans 1: 14: "I
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NOTES ON. THE MEDEA 293
am debtor both to the Greeks and to the barbarians ")• Barbara
ora, of course, here means Colchis.
613. extemi . . . auri: the golden fleece.
614. exitu: abl. of means with piavU — by a dreadful end. —
temerata: outraged.
617. in primis: this may be taken literally, among the first in
time, or as the phrase imprimis, especially. Tiphys lost his life
before the Argo reached Colchis, and was succeeded at the
helm by Erginus (indocto magistro, 618), or, according to some
accounts, by Ancaeus, a son of Neptune.
622. Aulis . . . retinet: this implies that the Greek fleet which
was to sail against Troy had assembled at Aulis while Medea and
Jason were still at Corinth. Tiphys was a Boeotian, and the
Boeotian port of Aulis, here personified, is represented as detaining
the ships from running into the same perils that had cost him his
life. — memor inde: mindful thenceforth.
624. stare querentes: lamenting that they must stand idle.
626. Ille: Orpheus, who is said to have been the son of Apollo
and the muse {Camena) Calliope. The instances given here of
his power to charm inanimate objects with his lyre are familiar.
Ovid (M. 10. 1-77) tells of his passionate love for Eurydice and his
descent into Hades to rescue her from death. It is told further that
the women of Thrace, incensed at the bard's devotion to his lost
wife's memory and his consequent neglect of themselves, tore him
in pieces (hence sparsus . . . per agros, 630). The head floated
down the river Hebrus (631) and across the sea to the island Les-
bos (Ovid, M. 11. 1-60), thus transporting the power of lyric song
to that island, where Alcaeus and Sappho, the earliest of Greek
lyric poets, afterward lived and sang.
628. When the bird, leaving off its own song, stood near to
listen.
631. tristi: saddened by the burden it bore.
632. notam: because he had crossed it before, in his quest of
Eurydice (cf. Ovid, M. 11. 61: quae loca viderat ante). — Styga:
ace. sing.
634. Alcides: Hercules. — Aquilone nates: Calais and Zetes,
the Boreades, called in 231 sati Borea. They were among the
numerous victims of Hercules' prowess.
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294 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
635. Neptuno genitum: Pericljrmenus, who like Proteus had
the power to change his form. His story is told by Ovid (M. 12.
566-672).
637. pacem: Hercules is pictured in these tragedies as the slayer
of tyrants and defender of the feeble. He established peace by
putting an end to oppression (cf. H.F. 882: Pax eat Herculea
manu\ Auroram inter et Hesperum — By Hercules' might there is
peace from the sunrise to the evening star; see also H.F. 250).
638. After having opened up the kingdom of Pluto, in his quest
of the dog Cerberus. In H.F. 55 Juno complains that Patefacta
ab imis manibus retro via est — A way from the deepest abode of the
dead has been opened.
640-642. When the centaur Nessus attempted to carry off Her-
cules' wife, Dejanira, the hero shot him with one of his poisoned
arrows. The djring centaur wiped away the blood as it flowed
from his wound, mingled with the hydra poison (hence gemini
cruoris, 641), with a garment which he then gave to Dejanira with
the statement that it contained a powerful love charm, and if given
to one she cared for would revive his waning afifection. Some time
later, when she thought her husband was forgetting her, she gave
him the robe {munere nuptae, 642). When he had put it on the
venom with which it was saturated ate into his flesh and caused
such agony that to escape it he built a huge funeral pyre on Mt.
Oeta and had himself burnt alive upon it (cf. 777). Ovid tells
the story (M. 9. 141-272). Seneca's tragedy, Hercules Oetaeus,
has this closing scene of Hercules' life for its theme.
644. saetiger: the Calydonian boar.
645. impius: unnatural^ in slaying his kinsman. — moreris:
from morior. — dextra matris: at Meleager's birth it had been
foretold that his life would last only as long as a stick that then
was burning on the hearth. It was removed from the fire and
preserved, but when his mother learned that Meleager, grown to
manhood, had killed her own brother, she threw the stick again
into the fire and as it was consumed he slowly died (cf. 779; Ovid,
M. 8. 445-525).
646. meruere . . . expiavit: a confusion of two thoughts: (1) all
were guilty of the crime for which Hylas atoned with his death;
and (2) all deserved the death by which he atoned for the crime.
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 295
In either case the idea is that in having ventured on the forbidden
element all had deserved the fate that befell Hylas, i.e. drowning.
648. puer: Hylas, a handsome boy who was drawn by the
nymphs into the spring to which he had gone for water, and
drowned.
649. tutas: not the stormy ocean, but the quiet waters of a
spring.
661. fonte timendo: abl. abs. of cause — since it is the spring
that is to be dreaded, go, plow the sea fearlessly (fortes).
