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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12794 ***
+
+WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+_NOVELS_
+
+
+A MAN FROM THE NORTH
+ANNA OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+LEONORA
+A GREAT MAN
+SACRED AND PROFANE LOVE
+WHOM GOD HATH JOINED
+BURIED ALIVE
+THE OLD WIVES' TALE
+THE GLIMPSE
+THE ROLL CALL
+HELEN WITH THE HIGH HAND
+CLAYHANGER
+HILDA LESSWAYS
+THE CARD
+THE REGENT
+THE PRICE OF LOVE
+THESE TWAIN
+THE LION'S SHARE
+THE PRETTY LADY
+
+
+_FANTASIES_
+
+
+THE GRAND BABYLON HOTEL
+THE GATES OF WRATH
+THERESA OF WATLING STREET
+THE LOOT OF CITIES
+HUGO
+THE GHOST
+THE CITY OF PLEASURE
+
+
+_SHORT STORIES_
+
+
+TALES OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+THE GRIM SMILE OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+THE MATADOR OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+
+
+_BELLES-LETTRES_
+
+
+JOURNALISM FOR WOMEN
+FAME AND FICTION
+HOW TO BECOME AN AUTHOR
+THE TRUTH ABOUT AN AUTHOR
+MENTAL EFFICIENCY
+HOW TO LIVE ON TWENTY-FOUR HOURS A DAY
+THE HUMAN MACHINE
+LITERARY TASTE
+FRIENDSHIP AND HAPPINESS
+THOSE UNITED STATES
+PARIS NIGHTS
+MARRIED LIFE
+LIBERTY
+OVER THERE: WAR SCENES
+THE AUTHORS CRAFT
+BOOKS AND PERSONS
+SELF AND SELF-MANAGEMENT
+
+
+_DRAMA_
+
+
+POLITE FARCES
+CUPID AND COMMONSENSE
+WHAT THE PUBLIC WANTS
+THE HONEYMOON
+THE TITLE
+THE GREAT ADVENTURE
+MILESTONES (In Collaboration with Edward Knoblock)
+
+_In Collaboration with Eden Phillpotts_
+
+THE SINEWS OF WAR: A ROMANCE
+THE STATUE: A ROMANCE
+
+
+
+
+*JUDITH*
+
+A PLAY IN THREE ACTS
+
+_Founded on the apocryphal book of "Judith"_
+
+
+BY
+
+ARNOLD BENNETT
+
+
+
+
+LONDON
+
+1919
+
+_First published April 30, 1919_
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+This play was presented for the first time at the Devonshire Park
+Theatre, Eastbourne, on Monday, April 7th, 1919, with the following
+cast:
+
+Judith LILLAH MCCARTHY
+Haggith ESMÉ HUBBARD
+Rahel MADGE MURRAY
+Ozias CAMPBELL GULLAN
+Holofernes CLAUDE KING
+Bagoas ERNEST THESIGER
+Achior GEOFFREY DOUGLAS
+Chabris E.H. PATERSON
+Charmis FEWLASS LLEWELLYN
+Ingur FREDERICK VOLPE
+Messenger FELIX AYLMER
+Soldier CLIFFORD MOLLISON
+Attendant EDWIN OXLEE
+
+The play was produced by WILFRED EATON
+
+
+
+
+
+CHARACTERS
+
+
+_Hebrews_
+
+JUDITH
+HAGGITH, her waiting-woman
+RAHEL
+OZIAS, Governor of Bethulia
+CHABRIS, an elder
+CHARMIS, an elder
+A SOLDIER
+A MESSENGER
+
+
+_Assyrians_
+
+HOLOFERNES, General of the Assyrian armies
+BAGOAS, his chief eunuch
+ACHIOR, a captain
+INGUR, a soldier
+AN ATTENDANT ON BAGOAS
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+_A street in the city of Bethulia_.
+
+
+ACT II
+
+SCENE I. _The valley near the Assyrian camp. Time, morning; two days later_.
+
+SCENE II. _The tent of Holofernes. Time, later, the same morning_.
+
+SCENE III. _The same. Time, the same night_.
+
+
+ACT III
+
+SCENE I. _Same as Act I. Time, later, the same night._
+
+SCENE II. _The same. Time, the next day_.
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+_A street in the city of Bethulia in Judea. Bethulia is in the hill
+country, overlooking the great plain of Jezreel to the south-west. Back,
+the gates of the city, hiding the view of the plain. Right, Judith's
+house, with a tent on the roof. Left, houses. The street turns abruptly,
+back left, along the wall of the city. Left centre, a built-up
+vantage-point, from which the plain can be seen over the gates_.
+
+TIME: _Fifth century B.C.
+
+Towards evening_.
+
+Ozias _is standing alone in the street, drinking from a leathern bottle.
+Enter_ Chabris, _back left_.
+
+OZIAS _(quickly, but with perfect calmness, hiding the bottle in his
+garments_). Old man! It is years since I saw you. How came you past the
+guard, old man?
+
+CHABRIS. Old? Old? I am not yet a hundred. Who are you?
+
+OZIAS. Ozias.
+
+CHABRIS. Ah! So this is Ozias, the son of Ezbon. Before your father
+could walk I have nursed him on my knee; and he was filled like the full
+moon--with naughtiness.
+
+OZIAS. What has brought you at last out of your house? Are you come to
+prophesy once more?
+
+CHABRIS. I have given up prophesying.
+
+OZIAS. A profession full of risks.
+
+CHABRIS. I pass my endless days in meditation and solitude.
+
+OZIAS. That sounds much safer. How comely is the wisdom of old men!
+
+CHABRIS. And what do you do, sprig?
+
+OZIAS. Has none told you?
+
+CHABRIS. I see nobody but my daughter's granddaughter, and her I forbid
+to speak to me, because being a woman she has the tongue of a woman, and
+a woman's tongue is unfavourable to meditation. How should I be told?
+
+OZIAS. I am the governor of this great city of Bethulia.
+
+CHABRIS. You are responsible for this city?
+
+OZIAS. I am.
+
+CHABRIS. Now I understand my misfortune. And the truth was in me when I
+said to your mother as she lay dying: Better it is to die without
+children than to have them that are ungodly.
+
+OZIAS. Oh! How comely a thing is the judgment of grey hairs!
+
+CHABRIS. You ask me what has brought me at last out of my house. I will
+tell you. Thirst! Thirst has brought me out of my house. Every morning
+and every evening my great-grandchild serves me with pulse and water.
+For five days she has furnished less and less water, and this day--not a
+drop! Can one eat pulse without water to drink? Half an hour ago I went
+to her to reason with her, and she lay on her bed cracked, and raved
+that she herself had not drunk for three days and that there was no
+water left in all Bethulia. So I came at last out of my house into the
+streets of this city famous for its cool fountains which never fail. And
+lo! I meet the governor of this city, and he is Ozias! Ozias! Seven days
+do men mourn for him that is dead, but for an ungodly man all the days
+of his life! Why is there no water in Bethulia, sprig?
+
+OZIAS. Old man, meditation is good and solitude is good, but think not
+because you sit staring all day at your own belly that the sun and stars
+have ceased to revolve round the earth and the kings of this world to
+make war. Is it possible that you do not know what has happened?
+
+CHABRIS. I only know that I cannot eat pulse without water to drink.
+
+OZIAS. Bethulia is besieged.
+
+CHABRIS. Who is besieging Bethulia?
+
+OZIAS. Holofernes.
+
+CHABRIS. I have never heard his name. Who is he?
+
+OZIAS. Never heard the name of the chief captain of Nebuchadnezzar? Have
+you heard the name of Nebuchadnezzar, by chance?
+
+CHABRIS. I seem to remember it.
+
+OZIAS. Come up here. (_They go up the steps to the vantage-point_.)
+Look! A hundred and twenty thousand foot-soldiers. Twelve thousand
+archers on horseback. Oxen and sheep for their provisions. Twenty
+thousand asses for their carriages. Camels without number. Infinite
+victuals; and very much gold and silver. The like was never seen before.
+
+CHABRIS (_stepping down_.) Why has Nebuchadnezzar set about this thing?
+What harm has Bethulia done to him?
+
+OZIAS. Much harm. Nebuchadnezzar has decided to be God. He has decreed
+that all nations and tribes shall call upon him as God. And he has
+conquered the whole earth, excepting only Judea; and Bethulia is the
+gate into Judea, and Bethulia has not listened to his decree, and I am
+the governor of Bethulia. So Nebuchadnezzar the great king is very angry
+and Holofernes is the tool of his wrath.
+
+CHABRIS (_going up the steps again and gazing_.) How many did you say?
+
+OZIAS. A hundred and twenty thousand foot and twelve thousand horse.
+
+CHABRIS. At any rate this will be the last war.
+
+OZIAS. Why?
+
+CHABRIS. Why! Because plainly war cannot continue on such a scale. Or if
+it does, mankind is destroyed. Nebuchadnezzar has rendered war
+ridiculous.
+
+OZIAS _(laughs; then half to himself, sarcastically)._ What is heavier
+than lead, and what is the name thereof, but an aged fool?
+
+CHABRIS (_descending again, self-centred_). It remains that I cannot eat
+pulse without water to drink. (_To_ Ozias.) And surely Bethulia has more
+wells than any other city of Judea.
+
+OZIAS. The wells are at the foot of the hills, and Holofernes has
+seized them all.
+
+CHABRIS. That is not fighting.
+
+OZIAS. It is war.
+
+CHABRIS. No, no! In my time soldiers fought fairly.
+
+OZIAS. And killed each other. Why should Holofernes sacrifice thousands
+of lives to take the heights when he can reach the same result by
+letting his men sit still and watch?
+
+CHABRIS. I say this is not war. Once I travelled many days to Nineveh.
+It is a city of extravagance, and when I beheld its mad, new-fangled
+ways, I knew that the last day was nigh. I was right. Three thousand and
+five hundred years since Jehovah created Adam, and Eve from his rib ...
+Too long! Too long! And what is pulse without water? I must have water.
+
+OZIAS. It is thirty-four days since Holofernes took the wells. If you
+have received water up to yesterday your great-grandchild must indeed
+have thirsted that you might drink. I have distributed water by measure,
+but now the cisterns are empty, and women and young men fall down in the
+streets, and there is no water in Bethulia. We are all in like case, the
+high and the lowly.
+
+CHABRIS. Then give me your bottle.
+
+OZIAS. What bottle?
+
+CHABRIS. I saw you put it from your lips as I came.
+
+OZIAS. It behoves you to understand, old man, that my solemn duty as
+governor is to maintain my own strength, for if I fell the city would
+fall. Without me to inspire them the populace would yield in a moment.
+What is the populace? Poltroons, animals, sheep, rabbits, insects, lice!
+
+CHABRIS. Give me the bottle.
+
+OZIAS. It is as empty as the cisterns.
+
+CHABRIS. Give it to me, or I will cry through the streets that you are
+concealing water. (Ozias _gives him the bottle_. Chabris _drinks_. Ozias
+_snatches the bottle away and conceals it_.) Ah!
+
+(_A figure is glimpsed in the tent on the roof of_ Judith's _house_.
+Ozias _starts_.)
+
+CHABRIS. What is that up yonder?
+
+OZIAS. Nothing.
+
+CHABRIS. Whose house is this?
+
+OZIAS. It is the house of Judith, the daughter of Merari.
+
+CHABRIS. Ah! Merari, the son of Ox, the son of Oziel--Oziel and I were
+little playful boys together--the son of Elcia, the son of Raphaim, the
+son of Eliab, the son of Nathanael, the son of----
+
+OZIAS. Old man, your memory is terrible. Have pity!
+
+CHABRIS. The draught has revived me. So Merari married and had a
+daughter. What manner of woman is she?
+
+OZIAS. She is the widow of Manasses, who died of the heat in the barley
+harvest. And she is childless. And she is very rich; for Manasses left
+her gold and silver and menservants and maid-servants and cattle and
+lands. And she has remained a widow in her house three years and four
+months, and never has she come forth. And there is none to give her an
+ill word, for she fears the Lord greatly.
+
+CHABRIS. Yes. But what _manner_ of woman is she?
+
+OZIAS. She is beautiful to behold.
+
+CHABRIS (_to himself_). Oh! _That_ manner of woman!
+
+OZIAS. And she has fasted all the days of her widowhood, except the eves
+of the Sabbaths and the Sabbaths, and the eves of the new moons and the
+new moons, and the feasts and solemn days of the House of Israel.
+
+CHABRIS. You are most deeply versed in her life. Is she exceeding
+beautiful?
+
+OZIAS. She is exceeding beautiful.
+
+CHABRIS. Then it was she who _peeped_ (_with a peculiar emphasis on the
+word_) from the tent a moment since.
+
+OZIAS. Old man, you have eyes.
+
+CHABRIS. It is the draught of water.
+
+OZIAS. She is said to take the air in her tent daily at this hour.
+
+CHABRIS (_accusingly_). And that is why you are here, Ozias.
+
+OZIAS. No! I come here to reflect upon my plans for the saving of the
+city, and because of this vantage-point, to view the army of the
+Assyrians.
+
+CHABRIS. This vantage-point is new since my day. You have built it
+here, not to see the Assyrians, but to see Judith. And that is why you
+have set a guard to keep the street empty.
+
+OZIAS. And if it be so, what then? Old man, you are so old that to
+confess in your ear is sweet, like murmuring secrets into the grave. If
+I do come to this place to watch for the marvellous vision of Judith,
+what then?
+
+CHABRIS. What then? And the populace of Bethulia dying of thirst?
+
+OZIAS. The populace!... Mice! Rats! Beetles! (_He makes the motion of
+crushing with his foot_.)
+
+CHABRIS. Yet the city is doomed. You can have no hope.
+
+OZIAS. No hope? Am I then a dead body? Am I a rotting corpse? True, the
+city will be taken, and when the city is taken I may be killed. But in
+your meditations, old man, has it not occurred to you that death must be
+highly interesting? Or I may be seized for a slave. But either I should
+cease speedily to be a slave, or I should become the most powerful slave
+in Babylon. (_Reflectively_.) We might be enslaved together.
+
+CHABRIS. Who?
+
+OZIAS. Judith and I. The history of the world is full of miracles.
+Meanwhile, I live, and the strong savour of life inflames my nostrils;
+and the ever-increasing magnificence and terror of war is like wine in
+my mouth. I shake with delight at the vastness and the mystery of the
+future.... And there is woman!
+
+CHABRIS. I feel I can eat my pulse now.
+
+OZIAS. There is still woman.
+
+_A fracas is heard, back. Enter_ Rahel, _running, followed by two
+soldiers and a mixed group of Bethulians, including_ Charmis, _an
+elder_.
+
+RAHEL (_to_ Chabris, _like a termagant_). Why did you go forth alone,
+grandad, frightening me when I looked and could not find you? At your
+age! Come back with me this moment.
+
+CHABRIS. Ay! There is still woman!
+
+OZIAS (_angrily, to_ first soldier). Did I not give an order to bar the
+street?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. My lord, some of these are elders of high authority, and
+would pass. As for the girl----
+
+RAHEL (_to_ Chabris). This moment! (_She faints and falls_.)
+
+CHABRIS (_indifferently, as_ Charmis _moves towards_ Rahel). Let her
+lie. She will come to of herself--or not, as God wills.
+
+OZIAS (_to the soldiers, with cold fierceness_). Get back to your
+places. (_Exeunt soldiers_.)
+
+CHARMIS (_looking at_ Ozias _and indicating_ Rahel). She is the
+fourteenth I have seen faint from thirst in the streets this day.
+
+OZIAS (_soothingly_). Alas! And you or I may be the next. We are all in
+like case. But what is to be done?
+
+(_Confused feeble exclamations from the group of citizens:_ 'We want to
+know. We are come for that. There is but one thing to be done.')
+
+OZIAS (_still soothingly_). Who among you will be the spokesman?
+
+CHARMIS. We are all spokesmen.
+
+OZIAS. Even the children?
+
+CHARMIS. Even the children. In our extremity we are all spokesmen.
+
+OZIAS. But not all at once. Will you begin, honourable Charmis? You know
+that I am the servant of the citizens.
+
+CHARMIS (_nervously oratorical_). Lord Ozias, may the God of Israel
+judge between us and you, for you have done us a great injury. (_Looks
+round for approval. The group approves._)
+
+OZIAS. An injury? I? Have I not said that I am the servant of the
+citizens?
+
+CHARMIS (_more confidently_). And I say again that you have done us a
+great injury, in that you have not asked peace of the Assyrians. For we
+have no helper, and the God of Israel has sold us into the hands of the
+Assyrians. We are thrown down before them with thirst and with great
+destruction. Therefore now we demand--(_looks round_)--I say we demand
+that you call the Assyrians, and deliver the whole city for a spoil to
+the people of Holofernes and to all his army. For it is better for us to
+be made a spoil than to die of thirst. We will be the slaves of
+Holofernes, so that our souls may live and so that we may not see the
+death of our infants before our eyes, nor our wives nor our children
+die. (_A mother in the group convulsively seizes her child. Pause_.
+Ozias _walks about_.) We take to witness against you the heaven and the
+earth and our God and the God of our fathers, which punishes us
+according to our sins and the sins of our fathers; and we demand of you
+that you deliver up the city to Holofernes and his host. (_A silence_.)
+
+(Ozias _ascends solemnly to the vantage-point._)
+
+OZIAS (_dominating the assembly_). Friends, it would seem that Charmis
+has made an end. His words are excellent and full of pity. Who follows
+him? Who will speak next? My ear waits. (_A silence_.) Ah! Then give
+heed. The words of Charmis are full of pity, but I also have pity. Do
+not I too cherish our women, and our maidens and our young children? And
+because I pity I would not yield to the monster Holofernes. Yes, the
+monster! This is not war that he wages. Once our enemy strove fairly
+with the warriors of Israel. Now he makes our women and children to die
+of thirst. The magnificence of war is gone from the earth, and
+Holofernes by the excess of his hosts has rendered war ridiculous.
+(Chabris _raises his hands_.) The peoples of the earth will perceive
+that henceforward the institution of war cannot continue, and after this
+there will be no more war. But meanwhile, if I go crouching to the feet
+of Holofernes, what will happen and what will come to pass? Surely it
+will come to pass that the monster who has sat down to watch us die of
+thirst will slay our little children and our old men, and dishonour our
+women, and ravish our innocent virgins; for the enslaving of the
+conquered will not content his anger nor satisfy the lust of his great
+hosts. Shall these things be? I say they shall not be. But what am I,
+save the servant of the citizens of Bethulia? And what do I speak, save
+the thought that is in your hearts? There is no cowardice in you. You
+are not sheep, nor rabbits, nor beetles, nor lice. You are valiant men,
+and women lion-hearted. Without you I am naught, and if I defy
+Holofernes, my fortitude is yours and my resolve springs from you.
+Charmis has invoked the holy name of the God of Israel. Let Israel not
+forget its God, for never has the Most High forsaken Israel. Brethren,
+be of good courage. Let us yet endure five days. Five short days. And if
+these days pass and the God of Israel turn not his mercy towards us,
+then will I do according to the word of Charmis. Such is my oath to you.
+And so it shall be.
+
+Haggith _enters from the house of_ Judith.
+
+HAGGITH. My lord Ozias!
+
+OZIAS (_quickly descending the steps_). What say you?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress, the lady Judith, will speak with you. She comes.
+
+RAHEL (_half rising_). Water!
+
+OZIAS (_excited_.) The lady Judith comes out of her house after three
+years.
+
+VOICES IN THE GROUP (_excited and impressed_.) Judith is coming, after
+three years! Judith! The widow!
+
+OZIAS (_sternly to the group_). Get hence, everyone to his own charge.
+Soldiers! Clear the street! (Two soldiers _advance, running to obey_.)
+The men to the walls and towers. The women and children to their houses.
+(_To_ Rahel, _who has risen, indicating_ Chabris.) Take the aged fool
+away, girl. (_Ruthlessly and contemptuously_.) Get home, all of you.
+Rabble! Insects! Lice!
+
+(_The street is cleared, not without difficulty, and_ Ozias _is left
+alone with_ Haggith.)
+
+_After a pause_, Judith _enters slowly, in widow's apparel and
+sackcloth_.
+
+(_Exit_ Haggith _into the house_.)
+
+JUDITH. Greetings, Lord Ozias.
+
+OZIAS. Lady, greetings. (_They salute_.)
+
+JUDITH. Where are the people?
+
+OZIAS. I invited them to go away.
+
+JUDITH. Why?
+
+OZIAS. Your waiting-woman said that you would speak with me.
+
+JUDITH. But what I have to say I would have said before them.
+
+OZIAS. Forgive your servant.
+
+JUDITH. No! It is I, the woman, who should ask to be absolved.
+
+OZIAS. I beseech you----
+
+JUDITH (_simply_). Perhaps you dismissed the people because it is not
+meet for them to see all the workings of the mind which has authority
+over them.
+
+OZIAS (_warmly responsive_). Ah! Lady! In your wisdom and your
+understanding you have comprehended what it is to be the governor of a
+besieged city. You, alone!
+
+JUDITH. This is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia.
+
+OZIAS. It is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia--because
+Judith, the widow of Manasses, has issued from her house and from her
+secrecy, and because after long years she has lightened the city with
+her countenance.
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). We hold converse with words, but the shadow of
+destruction is over us, and our hearts are darkened, and we hide our
+hearts in speech. Ozias, governor of Bethulia, show me your heart.
+
+OZIAS. I dare not.
+
+JUDITH. Dare! I am not afraid.
+
+OZIAS. YOU are more beautiful than aforetime--were it possible.
+
+JUDITH (_accepting the compliment_). And if I am?
+
+OZIAS. That is what is in my heart! Behold my heart, and the depths of
+my heart. Look deep, and deeper, and still you will see naught therein
+but the beauty and the subtlety of Judith.
+
+JUDITH. It is no common man that with the parched tongue of thirst can
+talk thus while unspeakable calamity assails the city.
+
+OZIAS. It is Ozias.
+
+JUDITH (_gently_). I came not to meet Ozias, but the governor of
+Bethulia. From my tent I hearkened to the words which he spoke to the
+people, and the Lord said to me: Go down to him, thou, a woman. And I am
+here.
+
+OZIAS. The Lord reigns! That which I said to the people did not please
+the ear of Judith?
+
+JUDITH. No.
+
+OZIAS. I spoke to the people according to their understanding. Have you
+not said it is not meet for the people to know the thoughts of the
+ruler? Hearken again? And I will speak now to the wise woman. I
+flattered the people with vain praise of their courage, when they have
+no courage. I affrighted the people with a prophecy of terror, when
+there is no terror--for Holofernes is a great warrior, and has
+compassion in his greatness, for he is a Babylonian. I gave them hope of
+succour when succour is none--for, with a hundred and twenty thousand
+footmen and twelve thousand horse against us (_with dry humour_) to
+count upon the mercy of the Lord is presumption.
+
+JUDITH (_moves aside and returns. Sweetly_). Why then did you speak thus
+to the people? And to what end did you deceive them? I beseech you yet
+again to show me your heart, for it is right that I should know.
+
+OZIAS. I saw the vastness of the future as in a vision. If the God of
+Israel perchance is merciful, and the city is saved at the eleventh
+hour, then it will be said in Jerusalem that there is none like Ozias of
+Bethulia for steadfastness, for he alone by his ardour revived the
+fainting populace and held firm the city; and great will be my
+recompense.... But that is a dream. Always I have faced the substance of
+things, and the substance is that Nebuchadnezzar has decreed to rule
+over the whole earth, and from the east to the west there is no living
+man that shall not bow down before Nebuchadnezzar. Bethulia will fall.
+I, the governor, shall be taken captive and shown to Nebuchadnezzar, and
+in that day Holofernes shall say to Nebuchadnezzar: Lo! Here is Ozias
+the Israelite who resisted thy mighty armies for thirty-four days and
+yet five days more. Use him if it seem good to thee. And I shall be
+lifted up to be a satrap of Nebuchadnezzar, and I shall partake of the
+bright glory of Nebuchadnezzar. And--(_hesitates_.)
+
+JUDITH (_subtly and sweetly_). And?
+
+OZIAS (_in an outburst_). What am I without you, O Judith? Before
+Manasses loved you, did I not love you? For three years have I not
+watched over you in all honour and respect, and troubled you not with my
+importunity until this day, which is the day of days? What am I without
+you, and what shall be my dominion and my satrap's throne if you do not
+sit in majesty by my side, O Rose of Sharon and matchless among women?
+
+Judith (_as before_). My lord, you are like a rushing river.
+
+OZIAS. You have seen my heart.
+
+JUDITH. I have seen it.
+
+OZIAS. And what say you?
+
+_There is the sudden sound of a disturbance. Enter, from back, soldiers,
+holding_ Achior, _and a group of excited citizens_. Haggith _appears at
+the house-door._
+
+OZIAS (_fiercely_). What! Are my commands no more than the wind in the
+corn, and is there to be naught but tumult within the walls of this
+city?
+
+VOICES IN THE GROUP. An Assyrian! An Assyrian!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias! We saw this man lying bound at the foot of
+the hill, and we descended and loosed him and brought him privily into
+Bethulia by the secret way. And now we present him to my lord.
+
+OZIAS Fools! Then no longer is the secret way secret.
+
+VOICES. Slay him! Stone him! Whip the dog!
+
+JUDITH (_nobly scornful, to the crowd_). Oh! Brave! Oh! Men of courage
+and high valour!
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Achior). Who are you?
+
+ACHIOR. Achior.
+
+OZIAS. Your condition?
+
+ACHIOR (_with calm, genial candour_). Captain of all the Ammonites in
+the army of Holofernes.
+
+JUDITH. Let them loose him, Lord Ozias. His eyes are not the eyes of
+treachery.
+
+OZIAS (_to the soldiers_). Loose him. (_To_ Achior.) And how come you
+here? Speak the truth--and fear.
+
+ACHIOR. My mouth shall say truth, but I will not fear.
+
+OZIAS. My hand is terrible.
+
+ACHIOR. Thus it happened. When the children of Israel had shut up the
+passages of the hill country and had fortified all the tops of the high
+hills, Holofernes was very angry. And he called the captains of Ammon
+and said to them: Tell me now, ye sons of Chanaan, who these Israelites
+are that dwell in the hill country, and wherein is their power and
+strength, and why they have determined not to come and meet me, more
+than all the inhabitants of the west? And I, Achior, answered the
+question of Holofernes.
+
+OZIAS. And what answer gave you?
+
+ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes: This people is descended of the Chaldeans.
+But they left the way of their ancestors and would not follow the gods
+of their fathers; and they worshipped the God of heaven. So they were
+cast out from the face of the gods of Chaldea, and they fled into
+Mesopotamia. And they came to Chanaan. But when a famine covered all the
+land of Chanaan they went down into Egypt, and the king of Egypt brought
+them low with labouring in brick and made them slaves. Then they cried
+to their God, and he smote all the land of Egypt with plagues.... And
+God dried the Red Sea for them.
+
+VOICES. It is true. It is true!
+
+ACHIOR. And they came to Chanaan, and drove before them the inhabitants
+of that land, and they dwelt in that country many days. And while they
+sinned not before their God they prospered, because the God that hates
+iniquity was with them.
+
+VOICES. It is true.
+
+ACHIOR. But when they departed from the way which their God appointed,
+then they were destroyed in many battles very sore, and were led
+captives into a land that was not theirs, and the temple of their God
+was cast to the ground.
+
+VOICES. Gentile dog! Shall we not render him to pieces?
+
+JUDITH. There is but one truth, brethren, whether it please or whether
+it displease.
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Achior). Make an end.
+
+ACHIOR. And I said to Holofernes: But now this people are returned to
+their God, and have possessed Jerusalem, and are seated in the hill
+country. (_With more emphasis_.) And I said further to Holofernes: Now
+therefore, my lord and governor, if there be any error in this people,
+let us go up and we shall overcome them. But if there be no iniquity in
+their nation, let my lord now pass by, lest their Lord defend them and
+we become a reproach before all the world.
+
+JUDITH. It was well said.
+
+OZIAS. Lady, it was well said--if the slave said it. (_To_ Achior.) I
+demanded of you: How came you _here_?
+
+ACHIOR. Thus. When I had finished speaking to Holofernes, all they that
+were about my lord and governor rose up in wrath and cried: Kill him.
+And the face of Holofernes darkened, and he said: And who art thou,
+Achior, that thou hast prophesied among us to-day that we should not
+make war with the people of Israel because of their God? And who is God
+but Nebuchadnezzar? Nebuchadnezzar by my hand will destroy the
+Israelites, and their God shall not deliver them. Their mountains shall
+be drunken with their blood and their fields shall be filled with their
+dead bodies. (_The_ citizens _show alarm_.) And thou, Achior, shalt be
+delivered up to the Israelites in Bethulia, and when thou seest me again
+thou shalt fall among the slain.... And he commanded his servants, and
+they took me, and carried me secretly to the foot of the hill of
+Bethulia. And here am I!
+
+OZIAS (_after a pause, positively_). It is a wicked device for our
+undoing.
+
+JUDITH. How so?
+
+OZIAS. Plainly this fellow lies, and he has come subtly with a tale to
+spy out our strength. Presently he will seek to escape from us again to
+the Assyrians.
+
+VOICES. Spy! Stone him! Rend him!
+
+ACHIOR (_to_ Ozias). To Holofernes, my lord and governor, I spoke truth;
+and to you also I speak truth. Never has my mouth lied, nor my tongue
+uttered deceit. If death is ordained for my recompense, so be it.
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Ozias). He is a fair youth, and has spoken truly and feared
+not.
+
+OZIAS (_with meaning_). Lady, he is a fair youth, and fearless. But by
+what sign know you that he has spoken truly?
+
+JUDITH. By the glance of his eyes I know.
+
+OZIAS. It is a sign that suffices not. Shall it be said that Ozias was
+deceived, and shall Ozias imperil his renown, by reason of the glance of
+a youth when he looks at a woman--even you?... And if he lies not, then
+he is a fool and his folly was great.
+
+ACHIOR. I spoke the truth to Holofernes.
+
+OZIAS (_fiercely_). But to speak truth did not content you. Having
+answered Holofernes, you must needs offer counsel to your lord and
+governor! Who were you to offer counsel to the greatest of all the
+captains of the earth? The protection of the mighty conqueror covered
+you, and lo! in your folly did you estrange yourself from him. Fool!
+
+ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes, my lord and governor, that which I was
+appointed to say--that, no more and no less.
+
+OZIAS. And who appointed you to say that which you said?
+
+JUDITH. If there be a God in Israel, and if the Lord has not abandoned
+us, may not this youth be the messenger of the Most High to bring us
+comfort, and for a warning to the vainglory of Holofernes?
+
+OZIAS (_with irony_). All is possible to the Lord. Yet may his purposes
+be hidden from us. (_To the soldiers_.) Until the Lord vouchsafe new
+wisdom to me, his servant, bind fetters about the feet of Achior, and
+take him to the house of bondage, and set a guard over him, for a spy is
+not more dangerous than a fool.
+
+CHARMIS (_springing forward_). It shall be done, Ozias.
+
+(_The soldiers begin to put chains on_ Achior.)
+
+JUDITH (_quietly_). Shame him not with fetters, lord Ozias.
+
+OZIAS (_after a pause, to the soldiers_). Unbind him! (_The soldiers
+obey_.) Take him off! Speedily! Away! All! Let none remain! Hasten, I
+say!
+
+(_Exeunt back, all except_ Ozias _and_ Judith. _As he goes_ Achior
+_kisses Judith's robe_.)
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Achior, _as he does so_). Truth-teller!
+
+(_At a sign from_ Judith, Haggith _re-enters the house_.)
+
+OZIAS. Your face is turned from me, because of the youth. Yet you came
+out to see the governor of the city, and the governor could do no other
+than I have done.
+
+JUDITH (_looking at him_). Ozias, you have shown me your heart.
+
+OZIAS. Yea!
+
+JUDITH. And in the moment when the youth came you asked of me my
+counsel.
+
+OZIAS. Yea!
+
+JUDITH. Hear me now, for the words you have spoken before the people
+this day are not right.
+
+OZIAS. What words?
+
+JUDITH. This promise that you have uttered to deliver the city to our
+enemies, unless within five days the Lord turn to help. Who are you that
+seek to stand instead of God among the children of men?
+
+OZIAS. Stand instead of God!
+
+JUDITH. Who are you that have tempted God this day? For you cannot find
+the depth of the heart of man,--how then shall you search out God or
+comprehend his purpose? Brother, provoke not the Lord our God to anger.
+For if he will not help us within these five days, he has power to
+defend us when he will, even every day. Do not bind the counsels of God.
+For God is not as man that he may be threatened, neither as the son of
+man that he should be wavering. Therefore let us wait for salvation from
+him, and he will hear our voice,--if it please him. Moreover, this city
+is the key and the gateway to all Judea. If it be obstinate in
+resistance, Judea is not defiled, but if it be taken the whole land
+shall lie waste and God will require the profanation of it at our mouth.
+
+OZIAS. All that you have spoken is truth, and there is none to gainsay
+your words. From the beginning of your days we have known your wisdom,
+and your understanding is manifest.... (_With significance_.) But we are
+thirsty.
+
+JUDITH. If we are thirsty, let us give thanks to the Lord our God, who
+tries us, even as he did our fathers.
+
+OZIAS. The people in the extremity of their thirst compelled me to an
+oath, which I will not break.
+
+JUDITH. Say you the people, Ozias? As for them, you hold them lightly,
+and they are as naught in your eyes. So much you have avowed.
+
+OZIAS (_in a new tone_). It is true. This day I hold the people lightly.
+But when the great madness and desperation of thirst comes at last upon
+them, who shall hold them? In that day they will seize the things
+forbidden, and they will drink the wine sanctified and reserved for the
+priests that serve the Lord. And to avert from me the wrath of Joachim,
+the high priest of Jerusalem, I have sent already a messenger to
+Jerusalem to bring a licence that this matter may be lawful.
+
+JUDITH (_shocked_). Nay!
+
+OZIAS. I say it will be so.
+
+JUDITH. It shall not be so.
+
+OZIAS. Then pray you to the Most High for the city, even for all of us,
+and the Lord will send rain for our cisterns and we shall faint no more.
+Pray, for you are a godly woman, and the God of Israel shall listen.
+
+JUDITH (_with supreme impressiveness_). Hear me again, Ozias. This night
+I will do a thing which shall go throughout all the generations to the
+children of Israel. You shall stand this night in the gate of the city,
+and I will go forth from the city with my waiting-woman; and within the
+days that you have promised to deliver the city to our enemies the Lord
+will visit Israel by my hand.
+
+OZIAS. On what errand will you go?
+
+JUDITH. Enquire not of my act, for I will not declare it until the
+things are finished that I do. But this I declare, that the Lord has
+inclined himself to me, and now he has sent Achior for a sign.
+
+OZIAS. You go to Holofernes!
+
+JUDITH. To Holofernes.
+
+OZIAS. Do not go!
+
+JUDITH. But why shall I not go?
+
+OZIAS. The perils of the heathen will surround you, and harm will surely
+befall you, for Holofernes will work lamentable evil upon you. And I
+cannot suffer it.
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). Did not Ozias say that Holofernes was a great
+warrior and had compassion in his greatness?
+
+OZIAS (_insistent_). I cannot suffer it, for if any shame come upon you
+I will not live.
+
+JUDITH. God will not see his handmaid shamed. Moreover I regard not
+myself in this thing, but the welfare of the people of Israel.
+
+OZIAS (_kneeling_). Judith, I entreat you! For you are the light of my
+eyes, and without you the world is not.
+
+JUDITH (_softly_). I know it. Think you that in these years I have not
+seen the depths of your heart, Ozias? Think you that I was blind in my
+tent? Think you that I watched not upon you? You were comely in my
+sight. But this day you have revealed your pride. For you seek not God,
+but the vanity of the earth, and you would make all Israel the
+instrument of your glory, denying the Lord. And I am sad.
+
+OZIAS. Forgive me, Rose of Sharon.
+
+JUDITH (_softly_). Who am I, to forgive my brother? Peace be upon you!
+(_She turns towards her house_.)
+
+OZIAS (_rising,_). Stay!
+
+JUDITH. I go to prepare myself for that which I have to do. (_Exit into
+the house_.)
+
+(_A soldier shows himself, back._)
+
+OZIAS. Friend!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_approaching and saluting_). Lord! Your command!
+
+OZIAS. Send to me the officer of the watch.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, the honourable lieutenant lies sick.
+
+(Haggith _appears at the door of the house_.)
+
+OZIAS. Thirst has overcome him?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_bowing_). He raves on the bed, lord, and his tongue is
+like the tongue of a dog.
+
+OZIAS. Who then commands the watch by the watchfires this night?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. I, lord. The watchfires wait the torch.
+
+OZIAS. Will you, too, faint, and will your tongue be like the tongue of
+a dog?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_grimly_), Not mine, lord.
+
+OZIAS. DO the people complain?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, they whine and snivel mightily.
+
+_Enter_ Haggith _with a small sack._
+
+OZIAS. Is the secret way shut?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Shut and barred, lord.
+
+OZIAS. It must be opened.... Stand! I will see to it.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. AS my lord wills.
+
+OZIAS. Has the watch aught to drink?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. My lord knows that no drop is left in the gourds.
+
+(Ozias _waves him away, and he retires_.)
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Haggith, _who is busy with the sack_). Woman, has the lady
+Judith perchance dreamed a dream?
+
+HAGGITH (_enigmatically_). My mistress has dreamed no dream. Why does
+the lord Ozias ask?
+
+OZIAS. It seemed to me--(_stops_)
+
+HAGGITH. Dreams lift up fools. (_Exit into the house_.) (_Exit Ozias,
+L_.)
+
+(_The soldier strolls forward. Twilight begins to fall_.)
+
+(_Enter_ Haggith _from the house with more baggage_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_to the soldier; curtly; not looking at him_). So thou hast no
+water?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_with genial freedom_). Yea, Haggith, we have still a
+little.
+
+HAGGITH. Then thou has lied to the governor?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. _Him_? (_With a jerk of the shoulder_!) _He_ knows! In
+truth now, thinkest thou he would expect us soldiers to keep guard
+without water? _He_ knows! But he is a great lord, and in seemliness he
+asks for a lie, and that which he asks is given to him--in seemliness.
+
+HAGGITH. But the officer raving as thou hast said with thirst?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Ah! It is the business of a worshipful officer to scorn
+deceit and to suffer.
+
+HAGGITH. And all the people?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. The people are the people. But we soldiers are
+soldiers--and must drink, or we cannot guard. (_Yawns_.) Eh! I could lie
+down and snore for seven years, but I am appointed to watch all night.
+
+HAGGITH (_suddenly caressing_). Sweet warrior! Would I could rest thee!
+
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_startled by the change in her demeanour_). Haggith! Thou
+art marvellously and desirably changed.
+
+HAGGITH. I am practising to thy profit for that which lies before me and
+my mistress.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What meanest thou?
+
+HAGGITH. Chut! If thou hast heard a word, let it die with thee--it will
+not burst thee.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord! turn away from me vain hopes and concupiscence.
+
+HAGGITH. And so thou sleepest not this night!... Neither do I sleep.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What?
+
+HAGGITH. I go with my mistress upon a journey.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What journey? There can be no journey for thee, unless
+thou leave the city and wend to the Assyrians.
+
+HAGGITH (_curt again_). Nevertheless we go upon a journey.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. It is madness.
+
+HAGGITH. It may be.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Who can tell the heart of a master? Not I! When dost thou
+depart?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress is attiring.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Thou dost not attire her?
+
+HAGGITH. I! I, who have charge over all that is hers! Wilt thou tell me,
+then, what is the task of her tiring-women? Idle sluts!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. And this is thy baggage?
+
+HAGGITH (_matter-of-fact_). A cruse of oil, a bag of parched corn, fine
+bread, three lumps of figs--and a bottle of wine--yea, the last!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_drawing in his lips_). Ah! But thou wilt need an ass for
+this cargo.
+
+HAGGITH (_drily_). I am the ass.
+
+_Enter_ Judith, _magnificently dressed_.
+
+(_The_ soldier _retires, back_.)
+
+JUDITH. Is all prepared?
+
+HAGGITH. All is prepared, mistress.
+
+_Enter_ Ozias, _L_.
+
+OZIAS (_ecstatic at the sight of_ Judith's _splendour_). O, loveliness!
+O, lily of the field! Who shall withstand you, and who shall say you
+nay?
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). I am ready to depart.
+
+OZIAS. The secret way is opened. I will lead you to it.
+
+JUDITH (_gently_). The secret way? I will take no secret way.
+
+OZIAS. But hear me, lady. The peril from the archers far off--
+
+JUDITH. What did I say to you, lord Ozias? I said: You shall stand this
+night in the gate of the city, and I will go forth. My desire is that
+you command the gatemen to open the gates, so that I and my
+waiting-woman may pass out before all men, and in the sight of the Lord.
+(_She bends to examine_ Haggith's _baggage_.)
+
+OZIAS (_moved. Calling to the_ soldiers). Ho! Let the gates of the city
+be opened, that the lady Judith may go forth.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Yea, lord. (_Calling to others, off._) Gatemen!
