FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   282   283   284   285   286   287   288   289   290   291   292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306  
307   308   >>  
ing still in vain. Nor this alone; ye have in rude unmanner'd wrath Unblessed images of dreadful shapes evoked, Which so encompass me, that whirl'd I feel myself To Orcus down, despite these my ancestral fields. Is it remembrance? Was it frenzy seized on me? Was I all that? and am I? shall I henceforth be The dread and phantom-shape of those town-wasting ones? The maidens quail: but thou, the eldest, thou dost stand, Calm and unmoved; speak, then, to me some word of sense! PHORKYAS Who of long years recalls the fortune manifold, To him heaven's highest favor seems at last a dream. But thou, so highly favored, past all bound or goal, Saw'st, in thy life-course, none but love-inflamed men, Kindled by impulse rash to boldest enterprise. Theseus by passion stirred full early seized on thee, A man of glorious form, and strong as Heracles. HELENA Forceful he bore me off, a ten-year slender roe, And in Aphidnus' keep shut me, in Attica. PHORKYAS But thence full soon set free, by Castor, Pollux too, In marriage wast thou sought by chosen hero-band. HELENA Yet hath Patroclus, he, Pelides' other self, My secret favor won, as willingly I own. PHORKYAS But thee thy father hath to Menelaus wed, Bold rover of the sea, and house-sustainer too. HELENA His daughter gave he, gave to him the kingdom's sway; And from our wedded union sprang Hermione. PHORKYAS But while he strove afar, for Crete, his heritage, To thee, all lonely, came an all too beauteous guest. HELENA Wherefore the time recall of that half-widowhood, And what destruction dire to me therefrom hath grown! PHORKYAS That voyage unto me, a free-born dame of Crete, Hath also capture brought, and weary servitude. HELENA As stewardess forthwith, he did appoint thee here, With much intrusted,--fort and treasure boldly won. PHORKYAS All which thou didst forsake, by Ilion's tower-girt town Allured, and by the joys, the exhaustless joys of love. HELENA Remind me not of joys: No, an infinitude Of all too bitter woe o'erwhelm'd my heart and brain. PHORKYAS Nathless 'tis said thou didst in two-fold shape appear; Seen within Ilion's walls, and seen in Egypt too. HELENA Confuse thou not my brain, distraught and desolate! Here even, who I am in sooth I cannot tell. PHORKYAS 'Tis also said, from out the hollow shadow-dream, Achilles, passion-fired, hath joined himself to thee, Whom he hath loved of old, 'gain
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   282   283   284   285   286   287   288   289   290   291   292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306  
307   308   >>  



Top keywords:

PHORKYAS

 

HELENA

 

seized

 
passion
 
destruction
 

voyage

 

recall

 
therefrom
 

widowhood

 

sustainer


daughter

 

kingdom

 

father

 
Menelaus
 

wedded

 

lonely

 

heritage

 
beauteous
 

Wherefore

 
sprang

Hermione

 
strove
 

Confuse

 

distraught

 
desolate
 

joined

 

Achilles

 

shadow

 

hollow

 

Nathless


intrusted

 

treasure

 

willingly

 

appoint

 
brought
 

servitude

 
forthwith
 
stewardess
 
boldly
 

infinitude


bitter

 

erwhelm

 

Remind

 
forsake
 

exhaustless

 

Allured

 

capture

 
maidens
 

eldest

 
wasting