The Persians

by Aeschylus
Themes and Colors
War, Nationalism, and Propaganda Theme Icon
Humility vs. Hubris Theme Icon
Faith and Endurance Theme Icon
Performance, Grief, and Community Theme Icon
Gendered Roles and Loss Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Persians, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Faith and Endurance Theme Icon
Faith and Endurance Theme Icon

Aeschylus’s The Persians, a Greek drama from 472 BCE, follows the Queen of Persia and her son Xerxes in the aftermath of a devastating loss against the Greeks at the Battle of Salamis. When a Messenger brings news of the carnage Persian soldiers have suffered, the Queen’s council of advisors (who double as the play’s Greek Chorus) lament that all hope is lost. But even as the Queen fears for her son and aches for all the soldiers who have been killed, she refuses to let her grief overtake her. Instead, she reminds the Chorus that just as happiness is only temporary, the worst moments in life will also pass (“when a flood of evil comes, we tend to fear for everything; […] when a god provides an easy voyage, we think that fortune’s never-changing wind will blow forever”). And to survive life’s most difficult moments, the Queen turns to solace in her faith, calling both on the spirit of her dead husband King Darius and on the gods themselves.

On the one hand, The Persians uses Xerxes’s tragic defeat to illustrate that those who flout the gods are sure to meet with misery. On the other hand, the Queen and Darius seem to demonstrate that those who engage in dutiful religious practice—offering sacrifice and libations, saying prayers, and treating the gods with “awe and reverence”—can find peace and stability even in the most troubled times. In one particularly touching moment, the Queen learn that Xerxes has ripped his clothing (his “robes”) in shame at his defeat. But rather than giving up on her humiliated son, the Queen insists that “when evils fall on those we dearly love, we never will betray them.” Not only does the Queen herself find solace in prayer, but that faith then allows her to give strength to others, helping those whom she “dearly loves” to endure alongside her.

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Faith and Endurance Quotes in The Persians

Below you will find the important quotes in The Persians related to the theme of Faith and Endurance.

The Persians Quotes

CHORUS, ANTISTROPHE A: And the furious leader the herd
of populous Asia he drives,
wonderful over the earth,
and admirals stern and rough
marshals of men he trusts:
gold his descent from Perseus,
he is the equal of a god.

CHORUS, STROPHE B: In his eyes lazuli flashing
like a snake’s murderous glances,
with his mariners, warriors, many,
and his Syrian chariot driving,
hard on the glorious spearmen
the archer Ares he leads.

CHORUS, ANTISTROPHE B: To the great torrent of heroes
there is none worthily equal,
who resist, by defenses secured,
the unconquerable billows of ocean:
Persians are never defeated,
the people tempered and brave.

Related Characters: Chorus of Persian Elders (speaker), Ares , Xerxes, King of Persia
Page Number and Citation: 22
Explanation and Analysis:

QUEEN: Thus in the night these visions
I dreamed: but when, arisen, I touched the springs’
fair-flowing waters, approached the altar, wishing
to offer sacrifice religiously
to guardian deities, whose rites these are,
then to Phoebus’ hearth I saw an eagle fleeing.
Dumb in dread I stood: a falcon swooped
upon him, its wings in flight, its claws plucked
At his head: he did no more than cower, hare-like.
Those were my terrors to see, and yours to hear.

Related Characters: Queen of Persia (speaker), Chorus of Persian Elders , Xerxes, King of Persia
Related Symbols: Eagles vs. Falcons
Page Number and Citation: 25
Explanation and Analysis:

CHORUS LEADER: Queen mother, excessive fear
or confidence we do not wish to give you.
If your dreams were ominous, approach
the gods with supplications; pray that these
be unfulfilled, and blessings be fulfilled
for you, your son, your city, and your friends.
Next you must pour libations to the Earth
and the dead: and beg Darius, of whom you dreamed,
to send those blessings from the nether world
to light, for you and your son; and to hide
in darkness evils contrary, retained
within the earth. Propitious be your prayers.

Related Characters: Chorus Leader (speaker), Chorus of Persian Elders , Queen of Persia, Ghost of Darius , Xerxes, King of Persia
Related Symbols: Eagles vs. Falcons
Page Number and Citation: 26
Explanation and Analysis:

CHORUS, STROPHE C: Raise a mournful, doleful cry
for Persians wretched:
all they made, all woe.
Alas! the host destroyed.

MESSENGER: O most hateful name of Salamis!
O woe! how I groan recalling Athens.

CHORUS, ANTISTROPHE C: Athens hateful to her foes.
Recall how many
Persian women are widowed,
and mothers have lost their sons.

QUEEN: Long am I silent, alas! struck down
by disasters exceeding speech and question.
Yet humans must perforce endure misfortunes
that are sent by the gods.

Related Characters: Chorus of Persian Elders (speaker), Persian Messenger (speaker), Queen of Persia (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 29
Explanation and Analysis:

MESSENGER: Either an avenger or a wicked
god, my lady (whence it came I know not),
began the whole disaster. From Athenian
ranks a Greek approached, addressing Xerxes
thud: “When the gloom of blackest night
will fall, the Greeks will not remain, but leap
to their rowing benches, and each by secret course
will save his life.” And he your son, upon
his hearing this, in ignorance of Greek
guile and the jealousy of gods,
harangued his captains publicly: “As soon
as sunlit rays no longer burn the earth,
[…] rank the swarm of ships in three flotillas:
have them guard the entrances, the straits sea-pound;
and girdle others round Ajax’ island.
But if the Greeks escape their evil doom,
contriving secret flight, all your heads
will roll. I warrant it.” So he spoke
in confident pride: of the god-given future
he knew nothing.

