Page:Acharnians and two other plays (1909).djvu/51

Rh

Demanding an insignificant isle!

"Ægina," they say, "for a pledge of peace,

As a means to make all jealousy cease."

Meanwhile their privy design and plan

Is solely to gain this marvellous man,

Knowing his influence on your fate,

By obtaining a hold on his estate

Situate in the isle aforesaid.

Therefore there needs to be no more said.

You know their intention, and know that you know it.

You'll keep to your island, and stick to the poet.

And he for his part

Will practise his art

With a patriot heart

With the honest views

That he now pursues,

And fair buffoonery and abuse;

Not rashly bespattering, or basely beflattering,

Not pimping, or puffing, or acting the ruffian;

Not sneaking or fawning;

But openly scorning

All menace and warning,

All bribes and suborning:

He will do his endeavour on your behalf;

He will teach you to think, he will teach you to laugh.

So Cleon again and again may try;

I value him not, nor fear him, I!

His rage and rhetoric I defy.

His impudence, his politics,

His dirty designs, his rascally tricks

No stain of abuse on me shall fix.

Justice and right, in his despite,

Shall aid and attend me, and do me right:

With these a friend, I ne'er will bend,

Nor descend

To an humble tone

(Like his own),

As a sneaking loon,

A knavish, slavish, poor poltroon. Muse of old

Manly times,