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A great warrior descends into madness after being denied magical armor.

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+68 pages · layout

Readme / description

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Imported from manifest on 2026-05-25T06:36:55.685973+00:00

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A great warrior descends into madness after being denied magical armor.
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Pages

68 changed
Added

Ajax

/ajax
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  • Athena
    Son of Laertes, ever on the prowl
    To seize some coign of vantage ’gainst thy foes,
    Now at the tent of Ajax by the ships,
    Where he is posted on the flank, I see thee
    Following the trail and scanning his fresh tracks,
    To learn if Ajax be within or no.
    Bravely thy long search brings thee to the goal,
    Like a keen-scented hound of Spartan breed;
    The man has even now returned, his brow
    Bedewed with sweat and hands besmeared with gore.
    No further need to peer within these doors;
    Say rather what the purpose of thy search
    Thus keenly urged, and learn from one who knows.
  • Odysseus
    Voice of Athena, Goddess most by me
    Beloved, how clearly, though I see thee not,
    Those accents strike my ear and thrill my soul,
    Like some Tyrrhenian trumpet, brazen-mouthed.
    Yea, thou hast well divined why thus I cast
    About in hot pursuance of a foe,
    Ajax, the bearer of the sevenfold shield:
    Him and none other I have tracked full long.
    Last night a monstrous thing he wrought on us,
    If it be he in sooth⁠—’tis all surmise.
    So for the hard task of discovery
    I volunteered. This very morn we found
    Our herds, the spoil of war, all hacked and hewn,
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  • Chorus (cont.)
    Quit, we implore,
    Thy tent upon the shore.
    Rouse thee, my King, where’er thou sittest brooding;
    Too long thou mak’st the stour of battle cease,
    While in the camp red ruin flames to heaven,
    And, like the west wind soughing in the trees,
    Unchecked the mockery goes
    Of thy o’erweening foes.
    My woe no respite knows!
  • Tecmessa
    Crew of Ajax, men who trace
    Back to Erechtheus your famed race,
    Woe is ours who muse upon
    The far-off house of Telamon;
    For our lord of dreaded might
    Stricken lies in desperate plight,
    And his soul is dark as night.
  • Chorus
    What the change so grievous, say,
    Of the morn from yesterday?
    Daughter of Teleutas, tell;
    Stalwart Ajax loves thee well,
    Thee his spear-won bride; ’tis thine
    What befalls him to divine.
  • Tecmessa
    Ah, how tell a tale so drear?
    Sad as death what thou shalt hear
    Of great Ajax, undone quite,
    Smit with madness, in the night.
    Look within and see the floor
    Reeking with his victims’ gore;
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  • Tecmessa (cont.)
    Slain by his own hand there lies
    His ungodly sacrifice.
  • Chorus
    O fatal tidings of the hot-brained chief,
    Intolerable, yet without relief!
    What flagrant charge amid the Greek host goes
    That spread by rumour grows?
    Ah me, doom stalks amain!
    And if with his dark blade the man hath slain
    The herds and mounted herdsmen, sure he dies,
    A malefactor shamed before all eyes.
  • Tecmessa
    Ah me, ’twas thence I saw him come
    Driving his captive cattle home.
    Of some he gashed the throats amain,
    There where they stood upon the ground;
    And some were ripped and rent in twain.
    Then two white-footed rams he found;
    Of one, beheaded first, the tongue
    He snipped, then far the carcase flung.
    The other to a pillar lashed
    Erect, with doubled rein, he thrashed,
    And as he plied the whistling thong
    He uttered imprecations strong,
    Dread words a god, no man, had taught.
  • Chorus
    ’Tis time to veil the head and steal away
    On foot, or straight embarking ply the oar,
    And let the good ship bear us from the bay;
    Such bitter threats the Atridae on us pour.
    Me too, if I be by him, they will stone;
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  • Chorus (cont.)
    He stands alone,
    Fate marks him for her own.
  • Tecmessa
    No more; for like the southern blast
    When lightnings flash, his rage is past.
    But, now he is himself again,
    Reviving memory brings new pain.
    What keener anguish than to know
    Thyself sole cause of self-wrought woe?
  • Chorus
    Nay, if he have surcease, good hope is mine
    All may be well, for men are less concerned
    With evil doing when the trouble’s past.
  • Tecmessa
    Come tell me, which wouldst choose, if choice were free,
    To vex thy friends while thou thyself wert glad,
    Or share the pain, grieving with them that grieve?
  • Chorus
    The twofold sorrow, lady, is the worse.
  • Tecmessa
    Then are we losers now our plague is past.
  • Chorus
    What meanest thou? it passes my poor wit.
  • Tecmessa
    Yon man, while stricken, had himself delight
    In his sick fancies, though his presence grieved
    Us who were sane; but now that he is whole,
    Eased of his frenzy, he is racked with grief,
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  • Tecmessa (cont.)
    And we are no less troubled than before.
    Are there not here two ills in place of one?
  • Chorus
    ’Tis even so, and much I fear it prove
    A stroke from heaven, if indeed, now cured,
    He is no gladder than he was when sick.
  • Tecmessa
    His case is as thou sayest, rest assured.
  • Chorus
    But tell us how the plague first struck him down.
    We share thy sorrow and would know it all.
  • Tecmessa
    Hear then the story of our common woe.
    At dead of night when all the lamps were out,
    He took his two-edged sword, as if intent
    On some wild expedition. So I chid him,
    Saying, “What dost thou, Ajax, why go forth?
    No summons, messenger or trumpet blast,
    Hath called thee; nay, by now the whole host sleeps.”
    He answered lightly with an ancient saw,
    “Woman, for women silence is a grace.”
    Admonished thus I held my tongue; but he
    Sped forth alone. What happened afterwards
    I know not, but he came back with his spoil,
    Oxen and sheep-dogs with their fleecy charge.
    Some he beheads, of some the upturned necks
    He cuts, or cleaves the chine; others again
    He buffeted and mangled in their bonds,
    Mauling the beasts, as if they had been men.
    At last he darted through the door and held
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  • Tecmessa (cont.)
    Wild converse with some phantom of the brain;
    Now the Atridae, and Odysseus now,
    He mocked with peals of laughter, vaunting loud
    The vengeance he had wreaked on them. Anon
    He rushed indoors again; and then in time
    With painful struggles was himself again.
    And as he scanned the havoc all around,
    He smote his head and wailed and sank to earth,
    A wreck among the wreck of slaughtered sheep,
    Digging into his hair his clenchèd nails.
    At first⁠—a long, long while⁠—he spake no word,
    Then against me he uttered those dire threats,
    If I declared not all that had befallen,
    Bidding me tell him in what plight he stood.
    And I a-tremble told him what had chanced,
    So far as I had knowledge. Whereat he
    Broke into lamentations, piercing, shrill,
    Such as I ne’er had heard from him before.
    For ’twas his creed that wailings and lament
    Are for the craven and faint-hearts; no shrill
    Complaint escaped him ever; his low moan
    Was like the muffled bellowing of a bull.
    But now, confounded in his abject woe,
    Refusing food or drink, he sits there still,
    Just where he fell amid the carcases
    Of the slain sheep and cattle. And ’tis plain
    He meditates some mischief, so I read
    His muttered exclamations and laments.
    Come, friends, and help me, if so be ye can⁠—
    This was my errand⁠—men in case like his
    Are won to reason by the words of friends.
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  • Chorus
    Tecmessa, daughter of Teleutas, dread
    Thy tidings of our master thus distraught.
  • Ajax
    Woe, woe is me!
  • Tecmessa
    Worse is to come, I fear me. Heard ye not
    The voice of Ajax⁠—that heartrending cry?
  • Ajax
    Woe, woe is me!
  • Chorus
    ’Tis a fresh fit, methinks, or else he groans
    At sight of all the ills his frenzy wrought.
  • Ajax
    My son, my son!
  • Tecmessa
    Ah me! Eurysaces, ’tis for thee he calls.
    What would he? Where art thou, my son? ah me!
  • Ajax
    Ho Teucer! where is Teucer? Will his raid
    End never? And the while I am undone!
  • Chorus
    He seems himself again. Quick, ope the door.
    Perchance the sight of us his humble friends
    May bring him to a soberer mood.
  • Tecmessa
    I open,
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  • Tecmessa (cont.)
    And thou mayst view his works and his own plight.
  • Ajax
    Mariners, ever leal and true,
    Alas my friends have left me, all but you,
    See how disasters whelmed me like a flood,
    And now I welter in a surge of blood.
  • Chorus
    Ah, lady, thy report was all too true,
    Too clear the tokens of an unhinged brain.
  • Ajax
    Sailors brave, whose flashing oar
    Swift and sure the good ship bore,
    To you I look for comfort, none but you;
    Come slay me too.
  • Chorus
    O hush, essay not ill by ill to cure,
    Nor aggravate the burden of thy doom.
  • Ajax
    See’st thou the bold, stout-hearted knight
    Who never quailed to face the fight,
    Now on tame beasts that fear no harm
    He proves the puissance of his arm.
    Ah me! the mockery, the scorn, the shame!
  • Tecmessa
    Ajax, my dearest master, speak not so.
  • Ajax
    Out with thee, woman; hence, avaunt, begone!
    Ah me! ah me!
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  • Chorus
    O listen, I adjure thee, and be ruled.
  • Ajax
    Wretch to let those fiends, my foes,
