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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Oedipus Trilogy, by Sophocles ...

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Grievous to me, my child, the boon ye win<br />

By pleading. Let it be then; have your way<br />

Only if come he must, I beg thee, friend,<br />

Let none have power to dispose <strong>of</strong> me.<br />

THESEUS<br />

No need, Sir, to appeal a second time.<br />

It likes me not to boast, but be assured<br />

Thy life is safe while any god saves mine.<br />

[Exit THESEUS]<br />

CHORUS<br />

(Str.)<br />

Who craves excess <strong>of</strong> days,<br />

Scorning the common span<br />

Of life, I judge that man<br />

A giddy wight who walks in folly's ways.<br />

For the long years heap up a grievous load,<br />

Scant pleasures, heavier pains,<br />

Till not one joy remains<br />

For him who lingers on life's weary road<br />

And come it slow or fast,<br />

One doom <strong>of</strong> fate<br />

Doth all await,<br />

For dance and marriage bell,<br />

<strong>The</strong> dirge and funeral knell.<br />

Death the deliverer freeth all at last.<br />

(Ant.)<br />

Not to be born at all<br />

Is best, far best that can befall,<br />

Next best, when born, with least delay<br />

To trace the backward way.<br />

For when youth passes with its giddy train,<br />

Troubles on troubles follow, toils on toils,<br />

Pain, pain for ever pain;<br />

And none escapes life's coils.<br />

Envy, sedition, strife,<br />

Carnage and war, make up the tale <strong>of</strong> life.<br />

Last comes the worst and most abhorred stage<br />

Of unregarded age,<br />

Joyless, companionless and slow,<br />

Of woes the crowning woe.<br />

(Epode)<br />

Such ills not I alone,<br />

He too our guest hath known,<br />

E'en as some headland on an iron-bound shore,<br />

Lashed <strong>by</strong> the wintry blasts and surge's roar,<br />

So is he buffeted on every side<br />

By drear misfortune's whelming tide,<br />

By every wind <strong>of</strong> heaven o'erborne<br />

Some from the sunset, some from orient morn,<br />

Some from the noonday glow.<br />

Some from Rhipean gloom <strong>of</strong> everlasting snow.<br />

ANTIGONE<br />

Father, methinks I see the stranger coming,

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