Stories from the Greek Tragedians eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 188 pages of information about Stories from the Greek Tragedians.

Stories from the Greek Tragedians eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 188 pages of information about Stories from the Greek Tragedians.

But the King answered him in great wrath, “I did not bid thee to this burial, nor shall this dead woman be adorned with gifts of thine.  Who art thou that thou shouldest bewail her?  Surely thou art not father of mine.  For being come to extreme old age, yet thou wouldst not die for thy son, but sufferedst this woman, being a stranger in blood, to die for me.  Her therefore I count father and mother also.  Yet this had been a noble deed for thee, seeing that the span of life that was left to thee was short.  And I too had not been left to live out my days thus miserably, being bereaved of her whom I loved.  Hast thou not had all happiness, thus having lived in kingly power from youth to age?  And thou wouldst have left a son to come after thee, that thy house should not be spoiled by thine enemies.  Have I not always done due reverence to thee and to my mother?  And, lo! this is the recompense that ye make me.  Wherefore I say to thee, make haste and raise other sons who may nourish thee in thy old age, and pay thee due honour when thou art dead, for I will not bury thee.  To thee I am dead.”

Then the old man spake, “Thinkest thou that thou art driving some Lydian and Phrygian slave that hath been bought with money, and forgettest that I am a freeborn man of Thessaly, as my father was freeborn before me?  I reared thee to rule this house after me; but to die for thee, that I owed thee not.  This is no custom among the Greeks that a father should die for his son.  To thyself thou livest or diest.  All that was thy due thou hast received of me; the kingdom over many people, and, in due time, broad lands which I also received of my father.  How have I wronged thee?  Of what have I defrauded thee?  I ask thee not to die for me; and I die not for thee.  Thou lovest to behold this light.  Thinkest thou that thy father loveth it not?  For the years of the dead are very long; but the days of the living are short yet sweet withal.  But I say to thee that thou hast fled from thy fate in shameless fashion, and hast slain this woman.  Yea, a woman hath vanquished thee, and yet thou chargest cowardice against me.  In truth, ’tis a wise device of thine that thou mayest live for ever, if marrying many times, thou canst still persuade thy wife to die for thee.  Be silent then, for shame’s sake; and if thou lovest life, remember that others love it also.”

So King Admetus and his father reproached each other with many unseemly words.  And when the old man had departed, they carried forth Alcestis to her burial.

But when they that bare the body had departed, there came in the old man that had the charge of the guest-chambers, and spake, saying, “I have seen many guests that have come from all the lands under the sun to this palace of Admetus, but never have I given entertainment to such evil guest as this.  For first, knowing that my lord was in sore trouble and sorrow, he forebore not to enter these gates.  And then he took his

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Stories from the Greek Tragedians from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.