Page:Tragedies of Euripides (Way 1898) v3.djvu/442

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
414
EURIPIDES.

Dionysus.

Now nay—the shrines of Nymphs destroy not thou,
And haunts of Pan that with his piping ring.


Pentheus.

True—true: we must not overcome by force
The women. I will hide me midst the pines.


Dionysus.

Such hiding shall be thine as fate ordains,[1] 955
Who com'st with guile, a spy on Bacchanals.


Pentheus.

Methinks I see them mid the copses caught,
Like birds, in toils of their sweet dalliance.


Dionysus.

To this end then art thou appointed watchman:
Perchance shalt catch them—if they catch not thee. 960


Pentheus.

On through the midst of Thebes' town usher me,
For I, I only of them, dare such deed.


Dionysus.

Alone for Thebes thou travailest, thou alone;
Wherefore for thee wait tug and strain foredoomed.
Follow: all safely will I usher thee. 965
Another thence shall bring thee,—

  1. Henceforth the dialogue is all Tragic Irony, the words of Dionysus bearing one meaning for Pentheus, and another for the audience.