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PHAEDRA
by Jean Racine Copyright note
We thank The Gutenberg Projekt for this public domain version -
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But adding to their fright, his body soon One mass of wounds. Our cries of anguish fill The plain. At last they slacken their swift pace, Then stop, not far from those old tombs that mark Where lie the ashes of his royal sires. Panting I thither run, and after me His guard, along the track stain'd with fresh blood That reddens all the rocks; caught in the briers Locks of his hair hang dripping, gory spoils! I come, I call him. Stretching forth his hand, He opens his dying eyes, soon closed again. "The gods have robb'd me of a guiltless life," I hear him say: "Take care of sad Aricia When I am dead. Dear friend, if e'er my father Mourn, undeceived, his son's unhappy fate Falsely accused; to give my spirit peace, Tell him to treat his captive tenderly, And to restore--" With that the hero's breath Fails, and a mangled corpse lies in my arms, A piteous object, trophy of the wrath Of Heav'n--so changed, his father would not know him.
THESEUS Alas, my son! Dear hope for ever lost! The ruthless gods have served me but too well. For what a life of anguish and remorse Am I reserved!
THERAMENES Aricia at that instant, Flying from you, comes timidly, to take him For husband, there, in presence of the gods. Thus drawing nigh, she sees the grass all red And reeking, sees (sad sight for lover's eye!) Hippolytus stretch'd there, pale and disfigured. But, for a time doubtful of her misfortune, Unrecognized the hero she adores, She looks, and asks--"Where is Hippolytus?" Only too sure at last that he lies there Before her, with sad eyes that silently Reproach the gods, she shudders, groans, and falls Swooning and all but lifeless, at his feet. Ismene, all in tears, kneels down beside her, And calls her back to life--life that is naught But sense of pain. And I, to whom this light Is darkness now, come to discharge the duty The hero has imposed on me, to tell thee His last request--a melancholy task. But hither comes his mortal enemy.
SCENE VII THESEUS, PHAEDRA, THERAMENES, PANOPE, GUARDS
THESEUS Madame, you've triumph'd, and my son is kill'd! Ah, but what room have I for fear! How justly Suspicion racks me that in blaming him I err'd! But he is dead; accept your victim; Rightly or wrongly slain, let your heart leap For joy. My eyes shall be for ever blind: Since you accuse him, I'll believe him guilty. His death affords me cause enough for tears, Without a foolish search for further light Which, pow'rless to restore him to my grief, Might only serve to make me more unhappy, Far from this shore and far from you I'll fly, For here the image of my mangled son
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AVAILABLE WORKS
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20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
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5 Weeks in a Balloon
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A Christmas Carol
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A Journey to the Centre of the Earth
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A Modest Proposal
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A Sentimental Journey
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A Study in Scarlet
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A Tale of a Tub
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A Tale of Two
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A Woman of No Importance
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Adam Bede
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All Around The Moon
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An Ideal Husband
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Around The World in 80 Days
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Captains Courageous
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Crime and
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Daniel Deronda
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David Copperfield
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Dead Souls
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Decamerone 2
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Mansfield Park
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Master of Ballantrae
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Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
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Metamorphosis
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Michael Strogoff
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Middlemarch
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Moby Dick
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Moll Flanders
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My Ten Years Imprisonment
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Northanger Abbey
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Nostromo
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Oliver Twist
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Pamela
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Persuasion
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Phaedra
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Pinocchio
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Principle of Population
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Robinson Crusoe
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Rosmersholm
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Sense and Sensibility
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She Stoops to Conquer
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Silas Marner
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Sons and Lovers
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Swann's Way
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Tao Teh King
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The Adventures of
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The Alchemist
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The Art of Controversy
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The Autobiography of Charles Darwin
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The Book of Nonsense
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The Lady from the Sea
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The Man Who Would be King
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The Mill on the Floss
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The Nigger of the Narcissus
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The Origin of Species
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The Prince
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The Scarlet Letter
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The Trial
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The Wisdom of Father Brown
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The Wisdom of Life
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Through the Looking Glass
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Treasure Island
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Typhoon
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Vanity Fair
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Volpone
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War and Peace
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Wuthering Heights

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