Ion Monologue
| Ion Monologue by Euripides | |
| Character: | Old Man |
| Gender: | Male |
| Age (range): | ? |
| Style: | Drama |
| Length: | < 3 minutes |
Looking for a published monologue? Want to know
character history & story background? We have exactly what you
need! Join Our Community
today and gain access to dozens of monologues for auditions,
classes, competitions, workshops, and more! Click
To See What The Buzz Is About... |
- OLD MAN: My honoured mistress (for with you I grieve),
- We are betrayed by your perfidious lord,
- Wronged by premeditated fraud, and cast
- Forth from Erectheus' house: I speak not this
- Through hatred to your husband, but because
- I love you more than him, who wedding you
- When to the city he a stranger came,
- Your palace too and whole inheritance
- With you receiving, on some other dame
- Appears to have begotten sons by stealth:
- How 'twas by stealth I'll prove; when he perceived
- That you were barren, he was not content
- To share the self-same fate, but on a slave,
- Whom he embraced in secrecy, begot
- And to some Delphic matron gave this son,
- That in a foreign realm he might be nurtured:
- He, to the temple of Apollo sent,
- Is here trained up in secret. But the sire,
- Soon as he knew the stripling had attained
- The years of manhood, hath on you prevailed
- Hither to come, because you had no child.
- The god indeed hath spoken truth; not so
- Xuthus, who from his infancy hath reared
- The boy, and forged these tales; that, if detected,
- His crimes might be imputed to the god:
- But coming hither, and by length of time
- Hoping to screen the fraud, he now resolves
- He will transfer the sceptre to this stripling,
- For whom at length he forges the new name
- Of Ion, to denote that he went forth
- And met him. Ah, how do I ever hate
- Those wicked men who plot unrighteous deeds,
- And then adorn them with delusive art!
- Rather would I possess a virtuous friend
- Of mean abilities, than one more wise
- And profligate. Of all disastrous fates
- Yours is the worst, who to your house admit
- Its future lord, whose mother is unknown,
- A youth selected from th' ignoble crowd,
- The base-born issue of some female slave.
- For this had only been a single ill
- Had he persuaded you, since you are childless,
- T' adopt, and in your place lodged the son
- Of some illustrious dame: but if to you
- This scheme had been disgustful, from the kindred
- Of AE olus his sire should he have sought
- Another consort. Hence is it incumbent
- On you to execute some great revenge
- Worthy of woman: with the lifted sword,
- Or by some stratagem or deadly poison,
- Your husband and his offspring to dispatch
- Ere you by them are murdered: you will lose
- Your life if you delay, for when two foes
- Meet in one house some mischief must befall,
- Or this or that. I therefore will with you
- Partake the danger, and with you conspire
- To slay that stripling, entering the abode
- Where for the sumptuous banquet he is making
- Th' accustomed preparation. While I view
- The sun, and e'en in death, I will repay
- The bounty of those lords who nurtured me.
- For there is one thing only which confers
- Disgrace on slaves--the name; in all beside
- No virtuous slave to freeborn spirit yields.
- We are betrayed by your perfidious lord,
Credits: Reprinted from The Plays of Euripides in English, vol. ii. Trans. Shelley Dean Milman. London: J.M. Dent & Sons, 1922.

Looking for a published monologue? Want to know
character history & story background? We have exactly what you
need!