ACT III. SCENE I.
An
apartment in ORLANDO'S
palace.
HESPERUS
seated. ATTENDANTS. Enter
to them CLAUDIO.
CLAUDIO. The
bridegroom's here?
ATTENDANT. Yonder
he sits, my lord,
And
since the morn's first
hour, without the motion
Even
of a nerve, as he were
growing marble,
Has
sat and watched, the sun
blazed in at noon
With
light enough to blind
an eagle's ken,
He
felt it not, although
his eyeballs glared
Horribly
bright: I
spoke: he
heard me not:
And
when I shook his arm slept
on in thought;
I
pray you try him.
CLAUDIO. Sir,
good Hesperus,
I
wait at your desire; we
are to end 10
Our
match at tennis. Will
you walk with me?
ATTENDANT. Your
voice is weak as silence
to his sense.
Enter
ORLANDO.
ORLANDO. My
brother, you must join
us at the banquet;
We
wait your coming long;
how's this?
ATTENDANT. My
lord,
Like
trance has held him since
the dawn of day,
He
has looked down upon yon
wood since then,
Speechless
and still.
Enter
LORD ERNEST.
LORD
ERNEST. Now
health and good be here,
For
I have missed my son the
livelong day.
Why
what an idle loiterer
thou art;
By
this your vacant sight
must ache with gazing 20
Upon
that view. Arise,
I'd have you with me
To
fix upon some posy for
the ring
You
wed your love with. Death! Some
fearful change
Is
here. Speak;
speak and tell me if he
lives.
ATTENDANT. He
does, my lord, if breathing
is to live,
But
in all else his like the
coffined dead;
Motion
and speech he lacks.
LORD
ERNEST. O
heavens, Orlando
Tell
me 'tis
false.
ORLANDO. I
would 'twere
in my power,
But
it doth seem too true.
LORD
ERNEST. Ride
like the wind,
Fetch
him the aid of medicine. See
you not 30
Some
vision has come to him
in the night,
And
stole his eyes and ears
and tongue away?
Enter
OLIVIA.
Oh,
you are come in time to
see him die;
Look,
look, Olivia, look;
he knows us not;
My
son, if thou dost hear
me, speak one word,
And
I will bless thee.
ORLANDO. He
is dumb indeed.
OLIVIA. Let
me come near him. Dearest
Hesperus,
If
thou beholdest these poor
unbeauteous cheeks,
Which
first thy flattering kindness
taught to blush;
Or
if thou hearest a voice,
that's only sweet 40
When
it says Hesperus; oh gentle
love,
Speak
any thing, even that thou
hatest Olivia,
And
I will thank thee for't: or
if some horror
Has
frozen up the fountain
of thy words,
Give
but a sign.
CLAUDIO. Lady,
alas, 'tis
vain.
OLIVIA. (kneeling) Nay,
he shall speak, or I will
never move,
But
thus turn earth beseeching
his dull hand,
And
let the grass grow over
me. I'll
hold
A
kind of converse with
my raining eyes,
For
if he sees not, nor doth
hear, he'll know 50
The
gentle feel of his Olivia's
tears.
CLAUDIO. Sweet
sir, look on her.
ORLANDO. Brother.
OLIVIA. Husband.
LORD
ERNEST. Son.
Kind
heaven, let him hear,
though death should call
him.
[Pause,
a clock strikes.
HESPERUS. The
hour is come. [Exit.
ACT III. SCENE II.
A
room in MORDRED'S cottage.
FLORIBEL
alone.
FLORIBEL. And
must I wake again? Oh come
to me,
Thou
that with dew-cold fingers
softly closest
The
wearied eye; thou sweet,
thou gentle power,
Soother
of woe, sole friend of
the oppressed,
I
long to lay me on thy
peaceful breast.
