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trum from the mine Of Lydia, and the gold of Ind! Yet know, Grey-beard! ye ne'er shall hide him in a tomb. No, not if heaven's own eagle chose to snatch And bear him to the throne supreme for food, Even that pollution should not daunt my heart To yield permission for his funeral. For well know I defilement ne'er can rise From man to God. But, old Tiresias, hear! Even wisest spirits have a shameful fall That fairly speak base words for love of gain. TI. Ah! where is wisdom? who considereth? CR. Wherefore? what means this universal doubt? TI. How far the best of riches is good counsel! CR. As far as folly is the mightiest bane. TI. Yet thou art sick of that same pestilence. CR. I would not give the prophet blow for blow. TI. What blow is harder than to call me false? CR. Desire of money is the prophet's plague. TI. And ill-sought lucre is the curse of kings. CR. Know'st thou 'tis of thy sovereign thou speak'st this? TI. Yea, for my aid gives thee to sway this city. CR. Far seeing art thou, but dishonest too. TI. Thou wilt provoke the utterance of my tongue To that even thought refused to dwell upon. CR. Say on, so thou speak sooth, and not for gain. TI. You think me likely to seek gain from you? CR. You shall not make your merchandise on me! TI. Not many courses of the racing sun Shalt thou fulfil, ere of thine own true blood Thou shalt have given a corpse in recompense For one on earth whom thou hast cast beneath, Entombing shamefully a living soul, And one whom thou hast kept above the ground And disappointed of all obsequies, Unsanctified and godlessly forlorn. Such violence the powers beneath will bear Not even from the Olympian gods. For thee The avengers wait. Hidden but near at hand, Lagging but sure, the Furies of the grave Are watching for thee to thy ruinous harm, With thine own evil to entangle thee. Look well to it now whether I speak for gold! A little while, and thine own palace-halls Shall flash the truth upon thee with loud noise Of men and women, shrieking o'er the dead. And all the cities whose unburied sons, Mangled and torn, have found a sepulchre In dogs or jackals or some ravenous bird That stains their incense with polluted breath, Are forming leagues in troublous enmity. Such shafts, since thou hast stung me to the quick, I like an archer at thee in my wrath Have loosed unerringly--carrying their pang, Inevitable, to thy very heart. Now, sirrah! l
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