THE. How then should they require thee to go
near,
And yet dwell separate?
OED. The voice of Heaven
Will drive them to it.
THE. As fearing what reverse
Prophetically told?
OED. Destined defeat
By Athens in the Athenian land.
THE. What source
Of bitterness ’twixt us and Thebes can rise?
OED. Dear son of Aegeus, to the Gods alone
Comes never Age nor Death. All else i’
the world
Time, the all subduer, merges in oblivion.
Earth and men’s bodies weaken, fail, and perish.
Faith withers, breach of faith springs up and glows
And neither men nor cities that are friends
Breathe the same spirit with continuing breath.
Love shall be turned to hate, and hate to love
With many hereafter, as with some to-day.
And though, this hour, between great Thebes and thee
No cloud be in the heaven, yet moving Time
Enfolds a countless brood of days to come,
Wherein for a light cause they shall destroy
Your now harmonious league with severing war,
Even where my slumbering form, buried in death,
Coldly shall drink the life blood of my foes,
If Zeus be Zeus, and his son Phoebus true.
I would not speak aloud of mysteries.
Then let me leave where I began. Preserve
Thine own good faith, and thou shalt never say,
Unless Heaven’s promise fail me, that for nought
Athens took Oedipus to dwell with her.
CH. My lord, long since the stranger hath professed
Like augury of blessings to our land.
THE. And who would dare reject his proffered
good?
Whose bond with us of warrior amity
Hath ne’er been sundered,—and to
day he comes
A God-sent suppliant, whose sacred hand
Is rich with gifts for Athens and for me.
In reverent heed whereof I ne’er will scorn
The boon he brings, but plant him in our land.
And if it please our friend to linger here,
Ye shall protect him:—if to go with me
Best likes thee, Oedipus,—ponder, and use
Thy preference. For my course shall join with
thine.
OED. Ye Heavens, reward such excellence!
THE. How,
then?
Is it thy choice now to go home with me?
OED. Yea, were it lawful. But in this same spot—
THE. What wouldst thou do? I’ll not withstand thy will.
OED. I must have victory o’er my banishers.
THE. Thy dwelling with us, then, is our great gain?
OED. Yes, if thou fail me not, but keep thy word.
THE. Nay, fear not me! I will aye be true to thee.
OED. I will not bind thee, like a knave, with oaths.
THE. Oaths were no stronger than my simple word.
OED. What will ye do, then?
THE. What is that thou fearest?
OED. They will come hither.