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.
Related Topics

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.

TEU.  Lo! where the hero’s housemate and his child,
Hitting the moment’s need, appear at hand,
To tend the burial of the ill fated dead. 
Come, child, take thou thy station close beside: 
Kneel and embrace the author of thy life,
In solemn suppliant fashion holding forth
This lock of thine own hair, and hers, and mine
With threefold consecration, that if one
Of the army force thee from thy father’s corse,
My curse may banish him from holy ground,
Far from his home, unburied, and cut off
From all his race, even as I cut this curl. 
There, hold him, child, and guard him; let no hand
Stir thee, but lean to the calm breast and cling.
(To CHORUS) And ye, be not like women in this scene,
Nor let your manhoods falter; stand true men
To this defence, till I return prepared,
Though all cry No, to give him burial. [Exit

CHORUS. 
When shall the tale of wandering years be done?  I 1
When shall arise our exile’s latest sun? 
Oh, where shall end the incessant woe
Of troublous spear-encounter with the foe,
    Through this vast Trojan plain,
Of Grecian arms the lamentable stain?

Would he had gone to inhabit the wide sky, I 2
Or that dark home of death where millions lie,
Who taught our Grecian world the way
To use vile swords and knit the dense array! 
    His toil gave birth to toil
In endless line.  He made mankind his spoil.

His tyrant will hath forced me to forgo II 1
The garland, and the goblet’s bounteous flow: 
    Yea, and the flute’s dear noise,
    And night’s more tranquil joys;
    Ay me! nor only these,
    The fruits of golden ease,
But Love, but Love—­O crowning sorrow!—­
Hath ceased for me.  I may not borrow
  Sweet thoughts from him to smooth my dreary bed,
  Where dank night-dews fall ever on my head,
Lest once I might forget the sadness of the morrow.

Even here in Troy, Aias was erst my rock, II 2
From darkling fears and ’mid the battle-shock
    To screen me with huge might: 
    Now he is lost in night
    And horror.  Where again
    Shall gladness heal my pain? 
O were I where the waters hoary,
Round Sunium’s pine-clad promontory,
  Plash underneath the flowery upland height. 
  Then holiest Athens soon would come in sight,
And to Athena’s self I might declare my story.

Enter TEUCER.

TEU.  My steps were hastened, brethren, when I saw
Great Agamemnon hitherward afoot. 
He means to talk perversely, I can tell.

Enter AGAMEMNON.

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