Prof. Fakhar Alam

Dept. of English

Govt. College Civil Lines Multan

Prof. Fakhar Alam

Dept. of English

Govt. College Civil Lines Multan

Prof. Fakhar Alam

Dept. of English

Govt. College Civil Lines Multan

Prof. Fakhar Alam

Dept. of English

Govt. College Civil Lines Multan

    Paper 2        Drama


    Oedipus Rex        



                               Sophocles



    Oedipus the King

    (Greek: Oedipus Tyrannus; Latin: Oedipus Rex; Oedipus the King)

    Play by Sophocles
    Translation by F. Storr, BA
    Formerly Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge
    From the Loeb Library Edition
    Originally published by
    Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA
    and
    William Heinemann Ltd, London

    This translation first published in 1912 CE
    Originally written in the 420s BCE.


    Argument

    To Laius, King of Thebes, an oracle foretold that the child born
    to him by his queen Jocasta would slay his father and wed his mother.
    So when in time a son was born the infant's feet were riveted together
    and he was left to die on Mount Cithaeron. But a shepherd found the
    babe and tended him, and delivered him to another shepherd who took
    him to his master, the King or Corinth. Polybus being childless
    adopted the boy, who grew up believing that he was indeed the King's
    son. Afterwards doubting his parentage he inquired of the Delphic god
    and heard himself the weird declared before to Laius. Wherefore he
    fled from what he deemed his father's house and in his flight he
    encountered and unwillingly slew his father Laius. Arriving at Thebes
    he answered the riddle of the Sphinx and the grateful Thebans made
    their deliverer king. So he reigned in the room of Laius, and
    espoused the widowed queen. Children were born to them and Thebes
    prospered under his rule, but again a grievous plague fell upon the
    city. Again the oracle was consulted and it bade them purge
    themselves of blood-guiltiness. Oedipus denounces the crime of which
    he is unaware, and undertakes to track out the criminal. Step by
    step it is brought home to him that he is the man. The closing scene
    reveals Jocasta slain by her own hand and Oedipus blinded by his own
    act and praying for death or exile.


    DRAMATIS PERSONAE

    Oedipus

    The Priest of Zeus

    Creon

    Chorus of Theban Elders

    Teiresias

    Jocasta

    Messenger

    Herd of Laius

    Second Messenger

    Scene: Thebes. Before the Palace of Oedipus.


    OEDIPUS REX

    Suppliants of all ages are seated round the altar at the palace doors,
    at their head a PRIEST OF ZEUS. To them enter OEDIPUS.

    OEDIPUS

    My children, latest born to Cadmus old,
    Why sit ye here as suppliants, in your hands
    Branches of olive filleted with wool?
    What means this reek of incense everywhere,
    And everywhere laments and litanies?
    Children, it were not meet that I should learn
    From others, and am hither come, myself,
    I Oedipus, your world-renowned king.
    Ho! aged sire, whose venerable locks
    Proclaim thee spokesman of this company,
    Explain your mood and purport. Is it dread
    Of ill that moves you or a boon ye crave?
    My zeal in your behalf ye cannot doubt;
    Ruthless indeed were I and obdurate
    If such petitioners as you I spurned.

    PRIEST

    Yea, Oedipus, my sovereign lord and king,
    Thou seest how both extremes of age besiege
    Thy palace altars—fledglings hardly winged,
    and greybeards bowed with years; priests, as am I
    of Zeus, and these the flower of our youth.
    Meanwhile, the common folk, with wreathed boughs
    Crowd our two market-places, or before
    Both shrines of Pallas congregate, or where
    Ismenus gives his oracles by fire.
    For, as thou seest thyself, our ship of State,
    Sore buffeted, can no more lift her head,
    Foundered beneath a weltering surge of blood.
    A blight is on our harvest in the ear,
    A blight upon the grazing flocks and herds,
    A blight on wives in travail; and withal
    Armed with his blazing torch the God of Plague
    Hath swooped upon our city emptying
    The house of Cadmus, and the murky realm
    Of Pluto is full fed with groans and tears.
    Therefore, O King, here at thy hearth we sit,
    I and these children; not as deeming thee
    A new divinity, but the first of men;
    First in the common accidents of life,
    And first in visitations of the Gods.
    Art thou not he who coming to the town
    of Cadmus freed us from the tax we paid
    To the fell songstress? Nor hadst thou received
    Prompting from us or been by others schooled;
    No, by a god inspired (so all men deem,
    And testify) didst thou renew our life.
    And now, O Oedipus, our peerless king,
    All we thy votaries beseech thee, find
    Some succor, whether by a voice from heaven
    Whispered, or haply known by human wit.
    Tried counselors, methinks, are aptest found [1]
    To furnish for the future pregnant rede.
    Upraise, O chief of men, upraise our State!
    Look to thy laurels! for thy zeal of yore
    Our country's savior thou art justly hailed:
    O never may we thus record thy reign:—
    "He raised us up only to cast us down."
    Uplift us, build our city on a rock.
    Thy happy star ascendant brought us luck,
    O let it not decline! If thou wouldst rule
    This land, as now thou reignest, better sure
    To rule a peopled than a desert realm.
    Nor battlements nor galleys aught avail,
    If men to man and guards to guard them tail.

    OEDIPUS

    Ah! my poor children, known, ah, known too well,
    The quest that brings you hither and your need.
    Ye sicken all, well wot I, yet my pain,
    How great soever yours, outtops it all.
    Your sorrow touches each man severally,
    Him and none other, but I grieve at once
    Both for the general and myself and you.
    Therefore ye rouse no sluggard from day-dreams.
    Many, my children, are the tears I've wept,
    And threaded many a maze of weary thought.
    Thus pondering one clue of hope I caught,
    And tracked it up; I have sent Menoeceus' son,
    Creon, my consort's brother, to inquire
    Of Pythian Phoebus at his Delphic shrine,
    How I might save the State by act or word.
    And now I reckon up the tale of days
    Since he set forth, and marvel how he fares.
    'Tis strange, this endless tarrying, passing strange.
    But when he comes, then I were base indeed,
    If I perform not all the god declares.

    PRIEST

    Thy words are well timed; even as thou speakest
    That shouting tells me Creon is at hand.

    OEDIPUS

    O King Apollo! may his joyous looks
    Be presage of the joyous news he brings!

    PRIEST

    As I surmise, 'tis welcome; else his head
    Had scarce been crowned with berry-laden bays.

    OEDIPUS

    We soon shall know; he's now in earshot range.
    [Enter CREON]
    My royal cousin, say, Menoeceus' child,
    What message hast thou brought us from the god?

    CREON

    Good news, for e'en intolerable ills,
    Finding right issue, tend to naught but good.

    OEDIPUS

    How runs the oracle? thus far thy words
    Give me no ground for confidence or fear.

    CREON

    If thou wouldst hear my message publicly,
    I'll tell thee straight, or with thee pass within.

    OEDIPUS

    Speak before all; the burden that I bear
    Is more for these my subjects than myself.

    CREON

    Let me report then all the god declared.
    King Phoebus bids us straitly extirpate
    A fell pollution that infests the land,
    And no more harbor an inveterate sore.

    OEDIPUS

    What expiation means he? What's amiss?

    CREON

    Banishment, or the shedding blood for blood.
    This stain of blood makes shipwreck of our state.

    OEDIPUS

    Whom can he mean, the miscreant thus denounced?

    CREON

    Before thou didst assume the helm of State,
    The sovereign of this land was Laius.

    OEDIPUS

    I heard as much, but never saw the man.

    CREON

    He fell; and now the god's command is plain:
    Punish his takers-off, whoe'er they be.

    OEDIPUS

    Where are they? Where in the wide world to find
    The far, faint traces of a bygone crime?

    CREON

    In this land, said the god; "who seeks shall find;
    Who sits with folded hands or sleeps is blind."

    OEDIPUS

    Was he within his palace, or afield,
    Or traveling, when Laius met his fate?

    CREON

    Abroad; he started, so he told us, bound
    For Delphi, but he never thence returned.

    OEDIPUS

    Came there no news, no fellow-traveler
    To give some clue that might be followed up?

    CREON

    But one escape, who flying for dear life,
    Could tell of all he saw but one thing sure.

    OEDIPUS

    And what was that? One clue might lead us far,
    With but a spark of hope to guide our quest.

    CREON

    Robbers, he told us, not one bandit but
    A troop of knaves, attacked and murdered him.

    OEDIPUS

    Did any bandit dare so bold a stroke,
    Unless indeed he were suborned from Thebes?

    CREON

    So 'twas surmised, but none was found to avenge
    His murder mid the trouble that ensued.

    OEDIPUS

    What trouble can have hindered a full quest,
    When royalty had fallen thus miserably?

    CREON

    The riddling Sphinx compelled us to let slide
    The dim past and attend to instant needs.

    OEDIPUS

    Well, I will start afresh and once again
    Make dark things clear. Right worthy the concern
    Of Phoebus, worthy thine too, for the dead;
    I also, as is meet, will lend my aid
    To avenge this wrong to Thebes and to the god.
    Not for some far-off kinsman, but myself,
    Shall I expel this poison in the blood;
    For whoso slew that king might have a mind
    To strike me too with his assassin hand.
    Therefore in righting him I serve myself.
    Up, children, haste ye, quit these altar stairs,
    Take hence your suppliant wands, go summon hither
    The Theban commons. With the god's good help
    Success is sure; 'tis ruin if we fail.
    [Exeunt OEDIPUS and CREON]

    PRIEST

    Come, children, let us hence; these gracious words
    Forestall the very purpose of our suit.
    And may the god who sent this oracle
    Save us withal and rid us of this pest.
    [Exeunt PRIEST and SUPPLIANTS]

    CHORUS

    (Str. 1)
    Sweet-voiced daughter of Zeus from thy gold-paved Pythian shrine
    Wafted to Thebes divine,
    What dost thou bring me? My soul is racked and shivers with fear.
    (Healer of Delos, hear!)
    Hast thou some pain unknown before,
    Or with the circling years renewest a penance of yore?
    Offspring of golden Hope, thou voice immortal, O tell me.