+
+(_The gatemen man the gate-chains, and citizens rush in with cries_:
+'What shall happen to us? The lady Judith leaves the city? At
+night-fall? What is it?')
+
+OZIAS (_fiercely, to the crowd_). Get hence! Dogs!
+
+JUDITH (_softly_). Let them stay, Lord Ozias, for that which I do, I do
+not in secret, neither shall it be hidden.
+
+OZIAS (_to the crowd_). Make a way clear to the gates.
+
+JUDITH. Before I go, I will look into the valley whither I descend.
+(_She mounts to the vantage-point_).
+
+VOICES. Water! Water! Or we die!
+
+JUDITH (_from the vantage-point_). Brethren, bewail not! Remember what
+things the Lord did to Abraham, and how he tried Isaac, and what
+happened to Jacob in Mesopotamia. For the Lord has not tried us in the
+fire as he did them, neither has he taken vengeance upon us. But the
+Lord scourges them that come near to him, to admonish them. (_She
+kneels. Following her example, everybody kneels_.) O Lord God of my
+father Simeon, the Assyrians are multiplied in their power; they trust
+in shield, and spear, and bow, and sling; and know not that thou art the
+Lord which breakest battles; the Lord is thy name. Behold their pride,
+and send thy wrath upon their heads; give into my hand, which am a
+widow, the power that I have conceived. For thy power standeth not in
+multitude, nor thy might in strong men. Smite the Assyrians by the
+deceit of my lips; break down their stateliness by the hand of a woman.
+And make my speech and deceit to be their wound and stripe, who have
+purposed cruel things against thy covenant and against the top of Zion.
+And make every nation and tribe to acknowledge that thou art the God of
+all power, and that there is none other that protecteth the people of
+Israel but thou. (_She rises. The crowd murmurs:_ 'Amen.' _All rise._
+Judith _comes down from the vantage-point. Silence_.)
+
+OZIAS (_moved_). Open the gates.
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Haggith). Nothing is forgotten?
+
+HAGGITH. Nothing.
+
+(Judith _moves a step towards the gates._)
+
+OZIAS. The soul of my soul goes with you into the valley.
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Haggith, _solemnly_). And the knife?
+
+(Haggith _gives a gesture. At the same moment a woman comes from the
+house with a knife, which she hands to_ Haggith, _who hands it to_
+Judith, _who takes it ceremoniously, and hides it in her dress. The
+gates are now opened, and the distant plain under the setting sun is
+seen covered with the tents of the Assyrian army_.)
+
+(Judith _goes slowly through the gates, followed by_ Haggith _carrying
+the baggage_.)
+
+VOICES (_as_ Judith _passes_). Water! Water!
+
+OZIAS (_with deep emotion_). Close the gates. Light the watchfires.
+
+(_The gates begin slowly to close. The glow of the watchfires is seen_.)
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+ACT II
+
+
+SCENE I
+
+_The valley of Jezreel. The city of Bethulia on the hill in the
+distance_.
+
+Haggith _with her baggage enters to_ Ingur _and his men_.
+
+TIME: _The next morning but one_.
+
+INGUR. What art thou?
+
+HAGGITH (_prudishly and coldly_). If it please thee, I am a woman.
+
+INGUR. No. Thou art a hedgehog.
+
+HAGGITH (_suddenly cajoling_). I ask pardon. When I saw thy great
+handsomeness I grew afraid, and my tongue was stiffened. In my country
+there is no man so handsome as thou art.
+
+INGUR. Ah! (_Much mollified_.) And what then is thy country?
+
+HAGGITH. I am a woman of the Hebrews, and I have come from Bethulia.
+
+INGUR (_astonished_). A woman of the Hebrews! From Bethulia! (_To his
+men_). Stand back from my face. (_The men retire. To_ Haggith.) This is
+a rare strange tale.
+
+HAGGITH. Could I lie to _thee_? I have escaped from the city, which is
+given over to be consumed. I sought water for my thirst, for in Bethulia
+there is no water, and the people faint in the streets.
+
+INGUR. But it is a long journey from Bethulia, and thou art fresh and
+delicate as though just risen from thy bed.
+
+HAGGITH (_smiling_). I can hide nothing from thee, mighty wolf. I am,
+indeed, but just risen from my bed. The night before last night I set
+forth secretly, and came into the valley yesterday at noon, and lay soft
+in a cave where three springs bubbled, and drank, and slept until this
+morning's sunrise.
+
+INGUR. What is thy name?
+
+HAGGITH. Haggith.
+
+INGUR. Thy name is as strange as thy errand, and as thyself; and surely
+thou art a woman of the Hebrews, which is a race of lunatics, as I am
+told.
+
+HAGGITH. I have figs fit for a great king. (_Opens her sack and offers
+some figs_.)
+
+INGUR _(eating)._ Um! And what else hast thou? Let me touch thee,
+Haggith. (_He touches her carefully_). Yes, thou art outlandish, and no
+doubt mad, but comely. Comely! Thou hast the likeness and feel of a
+woman. Always have I hankered after strange women, and now lo! one falls
+ripe into my mouth. (Haggith _shrinks. Reassuringly._) In a way of
+speaking! In a way speaking! For thou art not in my mouth. And so thou
+earnest to slake thy thirst?
+
+HAGGITH. Yes, my roaring lion.
+
+INGUR. Listen! Thou hast saved thy life with water. But thou art lost.
+
+HAGGITH. Lost?
+
+INGUR. Ay! A woman in the camps of the Assyrians--she is undone. She is
+a lamb in a den of terrible tigers. (_Comfortingly_.) No, no! I will
+protect thee, but I warn thee that thou art undone. I am honest.
+(_Caresses her_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_clumsily returning his caress_). _Thou_ wilt not harm me.
+
+INGUR. I will not tear thee to pieces, but thou shalt come away with me.
+(_She timidly strokes him_). Thou hast not the habit of this stroking.
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me, when I encountered any noble
+Assyrian, to use him thus. It is true that I have not the habit.
+Nevertheless I do what I can.
+
+INGUR (_startled at the mention of a mistress_). Thy--thy mistress? Ye
+are two? Where then is thy mistress? Tell me upon the instant--is she
+fairer than thou?
+
+HAGGITH. Seven times more fair.
+
+INGUR. Fetch her!
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress is washing herself in a fountain of water by the
+cave. She sent me forward in peace and friendliness to announce her
+coming.
+
+INGUR. Fetch her! (_Suddenly perceiving_ Bagoas _in the distance, he
+changes his manner_.) Stay! Bagoas is approaching, and he may have seen
+thee. His eyes are sharp. Stand off. (Haggith _moves away a little_.)
+But when I tell thee, fall down on thy face.
+
+HAGGITH. Is he a great captain?
+
+INGUR. His mightiness is the chief eunuch of the Prince, and there is
+none greater than he save only the Prince himself, for Bagoas has charge
+over all the women of the Prince's tents.
+
+HAGGITH. Women of the Prince's tents?
+
+INGUR. Ay! Wives! Concubines! Virgins! Beyond counting. Didst thou think
+in thy Hebrew pride, that the Prince was a savage and a barbarian?...
+Down, damsel! Here is Bagoas. Embrace the earth for thy life's sake.
+(Haggith _obeys_.)
+
+_Enter_ Bagoas, _with attendants, L_.
+
+(Ingur _salutes him with extreme deference_.)
+
+BAGOAS. Who art thou?
+
+INGUR. Ingur, mightiness, commanding twenty footmen.
+
+BAGOAS. Begone from my sight. This morning the Prince condescends to
+walk through the camp, that all the armies may take joy in his
+countenance. It is not meet that he should be seen of any lower than a
+lieutenant.
+
+INGUR (_indicating_ Haggith). Mightiness, a woman of the Hebrews escaped
+from Bethulia to find water! And by my subtlety I have captured her.
+
+BAGOAS. A woman of the Hebrews! (_Surveying_ Haggith.) Rise, scum, and
+let me behold thy deformity. (Haggith _obeys_.)
+
+INGUR. And there is another yet to appear,--her mistress, seven times
+fairer.
+
+BAGOAS. Her mistress may be seven times fairer than this eyesore, and
+yet ugly. (_To_ Haggith.) Who is thy mistress?
+
+HAGGITH. The lady Judith.
+
+BAGOAS. Judith! A name fit only for a cat! Why is she here? How is she
+here? What is her secret and detestable purpose? For there is a trick in
+this thing.
+
+HAGGITH. I know not my mistress's purpose.
+
+BAGOAS. Tell me thy mistress's purpose, or I will have thee smothered.
+
+HAGGITH. I know only that if Holofernes----
+
+BAGOAS (_stopping her angrily_). Callest thou the illustrious one by his
+name? The most high _Prince_ Holofernes, foul wench.
+
+HAGGITH. The most high Prince Holofernes--if he so wills my mistress
+would speak with his highness.
+
+BAGOAS (_laughing heartily_). Speak with the Prince? _Speak_ with the
+Prince? Ha-ha! (_All the men laugh_.) What is the state of thy mistress?
+
+HAGGITH. The lady Judith is a widow.
+
+BAGOAS (_still more amused_). Aha! A widow! And the Hebrew hag would
+_speak_ with Prince Holofernes! (_The men laugh and jeer_.)
+
+_Enter_ Judith, _R_.
+
+(Haggith _goes quickly to her. All the men stare at_ Judith, _deeply
+impressed_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_aside to_ Judith). There are many hussies in the camps,
+thousands and thousands, mistress. This lord is the chief eunuch.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to an attendant_). If this be an example of the Bethulian
+women, I shall have a momentous business upon me when their city falls.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+(Judith, _signing to_ Haggith _to stand aside, bows to the ground
+before_ Bagoas; _then rises again_.)
+
+BAGOAS (_after a short pause_). You are very beautiful.
+
+JUDITH. There are beautiful women in Judea, but no man of Judea would
+look twice at such as I, a shrunken widow, like dried fish.
+
+(_Exit_ Ingur, _excitedly, L_.)
+
+BAGOAS. I have heard how you have escaped out of Bethulia and come
+hither in order to find water. (_Blandly_.) Aught else?
+
+JUDITH. My desire also was to have speech privately with the great
+conqueror, Holofernes.
+
+BAGOAS. Ah! We are well met, you and I. For I am Bagoas, chief eunuch to
+the illustrious Prince. (_Aside to second attendant_.) Run. Fetch the
+box of veils. (_Exit_ second attendant, _L_.)
+
+JUDITH (_saluting once more_). I supplicate then, mighty Bagoas, that
+you lead me quickly to the illustrious Prince Holofernes.
+
+BAGOAS. Surely! Surely! It is my pleasure to content you. (_Aside, to
+attendant, anxiously_.) This dried fish by her damnable beauty will
+reach great power, and if I speak not softly to her now she will undo me
+in that day.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+JUDITH. I humbly thank your mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS. But it is necessary that you should relate to me your little
+affair. For no woman speaks to the illustrious Prince until she has
+spoken to me.
+
+JUDITH. It cannot be so.
+
+BAGOAS (_persuasively_). In my ear, privily. Approach.
+
+JUDITH. It cannot be so.
+
+BAGOAS. What mean you--it cannot be so?
+
+JUDITH. I will utter my errand to the illustrious Prince Holofernes
+alone.
+
+BAGOAS (_losing his self-control; angrily_). What? Thou queasy chit!
+Thou minx! Thou jade! Baggage! Mopsy! Shamelesss wench! Thou wilt not
+obey Bagoas, chief eunuch in the camps of the Assyrians! I will make
+thee the slave of my slave and the plaything of scullions. (_Stops._
+Judith _smiles_. Haggith _subsides alarmed at her feet_.) Thou shalt be
+abandoned to the sutlers and the ass-drivers, and thus thou shalt learn
+who is Bagoas and what is his power! (_Stops again._ Judith _still
+smiles_.) The strumpets of the kitchens shall scorn thee! I--I----
+
+JUDITH (_smiling sweetly_). Mightiness! Mightiness! I am your bondwoman,
+but it is appointed by heaven that I shall speak with the illustrious
+Prince Holofernes himself.
+
+BAGOAS (_controlling himself, smiling_). Well, if it is appointed by
+heaven, so shall it be. Forget my words. They had no evil intent, for I
+was trying you, as my duty is. (_Aside to attendant_.) The sweetness of
+her glance dissolves my backbone.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightinesss.
+
+BAGOAS (_to_ Judith). Follow me, lady. (_Aside to_ attendant.) Thinkest
+thou the Prince will come this way? (_Pointing_.)
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS. Or that?
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS. If the Prince so much as sees her before the city is taken,
+never will the city be taken, and we shall all be her captives.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS (_beating the attendant_). I will lead her by the path to the
+cave, for the Prince will surely not come that way. (_To_ Judith.)
+Follow me, lady.
+
+(Bagoas _moves R_. Judith _hesitates a moment as_ Haggith _picks up her
+sack. Enter R. the heralds of Holofernes, followed by_ Holofernes.)
+
+BAGOAS (_to himself_). Holofernes! (_To his attendants_.) Hide her,
+rascals, or Assyria is undone. (_The attendants range themselves
+between_ Judith _and_ Holofernes.)
+
+(Bagoas _receives_ Holofernes _with a prostration and high ceremony_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. Where is this woman?
+
+BAGOAS. Woman, Prince?
+
+HOLOFERNES (_impatient_). This Hebrew woman, I say! One Ingur has run
+among the tents chattering, and the rumour of her has spread through the
+camps like a plague. By Nebuchadnezzar the one god, where is she, for it
+has been told to me that her beauty excels the beauty of all the women
+of the East and ravishes the eye exceedingly?
+
+BAGOAS. Ah! It is of Judith that the Prince deigns to speak. Lo! I had
+caught her and was bringing her to your highness. (_To_ attendants.)
+Stand aside, dogs.
+
+(Judith _is revealed to_ Holofernes. _She prostrates herself and then
+rises_. Holofernes _gazes at her, entranced_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. So thou hast escaped out of Bethulia to find water for thy
+thirst?
+
+JUDITH. To find water, and to have speech with the most illustrious
+Prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Woman (_approaching her a step, and then standing still_),
+be of good comfort, and fear not in thy heart, for I never hurt any that
+was willing to serve Nebuchadnezzar, the god of all the earth. And if
+thy people that dwell in the mountains had not held me lightly, I would
+not have lifted up my spear against them, but they have done these
+things to themselves.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside, to_ Holofernes). Terrible master, she is full of guile
+and deceitfulness, and came not at all for water, but for a hidden
+purpose against you. Therefore enquire of her closely.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Bagoas). Chastise thy tongue, ere it overthrow thee,
+fiend. There is no guile in that face. (_To_ Judith.) Tell me now thy
+message and wherefore in truth thou art come. And tremble not, for thou
+shalt live this night.
+
+JUDITH. Great prince, receive the words of your servant and suffer your
+handmaid to speak in your presence, and I will declare no lie to my
+lord.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Speak.
+
+JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to_ Holofernes). It is a device against my lord.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Judith). Speak now, I command thee.
+
+JUDITH. My message concerns the fate of Bethulia, and of all the
+Assyrians, and of my lord. Life and death are in it, for I have communed
+with heaven.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Which heaven? Thine or mine?
+
+JUDITH. There is but one God.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_roughly_). And he is Nebuchadnezzar. Speak thy tale.
+
+JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to_ Holofernes). It is a device.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_angrily_). Speak out all thy heart, and quickly!
+
+JUDITH. I will speak to my lord in my lord's tent.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_furious_). In my tent! Who art thou who defiest me, and
+what is thy licence, heathen slave, to defile the tent of Holofernes?
+Bind her. Take her away, and twist the cords about her neck, and
+strangle her, and cast her insolence into the lake.
+
+(Judith _is seized and bound in an instant_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_in two minds_). Wait!
+
+BAGOAS. She is bound, illustrious prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Wait!
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to_ Holofernes). Prince, let not the benevolence of your
+heart be your undoing, for in the loveliness of her face is cunning and
+great peril. I have lived all my days amid the craftiness of women, and
+my lord also knows somewhat of their strange tricks, which bring ruin to
+the carnal.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_reflective_). Who would despise these Hebrews that have
+among them such women as she? (_Fiercely_). Surely it is not good that
+one man among them should be left; for if one were let go he might
+deceive the whole earth.
+
+JUDITH (_advancing a step, appealingly_). Will the wise man cast away a
+pearl, and will my lord in anger lose his servant for ever?
+
+BAGOAS (_to_ Holofernes). Let her not speak with my lord alone in my
+lord's tent.
+
+JUDITH. I would speak with the illustrious prince--and with Bagoas
+also. (_She smiles_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_with a gesture_). I cannot lose thee. (_To attendants_.)
+Unbind her.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside_). May heaven be with us, for the woman is against us!
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Bagoas). Veil her, that her face and form be not seen
+as she passes to my tent, for she is mine.
+
+BAGOAS (_calling_). The veils! The veils! Where is the rascal?
+
+_The attendant rushes in panting with the box of veils. He is followed
+by_ Ingur.
+
+(Judith _is elaborately veiled in a series of veils by_ Bagoas _and his
+attendants_).
+
+HOLOFERNES. Let her follow me.
+
+(_Exeunt, R, with great ceremony_, Holofernes _and his heralds, followed
+by_ Judith.)
+
+INGUR (_as they go, stopping_ Bagoas, _who goes last_). Mightiness,
+pardon your slave.
+
+BAGOAS. Well?
+
+INGUR (_pointing to_ Haggith). Your slave captured the mistress. Reward
+him with this outlandish wench.
+
+BAGOAS (_carelessly_). The fool goeth out to seek his own damnation.
+Take her.
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE II
+
+
+_Interior of the tent of_ Holofernes. _A couch with curtains, L. The
+principal entrance to the tent is at the back. Secondary entrances in
+the hangings, L. and R._
+
+TIME: _The same morning, later._
+
+Bagoas _and his attendant are unveiling_ Judith.
+
+BAGOAS. Animal, wouldst thou dare to behold that which is thy lord's?
+Leave the last veil, and away with thee.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness!
+
+(_Exit back with the veils already removed from_ Judith.)
+
+BAGOAS. Queen of the night of Holofernes!
+
+JUDITH (_through the veil_). Mighty Bagoas!
+
+BAGOAS. The Prince comes to look upon you in his tent.
+
+JUDITH. Mighty Bagoas, deign to answer a question I will put.
+
+BAGOAS. Deign to ask, lady, and my humility shall answer; for your
+beauty has blinded Holofernes this day and he is your captive, and his
+servant is your servant, and there is no law in the camps of the
+Assyrians save your glance. (_He makes a covert gesture of half-amused
+resentful resignation_.)
+
+JUDITH. Nebuchadnezzar is your god? Is it not so, Bagoas?
+
+BAGOAS. Nebuchadnezzar is henceforward the god of the Assyrians and of
+all the lands which their spears conquer. It is an official order.
+
+JUDITH. If Nebuchadnezzar laid a command upon you, would you disregard
+it?
+
+BAGOAS. I would not, for my skin is very valuable to me.
+
+JUDITH. As Nebuchadnezzar is your god, so is the Lord of Israel mine.
+And my God laid a secret command upon me to speak with Prince Holofernes
+alone and with none other in his tent. Thus, and thus only, was it that
+I refused to speak in the presence even of the mighty Bagoas. But as I
+withstood you in the valley there, the God of Israel descended upon me
+and I heard the voice of God in my ear, and the voice said: 'It is
+permitted to thee to speak with Bagoas also.' Therefore I yielded to the
+importunity of Prince Holofernes and of Bagoas.
+
+BAGOAS. Your god is a wise god and has discernment.
+
+JUDITH. This I tell you, that there may be peace and good intelligence
+between us. Is there peace between us?
+
+BAGOAS. Lady, in my heat I admonished you with hard words and much
+vituperation.
+
+JUDITH (_innocently_.) By Nebuchadnezzar, I heard none.
+
+BAGOAS. There is peace between us. And in the closeness of our
+intelligence you and I will rule them that rule all Assyria.
+
+_Enter_ Holofernes, _L_.
+
+(Bagoas _prostrates himself_. Holofernes _walks about, ignoring_
+Judith.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Bagoas). At what hour is the Council of Captains?
+
+BAGOAS. The Council awaits your highness.
+
+(_Suddenly_ Holofernes _snatches the veil from_ Judith, _and throws it
+on the floor. He gazes at her._ Judith _prostrates herself_. Holofernes
+_drops on to the couch, and looks at everything except_ Judith.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_imperiously_). Rise. (Judith _rises. A pause_. Holofernes
+_plays with a jewel on his costume. Without looking at_ Judith.) And
+Achior?
+
+JUDITH. Illustrious Prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Did the slave reach Bethulia?
+
+JUDITH. The men of Bethulia took him, and he declared to them all that
+he had spoken to my lord Prince. And many approved him.
+
+HOLOFERNES. And what sayest _thou_ of Achior?
+
+JUDITH. O lord and governor, I say: Reject not the word of Achior, but
+lay it up in your heart.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou art bold.
+
+JUDITH. The word of Achior is true. For the Israelites shall not be
+punished, and the sword shall not prevail against them, except they sin
+against their God.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Not even _my_ sword?
+
+JUDITH. Not even the sword of my lord and governor, except they sin
+against their God. (_With significance_.) But they will sin.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Ah! They will sin? In what will they sin?
+
+JUDITH. Death is fallen upon them, and they will provoke their God to
+anger, for their water is scant, and they faint in their thirst; and
+they will drink the holy wine which was sanctified and reserved for the
+priests who serve before the face of our God: which thing is not lawful
+for any of the people so much as to touch with their hands.
+
+HOLOFERNES. What has all this to do with me? There is no god but
+Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+JUDITH. It touches my lord and governor, because, knowing all this, I am
+fled from Bethulia, which shall be accurst; and the God of Israel has
+sent me to work things with my lord and governor whereat the whole earth
+shall be astonished.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_looking at her, interested_). What things? And what have I
+to do with thy god? I need not thy god, for after the Israelites have
+drunk their wine they will thirst again; and when the city is broken
+with fainting, it will fall safe into my hands while I sit and watch.
+
+JUDITH (_with fire_). And when the city has fallen while the Assyrians
+sit and watch, and when all men whisper one to another that the greatest
+captain of the earth conquered by a device because he dared not attack
+boldly with spear, and bow, and sling--in that day will my lord and
+governor be content? Or will he be ashamed, and blush to lift up his
+eyes?
+
+HOLOFERNES (_disturbed_). It is a true word.
+
+BAGOAS. It is a true word.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_savagely_). This day will I attack the city and take it,
+and though I make fifty thousand widows and orphans in Assyria I will
+compass Bethulia, and not one house in it shall be left standing, nor
+one Israelite alive.
+
+JUDITH (_shaking her head slowly_). Why is my lord against the pleasure
+of the Most High? Do I not say, and has it not been revealed to me, that
+Bethulia shall not perish until its inhabitants have sinned before God?
+Listen, illustrious Prince, I will remain this night. And when the time
+comes I will go into the valley, and I will pray to God, and mayhap He
+will tell me when the Israelites in Bethulia have committed their sin.
+And I will come and show it to you, and thereupon my lord and governor
+shall go forth with all his army, and none shall resist him.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_fascinated_). Thou wilt come to me when the time is at hand
+for my triumph!
+
+JUDITH. And hearken further! I will lead my lord and governor in the
+midst of Judea, until he comes to Jerusalem; and I will set his throne
+in the midst of Jerusalem, and a dog shall not so much as open his mouth
+at my lord and prince. For these things were declared unto me from on
+high, and I am sent to tell them.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_aside to_ Bagoas, _excitedly_). There is not such a woman
+from one end of the earth to the other, both for beauty of face and
+wisdom of words.
+
+BAGOAS. It may well be so, Prince. But I have not seen the whole earth.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Judith). Thou hast done well to come to me, that
+strength may be in my hands and destruction upon them that lightly
+regard Nebuchadnezzar, the one god. Thou art ravishing in countenance,
+and if thou do as thou hast spoken, thou shalt dwell in my house which
+is over against the house of King Nebuchadnezzar, and thou shalt be
+renowned through the east and through the west. Bagoas, prepare meat and
+wine for her.
+
+BAGOAS (_making as if to give an order_). To hear is to obey.
+
+JUDITH. I will not eat of my lord's meat, nor drink of his wine, lest
+there be offence; I have brought provision by my waiting-woman.
+
+BAGOAS. But if thy provision fail?
+
+JUDITH (_significantly_). My provision will not fail before the Lord
+works by my hand the things which He has determined.
+
+Bagoas _claps his hands. Enter an attendant_.
+
+BAGOAS. Fetch Haggith, the waiting-woman of the lady Judith! Quickly!
+(_Exit attendant. To_ Holofernes.) Prince, shall the Hebrew woman eat
+and drink of her provision in my lord's tent?
+
+HOLOFERNES. She shall eat and drink in my tent, and she shall not leave
+it.
+
+BAGOAS. Then it is right that my lord remains not. And moreover the
+Council humbly waits for my lord. (_Exit_ Holofernes, _L_.)
+
+BAGOAS (_to_ Judith, _as he follows_ Holofernes). Did I not say that you
+and I shall rule them that rule Assyria? (_Exit L_.)
+
+_Enter_ Haggith, _back, with provisions_.
+
+HAGGITH (_excited, looking round to see if they are alone_). Mistress!
+Is it possible?
+
+JUDITH. What has taken thee?
+
+HAGGITH. Is this the tent of the monster?
+
+JUDITH. Hush!
+
+HAGGITH (_whispering_). It is greater and more magnificent than the
+temple at Bethulia. (_Looking into a corner_.) But unclean. Have they
+no besoms?... Ah! (_Looking up at the roof_.) The bigness of it makes me
+small like a child before it can walk. I could not live comfortably in
+such a great windy place. No! I prefer our own house to all this
+royalty.
+
+JUDITH. Give me food, Haggith. Where hast thou been? (_She sits_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Mistress, I have been with the man Ingur! (_Arranging_ Judith's
+_costume, and then setting out the food and wine_.) In obedience to your
+command. At Bethulia, being busied all my days with the ordering of your
+possessions, I had no time for traffic with men; neither desire. And I
+deemed them terrible and masterful creatures. And when you commanded me
+to go forth into the camps and delude and entangle with wiles whatever
+Assyrian I should meet, I was afraid. For it was in my heart that I
+could not accomplish this thing. Yet I have done it prettily. And it is
+easier to me far than sweeping with a besom. Either all men are
+simpletons and besotted with self-conceit, or Ingur exceeds greatly in
+folly. I have been given to him for his slave, but he is mine and knows
+it not. (_She sits_.)
+
+JUDITH. Where hast thou left him?
+
+HAGGITH. Mistress I would not suffer that you should pass from my sight,
+and I followed you, and Ingur followed me gladly, and at last the guard
+seized him for that he was found within the precincts of the prince's
+quarter, which is forbidden to his rank, and many stripes will be his.
+Mistress, you eat not.
+
+JUDITH (_trying to eat_). Yes, I eat. Do thou eat for me.
+
+HAGGITH. I have eaten and drunk--with Ingur.
+
+JUDITH. But not of his provision?
+
+HAGGITH (_nodding_). He so softly entreated me.
+
+JUDITH. It is a sin and an offence for thee, being an Israelite.
+
+HAGGITH. For such as my high-born mistress, it is an offence. But for
+the handmaid--pooh! She eats as she can, and the Lord turneth away his
+glance until she has finished her platter. Moreover, did you not lay it
+upon me to beguile the dolt? And verily, mistress, I have rejoiced much
+this day; and Ingur----
+
+JUDITH. Silence with thy prattle. Bethink thee of the dread business
+upon which I am come down from Bethulia into the valley?
+
+HAGGITH (_subdued; offering food_). Eat, mistress.
+
+JUDITH. I cannot. My soul rejects it, and my body is on fire with
+expectation and suspense. (_Rising_. Haggith _also rises_.) Stay thou
+where thou art, for I will go forth alone. I must commune with the God
+of Israel for my tranquillity, and I dare not seek him in the tent of
+the heathen. (_Exit, back_.)
+
+(Haggith _gathers the meat together_.)
+
+_Enter_ Holofernes _and_ Bagoas, _L_.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_looking about the tent, alarmed_). Where is she? Has she
+fled? If she has escaped me, this shall be thy last day, Bagoas. What is
+this girl here?
+
+BAGOAS. Prince, has any woman yet slipped through these hands? This girl
+is the waiting wench of the lady Judith. (_To_ Haggith.) Where is thy
+mistress, wench?
+
+HAGGITH (_frightened and foolish_). My mistress having eaten ... having
+eaten naught, is gone to--to--to--pray.
+
+BAGOAS. Bring her. Her god may wait, but not the illustrious Prince. Run
+with both thy legs.
+
+HAGGITH. Ye--es, mightiness. (_Exit, back_)
+
+HOLOFERNES. Bagoas, with thine arts thou shalt persuade the Hebrew woman
+to come to us and to eat and drink with us this night.
+
+BAGOAS (_grimly_). Persuasion shall be used, highness. My arts are many
+and various.
+
+HOLOFERNES. It will be a shame for our person if we let such a woman go,
+not having delighted in her company. If we do not draw her to us she
+will laugh us to scorn.
+
+BAGOAS. Yea, highness. But my lord has but this moment appointed a great
+feast with his captains at sunset. How then shall he eat and drink with
+the lady Judith?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thick-skull! Speak not to me of my captains! The Council of
+the Captains was as dust in my mouth, and I could not away with it.
+Therefore I sharply dismissed the Council, and soothed their damnable
+pride with the promise of a mighty feast. But what care I for the
+captains? My heart thirsts horribly for this Hebrew woman, and I am full
+of a great madness.
+
+BAGOAS. So be it, highness. Nevertheless, the Prince has promised to his
+captains a mighty feast, and the word of Holofernes is a rock that
+cannot be shaken.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Oh! What a calamity is love! And there is no slave so
+trodden down as him that is the slave of desire.... Bah! I will eat and
+drink quickly with the captains, and the woman shall await me here.
+
+_Enter_ Judith, _back. On seeing_ Holofernes _she prostrates herself_.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Arise, sorceress. (Judith _rises. To_ Bagoas.) Go fetch
+leopard skins for her repose.
+
+BAGOAS. I will send for the skins on the instant, highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt go thyself to fetch them, elephant. And come not
+back without the finest skins in my wardrobe. See to it.
+
+(_Exit_ Bagoas, _back_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. Come closer. (Judith _obeys_.) Look into my eyes. (Judith
+_obeys_.) Sorceress, thou knowest thy power.
+
+JUDITH. I have no power, save that which is given to me from on high.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou wast praying to thy god?
+
+JUDITH. Yea, highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Didst thou demand of him that he should tell thee if the
+Israelites in Bethulia had committed their sin, and if the time of my
+triumph was at hand?
+
+JUDITH. No, lord. I prayed for the forgiveness of the transgressions of
+thy handmaid.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Why didst thou not demand of him what I ask thee?
+
+JUDITH. Who am I to hasten the God of Israel? In the night time, and in
+the darkness, when all men sleep,--then it is that my God condescends
+towards me, and my ear hears his secret purposes.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_low_). This night?
+
+JUDITH. Who can search out heaven?
+
+HOLOFERNES. This night?
+
+JUDITH. It may be.
+
+HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt come to me in the night and tell me thy
+message?
+
+JUDITH. I will come to thee in the night, great prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt eat and drink with me in my triumph?
+
+JUDITH (_after a pause_). If it pleases my lord.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt eat of my meat and drink of my wine, which I will
+give thee?
+
+JUDITH (_after a pause_). If my lord is alone and there is none with
+him. For it is not right that any should see me.
+
+HOLOFERNES. I will be alone. But Bagoas shall stand at the door of the
+tent.
+
+JUDITH. As my lord wills.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_ecstatic, moving a little towards her; she responds_).
+Fairest among women! Can it be!... The way of God is wondrous.
+
+(_A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears through the hangings R., and
+watches_.)
+
+JUDITH (_solemnly and significantly_). There are yet hid greater things
+than this, and thou hast yet seen but a few of his works.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_sinking back on the couch, mysteriously afraid_).
+Sorceress!
+
+(_The watcher disappears_.)
+
+JUDITH (_cooingly_) Does my lord shrink from his handmaid?
+
+(Holofernes _stretches his hands to her_.)
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE III
+
+
+SCENE: _The same_.
+
+TIME: _The same night_.
+
+_Wine and food are set by the couch_.
+
+_A lamp is burning_.
+
+BAGOAS (_at back entrance to tent, calling to people off_). To your
+beds, all of you. Let none remain. (_He stands a moment at the entrance;
+a few distant shouts are heard; then silence_. Bagoas _comes within the
+tent towards the couch. To_ Holofernes.) The waiters are gone, Prince.
+There is no one left to disturb the night.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Hast thou seen her?
+
+BAGOAS (_after a pause_). No, prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. But didst thou look?
+
+BAGOAS. I looked, O illustrious.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Is there moonlight?
+
+BAGOAS. The moon is clouded, highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Give me wine. (Bagoas _obeys_.) Bagoas!
+
+BAGOAS. Prince?
+
+(_The hangings of the tent R., balloon inwards a little_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_looking behind him sharply, spilling some wine_). The wind
+is rising.
+
+BAGOAS. It is but a night breeze.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_as he drinks gloomily_). Bagoas, she has escaped back to
+her own people.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside_). I would she had, the jade! (_To_ Holofernes.) Prince,
+she cannot escape. Every path from the valley is guarded.
+
+HOLOFERNES. What guard could restrain such a woman?
+
+BAGOAS. Ah! Prince! What guard could restrain her?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Dost thou echo me?
+
+BAGOAS. I humbly think the thought of his highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Do thy thinking outside.
+
+(Bagoas _bows and moves towards the entrance_. Judith _is standing
+there. The two look at each other for a moment_.)
+
+BAGOAS (_with a gesture, indicating_ Judith). Highness!
+
+HOLOFERNES (_Jumping up. To_ Bagoas). Begone to thy post!
+
+(Judith _glides in silently_. Bagoas _goes out. They pass by each other
+without a word or a salutation, but mutually scrutinizing_.)
+
+JUDITH. The great feast of the captains is over?
+
+HOLOFERNES. The captains are departed, drunken with wine and their
+pride. But thy feast and my feast is not begun. (_Points to the
+repast_.)
+
+JUDITH (_enigmatically_.) I am here.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_ecstatic_.) Art thou in truth here, or do my eyes behold
+that which is not?
+
+JUDITH. Did I not say that I should come in the night?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Yea, I trusted thee. I trusted thee so much that at the
+feast of the captains I commanded that all my hosts shall attack
+Bethulia, with bow, and sling, and spear, at sunrise, and also I gave
+the word of Holofernes for a pledge that naught in the heavens or on the
+earth should resist the onset of the Assyrians; for some among them
+feared the word of Achior which they had heard.
+
+JUDITH. You have not done this thing?
+
+HOLOFERNES. I have done it.
+
+JUDITH. Would you forestall God, and would you speak the decrees of God
+before they are uttered?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou saidst thou wouldst pray to thy god this night and that
+he would tell thee when the Israelites in Bethulia had committed their
+sin, and that thou wouldst come to me to proclaim the hour of my
+triumph.
+
+JUDITH. I said: I will pray to God and _mayhap_ he will tell me.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou hast prayed, and thy god hath not answered?
+
+JUDITH. He has not answered.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_with bravado_). He is no god, then, thy god. Let us drink.
+
+JUDITH (_as_ Holofernes _moves towards her, solemnly_). Touch not your
+handmaid, and touch not the goblet. (_She goes to the skins, R_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_following_ Judith _gently_). Thou art offended.
+
+JUDITH. Stand afar off, Holofernes, and meddle not with her that
+communes with the Most High.
+
+(Judith _kneels_. Holofernes _goes in the direction of the couch.
+Silence_. Bagoas _has been seen once or twice in the porch of the tent,
+his back turned. He has now gone again. Two half-veiled Assyrian women
+appear through the hangings, R., and watch a moment, then vanish_.
+Judith _slowly rises_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. What has befallen thee?
+
+JUDITH. It has befallen me that this moment the God of Israel has spoken
+and my ear has heard his command. (_Approaching_ Holofernes.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. What saith thy god?
+
+JUDITH. My ear has heard that the Israelites in Bethulia have committed
+their sin, and at sunrise the Assyrians shall assault Bethulia and none
+shall withstand them.
+
+HOLOFERNES. A miracle!
+
+JUDITH. A miracle in thy tent, O great warrior!
+
+HOLOFERNES. To-morrow is appointed to be the day of my triumph.
+
+JUDITH (_moved_). Yea, it is so.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_gratefully_). Hear me, Judith. Thy god shall be my god.
+
+JUDITH. In truth thou art set apart to be his. HOLOFERNES (_close to
+her_). Thy body trembles.
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). Thinkst thou then that I was not afraid for thee?
+But my fear is gone from me, for now I know thy fate and the decree of
+heaven concerning thee.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_aside_). To-morrow is appointed for my triumph, but this
+night also shall I exult. (_To_ Judith.) Let us eat and drink together,
+for we are alone in the night, and thou hast promised.
+
+JUDITH (_gaily_). Let us feast.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_animated by her responsive tone_). Take off thy tunic; thou
+art in thy own house. Let Holofernes be thy tire-woman. (_Approaching
+her_.)
+
+JUDITH. No! (_Moving from him to the further side of the couch_.) But he
+shall be my slave to serve me. Pour out the wine, great slave.
+
+(_While_ Holofernes _cheerfully obeys_, Judith _takes the knife from her
+garments and places it behind the couch. Then, as he stands with the
+wine, gazing at her and separated from her only by the couch, she slowly
+removes her tunic and appears in indoor attire. She comes towards him
+and takes the wine from him and drinks_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. I feared that in the strictness of thy Hebrew scruples thou
+wouldst not drink of my wine.
+
+JUDITH. I will drink again. (_She does so_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES _(taking the goblet and drinking)._ Dost thou verily know thy
+power and thy dominion, Judith?
+
+JUDITH (_simply_). Yes, I know it now better than thou.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou dost not. For I am mad for thee, and thou hast set thy
+seal upon me for evermore. My heart cannot hold thee, for thou hast
+filled it to overflowing, and all men see that my heart is full of thee
+and runneth over. Yea, I have a hundred and two and thirty thousand that
+bow themselves at my feet and that live and die by my glance. And I am
+at _thy_ feet and thy glance is my joy and my sorrow according to thy
+whim. Judith, I entreat thee, command me something. For whatever thou
+command me, that will I execute. And be not afraid in thy command, for
+my power is very great and there is none like it save only my lord
+Nebuchadnezzar's.
+
+JUDITH (_tenderly_). I command thee that thou be happy. For thy captive
+has no other desire.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Say not my captive. For it is I that am thy prisoner. And I
+will set thee on my throne, and in my great boldness I will dare to sit
+beside thee. But thou shalt reign. And we will live together in Assyria
+long years.
+
+JUDITH (_changing her mood_). There is no requisition in the grave
+whether you have lived ten or an hundred or a thousand years. But the
+God of Israel is a shield.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_eagerly_). And I have told thee that thy god shall be my
+god; but in secret, because of that which I owe to King Nebuchadnezzar.
+Yet shall the whole earth know that thou, Judith, alone art my god.
+
+JUDITH. But thou hast other wives.
+
+HOLOFERNES. No!
+
+JUDITH. Yes! It has been whispered to me that thou hast many wives, and
+concubines without number.
+
+HOLOFERNES. It is a lie. For from this night I have put away from me all
+women but thee, and there is not one among them to compare with thee.
+(_Appealingly_). And since the judgment of heaven hath done a miracle
+by thee in the tent of Holofernes this night, wilt thou deny, O
+tenderness! that thou hast been divinely appointed to me, and I to thee?
+
+JUDITH. I will not deny that the Lord is in this thing. And for thy
+comfort I will tell thee that which thou knowest not.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_expectant_). Tell me.
+
+JUDITH. Before I escaped from Bethulia, as I lay on my bed, a vision
+came to me, and it was the vision of Holofernes in the likeness of his
+majesty and his might. And I saw the vision by my bed, and so it was
+that I came down into the valley.... (_Softly_.) And wouldst thou that I
+should have uttered this secret to any but thee!
+
+HOLOFERNES (_full of emotion_). I will kiss thy lips, and thou art mine,
+O fragrance!
+
+JUDITH. Kiss my lips.
+
+(Holofernes _kisses her, and then in an excess of feeling stumbles
+backward_.)
+
+(_A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears at the opening R., and watches_.
+Bagoas, _in the porch of the tent, turns and sees her, and dashes at her
+with a weapon. Both disappear through the opening, R._)
+
+JUDITH (_moving with stealth towards the hidden knife, comfortingly_). O
+mighty child, where is thy strength, and where is thy terribleness? Rest
+thee a moment on the couch, and thy soul's captive will tend thee.
+
+(Holofernes _drops on the couch, and_ Judith _caresses him_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_murmuring_). My great joy has overthrown me.
+
+(Judith, _seizing the knife and leaning over_ Holofernes, _kills him
+while she is still caressing_.)
+
+JUDITH (_as she uses the knife; murmuring_). Thou that wouldst go
+against the pleasure of the Most High! Thou that wouldst defile Judea!
