| (SCENE:-Before the Council-Hall of the Persian Kings at Susa.
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| CHORUS
| While o'er the fields of Greece the embattled troops | 5 |
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| Of great Darius, chose our honour'd age. | 10 |
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| Swells in my tortured breast: for all her force | 15 |
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| With tidings to this seat of Persia's kings. | 20 |
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| Amistres, Artaphernes, and the might | 25 |
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| Leading their martial thousands; their proud steeds | 30 |
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| and Imaeus bold, | 35 |
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| His high birth; Susiscanes; and the chief | 40 |
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| Next these the Lycian troops, | 45 |
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| and many a whirling car | 50 |
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| Mardon and Tharybis the massy spear | 55 |
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| From all the extent of Asia move the hosts Thus march'd the flower of Persia, whose loved youth | 60 |
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| Laments their absence; many an anxious look Already o'er the adverse strand | 65 |
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| The threat'ning ruin shakes the land, | 70 |
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| His proud neck taught to wear the chain. Now has the peopled Asia's warlike lord, | 75 |
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| Resistless in his rapid course, | 80 |
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| Fierce as the dragon scaled in gold Through the deep files he darts his glowing eye; | 85 |
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| Against the slow and cumbrous lance. What shall withstand the torrent of his sway | 90 |
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| So Persia, with resistless might, For thus from ancient times the Fates ordain | 95 |
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| Unequall'd in the works of war; | 100 |
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Taught to behold with fearless eyes | 105 |
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For when misfortune's fraudful hand | 110 |
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Gentle at first with flatt'ring smiles For this with many a sad and gloomy thought | 115 |
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| My tortured breast is fraught: | 120 |
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| 125 |
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| 130 |
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| And stretch across the watery way The Persian dames, with many a tender fear, | 135 |
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| And the long absence of their loves deplore. | 140 |
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| Hold in this ancient house, with prudent care | 145 |
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| The stream of whose rich blood flows in our veins, | 150 |
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| Her lustre blazes on our eyes: my queen, |
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| LEADER OF THE CHORUS | Hail, queen, of Persia's high-zoned dames supreme, | 155 |
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| Age-honour'd mother of the potent Xerxes,
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| ATOSSA | And therefore am I come, leaving my house | 160 |
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| Where in past days Darius held with me | 165 |
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| Past utterance fill my soul; that neither wealth | 170 |
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| Advise me then, you whose experienced age
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| LEADER | Speak, royal lady, what thy will, assured
| 175
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| ATOSSA | Oft, since my son hath march'd his mighty host | 180 |
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| Alethought two women stood before my eyes | 185 |
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| Though distant each from each they chanced to dwell, | 190 |
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| Yokes them, and reins their harness'd necks. The one, | 195 |
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| And tore the yoke asunder; down my son | 200 |
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| When I arose, in the sweet-flowing stream | 205 |
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| Fly to the altar of the sun; aghast | 210 |
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| My son, let conquest crown his arms, would shine
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| LEADER | We would not, royal lady, sink thy soul | 215 |
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| With confidence. Go then, address the gods; | 220 |
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| Him that was once thy husband, whom thou saw'st |
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| Close in the covering earth's profoundest gloom.
| 225
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| ATOSSA | Thy friendly judgment first hath placed these dreams |
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| In a fair light, confirming the event | 230 |
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| Indulge me, friends, who wish to be inform'd
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| LEADER | Far in the west, where sets the imperial sun.
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| ATOSSA | Yet my son will'd the conquest of this town.
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| LEADER | May Greece through all her states bend to his power!
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| ATOSSA | Send they embattled numbers to the field?
| 235
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| LEADER | A force that to the Medes hath wrought much wo.
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| ATOSSA | Have they sufficient treasures in their houses?
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| LEADER | Their rich earth yields a copious fount of silver.
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| ATOSSA | From the strong bow wing they the barbed shaft?
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| LEADER | They grasp the stout spear, and the massy shield.
| 240
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| ATOSSA | What monarch reigns, whose power commands their ranks?
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| LEADER | Slaves to no lord, they own no kingly power.
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| ATOSSA | How can they then resist the invading foe?
