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Andromache/Act III
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| Act II | Andromache ~ Act III written by Jean Racine, translated by A. S. Kline | Act IV |
Act III Scene I (Orestes, Pylades)
- Pylades
- My lord, you must control this fierce anger,
- You’re actions seem like those of a stranger.
- Let me…
- Orestes
- No, your words are out of season,
- Pylades, I’m wearied by dull reason.
- My life is dragged out now in suffering.
- I must depart with her, or end this thing.
- My plans are made, I shall complete them.
- Yes, I wish it.
- Pylades
- Well, take her with you then;
- I agree. But think how they’ll react.
- What will men say, seeing how you act?
- Dissimulate: they must not see you fret,
- Let your eyes be guardians of your secret.
- The guards, the court, the very air around you
- Belong to Pyrrhus, and Hermione too.
- Above all, hide your anger from her eyes.
- You Gods! Why seek her out in this wise?
- Orestes
- Who knows? Of myself, am I the master?
- Fury transported me, and I came hither,
- Perhaps to threaten her and her lover.
- Pylades
- And the fruits of it, now you’ve recovered?
- Orestes
- Tell me, what mind would not be overcome
- By the blow that snatched away my reason?
- He marries Hermione tomorrow;
- I must give her to him, it’s an honour.
- Oh! Rather this barbarian I’ll slay…
- Pylades
- My lord, you accuse him though all is fate.
- Yet, tormented by his inner fires,
- I ought to pity his and your desires.
- Orestes
- No, I see he enjoys my suffering,
- Without my love for her, he’d scorn the thing;
- Until he knew it, he despised her charms:
- He takes her to take her from my arms.
- Oh, you Gods! Hermione being won,
- From his sight forever might be gone.
- Confused between love and vexation,
- Her heart but awaited his permission;
- Her eyes were opened; she listened, yes;
- Spoke; pitied. A word ensured the rest.
- Pylades
- You believed her.
- Orestes
- What! That burning anger
- Against the ingrate…
- Pylades
- He was never loved more.
- With you and Pyrrhus in accord, I say
- Some ready pretext would have caused delay.
- Think you not so? Then, leave deception here,
- Don’t take her with you, forever flee her.
- What! Your love will batten on a fury
- Who will detest you, and will weary
- Your days, regretting this near marriage,
- Who will…
- Orestes
- That’s why with her I’d take passage.
- All smile on her; and I for my part pay
- By leaving, and losing, in useless rage?
- Go far from her, and try to forget her?
- No, in my suffering I’ll see her suffer.
- No lonely weeping. Weary of her pity
- I intend in turn she’ll learn to fear me,
- And her cruel eyes, when tears have flowed,
- Will yield the compliments I there bestowed.
- Pylades
- So here’s the outcome of your embassy:
- Orestes, the abductor!
- Orestes
- Pylades,
- If Greece, avenged, delights in my success,
- Will she delight then in my sorrows less?
- What reward then though Greece admires us,
- If I become the jest of Epirus?
- What do you wish? To conceal nothing,
- My innocence now’s a burdensome thing.
- What is this ever unjust contrivance
- That’s blind to crime, but hunts down innocence?
- Wherever I turn my eyes about me
- I see ills to condemn the deities.
- Let’s merit their anger then, deserve their hate,
- And taste the fruits of crime despite our fate.
- But you, in error, why do you ever seek
- To turn a wrath towards you meant for me?
- Long enough my friendship’s harmed you:
- Avoid misfortune, flee the guilty too.
- Dear Pylades, your sympathy’s in error;
- Leave me to await the fruits of danger.
- Take to the Greeks the child Pyrrhus has freed.
- Go now.
- Pylades
- No, go seize Hermione.
- In danger, the greatest hearts win through,
- Led by Love what shall not friendship do?
- Go to your Greeks and arouse their zeal:
- Our ships are ready, fair winds we feel,
- I know this palace and its winding halls;
- You know the sea beats against its walls;
- This very night, with ease, a secret way,
- Come lead your prize to the outer bay.
- Orestes
- Dear friend, I abuse your friendship, truly.