+Thou that hast dishonoured with thy kiss the widow of Manasses! Thou
+that hast compelled me to guile and deceit and much lying so that I
+might perform the will of God! The grave shall be thy house!
+
+_Enter_ Haggith, _L_.
+
+JUDITH (_turning to_ Haggith, _firmly and impressively_). I have done
+that which I had to do, and the power of Assyria is fallen.
+(_Pointing_.) Take the head by the beard, and put it in thy sack, and
+let us depart.
+
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+ACT III
+
+
+SCENE I
+
+
+SCENE: _Same as Act I_.
+
+TIME: _A few hours later than Act II, Scene III, the same night. The
+sole light is that of torches, and watchfires (off)._
+
+_The gatemen are at the gates_.
+
+_There is a knocking on the outside of the gates_.
+
+_Enter First Soldier, running_.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_to a gateman, who is climbing up in order to look over
+the top of the gates_). Look not over, booby. Thy fool's face might meet
+the point of an Assyrian spear. (_The gateman slips down quickly_.)
+
+(_Renewed knocking_.)
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_shouting_). None can enter the city till sunrise. And
+not then if I like not the aspect of his phiz.
+
+HAGGITH (_off_). It is Haggith, servant of the lady Judith. Open the
+gates quickly, for I am become a woman of much consequence.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith? It is the voice of Haggith; yet it may also be
+devils. (_To another soldier who has entered_.) Run! Rouse the lord
+Ozias. (_Exit soldier_.)
+
+HAGGITH. I have water with me. Many gourds! Fresh water! Cool water!
+
+(_The gatemen begin to work the gate-chains_.)
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What do ye, dogs? Stop, and await the order of the lord
+Ozias.
+
+GATEMEN (_continuing to work the chains_). Water! Water!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Pull, then, dogs. If there is water and it is wet I will
+taste it. But if there is not water, I will slay the first soul that
+enters. (_As the gates begin to open a little_.) Hold! No wider!
+
+_Enter_ Haggith _with two gourds_.
+
+(_The gourds are snatched from her, and the men, including the First
+Soldier, drink_.)
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_as he drinks_). Yea, it is indeed Haggith. Where is thy
+mistress, and whence comest thou, my beloved water-carrier, for thou art
+my beloved? (Haggith _slaps his face_.)
+
+_Enter_ Ozias, _L_.
+
+OZIAS (_furious_). Why are the gates opened? What is this?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith, lord, with water that is stronger than wine.
+(_Handing a gourd to_ Ozias _to soothe him_.)
+
+OZIAS. Where is thy mistress, wench? (_Drinks_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_stiffly_). I am the forerunner of my mistress, who has sent
+me, and before many hours are passed the lady Judith will come also.
+(_She goes to the gates and beckons_.)
+
+OZIAS. What art thou doing?
+
+_Enter_ Ingur, _bearing a sack_.
+
+VOICES. An Assyrian! An Assyrian! (_Men spring at_ Ingur.)
+
+HAGGITH. Let him alone; he is my bondman and I have tamed him.
+
+OZIAS. Shut the gates, for I will enquire into this matter.
+
+HAGGITH. There are yet ten other Assyrians outside the gates, carrying
+gourds for me.
+
+OZIAS. Ten other Assyrians! It is a trick!
+
+HAGGITH (_proudly_). By my command they are chained by their necks, neck
+to neck. Fetch in the gourds, men, and give the people to drink.
+
+(_The gourds are brought in amid cries and excitement. They are taken
+off, L_.)
+
+OZIAS. Shut the gates, I say.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. And the ten Assyrians, great lord?
+
+OZIAS. Let them await my enquiry where they stand.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias, if they flee?
+
+HAGGITH. Hold thy mouth, gaby! Wouldst _thou_ flee with thy neck chained
+to nine necks? Moreover, where will they flee? For the camps of the
+Assyrians are broken, and in their terrible confusion the Assyrians fall
+one upon another.
+
+(_The gatemen talk among themselves and stare at the Assyrians outside,
+who cannot be seen by those within the city. The gates remain open a
+little_.)
+
+OZIAS (_impatiently_). What is thy tale, Haggith?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress has slain Holofernes in his tent in the night, and
+the power of Assyria is undone.
+
+OZIAS (_astounded_). Slain Holofernes! Thou art mad in thy raving.
+
+HAGGITH (_to_ Ingur). Open the mouth of the sack, and let my lord behold
+the head of Holofernes and see that I am mad. (_To soldier_.) A torch,
+that the Lord Ozias may discover the manner of my raving.
+
+(Ozias _looks into the sack and sees the head of_ Holofernes.)
+
+OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!
+
+HAGGITH. And my mistress is the right hand of the Lord.
+
+OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!
+
+VOICES (_deeply moved_). His name shall live for ever.
+
+OZIAS. How did thy mistress accomplish this mighty deed?
+
+HAGGITH. AS for that, she will tell it to my lord with her own voice
+when she shall come. And now will my lord give ear to the commands of
+the lady Judith, which she doth lay upon my lord by me, Haggith? First,
+the head of Holofernes shall be set upon a spear on the highest wall in
+the great square before the temple. So shall all the Israelites know
+that God yet watcheth over Israel. (_To the soldiers_.) Take the sack
+and do as my lady hath ordained by me, Haggith.
+
+OZIAS (_to men, who hesitate_). Take the sack. It is my command.
+
+(_Exeunt two men, L., with sack_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Next, ye shall send men for water to the wells beneath the city
+that all may drink, for already the Assyrians are fled from the wells,
+knowing that Holofernes is dead. And ye shall send forth all your army
+into the valley to fall upon the Assyrians, for they are afraid of the
+judgment of God, and none dare abide in the sight of his neighbour.
+Neither can they stand against the chosen race of God.
+
+OZIAS (_to First Soldier_). Let every armed man in the city be roused,
+and publish the order of Ozias that the Captains lead their bands
+swiftly into the valley by the secret way to fall upon the Assyrians.
+
+(_Exit First Soldier and another, with joyous cries, L_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Thus hath the lady Judith spoken by me, Haggith.
+
+OZIAS. Whither is thy mistress gone, and why does she tarry?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress is hidden in a sure place in the valley, for there
+is one among the Assyrians who fears not God. And he is Bagoas, the
+chief eunuch of Holofernes, and he has sworn an oath to kill my
+mistress, for that by guile she did cut off the head of Holofernes. And
+Bagoas searches for my mistress in the folds of the valley. But he will
+not find her.
+
+OZIAS (_perturbed_). How knowst thou that he will not find her?
+
+HAGGITH. Because the Lord of Israel is a sharp sword and protecteth his
+servants.... And also because my mistress is most cunningly hidden.
+
+_Enter_ Charmis, _L_.
+
+CHARMIS (_joyously excited_). What is the miracle that I hear, Ozias?
+
+OZIAS (_blandly_). There is no miracle; but that which I had planned
+with the lady Judith has come to pass. Take women and old men Charmis,
+and go ye to the wells and bring water to the city, for the wells are
+delivered into my hands.
+
+CHARMIS (_hesitating_). Women and old men? But the onslaught against the
+Assyrians of which I hear?
+
+OZIAS (_imperiously_). Go quickly. For who is the governor of this city?
+Is it thou or is it I?
+
+(_Exit_ Charmis, _L_.)
+
+(_Men and women have gathered joyously in the street_.)
+
+VOICES (_mockingly, indicating_ Ingur, _with a tendency to horseplay_).
+The Assyrian! The Assyrian!
+
+OZIAS. Take him to the guard-house and chain him to Achior.
+
+HAGGITH. He shall not go, lord Ozias. For as my mistress beguiled
+Holofernes, so did I beguile Ingur, and he is my slave. But I have not
+cut off his head, and he is dear to me because I have not cut off his
+head. And he is mine, and let none touch him (_looking at the
+soldiers_), or my anger, which is the anger of the lady Judith, shall be
+upon that man. (_Hearing a noise, she glances at the house_.) What do I
+see? The sluts are in the tent of my mistress, which is forbidden them.
+Out, sluts! (_Exit angrily into the house_!)
+
+(Ingur _follows her quickly for protection_.)
+
+_Enter_ Messenger.
+
+OZIAS. And you?
+
+MESSENGER (_saluting_). Do my eyes behold the great lord Ozias,
+governor of Bethulia?
+
+OZIAS. Your eyes behold him.
+
+MESSENGER. It is not yet dawn, nevertheless the streets of the city are
+full of a great going and coming, but I found none to lead me to the
+house of the lord Ozias. Yet when I saw my lord's visage my heart said:
+'This is he.'
+
+OZIAS. What is your affair with me?
+
+MESSENGER. I am a messenger.
+
+OZIAS (_curtly_). Speak quickly, for the government of this city in this
+hour is no common matter, and the whole charge of it lies upon me.
+
+MESSENGER. And I am no common messenger. I come with wings through the
+night from Jerusalem, from Joachim, the high priest.
+
+OZIAS. Ah! (_Changing his tone and beckoning the messenger aside_.) What
+tidings do you bear?
+
+MESSENGER. I bear the licence from Joachim.
+
+OZIAS. What licence?
+
+MESSENGER. The licence for the people of Bethulia to drink the wine
+which is sanctified and reserved to the priests which serve the Lord.
+
+OZIAS (_affecting to be puzzled_). Who hath demanded this licence from
+Joachim?
+
+MESSENGER (_surprised_). The lord Ozias sent a messenger to Jerusalem to
+beseech that the licence should be granted. And my lord's messenger
+travelled so swiftly that in the moment when he reached the temple at
+Jerusalem he fell sick and vomited, and I have come to Bethulia in his
+place, for after he had vomited he unfolded to me the secret way
+into the city.
+
+OZIAS (_grandly_). It is true. In the heavy multitude of my cares I had
+forgotten this matter of the licence.
+
+MESSENGER (_confidentially_). And Joachim hath bidden me to say privily
+that if any have already in their extremity drunk of the sanctified wine
+it shall be denied utterly--for the sake of the church.
+
+OZIAS. Ah!
+
+MESSENGER. And here is the licence. (_Offering it_.)
+
+OZIAS. Friend, keep the licence and render it back to Joachim, the high
+priest in Jerusalem. For I need it not, and I demanded it only by excess
+of prudence such as becomes the governor of a city besieged and
+thirsting. But we Bethulians are a faithful and a constant people, and
+we have trusted in the Most High. And if perchance any have drunk of the
+sanctified wine unknown to me (_with a grimace_)--it shall be denied
+utterly, for the sake of seemliness.
+
+MESSENGER. But in the days of trial to come, will not the lord Ozias
+have need of the licence?
+
+OZIAS (_grandly_). Friend, return ye to Joachim and say to him that the
+Lord has delivered Bethulia from the Assyrians by the subtlety of his
+servant Ozias.
+
+MESSENGER (_amazed_). What says my lord?
+
+OZIAS. Yea, this night the head of Holofernes is set on a spear in the
+square before the temple, and the Assyrians flee one from another in
+disorder, and my hosts are about to descend upon them and rend them to
+pieces where they stand foolishly in the valley.
+
+MESSENGER. But this thing is marvellous beyond the understanding of man!
+
+OZIAS. It is indeed marvellous.
+
+MESSENGER. And when Joachim enquires of me who hath taken Holofernes the
+great captain to behead him, and by what device, what shall I answer to
+Joachim?
+
+OZIAS. You will answer that Ozias, knowing the weakness of Holofernes,
+sent down to him secretly a woman, a certain Judith of Bethulia, and
+upon the counsel of Ozias the woman by wiles compassed the death of
+Holofernes as I have told you.
+
+MESSENGER. It is a tale which fathers shall tell to their children, and
+to their children's children, and men shall wonder thereat for all time.
+And now your servant will say to you a thing which has not been told to
+him but which his ear has heard. It was said among the mighty that if my
+lord Ozias should save Judea from the heathen, he would receive notable
+advancement and be raised up among the great ones of the land. (Ozias
+_bows_.) Yet will Joachim not be astonished, for it was spoken in
+Jerusalem that among all the Israelites there is none like the lord
+Ozias for cunning and obstinacy in defence.
+
+OZIAS (_nettled_). Nevertheless it is meet that Joachim should be
+astonished, for with five thousand have I set at naught one hundred and
+two and thirty thousand, and in the chronicles of Israel there is
+written down no deed to match the delivery of Judea from the Assyrians.
+
+MESSENGER. The God of Israel hath saved Israel.
+
+OZIAS. The God of Israel hath save Israel,--by my hand. Go ye, and when
+you have eaten and drunk, set ye forth again for Jerusalem.
+
+(_The Messenger salutes and exit, L_.)
+
+(_Throughout this scene excited and joyous men and women frequently pass
+the street in twos and threes_.)
+
+(_Dawn is breaking and the torches begin to pale_.)
+
+_Enter_ Haggith _and_ Ingur _from the house._
+
+OZIAS. Where art thou going?
+
+HAGGITH. Lord Ozias, I came up from the valley to bring water, and to
+give tidings. Now I go down again to the valley with Ingur and his men
+to seek out my mistress, and to take new raiment to her, and lead her to
+the city; for since the Israelites are fallen upon the Assyrians, my
+mistress is no longer in danger.
+
+_Enter_ Achior.
+
+OZIAS. Slave, who hath dared to loose thee?
+
+ACHIOR. There was none left to guard, and I came forth.
+
+OZIAS (_to a soldier_). Seize this fellow and bind him with fetters.
+
+(_The torches are by this time extinguished_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Lord, it cannot be so. For the lady Judith commanded me to
+bring Achior also, for her protection, seeing that the youth came from
+the Assyrians at the bidding of the God of Israel to give comfort to
+Israel, and for a sign to my mistress.
+
+OZIAS (_after a pause_). I also will go with you, for it is right that
+the governor should do honour to the lady Judith.
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me to say to the lord Ozias that he
+should remain in the city to prepare for her a welcome. (_She points to
+the gates and_ Achior _gladly moves forward. She takes_ Ingur _by the
+ear_.) Bestir thy legs, booby!
+
+OZIAS. The subtlety of women is past knowing.
+
+HAGGITH (_at the gates, maliciously_). It may be. But would the lord
+Ozias invite the displeasure of my mistress? It is day. Let my lord sit
+in the sun.
+
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE II
+
+
+SCENE: _The same_.
+
+Charmis _is alone at the open gates. Glimpses are caught of the people
+beyond the gates_.
+
+TIME: _Afternoon of the same day_.
+
+CHABRIS (_entering to_ Charmis, _at the gates_). They say there is now
+much water in Bethulia.
+
+CHARMIS. Seeing that I have toiled mightily seven hours this day in
+charge of six score crazy carriers to carry water up from the wells!
+Would that Ozias had granted me a whip to sharpen their brains! And now
+Ozias hath left me in charge of the gates.
+
+CHABRIS. Where is Ozias, and what does he do?
+
+CHARMIS. He stands here beyond the gates to receive Judith and the women
+who have gone forth to meet her.
+
+CHABRIS. What is the deed of Judith? (_The noise of an approaching
+procession is heard_. Charmis, _ignoring_ Chabris, _goes a little
+outside the gates to watch._ Chabris _continues in a louder voice_.) The
+streets of the city are empty. I say the streets of the city are empty.
+
+CHARMIS. Dodderer! The whole city is afoot on the hill-side, and all the
+Assyrians left alive are fled in panic into the East.
+
+CHABRIS. Then I will return to my house and drink again. No! I will
+remain, and my eyes shall regard the women, as of old.
+
+_Enter through the gates a procession of women (including_ Rahel),
+_waving branches. At the end of the procession come_ Haggith _and_
+Ingur, _and finally_ Judith, _with_ Achior _on one hand, and_ Ozias _on
+the other. Townspeople and soldiers, garlanded, follow the procession_.
+
+BALLET.
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Judith). O daughter, blessed be thou above all the women of
+the earth. Thou art the exaltation of Jerusalem and the great glory of
+Israel, for the Lord hath directed thee to the cutting off of the head
+of the chief of our enemies, and thou hast revenged our ruin.
+
+VOICES. So be it.
+
+JUDITH. Holofernes came out of the mountains from the north, and his
+horsemen covered the hills; and he bragged that he would burn up the
+borders of Israel, and kill her young men with the sword, and make the
+virgins as a spoil. But the Almighty Lord hath disappointed the
+Assyrians by the hand of a woman; and my sandals ravished the eye of
+Holofernes, and my beauty took his mind prisoner, and the knife passed
+through his neck. Let all creatures serve the Lord!
+
+VOICES. So be it!
+
+OZIAS. Charmis, I appoint you to lead the people to the Temple, where
+are the banners of the Assyrians which we have captured this day, and
+each woman shall take a banner, and all shall return to this place
+before the house of the Lady Judith.
+
+CHARMIS (_swollen with pride_). I obey, lord Ozias.
+
+(_The procession begins to move away, L_. Haggith _displays her
+importance and bullies_ Ingur, _who accompanies her_.)
+
+RAHEL (_to_ Chabris). What, grandad! You are abroad once more! (_She
+takes him with her like a disobedient child_.)
+
+(_Exeunt, processionally, all except_ Judith, Ozias _and_ Achior.)
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Achior). Thou goest not with the people?
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Achior). Stay, I pray you, Achior.
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Judith, _with growing excitement_). I wish to speak privily
+with the lady Judith, _now_!
+
+JUDITH. Let us speak here.
+
+OZIAS. Shall we not go into your house, you and I?
+
+JUDITH. My house is not ready to receive you, Ozias.
+
+OZIAS. Let it be so. But before Achior I will not speak.
+
+JUDITH. Achior, go into my house, and do honour to my dwelling, and
+repose in it.
+
+ACHIOR. Gladly, O lady! (_Exit into the house_.)
+
+JUDITH. What is the urgency that oppresses you, Ozias, and why are you
+troubled in the hour of triumph?
+
+OZIAS (_losing control of himself_). Who is the heathen Achior that you
+should prefer him and make your mouth sweet to him?
+
+JUDITH. Leave Achior, and let us come at once to the matter that
+presses.
+
+OZIAS. Oh! I will not speak smoothly for a pretence! Thou knowest that
+my jealousy smokes against Achior. Yea, and against Holofernes also.
+
+JUDITH. But Holofernes is dead.
+
+OZIAS. Before he went down to his place, didst thou not sin with him?
+
+JUDITH. As the Lord liveth, my countenance deceived him to his
+destruction, yet did he not shame me.
+
+OZIAS. Blessed be our God!
+
+JUDITH. But how does this matter touch thee, and what is my virtue in
+thy regard?
+
+OZIAS. Let Holofernes suffice thee, and drive not me also to death with
+the softness of thy voice. Art thou not aware that the soul of my soul
+burns for thee and will not wait--the more so since thou hast done a
+mighty deed and art proved a woman beyond all women?
+
+JUDITH. Nay! I have done naught; but the Lord hath saved Israel by _thy_
+hand.
+
+OZIAS. What is this humbleness?
+
+JUDITH. AS I came towards the city with Achior, the messenger from
+Jerusalem met us in the way, and he was full to bursting of the word of
+Ozias, and that Ozias had delivered Israel, and that what I did I did
+by thy device and at thy command. But the messenger in speaking knew not
+that he spoke to Judith, and I let him go.
+
+OZIAS. Judith----
+
+JUDITH. Yet it seems to me that thou wast ignorant of all that which I
+went out to do, and my plan was hidden from thee.
+
+OZIAS (_powerfully persuasive_). Hearken to me, Judith. I swear it was
+for thee that I boasted. My aim was that thy mighty deed should gain
+preferment in Jerusalem. But thou art a woman and therefore preferment
+is not for thee. Yet now by reason of my boasting I shall be greatly
+advanced and lifted up, and in all Judea there will be none higher than
+me, and thus wilt thou also be advanced and lifted up.
+
+JUDITH. I desire no preferment.
+
+OZIAS. But I would have it in thy behalf; and my appetite is double. I
+rage for glory and dominion, and I rage also for thee. And I will offer
+thee glory and dominion, for I seek these things as a gift to thy
+beauty. And if I cannot lay them on thy lap my heel shall spurn mankind
+and I will tread it to dust. My desires are terrible; they will not be
+withstood; they consume me daily, but daily I am renewed. I am on fire,
+but by the fierceness of the fire I am strengthened. I was conceived
+for greatness and my mother bore me for mastery, and the huge earth
+shall shake with the terror of my commands.... And I am held between thy
+fingers.
+
+JUDITH. I deny not thy greatness.
+
+OZIAS. Surely thou canst not. For thou too art great. And my greatness
+yearns to thine.
+
+JUDITH. Wilt thou listen?
+
+OZIAS. I hear.
+
+JUDITH. With this greatness of thine goes deceit and laxity of mind.
+
+OZIAS. Yet when thou didst thy mighty deed didst thou not deceive
+cruelly?
+
+JUDITH. I deceived not for myself, but for Israel; and my guile was for
+the glory of God. But thy heart is set only upon advancement and power,
+which is corruption.
+
+OZIAS. Judith, canst thou not lift thy thoughts beyond good and evil,
+and canst thou not contemplate the marvellous greatness of man? I will
+abase myself before none but thee, and in my ear there is no commandment
+but thine; and all other decrees will I mock. I would have thee in
+marriage, and I would have no other but thee. Wilt thou take me to
+thee, and wilt thou yield thyself without fear to the terrible flame of
+my love? For thus shalt thou fulfil thyself and me. But give heed before
+thou answerest, and know that if thou turnest from me, I will make all
+the nations of the earth to tremble with my fury.
+
+JUDITH. Thou art great also in thy loving.
+
+OZIAS. Once thou didst love me.
+
+JUDITH. Nay! I but looked upon thee in kindness. But now I will not go
+to thee in marriage.
+
+OZIAS (_half admiring_). Thou art not then afraid of my wrath!
+
+JUDITH. I am Judith.
+
+OZIAS (_with a fresh access of violence_). Thou hungerest for Achior.
+Wouldst thou marry a heathen, thou a Hebrew woman?
+
+JUDITH. And thou, if I had not accomplished the will of the Lord, and if
+thou hadst been carried to Babylon as thou saidst, wouldst thou not have
+denied the Most High and gone after other gods? But Achior believeth in
+our God, and this day will be joined into the house of Israel.
+
+OZIAS (_savagely scornful_). What is Achior but a simpleton!
+
+JUDITH. It may be. But I love him and he shall rule me ... for he came
+hither for a sign from the Lord.
+
+OZIAS (_savagely resentful_). Oh! If I did not love thee, would I not
+undo thee!
+
+JUDITH. Thou! Thou art Ozias, but I am she who cut off the head of a
+mightier than thou, even Holofernes in his tent. Go thy ways and fulfil
+greatness. As for me I will remain obediently in my house, and truth and
+righteousness shall reign in my house.
+
+(_The procession returns, the women bearing the banners of the
+Assyrians_. Achior _enters from the house_.)
+
+(Judith _is crowned with olives_.)
+
+JUDITH. And now let the priests and the elders enter with me into my
+house, and Achior shall follow them, so that he may be received into
+Israel, and I will be betrothed to him with all the ceremonies of the
+law, for he came to me as a messenger from God. And when the marriage
+has been performed, I will submit myself to him as a wife to her
+husband.
+
+HAGGITH. And let Ingur also be received into Israel, for he has repented
+of his idolatries. And he shall be my husband, yet shall he not rule me.
+
+OZIAS. Brethren, hearken! This night I go to Jerusalem, for I am called
+to higher things, because I have delivered Israel. And I shall not
+return to this little city; but ye will have tidings of me in the years
+to come, and ye will say proudly to the strangers within your gates: He
+was a Bethulian and once he ruled over us.
+
+JUDITH. The lord Ozias is called to greatness. Peace go with him.
+
+ALL. So be it.
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Judith, by Arnold Bennett
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12794 ***
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Works By The Same Author, by AUTHOR.
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12794 ***</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h1><a name="JUDITH">
+JUDITH</a></h1>
+
+<p>A PLAY IN THREE ACTS</p>
+
+<p><i>Founded on the apocryphal book of &quot;Judith&quot;</i></p>
+<br />
+
+<p>BY</p>
+
+<p>ARNOLD BENNETT</p>
+
+<p>LONDON</p>
+
+<p>1919</p>
+
+<p><i>First published April 30, 1919</i></p>
+
+<p>NOTE</P>
+
+<p>This play was presented for the first time at the Devonshire Park
+Theatre, Eastbourne, on Monday, April 7th, 1919, with the following
+cast:</p>
+
+<table>
+<tr><td>Judith</td> <td>LILLAH MCCARTHY</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Haggith</td> <td>ESM&Eacute; HUBBARD</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Rahel</td><td> MADGE MURRAY</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Ozias</td><td> CAMPBELL GULLAN</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Holofernes</td><td> CLAUDE KING</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Bagoas</td><td> ERNEST THESIGER</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Achior</td><td> GEOFFREY DOUGLAS</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Chabris</td><td> E.H. PATERSON</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Charmis</td><td> FEWLASS LLEWELLYN</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Ingur</td><td> FREDERICK VOLPE</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Messenger</td><td> FELIX AYLMER</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Soldier</td><td> CLIFFORD MOLLISON</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Attendant</td><td> EDWIN OXLEE</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The play was produced by WILFRED EATON</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHARACTERS">
+CHARACTERS</a></h2>
+
+<p><i>Hebrews</i></p>
+
+JUDITH<br />
+HAGGITH, her waiting-woman<br />
+RAHEL<br />
+OZIAS, Governor of Bethulia<br />
+CHABRIS, an elder<br />
+CHARMIS, an elder<br />
+A SOLDIER<br />
+A MESSENGER<br />
+<br />
+
+<p><i>Assyrians</i></p>
+
+HOLOFERNES, General of the Assyrian armies<br />
+BAGOAS, his chief eunuch<br />
+ACHIOR, a captain<br />
+INGUR, a soldier<br />
+AN ATTENDANT ON BAGOAS<br />
+<br />
+
+
+<p><a href="#ACT_I">ACT I</a></p>
+<i>A street in the city of Bethulia</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_II">ACT II</a></p>
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_II">SCENE I.</a> <i>The valley near the Assyrian camp. Time, morning; two days later</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#SCENE_II">SCENE II.</a> <i>The tent of Holofernes. Time, later, the same morning</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#SCENE_III">SCENE III.</a> <i>The same. Time, the same night</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_III">ACT III</a></p>
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_III">SCENE I.</a> <i>Same as Act I. Time, later, the same night.</i><br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_III_SCENE_II">SCENE II.</a><i>The same. Time, the next day</i>.<br />
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="ACT_I">ACT I</a></h2>
+
+<p><i>A street in the city of Bethulia in Judea. Bethulia is in the hill
+country, overlooking the great plain of Jezreel to the south-west. Back,
+the gates of the city, hiding the view of the plain. Right, Judith's
+house, with a tent on the roof. Left, houses. The street turns abruptly,
+back left, along the wall of the city. Left centre, a built-up
+vantage-point, from which the plain can be seen over the gates</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>Fifth century B.C.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Towards evening</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Ozias <i>is standing alone in the street, drinking from a leathern bottle.
+Enter</i> Chabris, <i>back left</i>. </p>
+
+<p>OZIAS <i>(quickly, but with perfect calmness, hiding the bottle in his
+garments</i>). Old man! It is years since I saw you. How came you past the
+guard, old man?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Old? Old? I am not yet a hundred. Who are you?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Ah! So this is Ozias, the son of Ezbon. Before your father
+could walk I have nursed him on my knee; and he was filled like the full
+moon&mdash;with naughtiness.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What has brought you at last out of your house? Are you come to
+prophesy once more?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I have given up prophesying.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. A profession full of risks.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I pass my endless days in meditation and solitude.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. That sounds much safer. How comely is the wisdom of old men!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. And what do you do, sprig?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Has none told you?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I see nobody but my daughter's granddaughter, and her I forbid
+to speak to me, because being a woman she has the tongue of a woman, and
+a woman's tongue is unfavourable to meditation. How should I be told?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I am the governor of this great city of Bethulia.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. You are responsible for this city?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I am.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Now I understand my misfortune. And the truth was in me when I
+said to your mother as she lay dying: Better it is to die without
+children than to have them that are ungodly.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Oh! How comely a thing is the judgment of grey hairs!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. You ask me what has brought me at last out of my house. I will
+tell you. Thirst! Thirst has brought me out of my house. Every morning
+and every evening my great-grandchild serves me with pulse and water.
+For five days she has furnished less and less water, and this day&mdash;not a
+drop! Can one eat pulse without water to drink? Half an hour ago I went
+to her to reason with her, and she lay on her bed cracked, and raved
+that she herself had not drunk for three days and that there was no
+water left in all Bethulia. So I came at last out of my house into the
+streets of this city famous for its cool fountains which never fail. And
+lo! I meet the governor of this city, and he is Ozias! Ozias! Seven days
+do men mourn for him that is dead, but for an ungodly man all the days
+of his life! Why is there no water in Bethulia, sprig?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Old man, meditation is good and solitude is good, but think not
+because you sit staring all day at your own belly that the sun and stars
+have ceased to revolve round the earth and the kings of this world to
+make war. Is it possible that you do not know what has happened?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I only know that I cannot eat pulse without water to drink.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Bethulia is besieged.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Who is besieging Bethulia?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I have never heard his name. Who is he?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Never heard the name of the chief captain of Nebuchadnezzar? Have
+you heard the name of Nebuchadnezzar, by chance?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I seem to remember it.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Come up here. (<i>They go up the steps to the vantage-point</i>.)
+Look! A hundred and twenty thousand foot-soldiers. Twelve thousand
+archers on horseback. Oxen and sheep for their provisions. Twenty
+thousand asses for their carriages. Camels without number. Infinite
+victuals; and very much gold and silver. The like was never seen before.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>stepping down</i>.) Why has Nebuchadnezzar set about this thing?
+What harm has Bethulia done to him?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Much harm. Nebuchadnezzar has decided to be God. He has decreed
+that all nations and tribes shall call upon him as God. And he has
+conquered the whole earth, excepting only Judea; and Bethulia is the
+gate into Judea, and Bethulia has not listened to his decree, and I am
+the governor of Bethulia. So Nebuchadnezzar the great king is very angry
+and Holofernes is the tool of his wrath.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>going up the steps again and gazing</i>.) How many did you say?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. A hundred and twenty thousand foot and twelve thousand horse.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. At any rate this will be the last war.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Why?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Why! Because plainly war cannot continue on such a scale. Or if
+it does, mankind is destroyed. Nebuchadnezzar has rendered war
+ridiculous.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS <i>(laughs; then half to himself, sarcastically).</i> What is heavier
+than lead, and what is the name thereof, but an aged fool?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>descending again, self-centred</i>). It remains that I cannot eat
+pulse without water to drink. (<i>To</i> Ozias.) And surely Bethulia has more
+wells than any other city of Judea.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The wells are at the foot of the hills, and Holofernes has
+seized them all.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. That is not fighting.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is war.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. No, no! In my time soldiers fought fairly.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And killed each other. Why should Holofernes sacrifice thousands
+of lives to take the heights when he can reach the same result by
+letting his men sit still and watch?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I say this is not war. Once I travelled many days to Nineveh.
+It is a city of extravagance, and when I beheld its mad, new-fangled
+ways, I knew that the last day was nigh. I was right. Three thousand and
+five hundred years since Jehovah created Adam, and Eve from his rib ...
+Too long! Too long! And what is pulse without water? I must have water.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is thirty-four days since Holofernes took the wells. If you
+have received water up to yesterday your great-grandchild must indeed
+have thirsted that you might drink. I have distributed water by measure,
+but now the cisterns are empty, and women and young men fall down in the
+streets, and there is no water in Bethulia. We are all in like case, the
+high and the lowly. </p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Then give me your bottle.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What bottle?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I saw you put it from your lips as I came.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It behoves you to understand, old man, that my solemn duty as
+governor is to maintain my own strength, for if I fell the city would
+fall. Without me to inspire them the populace would yield in a moment.
+What is the populace? Poltroons, animals, sheep, rabbits, insects, lice!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Give me the bottle.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is as empty as the cisterns.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Give it to me, or I will cry through the streets that you are
+concealing water. (Ozias <i>gives him the bottle</i>. Chabris <i>drinks</i>. Ozias
+<i>snatches the bottle away and conceals it</i>.) Ah!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>A figure is glimpsed in the tent on the roof of</i> Judith's <i>house</i>.
+Ozias <i>starts</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. What is that up yonder?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Nothing.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Whose house is this?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is the house of Judith, the daughter of Merari.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Ah! Merari, the son of Ox, the son of Oziel&mdash;Oziel and I were
+little playful boys together&mdash;the son of Elcia, the son of Raphaim, the
+son of Eliab, the son of Nathanael, the son of&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Old man, your memory is terrible. Have pity!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. The draught has revived me. So Merari married and had a
+daughter. What manner of woman is she?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. She is the widow of Manasses, who died of the heat in the barley
+harvest. And she is childless. And she is very rich; for Manasses left
+her gold and silver and menservants and maid-servants and cattle and
+lands. And she has remained a widow in her house three years and four
+months, and never has she come forth. And there is none to give her an
+ill word, for she fears the Lord greatly.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Yes. But what <i>manner</i> of woman is she?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. She is beautiful to behold.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>to himself</i>). Oh! <i>That</i> manner of woman!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And she has fasted all the days of her widowhood, except the eves
+of the Sabbaths and the Sabbaths, and the eves of the new moons and the
+new moons, and the feasts and solemn days of the House of Israel.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. You are most deeply versed in her life. Is she exceeding
+beautiful?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. She is exceeding beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Then it was she who <i>peeped</i> (<i>with a peculiar emphasis on the
+word</i>) from the tent a moment since.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Old man, you have eyes.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. It is the draught of water.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. She is said to take the air in her tent daily at this hour.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>accusingly</i>). And that is why you are here, Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. No! I come here to reflect upon my plans for the saving of the
+city, and because of this vantage-point, to view the army of the
+Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. This vantage-point is new since my day. You have built it
+here, not to see the Assyrians, but to see Judith. And that is why you
+have set a guard to keep the street empty.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And if it be so, what then? Old man, you are so old that to
+confess in your ear is sweet, like murmuring secrets into the grave. If
+I do come to this place to watch for the marvellous vision of Judith,
+what then?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. What then? And the populace of Bethulia dying of thirst?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The populace!... Mice! Rats! Beetles! (<i>He makes the motion of
+crushing with his foot</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Yet the city is doomed. You can have no hope.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. No hope? Am I then a dead body? Am I a rotting corpse? True, the
+city will be taken, and when the city is taken I may be killed. But in
+your meditations, old man, has it not occurred to you that death must be
+highly interesting? Or I may be seized for a slave. But either I should
+cease speedily to be a slave, or I should become the most powerful slave
+in Babylon. (<i>Reflectively</i>.) We might be enslaved together.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Who?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Judith and I. The history of the world is full of miracles.
+Meanwhile, I live, and the strong savour of life inflames my nostrils;
+and the ever-increasing magnificence and terror of war is like wine in
+my mouth. I shake with delight at the vastness and the mystery of the
+future.... And there is woman!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I feel I can eat my pulse now.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. There is still woman.</p>
+
+<p><i>A fracas is heard, back. Enter</i> Rahel, <i>running, followed by two
+soldiers and a mixed group of Bethulians, including</i> Charmis, <i>an
+elder</i>.</p>
+
+<p>RAHEL (<i>to</i> Chabris, <i>like a termagant</i>). Why did you go forth alone,
+grandad, frightening me when I looked and could not find you? At your
+age! Come back with me this moment.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Ay! There is still woman!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>angrily, to</i> first soldier). Did I not give an order to bar the
+street?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. My lord, some of these are elders of high authority, and
+would pass. As for the girl&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>RAHEL (<i>to</i> Chabris). This moment! (<i>She faints and falls</i>.) </p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>indifferently, as</i> Charmis <i>moves towards</i> Rahel). Let her
+lie. She will come to of herself&mdash;or not, as God wills.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to the soldiers, with cold fierceness</i>). Get back to your
+places. (<i>Exeunt soldiers</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>looking at</i> Ozias <i>and indicating</i> Rahel). She is the
+fourteenth I have seen faint from thirst in the streets this day.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>soothingly</i>). Alas! And you or I may be the next. We are all in
+like case. But what is to be done?</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Confused feeble exclamations from the group of citizens:</i> 'We want to
+know. We are come for that. There is but one thing to be done.')</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>still soothingly</i>). Who among you will be the spokesman?</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. We are all spokesmen.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Even the children?</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. Even the children. In our extremity we are all spokesmen.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. But not all at once. Will you begin, honourable Charmis? You know
+that I am the servant of the citizens.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>nervously oratorical</i>). Lord Ozias, may the God of Israel
+judge between us and you, for you have done us a great injury. (<i>Looks
+round for approval. The group approves.</i>)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. An injury? I? Have I not said that I am the servant of the
+citizens?</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>more confidently</i>). And I say again that you have done us a
+great injury, in that you have not asked peace of the Assyrians. For we
+have no helper, and the God of Israel has sold us into the hands of the
+Assyrians. We are thrown down before them with thirst and with great
+destruction. Therefore now we demand&mdash;(<i>looks round</i>)&mdash;I say we demand
+that you call the Assyrians, and deliver the whole city for a spoil to
+the people of Holofernes and to all his army. For it is better for us to
+be made a spoil than to die of thirst. We will be the slaves of
+Holofernes, so that our souls may live and so that we may not see the
+death of our infants before our eyes, nor our wives nor our children
+die. (<i>A mother in the group convulsively seizes her child. Pause</i>.
+Ozias <i>walks about</i>.) We take to witness against you the heaven and the
+earth and our God and the God of our fathers, which punishes us
+according to our sins and the sins of our fathers; and we demand of you
+that you deliver up the city to Holofernes and his host. (<i>A silence</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(Ozias <i>ascends solemnly to the vantage-point.</i>) </p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>dominating the assembly</i>). Friends, it would seem that Charmis
+has made an end. His words are excellent and full of pity. Who follows
+him? Who will speak next? My ear waits. (<i>A silence</i>.) Ah! Then give
+heed. The words of Charmis are full of pity, but I also have pity. Do
+not I too cherish our women, and our maidens and our young children? And
+because I pity I would not yield to the monster Holofernes. Yes, the
+monster! This is not war that he wages. Once our enemy strove fairly
+with the warriors of Israel. Now he makes our women and children to die
+of thirst. The magnificence of war is gone from the earth, and
+Holofernes by the excess of his hosts has rendered war ridiculous.
+(Chabris <i>raises his hands</i>.) The peoples of the earth will perceive
+that henceforward the institution of war cannot continue, and after this
+there will be no more war. But meanwhile, if I go crouching to the feet
+of Holofernes, what will happen and what will come to pass? Surely it
+will come to pass that the monster who has sat down to watch us die of
+thirst will slay our little children and our old men, and dishonour our
+women, and ravish our innocent virgins; for the enslaving of the
+conquered will not content his anger nor satisfy the lust of his great
+hosts. Shall these things be? I say they shall not be. But what am I,
+save the servant of the citizens of Bethulia? And what do I speak, save
+the thought that is in your hearts? There is no cowardice in you. You
+are not sheep, nor rabbits, nor beetles, nor lice. You are valiant men,
+and women lion-hearted. Without you I am naught, and if I defy
+Holofernes, my fortitude is yours and my resolve springs from you.
+Charmis has invoked the holy name of the God of Israel. Let Israel not
+forget its God, for never has the Most High forsaken Israel. Brethren,
+be of good courage. Let us yet endure five days. Five short days. And if
+these days pass and the God of Israel turn not his mercy towards us,
+then will I do according to the word of Charmis. Such is my oath to you.
+And so it shall be.</p>
+
+<p>Haggith <i>enters from the house of</i> Judith.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My lord Ozias!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>quickly descending the steps</i>). What say you?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress, the lady Judith, will speak with you. She comes.</p>
+
+<p>RAHEL (<i>half rising</i>). Water!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>excited</i>.) The lady Judith comes out of her house after three
+years.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES IN THE GROUP (<i>excited and impressed</i>.) Judith is coming, after
+three years! Judith! The widow!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>sternly to the group</i>). Get hence, everyone to his own charge.
+Soldiers! Clear the street! (Two soldiers <i>advance, running to obey</i>.)
+The men to the walls and towers. The women and children to their houses.
+(<i>To</i> Rahel, <i>who has risen, indicating</i> Chabris.) Take the aged fool
+away, girl. (<i>Ruthlessly and contemptuously</i>.) Get home, all of you.
