The Seven Plays in English Verse eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 345 pages of information about The Seven Plays in English Verse.
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The Seven Plays in English Verse eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 345 pages of information about The Seven Plays in English Verse.

PHI.  And is this thine intent?

NEO.  ’Tis so ordained
Unchangeably.  Be not dismayed!  ’Tis so.

PHI.  Me miserable!  I am betrayed, undone! 
What guile is here?  My bow! give back my bow!

NEO.  I may not.  Interest, and duty too,
Force me to obey commandment.

PHI.  O thou fire,
Thou terror of the world!  Dark instrument
Of ever-hateful guile!—­What hast thou done? 
How thou hast cheated me!  Art not ashamed
To look on him that sued to thee for shelter? 
O heart of stone, thou hast stolen my life away
With yonder bow!—­Ah, yet I beg of thee,
Give it me back, my son, I entreat thee, give! 
By all thy father worshipped, rob me not
Of life!—­Ah me!  Now he will speak no more,
But turns away, obdurate to retain it. 
O ye, my comrades in this wilderness,
Rude creatures of the rocks, O promontories,
Creeks, precipices of the hills, to you
And your familiar presence I complain
Of this foul trespass of Achilles’ son. 
Sworn to convey me home, to Troy he bears me. 
And under pledge of his right hand hath ta’en
And holds from me perforce my wondrous bow,
The sacred gift of Zeus-born Heracles,
Thinking to wave it midst the Achaean host
Triumphantly for his.  In conquering me
He vaunts as of some valorous feat, and knows not
He is spoiling a mere corse, an empty dream,
The shadow of a vapour.  In my strength
He ne’er had vanquished me.  Even as I am,
He could not, but by guile.  Now, all forlorn,
I am abused, deceived.  What must I do? 
Nay, give it me.  Nay, yet be thy true self! 
Thou art silent.  I am lost.  O misery! 
Rude face of rock, back I return to thee
And thy twin gateway, robbed of arms and food,
To wither in thy cave companionless:—­
No more with these mine arrows to destroy
Or flying bird or mountain-roving beast. 
But, all unhappy!  I myself must be
The feast of those on whom I fed, the chase
Of that I hunted, and shall dearly pay
In bloody quittance for their death, through one
Who seemed all ignorant of sinful guile. 
Perish,—­not till I am certain if thy heart
Will change once more,—­if not, my curse on thee!

CH.  What shall we do, my lord?  We wait thy word
Or to sail now, or yield to his desire.

NEO.  My heart is pressed with a strange pity for him,
Not now beginning, but long since begun.

PHI.  Ay, pity me, my son! by all above,
Make not thy name a scorn by wronging me!

NEO.  O!  I am troubled sore.  What must I do? 
Would I had never left mine island home!

PHI.  Thou art not base, but seemest to have learnt
Some baseness from base men.  Now, as ’tis meet,
Be better guided—­leave me mine arms, and go.

NEO. (to Chorus). 
What shall we do?

Enter ODYSSEUS.

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The Seven Plays in English Verse from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.