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Plutus [1]

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does mean.

CARIO (to PLUTUS)

Come, tell us at once who you are, or I shall give effect to my

threat. (He menaces him.) And quick too, be quick, I say.

PLUTUS

I'll thrash you.

CARIO (to CHREMYLUS)

Do you understand who he says he is?

CHREMYLUS

It's to you and not to me that he replies thus: your mode of

questioning him was ill-advised. (To PLUTUS) Come, friend, if you

care to oblige an honest man, answer me.

PLUTUS

I'll knock you down.

CARIO (sarcastically)

Ah! what a pleasant fellow and what a delightful prophecy the

god has given you!

CHREMYLUS (to PLUTUS)

By Demeter, you'll have no reason to laugh presently.

CARIO

If you don't speak, you wretch, I will surely do you an ill turn.

PLUTUS

Friends, take yourselves off and leave me.

CHREMYLUS

That we very certainly shan't.

CARIO

This, master, is the best thing to do. I'll undertake to secure

him the most frightful death; I will lead him to the verge of a

precipice and then leave him there, so that he'll break his neck

when he pitches over.

CHREMYLUS

Well then, seize him right away.

(CARIO does so.)

PLUTUS

Oh, no! Have mercy!

CHREMYLUS

Will thou speak then?

PLUTUS

But if you learn who I am, I know well that you will ill-use me

and will let me go again.

CHREMYLUS

I call the gods to witness that you have naught to fear if you

will only speak.

PLUTUS

Well then, first unhand me.

CHREMYLUS

There! we set you free.

PLUTUS

Listen then, since I must reveal what I had intended to keep a

secret. I am Plutus.

CARIO

Oh! you wretched rascal! You Plutus all the while, and you never

said so!

CHREMYLUS

You, Plutus, and in this piteous guise! Oh, Phoebus Apollo! oh, ye

gods of heaven and hell! Oh, Zeus! is it really and truly as you say?

PLUTUS

Yes.

CHREMYLUS

Plutus' very own self?

PLUTUS

His own very self and none other.

CHREMYLUS

But tell me, how come you're so squalid?

PLUTUS

I have just left Patrocles' house, who has not had a bath since

his birth.

CHREMYLUS

But your infirmity; how did that happen? Tell me.

PLUTUS

Zeus inflicted it on me, because of his jealousy of-mankind.

When I was young, I threatened him that I would only go to the just,

the wise, the men of ordered life; to prevent my distinguishing these,

he struck me with blindness' so much does he envy the good!

CHREMYLUS

And yet, it's only the upright and just who honour him.

PLUTUS

Quite true.

CHREMYLUS

Therefore, if ever you recovered your sight, you would shun the

wicked?

PLUTUS

Undoubtedly.

CHREMYLUS

You would visit the good?

PLUTUS

Assuredly. It is a very long time since I saw them.

CARIO (to the audience)

That's not astonishing. I, who see clearly, don't see a single

one.

PLUTUS

Now let me leave you, for I have told you everything.

CHREMYLUS

No, certainly not! we shall fasten ourselves on to you faster than

ever.

PLUTUS

Did I not tell you, you were going to plague me?

CHREMYLUS

Oh! I adjure you, believe what I say and don't leave me; for you

will seek in vain for a more honest man than myself.

CARIO

There is only one man more worthy; and that is I.

PLUTUS

All talk like this, but as soon as they secure my favours and grow

rich, their wickedness knows no bounds.

CHREMYLUS

And yet all men are not wicked.

PLUTUS

All. There's no exception.

CARIO

You shall pay for that opinion.

CHREMYLUS

Listen to what happiness there is in store for you, if you but

stay with us. I have hope; aye, I have good hope with the god's help

to deliver you from that blindness, in fact to restore
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