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

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That now thy brother holdeth in thy stead,<br />

Didst thou not drive me, thine own father, out,<br />

An exile, cityless, and make we wear<br />

This beggar's garb thou weepest to behold,<br />

Now thou art come thyself to my sad plight?<br />

Nothing is here for tears; it must be borne<br />

By _me_ till death, and I shall think <strong>of</strong> thee<br />

As <strong>of</strong> my murderer; thou didst thrust me out;<br />

'Tis thou hast made me conversant with woe,<br />

Through thee I beg my bread in a strange land;<br />

And had not these my daughters tended me<br />

I had been dead for aught <strong>of</strong> aid from thee.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y tend me, they preserve me, they are men<br />

Not women in true service to their sire;<br />

But ye are bastards, and no sons <strong>of</strong> mine.<br />

<strong>The</strong>refore just Heaven hath an eye on thee;<br />

Howbeit not yet with aspect so austere<br />

As thou shalt soon experience, if indeed<br />

<strong>The</strong>se banded hosts are moving against <strong>The</strong>bes.<br />

That city thou canst never storm, but first<br />

Shall fall, thou and thy brother, blood-imbrued.<br />

Such curse I lately launched against you twain,<br />

Such curse I now invoke to fight for me,<br />

That ye may learn to honor those who bear thee<br />

Nor flout a sightless father who begat<br />

Degenerate sons--these maidens did not so.<br />

<strong>The</strong>refore my curse is stronger than thy "throne,"<br />

Thy "suppliance," if <strong>by</strong> right <strong>of</strong> laws eterne<br />

Primeval Justice sits enthroned with Zeus.<br />

Begone, abhorred, disowned, no son <strong>of</strong> mine,<br />

Thou vilest <strong>of</strong> the vile! and take with thee<br />

This curse I leave thee as my last bequest:--<br />

Never to win <strong>by</strong> arms thy native land,<br />

No, nor return to Argos in the Vale,<br />

But <strong>by</strong> a kinsman's hand to die and slay<br />

Him who expelled thee. So I pray and call<br />

On the ancestral gloom <strong>of</strong> Tartarus<br />

To snatch thee hence, on these dread goddesses<br />

I call, and Ares who incensed you both<br />

To mortal enmity. Go now proclaim<br />

What thou hast heard to the Cadmeians all,<br />

Thy staunch confederates--this the heritage<br />

that <strong>Oedipus</strong> divideth to his sons.<br />

CHORUS<br />

Thy errand, Polyneices, liked me not<br />

From the beginning; now go back with speed.<br />

POLYNEICES<br />

Woe worth my journey and my baffled hopes!<br />

Woe worth my comrades! What a desperate end<br />

To that glad march from Argos! Woe is me!<br />

I dare not whisper it to my allies<br />

Or turn them back, but mute must meet my doom.<br />

My sisters, ye his daughters, ye have heard<br />

<strong>The</strong> prayers <strong>of</strong> our stern father, if his curse<br />

Should come to pass and ye some day return

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