ACT V. SCENE I.
A room in MORDRED'S cottage
The
dead FLORIBEL laid upon
a couch. LENORA
and BOY.
LENORA. Why
dost thou weep, thou little
churl?
BOY. Alas!
I
need not say.
LENORA. Boy,
boy; thou'rt wicked; thou
wouldst have me think
I
have no Floribel, but
thou shalt see
How
I will make her live.
It
is the morning,
And
she has risen to tend
her favourite flowers,
And
wearied with the toil
leans o'er her seat
In
silent languour. Now
I will steal in
Softly: perchance
she sleeps. It's
plain she hears not,
Or
she would leap all-smiling
to my arms; 10
I
wish dear Mordred were
awake to see
How
the sweet girl will start
and welcome me
At
my first speaking: but
I'll wait awhile
And
save the pleasure. Ah
thou pretty silence,
I
know thou'rt thinking
what a happy cot
'Twill
be when our loved patient
is quite well.
Yes,
you shall take him his
first walk; he'll lean
Upon
that arm and you shall
show the plants
New
set in the garden, and
the grassy path
Down
to the church.
Now
I will stand behind her 20
So,
she must drop her head
upon my bosom
As
she looks up. Good-morrow
to thee, sweet;
Now
for her gently cry; she's
turning round.
No—for
she won't seem startled,
but pretend
To
have heard my coming. Why
art thou so slow?
Sweet
little wag, I know thou'rt not
asleep.
Soft! 'Tis
the swiftness of my thought
outruns
Her
proper motions. I've
this instant spoken,
The
air has scarcely yet ta'en
up my words;
May
be she hears not. But
I did not speak, 30
'Twas
only thought, or whispered. Child,
good-morrow;
Yes,
she hears that, but will
not stir even yet.
I'll
not be frightened for
she surely hears,
Though
if I had not seem her
garments move,
And
caught the tiny echo of
her breath,
'Twere
dreadful. Speak,
I pray thee, Floribel,
Speak
to thy mother; do but
whisper 'aye';
Well,
well, I will not press
her; I am sure
She
has the welcome news of
some good fortune,
And
hoards the telling till
her father comes; 40
Perhaps
she's found the fruit
he coveted
Last
night. Ah!
she half laughed. I've
guessed it then;
Come
tell me, I'll be secret. Nay,
if you mock me,
I
must be very angry till
you speak.
Now
this is silly; some of
those young boys
Have
dressed the cushions with
her clothes in sport.
'Tis
very like her. I
could make this image
Act
all her greetings; she
shall bow her head,
'Good
morrow mother'; and her
smiling face
Falls
on my neck.—Oh
heaven, 'tis
she indeed! 50 I know it all—don't
tell me.
ACT V. SCENE II.
The
interior of a prison.
HESPERUS alone.
HESPERUS. Hark! Time's
old iron voice already
counts
The
steps unto the after-world,
o'er which
Sleep
in her arms hath carried
man to-night;
And
all it wakes to business
or to joy,
Save
one; and mingled with
its solemn tone
I
heard the grating gates
of hell expand—
Oh!
house of agony,
I
feel thy scorching flames
already near.
Where
shall I 'scape? Is there
no hiding-place?
Spirit,
that guidest the sun,
look round this ball 10
And
through the windows of
deep ocean's vault;
Is
there no nook just big
enough for me?
Or
when I'm dead, can I not
pass my soul
For
common air, and shroud
me in some cloud?
But
then the earth will moulder, clouds
evanish;
So
Hell, I must unto thee,
darksome vale:
For
dared I hope, I could
not wish, Elysium,
There
should I meet the frowns
of Floribel;
My
father would be there: black
gulph of anguish,
Thou
art far better than such
paradise. 20
Why
did they teach me there
is such a place?
The
pang of misery is there;
I know
There
is a land of bliss, and
am not in it;
This,
this, outstings your lashes,
torturers;
He
has no lack of punishment
who feels it.