653. condidit: killed (lit. laid away in the tomb). The more
common version of the story represents the seer Idmon as having
lost his life in a boar hunt in Bithynia (ApoUodorus, 1. 9). All
accounts make him foretell his own fate.
667. Thetidis maritus: Peleus, father of Achilles, who after
great vicissitudes died in wretchedness on the island of Cos, an
exile.
661. It was Ajax, the son of Oileus, here called by his father's
name, who perished fulmine et ponto on his way homeward from
Troy (cf . Vergil, A. 1. 43 flf.). Our poet here intimat.es that the real
reason for his destruction was his father's offense in joining the
Argonautic expedition (patrioque pendet). To preserve the Sapphic
measure a hemistich (half line) must be supplied. Leo suggests
occidet proles. If instead we read occidetque Aiax, it will remove
all difficulty about the name, for we shall have Aiax Oileus, as in
Vergil, A. 1. 41.
669. Nauplius: there are three of this name in the old mythol-
ogy. Seneca here identifies the Argonaut with another of the
name, the father of Palamedes. Incensed at the treatment his son
received from the Greek leaders (Vergil, A. 2. 82 ff.), in revenge he
lured their returning fleet upon the rocks by means of a false
beacon (igne fallaci, 658). He himself met a like fate later. In
the story of the wreck, told by the courier Eurybates in Ag.
558-570, the expression perfida face is used.
662. coniugis . . . Pheraei: Admetus, king of Pherae, whose
wife Alcestis voluntarily gave up her life to save his (impendes
animam marito), and thus helped atone for the sin of her father,
Pelias, who had caused the expedition of the Argo (664, 665).
It is worthy of note that the tenses in 634-656 are perfect, impljdng
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296 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
that the heroes there named had already met their fate, while
Peleus, Ajax, Nauplius and Alcestis are spoken of in the future
as if still to meet their doom. The chorus then closes with a refer-
ence to Pelias' end and a prayer for Jason.
664. ipse . . . Pelias: see 133 n.
667. angustas . . . undas: not the mighty waves of ocean, but
the bubblings of a caldron, a most unheroic fate (cf. 651 n.).
669. Spare Jason . . . who merely obeyed his orders. — iusso:
Tro. 870: Quid iussa cessas agere f ad aiLctorem redit sceleris
coacti culpa — Why do you hesitate to do what is ordered f The guilt
of a sin that is forced recoils upon its author.
ACT IV
Scene 1 (w. 670-739). — The nurse describes Medea^s gather-
ing of deadly herbs and animal poisons from heaven and earth and
hell, and her preparations for the magic rites that fpUow.
670. The first dipody may be read as tribrach-anapest {pavSt a \
nimus hor), but better as proceleusmatic-iambus {pavet dni \ mus
hor). It is questionable if Seneca ever admits the anapest in the
second place of this measure (cf. 488).
671. immane . . . atigescit: 'tis monstrous j how it swells (cf.
immane quantum discrepat, Horace, C. 1. 27. 6, and the frequent
use of mirum in like connection).
673. furentem: sc. Medeam; so with aggressam and trahentem.
— aggressam decs: cf. 271, 424.
674. caelum trahentem: invoking the gods with magic incanta-
tions (cf. te quoque Luna traho, Ovid, M. 7. 207).
676. penetrale funestum: the unholy shrine, the arae of 578 (cf.
triste sacrum, 680).
677. totas . . . effundit: is lavishing aU her powers. All the
principal verbs in the sentence {effundit, promit, explicat, vocat)
are present tense. The nurse is looking on and describing what
she sees.
678. etiam ipsa: there were powers which even Medea had
shrunk from invoking before, but now scruples and fears aUke are
forgotten.
680. laev&: touching the altar with the left hand instead of the
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 297
right, which would have been used in lawful worship of the
gods.
681-683. Libyae, Taurus: extremes of climate; Medea's power
ranged over them all (cf. 373 n.).
686. squamifera . . . turba: the serpent kind.
687. exertat: for exsertat, — quaerit . . . veniat: is searching
for those at whom it may come dealing death. — quibus: may be
relative with antecedent omitted, or perhaps better interrogative.
It is dat. after mortifera.
693. fraude vulgari: stich arts as the common herd can use.
695. auguis: the constellation Draco. Cicero (N.D. 2. 106)
quotes the Greek astronomical poet Aratus (translated) thus: Has
(arctos) inter J veliUi rapidocum gurgite flumen, torvus Draco serpit —
Between the great and little hears, like a river with rushing current,
creeps the grim dragon.
696. ferae: the Arctoe, Ursa Major and Ursa Minor. The former
was known to the Greeks of Homer's time (II. 18. 487; Od. 5. 275),
while the latter, though long known to the Phoenicians, was not
pointed out to the Greeks till the age of Thales, about 600 B.C.