- Forgive these sorrows you alone pity;
- Excuse this wretch that loses all he loves,
- Whom the world hates; whom hatred moves.
- If only I in turn in happier days…
- Pylades
- Dissemble, my lord, that’s what I say.
- Seek to conceal your plans behind a mask:
- Forget Hermione’s ungrateful acts;
- Forget your love; she’s here, show cunning, stealth.
- Orestes
- Go. Answer for her, I’ll answer for myself.
Act III Scene II (Hermione, Orestes, Cleone)
- Orestes
- So! My efforts have ensured your conquest.
- I have seen Pyrrhus: marriage wins the rest.
- Hermione
- They say so: and moreover they assure me
- That you only seek me to prepare me.
- Orestes
- Your soul will not rebel then at his vows?
- Hermione
- Who’d have thought Pyrrhus would prove faithful now?
- That love would make this late declaration?
- That, as I leave, he’d declare his passion?
- I thought like you he only feared the Greeks,
- That he pursued his interests, not me,
- That I held greater sway over your heart.
- Orestes
- No, Madame; he loves you, I must not doubt.
- Cannot your eyes do all they wish to do?
- And doubtless he is not despised by you.
- Hermione
- What can I do, my lord? A promise made,
- Can I take from him what’s not mine to take?
- Love does not rule the fate of a princess,
- The glory of duty is all that we have left.
- Yet I would leave, and you saw maybe
- How far, for you, I strayed from my duty.
- Orestes
- How clearly you see, cruel one…though you,
- Like all, may give their heart to whom they choose.
- Your heart’s your own. I hoped, and yet I see,
- In giving it you steal it not from me.
- I accuse you much less than I rail at fate.
- Why tire you with importunate debate?
- Such is your duty, I accept; and mine
- To spare you sorrow’s speech at such a time.
Act III Scene III (Hermione, Cleone)
- Hermione
- Did you expect so little show of anger?
- Cleone
- A grief that’s silent often lies deeper.
- I pity him: author of his own sorrow,
- The blow that hurts him is his own, I know.
- Think how long your wedding’s been delayed.
- He but speaks, and Pyrrhus’ mind is swayed.
- Hermione
- You think Pyrrhus fears? Whom should he fear?
- Those who for ten long years fled Hector’s spear;
- Who, a hundred times, missing Achilles,
- In their burning ships sought sanctuary,
- And who without the actions of his son
- Would still be asking high Troy for Helen?
- No, Cleone, he’s not his enemy:
- He does what he wills; weds me, loves me.
- Yet Orestes must impute his tears to me:
- Is there naught to speak of but his misery?
- Pyrrhus returns to me. Oh, dear Cleone,
- Can you feel the joy that fills Hermione?
- Do you know who he is? Have you heard tell
- Of all his countless exploits…what befell?
- Intrepid, winning victory everywhere,
- Handsome, faithful too: no failings there.
- Think…
- Cleone
- Dissimulate. Your rival now, in tears,
- Bringing her sorrows, doubtless, ventures here.
- Hermione
- You Gods! Can I not smile in privacy?
- We’ll go: why speak?
Act III Scene IV (Andromache, Hermione, Cleone, Cephisa)
- Andromache
- Madame, why do you flee?
- Is it not now a sweet sight to your eye
- To witness Hector’s widow kneel and cry?
- I do not come to you with jealous tears
- To mourn a man who your arts reveres.
- Alas, those cruel hands, I saw them pierce
- The only one whose love I might rehearse.
- My heart by Hector long ago was lit;
- Now, with him, the grave has buried it.
- Yet my son remains. One day you’ll know,
- Madame, how for a son our tears must flow;
- But you’ll not know, such is not my thought,
- What mortal trouble destiny has brought,
- When of all the good it might have left me,
- The sole remaining one, it steals from me.
- Alas, when, left for ten long years to suffer,
- The angry Trojans threatened your mother,
- I begged my Hector to show her mercy.
- You could beg Pyrrhus likewise to help me.
- Why fear the child because he is a Trojan?
- Let me hide him on some desert island.
- You are assured, with all his mother’s care,
- My son will learn naught but weeping there.
- Hermione
- I know your sorrows. But austere duty,
- A father’s word, impose this silence on me.