Enter
JAILOR.
Oh!
speak not for a moment, speak
not, sir,
I
know thine errand well;
so tell it not.
But
let me shut mine yes and
think a little
That
I am what I was. Aye,
there he sits,
My
good old sire, with his
large eye of love. 30
How
well it smiles upon that
lovely maid,
A
beauteous one, indeed;
and yet they say
She
died most cruelly. Oh!
tell me something,
Drive
out these dreams.
JAILOR. Prisoner,
prepare for death. [Exit.
HESPERUS. Death!
Death! What's death? I
cannot think.
Enter
LENORA.
Who
art thou?
LENORA. Ha!
knowest thou
not the
wretch thou'st
made Lenora?
Alone
I've found thee, villain.
HESPERUS. Not
alone;
Oh!
not alone: the
world hath burst its ribs,
And
let out all the demons
in the pit;
Thick;
thick they throng: I
cannot breathe for them; 40
The
hounds of Lucifer are
feeding on me,
Yet
I endure; Remorse and
Conscience too,
Stirring
the dying embers of my
heart,
Which
Passion hath burned out,
like midnight gossips
Sit
idly chattering of the
injured dead;
But
thou'rt the last and worst;
I hoped to hide
Beneath
the turf from thee.
LENORA. Thou
shalt not leave me; stand
and hear my curse,
Oh
such a curse! I
learned it from a voice
That
wandered 'mid
the damned: it
burns my tongue, 50
Listen,
wretch, listen;
Thus,
thus I curse thee. . . .
No
I
do
revoke it,
My
pardon be upon you for
your deeds;
Though
thou didst stab me through
my Floribel,
I
think thou once didst
love her; didst thou not?
HESPERUS. With
my whole soul, as now
I worship her.
LENORA. Alas!
say no. I
wish thou'dst break my
heart;
Now,
pr'ythee do; I'll bless
thee for't again.
HESPERUS. What!
is it stubborn yet? Then
thou canst teach me
How
to bear misery—but
I need it not, 60
They've
dug my grave.
LENORA. But
while you still are living,
What
say you to some frolic
merriment?
There
are two grassy mounds
beside the church,
My
husband and my daughter;
let us go
And
sit beside them, and learn
silence there;
Even
with such guests we'll
hold our revelry
O'er
bitter recollections: there's
no anguish,
No
fear, no sorrow, no calamity,
In
the deathful catalogue
of human pains,
But
we will jest upon't, and
laugh and sing: 70
Let
pitiful wretches whine
for consolation,
Thank
heaven we despair.
Enter
GUARDS.
See
you these men?
They
bid me to a strange solemnity.
LENORA. Must
thou be gone?
HESPERUS. I
must, alas! for ever.
Live
and be blessed, mother
of Floribel. [Exit
with GUARDS.
LENORA. Farewell;
farewell. They
drag him to the scaffold,
My
son, the husband of my
Floribel:
They
shall not slaughter him
upon the block,
And
to the cursing multitude
hold up
The
blackened features which
she loved; they shall
not.
[Exit.
ACT V. SCENE III.
An apartment in ORLANDO'S palace.
ORLANDO, VIOLETTA, and ATTENDANTS.
OLIVIA. Sing
me that strain, my gentle
Violet,
Which
erst we used, in sport
and mockery
Of
grief, beneath the willow
shade at eve
To
chaunt together; 'twill
allay my woes.
Song,
by Two Voices.
First
Voice
Who
is the baby, that doth
lie
Beneath
the silken canopy
Of
thy blue eye?
Second
It
is young Sorrow laid asleep
In
the crystal deep.
Both
Let
us sing his lullaby, 10
Heigho!
a sob and a sigh.
First
Voice
What
sound is that, so soft,
so clear
Harmonious
as a bubbled tear
Bursting,
we hear?
Second
It
is young Sorrow, slumber
breaking,
Suddenly
awaking.