698. sol vat Ophiuchus: let the serpent holder loose his tight
grip, and so release the serpent. Cicero (N.D. 2. 108) translates
Ophiuchus into the Latin An^uitenens, Quem claro perhibent
Ophiuchum nomine Graii. \ Hie pressu duplici palmarum continet
Anguem — The serpent holder , whom the Greeks call hy the splendid
name Ophiuchus. He holds the Dragon with the twofold grip of his
hands.
699. virus: ace; one of the few neuter o-stems in -ws.
700. ausus: which dared. — gemina . . . numina: Apollo and
Diana. It was the former who slew the python, and the oracle at
Delphi, where the encounter occurred, was sacred to him alone,
though here his twin ^ister is assigned a share in the exploit (cf*
the inclusion of Juno in tonantibus, 59 n.).
702. serpens: omnis serpens may mean every serpent that has
fallen by Hercules^ hand, including the two that attacked him in
his cradle (H.F. 214-222), the guardian of the garden of the
Hesperides (H.F. 531), etc., but its position between Hydra and
reparans, which certainly must be taken together, makes it more
probable that the reference is to the many heads and Uves of the
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298 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
hydra itself, which in H.F. 241 is called numeroaum malum, —
caede . . . sua: re-creating itself by its own destruction; whenever
one of its nine heads was lopped off, two sprang up in its place.
703. tu . . . serpens: the sleepless dragon (insomne monstrum,
473 n.) which guarded the golden fleece in Colchis.
706. frugis: to the venom of serpents she now adds the juices
of poisonous plants.
707. invius . . . Eryx: the famous mountain in western Sicily,
which in the first Punic war was the last stronghold of the Car-
thaginians in that island.
711. quis: abl. The antecedent is mala (706). — divites: an
epithet often applied to the inhabitants of Arabia Felix, which was
supposed to be exceedingly rich in its natural resources (cf . the-
sauris Arabum, Horace, C. 3. 24. 2). — linunt: sm^ar with
poison.
713. Suebae: feminine, as if those who dealt in witchcraft and
poisons would naturally be women.
715. rigida: stiff with cold. — decus nemorum: the leaves.
720. pestes: baneful herbs. Athos, which was not really
Thessalian (Haemonius)^ but Macedonian; Pindus, on the western
boundary of Thessaly; and Pangaeus, near Philippi, all were
mountains well known -to Seneca's readers. He next names four
rivers which roughly represent the points of the compass — Tigris
' south, Danube north, Hydaspes east and Baetis west — to em-
phasize again the world-wide range Medea covered in her search
(cf. 373, 681 n.).
723. premens: the Tigris, noted for its swift current, is pictiu:ed
here as checking its deep torrent so as to water the plants that
grew in or near its bed (cf . Hister . . . 'compressit undas, 764).
725. gemmifer: the river Hydaspes, near the northwest border
of India, was supposed to be rich in diamonds; Claudian, a fourth-
century court poet, speaks of the gemmae Hydaspeae (III Cons.
Honorii, 4).
726. nomen . . . dedit: Seneca's native town, Corduba (modem
Cordova), was in the Provincia Baetica, which took its name from
the river Baetis.
727. Hesperia: a general term for western, i.e. in the direction
of Hesperus, the evening star. To the Greeks it commonly sug-
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 299
gested Italy {e.g. in Vergil, A. 1. 530); to the Romans it often
meant Spanish, as here (cf. Horace, C. 1. 36. 4).
728-730. Some herbs must be gathered at dawn, others at
midnight; some must be cut with a knife (cruenta falce, 722),
others pinched ofif with the finger nail (ungue).
731 ff. Cf . the contents of the witches' caldron in Macbeth
(4. 1. 4-38), "Fillet of a fenny snake," etc. — serpentium: the
regular form of the gen. plu. In 705 it was written aerpentum for
metrical reasons.
734. vivae: the heart and other vital organs cut from a living
screech owl. — scelenun artifex: Medea (see 121 n.).
735. discretaponit: separates j distinguishes.
137. verba: incantations. — illis: abl. after the comparative.
739. mundus . . . tremit: nature shudders.
Scene 2 (w. 740-848). — Medea invokes the aid of the infernal
gods, the shades of the wicked dead and Hecate, patron of magic
arts, in a rhapsody of sustained intensity, and expresses her assur-
ance and satisfaction that her prayer is answered. The meter is
trochaic to 751, iambic trimeter to 770, alternately trimeter and
dimeter to 786, anapestic to 842 and iambic trimeter to the end.
740-761. Medea begins her invocation with a passage in the
long, swinging trochaic septenarius, which, making due allowance
for the difference between quantitative and accentual meter, may
be illustrated by referring to Tennyson's Locksley HaU.
