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.
Spared not the goad, each eager to outgo
The crowded axles and the snorting steeds;
For close about his nimbly circling wheels
And stooping sides fell flakes of panted foam. 
Orestes, ever nearest at the turn,
With whirling axle seemed to graze the stone,
And loosing with free rein the right-hand steed
That pulled the side-rope[5], held the near one in. 
  So for a time all chariots upright moved,
But soon the Oetaean’s hard-mouthed horses broke
From all control, and wheeling as they passed
From the sixth circuit to begin the seventh,
Smote front to front against the Barcan car. 
And when that one disaster had befallen,
Each dashed against his neighbour and was thrown,
Till the whole plain was strewn with chariot-wreck. 
Then the Athenian, skilled to ply the rein,
Drew on one side, and heaving to, let pass
The rider-crested surge that rolled i’ the midst. 
Meanwhile Orestes, trusting to the end,
Was driving hindmost with tight rein; but now,
Seeing him left the sole competitor,
Hurling fierce clamour through his steeds, pursued: 
So drave they yoke by yoke—­now this, now that
Pulling ahead with car and team.  Orestes,
Ill-fated one, each previous course had driven
Safely without a check, but after this,
In letting loose again the left-hand rein[6],
He struck the edge of the stone before he knew,
Shattering the axle’s end, and tumbled prone,
Caught in the reins[7], that dragged him with sharp thongs. 
Then as he fell to the earth the horses swerved,
And roamed the field.  The people when they saw
Him fallen from out the car, lamented loud
For the fair youth, who had achieved before them
Such glorious feats, and now had found such woe,—­
Dashed on the ground, then tossed with legs aloft
Against the sky,—­until the charioteers,
Hardly restraining the impetuous team,
Released him, covered so with blood that none,—­
No friend who saw—­had known his hapless form. 
Which then we duly burned upon the pyre. 
And straightway men appointed to the task
From all the Phocians bear his mighty frame—­
Poor ashes! narrowed in a brazen urn,—­
That he may find in his own fatherland
His share of sepulture.—­Such our report,
Painful to hear, but unto us, who saw,
The mightiest horror that e’er met mine eye.

CH.  Alas! the stock of our old masters, then,
Is utterly uprooted and destroyed.

CLY.  O heavens! what shall I say?  That this is well? 
Or terrible, but gainful?  Hard my lot,
To save my life through my calamity!

OLD M. Lady, why hath my speech disheartened thee?

CLY.  To be a mother hath a marvellous power: 
No injury can make one hate one’s child.

OLD M. Then it should seem our coming was in vain.

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