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| LEADER | As to spread havoc through the numerous host,
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| ATOSSA | Thy words strike deep, and wound the parent's breast
| 245
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| LEADER | But, if I judge aright, thou soon shalt hear |
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| Each circumstance; for this way, mark him, speeds |
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| MESSENGER | Wo to the towns through Asia's peopled realms! | 250 |
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| Of boundless wealth, how is thy glorious state |
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| Persians, the whole barbaric host is fall'n.
| 255
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| CHORUS (chanting) | O horror, horror! What a baleful train
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| MESSENGER | It is ev'n so, all ruin; and myself, | 260 |
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| Beyond all hope returning, view this light.
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| CHORUS (chanting) | How tedious and oppressive is the weight
| 265
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| MESSENGER | I speak not from report; but these mine eyes
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| CHORUS (chanting) | Wo, wo is me! Then has the iron storm, | 270 |
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| In vain its arrowy shower on sacred Greece.
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| MESSENGER | In heaps the unhappy dead lie on the strand
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| CHORUS (chanting) | Unhappy friends, sunk, perish'd in the sea; | 275 |
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| Their bodies, mid the wreck of shatter'd ships,
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| MESSENGER | Naught did their bows avail, but all the troops
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| CHORUS (chanting) | Raise the funereal cry, with dismal notes | 280 |
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| Wailing the wretched Persians. Oh, how ill
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| MESSENGER | O Salamis, how hateful is thy name!
| 285
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| CHORUS (chanting) | How dreadful to her foes! Call to remembrance
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| ATOSSA | Astonied with these ills, my voice thus long | 290 |
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| Hath wanted utterance: griefs like these exceed | 295 |
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| What leader must we wail? What sceptred chief
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| MESSENGER | Xerxes himself lives, and beholds the light.
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| ATOSSA | That word beams comfort on my house, a ray | 300 |
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| That brightens through the melancholy gloom.
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| MESSENGER
| Artembares, the potent chief that led | 305 |
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| Tenagon, bravest of the Bactrians, lies | 310 |
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| Near to the fountains of the Egyptian Nile, | 315 |
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| On jet-black steeds, with purple gore distain'd | 320 |
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| Grasps his war-wear spear; there prostrate lies | 325 |
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| Unhappy in his fate. Syennesis,
| 330
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| ATOSSA | This is the height of ill, ah me! and shame | 335 |
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| Rush to encounter with the Persian hosts.
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| MESSENGER | Know then, in numbers the barbaric fleet | 340 |
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| A thousand ships; their number well I know; | 345 |
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| Of victory? But unequal fortune sunk
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| ATOSSA | The gods preserve the city of Minerva.
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| MESSENGER | The walls of Athens are impregnable,
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| ATOSSA | Which navy first advanced to the attack? | 350 |
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| Who led to the onset, tell me; the bold Greeks,
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| MESSENGER | Our evil genius, lady, or some god | 355 |
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| And thus address'd thy son, the imperial Xerxes:- | 360 |
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| Seek safety." At these words, the royal chief, | 365 |
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| In three divisions your well-ordered ships, | 370 |
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| Shall answer the neglect." This harsh command | 375 |
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| Soon as the golden sun was set, and night | 380 |
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| Each to the appointed station steers his course; | 385 |
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| To escape. The morn, all beauteous to behold, | 390 |
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| Spreading dismay through Persia's hosts, thus fallen | 395 |
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| The paean ended, with impetuous force | 400 |
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| From ev'ry part this voice of exhortation:- | 405 |
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| Meantime from Persia's hosts the deep'ning shout | 410 |
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| Its sculptured prow all shatter'd. Each advanced | 415 |
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| Breaks all the other's oars: with skill disposed | 420 |
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| Roll on the rocky shores: the poor remains | 425 |
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| 430 |
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| Would set; for be assured that not one day
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| ATOSSA | Ah, what a boundless sea of wo hath burst
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| MESSENGER | These are not half, not half our ills; on these | 435 |
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| Came an assemblage of calamities,
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| ATOSSA | What fortune can be more unfriendly to us
| 440 |
| MESSENGER | Whoe'er of Persia's warriors glow'd in prime
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| ATOSSA | Alas, their ruthless fate, unhappy friends! | 445 |
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| But in what manner, tell me, did they perish?