742. ligatos: hounded (cf. aUigat, Vergil, A. 6. 439) as well as
bound.
743. supplicis: for suppliciis, abl. abs. with remissis. The
lines that follow give details (cf. Theseus' account in H.F. 750-
759, where the same stock examples are used). — thalamos novos:
of Jason and Creusa; for the special meaning of novos in this con-
nection see note on 894.
746. Pirenidas: ace. plu. of Pirenis, adjective from Pirene,
the name of a famous fountain at CJorinth. Tantalus is variously
described by authorities as having been king of Lydia, of Phrygia,
of Argos and of Corinth; evidently the last view is adopted
here.
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300 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
746. sedeat: remain for, i.e. await. — socero: dat. of in-
terest after sedeat. Creon is meant, his name suggested by
mention of Tantalus, one of his predecessors on the Corinthian
throne.
749. vestras . . . manus: the daughters of Danaus had slain
their husbands, and the crime which Medea meditated was worthy
of them.
760. vocata . . . veni: the participle agrees not with the
neuter sidua but with tu, the subject of the imperative veni, with
Hecate as antecedent; induta and minax, 751, have the same
agreement. — sidus: appositive to tu.
751. fronte non una: cf. note on trifonnis, 7.
752. Having finished her solemn invocation, Medea recounts
(in iambics) the wonders she has wrought by the aid of these
powers. — tibi: for thee, Hecate. — moregentis: modifies solvens —
loosing my hair from its bonds in the manner of my people.
763. nude . . . pede: on a similar occasion Ovid (M. 7. 183)
describes Medea as being nvda pedem — hare of foot.
755, 756. Two opposite movements of the sea are described:
/ have driven the seas back to their deepest recesses, and (conversely)
the ocean has sent its mighty waves farther inland, otUdoing the tides.
With the examples of her power cited below cf . Ovid, M. 7. 199-
209.
768. et solem et astra: at the same time. — vetitum . . .
tetigistis: see 404 n.
759. temporum . . . vices: the seasons — / have caused the flowers
of spring to bloom in summer, grain to ripen in the winter, water to
flow up hill.
763. Hister: the Danube in its lower course. — tot ora: as the
delta of the Nile had seven recognized branches, ancient writers
seem to have taken it for granted that all great rivers had the same
number. Thus Tacitus, writing of the Danube, says (Germ. 1.1):
Danuvius . . . plures populos adit, donee in Ponticum mare sex
meatibus erumpat; septimum os paludibus hauritur — The Danube
. . . visits many nations, till it bursts forth into the Black Sea in
six channels ; the seventh mouth is swallowed up in the marshes.
Cf . Tro. 9, where the seven mouths of the Don (Tanais) are spoken
of.
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 301
766. tacente vento: abl. abs. concessive — though the wind is
still. — nemoris . . . domus: the heart of the ancient wood.
768. die reducto: that is, bright daylight enters the recesses
of the dense forest. — Phoebus: the sun has stood still in mid
heaven.
770. It is time to attend thy sacred rites, Phoebe. Note the
final B in Phoebe, which distinguishes this feminine form from the
masculine Phoebe in 874 (see note on 97). Phoebe here, as often,
is identified with Hecate (7 n.). Other of her names used in this
same passage are Trivia (787), Dictynna (795) and Perseis (814).
771-786. In alternating trimeters and dimeters she enumerates
the horrid offerings she brings. — tibi: as in 752. — cruent&: abl.
772. no vena . . . ligat: each boxmd with nine serpent coils.
Novena agrees with serpens, while quae is ace. plu.
773. membra: the giants had feet like serpents. — discors:
rebellious. — Typhoeus: one of the Giants who attacked the
heavens in the attempt to dethrone Jupiter (see 410 n.).
775. vectoris: the centaur Neesus (640 n.), who served as ferry-
man on the river Evenus, and there tried to carry off Dejanira,
one of his passengers.
777. Oetaeus . . . rogus: the pyre on Mt. Oeta, where Hercules
ended his life (640 n.). This is the theme of the Hercules Oetaeus
of Seneca.
779. impiae: cf. impiw«, 645. — facem: the firebrand on whose
preservation Meleager's life depended (645 n.). With ultrids
AUhaeae cf . matris iratae, 646. It is natural for Medea, about to
slay her own children, to think of Althaea, who had caused the
death of her son.
782. Harpyia: a trisyllable, pronounced Har-pyi-a. — dum
fugit: the harpies were driven by Calais and Zetes, sons of the
north wind, from the house of the blind Phineus and pursued as
far as the Strophades islands (Ovid, M. 7. 3; Vergil, A. 3. 211-213).
783. Stymphalidos : a Greek gen. sing. , here modified by passae —
the wounded bird of the Stymphalian lake, which had felt (lit. suffered)
the Lernaean arrow, i.e. an arrow poisoned with the hydra's gall.