Both
Let
us sing his lullaby,
Heigho!
a sob and a sigh.
OLIVIA. 'Tis
well: you
must not weep; 'twill
spoil your voices,
And
I shall need them soon.
VIOLETTA. For
what, Olivia? 20
You
were not wont to prize
our simple skill
Erewhile
so highly: what
will please you most?
What
lay of chivalry, or rural
sport,
Or
shepherd love, shall we
prepare you next?
OLIVIA. My
dirge: I
shall not tax your music
else.
It
must be: wherefore
weep?
VIOLETTA. I
cannot help it,
When
you converse so mournfully
of death;
You
must forgive me.
OLIVIA. Death!
thou silly girl,
There's
no such thing; 'tis
but a goblin word,
Which
bad men conjure from their
reeking sins 30
To
haunt their slumbers; 'tis
a life indeed.
These
bodies are the vile and
drossy seeds,
Whence,
placed again within their
kindred earth,
Springs
Immortality, the glorious
plant
Branching
above the skies. What
is there here
To
shrink from? Though
your idle legends tell
How
cruelly he treats the
prostrate world;
Yet,
unto me this shadowy potentate
Comes
soft and soothing as an
infant's sleep,
And
kisses out my being. Violetta,
Dost
thou regard my wish, perhaps
the last? 40
VIOLETTA. Oh!
madam, can you doubt it? We
have lived
Together
ever since our little
feet
Were
guided on the path, and
thence have shared
Habits
and thoughts. Have
I in all that time,
That
long companionship, e'er
thwarted thee?
Why
dost thou ask me then? Indeed
I know not
Thy
wishes from my own, but
to prefer them.
Then
tell me what you will;
if its performance
But
occupy the portion of
a minute, 50
'Twill
be a happy one, for which
I thank you.
OLIVIA. Thine
hand upon it, I believe
thy promise.
When
I am gone you must not
weep for me,
But
bring your books, your
paintings, and your flowers,
And
sit upon my grassy monument
In
the dewy twilight, when
they say souls come
Walking
the palpable gross world
of man,
And
I will waft the sweetest
odours o'er you,
I'll
shower down acorn-cups
of spicy rain
Upon
your couch and twine the
boughs above; 60
Then,
if you sing, I'll take
up Echo's part,
And
from a far-off bower give
back the ends
Of
some remembered airy melody;
Then,
if you draw, I'll breathe
upon the banks
And
freshen up the flowers,
and send the birds
Stammering
their madrigals, across
your path;
Then,
if you read, I'll tune
the rivulets,
I'll
teach the neighbouring
shrubs to fan your temples,
And
drive sad thoughts and
fevers from your breast;
But
if you sleep, I'll watch
your truant sense, 70
And
meet it in the fairy-land
of dreams
With
my lap full of blessings; 'twill,
methinks,
Be
passing pleasant, so don't
weep for me.
VIOLETTA. I
fear, Olivia, I'm a selfish
creature,
These
tears drop not for you,
but for myself;
'Tis
not that death will have
you, but that I
Shall
be a lone lost thing without
your love.
OLIVIA. My
love will spread its wings
for ever near you,
Each
gentler, nobler, and diviner
thought
Will
be my prompting.
VIOLETTA. Well,
I'll bear it then, 80
And
even persuade myself this
intercourse
Of
disembodied minds is no
conjecture,
No
fiction of romance. The
summer sun
Will
find me on the sod that
covers you,
Among
the blossoms; I'll try
not to cry;
And
when I hear a rustle in
the grass,
Or
the soft leaves come kissing
my bent arm,
I
shall not lay it to the
empty air,
But
think I know thy utterance
in the noises
That
answer me, and see thy
rosy fingers 90
Dimpling
the brooks.
OLIVIA. Thou
wilt be cheerful, then?