    Slip, while on the flock my blows
    And the goodly cattle rained,
    Till with their dark blood all the house was stained.
  • Chorus
    Why vex thyself for what is past recall?
    What’s done is done and naught can alter it.
  • Ajax
    Spy of the time, apt tool for any guile,
    Of all the host the sublest knave, most vile,
    Son of Laertes, loud and long, I trow,
    Thou laughest in malignant triumph now.
  • Chorus
    Laughter or mourning comes as God ordains.
  • Ajax
    Would I could see him, shattered though I be!
    Ah me!
  • Chorus
    No boastful words; see’st not thy piteous case?
  • Ajax
    O Zeus, my grand sire, would that I
    Might slay that knave, my bane,
    That arch-dissembler and the generals twain.
    Then let me die!
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  • Tecmessa
    When thus thou prayest, pray that I with thee
    May die; why should I live when thou art dead?
  • Ajax
    O woe is me!
    Darkness, my light!
    O nether gloom to me more bright
    Than midday, take, O take me to your care!
    I am too vile to share
    The kindly aid of mortals, and the gods
    Have left me. Nay, the Warrior Maid, Zeus-born,
    Laughs me to scorn;
    I quail beneath her rods.
    Whither to fly? What hope of rest is left,
    If of my ancient fame bereft,
    Dead as these slaughtered sheep around me slain,
    A madman’s crown I gain,
    While all the host at my devoted head
    Would strike, and smite me dead?
  • Tecmessa
    Ah me that one so good should utter words
    That hitherto he ne’er had deigned to breathe!
  • Ajax
    Paths of the roaring waves,
    Ye salt sea caves
    And pastures by the shore,
    Where long, too long I roam
    In Troy-land, far from home;
    Me shall ye see no more⁠—
    No more in life. Give ear
    All who can hear.
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  • Ajax (cont.)
    Streams of Scamander, rills
    That flow from Ida’s hills,
    Streams to the Greeks so dear,
    Ne’er shall ye look on Ajax more;
    A paladin whose peer
    (For I will utter a proud boast)
    In all the Grecian host
    That sailed from Hellas’ shore
    Troy ne’er beheld. But now
    Low in the dust, o’erthrown, his head doth bow.
  • Chorus
    How to restrain or how to let thee speak
    I cannot tell, beset by endless woes.
  • Ajax
    Ay me! Whoe’er had thought how well my name
    Would fit my misery? Ay me! Ay me!
    Yea, twice and thrice may I repeat the wail
    That syllables my woe-begone estate.
    My sire, a peerless warrior, home returned
    Back from the land of Ida, crowned with fame,
    Proclaimed as champion bravest of the brave.
    And I, his son, in might not less than he,
    Sailed after him to this same land of Troy,
    And served the host by deeds of no less worth,
    And for reward I perish by the Greeks
    Dishonoured. Yet one thing I know full well:
    If to Achilles living it had fallen
    His arms as meed of valour to award,
    No man had grasped the prize, preferred to me.
    But now the Atridae, scouting my just claim,
    Have yielded to a miscreant’s base intrigue.
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0 → 9 blocks
  • Odysseus (cont.)
    Slain with their herdsmen by some human hand.
    On him with one consent all lay the guilt:
    And by a scout who marked him o’er the plain,
    In mad career, alone, with reeking sword,
    I duly was informed, and instantly
    I sped upon the spoor, and now the tracks
    I recognise, and now am all at fault,
    Without a clue to tell me whose they are.
    Most welcome then thy advent; thine the hand
    That ever guided and shall guide my path.
  • Athena
    I know, Odysseus, and set forth betimes
    To meet thee and abet thee in this chase.
  • Odysseus
    Tell me, dear mistress, will my quest succeed?
  • Athena
    Know that the guilty man is he thou seek’st.
  • Odysseus
    What moved him to this rash, insensate deed?
  • Athena
    Resentment touching dead Achilles’ arms.
  • Odysseus
    Why did he fall upon the innocent sheep?
  • Athena
    He thought his hands were gory with your blood.
  • Odysseus
    What, was this onslaught planned against the Greeks?
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  • Ajax (cont.)
    Had not mine eyes been dazed, my mind distraught
    And wrested from its purpose, they had never
    Procured false sentence ’gainst a second man.
    Alas! the grim-eyed goddess, unsubdued
    Daughter of Zeus⁠—as I was at their heels,
    Almost at grips with them, in act to strike⁠—
    Foiled me, abused me by a frenzy fit,
    Imbrued my hands with blood of these poor beasts.
    And thus my foes exult in their escape,
    Albeit I willed it not, and mock at me.
    But if some god or goddess intervene,
    Even a knave may worst the better man.
    And now what’s left me? By the gods, ’tis clear,
    I am detested, hated by the host
    Of Greeks, abhorred by Troy and all the camp.
    Shall I sail homeward o’er the Aegean, leave
    The sons of Atreus to fight on alone,
    This roadstead undefended? Then how face
    My father Telamon? How will he endure
    To look on me returning empty-handed
    Without the meed of valour that he held
    Himself, a crown of everlasting fame?
    That were intolerable. Am I then
    Alone to storm the Trojan battlements,
    And facing single-handed a whole host,
    Do some high deed of prowess⁠—and so die?
    Nay, that methinks would give the Atridae joy.
    It may not be; some emprise must be found
    That shall convince my aged sire his son
    Is not degenerate from his father’s breed.
    Base were it that a man should want long life
    When all he gets is long unchanging trouble.
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  • Ajax (cont.)
    To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow⁠—
    What pleasure comes of that? ’Tis but a move
    Forward or backward and the end⁠—is death!
    I would not count that mortal worth a doigt
    Who lives on, fed by visionary hopes.
    Nobly to live⁠—that is the true knight’s choice,
    Or nobly end his life. I have said my say.
  • Chorus
    No man will charge thee, Ajax, with feigned words.
    ’Twas thy heart spoke; yet pause and put aside
    These dark thoughts; let thyself be ruled by friends.
  • Tecmessa
    Ah, my lord Ajax, heavier lot is none
    Than to lie helpless in the coils of fate.
    I was the daughter of a high-born sire
    Of Phrygians unsurpassed in wealth and might.
    And now, I am a slave; ’twas so ordained
    By Heaven, methinks, and by thy might of arm.
    Since fate has willed, then, I should share thy bed,
    Thy good is mine; and O by the god of the hearth,
    O by the wedded bond that made us one,
    Let me not fall into a stranger’s hand,
    A laughing-stock! For, surely, if thou die
    And leave me widowed, on that very day
    I shall be seized and haled away by force,
    I and thy son, prey to the Argive host,
    Our portion slavery. Then shall I hear
    The flouts and gibes that my new lords let fly.
    “Look on her,” one will say, “the leman once
    Of Ajax, mightiest of the Argive chiefs,
    How has she fallen from her place of pride!”
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  • Tecmessa (cont.)
    Thus will they prate, and hard will be my lot,
    But on thy race and thee how foul a slur.
    Take pity and bethink thee of the sire
    Thou leavest, an old man, disconsolate;
    Bethink thee of thy mother bowed with years,
    Think of her prayers and vows for thy return.
    And, O my lord, take pity on thy son,
    Orphaned, without a father’s fostering care,
    The ward of loveless guardians; if thou die,
    What heritage of woe is his and mine!
    For I have naught to look to anywhere
    Save thee. By thee my country was laid waste,
    My mother and my father too were snatched
    To dwell with Hades by another fate.
    What home is left me then, if thou art ta’en?
    What weal? my welfare is bound up in thee.
    Think of me also: gratitude is due
    From man for favours that a woman gives.
    Kindness return of kindness e’er begets.
    Who lets the memory of service pass
    Him will I ne’er with noble spirits rank.
  • Chorus
    Ajax, I would that thou wert moved as I
    To pity; then wouldst thou approve her rede.
  • Ajax
    Yea, and my full approval she shall win,
    If only she take heart to do my hest.
  • Tecmessa
    Aye, my dear lord, I will obey in all.
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  • Ajax
    Bring hither then my son, that I may see him.
  • Tecmessa
    Oh, in alarm I sent him from my charge.
  • Ajax
    When I was stricken? Or what meanest thou?
  • Tecmessa
    Yea, lest the poor child meeting thee should die.
  • Ajax
    That fate indeed had matched my fortunes well.
  • Tecmessa
    Well, I averted that calamity.
  • Ajax
    Thy forethought and the action I commend.
  • Tecmessa
    As the case stands, how can I do thy hest?
  • Ajax
    Let me speak to him⁠—see him face to face.
  • Tecmessa
    Good; he is in our servants’ charge close by.
  • Ajax
    Then wherefore is his coming thus delayed?
  • Tecmessa
    My child, thy father calls thee. Bring him hither,
    Whoever of you guides his infant steps.
    To the Servants.
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  • Ajax
    Comes he, or has he failed to hear thy call?
  • Tecmessa
    I see one just approaching with the boy.
  • Ajax
    Lift him, O lift him to my arms; no dread,
    If he be mine, his father’s true-born son,
    He’ll feel in gazing on this fresh spilt blood.
    He must be early trained and broken in
    To the stern rule of life his father held,
    And moulded to the likeness of his sire.
    My boy, mayst thou prove happier than thy sire,
    But like him in all else, and thou wilt prove
    No weakling; nay, e’en now, in this at least
    I envy thee: of woes thou wottest naught,
    For ignorance is life’s extremest bliss⁠—
    The years when joy and sorrow are both unknown.
    But when thou reachest manhood, then’s the time
    To prove the inbred virtue of thy race,