    (Ant. 1)
    First on Athene I call; O Zeus-born goddess, defend!
    Goddess and sister, befriend,
    Artemis, Lady of Thebes, high-throned in the midst of our mart!
    Lord of the death-winged dart!
    Your threefold aid I crave
    From death and ruin our city to save.
    If in the days of old when we nigh had perished, ye drave
    From our land the fiery plague, be near us now and defend us!

    (Str. 2)
    Ah me, what countless woes are mine!
    All our host is in decline;
    Weaponless my spirit lies.
    Earth her gracious fruits denies;
    Women wail in barren throes;
    Life on life downstriken goes,
    Swifter than the wind bird's flight,
    Swifter than the Fire-God's might,
    To the westering shores of Night.

    (Ant. 2)
    Wasted thus by death on death
    All our city perisheth.
    Corpses spread infection round;
    None to tend or mourn is found.
    Wailing on the altar stair
    Wives and grandams rend the air—
    Long-drawn moans and piercing cries
    Blent with prayers and litanies.
    Golden child of Zeus, O hear
    Let thine angel face appear!

    (Str. 3)
    And grant that Ares whose hot breath I feel,
    Though without targe or steel
    He stalks, whose voice is as the battle shout,
    May turn in sudden rout,
    To the unharbored Thracian waters sped,
    Or Amphitrite's bed.
    For what night leaves undone,
    Smit by the morrow's sun
    Perisheth. Father Zeus, whose hand
    Doth wield the lightning brand,
    Slay him beneath thy levin bold, we pray,
    Slay him, O slay!

    (Ant. 3)
    O that thine arrows too, Lycean King,
    From that taut bow's gold string,
    Might fly abroad, the champions of our rights;
    Yea, and the flashing lights
    Of Artemis, wherewith the huntress sweeps
    Across the Lycian steeps.
    Thee too I call with golden-snooded hair,
    Whose name our land doth bear,
    Bacchus to whom thy Maenads Evoe shout;
    Come with thy bright torch, rout,
    Blithe god whom we adore,
    The god whom gods abhor.

    [Enter OEDIPUS.]

    OEDIPUS

    Ye pray; 'tis well, but would ye hear my words
    And heed them and apply the remedy,
    Ye might perchance find comfort and relief.
    Mind you, I speak as one who comes a stranger
    To this report, no less than to the crime;
    For how unaided could I track it far
    Without a clue? Which lacking (for too late
    Was I enrolled a citizen of Thebes)
    This proclamation I address to all:—
    Thebans, if any knows the man by whom
    Laius, son of Labdacus, was slain,
    I summon him to make clean shrift to me.
    And if he shrinks, let him reflect that thus
    Confessing he shall 'scape the capital charge;
    For the worst penalty that shall befall him
    Is banishment—unscathed he shall depart.
    But if an alien from a foreign land
    Be known to any as the murderer,
    Let him who knows speak out, and he shall have
    Due recompense from me and thanks to boot.
    But if ye still keep silence, if through fear
    For self or friends ye disregard my hest,
    Hear what I then resolve; I lay my ban
    On the assassin whosoe'er he be.
    Let no man in this land, whereof I hold
    The sovereign rule, harbor or speak to him;
    Give him no part in prayer or sacrifice
    Or lustral rites, but hound him from your homes.
    For this is our defilement, so the god
    Hath lately shown to me by oracles.
    Thus as their champion I maintain the cause
    Both of the god and of the murdered King.
    And on the murderer this curse I lay
    (On him and all the partners in his guilt):—
    Wretch, may he pine in utter wretchedness!
    And for myself, if with my privity
    He gain admittance to my hearth, I pray
    The curse I laid on others fall on me.
    See that ye give effect to all my hest,
    For my sake and the god's and for our land,
    A desert blasted by the wrath of heaven.
    For, let alone the god's express command,
    It were a scandal ye should leave unpurged
    The murder of a great man and your king,
    Nor track it home. And now that I am lord,
    Successor to his throne, his bed, his wife,
    (And had he not been frustrate in the hope
    Of issue, common children of one womb
    Had forced a closer bond twixt him and me,
    But Fate swooped down upon him), therefore I
    His blood-avenger will maintain his cause
    As though he were my sire, and leave no stone
    Unturned to track the assassin or avenge
    The son of Labdacus, of Polydore,
    Of Cadmus, and Agenor first of the race.
    And for the disobedient thus I pray:
    May the gods send them neither timely fruits
    Of earth, nor teeming increase of the womb,
    But may they waste and pine, as now they waste,
    Aye and worse stricken; but to all of you,
    My loyal subjects who approve my acts,
    May Justice, our ally, and all the gods
    Be gracious and attend you evermore.

    CHORUS

    The oath thou profferest, sire, I take and swear.
    I slew him not myself, nor can I name
    The slayer. For the quest, 'twere well, methinks
    That Phoebus, who proposed the riddle, himself
    Should give the answer—who the murderer was.

    OEDIPUS

    Well argued; but no living man can hope
    To force the gods to speak against their will.

    CHORUS

    May I then say what seems next best to me?

    OEDIPUS

    Aye, if there be a third best, tell it too.

    CHORUS

    My liege, if any man sees eye to eye
    With our lord Phoebus, 'tis our prophet, lord
    Teiresias; he of all men best might guide
    A searcher of this matter to the light.

    OEDIPUS

    Here too my zeal has nothing lagged, for twice
    At Creon's instance have I sent to fetch him,
    And long I marvel why he is not here.

    CHORUS

    I mind me too of rumors long ago—
    Mere gossip.

    OEDIPUS

    Tell them, I would fain know all.

    CHORUS

    'Twas said he fell by travelers.

    OEDIPUS

    So I heard,
    But none has seen the man who saw him fall.

    CHORUS

    Well, if he knows what fear is, he will quail
    And flee before the terror of thy curse.

    OEDIPUS

    Words scare not him who blenches not at deeds.

    CHORUS

    But here is one to arraign him. Lo, at length
    They bring the god-inspired seer in whom
    Above all other men is truth inborn.
    [Enter TEIRESIAS, led by a boy.]

    OEDIPUS

    Teiresias, seer who comprehendest all,
    Lore of the wise and hidden mysteries,
    High things of heaven and low things of the earth,
    Thou knowest, though thy blinded eyes see naught,
    What plague infects our city; and we turn
    To thee, O seer, our one defense and shield.
    The purport of the answer that the God
    Returned to us who sought his oracle,
    The messengers have doubtless told thee—how
    One course alone could rid us of the pest,
    To find the murderers of Laius,
    And slay them or expel them from the land.
    Therefore begrudging neither augury
    Nor other divination that is thine,
    O save thyself, thy country, and thy king,
    Save all from this defilement of blood shed.
    On thee we rest. This is man's highest end,
    To others' service all his powers to lend.

    TEIRESIAS

    Alas, alas, what misery to be wise
    When wisdom profits nothing! This old lore
    I had forgotten; else I were not here.

    OEDIPUS

    What ails thee? Why this melancholy mood?

    TEIRESIAS

    Let me go home; prevent me not; 'twere best
    That thou shouldst bear thy burden and I mine.

    OEDIPUS

    For shame! no true-born Theban patriot
    Would thus withhold the word of prophecy.

    TEIRESIAS

    Thy words, O king, are wide of the mark, and I
    For fear lest I too trip like thee...

    OEDIPUS

    Oh speak,
    Withhold not, I adjure thee, if thou know'st,
    Thy knowledge. We are all thy suppliants.

    TEIRESIAS

    Aye, for ye all are witless, but my voice
    Will ne'er reveal my miseries—or thine. [2]

    OEDIPUS

    What then, thou knowest, and yet willst not speak!
    Wouldst thou betray us and destroy the State?

    TEIRESIAS

    I will not vex myself nor thee. Why ask
    Thus idly what from me thou shalt not learn?

    OEDIPUS

    Monster! thy silence would incense a flint.
    Will nothing loose thy tongue? Can nothing melt thee,
    Or shake thy dogged taciturnity?

    TEIRESIAS

    Thou blam'st my mood and seest not thine own
    Wherewith thou art mated; no, thou taxest me.

    OEDIPUS

    And who could stay his choler when he heard
    How insolently thou dost flout the State?

    TEIRESIAS

    Well, it will come what will, though I be mute.

    OEDIPUS

    Since come it must, thy duty is to tell me.

    TEIRESIAS

    I have no more to say; storm as thou willst,
    And give the rein to all thy pent-up rage.

    OEDIPUS

    Yea, I am wroth, and will not stint my words,
    But speak my whole mind. Thou methinks thou art he,
    Who planned the crime, aye, and performed it too,
    All save the assassination; and if thou
    Hadst not been blind, I had been sworn to boot
    That thou alone didst do the bloody deed.

    TEIRESIAS

    Is it so? Then I charge thee to abide
    By thine own proclamation; from this day
    Speak not to these or me. Thou art the man,
    Thou the accursed polluter of this land.