786. sonuistis: some phenomenon of sound or motion on the
altar satisfies Medea that her invocation has been heard. —
tripodas: ace. plu. of the Greek noim tripus. The words / see my
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302 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
tripods have been shaken involve an allusion to the oracle at
Delphi, where the three-legged seat was an important part of the
paraphernalia, and mean simply that the goddess (Hecate) has
given some token of her presence and favor.
787-842. Here follows a rhapsody in anapests which fairly
entitles Medea to the epithet maenas which is used by herself in
806 and is applied to her by the chorus in 849.
787. Triviae: Hecate, so called because her shrines were com-
monly placed where three roads met. In the following lines she
is identified completely with the moongoddess: / see the chariot of
Trivia — not thai which the dear, all-night moon with full round face
is wont to drive, hut that of the darkened luminary, with sorrowful
countenance, when, assailed by the threats of Thessalian witches, she
sweeps the sky with dose-drawn rein. She desires not the bright
full moon, but one in eclipse. For some details see below.
790. Thessalicis minis: it seems that Thessaly was noted for the
number and ability of its witches who like Medea had learned to
control the forces of nature. Pliny (N.H. 30. 1) speaks of the
" Thessalian matrons whose name this art long held in our part
of the world.'' One feat much practiced, according to popular
belief, was to darken the moon by magic. So we read in Seneca's
Phaedra, 420, this prayer addressed to the moon: Te . . . detrahere
nunquam Thessali cantus queant — May Thessalian incantations
never avail to draw thee down; and again (Phaedra, 791): Tractam
Thessalicis carminihus rati — Thinking she had been drawn down by
Thessalian charms. Thessalicis minis then will mean the menaces,
mingled with entreaties, with which the effort to draw the
moon was made (cf. 674 n.). Lurida in 790 is nom. sing, and
maesta abl., as is shown by the meter.
791. caelum . . . legit: for the meaning cf. pontum legit
(V.A. 2. 207).
793. pallida: nom. sing. — funde: shed.
795, 796. An eclipse was the occasion of great terror, and
efforts were made to counteract the magic which was supposed to
cause it by beating on brazen vessels in auxilium, for the assistance,
of the threatened luminary. Tacitus gives an instance from his-
tory (Ann. 1. 28. 3), when he says mutinous soldiers aeris sono,
tubarum comuumque concentu strepere — made an uproar vnth the
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 303
sound of brass and the concerted blare of fifes and trumpets, in order
to end an eclipse of the moon a.d. 14. Of course it is an anach-
ronism for Medea to speak of precious Corinthian bronze, which
was not known till B.C. 146, when Corinth was captured and
burnt by the Romans.
797. caespite: an altar of turf.
799. A torch caught from the midst of a funeral pyre would be ill-
omened and hence appropriate here (cf. H.F. 103: Va^tam rogo
flagrante corripiat trabem — Let her catch a great brand from the
burning pyre; Ovid, M. 6. 430).
800. caput: ace. of specification with mota, or object of the same
participle in a " middle *' sense: Having tossed my head, I offered
thee with bended neck the words of the magic ritual.
803. vitta: officiating as priestess Medea would wear a wreath,
perhaps of cypress, which was associated with things funereal.
804. Stygia ramus ab unda: the rapta sepulchro fax of 799.
806. maenas: appositive to the subject of feriam (cf. 383 n.;
787 n.; 849). — sacro: with cuUro — accursed.
807. manet: from manare, not manere. — noster sanguis: my
own blood.
808. assuesce: a trisyllable, as-sues-ce. Tr. accustom yourself,
my hand, to draw the knife and be strong to shed blood that is dear
to me. The poet makes her gash her own arms (bracchia) that her
hand may be the more ready to shed the same blood flowing in
the veins of her children (caros cruores). In 810 {sacrum laticem
dedi) she has accomplished this preliminary sacrifice. Laticem,
there, of course, means her own blood.
812. vocari: sc. te.
813. votis: by my prayers. — ignosce: sc. mihi, or take abso-
lutely.
814. Persei: voc. of the patronymic Perseis. Hecate is so
called as being daughter of Perses, a brother of Medea's father
Aeetes, and granddaughter of Persa and Sol. Ovid (Rem. Am.
263) used the same word as an adjective, Perseides herbae, mean-
ing plants used in magic. — tuos arcus: object of vocandi.
818. quas: equivalent to ut eas, ut introducing urat in a clause
of purpose and eas object of sumpserit — Thai when she has donned
them the creeping flame may consume her very marrow.
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304 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
820. auro: the material of her gift to the bride (572-574).
