The Seven Plays in English Verse - BestLightNovel.com
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OED. Turn thine eyes. .h.i.ther, aged friend, and tell What I shall ask thee. Wast thou Laius' slave?
THEB. SH. I was, not bought, but bred within the house.
OED. What charge or occupation was thy care?
THEB. SH. Most of my time was spent in shepherding.
OED. And where didst thou inhabit with thy flock?
THEB. SH. 'Twas now Cithaeron, now the neighbouring tract.
OED. And hadst thou there acquaintance of this man?
THEB. SH. Following what service? What is he you mean?
OED. The man you see. Hast thou had dealings with him?
THEB. SH. I cannot bring him all at once to mind.
COR. SH. No marvel, good my lord. But I will soon Wake to clear knowledge his oblivious sense.
For sure I am he can recall the time, When he with his two flocks, and I with one Beside him, grazed Cithaeron's pasture wide Good six months' s.p.a.ce of three successive years, From spring to rising of Arcturus; then For the bleak winter season, I drove mine To their own folds, he his to Laius' stalls.
Do I talk idly, or is this the truth?
THEB. SH. The time is far remote. But all is true.
COR. SH. Well, dost remember having given me then A child, that I might nurture him for mine?
THEB. SH. What means thy question? Let me know thy drift.
COR. SH. Friend, yonder stands the infant whom we knew.
THEB. SH. Confusion seize thee, and thy evil tongue!
OED. Check not his speech, I pray thee, for thy words Call more than his for chastis.e.m.e.nt, old sir.
THEB. SH. O my dread lord, therein do I offend?
OED. Thou wilt not answer him about the child?
THEB. SH. He knows not what he speaks. His end is vain.
OED. So! Thou'lt not tell to please us, but the lash Will make thee tell.
THEB. SH. By all that's merciful, Scourge not this aged frame!
OED. Pinion him straight!
THEB. SH. Unhappy! wherefore? what is't you would know?
OED. Gave you this man the child of whom he asks you?
THEB. SH. I gave it him. Would I had died that hour!
OED. Speak rightly, or your wish will soon come true.
THEB. SH. My ruin comes the sooner, if I speak.
OED. This man will balk us with his baffling prate.
THEB. SH. Not so. I said long since, 'I gave the child.'
OED. Whence? Was't your own, or from another's hand?
THEB. SH. 'Twas not mine own; another gave it me.
OED. What Theban gave it, from what home in Thebes?
THEB. SH. O, I implore thee, master, ask no more!
OED. You perish, if I have to ask again.
THEB. SH. The child was of the stock of Laius.
OED. Slave-born, or rightly of the royal line?
THEB. SH. Ah me! Now comes the horror to my tongue!
OED. And to mine ear. But thou shalt tell it me!
THEB. SH. He was given out for Laius' son: but she, Thy queen, within the palace, best can tell.
OED. How? Did she give it thee?
THEB. SH. My lord, she did.
OED. With what commission?
THEB. SH. I was to destroy him.
OED. And could a mother's heart be steeled to this?
THEB. SH. With fear of evil prophecies.
OED. What were they?
THEB. SH. 'Twas said the child should be his father's death.
OED. What then possessed thee to give up the child To this old man?