Act Two SCENE I
The audience-chamber, in the Palace of Cepheus.
CASSIOPEA What will you do, Cepheus?
CEPHEUS This that has happened Is most unfortunate.
CASSIOPEA
What will you do ?
CEPHEUS
Great Poseidon's priest
CASSIOPEA
Empty thy treasuries, glut him with gold.
CEPHEUS I had already thought of it. Medes! Medes enters.
Page – 43
MEDES He does, my lord.
CEPHEUS Call him and Tyrian Phineus. Medes goes out again.
CASSIOPEA
Bid Tyre save He shall not have our daughter otherwise.
CEPHEUS This too was in my mind already, queen.
Polydaon and Phineus enter.
POLYDAON
Well, King of Syria,
CEPHEUS
Be content. Cepheus gives nought
POLYDAON
I am not used to cool my heels Page – 44
CEPHEUS
The prince is called to answer here
POLYDAON
Answer! Will he deny a crime The Tyrian stands here who can meet that lie.
CASSIOPEA
My children's lips were never stained with lies,
CEPHEUS
And grant the charge admitted,
POLYDAON
What talk is this of ransom? Think'st thou. King,
CASSIOPEA Ah God!
CEPHEUS (in agitation)
Take all my treasury includes
POLYDAON
The gods are not to be bribed, Page – 45
CASSIOPEA (apart)
Give him honours, state, precedence,
CEPHEUS
Listen!
POLYDAON
Me wilt thou bribe ? I take these for Poseidon,
CEPHEUS What will content thee?
POLYDAON A victim has been snatched from holy altar: To fill that want a victim is demanded.
CEPHEUS
I will make war on Egypt and Assyria
POLYDAON
Thy vaunt is empty.
CEPHEUS
Take thou the noblest head in all the kingdom Page – 46
POLYDAON
Shall then the innocent perish for the guilty ?
CEPHEUS
You hear him, Cassiopea ? he will not yield,
POLYDAON Must I wait longer?
CEPHEUS Ho Medes! Medes enters. Iolaus comes not yet. Medes goes out.
CASSIOPEA (rising fiercely)
Priest, thou wilt have my child's blood then, it seems!
POLYDAON
Poseidon knows not prince or beggar.
CASSIOPEA Beware! Thou shalt not have my child. Take heed Ere thou drive monarchs to extremity. Thou hopest in thy sacerdotal pride To make the Kings of Syria childless, end A line that started from the gods. Think'st thou It will be tamely suffered? What have we To lose, if we lose this ? I bid thee again Take heed: drive not a queen to strong despair. Page – 47
I am no tame-souled peasant, but a princess
POLYDAON (after a pause)
Wilt thou confirm
CEPHEUS They shall be thine. He turns to whisper with Cassiopea.
PHINEUS (apart to Polydaon) Dost thou prefer me for thy foeman?
POLYDAON
See
PHINEUS
Thou art a coward, priest, for all thy violence.
POLYDAON Well, as you choose. Iolaus enters.
IOLAUS Father, you sent for me ?
CEPHEUS
There is a charge upon thee, Iolaus, Page – 48
IOLAUS
Whatever I have done, my father, good
CEPHEUS
Didst thou rescue
IOLAUS I did not.
POLYDAON
Dar'st thou deny it, wretched boy?
IOLAUS
Hear me speak first. Thou ruffian
POLYDAON Hear him, O King!
CEPHEUS
Speak calmly. I forbid
IOLAUS As it was worded to me, I deny it.
PHINEUS
Syria, I have not spoken till this moment, Page – 49
IOLAUS Thou liest, Phineus, King of Tyre.
CASSIOPEA
Alas!
PHINEUS I am not angry.
IOLAUS It was no shipwrecked weeping mariner, Condemned by the wild seas, whom they attempted, But a calm god or glorious hero who came By other ways than man's to Syria's margin. Nor did rash steel or battle rescue him. With the mere dreadful waving of his shield He shook from him a hundred threatening lances, This hero hot from Tyre and this proud priest Now bold to bluster in his monarch's chamber, But then a pallid coward, — so he trusts In his Poseidon!
POLYDAON Hast thou done?
IOLAUS
Not yet.
POLYDAON Enough! he has confessed! Page – 50
Give verdict. King, and sentence. Let me watch
CEPHEUS But this fault was not so deadly!
POLYDAON
I see thy drift, O King. Thou wouldst prefer
Thou wouldst exalt thy throne above the temple,
IOLAUS
Father,
POLYDAON
Give sentence. King. I can no longer wait,
CEPHEUS (helplessly to Cassiopia) What shall I do?
CASSIOPEA
Monarch of Tyre,
PHINEUS Lady, Page – 51 You wrong my silence which was but your servant To find an issue from this dire impasse, Rescuing your child from wrath, justice not wounded.
CASSIOPEA
The issue lies in the accuser's will,
PHINEUS
The deed's by all admitted, (To Polydaon)
You urge a place is void and must be filled
CASSIOPEA Phineus, —
PHINEUS
But if
POLYDAON King, —
PHINEUS
The simpler fault Page – 52 The fugitive.
IOLAUS Tyrian, —
PHINEUS
I have not forgotten.
CASSIOPEA
Thou art a man noble indeed in counsel
CEPHEUS
I approve.
IOLAUS
I laugh to see wise men
CEPHEUS Priest, art thou content?
Page – 53
POLYDAON ,
Exceed not thou the period by one day,
CEPHEUS (rising)
Happily decided. Rise Cepheus and Cassiopea leave the chamber.
IOLAUS
Keep thy knife sharp, sacrificant. He goes out.
POLYDAON What hast thou done, King Phineus ? All is ruined.
PHINEUS What, have the stripling's threats appalled thee, priest?
POLYDAON
Thou hast demanded a bright dreadful god
Wilt thou slay him whose tasselled aegis smote
PHINEUS
Priest,
Page – 54
For powers unseen: the world's alive and moves
POLYDAON King Phineus, doubt not the immortal gods. They love not doubters. If thou hadst lived as I, Daily devoted to the temple dimness, And seen the awful shapes that live in night, And heard the awful sounds that move at will When Ocean with the midnight is alone, Thou wouldst not doubt. Remember the dread portents High gods have sent on earth a hundred times When kings offended.
PHINEUS
Well, let them reign unquestioned
POLYDAON
What of his naming aegis lightning-tasselled ?
PHINEUS
The aegis? Page – 55
POLYDAON
Have it your way. Say he was merely man!
PHINEUS
O marvellous!
She is my claim to Syria. Leave something, priest, Excite the commons, woo their thunderer, That plausible republican. Iolaus Once ended, by right of fair Andromeda I'll save and wear the crown. Priest, over Syria And all my Tyrians thou shalt be the one prelate, Should all go well.
POLYDAON All shall go well. King Phineus. They go. Page – 56 |