In 820-830 the efifect of the poison she is concocting is described as
if it were liquid fire, and this leads her to enumerate the mythical
sources of fire — that stolen from heaven by Prometheus, the forge
of Vulcan, the thunderbolt that killed her kinsman Phaethon,
the breath of the Chimaera and of the fire-breathing bulls of Col-
chis, to all of which she adds "the gall of Medusa."
822. furta: the stealing of fire from heaven for man (cf . Horace, C.
1. 3. 27). — viscere fete: Prometheus' punishment was confine-
ment on the barren rock of the Caucasus, where a vulture tore
constantly at his liver, which grew as fast as it was consumed
(cf. fihris rencUis, Vergil, A. 6. 600).
823. condere: store up, here in the golden gift (cf. condita,
835).
825. Mulciber: Vulcan, god of fire. The name is derived from
the verb mulceOf referring, of course, to the power of fire to soften
(melt) metals.
827. cognate: Phaethon was son and Medea granddaughter of
Phoebus (28 n.). His adventure with the sun's chariot ended
with his being struck by lightning in order to prevent further dis-
aster to the universe (Ovid, M. 2. 321).
831. taciturn: latent.
835 ft. visits, tactfls: ace. — art^: nom. plu. All the verbs
are optative.
840. tenentur: are heard Qit. received). — latratus: Hecate was
represented sometimes as having three heads (triformis, 7; triceps,
Ovid, M. 7. 194), one of a horse, one of a lion, one of a dog; more
often as merely attended by a pack of hounds, whose barking pro-
claimed her approach {latravU Hecates turba, Oed. 569; visaeque
canes ululo/re per umhram, adventante dea, Vergil, A. 6. 257 — " Dogs
seemed to howl through the darkness as the goddess drew near").
843 ft. The violence {vis) of her frenzy is gone, and only sullen
determination remains. — vocft: to the nurse.
846. placate: win to yourselves . . . your mistress — and step-
mother.
848. ultimo: to her hearers this would naturally mean the last
before her own departure, but for herself it has another and deeper
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 305
Scene 3 (w. 849-878). — The chorus describes the frenzy of
Medea, expresses its dread of her power, and prays for the speedy
coming of night. The meter is iambic dimeter catalectic, each
stanza closing with a verse one syllable shorter.
849. cruenta: nom. The sense may be literally blood-stained
(cf. 806-810, where she had gashed her own arms with the sacri-
ficial knife), or it may refer to her past crimes.
860. amore saevo: her fierce passion for Jason (398 n.).
864. riget: is set.
866. Does not stand on the defensive, but dares attack.
867. Sc. earn esse.
868-866. The chorus observes Medea's intense emotion, evinced
by change of color and uncertain gait (cf. 382-389).
866, 867. Cf . Medea's own expression, 397, 398.
874. Phoebe: note the short e final, and cf. Phoebe, 770 n. —
mitte . . . loro: drive the sun chariot swiftly. Medea's reprieve
was to end with the day (295, 297-299, 421, 1017), hence the prayer
that night might come quickly.
876. alma: the epithet commonly applied to dies, sol, lux and
words of kindred sense here is given to nox (cf. Tro. 438).
878. dux noctis: cf. gemini praevia temporis, 71.
ACT V
Scene 1 (w. 879-890). — A messenger narrates the destruction
of Creon and his daughter by the unquenchable fire kindled by
Medea's deadly gift, the chorus prompting hiQi with questions.
884. quis cladis modus: modus may mean either manner or
measure, probably the latter here (cf. omnem, tola, urbi timetur).
890. praesidia: the water. The fire is so fierce as to devour
what ordinarily is a safeguard against it.
Scene 2 (w. 891-977). — The nurse urges her mistress to flee
for her life, but Medea exults in the success of her plans thus far,
recalls with satisfaction her past deeds, wavers in her purpose to
destroy her sons but decides upon it, sees the apparition of her
murdered brother, and finally ascends to the house top, there to
finish her work.
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306 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
891. Pelopea: Pelops was a son of Tantalus (745 n.), and be-
came king of Pisa, in Elis. From his name the whole southern
peninsula of Greece came to be called Pelops' Island, Peloponnesus.
Here the adjective is applied to Corinth either as his father's home
or in the general sense of Grecian (Vei^il, A. 2. 193).
893. Egone ut recedam: am I to retreat ? — an indignant ques-
tion, implying that the proposed act is inconceivable (cf. 929).
894. nuptias novas: cf. thalamos novas, 743; thalamis novis,
Tro. 900. It is a new kind of marriage in that it is to be a scene of
mourning instead of rejoicing.
896. quota: how small, lit. whathf (cf. H.F. 383 n.).
897. You love him still if you are content with simply depriving
him of his new-made wife. — furiose: masculine, with anime; so
violentus, 904.
898. caelebs: both caelebs and viduus are used indifferently of
persons widowed and those who never have been married.