    OEDIPUS

    Vile slanderer, thou blurtest forth these taunts,
    And think'st forsooth as seer to go scot free.

    TEIRESIAS

    Yea, I am free, strong in the strength of truth.

    OEDIPUS

    Who was thy teacher? not methinks thy art.

    TEIRESIAS

    Thou, goading me against my will to speak.

    OEDIPUS

    What speech? repeat it and resolve my doubt.

    TEIRESIAS

    Didst miss my sense wouldst thou goad me on?

    OEDIPUS

    I but half caught thy meaning; say it again.

    TEIRESIAS

    I say thou art the murderer of the man
    Whose murderer thou pursuest.

    OEDIPUS

    Thou shalt rue it
    Twice to repeat so gross a calumny.

    TEIRESIAS

    Must I say more to aggravate thy rage?

    OEDIPUS

    Say all thou wilt; it will be but waste of breath.

    TEIRESIAS

    I say thou livest with thy nearest kin
    In infamy, unwitting in thy shame.

    OEDIPUS

    Think'st thou for aye unscathed to wag thy tongue?

    TEIRESIAS

    Yea, if the might of truth can aught prevail.

    OEDIPUS

    With other men, but not with thee, for thou
    In ear, wit, eye, in everything art blind.

    TEIRESIAS

    Poor fool to utter gibes at me which all
    Here present will cast back on thee ere long.

    OEDIPUS

    Offspring of endless Night, thou hast no power
    O'er me or any man who sees the sun.

    TEIRESIAS

    No, for thy weird is not to fall by me.
    I leave to Apollo what concerns the god.

    OEDIPUS

    Is this a plot of Creon, or thine own?

    TEIRESIAS

    Not Creon, thou thyself art thine own bane.

    OEDIPUS

    O wealth and empiry and skill by skill
    Outwitted in the battlefield of life,
    What spite and envy follow in your train!
    See, for this crown the State conferred on me.
    A gift, a thing I sought not, for this crown
    The trusty Creon, my familiar friend,
    Hath lain in wait to oust me and suborned
    This mountebank, this juggling charlatan,
    This tricksy beggar-priest, for gain alone
    Keen-eyed, but in his proper art stone-blind.
    Say, sirrah, hast thou ever proved thyself
    A prophet? When the riddling Sphinx was here
    Why hadst thou no deliverance for this folk?
    And yet the riddle was not to be solved
    By guess-work but required the prophet's art;
    Wherein thou wast found lacking; neither birds
    Nor sign from heaven helped thee, but I came,
    The simple Oedipus; I stopped her mouth
    By mother wit, untaught of auguries.
    This is the man whom thou wouldst undermine,
    In hope to reign with Creon in my stead.
    Methinks that thou and thine abettor soon
    Will rue your plot to drive the scapegoat out.
    Thank thy grey hairs that thou hast still to learn
    What chastisement such arrogance deserves.

    CHORUS

    To us it seems that both the seer and thou,
    O Oedipus, have spoken angry words.
    This is no time to wrangle but consult
    How best we may fulfill the oracle.

    TEIRESIAS

    King as thou art, free speech at least is mine
    To make reply; in this I am thy peer.
    I own no lord but Loxias; him I serve
    And ne'er can stand enrolled as Creon's man.
    Thus then I answer: since thou hast not spared
    To twit me with my blindness—thou hast eyes,
    Yet see'st not in what misery thou art fallen,
    Nor where thou dwellest nor with whom for mate.
    Dost know thy lineage? Nay, thou know'st it not,
    And all unwitting art a double foe
    To thine own kin, the living and the dead;
    Aye and the dogging curse of mother and sire
    One day shall drive thee, like a two-edged sword,
    Beyond our borders, and the eyes that now
    See clear shall henceforward endless night.
    Ah whither shall thy bitter cry not reach,
    What crag in all Cithaeron but shall then
    Reverberate thy wail, when thou hast found
    With what a hymeneal thou wast borne
    Home, but to no fair haven, on the gale!
    Aye, and a flood of ills thou guessest not
    Shall set thyself and children in one line.
    Flout then both Creon and my words, for none
    Of mortals shall be striken worse than thou.

    OEDIPUS

    Must I endure this fellow's insolence?
    A murrain on thee! Get thee hence! Begone
    Avaunt! and never cross my threshold more.

    TEIRESIAS

    I ne'er had come hadst thou not bidden me.

    OEDIPUS

    I know not thou wouldst utter folly, else
    Long hadst thou waited to be summoned here.

    TEIRESIAS

    Such am I—as it seems to thee a fool,
    But to the parents who begat thee, wise.

    OEDIPUS

    What sayest thou—"parents"? Who begat me, speak?

    TEIRESIAS

    This day shall be thy birth-day, and thy grave.

    OEDIPUS

    Thou lov'st to speak in riddles and dark words.

    TEIRESIAS

    In reading riddles who so skilled as thou?

    OEDIPUS

    Twit me with that wherein my greatness lies.

    TEIRESIAS

    And yet this very greatness proved thy bane.

    OEDIPUS

    No matter if I saved the commonwealth.

    TEIRESIAS

    'Tis time I left thee. Come, boy, take me home.

    OEDIPUS

    Aye, take him quickly, for his presence irks
    And lets me; gone, thou canst not plague me more.

    TEIRESIAS

    I go, but first will tell thee why I came.
    Thy frown I dread not, for thou canst not harm me.
    Hear then: this man whom thou hast sought to arrest
    With threats and warrants this long while, the wretch
    Who murdered Laius—that man is here.
    He passes for an alien in the land
    But soon shall prove a Theban, native born.
    And yet his fortune brings him little joy;
    For blind of seeing, clad in beggar's weeds,
    For purple robes, and leaning on his staff,
    To a strange land he soon shall grope his way.
    And of the children, inmates of his home,
    He shall be proved the brother and the sire,
    Of her who bare him son and husband both,
    Co-partner, and assassin of his sire.
    Go in and ponder this, and if thou find
    That I have missed the mark, henceforth declare
    I have no wit nor skill in prophecy.
    [Exeunt TEIRESIAS and OEDIPUS]

    CHORUS

    (Str. 1)
    Who is he by voice immortal named from Pythia's rocky cell,
    Doer of foul deeds of bloodshed, horrors that no tongue can tell?
    A foot for flight he needs
    Fleeter than storm-swift steeds,
    For on his heels doth follow,
    Armed with the lightnings of his Sire, Apollo.
    Like sleuth-hounds too
    The Fates pursue.

    (Ant. 1)
    Yea, but now flashed forth the summons from Parnassus' snowy peak,
    "Near and far the undiscovered doer of this murder seek!"
    Now like a sullen bull he roves
    Through forest brakes and upland groves,
    And vainly seeks to fly
    The doom that ever nigh
    Flits o'er his head,
    Still by the avenging Phoebus sped,
    The voice divine,
    From Earth's mid shrine.
    (Str. 2)
    Sore perplexed am I by the words of the master seer.
    Are they true, are they false? I know not and bridle my tongue for
    fear,
    Fluttered with vague surmise; nor present nor future is clear.
    Quarrel of ancient date or in days still near know I none
    Twixt the Labdacidan house and our ruler, Polybus' son.
    Proof is there none: how then can I challenge our King's good name,
    How in a blood-feud join for an untracked deed of shame?

    (Ant. 2)
    All wise are Zeus and Apollo, and nothing is hid from their ken;
    They are gods; and in wits a man may surpass his fellow men;
    But that a mortal seer knows more than I know—where
    Hath this been proven? Or how without sign assured, can I blame
    Him who saved our State when the winged songstress came,
    Tested and tried in the light of us all, like gold assayed?
    How can I now assent when a crime is on Oedipus laid?

    CREON

    Friends, countrymen, I learn King Oedipus
    Hath laid against me a most grievous charge,
    And come to you protesting. If he deems
    That I have harmed or injured him in aught
    By word or deed in this our present trouble,
    I care not to prolong the span of life,
    Thus ill-reputed; for the calumny
    Hits not a single blot, but blasts my name,
    If by the general voice I am denounced
    False to the State and false by you my friends.

    CHORUS

    This taunt, it well may be, was blurted out
    In petulance, not spoken advisedly.

    CREON

    Did any dare pretend that it was I
    Prompted the seer to utter a forged charge?

    CHORUS

    Such things were said; with what intent I know not.

    CREON

    Were not his wits and vision all astray
    When upon me he fixed this monstrous charge?

    CHORUS

    I know not; to my sovereign's acts I am blind.
    But lo, he comes to answer for himself.
    [Enter OEDIPUS.]

    OEDIPUS

    Sirrah, what mak'st thou here? Dost thou presume
    To approach my doors, thou brazen-faced rogue,
    My murderer and the filcher of my crown?
    Come, answer this, didst thou detect in me
    Some touch of cowardice or witlessness,
    That made thee undertake this enterprise?
    I seemed forsooth too simple to perceive
    The serpent stealing on me in the dark,
    Or else too weak to scotch it when I saw.
    This _thou_ art witless seeking to possess
    Without a following or friends the crown,
    A prize that followers and wealth must win.

    CREON

    Attend me. Thou hast spoken, 'tis my turn
    To make reply. Then having heard me, judge.

    OEDIPUS

    Thou art glib of tongue, but I am slow to learn
    Of thee; I know too well thy venomous hate.

    CREON

    First I would argue out this very point.

    OEDIPUS

    O argue not that thou art not a rogue.

    CREON

    If thou dost count a virtue stubbornness,
    Unschooled by reason, thou art much astray.