But
once I saw thee, beautiful
as moonlight,
Upon
a baby's lips, and thou
didst kiss them,
Lingering
and oft,
(As
a wild bee doth kiss a
rifled flower,
And
clips its waist, and drops
a little tear, 10
Remorsefully
enamoured of his prey:)
Come
so to me, sweet death,
and I will wreath thee
An
amorous chaplet for thy
paly brows;
And
on an odoured bank of
wan white buds
In
thy fair arms
I'll
lie, and taste thy cool
delicious breath,
And
sleep, and sleep, and
sleep.
Enter
LENORA.
O
here, good mother,
We'll
talk together.
LENORA. What;
of Hesperus?
Methinks
he has grown cold.
FLORIBEL. Oh
no; he is
More
full of courtship than
he ever was; 20
Don't
think him cold, dear mother,
or I may;
I'm
sure he loves me still;
I'll go to him,
'Tis
nigh the appointed hour.
LENORA. My
child, it is a chill and
gloomy evening,
So
go not out. Thy
Hesperus will come,
And
thou wilt live on every
word of his
Till
thine eyes sparkle. What
means this despondence?
FLORIBEL. Dear
mother, I will strive
to be at ease,
If
you desire; but melancholy
thoughts
Are
poor dissemblers. How
I wish we owned 30
The
wealth we've lost.
LENORA. Why
girl, I never heard
One
such regret escape your
lips before;
Has
not your Hesperus enough?
FLORIBEL. Too
much;
If
he were even poorer than
ourselves,
I'd
almost love him better. For,
methinks,
It
seemed a covetous spirit
urged me on,
Craving
to be received his bride. I
hope
He
did not think so; if he
does, I'll tell him
I
will not share his wealth,
but dwell with you.
Oh
that he'd come! How
each dull moment drags 40
Its
lazy wing along when he
is absent.
When
was he here?
LENORA. Last
night.
FLORIBEL. Last
night? Now
pr'ythee
Don't
jeer me so, I'm sure,
not many days;
But
all is night when he's
not here to light me,
So
let it be last night;
although that night
Had
days for hours, yet in
Love's book and mine
'Tis
but an empty cypher, a
black round.
Oh,
I've not lived, I've not
been Floribel
Sine
the last mellow echo of
his voice
Lent
the air music; is't not
a sweet voice? 50
What
can you liken to it?
LENORA. Pan's
honeycomb
Of
many vocal cells.
FLORIBEL. How
dull you are;
There's
nought beneath the thunder-choir
so grand;
The
wood-birds and the waterfalls
but mock him.
He
said, dear mother, I should
be his countess;
To-day
he'd come to fetch me,
but with day
I've
laid my expectation in
its grave.
Dost
think he will deceive
me? Silly
girl,
Querulous
ingrate, why do I torment
me?
Sweet
mother, comfort.
LENORA. Be
you sure he'll come 60
With
his whole princely train
of friends and kindred,
And
he will lift thee to his
gorgeous car,
And
place thee at his side,
a happy wife.
FLORIBEL. Fie!
you cajole me, like a
sulky child,
With
gilded cars; but oh! I
wish 'twere
here.
How
gloomily the clouds look,
and the wind
Rattles
among the brown leaves
dolefully;
He
will be very chill, heap
up the fire.
Hush!
hark! What's
that?
LENORA. Only
your dear father
Heavily
breathing in his sleep;
he'll wake 70
With
his sad smile upon his
patient face,
Looking
so dear in sickness.
FLORIBEL. But 'twill
cure him,
When
he knows all and sees
my bridegroom with me,
I
know it will: and
there's the horse's step,
I'll
just run out, it is not
cold at all.—
LENORA. Go
my love,
But
you must come to ask your
father's blessing,
And
bring your Hesperus with
you.
FLORIBEL. That
I will. [Exeunt.
ACT III. SCENE III.
A wood.
Enter
HUBERT and a HUNTSMAN.
HUBERT. No
answer to our shots but
mocking echo?
Where
are our fellow huntsmen? Why
they vanished
Like
mist before the sun, and
left us here
Lost
in the briary mazes.
HUNTSMAN. Shame
on the rogues
For
this their treatment. But
look upwards, Hubert,
See
what a mighty storm hangs
right above us.