    And show thy father’s foes whose son thou art.
    Meanwhile let light airs feed thee; cherish thou
    Thy tender years to glad thy mother’s heart.
    Thou need’st not fear that any of the Greeks
    Will tease or vex thee, e’en when I am gone.
    So stout a guardian will I leave in charge,
    Whose watchful eye will slumber not, though now
    A foray ’gainst his enemies keeps him hence.
    And ye, my seamen, comrades in the fight,
    (On you no less than him I lay this charge
    Of love) to him convey my last behest.
    Bid him from me take home this son of mine
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  • Ajax (cont.)
    To Eriboea and to Telamon,
    That he may comfort their old age till death.
    And for my arms, let no Greek arbiter
    Of games (so bid him) nor my venomous foe
    Set them as prize for the Achaean host.
    But this, the shield from which thou took’st thy name,
    Take this, my son, this sevenfold, spear-proof targe,
    Take it and wield it by the close-stitched thongs.
    My other arms shall lie with me interred.
    Quick, take the child, delay not; close the doors,
    Nor at the tent side moan and make lament.
    In sooth a woman is a tearful thing.
    Quick, make all fast: ’tis not a skilful leech
    Who mumbles charms o’er ills that need the knife.
  • Chorus
    I tremble as I mark this eager haste:
    Thy words are sharp as swords and like me not.
  • Tecmessa
    O my lord Ajax, what is in thy heart?
  • Ajax
    Question not, ask not; be discreet and wise.
  • Tecmessa
    Ah me, I quail, I faint. O by thy child,
    By heaven I implore thee, fail us not.
  • Ajax
    Thou art importunate; know’st not that I
    Henceforward owe no duty to the gods?
  • Tecmessa
    Oh hush, blaspheme not!
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  • Ajax
    Speak to ears that hear.
  • Tecmessa
    Wilt thou not heed?
  • Ajax
    I have heard from thee too much.
  • Tecmessa
    Fear, my lord, makes me speak.
  • Ajax
    Quick, close the doors.
  • Tecmessa
    Yield, I implore thee.
  • Ajax
    Fond simplicity
    If at this hour thou think’st to mould my mood.
    Exit Ajax .
  • Chorus
    Ah Salamis, blest isle,
    Secure, serene,
    Above the waves that lash thy shore,
    As ocean’s queen,
    Thou sittest evermore.
    But I in exile drear,
    Month after month, year after year,
    On Ida’s meads must bivouac, all forlorn
    By time outworn;
    And ever nearer, ever darker loom
    The night of Hades and eternal gloom.
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  • Chorus (cont.)
    And now to crown my grief
    Comes a new woe,
    My leader Ajax, mad beyond relief,
    By heaven laid low;
    How fallen from that impetuous chief,
    Who sailed to meet the foe.
    Now, to his friends’ distress,
    He sits and broods in sullen loneliness;
    Those doughty deeds his right hand wrought
    Now count for naught,
    And from that loveless pair, those men of sin,
    No love but despite win.
    Ah, when his mother, blanched with age and frail
    Hears of his shattered reason, what wild wail
    Will she upraise, a dirge of shrill despair,
    (No plaintive ditty of the nightingale)
    With beating of the breast and rending of white hair.
    Better be buried with the dead
    Who lives with brain bewilderèd.
    Of all the Greeks toil-worn
    Behold the noblest born,
    Now from his native temper warped and strange,
    Whose thoughts in alien paths distracted range.
    O wretched father, what a curse ’tis thine
    Upon thy son to hear⁠—curse that on none
    E’er fell of all the Aeacidae’s great line
    Save him alone.
  • Ajax
    Time in its slow, illimitable course
    Brings all to light and buries all again;
    Strange things it brings to pass, the dreadest oath
    Is broken and the stubbornest will is bent.
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  • Ajax (cont.)
    E’en I whose will aforetime was as iron
    Steeled in the dipping, now have lost the edge
    Of resolution, by this woman’s words
    Unmanned, to pity melted at the thought
    Of her a widow and my orphan son
    Left amidst foemen. But I go my way
    To the sea baths and meadows by the beach,
    That I may there assoil me and assuage
    The wrathful goddess, having purged my sin.
    Then will I seek some solitary spot
    And hide this sword, of weapons most accursed,
    Deep under earth, consigned to Night and Hell,
    Where never eye of man may see it more;
    For since the day I hanselled it, a gift
    From Hector, my arch-enemy, to this hour,
    No favour from Achaeans have I won.
    So true the word familiar in men’s mouths,
    A foe’s gifts are no gifts and profit not.
    Henceforward I shall know to yield to Heaven,
    And school myself the Atridae to respect.
    They are our rulers and obey we must;
    How otherwise? Dread potencies and powers
    Submit to law. Thus winter snow-bestrown
    Gives place to opulent summer. Night’s dim orb
    Is put to flight when Dawn with her white steeds
    Kindles the day-beams; and the wind’s fierce breath
    Can lay the storm and lull the moaning deep.
    E’en thus all-conquering sleep holds not for ever
    Whom he has bound, and must relax his grasp.
    And we, shall we not likewise learn to yield?
    I most of all; for I have learnt, though late,
    This rule, to hate an enemy as one
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  • Ajax (cont.)
    Who may become a friend, and serve a friend
    As knowing that his friendship may not last.
    An unsafe anchorage to most men proves
    The bond of friendship. As for present needs
    All shall be well. Woman, go thou within
    And pray the gods that all my heart’s desires
    May find their consummation to the full.
    And ye, my comrades, see that ye respect,
    No less than she, my wishes; and enjoin
    On Teucer, when he comes, to care for me,
    And show good will to you, my friends, withal.
    For I am going whither I am bound.
    Do ye my bidding, and perchance, though now
    I suffer, ye may hear of my release.
    Exit Ajax .
  • Chorus
    I thrill with rapture, all my heart upsprings!
    Pan, Pan, O Pan, appear.
    Come to us o’er the sea, sea-rover, leaving
    The ridges of Cyllenè’s driven snow,
    Come to us, hand in hand blithe dances weaving,
    Thou leader of the dance in heaven; show
    Of Nysa and of Cnosos measures rare,
    For in my rapture I the dance would share.
    Come, and upon his footsteps swiftly follow,
    Winging thy way across the Icarian main,
    Show thy bright presence, Delos’ own Apollo,
    God of my life, thou healer of all pain!
    Grim Ares from mine eyes the cloud of sadness
    Has lifted; now the radiant Dawn anew,
    Angel of light, and harbinger of gladness,
    Visits our ships that swiftly cleave the blue.
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  • Athena
    Aye, and it had succeeded, but for me.
  • Odysseus
    How could he venture such fool-hardiness?
  • Athena
    He schemed a night attack, by stealth, alone.
  • Odysseus
    And did he reach us and arrive his goal?
  • Athena
    At the tent door of the two chiefs he stood.
  • Odysseus
    What then arrested him athirst for blood?
  • Athena
    I, by the strong delusion that I sent,
    A vision of the havoc he should make.
    I turned his wrath aside upon the flocks
    And the promiscuous cattle in the charge
    Of drovers, booty not apportioned yet.
    On them he fell and hewing right and left
    Dealt death among the hornèd herd; and now
    It was the two Atridae whom he slew,
    And now a third, and now some other chief.
    ’Twas I that goaded him while thus distraught,
    And thrust him deeper in the coils of fate.
    Then pausing in this toil he turned to bind
    The oxen left alive with all the sheep,
    And drave them home, as if his spoil were men,
    And not poor innocent beasts with hoofs and horns,
    And now is mangling them fast bound within,
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  • Chorus (cont.)
    O joy, when Ajax has forgot once more
    His woe, and turns the godhead to adore!
    Due rites he pays with contrite heart and lowly.
    O all-devouring time, what miracles
    Thou workest! lo, his feud forgotten wholly,
    Ajax at peace with the Atridae dwells.
  • Messenger
    Teucer is here⁠—that, friends, is my first news⁠—
    Back from the Mysian highlands newly come.
    But as he neared headquarters in mid camp,
    He was beset with universal shouts
    Of obloquy; they spied him from afar,
    And crowding round him as he nearer came,
    Rained on him taunts from this side and from that,
    Railed at the kinsman of the crazy wretch,
    Plotter of mischief ’gainst the host⁠—“To die
    By stoning, mauled and mangled, is thy doom;
    Think not to ’scape it, villain,” so they cried.
    It came to such a pass that swords were drawn
    And brandished; then the riot, having run
    To the very verge of bloodshed, was allayed
    By intervention of the elder men.
    But where is Ajax? Him I fain would tell;
    ’Tis meet your lords should know whate’er befell.
  • Chorus
    He is not within; but now he went abroad,
    Yoking some new resolve to his new mood.
  • Messenger
    Alack, alack!
    Too late then on this errand was I sent,
    Or I, a laggard, have arrived too late.
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  • Chorus
    What pressing business has been slackly done?
  • Messenger
    Teucer enjoined his brother should not forth,
    Or quit his tent till he himself should come.
  • Chorus
    Well, he is gone, and with the best resolve
    To make his peace with heaven.
  • Messenger
    Folly sheer,
    If there be sense in Calchas’ prophecy.
  • Chorus
    What prophecy? what knowest thou thereof?
  • Messenger
    Thus much I know, for I was there. The seer
    Leaving the council of assembled chiefs,
    From the Atridae drew aside and laid
    His right hand lovingly in Teucer’s hand,
    And spake and charged him straitly by all means,
    For this one day whose light yet shines, to keep