    OEDIPUS

    If thou dost hold a kinsman may be wronged,
    And no pains follow, thou art much to seek.

    CREON

    Therein thou judgest rightly, but this wrong
    That thou allegest—tell me what it is.

    OEDIPUS

    Didst thou or didst thou not advise that I
    Should call the priest?

    CREON

    Yes, and I stand to it.

    OEDIPUS

    Tell me how long is it since Laius...

    CREON

    Since Laius...? I follow not thy drift.

    OEDIPUS

    By violent hands was spirited away.

    CREON

    In the dim past, a many years agone.

    OEDIPUS

    Did the same prophet then pursue his craft?

    CREON

    Yes, skilled as now and in no less repute.

    OEDIPUS

    Did he at that time ever glance at me?

    CREON

    Not to my knowledge, not when I was by.

    OEDIPUS

    But was no search and inquisition made?

    CREON

    Surely full quest was made, but nothing learnt.

    OEDIPUS

    Why failed the seer to tell his story <em>then</em>?

    CREON

    I know not, and not knowing hold my tongue.

    OEDIPUS

    This much thou knowest and canst surely tell.

    CREON

    What's mean'st thou? All I know I will declare.

    OEDIPUS

    But for thy prompting never had the seer
    Ascribed to me the death of Laius.

    CREON

    If so he thou knowest best; but I
    Would put thee to the question in my turn.

    OEDIPUS

    Question and prove me murderer if thou canst.

    CREON

    Then let me ask thee, didst thou wed my sister?

    OEDIPUS

    A fact so plain I cannot well deny.

    CREON

    And as thy consort queen she shares the throne?

    OEDIPUS

    I grant her freely all her heart desires.

    CREON

    And with you twain I share the triple rule?

    OEDIPUS

    Yea, and it is that proves thee a false friend.

    CREON

    Not so, if thou wouldst reason with thyself,
    As I with myself. First, I bid thee think,
    Would any mortal choose a troubled reign
    Of terrors rather than secure repose,
    If the same power were given him? As for me,
    I have no natural craving for the name
    Of king, preferring to do kingly deeds,
    And so thinks every sober-minded man.
    Now all my needs are satisfied through thee,
    And I have naught to fear; but were I king,
    My acts would oft run counter to my will.
    How could a title then have charms for me
    Above the sweets of boundless influence?
    I am not so infatuate as to grasp
    The shadow when I hold the substance fast.
    Now all men cry me Godspeed! wish me well,
    And every suitor seeks to gain my ear,
    If he would hope to win a grace from thee.
    Why should I leave the better, choose the worse?
    That were sheer madness, and I am not mad.
    No such ambition ever tempted me,
    Nor would I have a share in such intrigue.
    And if thou doubt me, first to Delphi go,
    There ascertain if my report was true
    Of the god's answer; next investigate
    If with the seer I plotted or conspired,
    And if it prove so, sentence me to death,
    Not by thy voice alone, but mine and thine.
    But O condemn me not, without appeal,
    On bare suspicion. 'Tis not right to adjudge
    Bad men at random good, or good men bad.
    I would as lief a man should cast away
    The thing he counts most precious, his own life,
    As spurn a true friend. Thou wilt learn in time
    The truth, for time alone reveals the just;
    A villain is detected in a day.

    CHORUS

    To one who walketh warily his words
    Commend themselves; swift counsels are not sure.

    OEDIPUS

    When with swift strides the stealthy plotter stalks
    I must be quick too with my counterplot.
    To wait his onset passively, for him
    Is sure success, for me assured defeat.

    CREON

    What then's thy will? To banish me the land?

    OEDIPUS

    I would not have thee banished, no, but dead,
    That men may mark the wages envy reaps.

    CREON

    I see thou wilt not yield, nor credit me.

    OEDIPUS

    [None but a fool would credit such as thou.] [3]

    CREON

    Thou art not wise.

    OEDIPUS

    Wise for myself at least.

    CREON

    Why not for me too?

    OEDIPUS

    Why for such a knave?

    CREON

    Suppose thou lackest sense.

    OEDIPUS

    Yet kings must rule.

    CREON

    Not if they rule ill.

    OEDIPUS

    Oh my Thebans, hear him!

    CREON

    Thy Thebans? am not I a Theban too?

    CHORUS

    Cease, princes; lo there comes, and none too soon,
    Jocasta from the palace. Who so fit
    As peacemaker to reconcile your feud?
    [Enter JOCASTA.]

    JOCASTA

    Misguided princes, why have ye upraised
    This wordy wrangle? Are ye not ashamed,
    While the whole land lies striken, thus to voice
    Your private injuries? Go in, my lord;
    Go home, my brother, and forebear to make
    A public scandal of a petty grief.

    CREON

    My royal sister, Oedipus, thy lord,
    Hath bid me choose (O dread alternative!)
    An outlaw's exile or a felon's death.

    OEDIPUS

    Yes, lady; I have caught him practicing
    Against my royal person his vile arts.

    CREON

    May I ne'er speed but die accursed, if I
    In any way am guilty of this charge.

    JOCASTA

    Believe him, I adjure thee, Oedipus,
    First for his solemn oath's sake, then for mine,
    And for thine elders' sake who wait on thee.

    CHORUS

    (Str. 1)
    Hearken, King, reflect, we pray thee, but not stubborn but relent.

    OEDIPUS

    Say to what should I consent?

    CHORUS

    Respect a man whose probity and troth
    Are known to all and now confirmed by oath.

    OEDIPUS

    Dost know what grace thou cravest?

    CHORUS

    Yea, I know.

    OEDIPUS

    Declare it then and make thy meaning plain.

    CHORUS

    Brand not a friend whom babbling tongues assail;
    Let not suspicion 'gainst his oath prevail.

    OEDIPUS

    Bethink you that in seeking this ye seek
    In very sooth my death or banishment?

    CHORUS

    No, by the leader of the host divine!
    (Str. 2)
    Witness, thou Sun, such thought was never mine,
    Unblest, unfriended may I perish,
    If ever I such wish did cherish!
    But O my heart is desolate
    Musing on our striken State,
    Doubly fall'n should discord grow
    Twixt you twain, to crown our woe.

    OEDIPUS

    Well, let him go, no matter what it cost me,
    Or certain death or shameful banishment,
    For your sake I relent, not his; and him,
    Where'er he be, my heart shall still abhor.

    CREON

    Thou art as sullen in thy yielding mood
    As in thine anger thou wast truculent.
    Such tempers justly plague themselves the most.

    OEDIPUS

    Leave me in peace and get thee gone.

    CREON

    I go,
    By thee misjudged, but justified by these.
    [Exeunt CREON]

    CHORUS

    (Ant. 1)
    Lady, lead indoors thy consort; wherefore longer here delay?

    JOCASTA

    Tell me first how rose the fray.

    CHORUS

    Rumors bred unjust suspicious and injustice rankles sore.

    JOCASTA

    Were both at fault?

    CHORUS

    Both.

    JOCASTA

    What was the tale?

    CHORUS

    Ask me no more. The land is sore distressed;
    'Twere better sleeping ills to leave at rest.

    OEDIPUS

    Strange counsel, friend! I know thou mean'st me well,
    And yet would'st mitigate and blunt my zeal.

    CHORUS

    (Ant. 2)
    King, I say it once again,
    Witless were I proved, insane,
    If I lightly put away
    Thee my country's prop and stay,
    Pilot who, in danger sought,
    To a quiet haven brought
    Our distracted State; and now
    Who can guide us right but thou?

    JOCASTA

    Let me too, I adjure thee, know, O king,
    What cause has stirred this unrelenting wrath.

    OEDIPUS

    I will, for thou art more to me than these.
    Lady, the cause is Creon and his plots.

    JOCASTA

    But what provoked the quarrel? make this clear.

    OEDIPUS

    He points me out as Laius' murderer.

    JOCASTA

    Of his own knowledge or upon report?

    OEDIPUS

    He is too cunning to commit himself,
    And makes a mouthpiece of a knavish seer.

    JOCASTA

    Then thou mayest ease thy conscience on that score.
    Listen and I'll convince thee that no man
    Hath scot or lot in the prophetic art.
    Here is the proof in brief. An oracle
    Once came to Laius (I will not say
    'Twas from the Delphic god himself, but from
    His ministers) declaring he was doomed
    To perish by the hand of his own son,
    A child that should be born to him by me.
    Now Laius—so at least report affirmed—
    Was murdered on a day by highwaymen,
    No natives, at a spot where three roads meet.
    As for the child, it was but three days old,
    When Laius, its ankles pierced and pinned
    Together, gave it to be cast away
    By others on the trackless mountain side.
    So then Apollo brought it not to pass
    The child should be his father's murderer,
    Or the dread terror find accomplishment,
    And Laius be slain by his own son.
    Such was the prophet's horoscope. O king,
    Regard it not. Whate'er the god deems fit
    To search, himself unaided will reveal.

    OEDIPUS

    What memories, what wild tumult of the soul
    Came o'er me, lady, as I heard thee speak!

    JOCASTA

    What mean'st thou? What has shocked and startled thee?

    OEDIPUS

    Methought I heard thee say that Laius
    Was murdered at the meeting of three roads.

    JOCASTA

    So ran the story that is current still.

    OEDIPUS

    Where did this happen? Dost thou know the place?

    JOCASTA

    Phocis the land is called; the spot is where
    Branch roads from Delphi and from Daulis meet.

    OEDIPUS

    And how long is it since these things befell?

    JOCASTA

    'Twas but a brief while were thou wast proclaimed
    Our country's ruler that the news was brought.