- It is he who has roused Pyrrhus’ anger.
- To sway Pyrrhus who than you is better?
- Your eyes have long reigned over his heart.
- Change his mind: I’ll yield, for my part.
Act III Scene V (Andromache, Cephisa)
- Andromache
- How scornfully the cruel girl denied us!
- Cephisa
- I would heed her counsel, and see Pyrrhus.
- One look might thwart Hermione and Greece…
- Ah, he seeks you.
Act III Scene VI (Pyrrhus, Andromache, Phoenix, Cephisa)
- Pyrrhus (To Phoenix)
- No princess do I see.
- You told me she was here, are these your lies?
- Phoenix
- I thought so.
- Andromache(To Cephisa)
- See now the power of my eyes.
- Pyrrhus
- What said she, Phoenix?
- Andromache
- Alas! All forsake me.
- Phoenix
- Sire, let us go follow Hermione.
- Cephisa
- What are you waiting for? Break this silence.
- Andromache
- He’s promised them my son.
- Cephisa
- That’s mere intent.
- Andromache
- No, no, I must weep, his death’s decided.
- Pyrrhus
- Will she not see us, are we derided?
- What pride!
- Andromache
- And I’d only annoy him more.
- Go.
- Pyrrhus
- Let’s give the Greeks this son of Hector.
- Andromache(Throwing herself at Pyrrhus’ feet)
- Oh, wait Sire! What is this that you would do?
- Surrender him? Then yield his mother too.
- Your words to me spoke of justice, amity!
- Gods! Can I not at least move your pity?
- Am I condemned without hope of pardon?
- Pyrrhus
- Phoenix will tell you, my word is given.
- Andromache
- You’d who’d defy great dangers, all for me!
- Pyrrhus
- I was blind then; now my eyes can see.
- Favour might have followed your request;
- But yet you never asked it of me yet.
- The thing is done.
- Andromache
- Oh, Sire, you know enough of those sighs
- That fear to let themselves be realised.
- Pardon, that to the light of fallen fortune
- Remains a pride that feared to presume.
- You know this too: Andromache could kneel
- To no other king but you, her heart reveal.
- Pyrrhus
- No, you detest me now; and your deep art
- Fears to owe a thing to my fond heart.
- That very son, the object of your care,
- You’d love less for it, if I left him there.
- Hatred and scorn, against me they gather;
- You hate me more than all the Greeks together.
- Enjoy your noble anger at leisure.
- Come, Phoenix.
- Andromache
- Come, rejoin my dead lover.
- Cephisa
- Madame…
- Andromache (To Cephisa)
- What would you have me say that I forgot?
- Source of my ills, think you he knows it not?
- (To Pyrrhus)
- Sire, see the state you reduce me to.
- I saw my father die, my city too,
- Witnessed the death of my whole family,
- My husband dragged through the dust, all bloody,
- His son, remaining, destined for the knife.
- But what can a son not do? I breathe, have life.
- More: to it I was sometimes reconciled,
- Since here, not elsewhere, I was exiled;
- That this son of kings, happy in servitude,
- Since he must serve, was subject now to you.
- I thought his prison was our sanctuary.
- Once Priam found mercy before Achilles:
- I sought, from his son, magnanimity.
- Pardon, dear Hector, for my credulity.
- I did not suspect your enemy of crime;
- Despite himself, I thought he would be kind.
- Oh, if only he might leave us two
- In the tomb my care once raised for you,
- That, ending there all misery and hate,
- Ashes so dear might never separate.
- Pyrrhus
- Go, wait for me, Phoenix.
Act III Scene VII (Pyrrhus, Andromache, Cephisa)
- Pyrrhus (Continuing)
- Madame, wait.
- Your son can be saved, however late.
- Oh, I regret, in causing you to weep
- I only gave you arms to oppose me.
- I thought to meet you filled with hate.
- At least now turn towards me your gaze,
- See if these eyes judge with severity,
- Whether they are those of an enemy.
- Why force me to spurn you once again?
- Let hatred cease, in your own son’s name.
- It is I who seek to save him anew.
- Must I, sighing, ask his life of you?
- Must I kneel to you on his behalf?