+Rabble! Insects! Lice!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The street is cleared, not without difficulty, and</i> Ozias <i>is left
+alone with</i> Haggith.)</p>
+
+<p><i>After a pause</i>, Judith <i>enters slowly, in widow's apparel and
+sackcloth</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit</i> Haggith <i>into the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Greetings, Lord Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Lady, greetings. (<i>They salute</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Where are the people?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I invited them to go away.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Why?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Your waiting-woman said that you would speak with me. </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But what I have to say I would have said before them.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Forgive your servant.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. No! It is I, the woman, who should ask to be absolved.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I beseech you&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>simply</i>). Perhaps you dismissed the people because it is not
+meet for them to see all the workings of the mind which has authority
+over them.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>warmly responsive</i>). Ah! Lady! In your wisdom and your
+understanding you have comprehended what it is to be the governor of a
+besieged city. You, alone!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. This is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia&mdash;because
+Judith, the widow of Manasses, has issued from her house and from her
+secrecy, and because after long years she has lightened the city with
+her countenance.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling</i>). We hold converse with words, but the shadow of
+destruction is over us, and our hearts are darkened, and we hide our
+hearts in speech. Ozias, governor of Bethulia, show me your heart.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I dare not.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Dare! I am not afraid.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. YOU are more beautiful than aforetime&mdash;were it possible.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>accepting the compliment</i>). And if I am?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. That is what is in my heart! Behold my heart, and the depths of
+my heart. Look deep, and deeper, and still you will see naught therein
+but the beauty and the subtlety of Judith.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It is no common man that with the parched tongue of thirst can
+talk thus while unspeakable calamity assails the city.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>gently</i>). I came not to meet Ozias, but the governor of
+Bethulia. From my tent I hearkened to the words which he spoke to the
+people, and the Lord said to me: Go down to him, thou, a woman. And I am
+here.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The Lord reigns! That which I said to the people did not please
+the ear of Judith?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. No.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I spoke to the people according to their understanding. Have you
+not said it is not meet for the people to know the thoughts of the
+ruler? Hearken again? And I will speak now to the wise woman. I
+flattered the people with vain praise of their courage, when they have
+no courage. I affrighted the people with a prophecy of terror, when
+there is no terror&mdash;for Holofernes is a great warrior, and has
+compassion in his greatness, for he is a Babylonian. I gave them hope of
+succour when succour is none&mdash;for, with a hundred and twenty thousand
+footmen and twelve thousand horse against us (<i>with dry humour</i>) to
+count upon the mercy of the Lord is presumption.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>moves aside and returns. Sweetly</i>). Why then did you speak thus
+to the people? And to what end did you deceive them? I beseech you yet
+again to show me your heart, for it is right that I should know.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I saw the vastness of the future as in a vision. If the God of
+Israel perchance is merciful, and the city is saved at the eleventh
+hour, then it will be said in Jerusalem that there is none like Ozias of
+Bethulia for steadfastness, for he alone by his ardour revived the
+fainting populace and held firm the city; and great will be my
+recompense.... But that is a dream. Always I have faced the substance of
+things, and the substance is that Nebuchadnezzar has decreed to rule
+over the whole earth, and from the east to the west there is no living
+man that shall not bow down before Nebuchadnezzar. Bethulia will fall.
+I, the governor, shall be taken captive and shown to Nebuchadnezzar, and
+in that day Holofernes shall say to Nebuchadnezzar: Lo! Here is Ozias
+the Israelite who resisted thy mighty armies for thirty-four days and
+yet five days more. Use him if it seem good to thee. And I shall be
+lifted up to be a satrap of Nebuchadnezzar, and I shall partake of the
+bright glory of Nebuchadnezzar. And&mdash;(<i>hesitates</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>subtly and sweetly</i>). And?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>in an outburst</i>). What am I without you, O Judith? Before
+Manasses loved you, did I not love you? For three years have I not
+watched over you in all honour and respect, and troubled you not with my
+importunity until this day, which is the day of days? What am I without
+you, and what shall be my dominion and my satrap's throne if you do not
+sit in majesty by my side, O Rose of Sharon and matchless among women?</p>
+
+<p>Judith (<i>as before</i>). My lord, you are like a rushing river.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. You have seen my heart.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I have seen it.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And what say you?</p>
+
+<p><i>There is the sudden sound of a disturbance. Enter, from back, soldiers,
+holding</i> Achior, <i>and a group of excited citizens</i>. Haggith <i>appears at
+the house-door.</i></p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>fiercely</i>). What! Are my commands no more than the wind in the
+corn, and is there to be naught but tumult within the walls of this
+city?</p>
+
+<p>VOICES IN THE GROUP. An Assyrian! An Assyrian!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias! We saw this man lying bound at the foot of
+the hill, and we descended and loosed him and brought him privily into
+Bethulia by the secret way. And now we present him to my lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS Fools! Then no longer is the secret way secret.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. Slay him! Stone him! Whip the dog!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>nobly scornful, to the crowd</i>). Oh! Brave! Oh! Men of courage
+and high valour!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Achior). Who are you?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. Achior.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Your condition?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR (<i>with calm, genial candour</i>). Captain of all the Ammonites in
+the army of Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Let them loose him, Lord Ozias. His eyes are not the eyes of
+treachery.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to the soldiers</i>). Loose him. (<i>To</i> Achior.) And how come you
+here? Speak the truth&mdash;and fear.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. My mouth shall say truth, but I will not fear.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. My hand is terrible.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. Thus it happened. When the children of Israel had shut up the
+passages of the hill country and had fortified all the tops of the high
+hills, Holofernes was very angry. And he called the captains of Ammon
+and said to them: Tell me now, ye sons of Chanaan, who these Israelites
+are that dwell in the hill country, and wherein is their power and
+strength, and why they have determined not to come and meet me, more
+than all the inhabitants of the west? And I, Achior, answered the
+question of Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And what answer gave you?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes: This people is descended of the Chaldeans.
+But they left the way of their ancestors and would not follow the gods
+of their fathers; and they worshipped the God of heaven. So they were
+cast out from the face of the gods of Chaldea, and they fled into
+Mesopotamia. And they came to Chanaan. But when a famine covered all the
+land of Chanaan they went down into Egypt, and the king of Egypt brought
+them low with labouring in brick and made them slaves. Then they cried
+to their God, and he smote all the land of Egypt with plagues.... And
+God dried the Red Sea for them.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. It is true. It is true!</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. And they came to Chanaan, and drove before them the inhabitants
+of that land, and they dwelt in that country many days. And while they
+sinned not before their God they prospered, because the God that hates
+iniquity was with them.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. It is true.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. But when they departed from the way which their God appointed,
+then they were destroyed in many battles very sore, and were led
+captives into a land that was not theirs, and the temple of their God
+was cast to the ground. </p>
+
+<p>VOICES. Gentile dog! Shall we not render him to pieces?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. There is but one truth, brethren, whether it please or whether
+it displease.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Achior). Make an end.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. And I said to Holofernes: But now this people are returned to
+their God, and have possessed Jerusalem, and are seated in the hill
+country. (<i>With more emphasis</i>.) And I said further to Holofernes: Now
+therefore, my lord and governor, if there be any error in this people,
+let us go up and we shall overcome them. But if there be no iniquity in
+their nation, let my lord now pass by, lest their Lord defend them and
+we become a reproach before all the world.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It was well said.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Lady, it was well said&mdash;if the slave said it. (<i>To</i> Achior.) I
+demanded of you: How came you <i>here</i>?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. Thus. When I had finished speaking to Holofernes, all they that
+were about my lord and governor rose up in wrath and cried: Kill him.
+And the face of Holofernes darkened, and he said: And who art thou,
+Achior, that thou hast prophesied among us to-day that we should not
+make war with the people of Israel because of their God? And who is God
+but Nebuchadnezzar? Nebuchadnezzar by my hand will destroy the
+Israelites, and their God shall not deliver them. Their mountains shall
+be drunken with their blood and their fields shall be filled with their
+dead bodies. (<i>The</i> citizens <i>show alarm</i>.) And thou, Achior, shalt be
+delivered up to the Israelites in Bethulia, and when thou seest me again
+thou shalt fall among the slain.... And he commanded his servants, and
+they took me, and carried me secretly to the foot of the hill of
+Bethulia. And here am I!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>after a pause, positively</i>). It is a wicked device for our
+undoing.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. How so?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Plainly this fellow lies, and he has come subtly with a tale to
+spy out our strength. Presently he will seek to escape from us again to
+the Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. Spy! Stone him! Rend him!</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR (<i>to</i> Ozias). To Holofernes, my lord and governor, I spoke truth;
+and to you also I speak truth. Never has my mouth lied, nor my tongue
+uttered deceit. If death is ordained for my recompense, so be it.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Ozias). He is a fair youth, and has spoken truly and feared
+not.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>with meaning</i>). Lady, he is a fair youth, and fearless. But by
+what sign know you that he has spoken truly?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. By the glance of his eyes I know.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is a sign that suffices not. Shall it be said that Ozias was
+deceived, and shall Ozias imperil his renown, by reason of the glance of
+a youth when he looks at a woman&mdash;even you?... And if he lies not, then
+he is a fool and his folly was great.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. I spoke the truth to Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>fiercely</i>). But to speak truth did not content you. Having
+answered Holofernes, you must needs offer counsel to your lord and
+governor! Who were you to offer counsel to the greatest of all the
+captains of the earth? The protection of the mighty conqueror covered
+you, and lo! in your folly did you estrange yourself from him. Fool!</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes, my lord and governor, that which I was
+appointed to say&mdash;that, no more and no less.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And who appointed you to say that which you said?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. If there be a God in Israel, and if the Lord has not abandoned
+us, may not this youth be the messenger of the Most High to bring us
+comfort, and for a warning to the vainglory of Holofernes?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>with irony</i>). All is possible to the Lord. Yet may his purposes
+be hidden from us. (<i>To the soldiers</i>.) Until the Lord vouchsafe new
+wisdom to me, his servant, bind fetters about the feet of Achior, and
+take him to the house of bondage, and set a guard over him, for a spy is
+not more dangerous than a fool.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>springing forward</i>). It shall be done, Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The soldiers begin to put chains on</i> Achior.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>quietly</i>). Shame him not with fetters, lord Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>after a pause, to the soldiers</i>). Unbind him! (<i>The soldiers
+obey</i>.) Take him off! Speedily! Away! All! Let none remain! Hasten, I
+say!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exeunt back, all except</i> Ozias <i>and</i> Judith. <i>As he goes</i> Achior
+<i>kisses Judith's robe</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Achior, <i>as he does so</i>). Truth-teller!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>At a sign from</i> Judith, Haggith <i>re-enters the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Your face is turned from me, because of the youth. Yet you came
+out to see the governor of the city, and the governor could do no other
+than I have done.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>looking at him</i>). Ozias, you have shown me your heart.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Yea!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. And in the moment when the youth came you asked of me my
+counsel.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Yea!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Hear me now, for the words you have spoken before the people
+this day are not right.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What words?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. This promise that you have uttered to deliver the city to our
+enemies, unless within five days the Lord turn to help. Who are you that
+seek to stand instead of God among the children of men?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Stand instead of God! </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Who are you that have tempted God this day? For you cannot find
+the depth of the heart of man,&mdash;how then shall you search out God or
+comprehend his purpose? Brother, provoke not the Lord our God to anger.
+For if he will not help us within these five days, he has power to
+defend us when he will, even every day. Do not bind the counsels of God.
+For God is not as man that he may be threatened, neither as the son of
+man that he should be wavering. Therefore let us wait for salvation from
+him, and he will hear our voice,&mdash;if it please him. Moreover, this city
+is the key and the gateway to all Judea. If it be obstinate in
+resistance, Judea is not defiled, but if it be taken the whole land
+shall lie waste and God will require the profanation of it at our mouth.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. All that you have spoken is truth, and there is none to gainsay
+your words. From the beginning of your days we have known your wisdom,
+and your understanding is manifest.... (<i>With significance</i>.) But we are
+thirsty.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. If we are thirsty, let us give thanks to the Lord our God, who
+tries us, even as he did our fathers.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The people in the extremity of their thirst compelled me to an
+oath, which I will not break.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Say you the people, Ozias? As for them, you hold them lightly,
+and they are as naught in your eyes. So much you have avowed.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>in a new tone</i>). It is true. This day I hold the people lightly.
+But when the great madness and desperation of thirst comes at last upon
+them, who shall hold them? In that day they will seize the things
+forbidden, and they will drink the wine sanctified and reserved for the
+priests that serve the Lord. And to avert from me the wrath of Joachim,
+the high priest of Jerusalem, I have sent already a messenger to
+Jerusalem to bring a licence that this matter may be lawful.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>shocked</i>). Nay!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I say it will be so.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It shall not be so.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Then pray you to the Most High for the city, even for all of us,
+and the Lord will send rain for our cisterns and we shall faint no more.
+Pray, for you are a godly woman, and the God of Israel shall listen.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>with supreme impressiveness</i>). Hear me again, Ozias. This night
+I will do a thing which shall go throughout all the generations to the
+children of Israel. You shall stand this night in the gate of the city,
+and I will go forth from the city with my waiting-woman; and within the
+days that you have promised to deliver the city to our enemies the Lord
+will visit Israel by my hand.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. On what errand will you go?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Enquire not of my act, for I will not declare it until the
+things are finished that I do. But this I declare, that the Lord has
+inclined himself to me, and now he has sent Achior for a sign.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. You go to Holofernes!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. To Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Do not go!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But why shall I not go?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The perils of the heathen will surround you, and harm will surely
+befall you, for Holofernes will work lamentable evil upon you. And I
+cannot suffer it.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling</i>). Did not Ozias say that Holofernes was a great
+warrior and had compassion in his greatness?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>insistent</i>). I cannot suffer it, for if any shame come upon you
+I will not live.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. God will not see his handmaid shamed. Moreover I regard not
+myself in this thing, but the welfare of the people of Israel.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>kneeling</i>). Judith, I entreat you! For you are the light of my
+eyes, and without you the world is not.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>softly</i>). I know it. Think you that in these years I have not
+seen the depths of your heart, Ozias? Think you that I was blind in my
+tent? Think you that I watched not upon you? You were comely in my
+sight. But this day you have revealed your pride. For you seek not God,
+but the vanity of the earth, and you would make all Israel the
+instrument of your glory, denying the Lord. And I am sad.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Forgive me, Rose of Sharon.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>softly</i>). Who am I, to forgive my brother? Peace be upon you!
+(<i>She turns towards her house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>rising,</i>). Stay!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I go to prepare myself for that which I have to do. (<i>Exit into
+the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>A soldier shows himself, back.</i>)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Friend!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>approaching and saluting</i>). Lord! Your command!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Send to me the officer of the watch.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, the honourable lieutenant lies sick.</p>
+
+<p>(Haggith <i>appears at the door of the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Thirst has overcome him?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>bowing</i>). He raves on the bed, lord, and his tongue is
+like the tongue of a dog.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Who then commands the watch by the watchfires this night?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. I, lord. The watchfires wait the torch.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Will you, too, faint, and will your tongue be like the tongue of
+a dog?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>grimly</i>), Not mine, lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. DO the people complain?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, they whine and snivel mightily.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith <i>with a small sack.</i> </p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Is the secret way shut?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Shut and barred, lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It must be opened.... Stand! I will see to it.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. AS my lord wills.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Has the watch aught to drink?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. My lord knows that no drop is left in the gourds.</p>
+
+<p>(Ozias <i>waves him away, and he retires</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Haggith, <i>who is busy with the sack</i>). Woman, has the lady
+Judith perchance dreamed a dream?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>enigmatically</i>). My mistress has dreamed no dream. Why does
+the lord Ozias ask?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It seemed to me&mdash;(<i>stops</i>)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Dreams lift up fools. (<i>Exit into the house</i>.) (<i>Exit Ozias,
+L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The soldier strolls forward. Twilight begins to fall</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Enter</i> Haggith <i>from the house with more baggage</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>to the soldier; curtly; not looking at him</i>). So thou hast no
+water?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>with genial freedom</i>). Yea, Haggith, we have still a
+little.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Then thou has lied to the governor?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. <i>Him</i>? (<i>With a jerk of the shoulder</i>!) <i>He</i> knows! In
+truth now, thinkest thou he would expect us soldiers to keep guard
+without water? <i>He</i> knows! But he is a great lord, and in seemliness he
+asks for a lie, and that which he asks is given to him&mdash;in seemliness.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. But the officer raving as thou hast said with thirst?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Ah! It is the business of a worshipful officer to scorn
+deceit and to suffer.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. And all the people?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. The people are the people. But we soldiers are
+soldiers&mdash;and must drink, or we cannot guard. (<i>Yawns</i>.) Eh! I could lie
+down and snore for seven years, but I am appointed to watch all night.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>suddenly caressing</i>). Sweet warrior! Would I could rest thee!</p>
+<br />
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>startled by the change in her demeanour</i>). Haggith! Thou
+art marvellously and desirably changed.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I am practising to thy profit for that which lies before me and
+my mistress.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. What meanest thou?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Chut! If thou hast heard a word, let it die with thee&mdash;it will
+not burst thee.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord! turn away from me vain hopes and concupiscence.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. And so thou sleepest not this night!... Neither do I sleep.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. What?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I go with my mistress upon a journey.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. What journey? There can be no journey for thee, unless
+thou leave the city and wend to the Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>curt again</i>). Nevertheless we go upon a journey.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. It is madness.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. It may be.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Who can tell the heart of a master? Not I! When dost thou
+depart?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress is attiring.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Thou dost not attire her?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I! I, who have charge over all that is hers! Wilt thou tell me,
+then, what is the task of her tiring-women? Idle sluts!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. And this is thy baggage?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>matter-of-fact</i>). A cruse of oil, a bag of parched corn, fine
+bread, three lumps of figs&mdash;and a bottle of wine&mdash;yea, the last!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>drawing in his lips</i>). Ah! But thou wilt need an ass for
+this cargo.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>drily</i>). I am the ass.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Judith, <i>magnificently dressed</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The</i> soldier <i>retires, back</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Is all prepared?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. All is prepared, mistress.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Ozias, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>ecstatic at the sight of</i> Judith's <i>splendour</i>). O, loveliness!
+O, lily of the field! Who shall withstand you, and who shall say you
+nay?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling</i>). I am ready to depart.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The secret way is opened. I will lead you to it.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>gently</i>). The secret way? I will take no secret way.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. But hear me, lady. The peril from the archers far off&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. What did I say to you, lord Ozias? I said: You shall stand this
+night in the gate of the city, and I will go forth. My desire is that
+you command the gatemen to open the gates, so that I and my
+waiting-woman may pass out before all men, and in the sight of the Lord.
+(<i>She bends to examine</i> Haggith's <i>baggage</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>moved. Calling to the</i> soldiers). Ho! Let the gates of the city
+be opened, that the lady Judith may go forth.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Yea, lord. (<i>Calling to others, off.</i>) Gatemen!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gatemen man the gate-chains, and citizens rush in with cries</i>:
+'What shall happen to us? The lady Judith leaves the city? At
+night-fall? What is it?')</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>fiercely, to the crowd</i>). Get hence! Dogs!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>softly</i>). Let them stay, Lord Ozias, for that which I do, I do
+not in secret, neither shall it be hidden.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to the crowd</i>). Make a way clear to the gates.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Before I go, I will look into the valley whither I descend.
+(<i>She mounts to the vantage-point</i>).</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. Water! Water! Or we die!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>from the vantage-point</i>). Brethren, bewail not! Remember what
+things the Lord did to Abraham, and how he tried Isaac, and what
+happened to Jacob in Mesopotamia. For the Lord has not tried us in the
+fire as he did them, neither has he taken vengeance upon us. But the
+Lord scourges them that come near to him, to admonish them. (<i>She
+kneels. Following her example, everybody kneels</i>.) O Lord God of my
+father Simeon, the Assyrians are multiplied in their power; they trust
+in shield, and spear, and bow, and sling; and know not that thou art the
+Lord which breakest battles; the Lord is thy name. Behold their pride,
+and send thy wrath upon their heads; give into my hand, which am a
+widow, the power that I have conceived. For thy power standeth not in
+multitude, nor thy might in strong men. Smite the Assyrians by the
+deceit of my lips; break down their stateliness by the hand of a woman.
+And make my speech and deceit to be their wound and stripe, who have
+purposed cruel things against thy covenant and against the top of Zion.
+And make every nation and tribe to acknowledge that thou art the God of
+all power, and that there is none other that protecteth the people of
+Israel but thou. (<i>She rises. The crowd murmurs:</i> 'Amen.' <i>All rise.</i>
+Judith <i>comes down from the vantage-point. Silence</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>moved</i>). Open the gates.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Haggith). Nothing is forgotten?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Nothing.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>moves a step towards the gates.</i>)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The soul of my soul goes with you into the valley.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Haggith, <i>solemnly</i>). And the knife?</p>
+
+<p>(Haggith <i>gives a gesture. At the same moment a woman comes from the
+house with a knife, which she hands to</i> Haggith, <i>who hands it to</i>
+Judith, <i>who takes it ceremoniously, and hides it in her dress. The
+gates are now opened, and the distant plain under the setting sun is
+seen covered with the tents of the Assyrian army</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>goes slowly through the gates, followed by</i> Haggith <i>carrying
+the baggage</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>VOICES (<i>as</i> Judith <i>passes</i>). Water! Water!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>with deep emotion</i>). Close the gates. Light the watchfires.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gates begin slowly to close. The glow of the watchfires is seen</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="ACT_II">ACT II</a></h2>
+
+
+<h3>SCENE I</h3>
+
+<p><i>The valley of Jezreel. The city of Bethulia on the hill in the
+distance</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Haggith <i>with her baggage enters to</i> Ingur <i>and his men</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>The next morning but one</i>. </p>
+
+<p>INGUR. What art thou?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>prudishly and coldly</i>). If it please thee, I am a woman.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. No. Thou art a hedgehog.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>suddenly cajoling</i>). I ask pardon. When I saw thy great
+handsomeness I grew afraid, and my tongue was stiffened. In my country
+there is no man so handsome as thou art.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Ah! (<i>Much mollified</i>.) And what then is thy country?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I am a woman of the Hebrews, and I have come from Bethulia.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>astonished</i>). A woman of the Hebrews! From Bethulia! (<i>To his
+men</i>). Stand back from my face. (<i>The men retire. To</i> Haggith.) This is
+a rare strange tale.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Could I lie to <i>thee</i>? I have escaped from the city, which is
+given over to be consumed. I sought water for my thirst, for in Bethulia
+there is no water, and the people faint in the streets.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. But it is a long journey from Bethulia, and thou art fresh and
+delicate as though just risen from thy bed.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>smiling</i>). I can hide nothing from thee, mighty wolf. I am,
+indeed, but just risen from my bed. The night before last night I set
+forth secretly, and came into the valley yesterday at noon, and lay soft
+in a cave where three springs bubbled, and drank, and slept until this
+morning's sunrise.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. What is thy name?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Haggith.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Thy name is as strange as thy errand, and as thyself; and surely
+thou art a woman of the Hebrews, which is a race of lunatics, as I am
+told.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I have figs fit for a great king. (<i>Opens her sack and offers
+some figs</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>INGUR <i>(eating).</i> Um! And what else hast thou? Let me touch thee,
+Haggith. (<i>He touches her carefully</i>). Yes, thou art outlandish, and no
+doubt mad, but comely. Comely! Thou hast the likeness and feel of a
+woman. Always have I hankered after strange women, and now lo! one falls
+ripe into my mouth. (Haggith <i>shrinks. Reassuringly.</i>) In a way of
+speaking! In a way speaking! For thou art not in my mouth. And so thou
+earnest to slake thy thirst?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Yes, my roaring lion.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Listen! Thou hast saved thy life with water. But thou art lost.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Lost?</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Ay! A woman in the camps of the Assyrians&mdash;she is undone. She is
+a lamb in a den of terrible tigers. (<i>Comfortingly</i>.) No, no! I will
+protect thee, but I warn thee that thou art undone. I am honest.
+(<i>Caresses her</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>clumsily returning his caress</i>). <i>Thou</i> wilt not harm me.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. I will not tear thee to pieces, but thou shalt come away with me.
+(<i>She timidly strokes him</i>). Thou hast not the habit of this stroking.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me, when I encountered any noble
+Assyrian, to use him thus. It is true that I have not the habit.
+Nevertheless I do what I can.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>startled at the mention of a mistress</i>). Thy&mdash;thy mistress? Ye
+are two? Where then is thy mistress? Tell me upon the instant&mdash;is she
+fairer than thou?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Seven times more fair.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Fetch her!</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress is washing herself in a fountain of water by the
+cave. She sent me forward in peace and friendliness to announce her
+coming.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Fetch her! (<i>Suddenly perceiving</i> Bagoas <i>in the distance, he
+changes his manner</i>.) Stay! Bagoas is approaching, and he may have seen
+thee. His eyes are sharp. Stand off. (Haggith <i>moves away a little</i>.)
+But when I tell thee, fall down on thy face.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Is he a great captain?</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. His mightiness is the chief eunuch of the Prince, and there is
+none greater than he save only the Prince himself, for Bagoas has charge
+over all the women of the Prince's tents.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Women of the Prince's tents?</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Ay! Wives! Concubines! Virgins! Beyond counting. Didst thou think
+in thy Hebrew pride, that the Prince was a savage and a barbarian?...
+Down, damsel! Here is Bagoas. Embrace the earth for thy life's sake.
+(Haggith <i>obeys</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Bagoas, <i>with attendants, L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(Ingur <i>salutes him with extreme deference</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Who art thou?</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Ingur, mightiness, commanding twenty footmen.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Begone from my sight. This morning the Prince condescends to
+walk through the camp, that all the armies may take joy in his
+countenance. It is not meet that he should be seen of any lower than a
+lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>indicating</i> Haggith). Mightiness, a woman of the Hebrews escaped
+from Bethulia to find water! And by my subtlety I have captured her.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. A woman of the Hebrews! (<i>Surveying</i> Haggith.) Rise, scum, and
+let me behold thy deformity. (Haggith <i>obeys</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. And there is another yet to appear,&mdash;her mistress, seven times
+fairer.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Her mistress may be seven times fairer than this eyesore, and
+yet ugly. (<i>To</i> Haggith.) Who is thy mistress?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. The lady Judith.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Judith! A name fit only for a cat! Why is she here? How is she
+here? What is her secret and detestable purpose? For there is a trick in
+this thing.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I know not my mistress's purpose.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Tell me thy mistress's purpose, or I will have thee smothered.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I know only that if Holofernes&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>stopping her angrily</i>). Callest thou the illustrious one by his
+name? The most high <i>Prince</i> Holofernes, foul wench.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. The most high Prince Holofernes&mdash;if he so wills my mistress
+would speak with his highness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>laughing heartily</i>). Speak with the Prince? <i>Speak</i> with the
+Prince? Ha-ha! (<i>All the men laugh</i>.) What is the state of thy mistress?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. The lady Judith is a widow.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>still more amused</i>). Aha! A widow! And the Hebrew hag would
+<i>speak</i> with Prince Holofernes! (<i>The men laugh and jeer</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Judith, <i>R</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(Haggith <i>goes quickly to her. All the men stare at</i> Judith, <i>deeply
+impressed</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>aside to</i> Judith). There are many hussies in the camps,
+thousands and thousands, mistress. This lord is the chief eunuch.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside to an attendant</i>). If this be an example of the Bethulian
+women, I shall have a momentous business upon me when their city falls.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith, <i>signing to</i> Haggith <i>to stand aside, bows to the ground
+before</i> Bagoas; <i>then rises again</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>after a short pause</i>). You are very beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. There are beautiful women in Judea, but no man of Judea would
+look twice at such as I, a shrunken widow, like dried fish.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit</i> Ingur, <i>excitedly, L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I have heard how you have escaped out of Bethulia and come
+hither in order to find water. (<i>Blandly</i>.) Aught else?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. My desire also was to have speech privately with the great
+conqueror, Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Ah! We are well met, you and I. For I am Bagoas, chief eunuch to
+the illustrious Prince. (<i>Aside to second attendant</i>.) Run. Fetch the
+box of veils. (<i>Exit</i> second attendant, <i>L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>saluting once more</i>). I supplicate then, mighty Bagoas, that
+you lead me quickly to the illustrious Prince Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Surely! Surely! It is my pleasure to content you. (<i>Aside, to
+attendant, anxiously</i>.) This dried fish by her damnable beauty will
+reach great power, and if I speak not softly to her now she will undo me
+in that day.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I humbly thank your mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. But it is necessary that you should relate to me your little
+affair. For no woman speaks to the illustrious Prince until she has
+spoken to me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It cannot be so.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>persuasively</i>). In my ear, privily. Approach. </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It cannot be so.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. What mean you&mdash;it cannot be so?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will utter my errand to the illustrious Prince Holofernes
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>losing his self-control; angrily</i>). What? Thou queasy chit!
+Thou minx! Thou jade! Baggage! Mopsy! Shamelesss wench! Thou wilt not
+obey Bagoas, chief eunuch in the camps of the Assyrians! I will make
+thee the slave of my slave and the plaything of scullions. (<i>Stops.</i>
+Judith <i>smiles</i>. Haggith <i>subsides alarmed at her feet</i>.) Thou shalt be
+abandoned to the sutlers and the ass-drivers, and thus thou shalt learn
+who is Bagoas and what is his power! (<i>Stops again.</i> Judith <i>still
+smiles</i>.) The strumpets of the kitchens shall scorn thee! I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling sweetly</i>). Mightiness! Mightiness! I am your bondwoman,
+but it is appointed by heaven that I shall speak with the illustrious
+Prince Holofernes himself.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>controlling himself, smiling</i>). Well, if it is appointed by
+heaven, so shall it be. Forget my words. They had no evil intent, for I
+was trying you, as my duty is. (<i>Aside to attendant</i>.) The sweetness of
+her glance dissolves my backbone.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightinesss.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>to</i> Judith). Follow me, lady. (<i>Aside to</i> attendant.) Thinkest
+thou the Prince will come this way? (<i>Pointing</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Or that?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. If the Prince so much as sees her before the city is taken,
+never will the city be taken, and we shall all be her captives.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>beating the attendant</i>). I will lead her by the path to the
+cave, for the Prince will surely not come that way. (<i>To</i> Judith.)
+Follow me, lady.</p>
+
+<p>(Bagoas <i>moves R</i>. Judith <i>hesitates a moment as</i> Haggith <i>picks up her
+sack. Enter R. the heralds of Holofernes, followed by</i> Holofernes.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>to himself</i>). Holofernes! (<i>To his attendants</i>.) Hide her,
+rascals, or Assyria is undone. (<i>The attendants range themselves
+between</i> Judith <i>and</i> Holofernes.)</p>
+
+<p>(Bagoas <i>receives</i> Holofernes <i>with a prostration and high ceremony</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Where is this woman?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Woman, Prince?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>impatient</i>). This Hebrew woman, I say! One Ingur has run
+among the tents chattering, and the rumour of her has spread through the
+camps like a plague. By Nebuchadnezzar the one god, where is she, for it
+has been told to me that her beauty excels the beauty of all the women
+of the East and ravishes the eye exceedingly?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Ah! It is of Judith that the Prince deigns to speak. Lo! I had
+caught her and was bringing her to your highness. (<i>To</i> attendants.)
+Stand aside, dogs.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>is revealed to</i> Holofernes. <i>She prostrates herself and then
+rises</i>. Holofernes <i>gazes at her, entranced</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. So thou hast escaped out of Bethulia to find water for thy
+thirst?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. To find water, and to have speech with the most illustrious
+Prince.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Woman (<i>approaching her a step, and then standing still</i>),
+be of good comfort, and fear not in thy heart, for I never hurt any that
+was willing to serve Nebuchadnezzar, the god of all the earth. And if
+thy people that dwell in the mountains had not held me lightly, I would
+not have lifted up my spear against them, but they have done these
+things to themselves.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside, to</i> Holofernes). Terrible master, she is full of guile
+and deceitfulness, and came not at all for water, but for a hidden
+purpose against you. Therefore enquire of her closely.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Bagoas). Chastise thy tongue, ere it overthrow thee,
+fiend. There is no guile in that face. (<i>To</i> Judith.) Tell me now thy
+message and wherefore in truth thou art come. And tremble not, for thou
+shalt live this night.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Great prince, receive the words of your servant and suffer your
+handmaid to speak in your presence, and I will declare no lie to my
+lord.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Speak.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside to</i> Holofernes). It is a device against my lord. </p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Judith). Speak now, I command thee.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. My message concerns the fate of Bethulia, and of all the
+Assyrians, and of my lord. Life and death are in it, for I have communed
+with heaven.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Which heaven? Thine or mine?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. There is but one God.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>roughly</i>). And he is Nebuchadnezzar. Speak thy tale.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside to</i> Holofernes). It is a device.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>angrily</i>). Speak out all thy heart, and quickly!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will speak to my lord in my lord's tent.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>furious</i>). In my tent! Who art thou who defiest me, and
+what is thy licence, heathen slave, to defile the tent of Holofernes?
+Bind her. Take her away, and twist the cords about her neck, and
+strangle her, and cast her insolence into the lake.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>is seized and bound in an instant</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>in two minds</i>). Wait!</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. She is bound, illustrious prince.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Wait!</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside to</i> Holofernes). Prince, let not the benevolence of your
+heart be your undoing, for in the loveliness of her face is cunning and
+great peril. I have lived all my days amid the craftiness of women, and
+my lord also knows somewhat of their strange tricks, which bring ruin to
+the carnal.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>reflective</i>). Who would despise these Hebrews that have
+among them such women as she? (<i>Fiercely</i>). Surely it is not good that
+one man among them should be left; for if one were let go he might
+deceive the whole earth.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>advancing a step, appealingly</i>). Will the wise man cast away a
+pearl, and will my lord in anger lose his servant for ever?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>to</i> Holofernes). Let her not speak with my lord alone in my
+lord's tent.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I would speak with the illustrious prince&mdash;and with Bagoas
+also. (<i>She smiles</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>with a gesture</i>). I cannot lose thee. (<i>To attendants</i>.)
+Unbind her.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside</i>). May heaven be with us, for the woman is against us!</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Bagoas). Veil her, that her face and form be not seen
+as she passes to my tent, for she is mine.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>calling</i>). The veils! The veils! Where is the rascal?</p>
+
+<p><i>The attendant rushes in panting with the box of veils. He is followed
+by</i> Ingur.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>is elaborately veiled in a series of veils by</i> Bagoas <i>and his
+attendants</i>).</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Let her follow me.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exeunt, R, with great ceremony</i>, Holofernes <i>and his heralds, followed
+by</i> Judith.)</p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>as they go, stopping</i> Bagoas, <i>who goes last</i>). Mightiness,
+pardon your slave.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Well? </p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>pointing to</i> Haggith). Your slave captured the mistress. Reward
+him with this outlandish wench.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>carelessly</i>). The fool goeth out to seek his own damnation.
+Take her.</p>
+<br />
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="SCENE_II">SCENE II</a></h3>
+
+
+<p><i>Interior of the tent of</i> Holofernes. <i>A couch with curtains, L. The
+principal entrance to the tent is at the back. Secondary entrances in
+the hangings, L. and R.</i></p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>The same morning, later.</i></p>
+
+<p>Bagoas <i>and his attendant are unveiling</i> Judith.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Animal, wouldst thou dare to behold that which is thy lord's?
+Leave the last veil, and away with thee.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit back with the veils already removed from</i> Judith.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Queen of the night of Holofernes!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>through the veil</i>). Mighty Bagoas!</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. The Prince comes to look upon you in his tent.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Mighty Bagoas, deign to answer a question I will put.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Deign to ask, lady, and my humility shall answer; for your
+beauty has blinded Holofernes this day and he is your captive, and his
+servant is your servant, and there is no law in the camps of the
+Assyrians save your glance. (<i>He makes a covert gesture of half-amused
+resentful resignation</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Nebuchadnezzar is your god? Is it not so, Bagoas?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Nebuchadnezzar is henceforward the god of the Assyrians and of
+all the lands which their spears conquer. It is an official order.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. If Nebuchadnezzar laid a command upon you, would you disregard
+it?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I would not, for my skin is very valuable to me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. As Nebuchadnezzar is your god, so is the Lord of Israel mine.
+And my God laid a secret command upon me to speak with Prince Holofernes
+alone and with none other in his tent. Thus, and thus only, was it that
+I refused to speak in the presence even of the mighty Bagoas. But as I
+withstood you in the valley there, the God of Israel descended upon me
+and I heard the voice of God in my ear, and the voice said: 'It is
+permitted to thee to speak with Bagoas also.' Therefore I yielded to the
+importunity of Prince Holofernes and of Bagoas.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Your god is a wise god and has discernment.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. This I tell you, that there may be peace and good intelligence
+between us. Is there peace between us?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Lady, in my heat I admonished you with hard words and much
+vituperation.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>innocently</i>.) By Nebuchadnezzar, I heard none.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. There is peace between us. And in the closeness of our
+intelligence you and I will rule them that rule all Assyria.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Holofernes, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(Bagoas <i>prostrates himself</i>. Holofernes <i>walks about, ignoring</i>
+Judith.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Bagoas). At what hour is the Council of Captains?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. The Council awaits your highness.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Suddenly</i> Holofernes <i>snatches the veil from</i> Judith, <i>and throws it
+on the floor. He gazes at her.</i> Judith <i>prostrates herself</i>. Holofernes
+<i>drops on to the couch, and looks at everything except</i> Judith.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>imperiously</i>). Rise. (Judith <i>rises. A pause</i>. Holofernes
+<i>plays with a jewel on his costume. Without looking at</i> Judith.) And
+Achior? </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Illustrious Prince.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Did the slave reach Bethulia?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. The men of Bethulia took him, and he declared to them all that
+he had spoken to my lord Prince. And many approved him.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. And what sayest <i>thou</i> of Achior?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. O lord and governor, I say: Reject not the word of Achior, but
+lay it up in your heart.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou art bold.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. The word of Achior is true. For the Israelites shall not be
+punished, and the sword shall not prevail against them, except they sin
+against their God.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Not even <i>my</i> sword?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Not even the sword of my lord and governor, except they sin
+against their God. (<i>With significance</i>.) But they will sin.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Ah! They will sin? In what will they sin?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Death is fallen upon them, and they will provoke their God to
+anger, for their water is scant, and they faint in their thirst; and
+they will drink the holy wine which was sanctified and reserved for the
+priests who serve before the face of our God: which thing is not lawful
+for any of the people so much as to touch with their hands.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. What has all this to do with me? There is no god but
+Nebuchadnezzar.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It touches my lord and governor, because, knowing all this, I am
+fled from Bethulia, which shall be accurst; and the God of Israel has
+sent me to work things with my lord and governor whereat the whole earth
+shall be astonished.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>looking at her, interested</i>). What things? And what have I
+to do with thy god? I need not thy god, for after the Israelites have
+drunk their wine they will thirst again; and when the city is broken
+with fainting, it will fall safe into my hands while I sit and watch.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>with fire</i>). And when the city has fallen while the Assyrians
+sit and watch, and when all men whisper one to another that the greatest
+captain of the earth conquered by a device because he dared not attack
+boldly with spear, and bow, and sling&mdash;in that day will my lord and
+governor be content? Or will he be ashamed, and blush to lift up his
+eyes?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>disturbed</i>). It is a true word. </p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. It is a true word.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>savagely</i>). This day will I attack the city and take it,
+and though I make fifty thousand widows and orphans in Assyria I will
+compass Bethulia, and not one house in it shall be left standing, nor
+one Israelite alive.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>shaking her head slowly</i>). Why is my lord against the pleasure
+of the Most High? Do I not say, and has it not been revealed to me, that
+Bethulia shall not perish until its inhabitants have sinned before God?
+Listen, illustrious Prince, I will remain this night. And when the time
+comes I will go into the valley, and I will pray to God, and mayhap He
+will tell me when the Israelites in Bethulia have committed their sin.
+And I will come and show it to you, and thereupon my lord and governor
+shall go forth with all his army, and none shall resist him.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>fascinated</i>). Thou wilt come to me when the time is at hand
+for my triumph!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. And hearken further! I will lead my lord and governor in the
+midst of Judea, until he comes to Jerusalem; and I will set his throne
+in the midst of Jerusalem, and a dog shall not so much as open his mouth
+at my lord and prince. For these things were declared unto me from on
+high, and I am sent to tell them.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>aside to</i> Bagoas, <i>excitedly</i>). There is not such a woman
+from one end of the earth to the other, both for beauty of face and
+wisdom of words.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. It may well be so, Prince. But I have not seen the whole earth.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Judith). Thou hast done well to come to me, that
+strength may be in my hands and destruction upon them that lightly
+regard Nebuchadnezzar, the one god. Thou art ravishing in countenance,
+and if thou do as thou hast spoken, thou shalt dwell in my house which
+is over against the house of King Nebuchadnezzar, and thou shalt be
+renowned through the east and through the west. Bagoas, prepare meat and
+wine for her.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>making as if to give an order</i>). To hear is to obey.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will not eat of my lord's meat, nor drink of his wine, lest
+there be offence; I have brought provision by my waiting-woman.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. But if thy provision fail?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>significantly</i>). My provision will not fail before the Lord
+works by my hand the things which He has determined. </p>
+
+<p>Bagoas <i>claps his hands. Enter an attendant</i>.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Fetch Haggith, the waiting-woman of the lady Judith! Quickly!
+(<i>Exit attendant. To</i> Holofernes.) Prince, shall the Hebrew woman eat
+and drink of her provision in my lord's tent?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. She shall eat and drink in my tent, and she shall not leave
+it.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Then it is right that my lord remains not. And moreover the
+Council humbly waits for my lord. (<i>Exit</i> Holofernes, <i>L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>to</i> Judith, <i>as he follows</i> Holofernes). Did I not say that you
+and I shall rule them that rule Assyria? (<i>Exit L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith, <i>back, with provisions</i>.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>excited, looking round to see if they are alone</i>). Mistress!