    OEDIPUS

    O Zeus, what hast thou willed to do with me!

    JOCASTA

    What is it, Oedipus, that moves thee so?

    OEDIPUS

    Ask me not yet; tell me the build and height
    Of Laius? Was he still in manhood's prime?

    JOCASTA

    Tall was he, and his hair was lightly strewn
    With silver; and not unlike thee in form.

    OEDIPUS

    O woe is me! Mehtinks unwittingly
    I laid but now a dread curse on myself.

    JOCASTA

    What say'st thou? When I look upon thee, my king,
    I tremble.

    OEDIPUS

    'Tis a dread presentiment
    That in the end the seer will prove not blind.
    One further question to resolve my doubt.

    JOCASTA

    I quail; but ask, and I will answer all.

    OEDIPUS

    Had he but few attendants or a train
    Of armed retainers with him, like a prince?

    JOCASTA

    They were but five in all, and one of them
    A herald; Laius in a mule-car rode.

    OEDIPUS

    Alas! 'tis clear as noonday now. But say,
    Lady, who carried this report to Thebes?

    JOCASTA

    A serf, the sole survivor who returned.

    OEDIPUS

    Haply he is at hand or in the house?

    JOCASTA

    No, for as soon as he returned and found
    Thee reigning in the stead of Laius slain,
    He clasped my hand and supplicated me
    To send him to the alps and pastures, where
    He might be farthest from the sight of Thebes.
    And so I sent him. 'Twas an honest slave
    And well deserved some better recompense.

    OEDIPUS

    Fetch him at once. I fain would see the man.

    JOCASTA

    He shall be brought; but wherefore summon him?

    OEDIPUS

    Lady, I fear my tongue has overrun
    Discretion; therefore I would question him.

    JOCASTA

    Well, he shall come, but may not I too claim
    To share the burden of thy heart, my king?

    OEDIPUS

    And thou shalt not be frustrate of thy wish.
    Now my imaginings have gone so far.
    Who has a higher claim that thou to hear
    My tale of dire adventures? Listen then.
    My sire was Polybus of Corinth, and
    My mother Merope, a Dorian;
    And I was held the foremost citizen,
    Till a strange thing befell me, strange indeed,
    Yet scarce deserving all the heat it stirred.
    A roisterer at some banquet, flown with wine,
    Shouted "Thou art not true son of thy sire."
    It irked me, but I stomached for the nonce
    The insult; on the morrow I sought out
    My mother and my sire and questioned them.
    They were indignant at the random slur
    Cast on my parentage and did their best
    To comfort me, but still the venomed barb
    Rankled, for still the scandal spread and grew.
    So privily without their leave I went
    To Delphi, and Apollo sent me back
    Baulked of the knowledge that I came to seek.
    But other grievous things he prophesied,
    Woes, lamentations, mourning, portents dire;
    To wit I should defile my mother's bed
    And raise up seed too loathsome to behold,
    And slay the father from whose loins I sprang.
    Then, lady,—thou shalt hear the very truth—
    As I drew near the triple-branching roads,
    A herald met me and a man who sat
    In a car drawn by colts—as in thy tale—
    The man in front and the old man himself
    Threatened to thrust me rudely from the path,
    Then jostled by the charioteer in wrath
    I struck him, and the old man, seeing this,
    Watched till I passed and from his car brought down
    Full on my head the double-pointed goad.
    Yet was I quits with him and more; one stroke
    Of my good staff sufficed to fling him clean
    Out of the chariot seat and laid him prone.
    And so I slew them every one. But if
    Betwixt this stranger there was aught in common
    With Laius, who more miserable than I,
    What mortal could you find more god-abhorred?
    Wretch whom no sojourner, no citizen
    May harbor or address, whom all are bound
    To harry from their homes. And this same curse
    Was laid on me, and laid by none but me.
    Yea with these hands all gory I pollute
    The bed of him I slew. Say, am I vile?
    Am I not utterly unclean, a wretch
    Doomed to be banished, and in banishment
    Forgo the sight of all my dearest ones,
    And never tread again my native earth;
    Or else to wed my mother and slay my sire,
    Polybus, who begat me and upreared?
    If one should say, this is the handiwork
    Of some inhuman power, who could blame
    His judgment? But, ye pure and awful gods,
    Forbid, forbid that I should see that day!
    May I be blotted out from living men
    Ere such a plague spot set on me its brand!

    CHORUS

    We too, O king, are troubled; but till thou
    Hast questioned the survivor, still hope on.

    OEDIPUS

    My hope is faint, but still enough survives
    To bid me bide the coming of this herd.

    JOCASTA

    Suppose him here, what wouldst thou learn of him?

    OEDIPUS

    I'll tell thee, lady; if his tale agrees
    With thine, I shall have 'scaped calamity.

    JOCASTA

    And what of special import did I say?

    OEDIPUS

    In thy report of what the herdsman said
    Laius was slain by robbers; now if he
    Still speaks of robbers, not a robber, I
    Slew him not; "one" with "many" cannot square.
    But if he says one lonely wayfarer,
    The last link wanting to my guilt is forged.

    JOCASTA

    Well, rest assured, his tale ran thus at first,
    Nor can he now retract what then he said;
    Not I alone but all our townsfolk heard it.
    E'en should he vary somewhat in his story,
    He cannot make the death of Laius
    In any wise jump with the oracle.
    For Loxias said expressly he was doomed
    To die by my child's hand, but he, poor babe,
    He shed no blood, but perished first himself.
    So much for divination. Henceforth I
    Will look for signs neither to right nor left.

    OEDIPUS

    Thou reasonest well. Still I would have thee send
    And fetch the bondsman hither. See to it.

    JOCASTA

    That will I straightway. Come, let us within.
    I would do nothing that my lord mislikes.
    [Exeunt OEDIPUS and JOCASTA]

    CHORUS

    (Str. 1)
    My lot be still to lead
    The life of innocence and fly
    Irreverence in word or deed,
    To follow still those laws ordained on high
    Whose birthplace is the bright ethereal sky
    No mortal birth they own,
    Olympus their progenitor alone:
    Ne'er shall they slumber in oblivion cold,
    The god in them is strong and grows not old.

    (Ant. 1)
    Of insolence is bred
    The tyrant; insolence full blown,
    With empty riches surfeited,
    Scales the precipitous height and grasps the throne.
    Then topples o'er and lies in ruin prone;
    No foothold on that dizzy steep.
    But O may Heaven the true patriot keep
    Who burns with emulous zeal to serve the State.
    God is my help and hope, on him I wait.

    (Str. 2)
    But the proud sinner, or in word or deed,
    That will not Justice heed,
    Nor reverence the shrine
    Of images divine,
    Perdition seize his vain imaginings,
    If, urged by greed profane,
    He grasps at ill-got gain,
    And lays an impious hand on holiest things.
    Who when such deeds are done
    Can hope heaven's bolts to shun?
    If sin like this to honor can aspire,
    Why dance I still and lead the sacred choir?

    (Ant. 2)
    No more I'll seek earth's central oracle,
    Or Abae's hallowed cell,
    Nor to Olympia bring
    My votive offering.
    If before all God's truth be not bade plain.
    O Zeus, reveal thy might,
    King, if thou'rt named aright
    Omnipotent, all-seeing, as of old;
    For Laius is forgot;
    His weird, men heed it not;
    Apollo is forsook and faith grows cold.
    [Enter JOCASTA.]

    JOCASTA

    My lords, ye look amazed to see your queen
    With wreaths and gifts of incense in her hands.
    I had a mind to visit the high shrines,
    For Oedipus is overwrought, alarmed
    With terrors manifold. He will not use
    His past experience, like a man of sense,
    To judge the present need, but lends an ear
    To any croaker if he augurs ill.
    Since then my counsels naught avail, I turn
    To thee, our present help in time of trouble,
    Apollo, Lord Lycean, and to thee
    My prayers and supplications here I bring.
    Lighten us, lord, and cleanse us from this curse!
    For now we all are cowed like mariners
    Who see their helmsman dumbstruck in the storm.
    [Enter Corinthian MESSENGER.]

    MESSENGER

    My masters, tell me where the palace is
    Of Oedipus; or better, where's the king.

    CHORUS

    Here is the palace and he bides within;
    This is his queen the mother of his children.

    MESSENGER

    All happiness attend her and the house,
    Blessed is her husband and her marriage-bed.

    JOCASTA

    My greetings to thee, stranger; thy fair words
    Deserve a like response. But tell me why
    Thou comest—what thy need or what thy news.

    MESSENGER

    Good for thy consort and the royal house.

    JOCASTA

    What may it be? Whose messenger art thou?

    MESSENGER

    The Isthmian commons have resolved to make
    Thy husband king—so 'twas reported there.

    JOCASTA

    What! is not aged Polybus still king?

    MESSENGER

    No, verily; he's dead and in his grave.

    JOCASTA

    What! is he dead, the sire of Oedipus?

    MESSENGER

    If I speak falsely, may I die myself.

    JOCASTA

    Quick, maiden, bear these tidings to my lord.
    Ye god-sent oracles, where stand ye now!
    This is the man whom Oedipus long shunned,
    In dread to prove his murderer; and now
    He dies in nature's course, not by his hand.
    [Enter OEDIPUS.]

    OEDIPUS

    My wife, my queen, Jocasta, why hast thou
    Summoned me from my palace?

    JOCASTA

    Hear this man,
    And as thou hearest judge what has become
    Of all those awe-inspiring oracles.

    OEDIPUS

    Who is this man, and what his news for me?

