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.

TI.  And ill-sought lucre is the curse of kings.

CR.  Know’st thou ’tis of thy sovereign thou speak’st this?

TI.  Yea, for my aid gives thee to sway this city.

CR.  Far seeing art thou, but dishonest too.

TI.  Thou wilt provoke the utterance of my tongue
To that even thought refused to dwell upon.

CR.  Say on, so thou speak sooth, and not for gain.

TI.  You think me likely to seek gain from you?

CR.  You shall not make your merchandise on me!

TI.  Not many courses of the racing sun
Shalt thou fulfil, ere of thine own true blood
Thou shalt have given a corpse in recompense
For one on earth whom thou hast cast beneath,
Entombing shamefully a living soul,
And one whom thou hast kept above the ground
And disappointed of all obsequies,
Unsanctified and godlessly forlorn. 
Such violence the powers beneath will bear
Not even from the Olympian gods.  For thee
The avengers wait.  Hidden but near at hand,
Lagging but sure, the Furies of the grave
Are watching for thee to thy ruinous harm,
With thine own evil to entangle thee. 
Look well to it now whether I speak for gold! 
A little while, and thine own palace-halls
Shall flash the truth upon thee with loud noise
Of men and women, shrieking o’er the dead. 
And all the cities whose unburied sons,
Mangled and torn, have found a sepulchre
In dogs or jackals or some ravenous bird
That stains their incense with polluted breath,
Are forming leagues in troublous enmity. 
Such shafts, since thou hast stung me to the quick,
I like an archer at thee in my wrath
Have loosed unerringly—­carrying their pang,
Inevitable, to thy very heart. 
Now, sirrah! lead me home, that his hot mood
Be spent on younger objects, till he learn
To keep a safer mind and calmer tongue. [Exit

CH.  Sire, there is terror in that prophecy. 
He who is gone, since ever these my locks,
Once black, now white with age, waved o’er my brow,
Hath never spoken falsely to the state.

CR.  I know it, and it shakes me to the core. 
To yield is dreadful:  but resistingly
To face the blow of fate, is full of dread.

CH.  The time calls loud on wisdom, good my lord.

CR.  What must I do?  Advise me.  I will obey.

CH.  Go and release the maiden from the vault,
And make a grave for the unburied dead.

CR.  Is that your counsel?  Think you I will yield?

CH.  With all the speed thou mayest:  swift harms from heaven
With instant doom o’erwhelm the froward man.

CR.  Oh! it is hard.  But I am forced to this
Against myself.  I cannot fight with Destiny.

CH.  Go now to do it.  Trust no second hand.

CR.  Even as I am, I go.  Come, come, my people. 
Here or not here, with mattocks in your hands
Set forth immediately to yonder hill! 
And, since I have ta’en this sudden turn, myself,
Who tied the knot, will hasten to unloose it. 
For now the fear comes over me, ’tis best
To pass one’s life in the accustomed round. [Exeunt

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