+Is it possible?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. What has taken thee?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Is this the tent of the monster?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Hush!</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>whispering</i>). It is greater and more magnificent than the
+temple at Bethulia. (<i>Looking into a corner</i>.) But unclean. Have they
+no besoms?... Ah! (<i>Looking up at the roof</i>.) The bigness of it makes me
+small like a child before it can walk. I could not live comfortably in
+such a great windy place. No! I prefer our own house to all this
+royalty.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Give me food, Haggith. Where hast thou been? (<i>She sits</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Mistress, I have been with the man Ingur! (<i>Arranging</i> Judith's
+<i>costume, and then setting out the food and wine</i>.) In obedience to your
+command. At Bethulia, being busied all my days with the ordering of your
+possessions, I had no time for traffic with men; neither desire. And I
+deemed them terrible and masterful creatures. And when you commanded me
+to go forth into the camps and delude and entangle with wiles whatever
+Assyrian I should meet, I was afraid. For it was in my heart that I
+could not accomplish this thing. Yet I have done it prettily. And it is
+easier to me far than sweeping with a besom. Either all men are
+simpletons and besotted with self-conceit, or Ingur exceeds greatly in
+folly. I have been given to him for his slave, but he is mine and knows
+it not. (<i>She sits</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Where hast thou left him?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Mistress I would not suffer that you should pass from my sight,
+and I followed you, and Ingur followed me gladly, and at last the guard
+seized him for that he was found within the precincts of the prince's
+quarter, which is forbidden to his rank, and many stripes will be his.
+Mistress, you eat not.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>trying to eat</i>). Yes, I eat. Do thou eat for me.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I have eaten and drunk&mdash;with Ingur.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But not of his provision?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>nodding</i>). He so softly entreated me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It is a sin and an offence for thee, being an Israelite.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. For such as my high-born mistress, it is an offence. But for
+the handmaid&mdash;pooh! She eats as she can, and the Lord turneth away his
+glance until she has finished her platter. Moreover, did you not lay it
+upon me to beguile the dolt? And verily, mistress, I have rejoiced much
+this day; and Ingur&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Silence with thy prattle. Bethink thee of the dread business
+upon which I am come down from Bethulia into the valley?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>subdued; offering food</i>). Eat, mistress.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I cannot. My soul rejects it, and my body is on fire with
+expectation and suspense. (<i>Rising</i>. Haggith <i>also rises</i>.) Stay thou
+where thou art, for I will go forth alone. I must commune with the God
+of Israel for my tranquillity, and I dare not seek him in the tent of
+the heathen. (<i>Exit, back</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(Haggith <i>gathers the meat together</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Holofernes <i>and</i> Bagoas, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>looking about the tent, alarmed</i>). Where is she? Has she
+fled? If she has escaped me, this shall be thy last day, Bagoas. What is
+this girl here?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Prince, has any woman yet slipped through these hands? This girl
+is the waiting wench of the lady Judith. (<i>To</i> Haggith.) Where is thy
+mistress, wench?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>frightened and foolish</i>). My mistress having eaten ... having
+eaten naught, is gone to&mdash;to&mdash;to&mdash;pray.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Bring her. Her god may wait, but not the illustrious Prince. Run
+with both thy legs.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Ye&mdash;es, mightiness. (<i>Exit, back</i>)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Bagoas, with thine arts thou shalt persuade the Hebrew woman
+to come to us and to eat and drink with us this night.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>grimly</i>). Persuasion shall be used, highness. My arts are many
+and various.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. It will be a shame for our person if we let such a woman go,
+not having delighted in her company. If we do not draw her to us she
+will laugh us to scorn.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Yea, highness. But my lord has but this moment appointed a great
+feast with his captains at sunset. How then shall he eat and drink with
+the lady Judith?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thick-skull! Speak not to me of my captains! The Council of
+the Captains was as dust in my mouth, and I could not away with it.
+Therefore I sharply dismissed the Council, and soothed their damnable
+pride with the promise of a mighty feast. But what care I for the
+captains? My heart thirsts horribly for this Hebrew woman, and I am full
+of a great madness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. So be it, highness. Nevertheless, the Prince has promised to his
+captains a mighty feast, and the word of Holofernes is a rock that
+cannot be shaken.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Oh! What a calamity is love! And there is no slave so
+trodden down as him that is the slave of desire.... Bah! I will eat and
+drink quickly with the captains, and the woman shall await me here.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Judith, <i>back. On seeing</i> Holofernes <i>she prostrates herself</i>.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Arise, sorceress. (Judith <i>rises. To</i> Bagoas.) Go fetch
+leopard skins for her repose.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I will send for the skins on the instant, highness.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt go thyself to fetch them, elephant. And come not
+back without the finest skins in my wardrobe. See to it.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit</i> Bagoas, <i>back</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Come closer. (Judith <i>obeys</i>.) Look into my eyes. (Judith
+<i>obeys</i>.) Sorceress, thou knowest thy power.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I have no power, save that which is given to me from on high.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou wast praying to thy god?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Yea, highness. </p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Didst thou demand of him that he should tell thee if the
+Israelites in Bethulia had committed their sin, and if the time of my
+triumph was at hand?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. No, lord. I prayed for the forgiveness of the transgressions of
+thy handmaid.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Why didst thou not demand of him what I ask thee?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Who am I to hasten the God of Israel? In the night time, and in
+the darkness, when all men sleep,&mdash;then it is that my God condescends
+towards me, and my ear hears his secret purposes.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>low</i>). This night?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Who can search out heaven?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. This night?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It may be.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt come to me in the night and tell me thy
+message?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will come to thee in the night, great prince. </p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt eat and drink with me in my triumph?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>after a pause</i>). If it pleases my lord.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt eat of my meat and drink of my wine, which I will
+give thee?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>after a pause</i>). If my lord is alone and there is none with
+him. For it is not right that any should see me.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. I will be alone. But Bagoas shall stand at the door of the
+tent.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. As my lord wills.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>ecstatic, moving a little towards her; she responds</i>).
+Fairest among women! Can it be!... The way of God is wondrous.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears through the hangings R., and
+watches</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>solemnly and significantly</i>). There are yet hid greater things
+than this, and thou hast yet seen but a few of his works.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>sinking back on the couch, mysteriously afraid</i>).
+Sorceress!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The watcher disappears</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>cooingly</i>) Does my lord shrink from his handmaid?</p>
+
+<p>(Holofernes <i>stretches his hands to her</i>.)</p>
+<br />
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="SCENE_III">SCENE III</a></h3>
+
+
+
+<p>SCENE: <i>The same</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>The same night</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Wine and food are set by the couch</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>A lamp is burning</i>.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>at back entrance to tent, calling to people off</i>). To your
+beds, all of you. Let none remain. (<i>He stands a moment at the entrance;
+a few distant shouts are heard; then silence</i>. Bagoas <i>comes within the
+tent towards the couch. To</i> Holofernes.) The waiters are gone, Prince.
+There is no one left to disturb the night.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Hast thou seen her?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>after a pause</i>). No, prince.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. But didst thou look?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I looked, O illustrious.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Is there moonlight?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. The moon is clouded, highness.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Give me wine. (Bagoas <i>obeys</i>.) Bagoas!</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Prince?</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The hangings of the tent R., balloon inwards a little</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>looking behind him sharply, spilling some wine</i>). The wind
+is rising.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. It is but a night breeze.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>as he drinks gloomily</i>). Bagoas, she has escaped back to
+her own people.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside</i>). I would she had, the jade! (<i>To</i> Holofernes.) Prince,
+she cannot escape. Every path from the valley is guarded.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. What guard could restrain such a woman?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Ah! Prince! What guard could restrain her?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Dost thou echo me?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I humbly think the thought of his highness.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Do thy thinking outside.</p>
+
+<p>(Bagoas <i>bows and moves towards the entrance</i>. Judith <i>is standing
+there. The two look at each other for a moment</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>with a gesture, indicating</i> Judith). Highness!</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>Jumping up. To</i> Bagoas). Begone to thy post! </p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>glides in silently</i>. Bagoas <i>goes out. They pass by each other
+without a word or a salutation, but mutually scrutinizing</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. The great feast of the captains is over?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. The captains are departed, drunken with wine and their
+pride. But thy feast and my feast is not begun. (<i>Points to the
+repast</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>enigmatically</i>.) I am here.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>ecstatic</i>.) Art thou in truth here, or do my eyes behold
+that which is not?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Did I not say that I should come in the night?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Yea, I trusted thee. I trusted thee so much that at the
+feast of the captains I commanded that all my hosts shall attack
+Bethulia, with bow, and sling, and spear, at sunrise, and also I gave
+the word of Holofernes for a pledge that naught in the heavens or on the
+earth should resist the onset of the Assyrians; for some among them
+feared the word of Achior which they had heard.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. You have not done this thing?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. I have done it. </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Would you forestall God, and would you speak the decrees of God
+before they are uttered?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou saidst thou wouldst pray to thy god this night and that
+he would tell thee when the Israelites in Bethulia had committed their
+sin, and that thou wouldst come to me to proclaim the hour of my
+triumph.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I said: I will pray to God and <i>mayhap</i> he will tell me.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou hast prayed, and thy god hath not answered?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. He has not answered.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>with bravado</i>). He is no god, then, thy god. Let us drink.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>as</i> Holofernes <i>moves towards her, solemnly</i>). Touch not your
+handmaid, and touch not the goblet. (<i>She goes to the skins, R</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>following</i> Judith <i>gently</i>). Thou art offended.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Stand afar off, Holofernes, and meddle not with her that
+communes with the Most High. </p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>kneels</i>. Holofernes <i>goes in the direction of the couch.
+Silence</i>. Bagoas <i>has been seen once or twice in the porch of the tent,
+his back turned. He has now gone again. Two half-veiled Assyrian women
+appear through the hangings, R., and watch a moment, then vanish</i>.
+Judith <i>slowly rises</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. What has befallen thee?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It has befallen me that this moment the God of Israel has spoken
+and my ear has heard his command. (<i>Approaching</i> Holofernes.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. What saith thy god?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. My ear has heard that the Israelites in Bethulia have committed
+their sin, and at sunrise the Assyrians shall assault Bethulia and none
+shall withstand them.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. A miracle!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. A miracle in thy tent, O great warrior!</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. To-morrow is appointed to be the day of my triumph.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>moved</i>). Yea, it is so.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>gratefully</i>). Hear me, Judith. Thy god shall be my god.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. In truth thou art set apart to be his. HOLOFERNES (<i>close to
+her</i>). Thy body trembles.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling</i>). Thinkst thou then that I was not afraid for thee?
+But my fear is gone from me, for now I know thy fate and the decree of
+heaven concerning thee.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>aside</i>). To-morrow is appointed for my triumph, but this
+night also shall I exult. (<i>To</i> Judith.) Let us eat and drink together,
+for we are alone in the night, and thou hast promised.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>gaily</i>). Let us feast.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>animated by her responsive tone</i>). Take off thy tunic; thou
+art in thy own house. Let Holofernes be thy tire-woman. (<i>Approaching
+her</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. No! (<i>Moving from him to the further side of the couch</i>.) But he
+shall be my slave to serve me. Pour out the wine, great slave.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>While</i> Holofernes <i>cheerfully obeys</i>, Judith <i>takes the knife from her
+garments and places it behind the couch. Then, as he stands with the
+wine, gazing at her and separated from her only by the couch, she slowly
+removes her tunic and appears in indoor attire. She comes towards him
+and takes the wine from him and drinks</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. I feared that in the strictness of thy Hebrew scruples thou
+wouldst not drink of my wine.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will drink again. (<i>She does so</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES <i>(taking the goblet and drinking).</i> Dost thou verily know thy
+power and thy dominion, Judith?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>simply</i>). Yes, I know it now better than thou.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou dost not. For I am mad for thee, and thou hast set thy
+seal upon me for evermore. My heart cannot hold thee, for thou hast
+filled it to overflowing, and all men see that my heart is full of thee
+and runneth over. Yea, I have a hundred and two and thirty thousand that
+bow themselves at my feet and that live and die by my glance. And I am
+at <i>thy</i> feet and thy glance is my joy and my sorrow according to thy
+whim. Judith, I entreat thee, command me something. For whatever thou
+command me, that will I execute. And be not afraid in thy command, for
+my power is very great and there is none like it save only my lord
+Nebuchadnezzar's.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>tenderly</i>). I command thee that thou be happy. For thy captive
+has no other desire.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Say not my captive. For it is I that am thy prisoner. And I
+will set thee on my throne, and in my great boldness I will dare to sit
+beside thee. But thou shalt reign. And we will live together in Assyria
+long years.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>changing her mood</i>). There is no requisition in the grave
+whether you have lived ten or an hundred or a thousand years. But the
+God of Israel is a shield.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>eagerly</i>). And I have told thee that thy god shall be my
+god; but in secret, because of that which I owe to King Nebuchadnezzar.
+Yet shall the whole earth know that thou, Judith, alone art my god.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But thou hast other wives.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. No!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Yes! It has been whispered to me that thou hast many wives, and
+concubines without number.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. It is a lie. For from this night I have put away from me all
+women but thee, and there is not one among them to compare with thee.
+(<i>Appealingly</i>). And since the judgment of heaven hath done a miracle
+by thee in the tent of Holofernes this night, wilt thou deny, O
+tenderness! that thou hast been divinely appointed to me, and I to thee?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will not deny that the Lord is in this thing. And for thy
+comfort I will tell thee that which thou knowest not.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>expectant</i>). Tell me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Before I escaped from Bethulia, as I lay on my bed, a vision
+came to me, and it was the vision of Holofernes in the likeness of his
+majesty and his might. And I saw the vision by my bed, and so it was
+that I came down into the valley.... (<i>Softly</i>.) And wouldst thou that I
+should have uttered this secret to any but thee!</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>full of emotion</i>). I will kiss thy lips, and thou art mine,
+O fragrance!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Kiss my lips.</p>
+
+<p>(Holofernes <i>kisses her, and then in an excess of feeling stumbles
+backward</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears at the opening R., and watches</i>.
+Bagoas, <i>in the porch of the tent, turns and sees her, and dashes at her
+with a weapon. Both disappear through the opening, R.</i>) </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>moving with stealth towards the hidden knife, comfortingly</i>). O
+mighty child, where is thy strength, and where is thy terribleness? Rest
+thee a moment on the couch, and thy soul's captive will tend thee.</p>
+
+<p>(Holofernes <i>drops on the couch, and</i> Judith <i>caresses him</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>murmuring</i>). My great joy has overthrown me.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith, <i>seizing the knife and leaning over</i> Holofernes, <i>kills him
+while she is still caressing</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>as she uses the knife; murmuring</i>). Thou that wouldst go
+against the pleasure of the Most High! Thou that wouldst defile Judea!
+Thou that hast dishonoured with thy kiss the widow of Manasses! Thou
+that hast compelled me to guile and deceit and much lying so that I
+might perform the will of God! The grave shall be thy house!</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>turning to</i> Haggith, <i>firmly and impressively</i>). I have done
+that which I had to do, and the power of Assyria is fallen.
+(<i>Pointing</i>.) Take the head by the beard, and put it in thy sack, and
+let us depart.</p>
+
+<br />
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="ACT_III">ACT III</a></h2>
+<br />
+
+<h3>SCENE I</h3>
+<br />
+
+<p>SCENE: <i>Same as Act I</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>A few hours later than Act II, Scene III, the same night. The
+sole light is that of torches, and watchfires (off).</i></p>
+
+<p><i>The gatemen are at the gates</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>There is a knocking on the outside of the gates</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter First Soldier, running</i>.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>to a gateman, who is climbing up in order to look over
+the top of the gates</i>). Look not over, booby. Thy fool's face might meet
+the point of an Assyrian spear. (<i>The gateman slips down quickly</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Renewed knocking</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>shouting</i>). None can enter the city till sunrise. And
+not then if I like not the aspect of his phiz.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>off</i>). It is Haggith, servant of the lady Judith. Open the
+gates quickly, for I am become a woman of much consequence.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith? It is the voice of Haggith; yet it may also be
+devils. (<i>To another soldier who has entered</i>.) Run! Rouse the lord
+Ozias. (<i>Exit soldier</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I have water with me. Many gourds! Fresh water! Cool water! </p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gatemen begin to work the gate-chains</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. What do ye, dogs? Stop, and await the order of the lord
+Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>GATEMEN (<i>continuing to work the chains</i>). Water! Water!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Pull, then, dogs. If there is water and it is wet I will
+taste it. But if there is not water, I will slay the first soul that
+enters. (<i>As the gates begin to open a little</i>.) Hold! No wider!</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith <i>with two gourds</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gourds are snatched from her, and the men, including the First
+Soldier, drink</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>as he drinks</i>). Yea, it is indeed Haggith. Where is thy
+mistress, and whence comest thou, my beloved water-carrier, for thou art
+my beloved? (Haggith <i>slaps his face</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Ozias, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>furious</i>). Why are the gates opened? What is this?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith, lord, with water that is stronger than wine.
+(<i>Handing a gourd to</i> Ozias <i>to soothe him</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Where is thy mistress, wench? (<i>Drinks</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>stiffly</i>). I am the forerunner of my mistress, who has sent
+me, and before many hours are passed the lady Judith will come also.
+(<i>She goes to the gates and beckons</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What art thou doing?</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Ingur, <i>bearing a sack</i>.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. An Assyrian! An Assyrian! (<i>Men spring at</i> Ingur.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Let him alone; he is my bondman and I have tamed him.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Shut the gates, for I will enquire into this matter.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. There are yet ten other Assyrians outside the gates, carrying
+gourds for me.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Ten other Assyrians! It is a trick!</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>proudly</i>). By my command they are chained by their necks, neck
+to neck. Fetch in the gourds, men, and give the people to drink.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gourds are brought in amid cries and excitement. They are taken
+off, L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Shut the gates, I say.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. And the ten Assyrians, great lord?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Let them await my enquiry where they stand.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias, if they flee?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Hold thy mouth, gaby! Wouldst <i>thou</i> flee with thy neck chained
+to nine necks? Moreover, where will they flee? For the camps of the
+Assyrians are broken, and in their terrible confusion the Assyrians fall
+one upon another.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gatemen talk among themselves and stare at the Assyrians outside,
+who cannot be seen by those within the city. The gates remain open a
+little</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>impatiently</i>). What is thy tale, Haggith?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress has slain Holofernes in his tent in the night, and
+the power of Assyria is undone.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>astounded</i>). Slain Holofernes! Thou art mad in thy raving.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>to</i> Ingur). Open the mouth of the sack, and let my lord behold
+the head of Holofernes and see that I am mad. (<i>To soldier</i>.) A torch,
+that the Lord Ozias may discover the manner of my raving.</p>
+
+<p>(Ozias <i>looks into the sack and sees the head of</i> Holofernes.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. And my mistress is the right hand of the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!</p>
+
+<p>VOICES (<i>deeply moved</i>). His name shall live for ever.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. How did thy mistress accomplish this mighty deed?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. AS for that, she will tell it to my lord with her own voice
+when she shall come. And now will my lord give ear to the commands of
+the lady Judith, which she doth lay upon my lord by me, Haggith? First,
+the head of Holofernes shall be set upon a spear on the highest wall in
+the great square before the temple. So shall all the Israelites know
+that God yet watcheth over Israel. (<i>To the soldiers</i>.) Take the sack
+and do as my lady hath ordained by me, Haggith.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to men, who hesitate</i>). Take the sack. It is my command.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exeunt two men, L., with sack</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Next, ye shall send men for water to the wells beneath the city
+that all may drink, for already the Assyrians are fled from the wells,
+knowing that Holofernes is dead. And ye shall send forth all your army
+into the valley to fall upon the Assyrians, for they are afraid of the
+judgment of God, and none dare abide in the sight of his neighbour.
+Neither can they stand against the chosen race of God.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to First Soldier</i>). Let every armed man in the city be roused,
+and publish the order of Ozias that the Captains lead their bands
+swiftly into the valley by the secret way to fall upon the Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit First Soldier and another, with joyous cries, L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Thus hath the lady Judith spoken by me, Haggith.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Whither is thy mistress gone, and why does she tarry?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress is hidden in a sure place in the valley, for there
+is one among the Assyrians who fears not God. And he is Bagoas, the
+chief eunuch of Holofernes, and he has sworn an oath to kill my
+mistress, for that by guile she did cut off the head of Holofernes. And
+Bagoas searches for my mistress in the folds of the valley. But he will
+not find her.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>perturbed</i>). How knowst thou that he will not find her?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Because the Lord of Israel is a sharp sword and protecteth his
+servants.... And also because my mistress is most cunningly hidden.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Charmis, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>joyously excited</i>). What is the miracle that I hear, Ozias?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>blandly</i>). There is no miracle; but that which I had planned
+with the lady Judith has come to pass. Take women and old men Charmis,
+and go ye to the wells and bring water to the city, for the wells are
+delivered into my hands.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>hesitating</i>). Women and old men? But the onslaught against the
+Assyrians of which I hear?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>imperiously</i>). Go quickly. For who is the governor of this city?
+Is it thou or is it I? </p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit</i> Charmis, <i>L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Men and women have gathered joyously in the street</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>VOICES (<i>mockingly, indicating</i> Ingur, <i>with a tendency to horseplay</i>).
+The Assyrian! The Assyrian!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Take him to the guard-house and chain him to Achior.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. He shall not go, lord Ozias. For as my mistress beguiled
+Holofernes, so did I beguile Ingur, and he is my slave. But I have not
+cut off his head, and he is dear to me because I have not cut off his
+head. And he is mine, and let none touch him (<i>looking at the
+soldiers</i>), or my anger, which is the anger of the lady Judith, shall be
+upon that man. (<i>Hearing a noise, she glances at the house</i>.) What do I
+see? The sluts are in the tent of my mistress, which is forbidden them.
+Out, sluts! (<i>Exit angrily into the house</i>!)</p>
+
+<p>(Ingur <i>follows her quickly for protection</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Messenger.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And you?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER (<i>saluting</i>). Do my eyes behold the great lord Ozias,
+governor of Bethulia?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Your eyes behold him.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. It is not yet dawn, nevertheless the streets of the city are
+full of a great going and coming, but I found none to lead me to the
+house of the lord Ozias. Yet when I saw my lord's visage my heart said:
+'This is he.'</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What is your affair with me?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. I am a messenger.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>curtly</i>). Speak quickly, for the government of this city in this
+hour is no common matter, and the whole charge of it lies upon me.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. And I am no common messenger. I come with wings through the
+night from Jerusalem, from Joachim, the high priest.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Ah! (<i>Changing his tone and beckoning the messenger aside</i>.) What
+tidings do you bear?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. I bear the licence from Joachim.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What licence?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. The licence for the people of Bethulia to drink the wine
+which is sanctified and reserved to the priests which serve the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>affecting to be puzzled</i>). Who hath demanded this licence from
+Joachim?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER (<i>surprised</i>). The lord Ozias sent a messenger to Jerusalem to
+beseech that the licence should be granted. And my lord's messenger
+travelled so swiftly that in the moment when he reached the temple at
+Jerusalem he fell sick and vomited, and I have come to Bethulia in his
+place, for after he had vomited he unfolded to me the secret way
+into the city.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>grandly</i>). It is true. In the heavy multitude of my cares I had
+forgotten this matter of the licence.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER (<i>confidentially</i>). And Joachim hath bidden me to say privily
+that if any have already in their extremity drunk of the sanctified wine
+it shall be denied utterly&mdash;for the sake of the church.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Ah!</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. And here is the licence. (<i>Offering it</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Friend, keep the licence and render it back to Joachim, the high
+priest in Jerusalem. For I need it not, and I demanded it only by excess
+of prudence such as becomes the governor of a city besieged and
+thirsting. But we Bethulians are a faithful and a constant people, and
+we have trusted in the Most High. And if perchance any have drunk of the
+sanctified wine unknown to me (<i>with a grimace</i>)&mdash;it shall be denied
+utterly, for the sake of seemliness.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. But in the days of trial to come, will not the lord Ozias
+have need of the licence?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>grandly</i>). Friend, return ye to Joachim and say to him that the
+Lord has delivered Bethulia from the Assyrians by the subtlety of his
+servant Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER (<i>amazed</i>). What says my lord?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Yea, this night the head of Holofernes is set on a spear in the
+square before the temple, and the Assyrians flee one from another in
+disorder, and my hosts are about to descend upon them and rend them to
+pieces where they stand foolishly in the valley.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. But this thing is marvellous beyond the understanding of man!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is indeed marvellous.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. And when Joachim enquires of me who hath taken Holofernes the
+great captain to behead him, and by what device, what shall I answer to
+Joachim?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. You will answer that Ozias, knowing the weakness of Holofernes,
+sent down to him secretly a woman, a certain Judith of Bethulia, and
+upon the counsel of Ozias the woman by wiles compassed the death of
+Holofernes as I have told you.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. It is a tale which fathers shall tell to their children, and
+to their children's children, and men shall wonder thereat for all time.
+And now your servant will say to you a thing which has not been told to
+him but which his ear has heard. It was said among the mighty that if my
+lord Ozias should save Judea from the heathen, he would receive notable
+advancement and be raised up among the great ones of the land. (Ozias
+<i>bows</i>.) Yet will Joachim not be astonished, for it was spoken in
+Jerusalem that among all the Israelites there is none like the lord
+Ozias for cunning and obstinacy in defence.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>nettled</i>). Nevertheless it is meet that Joachim should be
+astonished, for with five thousand have I set at naught one hundred and
+two and thirty thousand, and in the chronicles of Israel there is
+written down no deed to match the delivery of Judea from the Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. The God of Israel hath saved Israel.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The God of Israel hath save Israel,&mdash;by my hand. Go ye, and when
+you have eaten and drunk, set ye forth again for Jerusalem.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The Messenger salutes and exit, L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Throughout this scene excited and joyous men and women frequently pass
+the street in twos and threes</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Dawn is breaking and the torches begin to pale</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith <i>and</i> Ingur <i>from the house.</i></p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Where art thou going?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Lord Ozias, I came up from the valley to bring water, and to
+give tidings. Now I go down again to the valley with Ingur and his men
+to seek out my mistress, and to take new raiment to her, and lead her to
+the city; for since the Israelites are fallen upon the Assyrians, my
+mistress is no longer in danger.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Achior.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Slave, who hath dared to loose thee?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. There was none left to guard, and I came forth.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to a soldier</i>). Seize this fellow and bind him with fetters.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The torches are by this time extinguished</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Lord, it cannot be so. For the lady Judith commanded me to
+bring Achior also, for her protection, seeing that the youth came from
+the Assyrians at the bidding of the God of Israel to give comfort to
+Israel, and for a sign to my mistress.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>after a pause</i>). I also will go with you, for it is right that
+the governor should do honour to the lady Judith.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me to say to the lord Ozias that he
+should remain in the city to prepare for her a welcome. (<i>She points to
+the gates and</i> Achior <i>gladly moves forward. She takes</i> Ingur <i>by the
+ear</i>.) Bestir thy legs, booby!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The subtlety of women is past knowing.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>at the gates, maliciously</i>). It may be. But would the lord
+Ozias invite the displeasure of my mistress? It is day. Let my lord sit
+in the sun.</p>
+
+<br />
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="ACT_III_SCENE_II">SCENE II</a></h3>
+
+
+<p>SCENE: <i>The same</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Charmis <i>is alone at the open gates. Glimpses are caught of the people
+beyond the gates</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>Afternoon of the same day</i>.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>entering to</i> Charmis, <i>at the gates</i>). They say there is now
+much water in Bethulia.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. Seeing that I have toiled mightily seven hours this day in
+charge of six score crazy carriers to carry water up from the wells!
+Would that Ozias had granted me a whip to sharpen their brains! And now
+Ozias hath left me in charge of the gates.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Where is Ozias, and what does he do?</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. He stands here beyond the gates to receive Judith and the women
+who have gone forth to meet her.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. What is the deed of Judith? (<i>The noise of an approaching
+procession is heard</i>. Charmis, <i>ignoring</i> Chabris, <i>goes a little
+outside the gates to watch.</i> Chabris <i>continues in a louder voice</i>.) The
+streets of the city are empty. I say the streets of the city are empty.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. Dodderer! The whole city is afoot on the hill-side, and all the
+Assyrians left alive are fled in panic into the East.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Then I will return to my house and drink again. No! I will
+remain, and my eyes shall regard the women, as of old. </p>
+
+<p><i>Enter through the gates a procession of women (including</i> Rahel),
+<i>waving branches. At the end of the procession come</i> Haggith <i>and</i>
+Ingur, <i>and finally</i> Judith, <i>with</i> Achior <i>on one hand, and </i> Ozias <i>on
+the other. Townspeople and soldiers, garlanded, follow the procession</i>.</p>
+
+<p>BALLET.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Judith). O daughter, blessed be thou above all the women of
+the earth. Thou art the exaltation of Jerusalem and the great glory of
+Israel, for the Lord hath directed thee to the cutting off of the head
+of the chief of our enemies, and thou hast revenged our ruin.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. So be it.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Holofernes came out of the mountains from the north, and his
+horsemen covered the hills; and he bragged that he would burn up the
+borders of Israel, and kill her young men with the sword, and make the
+virgins as a spoil. But the Almighty Lord hath disappointed the
+Assyrians by the hand of a woman; and my sandals ravished the eye of
+Holofernes, and my beauty took his mind prisoner, and the knife passed
+through his neck. Let all creatures serve the Lord! </p>
+
+<p>VOICES. So be it!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Charmis, I appoint you to lead the people to the Temple, where
+are the banners of the Assyrians which we have captured this day, and
+each woman shall take a banner, and all shall return to this place
+before the house of the Lady Judith.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>swollen with pride</i>). I obey, lord Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The procession begins to move away, L</i>. Haggith <i>displays her
+importance and bullies</i> Ingur, <i>who accompanies her</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>RAHEL (<i>to</i> Chabris). What, grandad! You are abroad once more! (<i>She
+takes him with her like a disobedient child</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exeunt, processionally, all except</i> Judith, Ozias <i>and</i> Achior.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Achior). Thou goest not with the people?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Achior). Stay, I pray you, Achior.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Judith, <i>with growing excitement</i>). I wish to speak privily
+with the lady Judith, <i>now</i>!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Let us speak here.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Shall we not go into your house, you and I?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. My house is not ready to receive you, Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Let it be so. But before Achior I will not speak.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Achior, go into my house, and do honour to my dwelling, and
+repose in it.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. Gladly, O lady! (<i>Exit into the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. What is the urgency that oppresses you, Ozias, and why are you
+troubled in the hour of triumph?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>losing control of himself</i>). Who is the heathen Achior that you
+should prefer him and make your mouth sweet to him?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Leave Achior, and let us come at once to the matter that
+presses.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Oh! I will not speak smoothly for a pretence! Thou knowest that
+my jealousy smokes against Achior. Yea, and against Holofernes also.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But Holofernes is dead.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Before he went down to his place, didst thou not sin with him?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. As the Lord liveth, my countenance deceived him to his
+destruction, yet did he not shame me.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Blessed be our God!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But how does this matter touch thee, and what is my virtue in
+thy regard?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Let Holofernes suffice thee, and drive not me also to death with
+the softness of thy voice. Art thou not aware that the soul of my soul
+burns for thee and will not wait&mdash;the more so since thou hast done a
+mighty deed and art proved a woman beyond all women?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Nay! I have done naught; but the Lord hath saved Israel by <i>thy</i>
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What is this humbleness?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. AS I came towards the city with Achior, the messenger from
+Jerusalem met us in the way, and he was full to bursting of the word of
+Ozias, and that Ozias had delivered Israel, and that what I did I did
+by thy device and at thy command. But the messenger in speaking knew not
+that he spoke to Judith, and I let him go.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Judith&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Yet it seems to me that thou wast ignorant of all that which I
+went out to do, and my plan was hidden from thee.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>powerfully persuasive</i>). Hearken to me, Judith. I swear it was
+for thee that I boasted. My aim was that thy mighty deed should gain
+preferment in Jerusalem. But thou art a woman and therefore preferment
+is not for thee. Yet now by reason of my boasting I shall be greatly
+advanced and lifted up, and in all Judea there will be none higher than
+me, and thus wilt thou also be advanced and lifted up.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I desire no preferment.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. But I would have it in thy behalf; and my appetite is double. I
+rage for glory and dominion, and I rage also for thee. And I will offer
+thee glory and dominion, for I seek these things as a gift to thy
+beauty. And if I cannot lay them on thy lap my heel shall spurn mankind
+and I will tread it to dust. My desires are terrible; they will not be
+withstood; they consume me daily, but daily I am renewed. I am on fire,
+but by the fierceness of the fire I am strengthened. I was conceived
+for greatness and my mother bore me for mastery, and the huge earth
+shall shake with the terror of my commands.... And I am held between thy
+fingers.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I deny not thy greatness.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Surely thou canst not. For thou too art great. And my greatness
+yearns to thine.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Wilt thou listen?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I hear.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. With this greatness of thine goes deceit and laxity of mind.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Yet when thou didst thy mighty deed didst thou not deceive
+cruelly?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I deceived not for myself, but for Israel; and my guile was for
+the glory of God. But thy heart is set only upon advancement and power,
+which is corruption.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Judith, canst thou not lift thy thoughts beyond good and evil,
+and canst thou not contemplate the marvellous greatness of man? I will
+abase myself before none but thee, and in my ear there is no commandment
+but thine; and all other decrees will I mock. I would have thee in
+marriage, and I would have no other but thee. Wilt thou take me to
+thee, and wilt thou yield thyself without fear to the terrible flame of
+my love? For thus shalt thou fulfil thyself and me. But give heed before
+thou answerest, and know that if thou turnest from me, I will make all
+the nations of the earth to tremble with my fury.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Thou art great also in thy loving.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Once thou didst love me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Nay! I but looked upon thee in kindness. But now I will not go
+to thee in marriage.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>half admiring</i>). Thou art not then afraid of my wrath!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I am Judith.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>with a fresh access of violence</i>). Thou hungerest for Achior.
+Wouldst thou marry a heathen, thou a Hebrew woman?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. And thou, if I had not accomplished the will of the Lord, and if
+thou hadst been carried to Babylon as thou saidst, wouldst thou not have
+denied the Most High and gone after other gods? But Achior believeth in
+our God, and this day will be joined into the house of Israel. </p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>savagely scornful</i>). What is Achior but a simpleton!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It may be. But I love him and he shall rule me ... for he came
+hither for a sign from the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>savagely resentful</i>). Oh! If I did not love thee, would I not
+undo thee!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Thou! Thou art Ozias, but I am she who cut off the head of a
+mightier than thou, even Holofernes in his tent. Go thy ways and fulfil
+greatness. As for me I will remain obediently in my house, and truth and
+righteousness shall reign in my house.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The procession returns, the women bearing the banners of the
+Assyrians</i>. Achior <i>enters from the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>is crowned with olives</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. And now let the priests and the elders enter with me into my
+house, and Achior shall follow them, so that he may be received into
+Israel, and I will be betrothed to him with all the ceremonies of the
+law, for he came to me as a messenger from God. And when the marriage
+has been performed, I will submit myself to him as a wife to her
+husband. </p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. And let Ingur also be received into Israel, for he has repented
+of his idolatries. And he shall be my husband, yet shall he not rule me.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Brethren, hearken! This night I go to Jerusalem, for I am called
+to higher things, because I have delivered Israel. And I shall not
+return to this little city; but ye will have tidings of me in the years
+to come, and ye will say proudly to the strangers within your gates: He
+was a Bethulian and once he ruled over us.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. The lord Ozias is called to greatness. Peace go with him.</p>
+
+<p>ALL. So be it.</p>
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12794 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #12794 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12794)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Judith, by Arnold Bennett
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Judith
+
+Author: Arnold Bennett
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2004 [EBook #12794]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JUDITH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Sander van Rijnswou and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+_NOVELS_
+
+
+A MAN FROM THE NORTH
+ANNA OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+LEONORA
+A GREAT MAN
+SACRED AND PROFANE LOVE
+WHOM GOD HATH JOINED
+BURIED ALIVE
+THE OLD WIVES' TALE
+THE GLIMPSE
+THE ROLL CALL
+HELEN WITH THE HIGH HAND
+CLAYHANGER
+HILDA LESSWAYS
+THE CARD
+THE REGENT
+THE PRICE OF LOVE
+THESE TWAIN
+THE LION'S SHARE
+THE PRETTY LADY
+
+
+_FANTASIES_
+
+
+THE GRAND BABYLON HOTEL
+THE GATES OF WRATH
+THERESA OF WATLING STREET
+THE LOOT OF CITIES
+HUGO
+THE GHOST
+THE CITY OF PLEASURE
+
+
+_SHORT STORIES_
+
+
+TALES OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+THE GRIM SMILE OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+THE MATADOR OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+
+
+_BELLES-LETTRES_
+
+
+JOURNALISM FOR WOMEN
+FAME AND FICTION
+HOW TO BECOME AN AUTHOR
+THE TRUTH ABOUT AN AUTHOR
+MENTAL EFFICIENCY
+HOW TO LIVE ON TWENTY-FOUR HOURS A DAY
+THE HUMAN MACHINE
+LITERARY TASTE
+FRIENDSHIP AND HAPPINESS
+THOSE UNITED STATES
+PARIS NIGHTS
+MARRIED LIFE
+LIBERTY
+OVER THERE: WAR SCENES
+THE AUTHORS CRAFT
+BOOKS AND PERSONS
+SELF AND SELF-MANAGEMENT
+
+
+_DRAMA_
+
+
+POLITE FARCES
+CUPID AND COMMONSENSE
+WHAT THE PUBLIC WANTS
+THE HONEYMOON
+THE TITLE
+THE GREAT ADVENTURE
+MILESTONES (In Collaboration with Edward Knoblock)
+
+_In Collaboration with Eden Phillpotts_
+
+THE SINEWS OF WAR: A ROMANCE
+THE STATUE: A ROMANCE
+
+
+
+
+*JUDITH*
+
+A PLAY IN THREE ACTS
+
+_Founded on the apocryphal book of "Judith"_
+
+
+BY
+
+ARNOLD BENNETT
+
+
+
+
+LONDON
+
+1919
+
+_First published April 30, 1919_
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+This play was presented for the first time at the Devonshire Park
+Theatre, Eastbourne, on Monday, April 7th, 1919, with the following
+cast:
+
+Judith LILLAH MCCARTHY
+Haggith ESMÉ HUBBARD
+Rahel MADGE MURRAY
+Ozias CAMPBELL GULLAN
+Holofernes CLAUDE KING
+Bagoas ERNEST THESIGER
+Achior GEOFFREY DOUGLAS
+Chabris E.H. PATERSON
+Charmis FEWLASS LLEWELLYN
+Ingur FREDERICK VOLPE
+Messenger FELIX AYLMER
+Soldier CLIFFORD MOLLISON
+Attendant EDWIN OXLEE
+
+The play was produced by WILFRED EATON
+
+
+
+
+
+CHARACTERS
+
+
+_Hebrews_
+
+JUDITH
+HAGGITH, her waiting-woman
+RAHEL
+OZIAS, Governor of Bethulia
+CHABRIS, an elder
+CHARMIS, an elder
+A SOLDIER
+A MESSENGER
+
+
+_Assyrians_
+
+HOLOFERNES, General of the Assyrian armies
+BAGOAS, his chief eunuch
+ACHIOR, a captain
+INGUR, a soldier
+AN ATTENDANT ON BAGOAS
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+_A street in the city of Bethulia_.
+
+
+ACT II
+
+SCENE I. _The valley near the Assyrian camp. Time, morning; two days later_.
+
+SCENE II. _The tent of Holofernes. Time, later, the same morning_.
+
+SCENE III. _The same. Time, the same night_.
+
+
+ACT III
+
+SCENE I. _Same as Act I. Time, later, the same night._
+
+SCENE II. _The same. Time, the next day_.
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+_A street in the city of Bethulia in Judea. Bethulia is in the hill
+country, overlooking the great plain of Jezreel to the south-west. Back,
+the gates of the city, hiding the view of the plain. Right, Judith's
+house, with a tent on the roof. Left, houses. The street turns abruptly,
+back left, along the wall of the city. Left centre, a built-up
+vantage-point, from which the plain can be seen over the gates_.
+
+TIME: _Fifth century B.C.
+
+Towards evening_.
+
+Ozias _is standing alone in the street, drinking from a leathern bottle.
+Enter_ Chabris, _back left_.
+
+OZIAS _(quickly, but with perfect calmness, hiding the bottle in his
+garments_). Old man! It is years since I saw you. How came you past the
+guard, old man?
+
+CHABRIS. Old? Old? I am not yet a hundred. Who are you?
+
+OZIAS. Ozias.
+
+CHABRIS. Ah! So this is Ozias, the son of Ezbon. Before your father
+could walk I have nursed him on my knee; and he was filled like the full
+moon--with naughtiness.
+
+OZIAS. What has brought you at last out of your house? Are you come to
+prophesy once more?
+
+CHABRIS. I have given up prophesying.
+
+OZIAS. A profession full of risks.
+
+CHABRIS. I pass my endless days in meditation and solitude.
+
+OZIAS. That sounds much safer. How comely is the wisdom of old men!
+
+CHABRIS. And what do you do, sprig?
+
+OZIAS. Has none told you?