HUBERT. The
day is in its shroud while
yet an infant,
And
Night with giant strides
stalks o'er the world,
Like
a swart Cyclops, on its
hideous front
One
round, red, thunderswollen
eye ablaze 10
HUNTSMAN. Now
mercy save the peril-stricken
man,
Who 'mongst
his shattered canvas sits
aghast
On
the last sinking plank
alone, and sees
The
congregated monsters of
the deep
For
his dead messmates warring
all, save one
That
leers upon him with a
ravenous gaze
And
whets its iron tusks just
at his feet:
Yet
little heeds his wide
and tearless eye
That,
or the thunder of the
mountain flood
Which
Destiny commissions with
his doom; 20
Where
the wild waters rush against
the sky,
Far
o'er the desolate plain,
his star of hope
In
mockery gleams, while
Death is at his side. [lightning.
HUBERT. That
flash hath rent the heavens;
this way for shelter.
HUNTSMAN. Some
steps above there stands
a noble oak
That
from the sun roofs ever-during
night
With
its thickwoven firmament
of leaves:
Thither
betake we. [Exeunt.
Enter
FLORIBEL.
FLORIBEL. Hence
did I seem to hear a human
voice,
Yet
there is nought, save
a low moaning sound, 30
As
if the spirits of the
earth and air
Were
holding sad and ominous
discourse.
And
much I fear me I have
lost my path;
Oh
how these brambles tear;
here 'twixt
the willows;
Ha!
something stirs, my silly
prattling nurse
Says
that fierce shaggy wolves
inhabit here,
And 'tis
in sooth a dread and lonely
place;
There,
there again; a rustling
in the leaves.
Enter
HESPERUS.
'Tis
he at last; why dost thou
turn away
And
lock thy bosom from my
first embrace? 40
I
am so tired and frightened;
but thou'rt here;
I
knew thou wouldst be faithful
to thy promise;
And
claim me openly. Speak,
let me hear thy voice,
Tell
me the joyful news.
HESPERUS. Aye,
I am come
In
all my solemn pomp, Darkness
and Fear,
And
the great Tempest in his
midnight car,
The
sword of lightning girt
across his thigh,
And
the whole dæmon
brood of night, blind
Fog
And
withering Blight, all
these are my retainers;
How: not
one smile for all this
bravery? 50
What
think you of my minstrels,
the hoarse winds,
Thunder,
and tuneful Discord? Hark,
they play.
Well
piped, methinks; somewhat
too rough, perhaps.
FLORIBEL. I
know you practise on my
silliness,
Else
I might well be scared. But
leave this mirth,
Or
I must weep.
HESPERUS. 'Twill
serve to fill the goblets
For
our carousal, but we loiter
here,
The
bridesmaids are without;
well-picked thou'lt say,
Wan
ghosts of woe-begone,
self-slaughtered damsels
In
their best winding sheets;
start not, I bid them
wipe 60
Their
gory bosoms; they'll look
wondrous comely;
Our
link-boy, Will o' the
Wisp, is waiting too
To
light us to our grave—bridal
I mean.
FLORIBEL. Ha!
how my veins are chilled—why
Hesperus!
HESPERUS. What
hero of thy dreams art
calling, girl?
Look
in my face—Is't
mortal? Dost
thou think
The
voice that calls thee
is not of a mouth
Long
choaked with dust? What
though I have assumed
This
garb of flesh and with
it the affections,
The
thoughts and weakness
of mortality? 70
'Twas
but for thee; and now
thou art my bride;
Lift
up thine eyes and smile—the
bride of Death.
FLORIBEL. Hold,
hold. My
thoughts are 'wildered. Is
my fancy
The
churlish framer of these
fearful words,
Or
do I live indeed to such
a fate? Oh!
no, I recollect; I have not waked
Since
Hesperus left me in the
twilight bower.