VIOLETTA. Yes,
with this hope,
That
when, some silent, melancholy
night,
I've
sobbed myself to sleep
over your picture,
Or
some memorial of your
former kindness,
I
shall awaken to ethereal
music,
And
find myself a spirit with
Olivia. [A
bell tolls.
OLIVIA. Whose
summons loads the gale
with mournful sound?
ATTENDANT. Dear
lady?
OLIVIA. I
ask who's dead or who's
to die:
You
need not tell me: I
remember now, 100
It
was a thought I wished
to keep away.
My
love, my Hesperus, unto
me thou wert
The
gentlest and the kindest;
sudden madness
Must
have inspired this deed;
and why do I,
Wife
of the dying, tarry in
the world?
I
feel already dissolution's
work,
A
languor creeps through
all my torpid veins,
Support
me, maidens.
VIOLETTA. Come
unto your couch;
Sleep
will recruit thee.
OLIVIA. Yes;
the breathless sleep;
Come
and pray round me, as
I fade away, 110
My
life already oozes from
my lips,
And
with that bell's last
sound I shall expire. [Exeunt.
ACT V. SCENE IV.
The place of execution.
HESPERUS guarded, HUBERT, ORLANDO, CITIZENS, &c.
HESPERUS. Now
in the scornful silence
of your features
I
see my hated self; my
friend, I was
The
pestilence you think of;
but to-night
Angelic
ministers have been with
me,
And
by the holy communings
of conscience
Wrought
a most blessed change;
my soul has wept
And
lain among the thorns
of penitence;
I
ask, (and you will not
refuse the boon
To
one who cannot crave again)
forgiveness
For
all that in the noontide
of my crimes, 10
Against
you, even in thought,
I have committed.
ORLANDO. And
we rejoice to grant it,
and if prayers
In
meek sincerity outpoured,
avail,
You
have them from our hearts.
HESPERUS. Thy
sister's soul spake in
those words, Orlando,
A
wretch's blessing for
them. I'm
as one
In
some lone watch-tower
on the deep, awakened
From
soothing visions of the
home he loves;
Trembling
he hears the wrathful
billows whoop,
And
feels the little chamber
of his life 20
Torn
from its vale of clouds,
and, as it falls,
In
his midway to fate, beholds
the gleam
Of
blazing ships, some swallowed
by the waves,
Some,
pregnant with mock thunder,
tossed abroad,
With
mangled carcases, among
the winds;
And
the black sepulchre of
ocean, choaked
With
multitudinous dead; then
shrinks from pangs,
Unknown
but destined. All
I know of death
Is,
that 'twill
come. I
have seen many die
Upon
the battle field, and
watched their lips 30
At
the final breath, pausing
in doubt to hear
If
they were gone. I
have marked oftentimes
Their
pale eyes fading in the
last blue twilight;
But
none could speak the burning
agony,
None
told his feelings. I ne'er
dreamed I died,
Else
might I guess the torture
that attends it.
But
men unhurt have lost their
several senses,
Grown
deaf, and blind, and dumb
without a pang,
And
surely these are members
of the soul,
And
when they fail, man tastes
a partial death: 40
Besides
our minds share not corporeal
sleep,
But
go among the past and
future, or perhaps
Inspire
another in some waking
world,
And
there's another death.
I
will not fear; why do
ye linger, guards?
I've
flung my doubts away;
my blood grows wild.
HUBERT. The
hour appointed is not
yet arrived,
Some
moments we must wait;
I pray you, patience.
Enter
LORD ERNEST in the dress
of a Peasant, followed
by CLAUDIO.
CLAUDIO. My
lord, where dost thou
hurry?
LORD
ERNEST. To
Despair;
Away!
I know thee not. Henceforth
I'll live 50
Those
bitter days that Providence
decrees me
In
toil and poverty. Oh
son, loved son,
I
come to give thee my last
tear and blessing;
Thou
wilt not curse the old,
sad, wretch again?
HESPERUS. (falling
upon the ground and
covering himself with
the loose
earth) Oh
trample me to dust.
