Antigone Ode # 1
CHORUS: Numberless are the world's wonders, but none
More
wonderful than man; the storm grey sea
Yields to his prows
; the huge crests bear him high;
Earth, holy and inexhaustible, is
graven
With
shining furrows where his plows have gone
Year after year, the
timeless labor of stallions.

The
light-boned birds and beasts that cling to cover,
The
lithe fish lighting their reaches of dim water,
All are taken,
tamed in the net of his mind;
The
lion on the hill, the wild horse windy-maned,
Resign to him; and his blunt yoke has broken
The
sultry shoulders of the mountain bull.

Words also and thought as rapid as air,
He fashions to his
good use; statecraft is his,
And his the
skill that deflects arrows of snow,
The
spears of winter rain: from every wind
He has made himself secure--from all but one:
In the late wind of
death he cannot stand.

O clear
intelligence, force beyond all measure!
O
fate of man, working both good and evil!
When the
laws are kept, how proudly his city stands!
When the laws are
broken, what of his city then?
Never may the
anarchic man find rest at my hearth,
Never be it said that my thoughts are his thoughts.