HESPERUS. Come,
we'll to our chamber,
The
cypress shade hangs o'er
our stony couch
A
goodly canopy; be mad
and merry; 80
There'll
be a jovial feast among
the worms. [aside.
Fiends,
strew your fiercest fire
about my heart
Or
she will melt it.
FLORIBEL. Oh,
that look of fury!
What's
this about my eyes? ah!
deadly night,
No
light, no hope, no help.
HESPERUS. What!
Darest thou tremble
Under
thy husband's arm, darest
think of fear?
Dost
dread me, me?
FLORIBEL. I
know not what to dread,
Nor
what to hope; all's horrible
and doubtful;
And
coldness creeps—
HESPERUS. She
swoons, poor girl, she
swoons.
And,
treacherous dæmons,
ye've allowed a drop 90
To
linger in my eyes. Out,
out for ever.
I'm
fierce again. Now
shall I slay the victim
As
she lies senseless? ah!
she wakes; cheer up,
'Twas
but a jest.
FLORIBEL. A
dread and cruel one;
But
I'll forgive you, if you
will be kind;
And
yet 'twas
frightful.
HESPERUS. Why 'twere
most unseemly
For
one marked for the grave
to laugh too loud.
FLORIBEL. Alas!
he raves again. Sweetest,
what mean you
By
these strange words?
HESPERUS. What
mean I? Death
and murder,
Darkness
and misery. To
thy prayers and shrift; 100
Earth
gives thee back; thy God
hath sent me for thee,
Repent
and die.
FLORIBEL. Oh,
if thou willest it, love,
If
thou but speak it with
thy natural voice,
And
smile upon me; I'll not
think it pain,
But
cheerfully I'll seek me
out a grave,
And
sleep as sweetly as on
Hesperus' breast.
He
will not smile, he will
not listen to me.
Why
dost thou thrust thy fingers
in thy bosom?
Oh
search it, search it;
see if there remain
One
little remnant of thy
former love 110
To
dry my tears with.
HESPERUS. Well,
speak on; and then,
When
thou hast done thy tale,
I will but kill thee.
Come
tell me all my vows, how
they are broken,
Say
that my love was feigned,
and black deceit,
Pour
out thy bitterest, till
untamed wrath
Melt
all his chains off with
his fiery breath,
And
rush a-hungering out.
FLORIBEL. Oh
piteous heavens!
I
see it now, some wild
and poisonous creature
Hath
wounded him and with contagious
fang
Planted
this fury in his veins. He
hides 120
The
mangled fingers, dearest,
trust them to me,
I'll
suck the madness out of
every pore,
So
as I drink it boiling
from thy wound
Death
will be pleasant. Let
me have the hand
And
I will treat it like another
heart.
HESPERUS. Here 'tis
then,
[stabs
her.
Shall
I thrust deeper yet?
FLORIBEL. Quite
through my soul,
That
all my senses, deadened
at the blow,
May
never know the giver. Oh,
my love,
Some
spirit in thy sleep hath
stole thy body 130
And
filled it to the brim
with cruelty;
Farewell!
and may no busy deathful
tongue
Whisper
this horror in thy waking
ears,
Lest
some dread desperate sorrow
urge thy soul
To
deeds of wickedness. Whose
kiss is that?
His
lips are ice. Oh
my loved Hesperus,
Help! [Dies.
HESPERUS. What
a shriek was that; it
flew to heaven,
And
hymning angels took it
for their own.
Dead
art thou, Floribel; fair,
painted earth,
And
no warm breath shall ever
more disport 140
Between
those rubious lips: no,
they have quaffed
Life
to the dregs, and found death
at the bottom,
The
sugar of the draught. All
cold and still;
Her
very tresses stiffen in
the air.
Look,
what a face: had
our first mother worn
But
half such beauty, when
the serpent came,
His
heart, all malice, would
have turned to love;
No
hand but this, which I
do think was once
Cain,
the arch-murtherer's,
could have acted it.