    Ajax within his tent nor let him forth,
    If he would see him still a living man.
    “Only to-day,” said Calchas, “will the wrath
    Of dread Athena vex him, and no more.
    O’erweening mortals waxing fat with pride
    Fall in their folly, smitten by the gods
    With dire disaster” (so the prophet spake),
    “Whene’er a mortal born to man’s estate
    Exalts himself in thoughts too high for man.
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  • Messenger (cont.)
    Thus Ajax, een when first he left his home,
    In folly spurned his father’s monishments⁠—
    ‘Seek victory, my son’ (so warned the sire),
    ‘But seek it ever with the help of heaven.’
    He in his wilful arrogance, replied,
    ‘Father, with gods to aid, a man of naught
    Might well prevail, but I without their help.’
    Such was his haughty boast. A second time,
    To Queen Athena, as she spurred him on
    To turn his reeking hand upon his foes,
    He spake a blasphemous, outrageous word,
    ‘Queen, stand beside the other Greeks; where I
    Am posted, fear not that our ranks will break.’
    Such vaunting words drew on him the dire wrath
    Of the goddess⁠—pride too high for mortal man.
    But if he can survive this day, perchance
    With God’s good aid we may avail to save him.”
    So spake the seer, and Teucer straightway rose
    And sent me with these mandates. Have I failed,
    Ajax is doomed, or Calchas is no seer.
  • Chorus
    Ill-starred Tecmessa, born to woe, come forth,
    And hearken to this messenger, whose words
    That touch us to the quick brook no delay.
  • Tecmessa
    Why break my rest and trouble me again,
    Relieved awhile from woes that have no end?
  • Chorus
    List to this man⁠—the tidings he has brought
    Of Ajax’ fortunes, filling me with grief.
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  • Tecmessa
    What is thy news, man? Say, are we undone?
  • Messenger
    I know not of thy fortunes, only this⁠—
    If Ajax is abroad, I augur ill.
  • Tecmessa
    Alas! he is. How thy words chill my soul!
  • Messenger
    Teucer’s injunction is to keep him close
    Indoors, nor let him go abroad alone.
  • Tecmessa
    And where is Teucer? Wherefore speaks he thus?
  • Messenger
    He hath returned but lately and forbodes
    Grave jeopardy, if Ajax goes abroad.
  • Tecmessa
    Ah woe is me! Who warned him of this peril?
  • Messenger
    The prophet, son of Thestor, but to-day,
    When in the scales for him hang life and death.
  • Tecmessa
    Help, friends, protect me from the impending doom!
    Speed, some to hasten Teucer on his way,
    Some to the western creeks and some to those
    That front the morn; pursue his ill-starred track.
    I see too well my lord hath cheated me,
    Withdrawn the favour that long time was mine.
    Ah me! What shall I do, my child? No time
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  • Tecmessa (cont.)
    To sit with folded hands; I too will go,
    So far as this weak frame allows, in search.
    Up, quick, to work! no moment must be lost,
    If we would save a man who hastes to death.
  • Chorus
    Ready am I; not words alone shall prove,
    But speed of act and foot, my readiness.
    Exeunt Ajax alone on the sea-shore, planting his sword in the ground.
  • Ajax
    The slayer standeth where his stroke is sure⁠—
    If I have time to muse thus curiously⁠—
    The gift of Hector erst my foeman-friend,
    The man most hateful to my soul and sight,
    Now fixed in foemen’s land, the land of Troy;
    Fresh edged upon the iron-fretting stone,
    Here have I planted it and set it fast,
    A friend to help me to a speedy death.
    My part is done; for what remains, O Zeus,
    First I invoke thine aid; and claim my due;
    ’Tis no excessive boon I shall demand.
    I pray thee send some messenger to bear
    To Teucer the sad tale, that he may come
    To lift me where I lie a bleeding corpse,
    Fallen on this gory sword, lest I be first
    Discovered by some enemy and cast forth,
    A prey to dogs and birds. Thus much, O Zeus,
    I crave of thee; and Hermes I invoke,
    Born guide of spirits to the nether world,
    To lay me soft to rest at one swift gasp,
    Without a struggle, when into my side
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  • Ajax (cont.)
    I plunge this sword. Ye too I call to aid,
    Maidens immortal, with immortal eyes
    Beholding all the many woes of man,
    Swift-footed hounds of vengeance, mark ye well
    How by the Atridae I am all undone.
    Swoop on them, Furies, blight and blast them both
    In utter ruin, as they see me now!
    On, ye Avengers, glut your maw, spare not,
    Let ruin seize the whole Achaean host!
    And thou whose chariot climbs the steep of heaven,
    When in thy course thou see’st my father-land,
    Draw in thy gold-bedizened rein and tell
    My aged sire and mother of their son,
    His sorrows and his end. Poor mother! when
    She hears the tale, her piercing wail will ring
    Through all the city. But how profitless
    These idle lamentations and delay!
    With such despatch as may be let’s to work.
    O Death, Death, Death, draw nigh and look on me⁠—
    Yet there below I shall have time enow
    To converse face to face with Death. But thee,
    O bright effulgence of this radiant day,
    On thee, the Sun-god charioteer, I call
    For the last time and never more again.
    O light! O sacred soil of mine own land,
    My Salamis! my home, my ancestral hearth!
    O far-famed Athens, race akin to mine,
    Ye Trojan springs and streams, ye plains of Troy,
    Farewell, ye nurses of my fame, farewell!
    This is the last word Ajax speaks to you.
    Henceforth he talks in Hades with the dead.
    He falls upon his sword.
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  • Semi-Chorus 1
    Toil, toil, and toil on toil!
    Where have my steps not roamed, and yet,
    No place that hath a secret for my ear.
    Hist! hist! what sound was that?
  • Semi-Chorus 2
    ’Tis we, thy mates.
  • Semi-Chorus 1
    What cheer, mates?
  • Semi-Chorus 2
    All westward of the fleet we’ve ranged and found
  • Semi-Chorus 1
    Found, say you!
  • Semi-Chorus 2
    Of moil enow, of what we sought no trace.
  • Semi-Chorus 1
    No better luck to the eastward; on the road
    That fronts the sunrise not a trace of him.
  • Chorus
    O that some toiling fisher by the bay,
    Dragging his nets all night,
    Some Oread from Olympus’ height,
    Or nymph who haunts the tides of Bosporus,
    Might spy the wanderer on his wayward way
    And bring the tale to us.
    Hard lot is ours who tack
    To east, to west, and find no track,
    Ne’er in our luckless course descry
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  • Chorus (cont.)
    The derelict nor come anigh.
  • Tecmessa
    Woe, woe is me!
  • Chorus
    Whose was that cry from out the covert’s fringe?
  • Tecmessa
    Me miserable:
  • Chorus
    My hapless mistress, Ajax’ spear-won bride,
    Teemessa, whelmed in anguish I behold.
  • Tecmessa
    I’m lost, undone, of all bereft, my friends.
  • Chorus
    What aileth thee?
  • Tecmessa
    Here lies our Ajax, newly slain, impaled
    Upon his sword, new planted in the ground.
  • Chorus
    O for my hope of return!
    O my chief, thou hast slain
    Me thy shipmate! my heart
    Bleeds for thee, lady forlorn.
  • Tecmessa
    Thus lies he overthrown; ’tis ours to wail.
  • Chorus
    By whose hand did he thus procure his death?
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  • Tecmessa
    By his own hand, ’tis manifest; the sword
    Set in the ground, on which he fell, is proof.
  • Chorus
    Out on my blindness! All alone
    Unwatched of friends he bled to death!
    And I saw naught, heard naught, recked naught of thee!
    Where lies he, Ajax, the self-willed,
    The unbending, luckless as his name?
  • Tecmessa
    No eye shall look on him; this robe around
    Shall lap him and enshroud from head to foot.
    For none who knew him, not his dearest friend,
    Could bear to see him, as the dark blood spurts
    Up through his nostrils from the self-wrought wound.
    What shall I do? What friend shall lift him up?
    Where, where is Teucer? Timely would he come,
    If come he might, to raise him and lay out
    His brother’s corse. Ah me! How high thou stood’st,
    My Ajax, and how low thou liest here!
    A sight to melt to tears e’en foemen’s eyes!
  • Chorus
    Ah woeful hero, ’twas thy fate,
    With that unyielding soul of thine,
    In endless misery to decline,
    And reach the goal of ruin, soon or late.
    I knew it as I heard thee eve and morn
    Against the Atridae vent
    Thy passionate complaint,
    A bitter cry of proud disdain and scorn.
    Aye, then began my woes
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  • Chorus (cont.)
    When first arose
    The contest who those arms could claim
    As guerdon for the first in warlike fame.
  • Tecmessa
    Woe, woe is me!
  • Chorus
    The anguish, well I know it,
    Pierces to thy true heart.
  • Tecmessa
    Woe, woe is me!
  • Chorus
    No marvel thou shouldst wail and wail again
    Bereft so lately and of one so loved.
  • Tecmessa
    The woe I feel thou canst in part conceive.
  • Chorus
    ’Tis true.
  • Tecmessa
    Alas, my child, to what hard yoke
    Of bondage must we come, so merciless
    The taskmasters set over thee and me!
  • Chorus
    The Atridae, ruthless pair,
    And their grim deeds ineffable
    Thy boding soul prefigures. God avert it!
  • Tecmessa
    Save by God’s will we were not in this case.
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  • Athena (cont.)
    Thou too this raving madness shalt behold,
    That thou mayst bruit the sight to all the Greeks.
    Be of good heart and stand thy ground; no harm
    Shall come from him, for I will turn aside
    His vision, lest he should behold thy face.
  • Odysseus
    What dost thou, Goddess? Nowise call him forth.
  • Athena
    Bridle thy tongue; earn not a coward’s name.
  • Odysseus
    Nay, nay; suffice it that he bide within.
