VOLTAIRE: 60+ Works in One Volume - Philosophical Writings, Novels, Historical Works, Poetry, Plays & Letters. Вольтер

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VOLTAIRE: 60+ Works in One Volume - Philosophical Writings, Novels, Historical Works, Poetry, Plays & Letters - Вольтер

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style="font-size:15px;">       On mount Citheron—

      phorbas.

       How!

      icarus.

       The child you gave me,

       The child to death—

      phorbas.

       What dost thou say? remember,

       Remember what?

      icarus.

       Thou hast no cause to fear;

       Le not alarmed: thou mayest rejoice, that infant

       Was—Œdipus.

      phorbas.

       The lightning blast thee, wretch!

       What hast thou said?

      icarus.

       Doubt not, my lord, whatever

       [To Œdipus.

       This Theban says, he gave thee to my arms;

       Thy fate is known; this old man is thy father.

      œdipus.

       What complicated misery! Alas!

       [To Phorbas.

       If thou art indeed my father, will the gods

       Ever suffer me to shed thy blood?

      phorbas.

       O no!

       For thou art not my son.

      œdipus.

       And didst not thou

       Expose me in my infancy?

      phorbas.

       My lord,

       Permit me to retire, and hide from thee

       The dreadful truth.

      œdipus.

       No, Phorbas; by the gods

       I beg thee, tell me all.

      phorbas.

       Begone, avoid

       Thy children, and thy queen.

      œdipus.

       Now answer me,

       For to resist is vain: that infant, doomed

       To death by thee, say, didst thou give it him?

       [Pointing to Icarus.

      phorbas.

       I did: and would that day had been my last!

      œdipus.

       And of what country was that child?

      phorbas.

       Of Thebes.

      œdipus.

       And thou art not his father?

      phorbas.

       No: alas!

       Sprung from a nobler, but more wretched race—

      œdipus.

       Who was he then?

      phorbas.

       My lord, what would you do?

       [Throwing himself at the feet of Œdipus.

      œdipus.

       Speak, speak, I say.

      phorbas.

       Jocaste was his mother.

      icarus.

       [Looking at Œdipus.

       Behold the fruit of all my generous care!

      phorbas.

       What have we done?

      œdipus.

       I thought it must be so.

      icarus.

       My lord—

      œdipus.

       Away, begone, this moment leave me:

       The dreadful gifts ye have bestowed on me

       Must have their recompense; and ye have cause

       To fear my wrath, for ye preserved my life.

      SCENE IV.

       Table of Contents

      œdipus.

       At length the dire prediction is fulfilled,

       And Œdipus is now, though innocent,

       A base, incestuous parricide: O virtue!

       Thou fatal empty name; thou who didst guide

       My hapless days, thou hadst not power to stop

       The current of my fate: alas! I fell

       Into the snare by trying to avoid it:

       Heaven led me on to guilt, and sunk a pit

       Beneath my sliding feet: I was the slave

       Of some unknown, some unrelenting power,

       That used me for its instrument of vengeance:

       These are my crimes, remorseless cruel gods!

       Yours was the guilt, and ye have punished me.

       Where am I? what dark shade thus from my eyes

       Covers the light of heaven? the walls are stained

       With blood; the furies shake their torches at me;

       The lightnings flash; hell opens her wide gates:

       O Laius! O my father! art thou there?

       I see the deadly wound these hands had made;

       Revenge thee now on this abhorred monster,

      

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