Gycia. Lewis Morris

Gycia - Lewis Morris


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knows not what love means, and cannot brook

      Such brain-sick folly. Nay, be sure, good father,

      I love not thus, and shall not.

      Lama.

      Well, well, girl,

      Thou wilt know it yet. I fetter not thy choice,

      But if thou couldst by loving bind together

      Not two hearts only, but opposing peoples;

      Supplant by halcyon days long years of strife,

      And link them in unbroken harmony;—

      Were this no glory for a woman, this

      No worthy price of her heart?

      Gycia.

      Tell me, I pray,

      What mean you by this riddle?

      Lama.

      Prince Asander

      Comes here to ask your hand, and with it take

      A gracious dower of peace and amity.

      He does not ask thee to forsake thy home,

      But leaves for thee his own. All tongues together

      Are full of praise of him: virgin in love,

      A brave youth in the field, as we have proved

      In many a mortal fight; a face and form

      Like a young god's. I would, my love, thy heart

      Might turn to him, and find thy happiness

      In that which makes me happy. I am old

      And failing, and I fain would see thee blest

      Before I die, and at thy knees an heir

      To all my riches, and the State of Cherson

      From anxious cares delivered, and through thee.

      Gycia. Father, we are of the Athenian race,

      Which was the flower of Hellas. Ours the fame

      Of Poets, Statesmen, Orators, whose works

      And thoughts upon the forehead of mankind

      Shine like a precious jewel; ours the glory

      Of those great Soldiers who by sea and land

      Scattered the foemen to the winds of heaven,

      First in the files of time. And though our mother,

      Our Athens, sank, crushed by the might of Rome,

      What is Rome now?—An Empire rent in twain;

      An Empire sinking 'neath the unwieldy weight

      Of its own power; an Empire where the Senate

      Ranks lower than the Circus, and a wanton

      Degrades the Imperial throne. But though to its fall

      The monster totters, this our Cherson keeps

      The bravery of old, and still maintains

      The old Hellenic spirit and some likeness

      Of the fair Commonwealth which ruled the world.

      Surely, my father, 'tis a glorious spring

      Drawn from the heaven-kissed summits whence we come;

      And shall we, then, defile our noble blood

      By mixture with this upstart tyranny

      Which fouls the Hellenic pureness of its source

      In countless bastard channels? If our State

      Ask of its children sacrifice, 'tis well.

      It shall be given; only I prithee, father,

      Seek not that I should with barbaric blood

      Taint the pure stream, which flows from Pericles.

      Let me abide unwedded, if I may,

      A Greek girl as before.

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