    JOCASTA

    He comes from Corinth and his message this:
    Thy father Polybus hath passed away.

    OEDIPUS

    What? let me have it, stranger, from thy mouth.

    MESSENGER

    If I must first make plain beyond a doubt
    My message, know that Polybus is dead.

    OEDIPUS

    By treachery, or by sickness visited?

    MESSENGER

    One touch will send an old man to his rest.

    OEDIPUS

    So of some malady he died, poor man.

    MESSENGER

    Yes, having measured the full span of years.

    OEDIPUS

    Out on it, lady! why should one regard
    The Pythian hearth or birds that scream i' the air?
    Did they not point at me as doomed to slay
    My father? but he's dead and in his grave
    And here am I who ne'er unsheathed a sword;
    Unless the longing for his absent son
    Killed him and so I slew him in a sense.
    But, as they stand, the oracles are dead—
    Dust, ashes, nothing, dead as Polybus.

    JOCASTA

    Say, did not I foretell this long ago?

    OEDIPUS

    Thou didst: but I was misled by my fear.

    JOCASTA

    Then let I no more weigh upon thy soul.

    OEDIPUS

    Must I not fear my mother's marriage bed.

    JOCASTA

    Why should a mortal man, the sport of chance,
    With no assured foreknowledge, be afraid?
    Best live a careless life from hand to mouth.
    This wedlock with thy mother fear not thou.
    How oft it chances that in dreams a man
    Has wed his mother! He who least regards
    Such brainsick phantasies lives most at ease.

    OEDIPUS

    I should have shared in full thy confidence,
    Were not my mother living; since she lives
    Though half convinced I still must live in dread.

    JOCASTA

    And yet thy sire's death lights out darkness much.

    OEDIPUS

    Much, but my fear is touching her who lives.

    MESSENGER

    Who may this woman be whom thus you fear?

    OEDIPUS

    Merope, stranger, wife of Polybus.

    MESSENGER

    And what of her can cause you any fear?

    OEDIPUS

    A heaven-sent oracle of dread import.

    MESSENGER

    A mystery, or may a stranger hear it?

    OEDIPUS

    Aye, 'tis no secret. Loxias once foretold
    That I should mate with mine own mother, and shed
    With my own hands the blood of my own sire.
    Hence Corinth was for many a year to me
    A home distant; and I trove abroad,
    But missed the sweetest sight, my parents' face.

    MESSENGER

    Was this the fear that exiled thee from home?

    OEDIPUS

    Yea, and the dread of slaying my own sire.

    MESSENGER

    Why, since I came to give thee pleasure, King,
    Have I not rid thee of this second fear?

    OEDIPUS

    Well, thou shalt have due guerdon for thy pains.

    MESSENGER

    Well, I confess what chiefly made me come
    Was hope to profit by thy coming home.

    OEDIPUS

    Nay, I will ne'er go near my parents more.

    MESSENGER

    My son, 'tis plain, thou know'st not what thou doest.

    OEDIPUS

    How so, old man? For heaven's sake tell me all.

    MESSENGER

    If this is why thou dreadest to return.

    OEDIPUS

    Yea, lest the god's word be fulfilled in me.

    MESSENGER

    Lest through thy parents thou shouldst be accursed?

    OEDIPUS

    This and none other is my constant dread.

    MESSENGER

    Dost thou not know thy fears are baseless all?

    OEDIPUS

    How baseless, if I am their very son?

    MESSENGER

    Since Polybus was naught to thee in blood.

    OEDIPUS

    What say'st thou? was not Polybus my sire?

    MESSENGER

    As much thy sire as I am, and no more.

    OEDIPUS

    My sire no more to me than one who is naught?

    MESSENGER

    Since I begat thee not, no more did he.

    OEDIPUS

    What reason had he then to call me son?

    MESSENGER

    Know that he took thee from my hands, a gift.

    OEDIPUS

    Yet, if no child of his, he loved me well.

    MESSENGER

    A childless man till then, he warmed to thee.

    OEDIPUS

    A foundling or a purchased slave, this child?

    MESSENGER

    I found thee in Cithaeron's wooded glens.

    OEDIPUS

    What led thee to explore those upland glades?

    MESSENGER

    My business was to tend the mountain flocks.

    OEDIPUS

    A vagrant shepherd journeying for hire?

    MESSENGER

    True, but thy savior in that hour, my son.

    OEDIPUS

    My savior? from what harm? what ailed me then?

    MESSENGER

    Those ankle joints are evidence enow.

    OEDIPUS

    Ah, why remind me of that ancient sore?

    MESSENGER

    I loosed the pin that riveted thy feet.

    OEDIPUS

    Yes, from my cradle that dread brand I bore.

    MESSENGER

    Whence thou deriv'st the name that still is thine.

    OEDIPUS

    Who did it? I adjure thee, tell me who
    Say, was it father, mother?

    MESSENGER

    I know not.
    The man from whom I had thee may know more.

    OEDIPUS

    What, did another find me, not thyself?

    MESSENGER

    Not I; another shepherd gave thee me.

    OEDIPUS

    Who was he? Would'st thou know again the man?

    MESSENGER

    He passed indeed for one of Laius' house.

    OEDIPUS

    The king who ruled the country long ago?

    MESSENGER

    The same: he was a herdsman of the king.

    OEDIPUS

    And is he living still for me to see him?

    MESSENGER

    His fellow-countrymen should best know that.

    OEDIPUS

    Doth any bystander among you know
    The herd he speaks of, or by seeing him
    Afield or in the city? answer straight!
    The hour hath come to clear this business up.

    CHORUS

    Methinks he means none other than the hind
    Whom thou anon wert fain to see; but that
    Our queen Jocasta best of all could tell.

    OEDIPUS

    Madam, dost know the man we sent to fetch?
    Is the same of whom the stranger speaks?

    JOCASTA

    Who is the man? What matter? Let it be.
    'Twere waste of thought to weigh such idle words.

    OEDIPUS

    No, with such guiding clues I cannot fail
    To bring to light the secret of my birth.

    JOCASTA

    Oh, as thou carest for thy life, give o'er
    This quest. Enough the anguish I endure.

    OEDIPUS

    Be of good cheer; though I be proved the son
    Of a bondwoman, aye, through three descents
    Triply a slave, thy honor is unsmirched.

    JOCASTA

    Yet humor me, I pray thee; do not this.

    OEDIPUS

    I cannot; I must probe this matter home.

    JOCASTA

    'Tis for thy sake I advise thee for the best.

    OEDIPUS

    I grow impatient of this best advice.

    JOCASTA

    Ah mayst thou ne'er discover who thou art!

    OEDIPUS

    Go, fetch me here the herd, and leave yon woman
    To glory in her pride of ancestry.

    JOCASTA

    O woe is thee, poor wretch! With that last word
    I leave thee, henceforth silent evermore.
    [Exit JOCASTA]

    CHORUS

    Why, Oedipus, why stung with passionate grief
    Hath the queen thus departed? Much I fear
    From this dead calm will burst a storm of woes.

    OEDIPUS

    Let the storm burst, my fixed resolve still holds,
    To learn my lineage, be it ne'er so low.
    It may be she with all a woman's pride
    Thinks scorn of my base parentage. But I
    Who rank myself as Fortune's favorite child,
    The giver of good gifts, shall not be shamed.
    She is my mother and the changing moons
    My brethren, and with them I wax and wane.
    Thus sprung why should I fear to trace my birth?
    Nothing can make me other than I am.

    CHORUS

    (Str.)
    If my soul prophetic err not, if my wisdom aught avail,
    Thee, Cithaeron, I shall hail,
    As the nurse and foster-mother of our Oedipus shall greet
    Ere tomorrow's full moon rises, and exalt thee as is meet.
    Dance and song shall hymn thy praises, lover of our royal race.
    Phoebus, may my words find grace!

    (Ant.)
    Child, who bare thee, nymph or goddess? sure thy sure was more than
    man,
    Haply the hill-roamer Pan.
    Of did Loxias beget thee, for he haunts the upland wold;
    Or Cyllene's lord, or Bacchus, dweller on the hilltops cold?
    Did some Heliconian Oread give him thee, a new-born joy?
    Nymphs with whom he love to toy?

    OEDIPUS

    Elders, if I, who never yet before
    Have met the man, may make a guess, methinks
    I see the herdsman who we long have sought;
    His time-worn aspect matches with the years
    Of yonder aged messenger; besides
    I seem to recognize the men who bring him
    As servants of my own. But you, perchance,
    Having in past days known or seen the herd,
    May better by sure knowledge my surmise.

    CHORUS

    I recognize him; one of Laius' house;
    A simple hind, but true as any man.
    [Enter HERDSMAN.]

    OEDIPUS

    Corinthian, stranger, I address thee first,
    Is this the man thou meanest!

    MESSENGER

    This is he.

    OEDIPUS

    And now old man, look up and answer all
    I ask thee. Wast thou once of Laius' house?

    HERDSMAN

    I was, a thrall, not purchased but home-bred.

    OEDIPUS

    What was thy business? how wast thou employed?

    HERDSMAN

    The best part of my life I tended sheep.

    OEDIPUS

    What were the pastures thou didst most frequent?

    HERDSMAN

    Cithaeron and the neighboring alps.

    OEDIPUS

    Then there
    Thou must have known yon man, at least by fame?

    HERDSMAN

    Yon man? in what way? what man dost thou mean?

    OEDIPUS

    The man here, having met him in past times...

    HERDSMAN

    Off-hand I cannot call him well to mind.