+
+CHABRIS. I see nobody but my daughter's granddaughter, and her I forbid
+to speak to me, because being a woman she has the tongue of a woman, and
+a woman's tongue is unfavourable to meditation. How should I be told?
+
+OZIAS. I am the governor of this great city of Bethulia.
+
+CHABRIS. You are responsible for this city?
+
+OZIAS. I am.
+
+CHABRIS. Now I understand my misfortune. And the truth was in me when I
+said to your mother as she lay dying: Better it is to die without
+children than to have them that are ungodly.
+
+OZIAS. Oh! How comely a thing is the judgment of grey hairs!
+
+CHABRIS. You ask me what has brought me at last out of my house. I will
+tell you. Thirst! Thirst has brought me out of my house. Every morning
+and every evening my great-grandchild serves me with pulse and water.
+For five days she has furnished less and less water, and this day--not a
+drop! Can one eat pulse without water to drink? Half an hour ago I went
+to her to reason with her, and she lay on her bed cracked, and raved
+that she herself had not drunk for three days and that there was no
+water left in all Bethulia. So I came at last out of my house into the
+streets of this city famous for its cool fountains which never fail. And
+lo! I meet the governor of this city, and he is Ozias! Ozias! Seven days
+do men mourn for him that is dead, but for an ungodly man all the days
+of his life! Why is there no water in Bethulia, sprig?
+
+OZIAS. Old man, meditation is good and solitude is good, but think not
+because you sit staring all day at your own belly that the sun and stars
+have ceased to revolve round the earth and the kings of this world to
+make war. Is it possible that you do not know what has happened?
+
+CHABRIS. I only know that I cannot eat pulse without water to drink.
+
+OZIAS. Bethulia is besieged.
+
+CHABRIS. Who is besieging Bethulia?
+
+OZIAS. Holofernes.
+
+CHABRIS. I have never heard his name. Who is he?
+
+OZIAS. Never heard the name of the chief captain of Nebuchadnezzar? Have
+you heard the name of Nebuchadnezzar, by chance?
+
+CHABRIS. I seem to remember it.
+
+OZIAS. Come up here. (_They go up the steps to the vantage-point_.)
+Look! A hundred and twenty thousand foot-soldiers. Twelve thousand
+archers on horseback. Oxen and sheep for their provisions. Twenty
+thousand asses for their carriages. Camels without number. Infinite
+victuals; and very much gold and silver. The like was never seen before.
+
+CHABRIS (_stepping down_.) Why has Nebuchadnezzar set about this thing?
+What harm has Bethulia done to him?
+
+OZIAS. Much harm. Nebuchadnezzar has decided to be God. He has decreed
+that all nations and tribes shall call upon him as God. And he has
+conquered the whole earth, excepting only Judea; and Bethulia is the
+gate into Judea, and Bethulia has not listened to his decree, and I am
+the governor of Bethulia. So Nebuchadnezzar the great king is very angry
+and Holofernes is the tool of his wrath.
+
+CHABRIS (_going up the steps again and gazing_.) How many did you say?
+
+OZIAS. A hundred and twenty thousand foot and twelve thousand horse.
+
+CHABRIS. At any rate this will be the last war.
+
+OZIAS. Why?
+
+CHABRIS. Why! Because plainly war cannot continue on such a scale. Or if
+it does, mankind is destroyed. Nebuchadnezzar has rendered war
+ridiculous.
+
+OZIAS _(laughs; then half to himself, sarcastically)._ What is heavier
+than lead, and what is the name thereof, but an aged fool?
+
+CHABRIS (_descending again, self-centred_). It remains that I cannot eat
+pulse without water to drink. (_To_ Ozias.) And surely Bethulia has more
+wells than any other city of Judea.
+
+OZIAS. The wells are at the foot of the hills, and Holofernes has
+seized them all.
+
+CHABRIS. That is not fighting.
+
+OZIAS. It is war.
+
+CHABRIS. No, no! In my time soldiers fought fairly.
+
+OZIAS. And killed each other. Why should Holofernes sacrifice thousands
+of lives to take the heights when he can reach the same result by
+letting his men sit still and watch?
+
+CHABRIS. I say this is not war. Once I travelled many days to Nineveh.
+It is a city of extravagance, and when I beheld its mad, new-fangled
+ways, I knew that the last day was nigh. I was right. Three thousand and
+five hundred years since Jehovah created Adam, and Eve from his rib ...
+Too long! Too long! And what is pulse without water? I must have water.
+
+OZIAS. It is thirty-four days since Holofernes took the wells. If you
+have received water up to yesterday your great-grandchild must indeed
+have thirsted that you might drink. I have distributed water by measure,
+but now the cisterns are empty, and women and young men fall down in the
+streets, and there is no water in Bethulia. We are all in like case, the
+high and the lowly.
+
+CHABRIS. Then give me your bottle.
+
+OZIAS. What bottle?
+
+CHABRIS. I saw you put it from your lips as I came.
+
+OZIAS. It behoves you to understand, old man, that my solemn duty as
+governor is to maintain my own strength, for if I fell the city would
+fall. Without me to inspire them the populace would yield in a moment.
+What is the populace? Poltroons, animals, sheep, rabbits, insects, lice!
+
+CHABRIS. Give me the bottle.
+
+OZIAS. It is as empty as the cisterns.
+
+CHABRIS. Give it to me, or I will cry through the streets that you are
+concealing water. (Ozias _gives him the bottle_. Chabris _drinks_. Ozias
+_snatches the bottle away and conceals it_.) Ah!
+
+(_A figure is glimpsed in the tent on the roof of_ Judith's _house_.
+Ozias _starts_.)
+
+CHABRIS. What is that up yonder?
+
+OZIAS. Nothing.
+
+CHABRIS. Whose house is this?
+
+OZIAS. It is the house of Judith, the daughter of Merari.
+
+CHABRIS. Ah! Merari, the son of Ox, the son of Oziel--Oziel and I were
+little playful boys together--the son of Elcia, the son of Raphaim, the
+son of Eliab, the son of Nathanael, the son of----
+
+OZIAS. Old man, your memory is terrible. Have pity!
+
+CHABRIS. The draught has revived me. So Merari married and had a
+daughter. What manner of woman is she?
+
+OZIAS. She is the widow of Manasses, who died of the heat in the barley
+harvest. And she is childless. And she is very rich; for Manasses left
+her gold and silver and menservants and maid-servants and cattle and
+lands. And she has remained a widow in her house three years and four
+months, and never has she come forth. And there is none to give her an
+ill word, for she fears the Lord greatly.
+
+CHABRIS. Yes. But what _manner_ of woman is she?
+
+OZIAS. She is beautiful to behold.
+
+CHABRIS (_to himself_). Oh! _That_ manner of woman!
+
+OZIAS. And she has fasted all the days of her widowhood, except the eves
+of the Sabbaths and the Sabbaths, and the eves of the new moons and the
+new moons, and the feasts and solemn days of the House of Israel.
+
+CHABRIS. You are most deeply versed in her life. Is she exceeding
+beautiful?
+
+OZIAS. She is exceeding beautiful.
+
+CHABRIS. Then it was she who _peeped_ (_with a peculiar emphasis on the
+word_) from the tent a moment since.
+
+OZIAS. Old man, you have eyes.
+
+CHABRIS. It is the draught of water.
+
+OZIAS. She is said to take the air in her tent daily at this hour.
+
+CHABRIS (_accusingly_). And that is why you are here, Ozias.
+
+OZIAS. No! I come here to reflect upon my plans for the saving of the
+city, and because of this vantage-point, to view the army of the
+Assyrians.
+
+CHABRIS. This vantage-point is new since my day. You have built it
+here, not to see the Assyrians, but to see Judith. And that is why you
+have set a guard to keep the street empty.
+
+OZIAS. And if it be so, what then? Old man, you are so old that to
+confess in your ear is sweet, like murmuring secrets into the grave. If
+I do come to this place to watch for the marvellous vision of Judith,
+what then?
+
+CHABRIS. What then? And the populace of Bethulia dying of thirst?
+
+OZIAS. The populace!... Mice! Rats! Beetles! (_He makes the motion of
+crushing with his foot_.)
+
+CHABRIS. Yet the city is doomed. You can have no hope.
+
+OZIAS. No hope? Am I then a dead body? Am I a rotting corpse? True, the
+city will be taken, and when the city is taken I may be killed. But in
+your meditations, old man, has it not occurred to you that death must be
+highly interesting? Or I may be seized for a slave. But either I should
+cease speedily to be a slave, or I should become the most powerful slave
+in Babylon. (_Reflectively_.) We might be enslaved together.
+
+CHABRIS. Who?
+
+OZIAS. Judith and I. The history of the world is full of miracles.
+Meanwhile, I live, and the strong savour of life inflames my nostrils;
+and the ever-increasing magnificence and terror of war is like wine in
+my mouth. I shake with delight at the vastness and the mystery of the
+future.... And there is woman!
+
+CHABRIS. I feel I can eat my pulse now.
+
+OZIAS. There is still woman.
+
+_A fracas is heard, back. Enter_ Rahel, _running, followed by two
+soldiers and a mixed group of Bethulians, including_ Charmis, _an
+elder_.
+
+RAHEL (_to_ Chabris, _like a termagant_). Why did you go forth alone,
+grandad, frightening me when I looked and could not find you? At your
+age! Come back with me this moment.
+
+CHABRIS. Ay! There is still woman!
+
+OZIAS (_angrily, to_ first soldier). Did I not give an order to bar the
+street?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. My lord, some of these are elders of high authority, and
+would pass. As for the girl----
+
+RAHEL (_to_ Chabris). This moment! (_She faints and falls_.)
+
+CHABRIS (_indifferently, as_ Charmis _moves towards_ Rahel). Let her
+lie. She will come to of herself--or not, as God wills.
+
+OZIAS (_to the soldiers, with cold fierceness_). Get back to your
+places. (_Exeunt soldiers_.)
+
+CHARMIS (_looking at_ Ozias _and indicating_ Rahel). She is the
+fourteenth I have seen faint from thirst in the streets this day.
+
+OZIAS (_soothingly_). Alas! And you or I may be the next. We are all in
+like case. But what is to be done?
+
+(_Confused feeble exclamations from the group of citizens:_ 'We want to
+know. We are come for that. There is but one thing to be done.')
+
+OZIAS (_still soothingly_). Who among you will be the spokesman?
+
+CHARMIS. We are all spokesmen.
+
+OZIAS. Even the children?
+
+CHARMIS. Even the children. In our extremity we are all spokesmen.
+
+OZIAS. But not all at once. Will you begin, honourable Charmis? You know
+that I am the servant of the citizens.
+
+CHARMIS (_nervously oratorical_). Lord Ozias, may the God of Israel
+judge between us and you, for you have done us a great injury. (_Looks
+round for approval. The group approves._)
+
+OZIAS. An injury? I? Have I not said that I am the servant of the
+citizens?
+
+CHARMIS (_more confidently_). And I say again that you have done us a
+great injury, in that you have not asked peace of the Assyrians. For we
+have no helper, and the God of Israel has sold us into the hands of the
+Assyrians. We are thrown down before them with thirst and with great
+destruction. Therefore now we demand--(_looks round_)--I say we demand
+that you call the Assyrians, and deliver the whole city for a spoil to
+the people of Holofernes and to all his army. For it is better for us to
+be made a spoil than to die of thirst. We will be the slaves of
+Holofernes, so that our souls may live and so that we may not see the
+death of our infants before our eyes, nor our wives nor our children
+die. (_A mother in the group convulsively seizes her child. Pause_.
+Ozias _walks about_.) We take to witness against you the heaven and the
+earth and our God and the God of our fathers, which punishes us
+according to our sins and the sins of our fathers; and we demand of you
+that you deliver up the city to Holofernes and his host. (_A silence_.)
+
+(Ozias _ascends solemnly to the vantage-point._)
+
+OZIAS (_dominating the assembly_). Friends, it would seem that Charmis
+has made an end. His words are excellent and full of pity. Who follows
+him? Who will speak next? My ear waits. (_A silence_.) Ah! Then give
+heed. The words of Charmis are full of pity, but I also have pity. Do
+not I too cherish our women, and our maidens and our young children? And
+because I pity I would not yield to the monster Holofernes. Yes, the
+monster! This is not war that he wages. Once our enemy strove fairly
+with the warriors of Israel. Now he makes our women and children to die
+of thirst. The magnificence of war is gone from the earth, and
+Holofernes by the excess of his hosts has rendered war ridiculous.
+(Chabris _raises his hands_.) The peoples of the earth will perceive
+that henceforward the institution of war cannot continue, and after this
+there will be no more war. But meanwhile, if I go crouching to the feet
+of Holofernes, what will happen and what will come to pass? Surely it
+will come to pass that the monster who has sat down to watch us die of
+thirst will slay our little children and our old men, and dishonour our
+women, and ravish our innocent virgins; for the enslaving of the
+conquered will not content his anger nor satisfy the lust of his great
+hosts. Shall these things be? I say they shall not be. But what am I,
+save the servant of the citizens of Bethulia? And what do I speak, save
+the thought that is in your hearts? There is no cowardice in you. You
+are not sheep, nor rabbits, nor beetles, nor lice. You are valiant men,
+and women lion-hearted. Without you I am naught, and if I defy
+Holofernes, my fortitude is yours and my resolve springs from you.
+Charmis has invoked the holy name of the God of Israel. Let Israel not
+forget its God, for never has the Most High forsaken Israel. Brethren,
+be of good courage. Let us yet endure five days. Five short days. And if
+these days pass and the God of Israel turn not his mercy towards us,
+then will I do according to the word of Charmis. Such is my oath to you.
+And so it shall be.
+
+Haggith _enters from the house of_ Judith.
+
+HAGGITH. My lord Ozias!
+
+OZIAS (_quickly descending the steps_). What say you?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress, the lady Judith, will speak with you. She comes.
+
+RAHEL (_half rising_). Water!
+
+OZIAS (_excited_.) The lady Judith comes out of her house after three
+years.
+
+VOICES IN THE GROUP (_excited and impressed_.) Judith is coming, after
+three years! Judith! The widow!
+
+OZIAS (_sternly to the group_). Get hence, everyone to his own charge.
+Soldiers! Clear the street! (Two soldiers _advance, running to obey_.)
+The men to the walls and towers. The women and children to their houses.
+(_To_ Rahel, _who has risen, indicating_ Chabris.) Take the aged fool
+away, girl. (_Ruthlessly and contemptuously_.) Get home, all of you.
+Rabble! Insects! Lice!
+
+(_The street is cleared, not without difficulty, and_ Ozias _is left
+alone with_ Haggith.)
+
+_After a pause_, Judith _enters slowly, in widow's apparel and
+sackcloth_.
+
+(_Exit_ Haggith _into the house_.)
+
+JUDITH. Greetings, Lord Ozias.
+
+OZIAS. Lady, greetings. (_They salute_.)
+
+JUDITH. Where are the people?
+
+OZIAS. I invited them to go away.
+
+JUDITH. Why?
+
+OZIAS. Your waiting-woman said that you would speak with me.
+
+JUDITH. But what I have to say I would have said before them.
+
+OZIAS. Forgive your servant.
+
+JUDITH. No! It is I, the woman, who should ask to be absolved.
+
+OZIAS. I beseech you----
+
+JUDITH (_simply_). Perhaps you dismissed the people because it is not
+meet for them to see all the workings of the mind which has authority
+over them.
+
+OZIAS (_warmly responsive_). Ah! Lady! In your wisdom and your
+understanding you have comprehended what it is to be the governor of a
+besieged city. You, alone!
+
+JUDITH. This is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia.
+
+OZIAS. It is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia--because
+Judith, the widow of Manasses, has issued from her house and from her
+secrecy, and because after long years she has lightened the city with
+her countenance.
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). We hold converse with words, but the shadow of
+destruction is over us, and our hearts are darkened, and we hide our
+hearts in speech. Ozias, governor of Bethulia, show me your heart.
+
+OZIAS. I dare not.
+
+JUDITH. Dare! I am not afraid.
+
+OZIAS. YOU are more beautiful than aforetime--were it possible.
+
+JUDITH (_accepting the compliment_). And if I am?
+
+OZIAS. That is what is in my heart! Behold my heart, and the depths of
+my heart. Look deep, and deeper, and still you will see naught therein
+but the beauty and the subtlety of Judith.
+
+JUDITH. It is no common man that with the parched tongue of thirst can
+talk thus while unspeakable calamity assails the city.
+
+OZIAS. It is Ozias.
+
+JUDITH (_gently_). I came not to meet Ozias, but the governor of
+Bethulia. From my tent I hearkened to the words which he spoke to the
+people, and the Lord said to me: Go down to him, thou, a woman. And I am
+here.
+
+OZIAS. The Lord reigns! That which I said to the people did not please
+the ear of Judith?
+
+JUDITH. No.
+
+OZIAS. I spoke to the people according to their understanding. Have you
+not said it is not meet for the people to know the thoughts of the
+ruler? Hearken again? And I will speak now to the wise woman. I
+flattered the people with vain praise of their courage, when they have
+no courage. I affrighted the people with a prophecy of terror, when
+there is no terror--for Holofernes is a great warrior, and has
+compassion in his greatness, for he is a Babylonian. I gave them hope of
+succour when succour is none--for, with a hundred and twenty thousand
+footmen and twelve thousand horse against us (_with dry humour_) to
+count upon the mercy of the Lord is presumption.
+
+JUDITH (_moves aside and returns. Sweetly_). Why then did you speak thus
+to the people? And to what end did you deceive them? I beseech you yet
+again to show me your heart, for it is right that I should know.
+
+OZIAS. I saw the vastness of the future as in a vision. If the God of
+Israel perchance is merciful, and the city is saved at the eleventh
+hour, then it will be said in Jerusalem that there is none like Ozias of
+Bethulia for steadfastness, for he alone by his ardour revived the
+fainting populace and held firm the city; and great will be my
+recompense.... But that is a dream. Always I have faced the substance of
+things, and the substance is that Nebuchadnezzar has decreed to rule
+over the whole earth, and from the east to the west there is no living
+man that shall not bow down before Nebuchadnezzar. Bethulia will fall.
+I, the governor, shall be taken captive and shown to Nebuchadnezzar, and
+in that day Holofernes shall say to Nebuchadnezzar: Lo! Here is Ozias
+the Israelite who resisted thy mighty armies for thirty-four days and
+yet five days more. Use him if it seem good to thee. And I shall be
+lifted up to be a satrap of Nebuchadnezzar, and I shall partake of the
+bright glory of Nebuchadnezzar. And--(_hesitates_.)
+
+JUDITH (_subtly and sweetly_). And?
+
+OZIAS (_in an outburst_). What am I without you, O Judith? Before
+Manasses loved you, did I not love you? For three years have I not
+watched over you in all honour and respect, and troubled you not with my
+importunity until this day, which is the day of days? What am I without
+you, and what shall be my dominion and my satrap's throne if you do not
+sit in majesty by my side, O Rose of Sharon and matchless among women?
+
+Judith (_as before_). My lord, you are like a rushing river.
+
+OZIAS. You have seen my heart.
+
+JUDITH. I have seen it.
+
+OZIAS. And what say you?
+
+_There is the sudden sound of a disturbance. Enter, from back, soldiers,
+holding_ Achior, _and a group of excited citizens_. Haggith _appears at
+the house-door._
+
+OZIAS (_fiercely_). What! Are my commands no more than the wind in the
+corn, and is there to be naught but tumult within the walls of this
+city?
+
+VOICES IN THE GROUP. An Assyrian! An Assyrian!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias! We saw this man lying bound at the foot of
+the hill, and we descended and loosed him and brought him privily into
+Bethulia by the secret way. And now we present him to my lord.
+
+OZIAS Fools! Then no longer is the secret way secret.
+
+VOICES. Slay him! Stone him! Whip the dog!
+
+JUDITH (_nobly scornful, to the crowd_). Oh! Brave! Oh! Men of courage
+and high valour!
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Achior). Who are you?
+
+ACHIOR. Achior.
+
+OZIAS. Your condition?
+
+ACHIOR (_with calm, genial candour_). Captain of all the Ammonites in
+the army of Holofernes.
+
+JUDITH. Let them loose him, Lord Ozias. His eyes are not the eyes of
+treachery.
+
+OZIAS (_to the soldiers_). Loose him. (_To_ Achior.) And how come you
+here? Speak the truth--and fear.
+
+ACHIOR. My mouth shall say truth, but I will not fear.
+
+OZIAS. My hand is terrible.
+
+ACHIOR. Thus it happened. When the children of Israel had shut up the
+passages of the hill country and had fortified all the tops of the high
+hills, Holofernes was very angry. And he called the captains of Ammon
+and said to them: Tell me now, ye sons of Chanaan, who these Israelites
+are that dwell in the hill country, and wherein is their power and
+strength, and why they have determined not to come and meet me, more
+than all the inhabitants of the west? And I, Achior, answered the
+question of Holofernes.
+
+OZIAS. And what answer gave you?
+
+ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes: This people is descended of the Chaldeans.
+But they left the way of their ancestors and would not follow the gods
+of their fathers; and they worshipped the God of heaven. So they were
+cast out from the face of the gods of Chaldea, and they fled into
+Mesopotamia. And they came to Chanaan. But when a famine covered all the
+land of Chanaan they went down into Egypt, and the king of Egypt brought
+them low with labouring in brick and made them slaves. Then they cried
+to their God, and he smote all the land of Egypt with plagues.... And
+God dried the Red Sea for them.
+
+VOICES. It is true. It is true!
+
+ACHIOR. And they came to Chanaan, and drove before them the inhabitants
+of that land, and they dwelt in that country many days. And while they
+sinned not before their God they prospered, because the God that hates
+iniquity was with them.
+
+VOICES. It is true.
+
+ACHIOR. But when they departed from the way which their God appointed,
+then they were destroyed in many battles very sore, and were led
+captives into a land that was not theirs, and the temple of their God
+was cast to the ground.
+
+VOICES. Gentile dog! Shall we not render him to pieces?
+
+JUDITH. There is but one truth, brethren, whether it please or whether
+it displease.
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Achior). Make an end.
+
+ACHIOR. And I said to Holofernes: But now this people are returned to
+their God, and have possessed Jerusalem, and are seated in the hill
+country. (_With more emphasis_.) And I said further to Holofernes: Now
+therefore, my lord and governor, if there be any error in this people,
+let us go up and we shall overcome them. But if there be no iniquity in
+their nation, let my lord now pass by, lest their Lord defend them and
+we become a reproach before all the world.
+
+JUDITH. It was well said.
+
+OZIAS. Lady, it was well said--if the slave said it. (_To_ Achior.) I
+demanded of you: How came you _here_?
+
+ACHIOR. Thus. When I had finished speaking to Holofernes, all they that
+were about my lord and governor rose up in wrath and cried: Kill him.
+And the face of Holofernes darkened, and he said: And who art thou,
+Achior, that thou hast prophesied among us to-day that we should not
+make war with the people of Israel because of their God? And who is God
+but Nebuchadnezzar? Nebuchadnezzar by my hand will destroy the
+Israelites, and their God shall not deliver them. Their mountains shall
+be drunken with their blood and their fields shall be filled with their
+dead bodies. (_The_ citizens _show alarm_.) And thou, Achior, shalt be
+delivered up to the Israelites in Bethulia, and when thou seest me again
+thou shalt fall among the slain.... And he commanded his servants, and
+they took me, and carried me secretly to the foot of the hill of
+Bethulia. And here am I!
+
+OZIAS (_after a pause, positively_). It is a wicked device for our
+undoing.
+
+JUDITH. How so?
+
+OZIAS. Plainly this fellow lies, and he has come subtly with a tale to
+spy out our strength. Presently he will seek to escape from us again to
+the Assyrians.
+
+VOICES. Spy! Stone him! Rend him!
+
+ACHIOR (_to_ Ozias). To Holofernes, my lord and governor, I spoke truth;
+and to you also I speak truth. Never has my mouth lied, nor my tongue
+uttered deceit. If death is ordained for my recompense, so be it.
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Ozias). He is a fair youth, and has spoken truly and feared
+not.
+
+OZIAS (_with meaning_). Lady, he is a fair youth, and fearless. But by
+what sign know you that he has spoken truly?
+
+JUDITH. By the glance of his eyes I know.
+
+OZIAS. It is a sign that suffices not. Shall it be said that Ozias was
+deceived, and shall Ozias imperil his renown, by reason of the glance of
+a youth when he looks at a woman--even you?... And if he lies not, then
+he is a fool and his folly was great.
+
+ACHIOR. I spoke the truth to Holofernes.
+
+OZIAS (_fiercely_). But to speak truth did not content you. Having
+answered Holofernes, you must needs offer counsel to your lord and
+governor! Who were you to offer counsel to the greatest of all the
+captains of the earth? The protection of the mighty conqueror covered
+you, and lo! in your folly did you estrange yourself from him. Fool!
+
+ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes, my lord and governor, that which I was
+appointed to say--that, no more and no less.
+
+OZIAS. And who appointed you to say that which you said?
+
+JUDITH. If there be a God in Israel, and if the Lord has not abandoned
+us, may not this youth be the messenger of the Most High to bring us
+comfort, and for a warning to the vainglory of Holofernes?
+
+OZIAS (_with irony_). All is possible to the Lord. Yet may his purposes
+be hidden from us. (_To the soldiers_.) Until the Lord vouchsafe new
+wisdom to me, his servant, bind fetters about the feet of Achior, and
+take him to the house of bondage, and set a guard over him, for a spy is
+not more dangerous than a fool.
+
+CHARMIS (_springing forward_). It shall be done, Ozias.
+
+(_The soldiers begin to put chains on_ Achior.)
+
+JUDITH (_quietly_). Shame him not with fetters, lord Ozias.
+
+OZIAS (_after a pause, to the soldiers_). Unbind him! (_The soldiers
+obey_.) Take him off! Speedily! Away! All! Let none remain! Hasten, I
+say!
+
+(_Exeunt back, all except_ Ozias _and_ Judith. _As he goes_ Achior
+_kisses Judith's robe_.)
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Achior, _as he does so_). Truth-teller!
+
+(_At a sign from_ Judith, Haggith _re-enters the house_.)
+
+OZIAS. Your face is turned from me, because of the youth. Yet you came
+out to see the governor of the city, and the governor could do no other
+than I have done.
+
+JUDITH (_looking at him_). Ozias, you have shown me your heart.
+
+OZIAS. Yea!
+
+JUDITH. And in the moment when the youth came you asked of me my
+counsel.
+
+OZIAS. Yea!
+
+JUDITH. Hear me now, for the words you have spoken before the people
+this day are not right.
+
+OZIAS. What words?
+
+JUDITH. This promise that you have uttered to deliver the city to our
+enemies, unless within five days the Lord turn to help. Who are you that
+seek to stand instead of God among the children of men?
+
+OZIAS. Stand instead of God!
+
+JUDITH. Who are you that have tempted God this day? For you cannot find
+the depth of the heart of man,--how then shall you search out God or
+comprehend his purpose? Brother, provoke not the Lord our God to anger.
+For if he will not help us within these five days, he has power to
+defend us when he will, even every day. Do not bind the counsels of God.
+For God is not as man that he may be threatened, neither as the son of
+man that he should be wavering. Therefore let us wait for salvation from
+him, and he will hear our voice,--if it please him. Moreover, this city
+is the key and the gateway to all Judea. If it be obstinate in
+resistance, Judea is not defiled, but if it be taken the whole land
+shall lie waste and God will require the profanation of it at our mouth.
+
+OZIAS. All that you have spoken is truth, and there is none to gainsay
+your words. From the beginning of your days we have known your wisdom,
+and your understanding is manifest.... (_With significance_.) But we are
+thirsty.
+
+JUDITH. If we are thirsty, let us give thanks to the Lord our God, who
+tries us, even as he did our fathers.
+
+OZIAS. The people in the extremity of their thirst compelled me to an
+oath, which I will not break.
+
+JUDITH. Say you the people, Ozias? As for them, you hold them lightly,
+and they are as naught in your eyes. So much you have avowed.
+
+OZIAS (_in a new tone_). It is true. This day I hold the people lightly.
+But when the great madness and desperation of thirst comes at last upon
+them, who shall hold them? In that day they will seize the things
+forbidden, and they will drink the wine sanctified and reserved for the
+priests that serve the Lord. And to avert from me the wrath of Joachim,
+the high priest of Jerusalem, I have sent already a messenger to
+Jerusalem to bring a licence that this matter may be lawful.
+
+JUDITH (_shocked_). Nay!
+
+OZIAS. I say it will be so.
+
+JUDITH. It shall not be so.
+
+OZIAS. Then pray you to the Most High for the city, even for all of us,
+and the Lord will send rain for our cisterns and we shall faint no more.
+Pray, for you are a godly woman, and the God of Israel shall listen.
+
+JUDITH (_with supreme impressiveness_). Hear me again, Ozias. This night
+I will do a thing which shall go throughout all the generations to the
+children of Israel. You shall stand this night in the gate of the city,
+and I will go forth from the city with my waiting-woman; and within the
+days that you have promised to deliver the city to our enemies the Lord
+will visit Israel by my hand.
+
+OZIAS. On what errand will you go?
+
+JUDITH. Enquire not of my act, for I will not declare it until the
+things are finished that I do. But this I declare, that the Lord has
+inclined himself to me, and now he has sent Achior for a sign.
+
+OZIAS. You go to Holofernes!
+
+JUDITH. To Holofernes.
+
+OZIAS. Do not go!
+
+JUDITH. But why shall I not go?
+
+OZIAS. The perils of the heathen will surround you, and harm will surely
+befall you, for Holofernes will work lamentable evil upon you. And I
+cannot suffer it.
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). Did not Ozias say that Holofernes was a great
+warrior and had compassion in his greatness?
+
+OZIAS (_insistent_). I cannot suffer it, for if any shame come upon you
+I will not live.
+
+JUDITH. God will not see his handmaid shamed. Moreover I regard not
+myself in this thing, but the welfare of the people of Israel.
+
+OZIAS (_kneeling_). Judith, I entreat you! For you are the light of my
+eyes, and without you the world is not.
+
+JUDITH (_softly_). I know it. Think you that in these years I have not
+seen the depths of your heart, Ozias? Think you that I was blind in my
+tent? Think you that I watched not upon you? You were comely in my
+sight. But this day you have revealed your pride. For you seek not God,
+but the vanity of the earth, and you would make all Israel the
+instrument of your glory, denying the Lord. And I am sad.
+
+OZIAS. Forgive me, Rose of Sharon.
+
+JUDITH (_softly_). Who am I, to forgive my brother? Peace be upon you!
+(_She turns towards her house_.)
+
+OZIAS (_rising,_). Stay!
+
+JUDITH. I go to prepare myself for that which I have to do. (_Exit into
+the house_.)
+
+(_A soldier shows himself, back._)
+
+OZIAS. Friend!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_approaching and saluting_). Lord! Your command!
+
+OZIAS. Send to me the officer of the watch.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, the honourable lieutenant lies sick.
+
+(Haggith _appears at the door of the house_.)
+
+OZIAS. Thirst has overcome him?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_bowing_). He raves on the bed, lord, and his tongue is
+like the tongue of a dog.
+
+OZIAS. Who then commands the watch by the watchfires this night?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. I, lord. The watchfires wait the torch.
+
+OZIAS. Will you, too, faint, and will your tongue be like the tongue of
+a dog?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_grimly_), Not mine, lord.
+
+OZIAS. DO the people complain?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, they whine and snivel mightily.
+
+_Enter_ Haggith _with a small sack._
+
+OZIAS. Is the secret way shut?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Shut and barred, lord.
+
+OZIAS. It must be opened.... Stand! I will see to it.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. AS my lord wills.
+
+OZIAS. Has the watch aught to drink?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. My lord knows that no drop is left in the gourds.
+
+(Ozias _waves him away, and he retires_.)
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Haggith, _who is busy with the sack_). Woman, has the lady
+Judith perchance dreamed a dream?
+
+HAGGITH (_enigmatically_). My mistress has dreamed no dream. Why does
+the lord Ozias ask?
+
+OZIAS. It seemed to me--(_stops_)
+
+HAGGITH. Dreams lift up fools. (_Exit into the house_.) (_Exit Ozias,
+L_.)
+
+(_The soldier strolls forward. Twilight begins to fall_.)
+
+(_Enter_ Haggith _from the house with more baggage_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_to the soldier; curtly; not looking at him_). So thou hast no
+water?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_with genial freedom_). Yea, Haggith, we have still a
+little.
+
+HAGGITH. Then thou has lied to the governor?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. _Him_? (_With a jerk of the shoulder_!) _He_ knows! In
+truth now, thinkest thou he would expect us soldiers to keep guard
+without water? _He_ knows! But he is a great lord, and in seemliness he
+asks for a lie, and that which he asks is given to him--in seemliness.
+
+HAGGITH. But the officer raving as thou hast said with thirst?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Ah! It is the business of a worshipful officer to scorn
+deceit and to suffer.
+
+HAGGITH. And all the people?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. The people are the people. But we soldiers are
+soldiers--and must drink, or we cannot guard. (_Yawns_.) Eh! I could lie
+down and snore for seven years, but I am appointed to watch all night.
+
+HAGGITH (_suddenly caressing_). Sweet warrior! Would I could rest thee!
+
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_startled by the change in her demeanour_). Haggith! Thou
+art marvellously and desirably changed.
+
+HAGGITH. I am practising to thy profit for that which lies before me and
+my mistress.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What meanest thou?
+
+HAGGITH. Chut! If thou hast heard a word, let it die with thee--it will
+not burst thee.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord! turn away from me vain hopes and concupiscence.
+
+HAGGITH. And so thou sleepest not this night!... Neither do I sleep.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What?
+
+HAGGITH. I go with my mistress upon a journey.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What journey? There can be no journey for thee, unless
+thou leave the city and wend to the Assyrians.
+
+HAGGITH (_curt again_). Nevertheless we go upon a journey.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. It is madness.
+
+HAGGITH. It may be.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Who can tell the heart of a master? Not I! When dost thou
+depart?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress is attiring.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Thou dost not attire her?
+
+HAGGITH. I! I, who have charge over all that is hers! Wilt thou tell me,
+then, what is the task of her tiring-women? Idle sluts!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. And this is thy baggage?
+
+HAGGITH (_matter-of-fact_). A cruse of oil, a bag of parched corn, fine
+bread, three lumps of figs--and a bottle of wine--yea, the last!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_drawing in his lips_). Ah! But thou wilt need an ass for
+this cargo.
+
+HAGGITH (_drily_). I am the ass.
+
+_Enter_ Judith, _magnificently dressed_.
+
+(_The_ soldier _retires, back_.)
+
+JUDITH. Is all prepared?
+
+HAGGITH. All is prepared, mistress.
+
+_Enter_ Ozias, _L_.
+
+OZIAS (_ecstatic at the sight of_ Judith's _splendour_). O, loveliness!
+O, lily of the field! Who shall withstand you, and who shall say you
+nay?
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). I am ready to depart.
+
+OZIAS. The secret way is opened. I will lead you to it.
+
+JUDITH (_gently_). The secret way? I will take no secret way.
+
+OZIAS. But hear me, lady. The peril from the archers far off--
+
+JUDITH. What did I say to you, lord Ozias? I said: You shall stand this
+night in the gate of the city, and I will go forth. My desire is that
+you command the gatemen to open the gates, so that I and my
+waiting-woman may pass out before all men, and in the sight of the Lord.
+(_She bends to examine_ Haggith's _baggage_.)
+
+OZIAS (_moved. Calling to the_ soldiers). Ho! Let the gates of the city
+be opened, that the lady Judith may go forth.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Yea, lord. (_Calling to others, off._) Gatemen!
+
+(_The gatemen man the gate-chains, and citizens rush in with cries_:
+'What shall happen to us? The lady Judith leaves the city? At
+night-fall? What is it?')
+
+OZIAS (_fiercely, to the crowd_). Get hence! Dogs!
+
+JUDITH (_softly_). Let them stay, Lord Ozias, for that which I do, I do
+not in secret, neither shall it be hidden.
+
+OZIAS (_to the crowd_). Make a way clear to the gates.
+
+JUDITH. Before I go, I will look into the valley whither I descend.
+(_She mounts to the vantage-point_).
+
+VOICES. Water! Water! Or we die!
+
+JUDITH (_from the vantage-point_). Brethren, bewail not! Remember what
+things the Lord did to Abraham, and how he tried Isaac, and what
+happened to Jacob in Mesopotamia. For the Lord has not tried us in the
+fire as he did them, neither has he taken vengeance upon us. But the
+Lord scourges them that come near to him, to admonish them. (_She
+kneels. Following her example, everybody kneels_.) O Lord God of my
+father Simeon, the Assyrians are multiplied in their power; they trust
+in shield, and spear, and bow, and sling; and know not that thou art the
+Lord which breakest battles; the Lord is thy name. Behold their pride,
+and send thy wrath upon their heads; give into my hand, which am a
+widow, the power that I have conceived. For thy power standeth not in
+multitude, nor thy might in strong men. Smite the Assyrians by the
+deceit of my lips; break down their stateliness by the hand of a woman.
+And make my speech and deceit to be their wound and stripe, who have
+purposed cruel things against thy covenant and against the top of Zion.
+And make every nation and tribe to acknowledge that thou art the God of
+all power, and that there is none other that protecteth the people of
+Israel but thou. (_She rises. The crowd murmurs:_ 'Amen.' _All rise._
+Judith _comes down from the vantage-point. Silence_.)
+
+OZIAS (_moved_). Open the gates.
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Haggith). Nothing is forgotten?
+
+HAGGITH. Nothing.
+
+(Judith _moves a step towards the gates._)
+
+OZIAS. The soul of my soul goes with you into the valley.
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Haggith, _solemnly_). And the knife?
+
+(Haggith _gives a gesture. At the same moment a woman comes from the
+house with a knife, which she hands to_ Haggith, _who hands it to_
+Judith, _who takes it ceremoniously, and hides it in her dress. The
+gates are now opened, and the distant plain under the setting sun is
+seen covered with the tents of the Assyrian army_.)
+
+(Judith _goes slowly through the gates, followed by_ Haggith _carrying
+the baggage_.)
+
+VOICES (_as_ Judith _passes_). Water! Water!
+
+OZIAS (_with deep emotion_). Close the gates. Light the watchfires.
+
+(_The gates begin slowly to close. The glow of the watchfires is seen_.)
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+ACT II
+
+
+SCENE I
+
+_The valley of Jezreel. The city of Bethulia on the hill in the
+distance_.
+
+Haggith _with her baggage enters to_ Ingur _and his men_.
+
+TIME: _The next morning but one_.
+
+INGUR. What art thou?
+
+HAGGITH (_prudishly and coldly_). If it please thee, I am a woman.
+
+INGUR. No. Thou art a hedgehog.
+
+HAGGITH (_suddenly cajoling_). I ask pardon. When I saw thy great
+handsomeness I grew afraid, and my tongue was stiffened. In my country
+there is no man so handsome as thou art.
+
+INGUR. Ah! (_Much mollified_.) And what then is thy country?
+
+HAGGITH. I am a woman of the Hebrews, and I have come from Bethulia.
+
+INGUR (_astonished_). A woman of the Hebrews! From Bethulia! (_To his
+men_). Stand back from my face. (_The men retire. To_ Haggith.) This is
+a rare strange tale.
+
+HAGGITH. Could I lie to _thee_? I have escaped from the city, which is
+given over to be consumed. I sought water for my thirst, for in Bethulia
+there is no water, and the people faint in the streets.
+
+INGUR. But it is a long journey from Bethulia, and thou art fresh and
+delicate as though just risen from thy bed.
+
+HAGGITH (_smiling_). I can hide nothing from thee, mighty wolf. I am,
+indeed, but just risen from my bed. The night before last night I set
+forth secretly, and came into the valley yesterday at noon, and lay soft
+in a cave where three springs bubbled, and drank, and slept until this
+morning's sunrise.
+
+INGUR. What is thy name?
+
+HAGGITH. Haggith.
+
+INGUR. Thy name is as strange as thy errand, and as thyself; and surely
+thou art a woman of the Hebrews, which is a race of lunatics, as I am
+told.
+
+HAGGITH. I have figs fit for a great king. (_Opens her sack and offers
+some figs_.)
+
+INGUR _(eating)._ Um! And what else hast thou? Let me touch thee,
+Haggith. (_He touches her carefully_). Yes, thou art outlandish, and no
+doubt mad, but comely. Comely! Thou hast the likeness and feel of a
+woman. Always have I hankered after strange women, and now lo! one falls
+ripe into my mouth. (Haggith _shrinks. Reassuringly._) In a way of
+speaking! In a way speaking! For thou art not in my mouth. And so thou
+earnest to slake thy thirst?
+
+HAGGITH. Yes, my roaring lion.
+
+INGUR. Listen! Thou hast saved thy life with water. But thou art lost.
+
+HAGGITH. Lost?
+
+INGUR. Ay! A woman in the camps of the Assyrians--she is undone. She is
+a lamb in a den of terrible tigers. (_Comfortingly_.) No, no! I will
+protect thee, but I warn thee that thou art undone. I am honest.
+(_Caresses her_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_clumsily returning his caress_). _Thou_ wilt not harm me.
