Oedipus Plays: Oedipus at Colonus, Quotes

Lines 1-576 Quotes

Off and gone from the land—before you fix
some greater penalty on our city.
– Chorus, 250–251 (Fagles)

Look through all humanity: you’ll never find
a man on earth, if a god leads him on,
who can escape his fate.
– Oedipus, 266–268 (Fagles)

Never honor the gods in one breath
and take the gods for fools the next
– Oedipus 298–299 (Fagles)

Lines 577-1192 Quotes

Never, I tell you, I will never shrink
from a stranger, lost as you are now,
or fail to lend a hand to save a life.
I am only a man, well I know,
and I have no more power over tomorrow,
Oedipus, than you.
– Theseus, 636–641 (Fagles)

Oh Athens, praised above any land on earth,
now turn your glowing praises into action!
– Antigone, 818–819 (Fagles)

Now, by our fathers’ gods, listen to me,
hide your own disgrace, consent—
return to Thebes, the house of your fathers!
– Creon, 859–861 (Fagles)

That’s precisely how your offers strike me now:
your words like honey—your actions, drawn swords.
– Oedipus, 890–891 (Fagles)

Given time, you’ll see this well, I know:
you do yourself no good, not now, not years ago,
indulging your rage despite the pleas of loved ones—
blind rage has always been your ruin.
– Creon, 973–976 (Fagles)

You have come to a city that practices justice,
that sanctions nothing without law, but you,
you flout our authorities, make your inroads,
seize your prizes, commandeer at will!
Tell me, did you imagine Athens stripped of men,
peopled by slaves? Myself worth nothing?
– Theseus, 1040–1045 (Fagles)

My isolation
leaves me weak, however just my cause.
But opposing you, old as I am,
I’ll stop at nothing, match you blow for blow.
A mans’ anger can never age and fade away,
not until he dies. The dead alone feel no pain.
– Creon, 1089–1094 (Fagles)

And if,
once I’d come to the world of pain, as come I did,
I fell to blows with my father, cut him down in blood—
blind to what I was doing, blind to whom I killed—
how could you condemn that involuntary act
with any sense of justice?
– Oedipus, 1112–1117 (Fagles)

So now I cry to those Great Goddesses,
I beg them, I storm them with my prayers—
Come to the rescue, fight for me, my champions!
So you can learn your lesson, Creon, learn
what breed of men stands guard around this city.
– Oedipus, 1155–1159 (Fagles)

Lines 1193-1645 Quotes

Like a seer I sense the glory in these struggles—
Rush me, wing me into the whirlwind, O dear god,
like a dove at the thunderheads of heaven I’d look down
I’d scan these struggles, I would see their glory.
– Chorus, (1226–1229)

May the gods reward you just as I desire,
you and your great country. Here among you,
you alone of all mankind—
I have discovered reverence, humanity
and lips that never lie.
– Oedipus, 1275–1279 (Fagles)

And how the fight was won—
why fill the air with empty boasting?
– Theseus, 1303–1304 (Fagles)

It isn’t good for men with a decent cause
to beg too long, or a man to receive help,
then fail to treat a fellow victim kindly.
– Antigone, 1366–1368 (Fagles)

Show me a man who longs to live a day beyond his time
who turns his back on a decent length of life,
I’ll show the world a man who clings to folly.
– Chorus, 1378–1380 (Fagles)

Not to be born is best
when all is reckoned in, but once a man has seen the light
the next best thing, by far, is to go back
back where he came from, quickly as he can.
– Chorus, 1388–1391 (Fagles)

You—die!
Die and be damned!
I spit on you! Out!—
your father cuts you off! Corruption—scum of the earth!—
out!—and pack these curses I call down upon your head:
never to win you mother-country with your spear,
never return to Argos ringed with hills—
Die!
Die by your own blood brother’s hand—die!—
killing the very man who drove you out!
So I curse your life out!
– Oedipus, 1567–1574 (Fagles)

Goodbye, dear ones.
You’ll never look on me again, alive.
– Polynices, 1631–1632 (Fagles)

Lines 1646-2001 Quotes

Dearest friend,
you and your country and your loyal followers,
may you be blessed with greatness,
and in your great day remember me, the dead,
the root of all your greatness, everlasting, ever-new.
– Oedipus, 1761–1765 (Fagles)

God of eternal sleep, I call to you,
let Oedipus rest forever.
– Chorus, 1788–1789 (Fagles)

And then, quickly,
we see him bow and kiss the ground and stretch
his arms to the skies, salute the gods of Olympus
and the power of the Earth in one great prayer,
binding both together.
– Messenger, 1875–1879 (Fagles)