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Antiochus' chamber.
Antiochus, with a map before him.
ANTIOCHUS
Ecbatana, Susa, and Sogdiana,""
The Aryan country which the Indus bounds,
Euphrates' stream and Tigris' golden sands,
The Oxus and Jaxartes and these mountains
Vague and enormous shouldering the moon
With all their dim beyond of nations huge;
This were an empire! What are Syria, Greece
And the blue littoral to Gades ? They are
Too narrow to contain my soul, too petty
To satisfy its hunger and its vastness.
O pale sweet Parthian face with liquid eyes
Mid darkest masses and O gracious limbs
Obscuring this epitome of earth,
You will not let me fix my eyes on Susa.
I never yearned for any woman yet.
While Timocles with the light Theban dames
Amused his careless heart, I walked aside;
Parthia and Greece became my mistresses.
But now my heart is filled with one pale girl.
Exult not, archer, I will quiet thee
With sudden and assured possession first,
Then keep thee beating an eternal strain.
I have loved her through past lives and many ages.
The Parthian princess, lovely Rodogune!
O name of sweetness! Renowned Phraates' daughter,
A bud of kings, — my glorious prisoner
With those beseeching eyes. O high Antiochus,
Who snatched her from among her guardian spears,
Thou hast gone past but left this prophecy
Of beautiful conquered Persia grown my slave
To love me. It is thou, my Rodogune!
Page – 380
Rodogune enters.
RODOGUNE
(with lowered eyes)
I have brought the wine.
ANTIOCHUS
Thou art the only wine,
O Parthian! Wine to flush Olympian souls
Is in this glorious flask. Set down the bowl.
Lift up instead thy long and liquid eyes;
I grudge them to the marble Rodogune.
Thou knowest well why I have sent for thee.
Have we not gazed into each other's eyes
And thine confessed their knowledge?
RODOGUNE
Prince, I am
Thy mother's slave,
ANTIOCHUS
Mine, mine, O Rodogune,
For I am Syria.
RODOGUNE
Thine.
ANTIOCHUS
O, thou hast spoken!
RODOGUNE
Touch me not, touch me not, Antiochus!
Son of Nicanor, spare me, spare thyself,
O me! I know the gods prepare some death;
I am a living misfortune.
ANTIOCHUS
Wert thou my fate
Page – 381
Of death itself, delightful Rodogune,
Not, as thou art, heaven's pledge of bliss, I'ld not abstain
From thy delight, but have my joy of thee
The short while it is possible on earth.
O, play not with the hours, my Rodogune.
Why should brief man defer his joys and wait
As if life were eternal ? Time does not pause,
Death does not tarry.
RODOGUNE
Alas!
ANTIOCHUS
Thou lingerest yet.
Wilt thou deny the beating of our hearts
That call to us to bridge these sundering paces ?
O, then I will command thee as a slave.
Thou would'st not let me draw thee, come thyself
Into my arms, O perfect Rodogune,
My Parthian captive!
RODOGUNE
Antiochus, my king!
ANTIOCHUS
So heave against me like a wave for ever.
Melt warmly into my bosom like the Spring,
O honied breathing tumult!
RODOGUNE
O release me!
ANTIOCHUS
Thou sudden sorceress, die upon my breast!
My arms are cords to bind thee to this stake,
Slowly to burn away in crimson fire.
Page – 382
RODOGUNE
Release me, O release me!
ANTIOCHUS
Not till our lips have joined
Eternal wedlock. With this stamp and this
And many more I'll seal thee to myself.
Eternal Time's too short for all the kisses
I yearn for from thee, O pale loveliness,
Dim mystery! Press thy lips to mine. Obey.
Again! and so again and even for ever
Chant love, O marvel, let thy lips' wild music
Come faltering from thy heart into my bosom>
Rodogune sinks at his feet and
embraces his knees.
RODOGUNE
I am thine, thine, thine, thine for ever.
She rises and hides her face in her hands.
ANTIOCHUS
(uncovering her face)
Hide not thy face from love. The gods in heaven
Look down on us; let us look up at them
With fearless eyes of candid joy and tell them
Not Time nor any of their dooms can move us now.
The passion of oneness two hearts are this moment
Denies the steps of death for ever.
RODOGUNE
My heart
Stops in me. I can bear no more of bliss.
O, leave me now that I may live for thee.
ANTIOCHUS
Stay where thou art. Or go, for thou art mine
And I can send thee from me when I will
And call thee when I will. Go, Rodogune
Page – 383
Who yet remain with me.
Rodogune leaves the chamber with
faltering steps.
O Love, thou art
Diviner in the enjoying. Can I now
Unblinded scan this map? No, she is there;
It is her eyes I see and not Ecbatana.
Page – 384
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