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Medea argues with her conscience. |
** Image ID #2233408 Unavailable ** Medea Why do you hound me with your constant whining, bemoaning the tearing of your heart from its roots, spewing your blood from your blasphemous lips that speak only of the horror of our conjoined deeds, vile murder of the king of Corinth and cursèd Creusa that stole our husband Jason who I rescued once and many times? ‘Twas I, not you, who dared the words that withheld the rule of heaven from those moments that altered mortal lives and preserved the doomed of gods. I alone, proud and unvanquished, that stood and took the vengeance earned by such betrayal by the man who fathered our sons and daughters, only I who wiped away the dirt and filth from our name, the offspring that carried his blood that must be expunged. It was you that split yourself from me, unwilling to glory in the recompense of our revenge, the death of all he cared for. And now you mourn for what is gone, the end of innocence you’d drape about my neck, but I’ll not have it, remorse is yours and not my part, your eternal weeping merely drives me on to grasp my eternal destiny, Queen of Athens and sorceress of irresistible power. But soft, will you stay with me to enjoy the fruits of our apotheosis? I loved him and he is gone forever. Line Count: 24 For Dark Dreamscapes Poetry Contest, October 2020 Week 4 Prompt: As per illustration. |