  • Athena
    What fear’st thou? Is he not, as erst, a man?
  • Odysseus
    Yea, and to me sworn foeman, and is still.
  • Athena
    What mockery sweeter than to mock at foes?
  • Odysseus
    Enough for me that he abide within.
  • Athena
    What, fear to see a madman face to face?
  • Odysseus
    I had not quailed to face him, were he sane.
  • Athena
    Insane, he shall not see thee now, though near.
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  • Chorus
    They have laid on us a load too hard to bear.
  • Tecmessa
    Yet such the plague wherewith the daughter dire
    Of Zeus afflicts us for Odysseus’ sake.
  • Chorus
    Yea, how the patient hero must exult
    In his dark soul and mock
    With fiendish laughter at our frenzied grief;
    And the two chiefs withal,
    The Atridae, when they learn his fate.
  • Tecmessa
    Well, let them laugh and mock at Ajax fall’n.
    It may be, though they missed him not in life,
    When comes the stress of war they’ll mourn him dead.
    Men of mean judgment know not the good thing
    They have and hold till they have squandered it.
    He by his death more sorrow gave to me
    Than joy to them; to himself ’twas pure content,
    For all he yearned to attain he won himself⁠—
    Death that he chose. Then wherefore scoff at him?
    The gods were authors of his death, not they.
    So let Odysseus, if it please him, vent
    Vain taunts; for them there is no Ajax more,
    And dying he has left me naught but woe.
  • Teucer
    Woe, woe is me!
  • Chorus
    Hist, hist! methinks ’tis Teucer’s voice I hear,
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  • Chorus (cont.)
    That woeful strain of mourning at our loss.
  • Teucer
    Beloved Ajax, dearest of my kin,
    Did fame not lie then? hast thou fared thus ill?
  • Chorus
    He hath perished, Teucer, and report spake true.
  • Teucer
    Then woe is me for my most grievous loss.
  • Chorus
    And since ’tis thus⁠—
  • Teucer
    Alas for me, alas!
  • Chorus
    The hour for mourning⁠—
  • Teucer
    O sharp pang of pain!
  • Chorus
    Is come, O Teucer, as thou say’st.
  • Teucer
    Ay me!
    But his son⁠—where in Troy-land bides he now?
  • Chorus
    Alone beside the tent.
  • Teucer
    Then bring him quickly,
    Lest of our foemen one should snatch him up,
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  • Teucer (cont.)
    As from a lioness forlorn her cub.
    Go quick, bestir thyself. ’Tis the world’s way
    To flout and triumph o’er the prostrate dead.
    Exit Tecmessa .
  • Chorus
    Yea, while he yet lived Ajax left to thee,
    Teucer, this child, to tend him, as thou dost.
  • Teucer
    O saddest sight of all I ever saw,
    O bitterest of all paths I ever trod,
    The path that led me hither, Ajax loved,
    My best-loved Ajax! when I learnt thy fate,
    B’en as I tracked in desperate haste thy steps;
    For a swift rumour, like a voice from heaven,
    Ran through the host that thou wert dead and gone.
    I heard it and I moaned in spirit afar,
    But now the sight strikes death into my soul.
    O woe!
    Come, lift the searcloth; let me see the worst.
    O bleeding form, O agonising sight!
    How brave, how rash, how cruel in thy death;
    Thy death, what seed of misery for me!
    Where can I turn, what race of men will house me,
    The wretch who failed to help thee in thy woes?
    How Telamon, thy sire and mine withal,
    Will beam upon me (can’st not picture him?)
    When I return without thee! Telamon
    Who in his hours of fortune never smiles!
    Will he refrain? Will he not curse and ban
    The bastard of his spear-won concubine,
    The wretch who like a coward and poltroon
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  • Teucer (cont.)
    Forsook thee, dearest Ajax, or conspired
    To hold thy realm and halls when thou wert dead?
    Thus will he rave, the choleric, soured old man,
    Ready to pick a quarrel for a straw.
    And in the end I shall be banned, defamed,
    Rejected, branded⁠— No free man, a slave.
    Such cheer at home awaits me, and at Troy
    My foes are many and my friends to seek.
    Thus by thy death I’ve profited! Ah me!
    How tear thee from this cruel glittering blade,
    That stands arraigned thine executioner?
    See’st thou how Hector dead and turned to dust
    Was fated in the end to be thy death?
    Look on the fortunes of the two, I pray ye:
    Hector, who by the very belt he wore,
    A gift from Ajax, lashed to the car-rail
    Was dragged and mangled till his ghost expired;
    And this the sword whose murderous edge transfixed
    The side of Ajax⁠—this was Hector’s gift.
    Say, was it not some Fury forged this blade,
    Was not that hellish girdle wove by Death?
    I hold, for my part, these and all things else
    The gods contrive for mortals. But may be
    Some disapprove my creed; let such an one
    Cling to his own belief, as I to mine.
  • Chorus
    Abridge thy large discourse; think how to lay
    The dead man in his grave and what thy plea
    Shall be anon; I see a foe approach.
    Perchance he comes with mocking of our grief,
    As miscreants use.
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  • Teucer
    What captain dost thou see?
  • Chorus
    Menelaus, he at whose behest we sailed.
  • Teucer
    ’Tis he, not hard to recognise thus near.
  • Menelaus
    Stop, sirrah, bear no hand in raising up
    The corse, I charge thee; leave it where it lies.
  • Teucer
    Wherefore dost waste thy breath in these proud words?
  • Menelaus
    Such is my will and the great general’s will.
  • Teucer
    On what pretence? wilt please to tell us that?
  • Menelaus
    Hear then. We thought to bring from Salamis
    For Greeks a friend and firm ally, but found him
    On trial worse than any Phrygian foe;
    Who plotted death and sallied forth by night
    ’Gainst the whole host, to slay us with the spear;
    And had some god not intervened to foil
    This enterprise, his fate had now been ours,
    To perish by an ignominious death,
    While he had now been living. But a god
    Turned his blind malice on the flocks and herds.
    Thus hath he done, and no man shall prevail
    By might to lay his body in the tomb.
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  • Menelaus (cont.)
    He shall be cast forth on the yellow sands
    To feed the carrion birds that haunt the beach.
    Rage not nor bluster as thou hear’st, for we,
    E’en if we could not master him alive,
    In any case will lord it o’er him dead,
    Rule him and discipline, in thy despite,
    By force⁠—my words he ne’er would heed, alive.
    Yet ’tis a mark of villainy when one
    Of the common deigns not to obey his lords.
    For in a State that hath no dread of law
    The laws can never prosper and prevail,
    Nor could an armèd force be disciplined
    Lacking the guard of awe and reverence.
    Nay, though a man should tower in thews and might,
    A giant o’er his fellows, let him think
    Some petty stroke of fate may work his ruin.
    Where dread prevails and reverence withal,
    Believe me, there is safety; but the State,
    Where arrogance hath licence and self-will,
    Though for a while she run before the gale,
    Will in the end make shipwreck and be sunk.
    Dread in its proper season and degree
    Must be maintained; let us not fondly dream
    That we can act at will to please ourselves,
    Nor pay the price of pleasure by our pains.
    ’Tis turn and turn; now this man lorded it
    In insolence; ’tis now my hour of pride.
    So I forewarn thee bury him not, lest thou
    In burying shouldst dig thyself a grave.
  • Chorus
    Sage precepts these, my lord, and do not thou
    Thyself become a scoffer of the dead.
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  • Teucer
    Friends, I shall never marvel after this
    If any baseborn fellow gives offence,
    When men who pride them on their lineage
    By their perverted utterance thus offend.
    Repeat thy tale: thou claimest to have brought
    My brother hither as a Greek ally,
    Secured by thee forsooth. Sailed he not forth
    As his own master, of his own free will?
    Who made thee lord of him? What right hast thou
    To rule the clansmen whom he brought from home?
    Thou cam’st as Sparta’s king, no lord of ours.
    Thou hast no more prerogative or right
    To govern him than he to govern thee;
    Thou sailedst under orders, not as chief,
    And captain unto Ajax ne’er couldst be.
    Go, lord it o’er thy henchmen, chasten them
    With lordly pride; but this man, whether thou,
    Aye, or thy brother-general forbid,
    I with due rites and offices will bury
    Despite thy threatenings. ’Twas not to bring back
    Thy wife that Ajax joined in the campaign,
    Like thy serf drudges, but to keep the oath
    Whereto he had bound himself, no whit for thee;
    Of underlings like thee he took no heed.
    Go then and bring more heralds back with thee
    And the commander; for thy noisy rant,
    Whilst thou art what thou art, I care no straw.
  • Chorus
    This speech again mislikes me in the midst
    Of woes; hard words, how just soever, wound.
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  • Menelaus
    Methinks this archer hath a captain’s pride.
  • Teucer
    Aye, as the master of no vulgar art.
  • Menelaus
    How wouldst thou strut, promoted to a shield!
  • Teucer
    Without a shield I were a match for thee
    In panoply.
  • Menelaus
    How valorous with thy tongue!
  • Teucer
    He can be bold who hath his quarrel just.
  • Menelaus
    Justice quotha, to exalt my murderer?
  • Teucer
    Murdered, and yet thou livest! that is strange!
  • Menelaus
    Heaven saved me; in intention I was slain.
  • Teucer
    If the gods saved thee, sin not ’gainst the gods.
  • Menelaus
    I! could I e’er abuse the laws of Heaven?
  • Teucer
    Yea, if thou com’st to stop the burial.
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  • Menelaus
    Of mine own foes; to bury them were sin.
  • Teucer
    Was Ajax e’en thine enemy in the field?
  • Menelaus