+
+INGUR. I will not tear thee to pieces, but thou shalt come away with me.
+(_She timidly strokes him_). Thou hast not the habit of this stroking.
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me, when I encountered any noble
+Assyrian, to use him thus. It is true that I have not the habit.
+Nevertheless I do what I can.
+
+INGUR (_startled at the mention of a mistress_). Thy--thy mistress? Ye
+are two? Where then is thy mistress? Tell me upon the instant--is she
+fairer than thou?
+
+HAGGITH. Seven times more fair.
+
+INGUR. Fetch her!
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress is washing herself in a fountain of water by the
+cave. She sent me forward in peace and friendliness to announce her
+coming.
+
+INGUR. Fetch her! (_Suddenly perceiving_ Bagoas _in the distance, he
+changes his manner_.) Stay! Bagoas is approaching, and he may have seen
+thee. His eyes are sharp. Stand off. (Haggith _moves away a little_.)
+But when I tell thee, fall down on thy face.
+
+HAGGITH. Is he a great captain?
+
+INGUR. His mightiness is the chief eunuch of the Prince, and there is
+none greater than he save only the Prince himself, for Bagoas has charge
+over all the women of the Prince's tents.
+
+HAGGITH. Women of the Prince's tents?
+
+INGUR. Ay! Wives! Concubines! Virgins! Beyond counting. Didst thou think
+in thy Hebrew pride, that the Prince was a savage and a barbarian?...
+Down, damsel! Here is Bagoas. Embrace the earth for thy life's sake.
+(Haggith _obeys_.)
+
+_Enter_ Bagoas, _with attendants, L_.
+
+(Ingur _salutes him with extreme deference_.)
+
+BAGOAS. Who art thou?
+
+INGUR. Ingur, mightiness, commanding twenty footmen.
+
+BAGOAS. Begone from my sight. This morning the Prince condescends to
+walk through the camp, that all the armies may take joy in his
+countenance. It is not meet that he should be seen of any lower than a
+lieutenant.
+
+INGUR (_indicating_ Haggith). Mightiness, a woman of the Hebrews escaped
+from Bethulia to find water! And by my subtlety I have captured her.
+
+BAGOAS. A woman of the Hebrews! (_Surveying_ Haggith.) Rise, scum, and
+let me behold thy deformity. (Haggith _obeys_.)
+
+INGUR. And there is another yet to appear,--her mistress, seven times
+fairer.
+
+BAGOAS. Her mistress may be seven times fairer than this eyesore, and
+yet ugly. (_To_ Haggith.) Who is thy mistress?
+
+HAGGITH. The lady Judith.
+
+BAGOAS. Judith! A name fit only for a cat! Why is she here? How is she
+here? What is her secret and detestable purpose? For there is a trick in
+this thing.
+
+HAGGITH. I know not my mistress's purpose.
+
+BAGOAS. Tell me thy mistress's purpose, or I will have thee smothered.
+
+HAGGITH. I know only that if Holofernes----
+
+BAGOAS (_stopping her angrily_). Callest thou the illustrious one by his
+name? The most high _Prince_ Holofernes, foul wench.
+
+HAGGITH. The most high Prince Holofernes--if he so wills my mistress
+would speak with his highness.
+
+BAGOAS (_laughing heartily_). Speak with the Prince? _Speak_ with the
+Prince? Ha-ha! (_All the men laugh_.) What is the state of thy mistress?
+
+HAGGITH. The lady Judith is a widow.
+
+BAGOAS (_still more amused_). Aha! A widow! And the Hebrew hag would
+_speak_ with Prince Holofernes! (_The men laugh and jeer_.)
+
+_Enter_ Judith, _R_.
+
+(Haggith _goes quickly to her. All the men stare at_ Judith, _deeply
+impressed_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_aside to_ Judith). There are many hussies in the camps,
+thousands and thousands, mistress. This lord is the chief eunuch.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to an attendant_). If this be an example of the Bethulian
+women, I shall have a momentous business upon me when their city falls.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+(Judith, _signing to_ Haggith _to stand aside, bows to the ground
+before_ Bagoas; _then rises again_.)
+
+BAGOAS (_after a short pause_). You are very beautiful.
+
+JUDITH. There are beautiful women in Judea, but no man of Judea would
+look twice at such as I, a shrunken widow, like dried fish.
+
+(_Exit_ Ingur, _excitedly, L_.)
+
+BAGOAS. I have heard how you have escaped out of Bethulia and come
+hither in order to find water. (_Blandly_.) Aught else?
+
+JUDITH. My desire also was to have speech privately with the great
+conqueror, Holofernes.
+
+BAGOAS. Ah! We are well met, you and I. For I am Bagoas, chief eunuch to
+the illustrious Prince. (_Aside to second attendant_.) Run. Fetch the
+box of veils. (_Exit_ second attendant, _L_.)
+
+JUDITH (_saluting once more_). I supplicate then, mighty Bagoas, that
+you lead me quickly to the illustrious Prince Holofernes.
+
+BAGOAS. Surely! Surely! It is my pleasure to content you. (_Aside, to
+attendant, anxiously_.) This dried fish by her damnable beauty will
+reach great power, and if I speak not softly to her now she will undo me
+in that day.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+JUDITH. I humbly thank your mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS. But it is necessary that you should relate to me your little
+affair. For no woman speaks to the illustrious Prince until she has
+spoken to me.
+
+JUDITH. It cannot be so.
+
+BAGOAS (_persuasively_). In my ear, privily. Approach.
+
+JUDITH. It cannot be so.
+
+BAGOAS. What mean you--it cannot be so?
+
+JUDITH. I will utter my errand to the illustrious Prince Holofernes
+alone.
+
+BAGOAS (_losing his self-control; angrily_). What? Thou queasy chit!
+Thou minx! Thou jade! Baggage! Mopsy! Shamelesss wench! Thou wilt not
+obey Bagoas, chief eunuch in the camps of the Assyrians! I will make
+thee the slave of my slave and the plaything of scullions. (_Stops._
+Judith _smiles_. Haggith _subsides alarmed at her feet_.) Thou shalt be
+abandoned to the sutlers and the ass-drivers, and thus thou shalt learn
+who is Bagoas and what is his power! (_Stops again._ Judith _still
+smiles_.) The strumpets of the kitchens shall scorn thee! I--I----
+
+JUDITH (_smiling sweetly_). Mightiness! Mightiness! I am your bondwoman,
+but it is appointed by heaven that I shall speak with the illustrious
+Prince Holofernes himself.
+
+BAGOAS (_controlling himself, smiling_). Well, if it is appointed by
+heaven, so shall it be. Forget my words. They had no evil intent, for I
+was trying you, as my duty is. (_Aside to attendant_.) The sweetness of
+her glance dissolves my backbone.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightinesss.
+
+BAGOAS (_to_ Judith). Follow me, lady. (_Aside to_ attendant.) Thinkest
+thou the Prince will come this way? (_Pointing_.)
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS. Or that?
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS. If the Prince so much as sees her before the city is taken,
+never will the city be taken, and we shall all be her captives.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS (_beating the attendant_). I will lead her by the path to the
+cave, for the Prince will surely not come that way. (_To_ Judith.)
+Follow me, lady.
+
+(Bagoas _moves R_. Judith _hesitates a moment as_ Haggith _picks up her
+sack. Enter R. the heralds of Holofernes, followed by_ Holofernes.)
+
+BAGOAS (_to himself_). Holofernes! (_To his attendants_.) Hide her,
+rascals, or Assyria is undone. (_The attendants range themselves
+between_ Judith _and_ Holofernes.)
+
+(Bagoas _receives_ Holofernes _with a prostration and high ceremony_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. Where is this woman?
+
+BAGOAS. Woman, Prince?
+
+HOLOFERNES (_impatient_). This Hebrew woman, I say! One Ingur has run
+among the tents chattering, and the rumour of her has spread through the
+camps like a plague. By Nebuchadnezzar the one god, where is she, for it
+has been told to me that her beauty excels the beauty of all the women
+of the East and ravishes the eye exceedingly?
+
+BAGOAS. Ah! It is of Judith that the Prince deigns to speak. Lo! I had
+caught her and was bringing her to your highness. (_To_ attendants.)
+Stand aside, dogs.
+
+(Judith _is revealed to_ Holofernes. _She prostrates herself and then
+rises_. Holofernes _gazes at her, entranced_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. So thou hast escaped out of Bethulia to find water for thy
+thirst?
+
+JUDITH. To find water, and to have speech with the most illustrious
+Prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Woman (_approaching her a step, and then standing still_),
+be of good comfort, and fear not in thy heart, for I never hurt any that
+was willing to serve Nebuchadnezzar, the god of all the earth. And if
+thy people that dwell in the mountains had not held me lightly, I would
+not have lifted up my spear against them, but they have done these
+things to themselves.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside, to_ Holofernes). Terrible master, she is full of guile
+and deceitfulness, and came not at all for water, but for a hidden
+purpose against you. Therefore enquire of her closely.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Bagoas). Chastise thy tongue, ere it overthrow thee,
+fiend. There is no guile in that face. (_To_ Judith.) Tell me now thy
+message and wherefore in truth thou art come. And tremble not, for thou
+shalt live this night.
+
+JUDITH. Great prince, receive the words of your servant and suffer your
+handmaid to speak in your presence, and I will declare no lie to my
+lord.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Speak.
+
+JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to_ Holofernes). It is a device against my lord.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Judith). Speak now, I command thee.
+
+JUDITH. My message concerns the fate of Bethulia, and of all the
+Assyrians, and of my lord. Life and death are in it, for I have communed
+with heaven.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Which heaven? Thine or mine?
+
+JUDITH. There is but one God.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_roughly_). And he is Nebuchadnezzar. Speak thy tale.
+
+JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to_ Holofernes). It is a device.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_angrily_). Speak out all thy heart, and quickly!
+
+JUDITH. I will speak to my lord in my lord's tent.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_furious_). In my tent! Who art thou who defiest me, and
+what is thy licence, heathen slave, to defile the tent of Holofernes?
+Bind her. Take her away, and twist the cords about her neck, and
+strangle her, and cast her insolence into the lake.
+
+(Judith _is seized and bound in an instant_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_in two minds_). Wait!
+
+BAGOAS. She is bound, illustrious prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Wait!
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to_ Holofernes). Prince, let not the benevolence of your
+heart be your undoing, for in the loveliness of her face is cunning and
+great peril. I have lived all my days amid the craftiness of women, and
+my lord also knows somewhat of their strange tricks, which bring ruin to
+the carnal.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_reflective_). Who would despise these Hebrews that have
+among them such women as she? (_Fiercely_). Surely it is not good that
+one man among them should be left; for if one were let go he might
+deceive the whole earth.
+
+JUDITH (_advancing a step, appealingly_). Will the wise man cast away a
+pearl, and will my lord in anger lose his servant for ever?
+
+BAGOAS (_to_ Holofernes). Let her not speak with my lord alone in my
+lord's tent.
+
+JUDITH. I would speak with the illustrious prince--and with Bagoas
+also. (_She smiles_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_with a gesture_). I cannot lose thee. (_To attendants_.)
+Unbind her.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside_). May heaven be with us, for the woman is against us!
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Bagoas). Veil her, that her face and form be not seen
+as she passes to my tent, for she is mine.
+
+BAGOAS (_calling_). The veils! The veils! Where is the rascal?
+
+_The attendant rushes in panting with the box of veils. He is followed
+by_ Ingur.
+
+(Judith _is elaborately veiled in a series of veils by_ Bagoas _and his
+attendants_).
+
+HOLOFERNES. Let her follow me.
+
+(_Exeunt, R, with great ceremony_, Holofernes _and his heralds, followed
+by_ Judith.)
+
+INGUR (_as they go, stopping_ Bagoas, _who goes last_). Mightiness,
+pardon your slave.
+
+BAGOAS. Well?
+
+INGUR (_pointing to_ Haggith). Your slave captured the mistress. Reward
+him with this outlandish wench.
+
+BAGOAS (_carelessly_). The fool goeth out to seek his own damnation.
+Take her.
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE II
+
+
+_Interior of the tent of_ Holofernes. _A couch with curtains, L. The
+principal entrance to the tent is at the back. Secondary entrances in
+the hangings, L. and R._
+
+TIME: _The same morning, later._
+
+Bagoas _and his attendant are unveiling_ Judith.
+
+BAGOAS. Animal, wouldst thou dare to behold that which is thy lord's?
+Leave the last veil, and away with thee.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness!
+
+(_Exit back with the veils already removed from_ Judith.)
+
+BAGOAS. Queen of the night of Holofernes!
+
+JUDITH (_through the veil_). Mighty Bagoas!
+
+BAGOAS. The Prince comes to look upon you in his tent.
+
+JUDITH. Mighty Bagoas, deign to answer a question I will put.
+
+BAGOAS. Deign to ask, lady, and my humility shall answer; for your
+beauty has blinded Holofernes this day and he is your captive, and his
+servant is your servant, and there is no law in the camps of the
+Assyrians save your glance. (_He makes a covert gesture of half-amused
+resentful resignation_.)
+
+JUDITH. Nebuchadnezzar is your god? Is it not so, Bagoas?
+
+BAGOAS. Nebuchadnezzar is henceforward the god of the Assyrians and of
+all the lands which their spears conquer. It is an official order.
+
+JUDITH. If Nebuchadnezzar laid a command upon you, would you disregard
+it?
+
+BAGOAS. I would not, for my skin is very valuable to me.
+
+JUDITH. As Nebuchadnezzar is your god, so is the Lord of Israel mine.
+And my God laid a secret command upon me to speak with Prince Holofernes
+alone and with none other in his tent. Thus, and thus only, was it that
+I refused to speak in the presence even of the mighty Bagoas. But as I
+withstood you in the valley there, the God of Israel descended upon me
+and I heard the voice of God in my ear, and the voice said: 'It is
+permitted to thee to speak with Bagoas also.' Therefore I yielded to the
+importunity of Prince Holofernes and of Bagoas.
+
+BAGOAS. Your god is a wise god and has discernment.
+
+JUDITH. This I tell you, that there may be peace and good intelligence
+between us. Is there peace between us?
+
+BAGOAS. Lady, in my heat I admonished you with hard words and much
+vituperation.
+
+JUDITH (_innocently_.) By Nebuchadnezzar, I heard none.
+
+BAGOAS. There is peace between us. And in the closeness of our
+intelligence you and I will rule them that rule all Assyria.
+
+_Enter_ Holofernes, _L_.
+
+(Bagoas _prostrates himself_. Holofernes _walks about, ignoring_
+Judith.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Bagoas). At what hour is the Council of Captains?
+
+BAGOAS. The Council awaits your highness.
+
+(_Suddenly_ Holofernes _snatches the veil from_ Judith, _and throws it
+on the floor. He gazes at her._ Judith _prostrates herself_. Holofernes
+_drops on to the couch, and looks at everything except_ Judith.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_imperiously_). Rise. (Judith _rises. A pause_. Holofernes
+_plays with a jewel on his costume. Without looking at_ Judith.) And
+Achior?
+
+JUDITH. Illustrious Prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Did the slave reach Bethulia?
+
+JUDITH. The men of Bethulia took him, and he declared to them all that
+he had spoken to my lord Prince. And many approved him.
+
+HOLOFERNES. And what sayest _thou_ of Achior?
+
+JUDITH. O lord and governor, I say: Reject not the word of Achior, but
+lay it up in your heart.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou art bold.
+
+JUDITH. The word of Achior is true. For the Israelites shall not be
+punished, and the sword shall not prevail against them, except they sin
+against their God.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Not even _my_ sword?
+
+JUDITH. Not even the sword of my lord and governor, except they sin
+against their God. (_With significance_.) But they will sin.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Ah! They will sin? In what will they sin?
+
+JUDITH. Death is fallen upon them, and they will provoke their God to
+anger, for their water is scant, and they faint in their thirst; and
+they will drink the holy wine which was sanctified and reserved for the
+priests who serve before the face of our God: which thing is not lawful
+for any of the people so much as to touch with their hands.
+
+HOLOFERNES. What has all this to do with me? There is no god but
+Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+JUDITH. It touches my lord and governor, because, knowing all this, I am
+fled from Bethulia, which shall be accurst; and the God of Israel has
+sent me to work things with my lord and governor whereat the whole earth
+shall be astonished.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_looking at her, interested_). What things? And what have I
+to do with thy god? I need not thy god, for after the Israelites have
+drunk their wine they will thirst again; and when the city is broken
+with fainting, it will fall safe into my hands while I sit and watch.
+
+JUDITH (_with fire_). And when the city has fallen while the Assyrians
+sit and watch, and when all men whisper one to another that the greatest
+captain of the earth conquered by a device because he dared not attack
+boldly with spear, and bow, and sling--in that day will my lord and
+governor be content? Or will he be ashamed, and blush to lift up his
+eyes?
+
+HOLOFERNES (_disturbed_). It is a true word.
+
+BAGOAS. It is a true word.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_savagely_). This day will I attack the city and take it,
+and though I make fifty thousand widows and orphans in Assyria I will
+compass Bethulia, and not one house in it shall be left standing, nor
+one Israelite alive.
+
+JUDITH (_shaking her head slowly_). Why is my lord against the pleasure
+of the Most High? Do I not say, and has it not been revealed to me, that
+Bethulia shall not perish until its inhabitants have sinned before God?
+Listen, illustrious Prince, I will remain this night. And when the time
+comes I will go into the valley, and I will pray to God, and mayhap He
+will tell me when the Israelites in Bethulia have committed their sin.
+And I will come and show it to you, and thereupon my lord and governor
+shall go forth with all his army, and none shall resist him.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_fascinated_). Thou wilt come to me when the time is at hand
+for my triumph!
+
+JUDITH. And hearken further! I will lead my lord and governor in the
+midst of Judea, until he comes to Jerusalem; and I will set his throne
+in the midst of Jerusalem, and a dog shall not so much as open his mouth
+at my lord and prince. For these things were declared unto me from on
+high, and I am sent to tell them.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_aside to_ Bagoas, _excitedly_). There is not such a woman
+from one end of the earth to the other, both for beauty of face and
+wisdom of words.
+
+BAGOAS. It may well be so, Prince. But I have not seen the whole earth.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Judith). Thou hast done well to come to me, that
+strength may be in my hands and destruction upon them that lightly
+regard Nebuchadnezzar, the one god. Thou art ravishing in countenance,
+and if thou do as thou hast spoken, thou shalt dwell in my house which
+is over against the house of King Nebuchadnezzar, and thou shalt be
+renowned through the east and through the west. Bagoas, prepare meat and
+wine for her.
+
+BAGOAS (_making as if to give an order_). To hear is to obey.
+
+JUDITH. I will not eat of my lord's meat, nor drink of his wine, lest
+there be offence; I have brought provision by my waiting-woman.
+
+BAGOAS. But if thy provision fail?
+
+JUDITH (_significantly_). My provision will not fail before the Lord
+works by my hand the things which He has determined.
+
+Bagoas _claps his hands. Enter an attendant_.
+
+BAGOAS. Fetch Haggith, the waiting-woman of the lady Judith! Quickly!
+(_Exit attendant. To_ Holofernes.) Prince, shall the Hebrew woman eat
+and drink of her provision in my lord's tent?
+
+HOLOFERNES. She shall eat and drink in my tent, and she shall not leave
+it.
+
+BAGOAS. Then it is right that my lord remains not. And moreover the
+Council humbly waits for my lord. (_Exit_ Holofernes, _L_.)
+
+BAGOAS (_to_ Judith, _as he follows_ Holofernes). Did I not say that you
+and I shall rule them that rule Assyria? (_Exit L_.)
+
+_Enter_ Haggith, _back, with provisions_.
+
+HAGGITH (_excited, looking round to see if they are alone_). Mistress!
+Is it possible?
+
+JUDITH. What has taken thee?
+
+HAGGITH. Is this the tent of the monster?
+
+JUDITH. Hush!
+
+HAGGITH (_whispering_). It is greater and more magnificent than the
+temple at Bethulia. (_Looking into a corner_.) But unclean. Have they
+no besoms?... Ah! (_Looking up at the roof_.) The bigness of it makes me
+small like a child before it can walk. I could not live comfortably in
+such a great windy place. No! I prefer our own house to all this
+royalty.
+
+JUDITH. Give me food, Haggith. Where hast thou been? (_She sits_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Mistress, I have been with the man Ingur! (_Arranging_ Judith's
+_costume, and then setting out the food and wine_.) In obedience to your
+command. At Bethulia, being busied all my days with the ordering of your
+possessions, I had no time for traffic with men; neither desire. And I
+deemed them terrible and masterful creatures. And when you commanded me
+to go forth into the camps and delude and entangle with wiles whatever
+Assyrian I should meet, I was afraid. For it was in my heart that I
+could not accomplish this thing. Yet I have done it prettily. And it is
+easier to me far than sweeping with a besom. Either all men are
+simpletons and besotted with self-conceit, or Ingur exceeds greatly in
+folly. I have been given to him for his slave, but he is mine and knows
+it not. (_She sits_.)
+
+JUDITH. Where hast thou left him?
+
+HAGGITH. Mistress I would not suffer that you should pass from my sight,
+and I followed you, and Ingur followed me gladly, and at last the guard
+seized him for that he was found within the precincts of the prince's
+quarter, which is forbidden to his rank, and many stripes will be his.
+Mistress, you eat not.
+
+JUDITH (_trying to eat_). Yes, I eat. Do thou eat for me.
+
+HAGGITH. I have eaten and drunk--with Ingur.
+
+JUDITH. But not of his provision?
+
+HAGGITH (_nodding_). He so softly entreated me.
+
+JUDITH. It is a sin and an offence for thee, being an Israelite.
+
+HAGGITH. For such as my high-born mistress, it is an offence. But for
+the handmaid--pooh! She eats as she can, and the Lord turneth away his
+glance until she has finished her platter. Moreover, did you not lay it
+upon me to beguile the dolt? And verily, mistress, I have rejoiced much
+this day; and Ingur----
+
+JUDITH. Silence with thy prattle. Bethink thee of the dread business
+upon which I am come down from Bethulia into the valley?
+
+HAGGITH (_subdued; offering food_). Eat, mistress.
+
+JUDITH. I cannot. My soul rejects it, and my body is on fire with
+expectation and suspense. (_Rising_. Haggith _also rises_.) Stay thou
+where thou art, for I will go forth alone. I must commune with the God
+of Israel for my tranquillity, and I dare not seek him in the tent of
+the heathen. (_Exit, back_.)
+
+(Haggith _gathers the meat together_.)
+
+_Enter_ Holofernes _and_ Bagoas, _L_.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_looking about the tent, alarmed_). Where is she? Has she
+fled? If she has escaped me, this shall be thy last day, Bagoas. What is
+this girl here?
+
+BAGOAS. Prince, has any woman yet slipped through these hands? This girl
+is the waiting wench of the lady Judith. (_To_ Haggith.) Where is thy
+mistress, wench?
+
+HAGGITH (_frightened and foolish_). My mistress having eaten ... having
+eaten naught, is gone to--to--to--pray.
+
+BAGOAS. Bring her. Her god may wait, but not the illustrious Prince. Run
+with both thy legs.
+
+HAGGITH. Ye--es, mightiness. (_Exit, back_)
+
+HOLOFERNES. Bagoas, with thine arts thou shalt persuade the Hebrew woman
+to come to us and to eat and drink with us this night.
+
+BAGOAS (_grimly_). Persuasion shall be used, highness. My arts are many
+and various.
+
+HOLOFERNES. It will be a shame for our person if we let such a woman go,
+not having delighted in her company. If we do not draw her to us she
+will laugh us to scorn.
+
+BAGOAS. Yea, highness. But my lord has but this moment appointed a great
+feast with his captains at sunset. How then shall he eat and drink with
+the lady Judith?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thick-skull! Speak not to me of my captains! The Council of
+the Captains was as dust in my mouth, and I could not away with it.
+Therefore I sharply dismissed the Council, and soothed their damnable
+pride with the promise of a mighty feast. But what care I for the
+captains? My heart thirsts horribly for this Hebrew woman, and I am full
+of a great madness.
+
+BAGOAS. So be it, highness. Nevertheless, the Prince has promised to his
+captains a mighty feast, and the word of Holofernes is a rock that
+cannot be shaken.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Oh! What a calamity is love! And there is no slave so
+trodden down as him that is the slave of desire.... Bah! I will eat and
+drink quickly with the captains, and the woman shall await me here.
+
+_Enter_ Judith, _back. On seeing_ Holofernes _she prostrates herself_.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Arise, sorceress. (Judith _rises. To_ Bagoas.) Go fetch
+leopard skins for her repose.
+
+BAGOAS. I will send for the skins on the instant, highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt go thyself to fetch them, elephant. And come not
+back without the finest skins in my wardrobe. See to it.
+
+(_Exit_ Bagoas, _back_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. Come closer. (Judith _obeys_.) Look into my eyes. (Judith
+_obeys_.) Sorceress, thou knowest thy power.
+
+JUDITH. I have no power, save that which is given to me from on high.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou wast praying to thy god?
+
+JUDITH. Yea, highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Didst thou demand of him that he should tell thee if the
+Israelites in Bethulia had committed their sin, and if the time of my
+triumph was at hand?
+
+JUDITH. No, lord. I prayed for the forgiveness of the transgressions of
+thy handmaid.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Why didst thou not demand of him what I ask thee?
+
+JUDITH. Who am I to hasten the God of Israel? In the night time, and in
+the darkness, when all men sleep,--then it is that my God condescends
+towards me, and my ear hears his secret purposes.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_low_). This night?
+
+JUDITH. Who can search out heaven?
+
+HOLOFERNES. This night?
+
+JUDITH. It may be.
+
+HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt come to me in the night and tell me thy
+message?
+
+JUDITH. I will come to thee in the night, great prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt eat and drink with me in my triumph?
+
+JUDITH (_after a pause_). If it pleases my lord.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt eat of my meat and drink of my wine, which I will
+give thee?
+
+JUDITH (_after a pause_). If my lord is alone and there is none with
+him. For it is not right that any should see me.
+
+HOLOFERNES. I will be alone. But Bagoas shall stand at the door of the
+tent.
+
+JUDITH. As my lord wills.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_ecstatic, moving a little towards her; she responds_).
+Fairest among women! Can it be!... The way of God is wondrous.
+
+(_A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears through the hangings R., and
+watches_.)
+
+JUDITH (_solemnly and significantly_). There are yet hid greater things
+than this, and thou hast yet seen but a few of his works.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_sinking back on the couch, mysteriously afraid_).
+Sorceress!
+
+(_The watcher disappears_.)
+
+JUDITH (_cooingly_) Does my lord shrink from his handmaid?
+
+(Holofernes _stretches his hands to her_.)
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE III
+
+
+SCENE: _The same_.
+
+TIME: _The same night_.
+
+_Wine and food are set by the couch_.
+
+_A lamp is burning_.
+
+BAGOAS (_at back entrance to tent, calling to people off_). To your
+beds, all of you. Let none remain. (_He stands a moment at the entrance;
+a few distant shouts are heard; then silence_. Bagoas _comes within the
+tent towards the couch. To_ Holofernes.) The waiters are gone, Prince.
+There is no one left to disturb the night.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Hast thou seen her?
+
+BAGOAS (_after a pause_). No, prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. But didst thou look?
+
+BAGOAS. I looked, O illustrious.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Is there moonlight?
+
+BAGOAS. The moon is clouded, highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Give me wine. (Bagoas _obeys_.) Bagoas!
+
+BAGOAS. Prince?
+
+(_The hangings of the tent R., balloon inwards a little_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_looking behind him sharply, spilling some wine_). The wind
+is rising.
+
+BAGOAS. It is but a night breeze.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_as he drinks gloomily_). Bagoas, she has escaped back to
+her own people.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside_). I would she had, the jade! (_To_ Holofernes.) Prince,
+she cannot escape. Every path from the valley is guarded.
+
+HOLOFERNES. What guard could restrain such a woman?
+
+BAGOAS. Ah! Prince! What guard could restrain her?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Dost thou echo me?
+
+BAGOAS. I humbly think the thought of his highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Do thy thinking outside.
+
+(Bagoas _bows and moves towards the entrance_. Judith _is standing
+there. The two look at each other for a moment_.)
+
+BAGOAS (_with a gesture, indicating_ Judith). Highness!
+
+HOLOFERNES (_Jumping up. To_ Bagoas). Begone to thy post!
+
+(Judith _glides in silently_. Bagoas _goes out. They pass by each other
+without a word or a salutation, but mutually scrutinizing_.)
+
+JUDITH. The great feast of the captains is over?
+
+HOLOFERNES. The captains are departed, drunken with wine and their
+pride. But thy feast and my feast is not begun. (_Points to the
+repast_.)
+
+JUDITH (_enigmatically_.) I am here.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_ecstatic_.) Art thou in truth here, or do my eyes behold
+that which is not?
+
+JUDITH. Did I not say that I should come in the night?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Yea, I trusted thee. I trusted thee so much that at the
+feast of the captains I commanded that all my hosts shall attack
+Bethulia, with bow, and sling, and spear, at sunrise, and also I gave
+the word of Holofernes for a pledge that naught in the heavens or on the
+earth should resist the onset of the Assyrians; for some among them
+feared the word of Achior which they had heard.
+
+JUDITH. You have not done this thing?
+
+HOLOFERNES. I have done it.
+
+JUDITH. Would you forestall God, and would you speak the decrees of God
+before they are uttered?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou saidst thou wouldst pray to thy god this night and that
+he would tell thee when the Israelites in Bethulia had committed their
+sin, and that thou wouldst come to me to proclaim the hour of my
+triumph.
+
+JUDITH. I said: I will pray to God and _mayhap_ he will tell me.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou hast prayed, and thy god hath not answered?
+
+JUDITH. He has not answered.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_with bravado_). He is no god, then, thy god. Let us drink.
+
+JUDITH (_as_ Holofernes _moves towards her, solemnly_). Touch not your
+handmaid, and touch not the goblet. (_She goes to the skins, R_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_following_ Judith _gently_). Thou art offended.
+
+JUDITH. Stand afar off, Holofernes, and meddle not with her that
+communes with the Most High.
+
+(Judith _kneels_. Holofernes _goes in the direction of the couch.
+Silence_. Bagoas _has been seen once or twice in the porch of the tent,
+his back turned. He has now gone again. Two half-veiled Assyrian women
+appear through the hangings, R., and watch a moment, then vanish_.
+Judith _slowly rises_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. What has befallen thee?
+
+JUDITH. It has befallen me that this moment the God of Israel has spoken
+and my ear has heard his command. (_Approaching_ Holofernes.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. What saith thy god?
+
+JUDITH. My ear has heard that the Israelites in Bethulia have committed
+their sin, and at sunrise the Assyrians shall assault Bethulia and none
+shall withstand them.
+
+HOLOFERNES. A miracle!
+
+JUDITH. A miracle in thy tent, O great warrior!
+
+HOLOFERNES. To-morrow is appointed to be the day of my triumph.
+
+JUDITH (_moved_). Yea, it is so.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_gratefully_). Hear me, Judith. Thy god shall be my god.
+
+JUDITH. In truth thou art set apart to be his. HOLOFERNES (_close to
+her_). Thy body trembles.
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). Thinkst thou then that I was not afraid for thee?
+But my fear is gone from me, for now I know thy fate and the decree of
+heaven concerning thee.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_aside_). To-morrow is appointed for my triumph, but this
+night also shall I exult. (_To_ Judith.) Let us eat and drink together,
+for we are alone in the night, and thou hast promised.
+
+JUDITH (_gaily_). Let us feast.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_animated by her responsive tone_). Take off thy tunic; thou
+art in thy own house. Let Holofernes be thy tire-woman. (_Approaching
+her_.)
+
+JUDITH. No! (_Moving from him to the further side of the couch_.) But he
+shall be my slave to serve me. Pour out the wine, great slave.
+
+(_While_ Holofernes _cheerfully obeys_, Judith _takes the knife from her
+garments and places it behind the couch. Then, as he stands with the
+wine, gazing at her and separated from her only by the couch, she slowly
+removes her tunic and appears in indoor attire. She comes towards him
+and takes the wine from him and drinks_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. I feared that in the strictness of thy Hebrew scruples thou
+wouldst not drink of my wine.
+
+JUDITH. I will drink again. (_She does so_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES _(taking the goblet and drinking)._ Dost thou verily know thy
+power and thy dominion, Judith?
+
+JUDITH (_simply_). Yes, I know it now better than thou.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou dost not. For I am mad for thee, and thou hast set thy
+seal upon me for evermore. My heart cannot hold thee, for thou hast
+filled it to overflowing, and all men see that my heart is full of thee
+and runneth over. Yea, I have a hundred and two and thirty thousand that
+bow themselves at my feet and that live and die by my glance. And I am
+at _thy_ feet and thy glance is my joy and my sorrow according to thy
+whim. Judith, I entreat thee, command me something. For whatever thou
+command me, that will I execute. And be not afraid in thy command, for
+my power is very great and there is none like it save only my lord
+Nebuchadnezzar's.
+
+JUDITH (_tenderly_). I command thee that thou be happy. For thy captive
+has no other desire.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Say not my captive. For it is I that am thy prisoner. And I
+will set thee on my throne, and in my great boldness I will dare to sit
+beside thee. But thou shalt reign. And we will live together in Assyria
+long years.
+
+JUDITH (_changing her mood_). There is no requisition in the grave
+whether you have lived ten or an hundred or a thousand years. But the
+God of Israel is a shield.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_eagerly_). And I have told thee that thy god shall be my
+god; but in secret, because of that which I owe to King Nebuchadnezzar.
+Yet shall the whole earth know that thou, Judith, alone art my god.
+
+JUDITH. But thou hast other wives.
+
+HOLOFERNES. No!
+
+JUDITH. Yes! It has been whispered to me that thou hast many wives, and
+concubines without number.
+
+HOLOFERNES. It is a lie. For from this night I have put away from me all
+women but thee, and there is not one among them to compare with thee.
+(_Appealingly_). And since the judgment of heaven hath done a miracle
+by thee in the tent of Holofernes this night, wilt thou deny, O
+tenderness! that thou hast been divinely appointed to me, and I to thee?
+
+JUDITH. I will not deny that the Lord is in this thing. And for thy
+comfort I will tell thee that which thou knowest not.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_expectant_). Tell me.
+
+JUDITH. Before I escaped from Bethulia, as I lay on my bed, a vision
+came to me, and it was the vision of Holofernes in the likeness of his
+majesty and his might. And I saw the vision by my bed, and so it was
+that I came down into the valley.... (_Softly_.) And wouldst thou that I
+should have uttered this secret to any but thee!
+
+HOLOFERNES (_full of emotion_). I will kiss thy lips, and thou art mine,
+O fragrance!
+
+JUDITH. Kiss my lips.
+
+(Holofernes _kisses her, and then in an excess of feeling stumbles
+backward_.)
+
+(_A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears at the opening R., and watches_.
+Bagoas, _in the porch of the tent, turns and sees her, and dashes at her
+with a weapon. Both disappear through the opening, R._)
+
+JUDITH (_moving with stealth towards the hidden knife, comfortingly_). O
+mighty child, where is thy strength, and where is thy terribleness? Rest
+thee a moment on the couch, and thy soul's captive will tend thee.
+
+(Holofernes _drops on the couch, and_ Judith _caresses him_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_murmuring_). My great joy has overthrown me.
+
+(Judith, _seizing the knife and leaning over_ Holofernes, _kills him
+while she is still caressing_.)
+
+JUDITH (_as she uses the knife; murmuring_). Thou that wouldst go
+against the pleasure of the Most High! Thou that wouldst defile Judea!
+Thou that hast dishonoured with thy kiss the widow of Manasses! Thou
+that hast compelled me to guile and deceit and much lying so that I
+might perform the will of God! The grave shall be thy house!
+
+_Enter_ Haggith, _L_.
+
+JUDITH (_turning to_ Haggith, _firmly and impressively_). I have done
+that which I had to do, and the power of Assyria is fallen.
+(_Pointing_.) Take the head by the beard, and put it in thy sack, and
+let us depart.
+
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+ACT III
+
+
+SCENE I
+
+
+SCENE: _Same as Act I_.
+
+TIME: _A few hours later than Act II, Scene III, the same night. The
+sole light is that of torches, and watchfires (off)._
+
+_The gatemen are at the gates_.
+
+_There is a knocking on the outside of the gates_.
+
+_Enter First Soldier, running_.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_to a gateman, who is climbing up in order to look over
+the top of the gates_). Look not over, booby. Thy fool's face might meet
+the point of an Assyrian spear. (_The gateman slips down quickly_.)
+
+(_Renewed knocking_.)
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_shouting_). None can enter the city till sunrise. And
+not then if I like not the aspect of his phiz.
+
+HAGGITH (_off_). It is Haggith, servant of the lady Judith. Open the
+gates quickly, for I am become a woman of much consequence.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith? It is the voice of Haggith; yet it may also be
+devils. (_To another soldier who has entered_.) Run! Rouse the lord
+Ozias. (_Exit soldier_.)
+
+HAGGITH. I have water with me. Many gourds! Fresh water! Cool water!
+
+(_The gatemen begin to work the gate-chains_.)
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What do ye, dogs? Stop, and await the order of the lord
+Ozias.
+
+GATEMEN (_continuing to work the chains_). Water! Water!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Pull, then, dogs. If there is water and it is wet I will
+taste it. But if there is not water, I will slay the first soul that
+enters. (_As the gates begin to open a little_.) Hold! No wider!
+
+_Enter_ Haggith _with two gourds_.
+
+(_The gourds are snatched from her, and the men, including the First
+Soldier, drink_.)
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_as he drinks_). Yea, it is indeed Haggith. Where is thy
+mistress, and whence comest thou, my beloved water-carrier, for thou art
+my beloved? (Haggith _slaps his face_.)
+
+_Enter_ Ozias, _L_.
+
+OZIAS (_furious_). Why are the gates opened? What is this?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith, lord, with water that is stronger than wine.
+(_Handing a gourd to_ Ozias _to soothe him_.)
+
+OZIAS. Where is thy mistress, wench? (_Drinks_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_stiffly_). I am the forerunner of my mistress, who has sent
+me, and before many hours are passed the lady Judith will come also.
+(_She goes to the gates and beckons_.)
+
+OZIAS. What art thou doing?
+
+_Enter_ Ingur, _bearing a sack_.
+
+VOICES. An Assyrian! An Assyrian! (_Men spring at_ Ingur.)
+
+HAGGITH. Let him alone; he is my bondman and I have tamed him.
+
+OZIAS. Shut the gates, for I will enquire into this matter.
+
+HAGGITH. There are yet ten other Assyrians outside the gates, carrying
+gourds for me.
+
+OZIAS. Ten other Assyrians! It is a trick!
+
+HAGGITH (_proudly_). By my command they are chained by their necks, neck
+to neck. Fetch in the gourds, men, and give the people to drink.
+
+(_The gourds are brought in amid cries and excitement. They are taken
+off, L_.)
+
+OZIAS. Shut the gates, I say.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. And the ten Assyrians, great lord?
+
+OZIAS. Let them await my enquiry where they stand.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias, if they flee?
+
+HAGGITH. Hold thy mouth, gaby! Wouldst _thou_ flee with thy neck chained
+to nine necks? Moreover, where will they flee? For the camps of the
+Assyrians are broken, and in their terrible confusion the Assyrians fall
+one upon another.
+
+(_The gatemen talk among themselves and stare at the Assyrians outside,
+who cannot be seen by those within the city. The gates remain open a
+little_.)
+
+OZIAS (_impatiently_). What is thy tale, Haggith?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress has slain Holofernes in his tent in the night, and
+the power of Assyria is undone.
+
+OZIAS (_astounded_). Slain Holofernes! Thou art mad in thy raving.
+
+HAGGITH (_to_ Ingur). Open the mouth of the sack, and let my lord behold
+the head of Holofernes and see that I am mad. (_To soldier_.) A torch,
+that the Lord Ozias may discover the manner of my raving.
+
+(Ozias _looks into the sack and sees the head of_ Holofernes.)
+
+OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!
+
+HAGGITH. And my mistress is the right hand of the Lord.
+
+OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!
+
+VOICES (_deeply moved_). His name shall live for ever.
+
+OZIAS. How did thy mistress accomplish this mighty deed?
+
+HAGGITH. AS for that, she will tell it to my lord with her own voice
+when she shall come. And now will my lord give ear to the commands of
+the lady Judith, which she doth lay upon my lord by me, Haggith? First,
+the head of Holofernes shall be set upon a spear on the highest wall in
+the great square before the temple. So shall all the Israelites know
+that God yet watcheth over Israel. (_To the soldiers_.) Take the sack
+and do as my lady hath ordained by me, Haggith.
+
+OZIAS (_to men, who hesitate_). Take the sack. It is my command.
+
+(_Exeunt two men, L., with sack_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Next, ye shall send men for water to the wells beneath the city
+that all may drink, for already the Assyrians are fled from the wells,
+knowing that Holofernes is dead. And ye shall send forth all your army
+into the valley to fall upon the Assyrians, for they are afraid of the
+judgment of God, and none dare abide in the sight of his neighbour.
+Neither can they stand against the chosen race of God.