899. haut: haud.
902. incumbe: bend to, lend all your force and weight. — languen-
tem: if you waver in your purpose.
905. pietas vocetur: i.e. in comparison with what is contem-
plated now. — faxis: feceris, perfect subjxmctive used impera-
tively — Cause them to know how trivial and of what common stamp
are the crimes I have done hitherto.
907. prolusit: took exercise in preparation for greater deeds
(cf. proludens fatis, Tro. 182).
910. Medea nunc sum: cf. 171 n. — crevit: from cresco — my
nature has developed through misfortune (or through evil deeds).
912. arcano . . . sacro: the golden fleece, called in Thy. 226
arcanum aries, though referring there to another ram.
913. senis: Pelias (133 n.).
915. non rudem: not inexperienced (cf. rv4es, 908; non rude, Tro.
67 n.).
916. perfido hosti: Jason, as in 920.
918. nondum: yet it is clear that the idea had occurred to her
at least as far back as her interview with Jason (549), and hints
of her growing purpose are given in 565, 848.
920. paelice: Creusa; for another use of the word see 462 n.
922. Creusa peperit: she first wishes that her rival had left
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 307
children behind her, then exclaims that any children of Jason's,
though her own as well, must now be thought of as Creusa's.
923. ultimum: crowning.
926 ff. With this wavering between right and wrong impulses
cf. Ovid's account of Medea's reflections at first sight of Jason
(M. 7. 9-99) and Dido's hesitation in yielding to her passion for
Aeneas (Vergil, A. 4. 1-55).
928. The fury of the outraged wife gives place to the tender
affection of a mother (cf. 443). — tota: probably nom.
931. incognitum: unheard of.
936. frater: sc. meiLs. Absyrtus had been innocent and yet
was sacrificed, why not her sons as well ?
938. variam: sc. me; so with incertam, 939.
960. osculis: the reading is doubtful and consequently the sense.
We may translate lamenting with their farewell kisses as a make-
shift. — pereant: be lost to.
963. antiqua Erinys: cf. 13-17 n. In 959-966 her frenzy leads
her to imagine that she really sees the Furies and the ghost of her
murdered brother.
954. turba Tantalidos: the brood of Niobe, daughter of Tantalus,
who was the mother of seven sons and as many daughters (Ovid,
M. 6. 182). Tantalidos: Greek gen. of Tantalis.
956. sterilis fui: my two are not enough. Another shade is
given the thought in the next line, that in slaying her two sons
she was sacrificing one each for the father and the brother she had
wronged.
969. quo . . . parat: against whom are they preparing their
fiery blows f
961. anguis: each of the Furies wielded a whip whose lashes
were living serpents (cf. viperea verbera, H.F. 88). — sonat: hisses.
962. trabe: the torch with which the Fury tortured her victims
(cf. airam facem, 15; ramus, 805).
964. incerta: dimly seen (cf. incertam lunam, Vergil, A. 6.
270).
966. onines: best taken as ace. with poenas, supplied from pre-
ceding line as object of dabimus — Vll grant it, but my atonement
shall be complete, i.e. it shall not be hasty, but shall include all that
I can ofifer. — fige faces: thritst firebrands into my eyes, tear, burn.
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308 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
The sudden apparition of her murdered brother throws her into
a new paroxysm of fury and despair.
967. ultrices deas: the same phrase occurs in 13, where uUrices,
there substantive, is followed by an objective genitive (cf. uUrices
Dirae, Vergil, A. 4. 473).
970. victimA . . . istA: Qne of her sons, who is slain at this
point.
972. petunt: the subject is general — they, the people.
974. tu: the living child; tuum corpus, 975, is addressed to the
dead bpdy of the other (cf. hiCy hie, 1000, 1001).
976. hoc age: as in 562.
Scene 3 (w. 97&-1027). — Jason enters, calling on all good
subjects to assist in avenging the murder of their king. Medea
from her house top taunts him with the loss of his bride and his
helplessness to save his sons, and in his sight kills the second of
them, then flies away in her winged chariot.
978. quicumque . . . doles: an exhortation more individual
and personal than the plural would have been. ' Jason does not
see Medea till 995, and is not recognized by her before 992. —
regum: Creon and his daughter.
980. armiferi: voc. — fortis cohors: appositive to armiferi.
982-984. / have recovered all I gave up for my lover, i.e. this
moment of vengeance is worth them all. In her interview with
Jason she had reminded him of what she had lost for his sake,
enumerating essentially the same details as are given here (477-
489). — germanum: brother.
984. redit: contracted from rediit, as peti from petii in 248.
985. placida: 'propitious. — tandem: at last, after opposing me
so long.
987. parage: sc. vindictam.
