Page:The Plays of Euripides Vol. 1- Edward P. Coleridge (1910).djvu/117

This page has been validated.
HIPPOLYTUS.
89

undermined my soul, yet, if in specious words thou dress thy foul suggestion, I shall be beguiled into the snare from which I am now escaping.

Nur. If thou art of this mind, 'twere well thou ne'er hadst sinned; but as it is, hear me; for that is the next best course; I in my house have charms to soothe thy love,—'twas but now I thought of them;—these shall cure thee of thy sickness on no disgraceful terms, thy mind unhurt, if thou wilt be but brave. [But from him thou lovest we must get some token, a word or fragment of his robe, and thereby unite in one love's twofold stream.][1]

Phæ. Is thy drug a salve or potion?

Nur. I cannot tell; be content, my child, to profit by it and ask no questions.

Phæ. I fear me thou wilt prove too wise for me.

Nur. If thou fear this, confess thyself afraid of all; but why thy terror?

Phæ. Lest thou shouldst breathe a word of this to Theseus' son.

Nur. Peace, my child! I will do all things well; only be thou, queen Cypris, ocean's child, my partner in the work! And for the rest of my purpose, it will be enough for me to tell it to our friends within the house.

[Exit Nurse.

Cho. O Love, Love, that from the eyes diffusest soft desire, bringing on the souls of those, whom thou dost camp against, sweet grace, O never in evil mood appear to me, nor out of time and tune approach! Nor fire nor meteor hurls a mightier bolt than Aphrodite's shaft shot by the hands of Love, the child of Zeus. Idly, idly by the streams of Alpheus and in the Pythian shrines of Phœbus, Hellas

    subdued'—according to Paley and Liddell and Scott (passive). Mahaffy extracts a middle sense 'prepared my soul for love's entry,' and adopts the conjectural οὐ, which would certainly seem to add clearness.

  1. These lines are perhaps spurious. Nauck and Weil both bracket them.