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The Cure at Troy

Page 2

by Seamus Heaney

Troy would have fallen too soon.

  But this is now.

  Philoctetes begins to cry out, offstage.

  Chorus

  Quiet. Wheesht!

  Neoptolemus

  This is the hour of the bow!

  Listen to that …

  He is in awful pain.

  That squeal

  Must be every time he drags his foot.

  Chorus

  Watch out. Get ready.

  Neoptolemus

  How?

  Chorus

  Think of your plan.

  This is not some shepherd in a book

  With his Pan pipes and his shepherd’s crook.

  This is a danger-man.

  That shouting’s desperate and it’s violent.

  He sounds provoked.

  He maybe saw the boat.

  Enter Philoctetes.

  Philoctetes

  What’s this? Who is this here? How did you land?

  What brought you to a deserted island?

  Tell us who you are and where you come from.

  Your clothes look Greek and that warms my heart

  But I need to hear your voices.

  I know I look like a wild animal

  But don’t let that scare you.

  Don’t treat me

  Like an untouchable.

  What I am

  Is what I was made into by the traitors.

  Do the friendly human thing and speak.

  Neoptolemus

  All right.

  I can tell you this:

  What warms your heart

  Warms ours.

  We are Greeks.

  Philoctetes

  Ohh! Hearing you talk,

  just hearing you

  And seeing you –

  you have no idea

  How much that means.

  But who was it sent you?

  Was it only chance?

  Or was there purpose to it?

  Did a wind blow you off course?

  Tell me what happened and who you are.

  Neoptolemus

  The whole story is very short and simple.

  My home-ground is the island of Scyros

  And I am heading for its wave-lashed shores.

  My name is Neoptolemus. Achilles was my father.

  Philoctetes

  Then you are one lucky son, and a lucky sailor

  To be heading for that home. But where are you coming from?

  Neoptolemus

  The walls of Troy. We hoisted sail at Troy.

  Philoctetes

  What’s that you say? You must have been with us.

  Did you not sail with the original Greek force?

  Neoptolemus

  Do you mean to say that you sailed with that force?

  Philoctetes

  Och! Och! Och ho!

  Child, do you not know me?

  Neoptolemus

  How could I know a man I never saw?

  Philoctetes

  And you haven’t even heard my name …?

  Och ho!

  Or heard about the way that I’m afflicted?

  Neoptolemus

  Never. I have no notion

  What all this is about.

  Philoctetes

  Gods curse it!

  But it’s me the gods have cursed.

  They’ve let my name and story be wiped out.

  The real offenders have got away with it

  And I’m still here, rotting like a leper.

  Tell me, son. Achilles was your father.

  Did you ever maybe hear him mentioning

  A man who had inherited a bow –

  The actual bow and arrows that belonged

  To Hercules, and that Hercules gave him?

  Did you never hear, son, about Philoctetes?

  About the snake-bite he got at a shrine

  When the first fleet was voyaging to Troy?

  And then the way he broke out with a sore

  And was marooned on the commander’s orders?

  Let me tell you, son, the way they abandoned me.

  The sea and the sea-swell had me all worn out

  So I dozed and fell asleep under a rock

  Down on the shore.

  And there and then, just like that,

  They headed off.

  And they were delighted.

  And the only thing

  They left me was a bundle of old rags.

  Some day I want them all to waken up

  The way I did that day. Imagine, son.

  The bay all empty. The ships all disappeared.

  Absolute loneliness. Nothing there except

  The beat of the waves and the beat of my raw wound.

  But I had to keep alive. Crawling and twisting

  To get myself down for a drink of water.

  Think of what that was like in the wintertime,

  When the water got iced over. And then I’d have to

  Gather sticks and break them,

  and every day

  Start a fire from scratch, out of two flints.

  Terrible times.

  I managed to come through

  But I never healed.

  My whole life has been

  Just one long cruel parody.

  This island is a nowhere. Nobody

  Would ever put in here. There’s nothing.

  Nothing to attract a lookout’s eye.

  Nobody in his right mind would come near it.

  And the rare ones that ever did turn up

  Landed by accident, against their will.

  They would take pity on me, naturally.

  Share out their supplies and give me clothes.

  But not a one of them would ever, ever

  Take me on board with them to ship me home.

  Every day has been a weeping wound

  For ten years now. Ten years’ misery and starvation –

  That’s all my service ever got for me.

