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rse on my own head! JO. How? I tremble as I gaze on thee, my king! OED. The fear appals me that the seer can see. Tell one thing more, to make it doubly clear! JO. I am lothe to speak, but, when you ask, I will. OED. Had he scant following, or, as princes use, Full numbers of a well-appointed train? JO. There were but five in all: a herald one; And Laius travelled in the only car. OED. Woe! woe! 'Tis clear as daylight. Who was he That brought you this dire message, O my queen? JO. A home-slave, who alone returned alive. OED. And is he now at hand within the house? JO. No, truly. When he came from yonder scene And found thee king in room of Laius murdered, He touched my hand, and made his instant prayer That I would send him to o'erlook the flocks And rural pastures, so to live as far As might be from the very thought of Thebes. I granted his desire. No servant ever More richly merited such boon than he. OED. Can he be brought again immediately? JO. Indeed he can. But why desire it so? OED. Words have by me been uttered, O my queen, That give me too much cause to wish him here. JO. Then come he shall. But I may surely claim To hear what in thy state goes heavily. OED. Thou shalt not lose thy rights in such an hour, When I am harrowed thus with doubt and fear. To whom more worthy should I tell my grief? --My father was Corinthian Polybus, My mother, Dorian Merope.--I lived A prince among that people, till a chance Encountered me, worth wonder, but, though strange, Not worth the anxious thought it waked in me. For at a feasting once over the wine One deep in liquor called aloud to me, 'Hail, thou false foundling of a foster-sire!' That day with pain I held my passion down; But early on the morrow I came near And questioned both my parents, who were fierce In anger at the man who broached this word. For their part I was satisfied, but still It galled me, for the rumour would not die. Eluding then my parents I made way To Delphi, where, as touching my desire, Phoebus denied me; but brake forth instead With other oracles of misery And horrible misfortune, how that I Must know my mother's shame, and cause to appear A birth intolerable in human view, And do to death the author of my life. I fled forth at the word, conjecturing now Corinthia's region by the stars of heaven, And wandered, where I never might behold Those dreadful prophecies fulfilled on me. So travelling on, I cam
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