    He loathed me, as I him, thou knowest well.
  • Teucer
    Aye, thou hadst robbed him by suborning votes.
  • Menelaus
    ’Twas by the judges he was cast, not me.
  • Teucer
    A fair face thou canst put on foulest frauds.
  • Menelaus
    Someone I know will suffer for that word.
  • Teucer
    He who provoked is like to suffer more.
  • Menelaus
    One word more; he shall not be burièd.
  • Teucer
    One word in answer; buried he shall be.
  • Menelaus
    Once did I see a braggart, bold of tongue,
    Who had pressed his crew to sail in time of storm,
    But when the storm was on him he was mum⁠—
    Lay like a dead log muffled in his cloak,
    And let the sailors trample him at will.
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  • Menelaus (cont.)
    E’en so with thee and thy unbridled tongue.
    Perchance a mighty hurricane may rise,
    Sprung from a cloud no bigger than a hand,
    Swoop down on thee and quench thy blustering.
  • Teucer
    Once too I knew a fool, a silly fool,
    Who triumphed at his neighbour’s woes and mocked;
    And then it chanced that one, a man like me
    In looks and character, addressed him thus:
    Man, do not evil to the dead, for if
    Thou doest evil, thou nilt surely rue it.
    So to his face he chid that silly fool.
    I see that wight before me, and methinks
    “ ’Tis none but thou. Can’st read my riddle plain?
  • Menelaus
    I go, for ’twould disgrace me, were it known
    That I, with power to act, chastised with words.
  • Teucer
    Begone then! ’twere for me a worse disgrace
    To listen to a bragster’s idle prate.
    Exit Menelaus .
  • Chorus
    Soon a mortal strife will come.
    Seek a hollow grave, and haste,
    Teucer, with what speed thou may’st,
    To prepare the mouldering tomb,
    Where the warrior shall lie,
    Deathless in men’s memory.
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  • Odysseus
    If he has eyes as erst, how can that be?
  • Athena
    I will obscure his vision, howe’er clear.
  • Odysseus
    Well, when a god works, all is possible.
  • Athena
    Peace! stand thy ground and budge not from the spot.
  • Odysseus
    So will I⁠—yet had liefer been far hence.
  • Athena
    Ho, Ajax! once again I summon thee.
    Say, why this scant regard for thine ally?
    To Ajax .
  • Ajax
    Hail O Athena, Zeus-born maiden, hail!
    Thine aid how opportune! for this I’ll crown
    Thy shrine with votive spoils of purest gold.
  • Athena
    Fair words; but tell me, hast thou well imbrued
    Thy sword with carnage of the Argive host?
  • Ajax
    A glorious deed that I will not disclaim.
  • Athena
    Haply thou has assailed the Atridae too?
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  • Teucer
    Lo! in good time I see his child and wife
    Draw near to tend the hero’s obsequies.
    Come hither, child, and take thy place beside him
    And lay, in suppliant guise, thy hand in his,
    And kneel as one who hath taken sanctuary,
    With locks of hair as offering in thine hand⁠—
    Mine, hers, and thine⁠—all-potent means of grace.
    Then if by violence any of the host
    Should drag thee from the dead man, be his lot
    To perish banned, cast forth without a grave,
    Cut off with kith and kindred, root and branch,
    Even as I cut this lock from off my head.
    Take it and keep it, child; let no man move thee.
    Kneel thou, and clasp in close embrace the dead.
    And ye, his comrades, stand not idly by
    As women mourners; quit yourselves as men
    In his defence, till I have made a grave
    To bury him, though all the world forbid.
    Exit Teucer .
  • Chorus
    When shall the score be told, the sum of the endless years?
    Weary am I of camps and tramps and the hurtling of spears.
    Hither and thither I roam o’er the windswept Trojan plain,
    Shame and reproach for Greece, for Grecians trouble and pain.
    Would he had sunk to hell, or vanished in ether afar,
    Who first admonished the Greeks to league themselves for the war⁠—
    War, the father of toils, whence mortal sorrows began;
    Yea, it was he who begat the plague and ruin of man.
    Wretch! for me no garlands fine,
    Cups o’erbrimming with red wine;
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  • Chorus (cont.)
    No shrill flutes didst thou assign.
    Wretch! a foe to all delight.
    F’en the slumbers soft of night
    Thy alarms have banished quite.
    And my loves, ah well-a-day!
    Thou hast driven them all away;
    Here I lie on the cold clay:
    All alone, with none to care,
    While the dank dews wet my hair.
    Such, accursèd Troy, thy fare!
    Erewhile Ajax, stalwart knight,
    Was my buckler in the fight,
    Shield against the alarm of might.
    Now by Fate a victim led
    To the altar, he hath bled;
    And for me all joy hath fled.
    O that from this barren strand
    Wafted to Athena’s land
    I on Sunium’s brow might stand;
    Hear the waves that round it beat
    Wash the wooded headland’s feet,
    Sacred Athens thence to greet!
  • Teucer
    Lo I return in haste; I saw approach
    Great Agamemnon, captain of the host;
    ’Tis plain he means to vent on us his spleen.
  • Agamemnon
    So, Sirrah, it is thou (for thus I learn)
    Hast dared to rant and curse and threaten us,
    Thus far unpunished; thou the bondmaid’s son.
    Ha! had thy mother been a high-born dame,
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  • Agamemnon (cont.)
    How grand thy speech, how proud had been thy gait,
    When now, a nobody, thou championest
    That thing of naught, maintaining that we kings
    Had no commission, or on sea or land,
    To rule the Greeks or thee, and (such thy claim)
    That Ajax sailed, an independent chief.
    Is this not rank presumption in a slave?
    And what is he whose might thou vauntest thus?
    Where did he hold his ground or lead the assault
    Where I was not? Have Greeks no man but him?
    ’Twas in an evil hour we made proclaim
    Of open contest for Achilles’ arms,
    If Teucer must denounce us as corrupt,
    Whate’er the issue, and if ye reject
    The adverse judgment of the major part,
    But must for ever gird at us and rail,
    Or plot to stab us, when ye lose your suit.
    Never with tempers such as yours could law
    Be firmly based, if we are called to oust
    The rightful victors and promote the worse.
    This must be stopped. ’Tis not the brawny, big,
    Broad-shouldered men who prove the best at need;
    The wise and prudent everywhere prevail.
    The broad-ribbed ox is guided on his path
    Down the straight furrow by a little goad.
    A like corrective is in store for thee,
    If thou acquire not some small sense full soon.
    The man is dead, a shadow, and yet thou
    Let’st thy tongue wag and waxest insolent.
    Come to a sober mind; recall thy birth,
    Bring hither someone else, a free-born man,
    To plead thy cause before us in thy stead;
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  • Agamemnon (cont.)
    For when thou speak’st thy words convey no sense;
    I understand not a barbarian tongue.
  • Chorus
    I would ye twain might learn sobriety;
    ’Tis the best counsel I can give you both.
  • Teucer
    Out on man’s gratitude! how soon it fades,
    Or proves a traitor when a friend is dead!
    What memory, what tittle of regard
    Hath he for thee, my Ajax, thou who oft
    At peril of thy life didst toil for him?
    Lost labour, cast away and all forgot!
    Vain, windy orator, canst not recall
    The day when ye were cooped within your lines,
    Scattered, half routed and as good as lost,
    How single-handed he stood forth and saved you,
    Though at your ships the poop decks were ablaze,
    And Hector o’er the fosse came bounding, prompt
    To board them? Who averted then the rout?
    The very man of whom thou sayest now,
    “He did no deed I have not done myself.”
    Was that no loyal service? Judge yourselves;
    Or once again when he in single fight
    Confronted Hector, under no constraint,
    But by the lot he drew⁠—no skulking lot,
    No lump of loam, but one that well he knew
    Would first leap lightly from the crested helm?
    Such deeds were his, and at his side was I,
    This slave, of a barbarian mother born.
    How canst thou prate thus idly? Look at home.
    Hast thou forgotten that thine own sire’s sire
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  • Teucer (cont.)
    Was Phrygian Pelops, a barbarian?
    That Atreus who begat thee, wretch, did set
    Before his brother a most impious feast,
    His brother’s children’s flesh? That thou thyself
    Com’st of a Cretan mother whom her sire
    Caught with an alien slave, her paramour,
    And sent to feed dumb fishes of the deep?
    Thus basely born thou twit’st me with my birth!
    My sire was Telamon who won the prize
    As champion of the host, a peerless bride,
    A princess, daughter of Laomedon,
    The meed assigned him by Alemena’s son.
    She was my mother. And am I, thus born
    Nobly of parents both of noblest birth,
    Am I to shame my kindred overthrown,
    Now helpless, whelmed in utter misery,
    Whom thou wouldst spurn and rob of burial rites,
    Nor art ashamed to promulgate this ban?
    Know this full well, where’er ye cast this man,
    We three, three corpses, ye will cast beside.
    For me ’twere nobler before all men’s eyes
    To fall in his behalf than for a wife
    Of thine⁠—or of thy brother, should I say?
    Therefore bethink thee⁠—’tis thine interest
    No less than mine⁠—if on me thou dar’st lay
    A finger, thou wilt surely wish full soon
    Rather to bear the brand of cowardice
    Than prove thy reckless bravery on me.
  • Chorus
    My lord Odysseus, thou art come in time,
    If thou art here to mediate, not embroil.
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  • Odysseus
    What is it, sirs? Far off I heard loud words
    Of the Atridae o’er the hero’s corpse.
  • Agamemnon
    True, lord Odysseus; were we not provoked
    By the most shameful taunts from yonder man?
  • Odysseus
    What taunts? For my part I can pardon one