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| MESSENGER | Full against Salamis an isle arises, | 450 |
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| That when the Grecians from their shatter'd ships | 455 |
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| Instant in all their glitt'ring arms they leap'd | 460 |
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| And storms of arrows crush'd them; then the Greeks | 465 |
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| Deep were the groans of Xerxes when he saw | 470 |
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| These are fresh miseries to awake thy sighs.
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| ATOSSA | Invidious Fortune, how thy baleful power | 475 |
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| Sufficed not; that defeat he thought to avenge,
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| MESSENGER | The poor remains of Persia's scatter'd fleet | 480 |
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| Spread ev'ry sail for flight, as the wind drives, | 485 |
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| And near the gulf of Melia, the rich vale | 490 |
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| Through thirst and hunger perish'd there, oppress'd | 495 |
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| That night, ere yet the season, breathing frore, | 500 |
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| O'er the stream's solid crystal they began | 505 |
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| Each over other; happiest he who found | 510 |
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| That Persia sighs through all her states, and mourns
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| LEADER OF THE CHORUS | O Fortune, heavy with affliction's load, | 515 |
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| How hath thy foot crush'd all the Persian race!
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| ATOSSA | Ah me, what sorrows for our ruin'd host | 520 |
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| First to the gods wish I to pour my prayers, | 525 |
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| If haply better fortune may await it, | 530 |
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| Attend him, nor let sorrow rise on sorrows.
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| CHORUS (singing) | Awful sovereign of the skies, | 535 |
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| By thee was wrapp'd in sorrow's dark'ning shade; | 540 |
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| From her sweet couch up starts the widow'd bride, | 545 |
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| Our melting tears demand, and sorrow-soften'd strain. Now her wailings wide despair | 550 |
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| Xerxes, ill-fated, leads no more; | 555 |
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| O'er all his grateful realms adored, | 560 |
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| Now crush'd, and whelm'd beneath the indignant deep | 565 |
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| The unshelter'd monarch roams o'er Thracia's dreary soil. | 570 |
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| Through sad constraint, ah me! forsaken lie, | 575 |
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| Or roll beneath the roaring tide, | 580 |
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| Gives the full stream of plaintive grief to flow; | 585 |
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| To their lord's hand | 590 |
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| Now no restraint the wanton tongue shall own, | 595 |
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| His awe commanding nobles lie in blood.
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| she carries offerings for the tomb of Darius.) | ||
| ATOSSA | Whoe'er, my friends, in the rough stream of life | 600 |
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| Of Fortune smooths the current, it expands | 605 |
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| Dismay my sick'ning soul: hence from my house | 610 |
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| White from the sacred heifer; liquid honey, | 615 |
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| In joy; the yellow olive's fragrant fruit, | 620 |
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| Your lord, divine Darius; I meanwhile
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| CHORUS (chanting) | Yes, royal lady, Persia's honour'd grace, | 625 |
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| That guide the dead, to be propitious to us. | 630 |
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| Once more to visit this ethereal light; | 635 |
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| Taught in descant sad to ring, | 640 |
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| Glorious in his radiant state, | 645 |
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| Send then, monarch of the dead, | 650 |
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| He in realm-unpeopling war | 655 |
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| Rise then, sovereign lord, to light; | 660 |
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| Lift thy sock in saffron died, | 665 |
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| Lord of Persia's lord, appear: | 670 |
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| Rise, Darius, awful power; | 675 |
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| Sweeping o'er the azure tide
| 680 |
| As the song concludes the GHOST OF DARIUS appears from the tomb.) | ||
| GHOST OF DARIUS | Ye faithful Persians, honour'd now in age, | 685 |
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| Pleased I receive. And you around my tomb | 690 |
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| But with reluctance: much with them my power
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| CHORUS (chanting) | My wonted awe o'ercomes me; in thy presence | 695 |
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| I dare not raise my eyes, I dare not speak.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | Since from the realms below, by thy sad strains
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| CHORUS (chanting) | I dread to forge a flattering tale, I dread | 700 |
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| To grieve thee with a harsh offensive truth.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | Since fear hath chained his tongue, high-honour'd dame, | 705 |
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| Must bear his lot of wo; afflictions rise
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| ATOSSA | O thou that graced with Fortune's choicest gifts | 710 |
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| Bless'd amid thy Persians; bless'd I deem thee now
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | By pestilence, or faction's furious storms?
| 715
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| ATOSSA | Not so: near Athens perish'd all our troops.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | Say, of my sons, which led the forces thither?
