SCENE IV
The same.
ANTIOCHUS ,
I put my hand on Antioch. Thou hast done well,
EUNICE
And like the lion
RODOGUNE
I trust the stars
ANTIOCHUS These are the shadows from a clouded past Which shall not be repeated, Rodogune. This is not Antioch that thou knew'st, the prison Of thy captivity, thou enterest now, Not Antioch of thy foes, but a new city And thy own kingdom.
RODOGUNE Are the gods so good ?
ANTIOCHUS
The gods are strong; they love to test our strength Page – 428
That they are jealous. No, but high and stern
Thoas enters.
THOAS
Broken and fallen.
ANTIOCHUS
Theramenes before me!
THOAS
The gods
ANTIOCHUS
The Macedonians! Then
THOAS That's if we choose; For there are other tidings. Page – 429
ANTIOCHUS They should be welcome.
THOAS Phraates, thy imperial father, comes With myriad hosts behind him thunder-hooved, Not for invasion armed as Syria's foe, But for the husband of his Rodogune. Shall we recoil upon these helpers ? Death Can always wait.
ANTIOCHUS
Perhaps. Leave me awhile,
Thoas goes.
RODOGUNE I have no country, I have only thee. I shall be where thou art; it is all I know And all I wish for.
ANTIOCHUS
Eunice, wilt thou go
EUNICE
I follow her and thee. What talk is this ?
ANTIOCHUS
Am I other, Eunice, Page – 430
EUNICE
You are my god, my warrior and the same
ANTIOCHUS
To her and thee I am.
RODOGUNE Nothing else.
Rodogune and Eunice enter the
ANTIOCHUS A god! Yes, I have godlike stirrings in me. Shall they be bounded by this petty world The sea can span ? If Rome, Greece, Africa, Asia and all the undiscovered globe Were given me for my garden, all glory mine, All men my friends, all women's hearts my own, Would there not still be bounds, still continents Unvanquished ? O thou glorious Macedonian, Thou too must seek at last more worlds to conquer. Hast thou discovered them ? This earth is but a hillock when all's said, The sea an azure puddle. All tonight Seems strange to me; my wars, ambition, fate And what I am and what I might have been, Float round me vaguely and withdraw from me Like grandiose phantoms in a mist. Who am I ? Whence come I? Whither go, or wherefore now? Who gave me these gigantic appetites That make a banquet of the world ? Who set These narrow, scornful and exiguous bounds To my achievement ? O, to die, to pass, Page – 431
Nothing achieved but this, "He tried great things,
The Parthian treads our land!
But wherefore die ? Should I not rather go Page – 432
Unless indeed all thinking-out is vain While he is speaking, the Eremite enters.
EREMITE Before thee always.
ANTIOCHUS
How
EREMITE
The how inquire not nor the whence, but learn
ANTIOCHUS
So then, defeat and death were from the first
EREMITE
Despise not proud defeat, scorn not high death.
ANTIOCHUS Yes, as I shall,
But not submissively. Break then, thou hill Page – 433
Unsatisfied with thy own height. The gods
They do their work with mortals. To the Vast He departs.
ANTIOCHUS
I will meet them there. Page – 434 |