  That’s what I have to thank Odysseus for

  And Menelaus and Agamemnon.

  Gods curse them all!

  I ask for the retribution I deserve.

  I solemnly beseech the gods to strike

  The sons of Atreus in retaliation.

  Chorus

  I know the way those people must have felt

  When they landed here and saw you.

  Neoptolemus

  And I know from experience, Philoctetes,

  That this has the ring of truth. I know

  What Odysseus and that whole crowd are like.

  Philoctetes

  How is that?

  Have you a score to settle with them too?

  Neoptolemus

  I’ll choke them all some day with my two bare hands

  And let them know that Scyros is a match

  For Sparta and Mycenae put together.

  Philoctetes

  More power to you, child!

  But what brought you here

  If you’re so desperate to be after them?

  Neoptolemus

  I’ll tell you – though you of all men know

  What it’s like when you’ve been humiliated.

  Still, humiliate me was what they did.

  After my father died, there came a day …

  Philoctetes

  Achilles died?

  Achilles?

  How? What happened?

  Neoptolemus

  Human enemies did not slay Achilles.

  It was the great god Apollo.

  Philoctetes

  No shame, in that event, on either side …

  Your father, dead. I’m heartbroken for him.

  Neoptolemus

  You have heartbreak enough, Philoctetes,

  Without starting to take on another man’s.

  Philoctetes

  You’re right.

  You are right.

  So keep on with the story.

  Neoptolemus

  My father’s foster-father
and Odysseus

  Landed from Troy in a freshly rigged-out boat.

  They had crucial information, they maintained,

  And to this day I cannot be sure

  If it was lies or the truth.

  What they said

  Was this:

  With Achilles gone,

  I was the destined one, the only man

  Who could ever take the citadel of Troy.

  So, naturally, I went straight into action.

  There was the Greek cause, and –

  inevitably –

  There was my father.

  I wanted to see

  My father’s body before they buried him.

  And behind all that, maybe there was the lure

  Of being the one who would take the citadel.

  Well. After two days’ good sailing,

  We disembarked on the shore at Sigeum

  And it was a great moment.

  The whole army

  Gathered to salute me, everybody declared

  It was just like seeing Achilles in the flesh,

  Alive again.

  But Achilles was a corpse.

  I mourned him. I took my last look at him

  And then went to the sons of Atreus

  As friends of mine, for how could they not be?

  I made the formal claim for my father’s armour

  And whatever else was due to me. But they

  Violated every law and custom

  And said, yes, I could have the personal effects,

  But Achilles’ arms were being worn already

  By another man. By Laertes’ son, in fact,

  Odysseus himself. And that put me wild.

  I raved and cried, then I asked them simply, why?

  Why were the weapons not reserved for me?

  So who pipes up but Odysseus himself

  And says because he was present on the spot

  And saved the arms and saved my father’s body,

  He was entitled.

  And that put me wilder still.

  I had a fit. I savaged him to his face

  And insulted him and cursed him. But he comes up –

  Not out of control, but definitely provoked –

  And he says to me,

  ‘We bore the brunt, not you.

  When you should have been with us, you went missing.

  So rant and rave your fill, but you will never

  Be seen in your famous armour on Scyros Island.’

  That was enough. There was nothing else to do

  But turn round for home, humiliated

  By the lowest of the low.

  But Odysseus

  In the end is less responsible

  Than the ones who held command.

  People in high office are bound to rule

  By the force of their example. Bad actions come

  From being badly influenced. What you see

  Is what you do yourself.

  Anyway.

  That’s all I have to say. But you’ll understand

  Why I consider anyone a friend

  That suffered at the hands of that alliance.

  Chorus

  I asked the ground to open under them,

  Menelaus and Agamemnon,

  When they demeaned this man.

  They robbed him of his father’s arms. But worse:

  They robbed him of dignity. He lost face.

  He was openly insulted by Odysseus.

  I asked Earth herself, the mother of Zeus,

  The mistress of the bull-killing lions,

  Native of gold Patroclus, spirit of mountains.

  Philoctetes

  Well, there’s nothing I can teach you

  You don’t know already. Odysseus

  Is contemptible and plausible and dangerous.

  And always was. But what about Ajax?

  I am astonished Ajax made no moves.

  Did he take no hand at all?