And
I must hide these sweets,
not in my bosom; 150
In
the foul earth. She
shudders at my grasp;
Just
so she laid her head across
my bosom
When
first—oh
villain! which
way lies the grave? [Exit.
Enter
HUBERT and a HUNTSMAN.
HUBERT. It
is a fearful and tempestuous
time,
The
concave firmament, the
angel's bridge
O'er
the world's day and night,
is visibly
Bowed
down and bent beneath
its load of thunder,
And
through the fiery fissures
of the clouds
Glistens
the warfare of armed elements,
Bellowing
defiance in earth's stunned
ear, 160
And
setting midnight on the
throne of day.
HUNTSMAN. The
roar has ceased; the hush
of intercalm
Numbs
with its leaden finger
Echo's lips,
And
angry spirits in mid havoc
pause,
Premeditating
ruin in their silence.
HUBERT. Hard
by should stand a lone
and tattered shed,
Where
some tired woodsman may
by chance be stretched,
Watching
his scanty food among
the coals;
There
may we chafe our drenched
and chilly limbs.
HUNTSMAN. The
forest has more tenants
than I knew, 170
Look
underneath this branch;
seest thou not yonder,
Amongst
the brushwood and the
briary weeds
A
man at work?
HUBERT. My
life upon't some miser,
Who
in the secret hour creeps
to his hoard,
And
kneeling at the altar
of his love,
Worships
that yellow devil, gold.
HUNTSMAN. 'Tis
buried,
And
now he stamps the sod
down, that no light
May
spy his mistress; with
what a doleful look
He
marks its grave, and backward
walks away,
As
if he left his all of
sight behind. 180
HUBERT. Let
us steal towards it; I
would have a peep
Upon
this hidden jewel. [Exeunt.
Enter
HESPERUS.
HESPERUS. Shall
I turn back and try to
thrust my soul
In
at her lips, and so re-animate
The
beauteous casket while
this body dies? I
cannot—not
the universe of breath
Could
give those little lips
their life again.
I've
huddled her into the wormy
earth,
And
left the guilty dagger
at her side.
Dead
Innocence! and must unkindly
thistles 190
And
rank thick hemlock force
their bristling roots
Into
thy lovely breast? Fool! Is't
not done?
Why
stand I tampering 'midst
the listening winds?
My
fears are lying traitors. [Bells
at a distance.
Wedding
bells,
Thanks
for your merry voices;
ye have waked
A
sudden hurry round about
my heart,
I'll
think it joy. Now
for my second bride. [Exit.
ACT III. SCENE IV.
A saloon in ORLANDO'S palace.
OLIVIA,
VIOLETTA, NURSE, and
ATTENDANTS.
OLIVIA. You
keep me long, am I not
yet attired,
Have
ye not tricked me out
enough? In
faith
I
am so vain to think I
need no more.
ATTENDANT. One
moment, madam;
This
little necklace, like
the marriage yoke
Pleasantly
binding, I must clasp
around you.
OLIVIA. A
pretty toy, and prettily
disposed;
I
have, I know not why,
this livelong day
Wept
drops enough to bead a
thousand such.
Where's
Violetta? Come,
look up, my girl, 10
Make
thine eyes sparkle, mine
are very moist.
VIOLETTA. Shake
off this sadness, lady, 'tis
not meet
At
such a moment; think upon
your bridegroom,
How
his affections seek thee.
OLIVIA. Gentle
maid,
I'll
not be sad; yet, little
Violet,
How
long I've worn thy beauty
next my heart,
Aye,
in my very thoughts, where
thou hast shed
Perpetual
summer: how
long shared thy being:
Like
two leaves of a bud, we've
grown together,
And
needs must bleed at parting.
VIOLETTA. No,
not so; 20
I
am thy handmaid still;
and when your lord
Is
absent, as he will be,
at the tourney,
The
court, or camp, we'll
drive the long hours on
With
prattle as of old.
OLIVIA. Thanks,
I'll be cheerful;
But
joy's a plant the showers
of many sorrows
Must
water, ere it bloom. Good
nurse, your pardon,
You've
known me for a froward
child before.