    Who when reviled retorts in angry words.
  • Agamemnon
    I did abuse him as his acts deserved.
  • Odysseus
    Say by what action gave he just offence?
  • Agamemnon
    He vows he will not leave unsepultured
    The corpse, but bury it in my despite.
  • Odysseus
    May I be candid with thee as a friend
    Without suspicion of my loyalty?
  • Agamemnon
    Surely. I am not senseless, and I count
    Thee among all the Greeks my chiefest friend.
  • Odysseus
    Then hear me. O for pity’s sake forbear,
    Repent, and let not violence and hate
    Blind thee to trample justice under foot.
    I also counted him my deadliest foe
    In all the army, ever since the day
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  • Odysseus (cont.)
    When by award I won Achilles’ arms;
    Yet for all that, foe as he was to me,
    I would not so requite his wrong with wrong
    As not to own that, save Achilles, he
    In all the host of Argives had no peer.
    Unjustly thou wouldst thus dishonour him;
    For not to him, but to the laws of heaven
    Wouldst thou do wrong; and wrong it is to insult
    A brave man dead, e’en if he be thy foe.
  • Agamemnon
    Wilt thou, Odysseus, take his part against me?
  • Odysseus
    Yea, yet I hated him so long as hate
    Was honourable.
  • Agamemnon
    Why not hate him still,
    And set thy heel on his dead body too?
  • Odysseus
    Delight not, son of Atreus, in ill gains.
  • Agamemnon
    ’Tis hard for monarchs to show piety.
  • Odysseus
    But not respect for friends who counsel well.
  • Agamemnon
    A true man ever heeds authority.
  • Odysseus
    Forbear: thou conquerest, yielding unto friends.
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  • Agamemnon
    Think to what kind of man thou showest grace.
  • Odysseus
    My foe he was, but still a noble foe.
  • Agamemnon
    What wouldst thou? Honour a dead foeman’s corpse?
  • Odysseus
    With me his worth outweighs his enmity.
  • Agamemnon
    Such sudden change of mind we call caprice.
  • Odysseus
    Common enough the change from friend to foe.
  • Agamemnon
    Dost thou commend such fickle friends as these?
  • Odysseus
    A stubborn temper I would ne’er commend.
  • Agamemnon
    Thou mind’st this day to make us seem as cowards.
  • Odysseus
    Nay, as just rulers in the eyes of Greece.
  • Agamemnon
    Thou bidst me then permit the burial?
  • Odysseus
    Yes, for I too shall come to need the same.
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  • Agamemnon
    How true the saw, each labours for himself.
  • Odysseus
    And who deserves my labour more than I?
  • Agamemnon
    Well, let it seem thy doing, friend, not mine.
  • Odysseus
    Howe’er ’tis done, ’twill prove thee good and kind.
  • Agamemnon
    To thee, my friend, of this be well assured,
    I’d grant a favour greater e’en than this.
    But that man, as in living so in death,
    Shall have my hate. So do as pleaseth thee.
    Exit Agamemnon .
  • Chorus
    Whoe’er, Odysseus, having proof like this,
    Denies thy wisdom is himself a fool.
  • Odysseus
    And now to Teucer, once my foe, henceforth
    I proffer friendship staunch and true as was
    Mine enmity; and I would ask to share
    With you in obsequies and ritual
    To grace his grave; no service would I stint
    That man can render to the mighty dead.
  • Teucer
    Noblest Odysseus, I have naught but praise
    For thy good words that all belie my fears.
    Of all the Greeks thou wast his deadliest foe,
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  • Teucer (cont.)
    Yet thou alone didst dare espouse his cause,
    And hadst no heart to insult this dumb cold clay,
    Like yonder crack-brained chief of the host who came,
    He and his brother general, with intent
    To cast him forth defamed without a grave.
    For that may he who rules in heaven supreme,
    And the Erinys who forgetteth not,
    And Justice who accomplisheth the end,
    Curse those accursed sinners and confound them,
    E’en as they would have wronged the innocent dead.
    But for thine aid in these our funeral rites,
    Son of Laertes, old and honoured chief,
    I must reject the service, though full loath,
    Lest I should do displeasure to the dead.
    In all the rest be one of us, and if
    Thou wouldst invite some comrade from the camp
    To join the mourning, we shall welcome him
    All else I will provide. Rest well assured,
    We reckon thee a true great-hearted friend.
  • Odysseus
    Well I was fain to assist, but if your will
    Consents not, I will acquiesce and go.
  • Teucer
    Enough: too long have we delayed.
    Go some with mattock armed and spade,
    Dig the grave pit speedily;
    Lustral waters to supply,
    Others set the cauldron high,
    Piling around it faggots dry,
    Let another band be sent
    To fetch his harness from his tent.
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  • Ajax
    So that they ne’er will outrage Ajax more.
  • Athena
    If I interpret rightly, they are dead.
  • Ajax
    Both dead; now let them cheat me of my arms!
  • Athena
    Good; and how fares it with Laertes’ son?
    How hast thou left him? or has he escaped?
  • Ajax
    He! That sly fox⁠—wouldst know what’s come of him?
  • Athena
    Of him⁠—Odysseus, thy antagonist.
  • Ajax
    A welcome guest he sits within, fast bound.
    I have no mind that he should die as yet.
  • Athena
    What would’st thou first? what further profit win?
  • Ajax
    I’ll bind him to a pillar of my tent.
  • Athena
    What vengeance wilt thou wreak on the poor wretch?
  • Ajax
    Flay with my scourge his back before he die.
  • Athena
    O torture not the wretch so savagely.
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  • Teucer (cont.)
    Thou too, child, draw near and lay
    Thy little hands on this cold clay;
    Though thy help may not be much,
    Thy sire shall feel thy loving touch.
    Help to raise this prostrate form.
    These limbs are cold, yet still the warm
    Veins from the heart and wounded side
    Jet forth their dark ensanguined tide.
    Haste, each who claims the name of friend,
    Haste one and all the dead to tend
    With service due. Since time began
    There lived on earth no nobler man.
  • Chorus
    Wisdom still by seeing grows,
    But no man the unseen knows.
    Shall he fare or ill or well
    Who of mortals can foretell?
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  • Ajax
    In all but this, Athena, have thy will;
    This and none else, must be his punishment.
  • Athena
    Well, since it is thy pleasure, be it so:
    Lay on, abate no jot of thine intent.
  • Ajax
    I will to work then, and I look to thee
    To be my true ally all times, as now.
    Exit Ajax .
  • Athena
    Odysseus, see how great the might of gods.
    Couldst thou have found a man more circumspect,
    Or one more prompt for all emergencies?
  • Odysseus
    I know none such, and though he be my foe,
    I still must pity him in his distress,
    Bound, hand and foot, to fatal destiny;
    And therein mind my case no less than his.
    Alas! we living mortals, what are we
    But phantoms all or unsubstantial shades?
  • Athena
    Warned by these sights, Odysseus, see that thou
    Utter no boastful word against the gods,
    Nor swell with pride if haply might of arm
    Exalt thee o’er thy fellows, or vast wealth.
    A day can prostrate and a day upraise
    All that is mortal; but the gods approve
    Sobriety and frowardness abhor.
    Exeunt Athena and Odysseus . Enter Chorus .
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  • Chorus
    Son of Telamon, thou whose isle,
    Sea-girt Salamis, doth smile
    O’er the surge, thy joys I share
    When thy fortunes promise fair;
    But if stroke of Zeus assail,
    Or the slanderous tongues prevail
    Of the Danaï, to blast
    Thy repute, I cower aghast,
    Like a dove with quivering eye.
    For of yesternight there fly
    Bitter plaints and loud-voiced blame
    Crowding on us to our shame⁠—
    How thou speddest o’er the meads
    Rich in troops of unbacked steeds,
    And with flashing sword didst slay
    All the yet unparted prey
    Of the Greeks, in foray ta’en,
    Spoiling all their hard earned gain.
    Such the scandal, as we hear,
    Odysseus breathes in every ear;
    And he wins belief, for now
    Thou dost seem thy guilt to avow,
    And the rumour spreads and swells.
    Even more than he who tells,
    Every hearer takes delight
    In thy woes, for envious spite.
    So it falls; the noblest heart
    Is a target for each dart;
    Aimed at me such shafts would fail:
    Envy doth the great assail.
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  • Chorus (cont.)
    Yet without the great the small
    Ill could guard the city wall;
    Leagued together small and great
    Best defend the common state.
    Fools this precept will not heed,
    And these men are fools indeed
    Who against thee rail; and we
    Can do nothing without thee,
    To confound their charge, O King.
    Like to birds they flap the wing,
    And chatter, when they ’scape thine eye;
    But if hovering in the sky
    The great vulture should appear,
    Mute they cower in sudden fear.
    Was it the Tauric Artemis, Jove’s daughter,
    (O dread report, begetter of my shame!)
    Drave thee the flocks, our common stock, to slaughter?
    Didst thou in victory rob her of her claim
    To tithe of spoil, her part,
    When to thy bow there fell some noble hart?
    Or did the mail-clad God of War resent
    Thy negligence thank-offering to pay?
    By him at night was the delusion sent
    That led astray?
    Ne’er wouldst thou, Ajax, of thine own intent
    Have wrought this havoc and the cattle slain.
    Such frenzy comes from Heaven in punishment.
    (Zeus and Apollo prove the rumour vain!)
    And if the great chiefs falsely charge thee, King,
    Spreading foul scandal, or the accursed race
    Of Sisyphus, let not this ill fame cling
    To us thy friends; no longer hide thy face,
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Back Cover

