Page:Tragedies of Euripides (Way 1898) v3.djvu/424

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396
EURIPIDES.

Chorus.

Hail to thee, to us the mightiest light of Evian revelry!
With what rapture, late so lonely and forlorn, I look on thee!


Dionysus.

Ha, and did your hearts for terror fail you when I passed within, 610
Deeming I should sink to darkness, caught in Pentheus' dungeon-gin?


Chorus.

Wherefore not? What shield had I, if thou into mischance shouldst fall?
Nay, but how didst thou escape, who wast a godless tyrant's thrall?


Dionysus.

I myself myself delivered, lightly, with nor toil nor strain.


Chorus.

Nay, but bound he not thine hands with coiling mesh of chain on chain? 615


Dionysus.

My derision there I made him, that he deemed he fettered me,
Yet nor touched me, neither grasped me, fed on empty phantasy.
Nay, a bull beside the stalls he found where he would pen me fast:
Round the knees and round the hoofs of this he 'gan his cords to cast,