NURSE. Now,
on the scanty remnant
of my life,
Grief's
an ill wedding garment;
if you'd put
One
of your rosy smiles on,
what a grace 30
You'd
look and be. Why
all these ohs and sobs
Are
more like funeral noises.
OLIVIA. 'Troth
they are,
And 'tis
the funeral of that Olivia
You
nursed and knew; an hour
and she's no more,
No
more the mistress of her
own resolves,
The
free partaker of earth's
airs and pleasures;
My
very love, the poorest
gift I have,
(Which,
light as 'tis,
I thought you all did
prize,)
Is
not my own. We
must be strangers, girls,
Give
me your hands and wishes.
NURSE. There
is one, 40
Old
now, and withered, truly
we might call it
Yours,
and not mine; oft has
it brought you food,
Led
you, and served you; yet
in gladness parts
To
make way for a younger
and a worthier.
OLIVIA. My
kind old nurse; nay, now
you are forgetting
Your
words of cheer; this hand
shall never want
Aid
while I live, your service
will be needful;
My
house would seem a strange
and dismal place
Without
your pleasant looks.
NURSE. Well,
my dear child,
I
hope you'll give my arms
a new Olivia; 50
Blush
not; the old will talk.
OLIVIA. Whose
hand is this
I
know not from my own? Young
Violet's.
My
beauteous innocence, you
must be with me
Oft,
as you said: Go
to, my nurse forbids
Our
weeping.
VIOLETTA. Don't
chide me then, Olivia,
I'm
a sad fool, but do not
chide.
OLIVIA. A
gem
For
Friendship's crown, each
drop. My
loving maids,
To
each a farewell that I
cannot speak;
All
have my heart, and well
can read its meaning.
Henceforth
I'll look upon my maiden
years 60
As
lovely pastoral pictures;
all of you
Shall
smile again 'neath
Memory's wizard pencil
The
natural beauties that
we've marked together
Will
look you back again; the
books we've loved
Will
talk to me of your sweet-worded
praises,
The
air of our old haunts
whisper your voices;
Trust
me, I'll not forget you.
ATTENDANT. Dearest
lady,
May
all the blessings that
rain down from heaven
Upon the
marriage-bed, descend
on yours;
May
many children, innocent
and fair, 70
With
soft embracements throng
about your knees,
Domestic
pleasures ever turn your
hour-glass,
And
when the long sleep falls
upon your eyes,
Content
and holy Peace, the twins
of Eden,
Draw
round the curtain 'twixt
you and the world,
And
watch beside you all the
dreary night.
ACT III. SCENE V.
A room in MORDRED.'S cottage.
Enter
LENORA supporting MORDRED.
MORDRED. Here
let me rest, in my old
oaken chair,
My
limbs grow faint, and
yet, kind, careful nurse,
Your
smiles have chased away
my pains.
LENORA. Dear
husband,
A
thousand thanks for those
delightful words,
They
bid me hope again and
warm my heart.
MORDRED. It
renovates the spirit thus
to look
With
the clear eye of health
and joyousness
Upon
the green creation. But
I miss
A
smile of hope, the copy
of Lenora's,
That's
wont to light my soul
with its rich love; 10
Where
is my peach-checked girl,
my Floribel?
LENORA. She
will be with us soon;
before you woke,
She
went to ramble underneath
the boughs,
And
feed her forest birds;
each bower she knows
Or
eglantine and hawthorn;
now the air
Is
calm, she will return.
MORDRED. I
hope she may;
Yet
who could injure such
a holy thing?
The
frenzied tempest's self,
had it a will,
Would
leave her path secure. My
dear Lenora
There
is one thing I wish to
see accomplished 20
Before
I die.
LENORA. What
is it, love? And
yet methinks 'twere
fit
For
me still to defer its
execution,
And
cheat you into living
to that end.
MORDRED. Long
have I prayed to see her
beauty growing
Under
some worthy husband's
firm protection.
LENORA. What
if she be already wedded?
