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TLACAELEL The weeks since last we met found Hungry Prince Of late locked in his tower, casting scrolls Which chart the star-crossed charms of the occult. And in the predawn darkness of his arts, He broke through to a voice from the beyond Which whispered that the throne of Mexico Must soon come to be ruled by foreigners. PRIEST OF TLALOC And thus the emperor submits to trial, And these, their wagers, are red herrings, then. TLACAELEL To spare us the demoralizing news. The spirits’ hands will steer them to reveal If this prognostication failed or not. PRIEST OF TLALOC The ***** in motion. Let the gods decide. TLACAELEL Motecuhzoma falls! The ball is down! The ball is down! PRIEST OF TLALOC Dust rises, and our lord is lost to view! TLACAELEL Three in a row! Were we left hanging, then, For torturers to **** by small and small? MOTECUHZOMA and HUNGRY PRINCE reappear. MOTECUHZOMA [aside] I’ve lost then, but the full significance Of that word “lost” I’ve yet begun to know. Gods need not lie, and here we have their words. Well, let it come. [to Tlacaelel] Unseal the wagers, lord, And read before these noble witnesses The stakes we trusted to you at the serve. TLACAELEL First, the abortive fee for Hungry Prince: King of Texcoco, had this victory Been won by his imperial majesty, And you had failed, your forfeiture had been . . . [Opens the first wager.] The loss of all your lands, your courts, your throne, And all, for your opponent’s acquisition, Decoronation to a common man, And forced prostration to this gentleman. HUNGRY PRINCE A staggering ransom! I must thank the gods, Not for their championing me, but truth.
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Oct 13, 2016
Oct 13, 2016 at 4:14 PM UTC
The Floral War 1:5:39-71
TLACAELEL The weeks since last we met found Hungry Prince Of late locked in his tower, casting scrolls Which chart the star-crossed charms of the occult. And in the predawn darkness of his arts, He broke through to a voice from the beyond Which whispered that the throne of Mexico Must soon come to be ruled by foreigners. PRIEST OF TLALOC And thus the emperor submits to trial, And these, their wagers, are red herrings, then. TLACAELEL To spare us the demoralizing news. The spirits’ hands will steer them to reveal If this prognostication failed or not. PRIEST OF TLALOC The ***** in motion. Let the gods decide. TLACAELEL Motecuhzoma falls! The ball is down! The ball is down! PRIEST OF TLALOC Dust rises, and our lord is lost to view! TLACAELEL Three in a row! Were we left hanging, then, For torturers to **** by small and small? MOTECUHZOMA and HUNGRY PRINCE reappear. MOTECUHZOMA [aside] I’ve lost then, but the full significance Of that word “lost” I’ve yet begun to know. Gods need not lie, and here we have their words. Well, let it come. [to Tlacaelel] Unseal the wagers, lord, And read before these noble witnesses The stakes we trusted to you at the serve. TLACAELEL First, the abortive fee for Hungry Prince: King of Texcoco, had this victory Been won by his imperial majesty, And you had failed, your forfeiture had been . . . [Opens the first wager.] The loss of all your lands, your courts, your throne, And all, for your opponent’s acquisition, Decoronation to a common man, And forced prostration to this gentleman. HUNGRY PRINCE A staggering ransom! I must thank the gods, Not for their championing me, but truth.
From my play in verse, thefloralwar.com
david-betten
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Oct 13, 2016
Oct 13, 2016 at 4:14 PM UTC
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