988. quid . . . potens: having the power why do you hesitate f
989. A momentary feeling of regret, which gives way almost
immediately (991) to a fierce joy as she sees her husband and thinks
of his suffering.
991. invitam: in spite of myself .
992. derat: for deerat (cf. derit, 403 n.). — hoc: explained by
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NOTES ON THE MEDEA 309
its appositive spectator iste, Jason, whom she now sees ap-
proaching.
993. nil . . . reor: as he had not witnessed the death of the
first child it counted for nothing in her vengeance (see next line
and cf. 275-280, 500, 501).
994. perit: perfect, like peti, 248, and redit, 984 — is lost, is
wasted.
995. ipsa: Medea; lo, she herself is above us, on the house top. —
parte praecipiti: this means simply the street wall of Medea's
house, from the top of which she looked down upon the gathering
crowd.
997. suis: the fire was to be brought from the king's house,
which had been destroyed by flames of Medea's devising.
998. ftmus: for rogum.
999. iusta . . . functis: the services due the dead (cf. iusta
Troiae, Tro. 65). Functis is for defunctis. In sending her fiery
gift to Creusa and by that means destroying the royal house and
all it contained, Medea had provided for the cremation of Jason's
bride and father-in-law (a me sepulti, 1000). She now tauntingly
challenges him to do as he had threatened (996) — bum her house
and so provide a funeral pyre for his sons.
1000. 1001. hie, hie: pointing to the dead and to the living
boy (cf. 974 n.).
1003. fides: see 434-441 for the reasons he gave Medea for his
desertion. <
1006. hae: here, in the body of our son (cf. vulneri . . . locu^,
550; and, for form of expression, hax:, qua, 565).
1010. nullam: sc. caedem. — ut perimam: concessive, as shown
by tamen.
1011. nimiiim angustus: too small, but cf. 957.
1016. moram: seeing it useless to plead with Medea for the
child's life he begs for delay in the hope that " something may turn
up" to save it. — supplieis: supplidis. — donfl: imperative.
1017. meus dies est: i.e. the day granted her by Creon (295);
so tempore accepto. At this point she kills the second boy and so
provokes Jason's despairing cry, memet perime, 1018.
1022. sie: in a chariot drawn by winged dragons (cf. 1023;
Ovid, M. 7. 220).
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310 THREE PLAYS OF SENECA
1024. redpe . . . parens: parent , take hack your children nowf
With this parting taunt she throws the bodies down to Jason and
herself mounts the chariot and flies away.
1027. qua vchcris: from its position this clause would most
naturally modify C8«« — Bear witness that tohere'er you go there are
no gods. Taking it with testare — Where'er you go, hear witness that
there are no gods, we have a stronger climax in the atheism into
which Jason is driven by the tragedy.
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MACMILLAN'S
LATIN CLASSICS
PREPARED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF
JAMES C. EGBERT
Professor of Latin in Columbia UNivERsriY
FOR THE YOUNGER STUDENTS IN COLLEGE CLASSES
Although great progress has been made during recent years in the
scholarly editing of Latin texts, the result has been books too cumbersome
and expensive for the younger students. Not finding helpful information
in the elaborate introduction with its extensive data as to usages, quota-
tions, and references, the student naturally turns to translations for aid.
The volumes in this new series will endeavor to combat this tendency by
presenting notes which, while scholarly, shall be brief and concise. Each
book will have a short introduction and standard text and a commentary
for the interpretation of the text. The series will contain the most useful
works available for class use and will be issued at prices sufficiently reason-
able to make the adoption of the volumes possible in large genersd classes.
Arrangements for editing the various texts have been made as follows :
Tacitus* Agricola, by Mr. Duane Reed Stuart of Princeton Uni-
versity.
Adelphoe of Terence, by Prof. Helen M. Searles of Mt. Holyoke
College.
Selections from Seneca, by Mr. Allan P. Ball of the College of the
City of New York.
LiVY, Book I and Selections, by Prof. Walter Dennison of the Uni-
versity of Michigan.
Horace's Odes and Epodes, by Prof. Nelson G. McCrea of Colum-
bia University.
Tacitus* Histories, I and III, by Prof. Frank G. Moore of Dartmouth
College.
LiVY, Book XXI and Selections, by Prof. James C. Egbert of Colum-
bia University.
Tacitus* Annales, Books I to III, by Miss Susan Fowler of Brearley
School, New York City.
QcERO, Selected Letters, by Dr. Ernest Reiss, De Witt Clinton
High School.
Plautus* Trinummus, by Prof. H. R. Fairdough, Leland Stan-
ford Jr. University.
Pliny's Letters (Selections)^ by Prof. George M. Whicher, New York
Normal College.
Seneca, THREETRAGEDiES,by Prof. H. M. Kingery, Wabash College.
Others to follow.
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