MORDRED. No,
That
cannot be, she would have
told unto me
The
first emotions of her
infant love;
She
never had a thought concealed
from me, 30
Even
her slightest. 'Tis
impossible
And
yet you look in earnest;
speak, and tell me
You
only jest.
LENORA. I
speak indeed the truth;
Perhaps
I was imprudent not to
tell you,
But
you were very ill, and
such the match,
You
could not disapprove: Young
Hesperus—
MORDRED. Lord
Ernest's son!
LENORA. The
same.
MORDRED. I'm
satisfied,
My
wish is all fulfilled. There's
not a man
Beneath
the sun more noble; but
his father
Was
wont to be a stern imperious
lord, 40
A
scorner of the poor.
LENORA. He
did not know it.
MORDRED. He
knew it not! That
was a sad omission,
Unworthy
of a parent, we might
rue it.
LENORA. This
night our daughter's bridegroom
Comes,
as his own to claim her,
and ere this
Doubtless
has told the love-tale
to his father.
MORDRED. I
wish him speedy, he shall
find a welcome,
In
the poor man's sole wealth,
my hearty love.
Hark!
There's a step.
LENORA. 'Tis
Hesperus'; I know it.
Enter
the HUNTSMAN.
MORDRED. Who
comes, who is it?
LENORA. One
whose visage wears 50
The
darkest sadness; such
a man I'd choose
For
the mute herald of disaster.
HUNTSMAN. Lady,
Would
that my looks could mirror
to your soul
The
woe, each syllable of
which in speaking
Tears
through my heart. Alas!
your lovely daughter—
LENORA. What? Speak
I pray thee. Has
she met with aught?
MORDRED. Bid
me die, or my fears.
Enter
HUBERT with the body
of FLORIBEL.
HUNTSMAN. Here's
all that's left
Of
nature's rarest work: this
lifeless all.
Oh! fall
some strange unheard-of
punishment
On
Hesperus' head.
MORDRED. Hesperus,
Hesperus; oh! 60
[Falls
back in his chair.
HUBERT. Aye, 'twas
his hand that wrought
its passage here,
And
murdered love in its most
sacred temple.
[LENORA takes
the body into her lap
and sits nursing it.
HUNTSMAN. Alas!
he heeds not; he is with
his daughter.
Look
at this other.
HUBERT. Oh!
I cannot bear it;
Leave
her, a mother's agony
is holy
As
nature's mysteries.
HUNTSMAN. We'll
to the Duke,
And
crush the viper in his
nest, before
Report
alarm him. Gently,
gently tread
And
wake not echo in this
home of woe.
[Exeunt HUBERTand
the HUNTSMAN.
LENORA.
[sings
in a distracted manner.
Lullaby, lullaby, sweet be thy sleep! 70
Thou babe of my bosom, thou babe
of my love;
Close, close to my heart, dear
caresser, you creep,
And kiss the fond eyelid that watches above.
One touch of those warm lips
and then to bed.
Where
is my child? I
held her in my arms,
Her
heart was beating in my
bosom. Ha!
It
is not she that lies upon
my breast,
It
is not she that whispers
in my ear,
It
is not she that kisses
my salt cheek;
They've
stolen her from my couch
and left this changeling, 80
Men
call Despair—and
she it is I suckle.
I
know her by her killing
lips of snow,
Her
watery eyeballs and her
tear-swoll'n cheeks.
My
Floribel! oh they have
ta'en her soul
To
make a second spring of
it, to keep
The
jarring spheres in melody. Come,
husband,
We'll
wander up and down this
wintry world,
And
if we see a sadder sight
than this,
Or
hear a tale, though false,
of half such horror,
We'll
closely hug our bosom-griefs
in transport. 90
Why
husband! You're
asleep—you're
deaf—you're
dead!
I
have not eyes enough to
weep for both,
But
I'll go steal the sleeping
world's, and beg
A
little dew from every
sipping worm
To
wet my cheeks with. [Exit.
|