LORD
ERNEST. (lying
down beside him) My
own dear child;
Aye,
we will lie thus sweetly
in the grave,
(The
wind will not awake us,
nor the rain,)
Thou
and thy mother and myself;
but I,
Alas! I
have some tearful years
to come
Without
a son to weep along with
me. 60
HESPERUS. Father,
dear father!
And
wilt thou pray for me? Oh, no! thou canst not,
Thou
must forget or hate me.
LORD
ERNEST. Sirs,
have pity;
Let
him not use me thus. Hesperus,
Hesperus,
Thou'rt
going to thy mother; tell
her, son,
My
heart will soon be broken;
so prepare
To
have me with you. Bless
thee, boy, good night. [Exit.
HESPERUS. My
father, heaven will curse
thee if I bless;
But
I shall die the better
for this meeting. [Kneeling.
Oh,
Floribel! fair martyr
of my fury, 70
Oh,
thou blessed saint! look
down and see thy vengeance,
And
if thy injured nature
still can pity,
Whisper
some comfort to my soul. 'Tis
done;
I
feel an airy kiss upon
my cheek;
It
is her breath; she hears
me; she descends;
Her
spirit is around me. Now
I'll die.
LENORA. Where's
Hesperus? Not
gone? Speak
to me loud,
I
hear not for the beating
of my heart.
We're
not both dead? Say
thou has 'scaped
the headsman,
Nor
felt the severing steel
fall through thy neck. 80
HESPERUS. I
stay one moment for the
signal here,
The
next I am no more.
LENORA. Then
we have conquered.
Friend,
leave us: I
would speak a private
word
Unto
thy prisoner. Look
upon these flowers;
They
grew upon the grave of
Floribel,
And
when I pulled them, through
their tendrils blew
A
sweet soft music, like
an angel's voice.
Ah!
there's her eye's dear
blue, the blushing down
Of
her ripe cheek in yonder
rose; and there
In
that pale bud, the blossom
of her brow, 90
Her
pitiful round tear; here
are all colours
That
bloomed the fairest in
her heavenly face;
Is't
not her breath?
HESPERUS. (smelling
them) It
falls upon my soul
Like
an unearthly sense.
LENORA. And
so it should,
For
it is Death thou'st quaffed:
I
steeped the plants in
a magician's potion,
More
deadly than the scum of
Pluto's pool,
Or
the infernal brewage that
goes round
From
lip to lip at wizards'
mysteries;
One
drop of it, poured in
a city conduit, 100
Would
ravage wider than a year
of plague;
It
brings death swifter than
the lightning shaft.
HESPERUS. 'Tis
true: I
feel it gnawing at my
heart,
And
my veins boil as though
with molten lead.
How
shall I thank thee for
this last, best gift?
LENORA. What
is it rushes burning through
my mouth?
Oh!
my heart's melted. —Let
me sit awhile.
HUBERT. Hear
ye the chime? Prisoner
we must be gone,
Already
should the sentence be
performed.
HESPERUS. On!
I am past your power.
(To
Lenora) How
farest thou now? 110
LENORA. Oh!
come with me, and view
These
banks of stars, these
rainbow-girt pavilions,
These
rivulets of music—hark,
hark, hark!
And
here are winged maidens
floating round
With
smiles and welcomes; this
bright beaming seraph
I
should remember; is it
not—my
daughter? [Dies.
HESPERUS. I
see not those; but the
whole earth's in motion;
I
cannot stem the billows;
now they roll:
And
what's this deluge? Ah! Infernal
flames! [Falls.
HUBERT. Guards,
lift him up. 120
HESPERUS. The
body hunters and their
dogs! Avaunt—
Tread
down these serpents' heads. Come
hither, Murder;
Why
dost thou growl at me? Ungrateful
hound!
Not
know thy master? Tear
him off! Help! Mercy!
Down
with your fiery fangs!—I'm
not dead yet.
[Dies.
THE
END.
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