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| ATOSSA | The impetuous Xerxes, thinning all the land.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | By sea or land dared he this rash attempt?
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| ATOSSA | By both: a double front the war presented.
| 720
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | A host so vast what march conducted o'er?
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| ATOSSA | From shore to shore he bridged the Hellespont.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | What! could he chain the mighty Bosphorus?
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| ATOSSA | Ev'n so, some god assisting his design.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | Some god of power to cloud his better sense.
| 725
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| ATOSSA | The event now shows what mischiefs he achieved.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | What suffer'd they, for whom your sorrows flow?
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| ATOSSA | His navy sunk spreads ruin through the camp.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | Fell all his host beneath the slaught'ring spear?
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| ATOSSA | Susa, through all her streets, mourns her lost sons.
| 730
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | How vain the succour, the defence of arms?
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| ATOSSA | In Bactra age and grief are only left.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | Ah, what a train of warlike youth is lost!
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| ATOSSA | Xerxes, astonished, desolate, alone.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | How will this end? Nay, pause not. Is he safe?
| 735
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| ATOSSA | Fled o'er the bridge, that join'd the adverse strands.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | And reach'd this shore in safety? Is this true?
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| ATOSSA | True are thy words, and not to be gainsay'd.
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | With what a winged course the oracles | 740 |
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| Yet I implored the gods that it might fall | 745 |
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| The raging Bosphorus, like a slave, in chains, | 750 |
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| But much I fear lest all my treasured wealth
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| ATOSSA | This from too frequent converse with bad men | 755 |
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| Tim'rous and slothful, never, save in sport,
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | Great deeds have they achieved, and memorable | 760 |
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| Suffer'd such ruin, since heaven's awful king | 765 |
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| Fix'd firm the empire, for his temperate soul | 770 |
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| Ionia bent reluctant; but the gods | 775 |
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| Artaphernes, and his confederate chiefs | 780 |
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| But never wrought such ruin to the state. | 785 |
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| You know it well, so wasted her brave sons.
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| LEADER OF THE CHORUS | Why this? To what fair end are these thy words
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | No more 'gainst Greece lead your embattled hosts; | 790 |
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| Not though your deep'ning phalanx spreads the field
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| LEADER | What may thy words import? How fight for them?
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | With famine it destroys your cumbrous train.
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| LEADER | Choice levies, prompt for action, will we send,
| 795
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | Those, in the fields of Greece that now remain,
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| LEADER | What! shall not all the host of Persia pass
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| GHOST OF DARIUS | Of all their numbers few, if aught avails | 800 |
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| The faith of heaven-sent oracles to him | 805 |
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| Wat'ring the plain, whose grateful currents roll | 810 |
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| The statues of the gods; their hallow'd shrines | 815 |
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| The heap yet swells; for in Plataea's plains | 820 |
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| That proud aspiring thoughts but ill beseem | 825 |
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| Another's, and her treasured happiness | 830 |
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| To curb that pride, which from the gods calls down |
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| (To ATOSSA) | And thou, whose age | 835 |
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| His gorgeous vestments from his royal limbs | 840 |
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| Each day in pleasures battle your drooping spirits,
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| LEADER | These many present, many future ills
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| ATOSSA | Unhappy fortune, what a tide of ills | 845 |
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| Bursts o'er me! Chief this foul disgrace, which shows | 850 |
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| Will I forsake whom my soul holds most dear.