/back-cover
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  • Unknown block type: back_cover_card
    {'type': 'back_cover_card', 'blurb': 'Ajax by Sophocles is a Greek tragedy that tells the story of Ajax, a warrior in the Trojan War. After the armor of the slain Achilles is awarded to Odysseus instead of him, Ajax is consumed by rage and humiliation. In his madness, he attempts to kill the Greek leaders, but is tricked by the goddess Athena into attacking livestock instead. When he regains his senses, Ajax chooses to take his own life rather than live in dishonor. His death ignites debates among the Greeks about whether he deserves a proper burial.', 'title': 'Ajax', 'byline': 'Sophocles, translated by Francis Storr', 'source': 'codal.cc/aaron/ajax', 'license': 'Public Domain — CC0 1.0', 'text_color': '#f5efe4', 'background_color': '#1f3329'}
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Colophon

/colophon
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Ajax

/cover
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  • Unknown block type: cover_card
    {'type': 'cover_card', 'title': 'Ajax', 'byline': 'by Sophocles', 'subtitle': '', 'text_color': '#f5efe4', 'background_color': '#1f3329'}
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Dramatis Personae

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  • Athena
    Odysseus
    King of Ithaca
    Ajax
    son of Telamon and Euboea, leader of the men of Salamis
    Tecmessa
    his captive wife, daughter of Teleutas, King of Phrygia
    Eurysaces
    their infant son
    Treucer
    son of Telamon by Hesione
    Menelaus
    King of Sparta
    Agamemnon
    his brother, captain of the host
    Messenger
    one of Ajax’s men
    Chorus
    mariners of Salamis
    Scene: The shore on the Northern coast of the Troad before the tent of Ajax. Time: Early morning.
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Argument

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  • The arms of Achilles, claimed by Ajax as the bravest warrior in the host, were through intrigue given to Odysseus, and Ajax vows vengeance both on the winner and on the awarders of the prize. But Athena, his patron goddess, whom his arrogance has estranged, sends him a delusion so that he mistakes for his foes the sheep and cattle of the Greeks. Athena, when the play opens, is discovered conversing with Odysseus outside the tent of Ajax; she will show him his mad foe mauling the beasts within. The mad fit passes and Ajax bewails his insensate folly and declares that death alone can wipe out the shame. His wife Tecmessa and the Chorus try to dissuade him, but he will not be comforted and calls for his son Eurysaces. The child is brought, and after leaving his last injunctions for his brother Teucer, Ajax takes a tender farewell. He then fetches his sword from the tent and goes forth declaring that he will purge himself of his stains and bury his sword. Presently a Messenger from the camp announces that Teucer has returned from his foray and has learnt from Calchas, the seer, that if only Ajax can be kept within the camp for that day all may yet be well. The Chorus and Tecmessa set forth in quest of Ajax, and Tecmessa discovers him lying transfixed by his sword. Teucer finds the mourners gathered round the corpse and is preparing to bury him, when Menelaus hurries up to forbid the burial. After an angry wrangle with Teucer, Menelaus departs, but is succeeded by Agamemnon, who enforces his brother’s veto and is hardly persuaded by Odysseus to relent. Ajax is carried by his Salaminians to his grave, a grave (so they prophesy) that shall be famous for all time.

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Table of Contents

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Ajax

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