  Neoptolemus

  Ajax, friend, had died before this started.

  If he had been alive, the arms were mine.

  Philoctetes

  Say that again, child. Ajax is dead and gone?

  Neoptolemus

  Ajax has gone away out of the light.

  Philoctetes

  And the ones that never should have seen the light

  Are thriving still.

  Neoptolemus

  They are.

  The whole seed, breed and generation of them.

  The biggest names in the Greek army now.

  Philoctetes

  But there was one good influence. One good man.

  Nestor. My friend, old Nestor of Pyleus.

  What has become of him?

  Neoptolemus

  He’s losing ground.

  His son, Antilochus, was a casualty

  And that weakened Nestor’s own position.

  Philoctetes

  This is terrible news. Of all people,

  Those two are the last I’d want to think of

  Being dead. But they are the ones, of course.

  And the one man that does deserve to die –

  Odysseus – Odysseus walks free.

  Neoptolemus

  Odysseus can outfox most opposition.

  But long runs the fox that isn’t caught at last.

  Philoctetes

  Gods! I forgot! Patroclus. Where was Patroclus

  When you needed him? Where was your father’s friend?

  Neoptolemus

  Philoctetes. Let me educate you

  In one short sentence. War has an appetite

  For human goodness but it won’t touch the bad.

  Philoctetes

  I’m not going to contradict you there. No,

  But there was a certain

  Gifted, sharp-tongued, useless nobody –

  Neoptolemus

  You mean Odysseus?

  Philoctetes

  No. Not him.

  But a man you couldn’t bear to listen to

  And therefore the man you had to listen to

  Incessantly. I mean Thersites.

  Neoptolemus

  I didn’t see him. But I know he’s still alive.

  Philoctetes

  Of course. Of course. What else could you expect?

  The gods do grant immunity, you see,

  To everybody except the true and the just.

  The more of a plague you are, and the crueller,

  The better your chances of being turned away

  From the doors of death. Whose side are gods on?

  What are human beings to make of them?

  How am I to keep on praising gods

  If they keep disappointing me, and never

  Match the good on my side with their good?

  Neoptolemus

  One thing’s certain in all this. I intend

  To get very far away from that crew camped at Troy.

  Once sharks and tramps start being in charge,

  All ordinary decency is gone.

  In future, the rocks and backwardness

  Of my old home will mean far more to me …

  Which is why I’m bound for Scyros. I have to go

  Back down to the ship now. I am sorry,

  Philoctetes, but I must say goodbye.

  I hope the gods relent and your sores get cured.

  We have to head on. Goodbye again, my friend.

  Philoctetes

  Are you going away again as soon as this?

  Neoptolemus

  We are. The minute the weather’s right.

  We have to be standing by for speedy boarding.

  Philoctetes

  No. Wait, son. Listen. And when I ask

  What I am asking of you now, remember

  Your own father and mother.

  You know how your heart lifts when you think of home?

  Well, think of what it’s like to be me here,

  Always homesick, abandoned every time.

 
; Take me with you. As a passenger.

  The state I’m in, I know I’m the last thing

  A crew would want on board. But, do it, son,

  Even so. Make yourself go through with it.

  Generous people should follow their instincts.

  Saying no is not your natural way

  And even if you do, you’ll suffer for it.

  So go with your impulse, take me to Oeta,

  And you’ll be proud, and people will be proud

  Of you.

  You could do it all in a day.

  One single day. You can stow me anywhere.

  The hold. The stern. Up under the prow.

  Wherever I’m the least bother to the men.

  Come on now, son. It’s in you to do this.

  You’re not going to leave a wounded man behind.

  I’m on my knees to you, look, and me not fit

  To move hardly. I’m lamed for life. I’m done.

  Take me out of here. Take me home with you

  To your place, or somewhere in Euboea.

  It’ll be easy from there to get to Oeta,

  And the Trachinian Hills and the Sperchius,

  The River Sperchius, flowing away there still.

  And my father too.

  So long ago, my father.

  But I am afraid, not any more.

  Time

  After time, when they would sail away,

  I would send word. But my predicament

  Was the last thing on their minds. So probably

  He never got my news. Or else he’s dead.

  But you’ll take my message this time, and take me

  As well.

  Life is shaky. Never, son, forget

  How risky and slippy things are in this world.

  Walk gently when the cup’s full, and don’t ever

 

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