- For the last time, save him, save us both.
- I know the vows, yes, the chains I break,
- The hatred that will follow my ‘mistake’.
- Dismiss Hermione, and on her brow
- I’ll set lasting shame, and not a crown.
- You shall I lead to her marriage-shrine,
- And with her garlands your hair entwine.
- This is no offer to despise, Madame:
- You’ll reign, or you will die out of hand.
- My heart, racked by a year’s ingratitude,
- Won’t tolerate prolonged incertitude.
- Too many days of fear, threats, and hate:
- I’ll die if I lose you, die if I must wait:
- Think then: I’ll return, to lead you swiftly
- To the temple where your child awaits me;
- There, angry, or submissive if you’re wise,
- To crown you, or slay him before your eyes.
Act III Scene VIII (Andromache, Cephisa)
- Cephisa
- I told you thus, and that in spite of Greece
- You’d still be mistress of your destiny.
- Andromache
- Alas, the results of speech in action!
- Now I am left to slay my only son.
- Cephisa
- To your dead husband you prove too loyal:
- Excess of virtue may be culpable.
- He too would have wished you to be kinder.
- Andromache
- What! Give him Pyrrhus as his successor?
- Cephisa
- So his son wishes, whom the Greeks now crave.
- Do you think his shade blushes in the grave?
- That he despises a victorious king
- Who reinstates your ancestral ranking,
- Who forcefully treads down the victors,
- Who forgets Achilles was his father,
- Who denies his exploits, all for you?
- Andromache
- Must I forget, because he chooses to?
- Forget my Hector who lacked burial,
- Dragged dishonoured round the city wall?
- Must I forget Priam, with his last breath,
- Bloodying the altar he clutched in death?
- Think, think, Cephisa, of that cruel night
- That quenched a whole nation’s living light.
- Imagine Pyrrhus, with glittering eyes,
- Caught in the glow of that burning prize,
- Carving his passage over my dead kin,
- Heated by the blood he wallowed in.
- Think of the victor’s cries, of the dying,
- Burnt by the flames; slain to the sword’s sighing.
- See Andromache distraught amongst the horror:
- That’s how Pyrrhus looms in memory’s mirror;
- Those are the exploits with which he’s crowned
- This is the man to whom you’d have me bound.
- No, I’ll not be accomplice to his crime;
- Troy will yield him victims, one more time.
- All of my hate would be enslaved by him.
- Cephisa
- Well, then! Let’s go and see them kill your son:
- They only wait for you…Madame, you tremble?
- Andromache
- Oh! What memories now make me stumble!
- What! Cephisa, shall I see him suffer
- That child, my only joy, image of Hector?
- That child he left me as the pledge he loved?
- I recall how, that day when courage moved
- Him to seek Achilles, or rather death,
- He clasped his son to him, said with a breath,
- ‘Dear spouse,’ and wiped away my tears,
- ‘Who knows what destiny will grant me here;
- I leave the child as pledge that I was true:
- If I die, I say he’ll know me through you.
- If my memory proves dear to his mother,
- Show my son how you cherished his father.’
- And shall I see them shed blood so precious?
- Shall I watch him die like his ancestors?
- Barbarous king, must my crime be his?
- Though I hate you, is my son not guiltless?
- Has he reproached you for your murders?
- Has he mourned ills that he did not suffer?
- And yet, my child, you die if I instead
- Do not arrest the sword above your head.
- I could restrain them, and yet I reject it?
- No, you shall not die: I’ll not accept it.
- Let us seek Pyrrhus. No, dear Cephisa,
- Go seek him for me.
- Cephisa
- What must I say?
- Andromache
- Tell him my love for my son is great…
- Do you think he’s sworn to his fate?
- Could love commit such barbarity?
- Cephisa
- Madame, he will soon return in fury.
- Andromache
- Well! Go tell him…
- Cephisa
- What? Of your affection?
- Andromache
- Must I then pretend to that emotion?
- O my husband’s ashes! Trojans! Father!
- O son, what your life will cost your mother!
- Come.
- Cephisa
- Where Madame, what do you now intend?
- Andromache
- At his tomb I’ll go consult my husband.