    MESSENGER

    No wonder, master. But I will revive
    His blunted memories. Sure he can recall
    What time together both we drove our flocks,
    He two, I one, on the Cithaeron range,
    For three long summers; I his mate from spring
    Till rose Arcturus; then in winter time
    I led mine home, he his to Laius' folds.
    Did these things happen as I say, or no?

    HERDSMAN

    'Tis long ago, but all thou say'st is true.

    MESSENGER

    Well, thou mast then remember giving me
    A child to rear as my own foster-son?

    HERDSMAN

    Why dost thou ask this question? What of that?

    MESSENGER

    Friend, he that stands before thee was that child.

    HERDSMAN

    A plague upon thee! Hold thy wanton tongue!

    OEDIPUS

    Softly, old man, rebuke him not; thy words
    Are more deserving chastisement than his.

    HERDSMAN

    O best of masters, what is my offense?

    OEDIPUS

    Not answering what he asks about the child.

    HERDSMAN

    He speaks at random, babbles like a fool.

    OEDIPUS

    If thou lack'st grace to speak, I'll loose thy tongue.

    HERDSMAN

    For mercy's sake abuse not an old man.

    OEDIPUS

    Arrest the villain, seize and pinion him!

    HERDSMAN

    Alack, alack!
    What have I done? what wouldst thou further learn?

    OEDIPUS

    Didst give this man the child of whom he asks?

    HERDSMAN

    I did; and would that I had died that day!

    OEDIPUS

    And die thou shalt unless thou tell the truth.

    HERDSMAN

    But, if I tell it, I am doubly lost.

    OEDIPUS

    The knave methinks will still prevaricate.

    HERDSMAN

    Nay, I confessed I gave it long ago.

    OEDIPUS

    Whence came it? was it thine, or given to thee?

    HERDSMAN

    I had it from another, 'twas not mine.

    OEDIPUS

    From whom of these our townsmen, and what house?

    HERDSMAN

    Forbear for God's sake, master, ask no more.

    OEDIPUS

    If I must question thee again, thou'rt lost.

    HERDSMAN

    Well then—it was a child of Laius' house.

    OEDIPUS

    Slave-born or one of Laius' own race?

    HERDSMAN

    Ah me!
    I stand upon the perilous edge of speech.

    OEDIPUS

    And I of hearing, but I still must hear.

    HERDSMAN

    Know then the child was by repute his own,
    But she within, thy consort best could tell.

    OEDIPUS

    What! she, she gave it thee?

    HERDSMAN

    'Tis so, my king.

    OEDIPUS

    With what intent?

    HERDSMAN

    To make away with it.

    OEDIPUS

    What, she its mother.

    HERDSMAN

    Fearing a dread weird.

    OEDIPUS

    What weird?

    HERDSMAN

    'Twas told that he should slay his sire.

    OEDIPUS

    What didst thou give it then to this old man?

    HERDSMAN

    Through pity, master, for the babe. I thought
    He'd take it to the country whence he came;
    But he preserved it for the worst of woes.
    For if thou art in sooth what this man saith,
    God pity thee! thou wast to misery born.

    OEDIPUS

    Ah me! ah me! all brought to pass, all true!
    O light, may I behold thee nevermore!
    I stand a wretch, in birth, in wedlock cursed,
    A parricide, incestuously, triply cursed!
    [Exit OEDIPUS]

    CHORUS

    (Str. 1)
    Races of mortal man
    Whose life is but a span,
    I count ye but the shadow of a shade!
    For he who most doth know
    Of bliss, hath but the show;
    A moment, and the visions pale and fade.
    Thy fall, O Oedipus, thy piteous fall
    Warns me none born of women blest to call.

    (Ant. 1)
    For he of marksmen best,
    O Zeus, outshot the rest,
    And won the prize supreme of wealth and power.
    By him the vulture maid
    Was quelled, her witchery laid;
    He rose our savior and the land's strong tower.
    We hailed thee king and from that day adored
    Of mighty Thebes the universal lord.

    (Str. 2)
    O heavy hand of fate!
    Who now more desolate,
    Whose tale more sad than thine, whose lot more dire?
    O Oedipus, discrowned head,
    Thy cradle was thy marriage bed;
    One harborage sufficed for son and sire.
    How could the soil thy father eared so long
    Endure to bear in silence such a wrong?

    (Ant. 2)
    All-seeing Time hath caught
    Guilt, and to justice brought
    The son and sire commingled in one bed.
    O child of Laius' ill-starred race
    Would I had ne'er beheld thy face;
    I raise for thee a dirge as o'er the dead.
    Yet, sooth to say, through thee I drew new breath,
    And now through thee I feel a second death.
    [Enter SECOND MESSENGER.]

    SECOND MESSENGER

    Most grave and reverend senators of Thebes,
    What Deeds ye soon must hear, what sights behold
    How will ye mourn, if, true-born patriots,
    Ye reverence still the race of Labdacus!
    Not Ister nor all Phasis' flood, I ween,
    Could wash away the blood-stains from this house,
    The ills it shrouds or soon will bring to light,
    Ills wrought of malice, not unwittingly.
    The worst to bear are self-inflicted wounds.

    CHORUS

    Grievous enough for all our tears and groans
    Our past calamities; what canst thou add?

    SECOND MESSENGER

    My tale is quickly told and quickly heard.
    Our sovereign lady queen Jocasta's dead.

    CHORUS

    Alas, poor queen! how came she by her death?

    SECOND MESSENGER

    By her own hand. And all the horror of it,
    Not having seen, yet cannot comprehend.
    Nathless, as far as my poor memory serves,
    I will relate the unhappy lady's woe.
    When in her frenzy she had passed inside
    The vestibule, she hurried straight to win
    The bridal-chamber, clutching at her hair
    With both her hands, and, once within the room,
    She shut the doors behind her with a crash.
    "Laius," she cried, and called her husband dead
    Long, long ago; her thought was of that child
    By him begot, the son by whom the sire
    Was murdered and the mother left to breed
    With her own seed, a monstrous progeny.
    Then she bewailed the marriage bed whereon
    Poor wretch, she had conceived a double brood,
    Husband by husband, children by her child.
    What happened after that I cannot tell,
    Nor how the end befell, for with a shriek
    Burst on us Oedipus; all eyes were fixed
    On Oedipus, as up and down he strode,
    Nor could we mark her agony to the end.
    For stalking to and fro "A sword!" he cried,
    "Where is the wife, no wife, the teeming womb
    That bore a double harvest, me and mine?"
    And in his frenzy some supernal power
    (No mortal, surely, none of us who watched him)
    Guided his footsteps; with a terrible shriek,
    As though one beckoned him, he crashed against
    The folding doors, and from their staples forced
    The wrenched bolts and hurled himself within.
    Then we beheld the woman hanging there,
    A running noose entwined about her neck.
    But when he saw her, with a maddened roar
    He loosed the cord; and when her wretched corpse
    Lay stretched on earth, what followed—O 'twas dread!
    He tore the golden brooches that upheld
    Her queenly robes, upraised them high and smote
    Full on his eye-balls, uttering words like these:
    "No more shall ye behold such sights of woe,
    Deeds I have suffered and myself have wrought;
    Henceforward quenched in darkness shall ye see
    Those ye should ne'er have seen; now blind to those
    Whom, when I saw, I vainly yearned to know."
    Such was the burden of his moan, whereto,
    Not once but oft, he struck with his hand uplift
    His eyes, and at each stroke the ensanguined orbs
    Bedewed his beard, not oozing drop by drop,
    But one black gory downpour, thick as hail.
    Such evils, issuing from the double source,
    Have whelmed them both, confounding man and wife.
    Till now the storied fortune of this house
    Was fortunate indeed; but from this day
    Woe, lamentation, ruin, death, disgrace,
    All ills that can be named, all, all are theirs.

    CHORUS

    But hath he still no respite from his pain?

    SECOND MESSENGER

    He cries, "Unbar the doors and let all Thebes
    Behold the slayer of his sire, his mother's—"
    That shameful word my lips may not repeat.
    He vows to fly self-banished from the land,
    Nor stay to bring upon his house the curse
    Himself had uttered; but he has no strength
    Nor one to guide him, and his torture's more
    Than man can suffer, as yourselves will see.
    For lo, the palace portals are unbarred,
    And soon ye shall behold a sight so sad
    That he who must abhorred would pity it.
    [Enter OEDIPUS blinded.]

    CHORUS

    Woeful sight! more woeful none
    These sad eyes have looked upon.
    Whence this madness? None can tell
    Who did cast on thee his spell,
    prowling all thy life around,
    Leaping with a demon bound.
    Hapless wretch! how can I brook
    On thy misery to look?
    Though to gaze on thee I yearn,
    Much to question, much to learn,
    Horror-struck away I turn.

    OEDIPUS

    Ah me! ah woe is me!
    Ah whither am I borne!
    How like a ghost forlorn
    My voice flits from me on the air!
    On, on the demon goads. The end, ah where?

    CHORUS

    An end too dread to tell, too dark to see.

    OEDIPUS

    (Str. 1)
    Dark, dark! The horror of darkness, like a shroud,
    Wraps me and bears me on through mist and cloud.
    Ah me, ah me! What spasms athwart me shoot,
    What pangs of agonizing memory?

    CHORUS

    No marvel if in such a plight thou feel'st
    The double weight of past and present woes.

    OEDIPUS

    (Ant. 1)
    Ah friend, still loyal, constant still and kind,
    Thou carest for the blind.
    I know thee near, and though bereft of eyes,
    Thy voice I recognize.

    CHORUS

    O doer of dread deeds, how couldst thou mar
    Thy vision thus? What demon goaded thee?

