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the heroes-第28部分

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n to the prison; and told him all her  heart; and said …

'Flee down to your ship at once; for I have bribed the guards  before the door。  Flee; you and all your friends; and go back  in peace to Greece; and take me; take me with you! for I dare  not stay after you are gone; for my father will kill me  miserably; if he knows what I have done。'

And Theseus。 stood silent awhile; for he was astonished and  confounded by her beauty:  but at last he said; 'I cannot go  home in peace; till I have seen and slain this Minotaur; and  avenged the deaths of the youths and maidens; and put an end  to the terrors of my land。'

'And will you kill the Minotaur?  How; then?'

'I know not; nor do I care:  but he must be strong if he be  too strong for me。'

Then she loved him all the more; and said; 'But when you have  killed him; how will you find your way out of the labyrinth?'

'I know not; neither do I care:  but it must be a strange  road; if I do not find it out before I have eaten up the  monster's carcase。'

Then she loved him all the more; and said … 'Fair youth; you  are too bold; but I can help you; weak as I am。  I will give  you a sword; and with that perhaps you may slay the beast;  and a clue of thread; and by that; perhaps; you may find your  way out again。  Only promise me that if you escape safe you  will take me home with you to Greece; for my father will  surely kill me; if he knows what I have done。'

Then Theseus laughed; and said; 'Am I not safe enough now?'   And he hid the sword in his bosom; and rolled up the clue in  his hand; and then he swore to Ariadne; and fell down before  her; and kissed her hands and her feet; and she wept over him  a long while; and then went away; and Theseus lay down and  slept sweetly。

And when the evening came; the guards came in and led him  away to the labyrinth。

And he went down into that doleful gulf; through winding  paths among the rocks; under caverns; and arches; and  galleries; and over heaps of fallen stone。  And he turned on  the left hand; and on the right hand; and went up and down;  till his head was dizzy; but all the while he held his clue。   For when he went in he had fastened it to a stone; and left  it to unroll out of his hand as he went on; and it lasted him  till he met the Minotaur; in a narrow chasm between black  cliffs。

And when he saw him he stopped awhile; for he had never seen  so strange a beast。  His body was a man's:  but his head was  the head of a bull; and his teeth were the teeth of a lion;  and with them he tore his prey。  And when he saw Theseus he  roared; and put his head down; and rushed right at him。

But Theseus stept aside nimbly; and as he passed by; cut him  in the knee; and ere he could turn in the narrow path; he  followed him; and stabbed him again and again from behind;  till the monster fled bellowing wildly; for he never before  had felt a wound。  And Theseus followed him at full speed;  holding the clue of thread in his left hand。

Then on; through cavern after cavern; under dark ribs of  sounding stone; and up rough glens and torrent…beds; among  the sunless roots of Ida; and to the edge of the eternal  snow; went they; the hunter and the hunted; while the hills  bellowed to the monster's bellow。

And at last Theseus came up with him; where he lay panting on  a slab among the snow; and caught him by the horns; and  forced his head back; and drove the keen sword through his  throat。

Then he turned; and went back limping and weary; feeling his  way down by the clue of thread; till he came to the mouth of  that doleful place and saw waiting for him; whom but Ariadne!

And he whispered 'It is done!' and showed her the sword; and  she laid her finger on her lips; and led him to the prison;  and opened the doors; and set all the prisoners free; while  the guards lay sleeping heavily; for she had silenced them  with wine。

Then they fled to their ship together; and leapt on board;  and hoisted up the sail; and the night lay dark around them;  so that they passed through Minos' ships; and escaped all  safe to Naxos; and there Ariadne became Theseus' wife。


PART IV … HOW THESEUS FELL BY HIS PRIDE


BUT that fair Ariadne never came to Athens with her husband。   Some say that Theseus left her sleeping on Naxos among the  Cyclades; and that Dionusos the wine…king found her; and took  her up into the sky; as you shall see some day in a painting  of old Titian's … one of the most glorious pictures upon  earth。  And some say that Dionusos drove away Theseus; and  took Ariadne from him by force:  but however that may be; in  his haste or in his grief; Theseus forgot to put up the white  sail。  Now AEgeus his father sat and watched on Sunium day  after day; and strained his old eyes across the sea to see  the ship afar。  And when he saw the black sail; and not the  white one; he gave up Theseus for dead; and in his grief he  fell into the sea; and died; so it is called the AEgean to  this day。

And now Theseus was king of Athens; and he guarded it and  ruled it well。

For he killed the bull of Marathon; which had killed  Androgeos; Minos' son; and he drove back the famous Amazons;  the warlike women of the East; when they came from Asia; and  conquered all Hellas; and broke into Athens itself。  But  Theseus stopped them there; and conquered them; and took  Hippolute their queen to be his wife。  Then he went out to  fight against the Lapithai; and Peirithoos their famous king:   but when the two heroes came face to face they loved each  other; and embraced; and became noble friends; so that the  friendship of Theseus and Peirithoos is a proverb even now。   And he gathered (so the Athenians say) all the boroughs of  the land together; and knit them into one strong people;  while before they were all parted and weak:  and many another  wise thing he did; so that his people honoured him after he  was dead; for many a hundred years; as the father of their  freedom and their laws。  And six hundred years after his  death; in the famous fight at Marathon; men said that they  saw the ghost of Theseus; with his mighty brazen club;  fighting in the van of battle against the invading Persians;  for the country which he loved。  And twenty years after  Marathon his bones (they say) were found in Scuros; an isle  beyond the sea; and they were bigger than the bones of mortal  man。  So the Athenians brought them home in triumph; and all  the people came out to welcome them; and they built over them  a noble temple; and adorned it with sculptures and paintings  in which we are told all the noble deeds of Theseus; and the  Centaurs; and the Lapithai; and the Amazons; and the ruins of  it are standing still。

But why did they find his bones in Scuros?  Why did he not  die in peace at Athens; and sleep by his father's side?   Because after his triumph he grew proud; and broke the laws  of God and man。  And one thing worst of all he did; which  brought him to his grave with sorrow。  For he went down (they  say beneath the earth) with that bold Peirithoos his friend  to help him to carry off Persephone; the queen of the world  below。  But Peirithoos was killed miserably; in the dark  fire…kingdoms under ground; and Theseus was chained to a rock  in everlasting pain。  And there he sat for years; till  Heracles the mighty came down to bring up the three…headed  dog who sits at Pluto's gate。  So Heracles loosed him from  his chain; and brought him up to the light once more。

But when he came back his people had forgotten him; and  Castor and Polydeuces; the sons of the wondrous Swan; had  invaded his land; and carried off his mother Aithra for a  slave; in revenge for a grievous wrong。

So the fair land of Athens was wasted; and another king ruled  it; who drove out Theseus shamefully; and he fled across the  sea to Scuros。  And there he lived in sadness; in the house  of Lucomedes the king; till Lucomedes killed him by  treachery; and there was an end of all his labours。

So it is still; my children; and so it will be to the end。   In those old Greeks; and in us also; all strength and virtue  come from God。  But if men grow proud and self…willed; and  misuse God's fair gifts; He lets them go their own ways; and  fall pitifully; that the glory may be His alone。  God help us  all; and give us wisdom; and courage to do noble deeds! but  God keep pride from us when we have done them; lest we fall;  and come to shame!



Footnotes:

(1) In the Elgin Marbles。 (2) The Danube。 (3) Between the Crimaea and Circassia。 (4) The Sea of Azov。 (5) The Ural Mountains? (6) The Baltic? (7) Britain? (8) The Azores?




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