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| | ||
| CHORUS | Ye powers that rule the skies, | 855 |
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| The scenes of glory opening to our eyes, | 860 |
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| Invincible in war, | 865 |
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| He pass'd, nor from his palace moved his state; | 870 |
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| Nor those, that far the extended ocean o'er | 875 |
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| Whose foot the deep Propontis laves; | 880 |
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| Bow'd to this monarch: humbled Lesbos bow'd; | 885 |
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| That stretches o'er the deep | 890 |
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| Him Melos, Gnidus, Rhodes confess'd their lord; | 895 |
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| The cause of all our wo, is red with Persian gore. | 900 |
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| With such unconquer'd might | 905 |
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| Farewell the big war's plumed pride:
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| The entire closing scene is sung or chanted.) | ||
| XERXES | Ah me, how sudden have the storms of Fate, | 910 |
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| With what relentless fury hath thy hand | 915 |
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| Had died with those brave men that died in fight. |
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| CHORUS | O thou afflicted monarch, once the lord | 920 |
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| The pride, the grace, whom ruin now hath sunk | 925 |
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| Of all the realm, thousands, whose dreadful bows | 930 |
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| Oppress'd, with griefs oppress'd, bends to the earth.
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| XERXES | And I, O wretched fortune, I was born
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| CHORUS | I have no voice, no swelling harmony, | 935 |
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| No descant, save these notes of wo,
| 940
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| XERXES | Then bid them flow, bid the wild measures flow
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| CHORUS | Yes, at thy royal bidding shall the strain | 945 |
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| The suff'rings of my bleeding country plain,
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| XERXES | For high the god of war his flaming crest | 950 |
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| Raised, with the fleet of Greece surrounded,
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| CHORUS | To swell thy griefs ask ev'ry circumstance. | 955 |
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| Where are thy valiant friends, thy chieftains where? |
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| And Susiscanes' glitt'ring crest?
| 960
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| XERXES | Dash'd from the Tyrian vessel on the rocks | 965 |
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| The heroes on the dreary strand are stretch'd.
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| CHORUS | Where is Pharnuchus? Ariomardus where, | 970 |
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| His high-descended lineage traced?
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| XERXES | Wretch that I am! These on the abhorred town | 975 |
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| Indignant; but at once in the fierce shock
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| CHORUS | There does the son of Batanochus lie, | 980 |
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| Of Susamus, down from the lineage high | 985 |
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| The fate of Persia's princes show.
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| XERXES | To my grieved memory thy mournful voice, | 990 |
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| In dreadful symphony the sorrowing strain.
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| CHORUS | Yet once more shall I ask thee, yet once more, | 995 |
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| Where Cigdadatas and Lythimnas' force, | 1000 |
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| Attend their rites: I follow'd: low they lie
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| XERXES | (Ah me, the once great leaders of my host!
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| CHORUS | O wo, wo, wo!
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| XERXES | Unutterable wo
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| CHORUS | The demons of revenge have spread; | 1005 |
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| And Ate from her drear abode below
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| XERXES | Dismay, and rout, and ruin, ills that wait
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| CHORUS
| Dismay, and rout, and ruin on us wait,
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| XERXES | Ill flows on ill, on sorrows sorrows rise;
| 1010 |
| CHORUS | Misfortune leads her baleful train; |
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| XERXES | At such a fall, such troops of heroes lost,
| 1015
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| CHORUS | Is all thy glory lost?
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| XERXES | Seest thou these poor remains of my rent robes?
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| CHORUS | I see, I see.
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| XERXES | And this ill-furnish'd quiver?
| 1020
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| CHORUS | Wherefore preserved?
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| XERXES | To store my treasured arrows.
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| CHORUS | Few, very few.
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| XERXES | And few my friendly aids.
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| CHORUS | I thought these Grecians shrunk appall'd at arms. | 1025
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| XERXES | No: they are bold and daring: these sad eyes
|
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| CHORUS | The ruin, sayst thou, of thy shattered fleet?
|
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| XERXES | And in the anguish of my soul I rent
| 1030
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| CHORUS | Wo, wo!
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| XERXES | And more than wo.
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| CHORUS | Redoubled, threefold wo!
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| XERXES | Disgrace to me,
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| CHORUS | Are all thy powers | 1035
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| XERXES | No satrap guards me now.
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| CHORUS | Thy faithful friends sunk in the roaring main.
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XERXES |
Weep, weep their loss, and lead me to my house;
| 1040 |
| CHORUS | Yes, once more at thy bidding shall the strain | 1076 |
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