    OEDIPUS

    (Str. 2)
    Apollo, friend, Apollo, he it was
    That brought these ills to pass;
    But the right hand that dealt the blow
    Was mine, none other. How,
    How, could I longer see when sight
    Brought no delight?

    CHORUS

    Alas! 'tis as thou sayest.

    OEDIPUS

    Say, friends, can any look or voice
    Or touch of love henceforth my heart rejoice?
    Haste, friends, no fond delay,
    Take the twice cursed away
    Far from all ken,
    The man abhorred of gods, accursed of men.

    CHORUS

    O thy despair well suits thy desperate case.
    Would I had never looked upon thy face!

    OEDIPUS

    (Ant. 2)
    My curse on him whoe'er unrived
    The waif's fell fetters and my life revived!
    He meant me well, yet had he left me there,
    He had saved my friends and me a world of care.

    CHORUS

    I too had wished it so.

    OEDIPUS

    Then had I never come to shed
    My father's blood nor climbed my mother's bed;
    The monstrous offspring of a womb defiled,
    Co-mate of him who gendered me, and child.
    Was ever man before afflicted thus,
    Like Oedipus.

    CHORUS

    I cannot say that thou hast counseled well,
    For thou wert better dead than living blind.

    OEDIPUS

    What's done was well done. Thou canst never shake
    My firm belief. A truce to argument.
    For, had I sight, I know not with what eyes
    I could have met my father in the shades,
    Or my poor mother, since against the twain
    I sinned, a sin no gallows could atone.
    Aye, but, ye say, the sight of children joys
    A parent's eyes. What, born as mine were born?
    No, such a sight could never bring me joy;
    Nor this fair city with its battlements,
    Its temples and the statues of its gods,
    Sights from which I, now wretchedst of all,
    Once ranked the foremost Theban in all Thebes,
    By my own sentence am cut off, condemned
    By my own proclamation 'gainst the wretch,
    The miscreant by heaven itself declared
    Unclean—and of the race of Laius.
    Thus branded as a felon by myself,
    How had I dared to look you in the face?
    Nay, had I known a way to choke the springs
    Of hearing, I had never shrunk to make
    A dungeon of this miserable frame,
    Cut off from sight and hearing; for 'tis bliss
    to bide in regions sorrow cannot reach.
    Why didst thou harbor me, Cithaeron, why
    Didst thou not take and slay me? Then I never
    Had shown to men the secret of my birth.
    O Polybus, O Corinth, O my home,
    Home of my ancestors (so wast thou called)
    How fair a nursling then I seemed, how foul
    The canker that lay festering in the bud!
    Now is the blight revealed of root and fruit.
    Ye triple high-roads, and thou hidden glen,
    Coppice, and pass where meet the three-branched ways,
    Ye drank my blood, the life-blood these hands spilt,
    My father's; do ye call to mind perchance
    Those deeds of mine ye witnessed and the work
    I wrought thereafter when I came to Thebes?
    O fatal wedlock, thou didst give me birth,
    And, having borne me, sowed again my seed,
    Mingling the blood of fathers, brothers, children,
    Brides, wives and mothers, an incestuous brood,
    All horrors that are wrought beneath the sun,
    Horrors so foul to name them were unmeet.
    O, I adjure you, hide me anywhere
    Far from this land, or slay me straight, or cast me
    Down to the depths of ocean out of sight.
    Come hither, deign to touch an abject wretch;
    Draw near and fear not; I myself must bear
    The load of guilt that none but I can share.
    [Enter CREON.]

    CREON

    Lo, here is Creon, the one man to grant
    Thy prayer by action or advice, for he
    Is left the State's sole guardian in thy stead.

    OEDIPUS

    Ah me! what words to accost him can I find?
    What cause has he to trust me? In the past
    I have bee proved his rancorous enemy.

    CREON

    Not in derision, Oedipus, I come
    Nor to upbraid thee with thy past misdeeds.
    (To BYSTANDERS)
    But shame upon you! if ye feel no sense
    Of human decencies, at least revere
    The Sun whose light beholds and nurtures all.
    Leave not thus nakedly for all to gaze at
    A horror neither earth nor rain from heaven
    Nor light will suffer. Lead him straight within,
    For it is seemly that a kinsman's woes
    Be heard by kin and seen by kin alone.

    OEDIPUS

    O listen, since thy presence comes to me
    A shock of glad surprise—so noble thou,
    And I so vile—O grant me one small boon.
    I ask it not on my behalf, but thine.

    CREON

    And what the favor thou wouldst crave of me?

    OEDIPUS

    Forth from thy borders thrust me with all speed;
    Set me within some vasty desert where
    No mortal voice shall greet me any more.

    CREON

    This had I done already, but I deemed
    It first behooved me to consult the god.

    OEDIPUS

    His will was set forth fully—to destroy
    The parricide, the scoundrel; and I am he.

    CREON

    Yea, so he spake, but in our present plight
    'Twere better to consult the god anew.

    OEDIPUS

    Dare ye inquire concerning such a wretch?

    CREON

    Yea, for thyself wouldst credit now his word.

    OEDIPUS

    Aye, and on thee in all humility
    I lay this charge: let her who lies within
    Receive such burial as thou shalt ordain;
    Such rites 'tis thine, as brother, to perform.
    But for myself, O never let my Thebes,
    The city of my sires, be doomed to bear
    The burden of my presence while I live.
    No, let me be a dweller on the hills,
    On yonder mount Cithaeron, famed as mine,
    My tomb predestined for me by my sire
    And mother, while they lived, that I may die
    Slain as they sought to slay me, when alive.
    This much I know full surely, nor disease
    Shall end my days, nor any common chance;
    For I had ne'er been snatched from death, unless
    I was predestined to some awful doom.
    So be it. I reck not how Fate deals with me
    But my unhappy children—for my sons
    Be not concerned, O Creon, they are men,
    And for themselves, where'er they be, can fend.
    But for my daughters twain, poor innocent maids,
    Who ever sat beside me at the board
    Sharing my viands, drinking of my cup,
    For them, I pray thee, care, and, if thou willst,
    O might I feel their touch and make my moan.
    Hear me, O prince, my noble-hearted prince!
    Could I but blindly touch them with my hands
    I'd think they still were mine, as when I saw.
    [ANTIGONE and ISMENE are led in.]
    What say I? can it be my pretty ones
    Whose sobs I hear? Has Creon pitied me
    And sent me my two darlings? Can this be?

    CREON

    'Tis true; 'twas I procured thee this delight,
    Knowing the joy they were to thee of old.

    OEDIPUS

    God speed thee! and as meed for bringing them
    May Providence deal with thee kindlier
    Than it has dealt with me! O children mine,
    Where are ye? Let me clasp you with these hands,
    A brother's hands, a father's; hands that made
    Lack-luster sockets of his once bright eyes;
    Hands of a man who blindly, recklessly,
    Became your sire by her from whom he sprang.
    Though I cannot behold you, I must weep
    In thinking of the evil days to come,
    The slights and wrongs that men will put upon you.
    Where'er ye go to feast or festival,
    No merrymaking will it prove for you,
    But oft abashed in tears ye will return.
    And when ye come to marriageable years,
    Where's the bold wooers who will jeopardize
    To take unto himself such disrepute
    As to my children's children still must cling,
    For what of infamy is lacking here?
    "Their father slew his father, sowed the seed
    Where he himself was gendered, and begat
    These maidens at the source wherefrom he sprang."
    Such are the gibes that men will cast at you.
    Who then will wed you? None, I ween, but ye
    Must pine, poor maids, in single barrenness.
    O Prince, Menoeceus' son, to thee, I turn,
    With the it rests to father them, for we
    Their natural parents, both of us, are lost.
    O leave them not to wander poor, unwed,
    Thy kin, nor let them share my low estate.
    O pity them so young, and but for thee
    All destitute. Thy hand upon it, Prince.
    To you, my children I had much to say,
    Were ye but ripe to hear. Let this suffice:
    Pray ye may find some home and live content,
    And may your lot prove happier than your sire's.

    CREON

    Thou hast had enough of weeping; pass within.

    OEDIPUS

    I must obey,
    Though 'tis grievous.

    CREON

    Weep not, everything must have its day.

    OEDIPUS

    Well I go, but on conditions.

    CREON

    What thy terms for going, say.

    OEDIPUS

    Send me from the land an exile.

    CREON

    Ask this of the gods, not me.

    OEDIPUS

    But I am the gods' abhorrence.

    CREON

    Then they soon will grant thy plea.

    OEDIPUS

    Lead me hence, then, I am willing.

    CREON

    Come, but let thy children go.

    OEDIPUS

    Rob me not of these my children!

    CREON

    Crave not mastery in all,
    For the mastery that raised thee was thy bane and wrought thy fall.

    CHORUS

    Look ye, countrymen and Thebans, this is Oedipus the great,
    He who knew the Sphinx's riddle and was mightiest in our state.
    Who of all our townsmen gazed not on his fame with envious eyes?
    Now, in what a sea of troubles sunk and overwhelmed he lies!
    Therefore wait to see life's ending ere thou count one mortal blest;
    Wait till free from pain and sorrow he has gained his final rest.



    The End

    Footnotes

    1. 1. Dr. Kennedy and others render "Since to men of experience I see
           that also comparisons of their counsels are in most lively use.
    2. 2. Literally "not to call them thine," but the Greek may be rendered "In order not to reveal thine."
    3. 3. The Greek text that occurs in this place has been lost.



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Prof. Fakhar Alam
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