Related Characters: Persian Messenger (speaker), Queen of Persia, Ghost of Darius , Xerxes, King of Persia
Page Number and Citation: 32
Explanation and Analysis:

QUEEN: Ah! woe is me, the army all destroyed.
O bright night’s spectacle of dreams,
how clearly you foresaw my woe,
and you, my counselors, how poorly you have judged.
But yet, as you counseled thus,
first to the gods I’ll offer prayer; and then
to Earth and the dead I’ll come to offer gifts
from the house, a rich libation. I know I pray
for what is done and gone, but a brighter
fortune, in time to come, may there yet be.

Related Characters: Queen of Persia (speaker), Persian Messenger , Chorus of Persian Elders , Ghost of Darius , Xerxes, King of Persia
Page Number and Citation: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

QUEEN: My friends, if one’s experienced in troubles,
One knows that, when a flood of evil comes,
we tend to fear for everything; but when
a god provides an easy voyage, we think
that fortune’s never-ending wind will blow
forever. So now, to me all things are full of the fear
and visions from the gods assail my eyes,
and my ears already ring with cureless songs:
thus consternation terrifies my sense.
Therefore I departed from the palace,
returning here, unaccompanied
by chariots, by pomp and ceremony:
to the father of my son I bring
libations, propitious offerings for the dead.

Related Characters: Queen of Persia (speaker), Chorus of Persian Elders
Page Number and Citation: 41
Explanation and Analysis:

DARIUS: All human beings suffer human troubles;
and many woes arise, some from the sea,
and others from the land, to those who live
a longer span of life.

Related Characters: Ghost of Darius (speaker), Queen of Persia, Chorus of Persian Elders
Page Number and Citation: 44
Explanation and Analysis:

DARIUS: So now a fountain of troubles has been found
for all those that I care for; and my son
is the one who discovered it, in ignorance.
He hoped, in youthful confidence, to check
he sacred waters of the Hellespont
by chains, as if it were a slave. […] Mortal though he was,
in folly he thought to master all the gods,
including Poseidon. Wasn’t his mind diseased?
So now I fear the wealth I labored so
to acquire will fall prey to the conquerors.

[…] So his deed is done, great and unforgettable!
Never had anyone before made this city
Sousa so empty and so desolate,
since Zeus, our lord, bestowed that honor:
one man to wield the scepter of authority
over all of Asia, rich in flocks.

Related Characters: Ghost of Darius (speaker), Queen of Persia, Zeus , Xerxes, King of Persia
Page Number and Citation: 46
Explanation and Analysis:

DARIUS: There are no half-measures
in the outcome of the prophecies—either all
or none come true. In which case, he has left,
behind in Greece, trusting his empty hopes,
chosen numbers of his host, now stationed
where Asopus floods the plain and gives rich nurture
for Boeotian crops; there they’ll suffer soon
the lowest depths of woe, as final payment
for insolent acts and godless arrogance.
Invading Greece, they felt no awe or reverence;
they did not hesitate to plunder images
of gods and put their temples to the torch;
altars were no more, and statues of divinities
were uprooted and torn right off their bases
in utter confusion. Thus having acted wickedly
they now no less are suffering in return.

Related Characters: Ghost of Darius (speaker), Xerxes, King of Persia
Page Number and Citation: 48
Explanation and Analysis:

DARIUS: And corpses, piled up like sand, shall witness
mute, even to generations to come,
before the eyes of men, that never, being
mortal, ought we to cast our thoughts too high.
Insolence, once blossoming, will bear
its fruit, a tasseled field of doom, from which
a deadly harvest must be reaped, all tears.
Behold the punishment of these! Remember
Greece and Athens! Lest anyone disdain
his present fortune, lusting after more,
and end up squandering great prosperity.
Zeus is the chastener of overboastful
minds, a grievous corrector. Therefore advise
my son, admonished by reason, to be wise
and cease his overboastful temper from
sinning against the gods. And you, aged
mother of Xerxes, go to the palace;
gather up rich and brilliant clothes, and go
to meet your son; for he, in grief, has rent
his embroidered robes to shreds.

Related Characters: Ghost of Darius (speaker), Zeus , Queen of Persia, Xerxes, King of Persia
Related Symbols: Xerxes’s Torn Robes
Page Number and Citation: 49
Explanation and Analysis:

QUEEN: O god! How many sorrows move against me!
But one torment bites me deepest of all,
to hear how such dishonor holds my son’s
body and its robes. So I shall go
to gather proper clothing, and try to meet
him as he comes. When evils fall on those
we dearly love, never shall we betray them.

Related Characters: Queen of Persia (speaker), Persian Messenger , Ghost of Darius , Xerxes, King of Persia
Related Symbols: Xerxes’s Torn Robes
Page Number and Citation: 50
Explanation and Analysis:

XERXES, STROPHE B (singing): Ionian Ares triumphed,
protector of their ships,
their partisan in war,
reaping gloomy flats of sea
and demon-haunted shores.

Related Characters: Xerxes, King of Persia (speaker), Chorus of Persian Elders , Ares
Page Number and Citation: 53
Explanation and Analysis: