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Home  »  library  »  poem  »  Hecuba Hears the Story of her Daughter’s Death

C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Hecuba Hears the Story of her Daughter’s Death

By Euripides (c. 480–406 B.C.)

Translation of John Addington Symonds

THE WHOLE vast concourse of the Achaian hast

Stood round the tomb to see your daughter die.

Achilleus’s son, taking her by the hand,

Placed her upon the mound, and I stayed near;

And youths, the flower of Greece, a chosen few,

With hands to check thy heifer, should she bound,

Attended. From a cup of carven gold,

Raised full of wine, Achilleus’s son poured forth

Libation to his sire, and bade me sound

Silence throughout the whole Achaian host.

I, standing there, cried in the midst these words:—

“Silence, Achaians! let the host be still!

Hush, hold your voices!” Breathless stayed the crowd;

But he:—“O son of Peleus, father mine,

Take these libations pleasant to thy soul,

Draughts that allure the dead: come, drink the black

Pure maiden’s blood wherewith the host and I

Sue thee: be kindly to us; loose our prows,

And let our barks go free; give safe return

Homeward from Troy to all, and happy voyage.”

Such words he spake, and the crowd prayed assent.

Then from the scabbard, by its golden hilt,

He drew the sword, and to the chosen youths

Signaled that they should bring the maid; but she,

Knowing her hour was come, spake thus, and said:—

“O men of Argos, who have sacked my town,

Lo, of free will I die! Let no man touch

My body: boldly will I stretch my throat.

Nay, but I pray you set me free, then slay;

That free I thus may perish: ’mong the dead,

Being a queen, I blush to be called slave.”

The people shouted, and King Agamemnon

Bade the youths loose the maid, and set her free:

She, when she heard the order of the chiefs,

Seizing her mantle, from the shoulder down

To the soft centre of her snowy waist

Tore it, and showed her breasts and bosom fair

As in a statue. Bending then with knee

On earth, she spake a speech most piteous:—

“See you this breast, O youth? If breast you will,

Strike it; take heart: or if beneath my neck,

Lo! here my throat is ready for your sword!”

He, willing not, yet willing,—pity-stirred

In sorrow for the maiden,—with his blade

Severed the channels of her breath: blood flowed;

And she, though dying, still had thought to fall

In seemly wise, hiding what eyes should see not.

But when she breathed her life out from the blow,

Then was the Argive host in divers way

Of service parted; for some, bringing leaves,

Strewed them upon the corpse; some piled a pyre,

Dragging pine trunks and boughs; and he who bore none,

Heard from the bearers many a bitter word:—

“Standest thou, villain? hast thou then no robe,

No funeral honors for the maid to bring?

Wilt thou not go and get for her who died

Most nobly, bravest-souled, some gift?” Thus they

Spake of thy child in death:—“O thou most blessed

Of women in thy daughter, most undone!”