Page:The poetical works of Matthew Arnold, 1897.djvu/377

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MEROPE.
339

And he is lost, and thou hast that to atone!
Fly, find me on the instant where confer
The murderer and his impious setter-on—
And ye, keep faithful silence, friends, and mark
What one weak woman can achieve alone.


ARCAS.

O mistress, by the Gods, do nothing rash!


MEROPE.

Unfaithful servant, dost thou, too, desert me?


ARCAS.

I go! I go!—The King holds council—there
Will I seek tidings. Take, the while, this word:
Attempting deeds beyond thy power to do,
Thou nothing profitest thy friends, but mak'st
Our misery more, and thine own ruin sure.

[Arcas goes out.


THE CHORUS.

I have heard, O Queen, how a prince, str. 1.
Agamemnon's son, in Mycenæ,
Orestes, died but in name,
Lived for the death of his foes.


MEROPE.

Peace!


THE CHORUS.

What is it?


MEROPE.

Alas,
Thou destroyest me!