+
+OZIAS (_to First Soldier_). Let every armed man in the city be roused,
+and publish the order of Ozias that the Captains lead their bands
+swiftly into the valley by the secret way to fall upon the Assyrians.
+
+(_Exit First Soldier and another, with joyous cries, L_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Thus hath the lady Judith spoken by me, Haggith.
+
+OZIAS. Whither is thy mistress gone, and why does she tarry?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress is hidden in a sure place in the valley, for there
+is one among the Assyrians who fears not God. And he is Bagoas, the
+chief eunuch of Holofernes, and he has sworn an oath to kill my
+mistress, for that by guile she did cut off the head of Holofernes. And
+Bagoas searches for my mistress in the folds of the valley. But he will
+not find her.
+
+OZIAS (_perturbed_). How knowst thou that he will not find her?
+
+HAGGITH. Because the Lord of Israel is a sharp sword and protecteth his
+servants.... And also because my mistress is most cunningly hidden.
+
+_Enter_ Charmis, _L_.
+
+CHARMIS (_joyously excited_). What is the miracle that I hear, Ozias?
+
+OZIAS (_blandly_). There is no miracle; but that which I had planned
+with the lady Judith has come to pass. Take women and old men Charmis,
+and go ye to the wells and bring water to the city, for the wells are
+delivered into my hands.
+
+CHARMIS (_hesitating_). Women and old men? But the onslaught against the
+Assyrians of which I hear?
+
+OZIAS (_imperiously_). Go quickly. For who is the governor of this city?
+Is it thou or is it I?
+
+(_Exit_ Charmis, _L_.)
+
+(_Men and women have gathered joyously in the street_.)
+
+VOICES (_mockingly, indicating_ Ingur, _with a tendency to horseplay_).
+The Assyrian! The Assyrian!
+
+OZIAS. Take him to the guard-house and chain him to Achior.
+
+HAGGITH. He shall not go, lord Ozias. For as my mistress beguiled
+Holofernes, so did I beguile Ingur, and he is my slave. But I have not
+cut off his head, and he is dear to me because I have not cut off his
+head. And he is mine, and let none touch him (_looking at the
+soldiers_), or my anger, which is the anger of the lady Judith, shall be
+upon that man. (_Hearing a noise, she glances at the house_.) What do I
+see? The sluts are in the tent of my mistress, which is forbidden them.
+Out, sluts! (_Exit angrily into the house_!)
+
+(Ingur _follows her quickly for protection_.)
+
+_Enter_ Messenger.
+
+OZIAS. And you?
+
+MESSENGER (_saluting_). Do my eyes behold the great lord Ozias,
+governor of Bethulia?
+
+OZIAS. Your eyes behold him.
+
+MESSENGER. It is not yet dawn, nevertheless the streets of the city are
+full of a great going and coming, but I found none to lead me to the
+house of the lord Ozias. Yet when I saw my lord's visage my heart said:
+'This is he.'
+
+OZIAS. What is your affair with me?
+
+MESSENGER. I am a messenger.
+
+OZIAS (_curtly_). Speak quickly, for the government of this city in this
+hour is no common matter, and the whole charge of it lies upon me.
+
+MESSENGER. And I am no common messenger. I come with wings through the
+night from Jerusalem, from Joachim, the high priest.
+
+OZIAS. Ah! (_Changing his tone and beckoning the messenger aside_.) What
+tidings do you bear?
+
+MESSENGER. I bear the licence from Joachim.
+
+OZIAS. What licence?
+
+MESSENGER. The licence for the people of Bethulia to drink the wine
+which is sanctified and reserved to the priests which serve the Lord.
+
+OZIAS (_affecting to be puzzled_). Who hath demanded this licence from
+Joachim?
+
+MESSENGER (_surprised_). The lord Ozias sent a messenger to Jerusalem to
+beseech that the licence should be granted. And my lord's messenger
+travelled so swiftly that in the moment when he reached the temple at
+Jerusalem he fell sick and vomited, and I have come to Bethulia in his
+place, for after he had vomited he unfolded to me the secret way
+into the city.
+
+OZIAS (_grandly_). It is true. In the heavy multitude of my cares I had
+forgotten this matter of the licence.
+
+MESSENGER (_confidentially_). And Joachim hath bidden me to say privily
+that if any have already in their extremity drunk of the sanctified wine
+it shall be denied utterly--for the sake of the church.
+
+OZIAS. Ah!
+
+MESSENGER. And here is the licence. (_Offering it_.)
+
+OZIAS. Friend, keep the licence and render it back to Joachim, the high
+priest in Jerusalem. For I need it not, and I demanded it only by excess
+of prudence such as becomes the governor of a city besieged and
+thirsting. But we Bethulians are a faithful and a constant people, and
+we have trusted in the Most High. And if perchance any have drunk of the
+sanctified wine unknown to me (_with a grimace_)--it shall be denied
+utterly, for the sake of seemliness.
+
+MESSENGER. But in the days of trial to come, will not the lord Ozias
+have need of the licence?
+
+OZIAS (_grandly_). Friend, return ye to Joachim and say to him that the
+Lord has delivered Bethulia from the Assyrians by the subtlety of his
+servant Ozias.
+
+MESSENGER (_amazed_). What says my lord?
+
+OZIAS. Yea, this night the head of Holofernes is set on a spear in the
+square before the temple, and the Assyrians flee one from another in
+disorder, and my hosts are about to descend upon them and rend them to
+pieces where they stand foolishly in the valley.
+
+MESSENGER. But this thing is marvellous beyond the understanding of man!
+
+OZIAS. It is indeed marvellous.
+
+MESSENGER. And when Joachim enquires of me who hath taken Holofernes the
+great captain to behead him, and by what device, what shall I answer to
+Joachim?
+
+OZIAS. You will answer that Ozias, knowing the weakness of Holofernes,
+sent down to him secretly a woman, a certain Judith of Bethulia, and
+upon the counsel of Ozias the woman by wiles compassed the death of
+Holofernes as I have told you.
+
+MESSENGER. It is a tale which fathers shall tell to their children, and
+to their children's children, and men shall wonder thereat for all time.
+And now your servant will say to you a thing which has not been told to
+him but which his ear has heard. It was said among the mighty that if my
+lord Ozias should save Judea from the heathen, he would receive notable
+advancement and be raised up among the great ones of the land. (Ozias
+_bows_.) Yet will Joachim not be astonished, for it was spoken in
+Jerusalem that among all the Israelites there is none like the lord
+Ozias for cunning and obstinacy in defence.
+
+OZIAS (_nettled_). Nevertheless it is meet that Joachim should be
+astonished, for with five thousand have I set at naught one hundred and
+two and thirty thousand, and in the chronicles of Israel there is
+written down no deed to match the delivery of Judea from the Assyrians.
+
+MESSENGER. The God of Israel hath saved Israel.
+
+OZIAS. The God of Israel hath save Israel,--by my hand. Go ye, and when
+you have eaten and drunk, set ye forth again for Jerusalem.
+
+(_The Messenger salutes and exit, L_.)
+
+(_Throughout this scene excited and joyous men and women frequently pass
+the street in twos and threes_.)
+
+(_Dawn is breaking and the torches begin to pale_.)
+
+_Enter_ Haggith _and_ Ingur _from the house._
+
+OZIAS. Where art thou going?
+
+HAGGITH. Lord Ozias, I came up from the valley to bring water, and to
+give tidings. Now I go down again to the valley with Ingur and his men
+to seek out my mistress, and to take new raiment to her, and lead her to
+the city; for since the Israelites are fallen upon the Assyrians, my
+mistress is no longer in danger.
+
+_Enter_ Achior.
+
+OZIAS. Slave, who hath dared to loose thee?
+
+ACHIOR. There was none left to guard, and I came forth.
+
+OZIAS (_to a soldier_). Seize this fellow and bind him with fetters.
+
+(_The torches are by this time extinguished_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Lord, it cannot be so. For the lady Judith commanded me to
+bring Achior also, for her protection, seeing that the youth came from
+the Assyrians at the bidding of the God of Israel to give comfort to
+Israel, and for a sign to my mistress.
+
+OZIAS (_after a pause_). I also will go with you, for it is right that
+the governor should do honour to the lady Judith.
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me to say to the lord Ozias that he
+should remain in the city to prepare for her a welcome. (_She points to
+the gates and_ Achior _gladly moves forward. She takes_ Ingur _by the
+ear_.) Bestir thy legs, booby!
+
+OZIAS. The subtlety of women is past knowing.
+
+HAGGITH (_at the gates, maliciously_). It may be. But would the lord
+Ozias invite the displeasure of my mistress? It is day. Let my lord sit
+in the sun.
+
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE II
+
+
+SCENE: _The same_.
+
+Charmis _is alone at the open gates. Glimpses are caught of the people
+beyond the gates_.
+
+TIME: _Afternoon of the same day_.
+
+CHABRIS (_entering to_ Charmis, _at the gates_). They say there is now
+much water in Bethulia.
+
+CHARMIS. Seeing that I have toiled mightily seven hours this day in
+charge of six score crazy carriers to carry water up from the wells!
+Would that Ozias had granted me a whip to sharpen their brains! And now
+Ozias hath left me in charge of the gates.
+
+CHABRIS. Where is Ozias, and what does he do?
+
+CHARMIS. He stands here beyond the gates to receive Judith and the women
+who have gone forth to meet her.
+
+CHABRIS. What is the deed of Judith? (_The noise of an approaching
+procession is heard_. Charmis, _ignoring_ Chabris, _goes a little
+outside the gates to watch._ Chabris _continues in a louder voice_.) The
+streets of the city are empty. I say the streets of the city are empty.
+
+CHARMIS. Dodderer! The whole city is afoot on the hill-side, and all the
+Assyrians left alive are fled in panic into the East.
+
+CHABRIS. Then I will return to my house and drink again. No! I will
+remain, and my eyes shall regard the women, as of old.
+
+_Enter through the gates a procession of women (including_ Rahel),
+_waving branches. At the end of the procession come_ Haggith _and_
+Ingur, _and finally_ Judith, _with_ Achior _on one hand, and_ Ozias _on
+the other. Townspeople and soldiers, garlanded, follow the procession_.
+
+BALLET.
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Judith). O daughter, blessed be thou above all the women of
+the earth. Thou art the exaltation of Jerusalem and the great glory of
+Israel, for the Lord hath directed thee to the cutting off of the head
+of the chief of our enemies, and thou hast revenged our ruin.
+
+VOICES. So be it.
+
+JUDITH. Holofernes came out of the mountains from the north, and his
+horsemen covered the hills; and he bragged that he would burn up the
+borders of Israel, and kill her young men with the sword, and make the
+virgins as a spoil. But the Almighty Lord hath disappointed the
+Assyrians by the hand of a woman; and my sandals ravished the eye of
+Holofernes, and my beauty took his mind prisoner, and the knife passed
+through his neck. Let all creatures serve the Lord!
+
+VOICES. So be it!
+
+OZIAS. Charmis, I appoint you to lead the people to the Temple, where
+are the banners of the Assyrians which we have captured this day, and
+each woman shall take a banner, and all shall return to this place
+before the house of the Lady Judith.
+
+CHARMIS (_swollen with pride_). I obey, lord Ozias.
+
+(_The procession begins to move away, L_. Haggith _displays her
+importance and bullies_ Ingur, _who accompanies her_.)
+
+RAHEL (_to_ Chabris). What, grandad! You are abroad once more! (_She
+takes him with her like a disobedient child_.)
+
+(_Exeunt, processionally, all except_ Judith, Ozias _and_ Achior.)
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Achior). Thou goest not with the people?
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Achior). Stay, I pray you, Achior.
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Judith, _with growing excitement_). I wish to speak privily
+with the lady Judith, _now_!
+
+JUDITH. Let us speak here.
+
+OZIAS. Shall we not go into your house, you and I?
+
+JUDITH. My house is not ready to receive you, Ozias.
+
+OZIAS. Let it be so. But before Achior I will not speak.
+
+JUDITH. Achior, go into my house, and do honour to my dwelling, and
+repose in it.
+
+ACHIOR. Gladly, O lady! (_Exit into the house_.)
+
+JUDITH. What is the urgency that oppresses you, Ozias, and why are you
+troubled in the hour of triumph?
+
+OZIAS (_losing control of himself_). Who is the heathen Achior that you
+should prefer him and make your mouth sweet to him?
+
+JUDITH. Leave Achior, and let us come at once to the matter that
+presses.
+
+OZIAS. Oh! I will not speak smoothly for a pretence! Thou knowest that
+my jealousy smokes against Achior. Yea, and against Holofernes also.
+
+JUDITH. But Holofernes is dead.
+
+OZIAS. Before he went down to his place, didst thou not sin with him?
+
+JUDITH. As the Lord liveth, my countenance deceived him to his
+destruction, yet did he not shame me.
+
+OZIAS. Blessed be our God!
+
+JUDITH. But how does this matter touch thee, and what is my virtue in
+thy regard?
+
+OZIAS. Let Holofernes suffice thee, and drive not me also to death with
+the softness of thy voice. Art thou not aware that the soul of my soul
+burns for thee and will not wait--the more so since thou hast done a
+mighty deed and art proved a woman beyond all women?
+
+JUDITH. Nay! I have done naught; but the Lord hath saved Israel by _thy_
+hand.
+
+OZIAS. What is this humbleness?
+
+JUDITH. AS I came towards the city with Achior, the messenger from
+Jerusalem met us in the way, and he was full to bursting of the word of
+Ozias, and that Ozias had delivered Israel, and that what I did I did
+by thy device and at thy command. But the messenger in speaking knew not
+that he spoke to Judith, and I let him go.
+
+OZIAS. Judith----
+
+JUDITH. Yet it seems to me that thou wast ignorant of all that which I
+went out to do, and my plan was hidden from thee.
+
+OZIAS (_powerfully persuasive_). Hearken to me, Judith. I swear it was
+for thee that I boasted. My aim was that thy mighty deed should gain
+preferment in Jerusalem. But thou art a woman and therefore preferment
+is not for thee. Yet now by reason of my boasting I shall be greatly
+advanced and lifted up, and in all Judea there will be none higher than
+me, and thus wilt thou also be advanced and lifted up.
+
+JUDITH. I desire no preferment.
+
+OZIAS. But I would have it in thy behalf; and my appetite is double. I
+rage for glory and dominion, and I rage also for thee. And I will offer
+thee glory and dominion, for I seek these things as a gift to thy
+beauty. And if I cannot lay them on thy lap my heel shall spurn mankind
+and I will tread it to dust. My desires are terrible; they will not be
+withstood; they consume me daily, but daily I am renewed. I am on fire,
+but by the fierceness of the fire I am strengthened. I was conceived
+for greatness and my mother bore me for mastery, and the huge earth
+shall shake with the terror of my commands.... And I am held between thy
+fingers.
+
+JUDITH. I deny not thy greatness.
+
+OZIAS. Surely thou canst not. For thou too art great. And my greatness
+yearns to thine.
+
+JUDITH. Wilt thou listen?
+
+OZIAS. I hear.
+
+JUDITH. With this greatness of thine goes deceit and laxity of mind.
+
+OZIAS. Yet when thou didst thy mighty deed didst thou not deceive
+cruelly?
+
+JUDITH. I deceived not for myself, but for Israel; and my guile was for
+the glory of God. But thy heart is set only upon advancement and power,
+which is corruption.
+
+OZIAS. Judith, canst thou not lift thy thoughts beyond good and evil,
+and canst thou not contemplate the marvellous greatness of man? I will
+abase myself before none but thee, and in my ear there is no commandment
+but thine; and all other decrees will I mock. I would have thee in
+marriage, and I would have no other but thee. Wilt thou take me to
+thee, and wilt thou yield thyself without fear to the terrible flame of
+my love? For thus shalt thou fulfil thyself and me. But give heed before
+thou answerest, and know that if thou turnest from me, I will make all
+the nations of the earth to tremble with my fury.
+
+JUDITH. Thou art great also in thy loving.
+
+OZIAS. Once thou didst love me.
+
+JUDITH. Nay! I but looked upon thee in kindness. But now I will not go
+to thee in marriage.
+
+OZIAS (_half admiring_). Thou art not then afraid of my wrath!
+
+JUDITH. I am Judith.
+
+OZIAS (_with a fresh access of violence_). Thou hungerest for Achior.
+Wouldst thou marry a heathen, thou a Hebrew woman?
+
+JUDITH. And thou, if I had not accomplished the will of the Lord, and if
+thou hadst been carried to Babylon as thou saidst, wouldst thou not have
+denied the Most High and gone after other gods? But Achior believeth in
+our God, and this day will be joined into the house of Israel.
+
+OZIAS (_savagely scornful_). What is Achior but a simpleton!
+
+JUDITH. It may be. But I love him and he shall rule me ... for he came
+hither for a sign from the Lord.
+
+OZIAS (_savagely resentful_). Oh! If I did not love thee, would I not
+undo thee!
+
+JUDITH. Thou! Thou art Ozias, but I am she who cut off the head of a
+mightier than thou, even Holofernes in his tent. Go thy ways and fulfil
+greatness. As for me I will remain obediently in my house, and truth and
+righteousness shall reign in my house.
+
+(_The procession returns, the women bearing the banners of the
+Assyrians_. Achior _enters from the house_.)
+
+(Judith _is crowned with olives_.)
+
+JUDITH. And now let the priests and the elders enter with me into my
+house, and Achior shall follow them, so that he may be received into
+Israel, and I will be betrothed to him with all the ceremonies of the
+law, for he came to me as a messenger from God. And when the marriage
+has been performed, I will submit myself to him as a wife to her
+husband.
+
+HAGGITH. And let Ingur also be received into Israel, for he has repented
+of his idolatries. And he shall be my husband, yet shall he not rule me.
+
+OZIAS. Brethren, hearken! This night I go to Jerusalem, for I am called
+to higher things, because I have delivered Israel. And I shall not
+return to this little city; but ye will have tidings of me in the years
+to come, and ye will say proudly to the strangers within your gates: He
+was a Bethulian and once he ruled over us.
+
+JUDITH. The lord Ozias is called to greatness. Peace go with him.
+
+ALL. So be it.
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Judith, by Arnold Bennett
+
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+<html>
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
+ "text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Works By The Same Author, by AUTHOR.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
+ P { margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
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+ BODY{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
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+ .linenum {position: absolute; top: auto; left: 4%;} /* poetry number */
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+ .blkquot {margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 4em;} /* block indent */
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+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Judith, by Arnold Bennett
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Judith
+
+Author: Arnold Bennett
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2004 [EBook #12794]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JUDITH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Sander van Rijnswou and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h1><a name="JUDITH">
+JUDITH</a></h1>
+
+<p>A PLAY IN THREE ACTS</p>
+
+<p><i>Founded on the apocryphal book of &quot;Judith&quot;</i></p>
+<br />
+
+<p>BY</p>
+
+<p>ARNOLD BENNETT</p>
+
+<p>LONDON</p>
+
+<p>1919</p>
+
+<p><i>First published April 30, 1919</i></p>
+
+<p>NOTE</P>
+
+<p>This play was presented for the first time at the Devonshire Park
+Theatre, Eastbourne, on Monday, April 7th, 1919, with the following
+cast:</p>
+
+<table>
+<tr><td>Judith</td> <td>LILLAH MCCARTHY</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Haggith</td> <td>ESM&Eacute; HUBBARD</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Rahel</td><td> MADGE MURRAY</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Ozias</td><td> CAMPBELL GULLAN</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Holofernes</td><td> CLAUDE KING</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Bagoas</td><td> ERNEST THESIGER</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Achior</td><td> GEOFFREY DOUGLAS</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Chabris</td><td> E.H. PATERSON</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Charmis</td><td> FEWLASS LLEWELLYN</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Ingur</td><td> FREDERICK VOLPE</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Messenger</td><td> FELIX AYLMER</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Soldier</td><td> CLIFFORD MOLLISON</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Attendant</td><td> EDWIN OXLEE</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The play was produced by WILFRED EATON</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHARACTERS">
+CHARACTERS</a></h2>
+
+<p><i>Hebrews</i></p>
+
+JUDITH<br />
+HAGGITH, her waiting-woman<br />
+RAHEL<br />
+OZIAS, Governor of Bethulia<br />
+CHABRIS, an elder<br />
+CHARMIS, an elder<br />
+A SOLDIER<br />
+A MESSENGER<br />
+<br />
+
+<p><i>Assyrians</i></p>
+
+HOLOFERNES, General of the Assyrian armies<br />
+BAGOAS, his chief eunuch<br />
+ACHIOR, a captain<br />
+INGUR, a soldier<br />
+AN ATTENDANT ON BAGOAS<br />
+<br />
+
+
+<p><a href="#ACT_I">ACT I</a></p>
+<i>A street in the city of Bethulia</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_II">ACT II</a></p>
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_II">SCENE I.</a> <i>The valley near the Assyrian camp. Time, morning; two days later</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#SCENE_II">SCENE II.</a> <i>The tent of Holofernes. Time, later, the same morning</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#SCENE_III">SCENE III.</a> <i>The same. Time, the same night</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_III">ACT III</a></p>
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_III">SCENE I.</a> <i>Same as Act I. Time, later, the same night.</i><br />
+<br />
+<p><a href="#ACT_III_SCENE_II">SCENE II.</a><i>The same. Time, the next day</i>.<br />
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="ACT_I">ACT I</a></h2>
+
+<p><i>A street in the city of Bethulia in Judea. Bethulia is in the hill
+country, overlooking the great plain of Jezreel to the south-west. Back,
+the gates of the city, hiding the view of the plain. Right, Judith's
+house, with a tent on the roof. Left, houses. The street turns abruptly,
+back left, along the wall of the city. Left centre, a built-up
+vantage-point, from which the plain can be seen over the gates</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>Fifth century B.C.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Towards evening</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Ozias <i>is standing alone in the street, drinking from a leathern bottle.
+Enter</i> Chabris, <i>back left</i>. </p>
+
+<p>OZIAS <i>(quickly, but with perfect calmness, hiding the bottle in his
+garments</i>). Old man! It is years since I saw you. How came you past the
+guard, old man?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Old? Old? I am not yet a hundred. Who are you?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Ah! So this is Ozias, the son of Ezbon. Before your father
+could walk I have nursed him on my knee; and he was filled like the full
+moon&mdash;with naughtiness.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What has brought you at last out of your house? Are you come to
+prophesy once more?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I have given up prophesying.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. A profession full of risks.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I pass my endless days in meditation and solitude.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. That sounds much safer. How comely is the wisdom of old men!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. And what do you do, sprig?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Has none told you?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I see nobody but my daughter's granddaughter, and her I forbid
+to speak to me, because being a woman she has the tongue of a woman, and
+a woman's tongue is unfavourable to meditation. How should I be told?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I am the governor of this great city of Bethulia.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. You are responsible for this city?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I am.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Now I understand my misfortune. And the truth was in me when I
+said to your mother as she lay dying: Better it is to die without
+children than to have them that are ungodly.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Oh! How comely a thing is the judgment of grey hairs!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. You ask me what has brought me at last out of my house. I will
+tell you. Thirst! Thirst has brought me out of my house. Every morning
+and every evening my great-grandchild serves me with pulse and water.
+For five days she has furnished less and less water, and this day&mdash;not a
+drop! Can one eat pulse without water to drink? Half an hour ago I went
+to her to reason with her, and she lay on her bed cracked, and raved
+that she herself had not drunk for three days and that there was no
+water left in all Bethulia. So I came at last out of my house into the
+streets of this city famous for its cool fountains which never fail. And
+lo! I meet the governor of this city, and he is Ozias! Ozias! Seven days
+do men mourn for him that is dead, but for an ungodly man all the days
+of his life! Why is there no water in Bethulia, sprig?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Old man, meditation is good and solitude is good, but think not
+because you sit staring all day at your own belly that the sun and stars
+have ceased to revolve round the earth and the kings of this world to
+make war. Is it possible that you do not know what has happened?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I only know that I cannot eat pulse without water to drink.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Bethulia is besieged.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Who is besieging Bethulia?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I have never heard his name. Who is he?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Never heard the name of the chief captain of Nebuchadnezzar? Have
+you heard the name of Nebuchadnezzar, by chance?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I seem to remember it.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Come up here. (<i>They go up the steps to the vantage-point</i>.)
+Look! A hundred and twenty thousand foot-soldiers. Twelve thousand
+archers on horseback. Oxen and sheep for their provisions. Twenty
+thousand asses for their carriages. Camels without number. Infinite
+victuals; and very much gold and silver. The like was never seen before.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>stepping down</i>.) Why has Nebuchadnezzar set about this thing?
+What harm has Bethulia done to him?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Much harm. Nebuchadnezzar has decided to be God. He has decreed
+that all nations and tribes shall call upon him as God. And he has
+conquered the whole earth, excepting only Judea; and Bethulia is the
+gate into Judea, and Bethulia has not listened to his decree, and I am
+the governor of Bethulia. So Nebuchadnezzar the great king is very angry
+and Holofernes is the tool of his wrath.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>going up the steps again and gazing</i>.) How many did you say?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. A hundred and twenty thousand foot and twelve thousand horse.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. At any rate this will be the last war.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Why?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Why! Because plainly war cannot continue on such a scale. Or if
+it does, mankind is destroyed. Nebuchadnezzar has rendered war
+ridiculous.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS <i>(laughs; then half to himself, sarcastically).</i> What is heavier
+than lead, and what is the name thereof, but an aged fool?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>descending again, self-centred</i>). It remains that I cannot eat
+pulse without water to drink. (<i>To</i> Ozias.) And surely Bethulia has more
+wells than any other city of Judea.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The wells are at the foot of the hills, and Holofernes has
+seized them all.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. That is not fighting.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is war.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. No, no! In my time soldiers fought fairly.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And killed each other. Why should Holofernes sacrifice thousands
+of lives to take the heights when he can reach the same result by
+letting his men sit still and watch?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I say this is not war. Once I travelled many days to Nineveh.
+It is a city of extravagance, and when I beheld its mad, new-fangled
+ways, I knew that the last day was nigh. I was right. Three thousand and
+five hundred years since Jehovah created Adam, and Eve from his rib ...
+Too long! Too long! And what is pulse without water? I must have water.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is thirty-four days since Holofernes took the wells. If you
+have received water up to yesterday your great-grandchild must indeed
+have thirsted that you might drink. I have distributed water by measure,
+but now the cisterns are empty, and women and young men fall down in the
+streets, and there is no water in Bethulia. We are all in like case, the
+high and the lowly. </p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Then give me your bottle.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What bottle?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I saw you put it from your lips as I came.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It behoves you to understand, old man, that my solemn duty as
+governor is to maintain my own strength, for if I fell the city would
+fall. Without me to inspire them the populace would yield in a moment.
+What is the populace? Poltroons, animals, sheep, rabbits, insects, lice!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Give me the bottle.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is as empty as the cisterns.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Give it to me, or I will cry through the streets that you are
+concealing water. (Ozias <i>gives him the bottle</i>. Chabris <i>drinks</i>. Ozias
+<i>snatches the bottle away and conceals it</i>.) Ah!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>A figure is glimpsed in the tent on the roof of</i> Judith's <i>house</i>.
+Ozias <i>starts</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. What is that up yonder?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Nothing.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Whose house is this?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is the house of Judith, the daughter of Merari.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Ah! Merari, the son of Ox, the son of Oziel&mdash;Oziel and I were
+little playful boys together&mdash;the son of Elcia, the son of Raphaim, the
+son of Eliab, the son of Nathanael, the son of&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Old man, your memory is terrible. Have pity!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. The draught has revived me. So Merari married and had a
+daughter. What manner of woman is she?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. She is the widow of Manasses, who died of the heat in the barley
+harvest. And she is childless. And she is very rich; for Manasses left
+her gold and silver and menservants and maid-servants and cattle and
+lands. And she has remained a widow in her house three years and four
+months, and never has she come forth. And there is none to give her an
+ill word, for she fears the Lord greatly.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Yes. But what <i>manner</i> of woman is she?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. She is beautiful to behold.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>to himself</i>). Oh! <i>That</i> manner of woman!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And she has fasted all the days of her widowhood, except the eves
+of the Sabbaths and the Sabbaths, and the eves of the new moons and the
+new moons, and the feasts and solemn days of the House of Israel.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. You are most deeply versed in her life. Is she exceeding
+beautiful?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. She is exceeding beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Then it was she who <i>peeped</i> (<i>with a peculiar emphasis on the
+word</i>) from the tent a moment since.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Old man, you have eyes.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. It is the draught of water.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. She is said to take the air in her tent daily at this hour.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>accusingly</i>). And that is why you are here, Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. No! I come here to reflect upon my plans for the saving of the
+city, and because of this vantage-point, to view the army of the
+Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. This vantage-point is new since my day. You have built it
+here, not to see the Assyrians, but to see Judith. And that is why you
+have set a guard to keep the street empty.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And if it be so, what then? Old man, you are so old that to
+confess in your ear is sweet, like murmuring secrets into the grave. If
+I do come to this place to watch for the marvellous vision of Judith,
+what then?</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. What then? And the populace of Bethulia dying of thirst?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The populace!... Mice! Rats! Beetles! (<i>He makes the motion of
+crushing with his foot</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Yet the city is doomed. You can have no hope.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. No hope? Am I then a dead body? Am I a rotting corpse? True, the
+city will be taken, and when the city is taken I may be killed. But in
+your meditations, old man, has it not occurred to you that death must be
+highly interesting? Or I may be seized for a slave. But either I should
+cease speedily to be a slave, or I should become the most powerful slave
+in Babylon. (<i>Reflectively</i>.) We might be enslaved together.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Who?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Judith and I. The history of the world is full of miracles.
+Meanwhile, I live, and the strong savour of life inflames my nostrils;
+and the ever-increasing magnificence and terror of war is like wine in
+my mouth. I shake with delight at the vastness and the mystery of the
+future.... And there is woman!</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. I feel I can eat my pulse now.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. There is still woman.</p>
+
+<p><i>A fracas is heard, back. Enter</i> Rahel, <i>running, followed by two
+soldiers and a mixed group of Bethulians, including</i> Charmis, <i>an
+elder</i>.</p>
+
+<p>RAHEL (<i>to</i> Chabris, <i>like a termagant</i>). Why did you go forth alone,
+grandad, frightening me when I looked and could not find you? At your
+age! Come back with me this moment.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Ay! There is still woman!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>angrily, to</i> first soldier). Did I not give an order to bar the
+street?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. My lord, some of these are elders of high authority, and
+would pass. As for the girl&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>RAHEL (<i>to</i> Chabris). This moment! (<i>She faints and falls</i>.) </p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>indifferently, as</i> Charmis <i>moves towards</i> Rahel). Let her
+lie. She will come to of herself&mdash;or not, as God wills.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to the soldiers, with cold fierceness</i>). Get back to your
+places. (<i>Exeunt soldiers</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>looking at</i> Ozias <i>and indicating</i> Rahel). She is the
+fourteenth I have seen faint from thirst in the streets this day.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>soothingly</i>). Alas! And you or I may be the next. We are all in
+like case. But what is to be done?</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Confused feeble exclamations from the group of citizens:</i> 'We want to
+know. We are come for that. There is but one thing to be done.')</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>still soothingly</i>). Who among you will be the spokesman?</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. We are all spokesmen.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Even the children?</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. Even the children. In our extremity we are all spokesmen.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. But not all at once. Will you begin, honourable Charmis? You know
+that I am the servant of the citizens.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>nervously oratorical</i>). Lord Ozias, may the God of Israel
+judge between us and you, for you have done us a great injury. (<i>Looks
+round for approval. The group approves.</i>)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. An injury? I? Have I not said that I am the servant of the
+citizens?</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>more confidently</i>). And I say again that you have done us a
+great injury, in that you have not asked peace of the Assyrians. For we
+have no helper, and the God of Israel has sold us into the hands of the
+Assyrians. We are thrown down before them with thirst and with great
+destruction. Therefore now we demand&mdash;(<i>looks round</i>)&mdash;I say we demand
+that you call the Assyrians, and deliver the whole city for a spoil to
+the people of Holofernes and to all his army. For it is better for us to
+be made a spoil than to die of thirst. We will be the slaves of
+Holofernes, so that our souls may live and so that we may not see the
+death of our infants before our eyes, nor our wives nor our children
+die. (<i>A mother in the group convulsively seizes her child. Pause</i>.
+Ozias <i>walks about</i>.) We take to witness against you the heaven and the
+earth and our God and the God of our fathers, which punishes us
+according to our sins and the sins of our fathers; and we demand of you
+that you deliver up the city to Holofernes and his host. (<i>A silence</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(Ozias <i>ascends solemnly to the vantage-point.</i>) </p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>dominating the assembly</i>). Friends, it would seem that Charmis
+has made an end. His words are excellent and full of pity. Who follows
+him? Who will speak next? My ear waits. (<i>A silence</i>.) Ah! Then give
+heed. The words of Charmis are full of pity, but I also have pity. Do
+not I too cherish our women, and our maidens and our young children? And
+because I pity I would not yield to the monster Holofernes. Yes, the
+monster! This is not war that he wages. Once our enemy strove fairly
+with the warriors of Israel. Now he makes our women and children to die
+of thirst. The magnificence of war is gone from the earth, and
+Holofernes by the excess of his hosts has rendered war ridiculous.
+(Chabris <i>raises his hands</i>.) The peoples of the earth will perceive
+that henceforward the institution of war cannot continue, and after this
+there will be no more war. But meanwhile, if I go crouching to the feet
+of Holofernes, what will happen and what will come to pass? Surely it
+will come to pass that the monster who has sat down to watch us die of
+thirst will slay our little children and our old men, and dishonour our
+women, and ravish our innocent virgins; for the enslaving of the
+conquered will not content his anger nor satisfy the lust of his great
+hosts. Shall these things be? I say they shall not be. But what am I,
+save the servant of the citizens of Bethulia? And what do I speak, save
+the thought that is in your hearts? There is no cowardice in you. You
+are not sheep, nor rabbits, nor beetles, nor lice. You are valiant men,
+and women lion-hearted. Without you I am naught, and if I defy
+Holofernes, my fortitude is yours and my resolve springs from you.
+Charmis has invoked the holy name of the God of Israel. Let Israel not
+forget its God, for never has the Most High forsaken Israel. Brethren,
+be of good courage. Let us yet endure five days. Five short days. And if
+these days pass and the God of Israel turn not his mercy towards us,
+then will I do according to the word of Charmis. Such is my oath to you.
+And so it shall be.</p>
+
+<p>Haggith <i>enters from the house of</i> Judith.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My lord Ozias!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>quickly descending the steps</i>). What say you?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress, the lady Judith, will speak with you. She comes.</p>
+
+<p>RAHEL (<i>half rising</i>). Water!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>excited</i>.) The lady Judith comes out of her house after three
+years.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES IN THE GROUP (<i>excited and impressed</i>.) Judith is coming, after
+three years! Judith! The widow!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>sternly to the group</i>). Get hence, everyone to his own charge.
+Soldiers! Clear the street! (Two soldiers <i>advance, running to obey</i>.)
+The men to the walls and towers. The women and children to their houses.
+(<i>To</i> Rahel, <i>who has risen, indicating</i> Chabris.) Take the aged fool
+away, girl. (<i>Ruthlessly and contemptuously</i>.) Get home, all of you.
+Rabble! Insects! Lice!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The street is cleared, not without difficulty, and</i> Ozias <i>is left
+alone with</i> Haggith.)</p>
+
+<p><i>After a pause</i>, Judith <i>enters slowly, in widow's apparel and
+sackcloth</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit</i> Haggith <i>into the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Greetings, Lord Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Lady, greetings. (<i>They salute</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Where are the people?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I invited them to go away.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Why?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Your waiting-woman said that you would speak with me. </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But what I have to say I would have said before them.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Forgive your servant.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. No! It is I, the woman, who should ask to be absolved.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I beseech you&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>simply</i>). Perhaps you dismissed the people because it is not
+meet for them to see all the workings of the mind which has authority
+over them.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>warmly responsive</i>). Ah! Lady! In your wisdom and your
+understanding you have comprehended what it is to be the governor of a
+besieged city. You, alone!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. This is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia&mdash;because
+Judith, the widow of Manasses, has issued from her house and from her
+secrecy, and because after long years she has lightened the city with
+her countenance.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling</i>). We hold converse with words, but the shadow of
+destruction is over us, and our hearts are darkened, and we hide our
+hearts in speech. Ozias, governor of Bethulia, show me your heart.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I dare not.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Dare! I am not afraid.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. YOU are more beautiful than aforetime&mdash;were it possible.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>accepting the compliment</i>). And if I am?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. That is what is in my heart! Behold my heart, and the depths of
+my heart. Look deep, and deeper, and still you will see naught therein
+but the beauty and the subtlety of Judith.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It is no common man that with the parched tongue of thirst can
+talk thus while unspeakable calamity assails the city.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>gently</i>). I came not to meet Ozias, but the governor of
+Bethulia. From my tent I hearkened to the words which he spoke to the
+people, and the Lord said to me: Go down to him, thou, a woman. And I am
+here.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The Lord reigns! That which I said to the people did not please
+the ear of Judith?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. No.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I spoke to the people according to their understanding. Have you
+not said it is not meet for the people to know the thoughts of the
+ruler? Hearken again? And I will speak now to the wise woman. I
+flattered the people with vain praise of their courage, when they have
+no courage. I affrighted the people with a prophecy of terror, when
+there is no terror&mdash;for Holofernes is a great warrior, and has
+compassion in his greatness, for he is a Babylonian. I gave them hope of
+succour when succour is none&mdash;for, with a hundred and twenty thousand
+footmen and twelve thousand horse against us (<i>with dry humour</i>) to
+count upon the mercy of the Lord is presumption.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>moves aside and returns. Sweetly</i>). Why then did you speak thus
+to the people? And to what end did you deceive them? I beseech you yet
+again to show me your heart, for it is right that I should know.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I saw the vastness of the future as in a vision. If the God of
+Israel perchance is merciful, and the city is saved at the eleventh
+hour, then it will be said in Jerusalem that there is none like Ozias of
+Bethulia for steadfastness, for he alone by his ardour revived the
+fainting populace and held firm the city; and great will be my
+recompense.... But that is a dream. Always I have faced the substance of
+things, and the substance is that Nebuchadnezzar has decreed to rule
+over the whole earth, and from the east to the west there is no living
+man that shall not bow down before Nebuchadnezzar. Bethulia will fall.
+I, the governor, shall be taken captive and shown to Nebuchadnezzar, and
+in that day Holofernes shall say to Nebuchadnezzar: Lo! Here is Ozias
+the Israelite who resisted thy mighty armies for thirty-four days and
+yet five days more. Use him if it seem good to thee. And I shall be
+lifted up to be a satrap of Nebuchadnezzar, and I shall partake of the
+bright glory of Nebuchadnezzar. And&mdash;(<i>hesitates</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>subtly and sweetly</i>). And?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>in an outburst</i>). What am I without you, O Judith? Before
+Manasses loved you, did I not love you? For three years have I not
+watched over you in all honour and respect, and troubled you not with my
+importunity until this day, which is the day of days? What am I without
+you, and what shall be my dominion and my satrap's throne if you do not
+sit in majesty by my side, O Rose of Sharon and matchless among women?</p>
+
+<p>Judith (<i>as before</i>). My lord, you are like a rushing river.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. You have seen my heart.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I have seen it.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And what say you?</p>
+
+<p><i>There is the sudden sound of a disturbance. Enter, from back, soldiers,
+holding</i> Achior, <i>and a group of excited citizens</i>. Haggith <i>appears at
+the house-door.</i></p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>fiercely</i>). What! Are my commands no more than the wind in the
+corn, and is there to be naught but tumult within the walls of this
+city?</p>
+
+<p>VOICES IN THE GROUP. An Assyrian! An Assyrian!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias! We saw this man lying bound at the foot of
+the hill, and we descended and loosed him and brought him privily into
+Bethulia by the secret way. And now we present him to my lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS Fools! Then no longer is the secret way secret.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. Slay him! Stone him! Whip the dog!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>nobly scornful, to the crowd</i>). Oh! Brave! Oh! Men of courage
+and high valour!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Achior). Who are you?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. Achior.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Your condition?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR (<i>with calm, genial candour</i>). Captain of all the Ammonites in
+the army of Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Let them loose him, Lord Ozias. His eyes are not the eyes of
+treachery.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to the soldiers</i>). Loose him. (<i>To</i> Achior.) And how come you
+here? Speak the truth&mdash;and fear.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. My mouth shall say truth, but I will not fear.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. My hand is terrible.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. Thus it happened. When the children of Israel had shut up the
+passages of the hill country and had fortified all the tops of the high
+hills, Holofernes was very angry. And he called the captains of Ammon
+and said to them: Tell me now, ye sons of Chanaan, who these Israelites
+are that dwell in the hill country, and wherein is their power and
+strength, and why they have determined not to come and meet me, more
+than all the inhabitants of the west? And I, Achior, answered the
+question of Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And what answer gave you?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes: This people is descended of the Chaldeans.
+But they left the way of their ancestors and would not follow the gods
+of their fathers; and they worshipped the God of heaven. So they were
+cast out from the face of the gods of Chaldea, and they fled into
+Mesopotamia. And they came to Chanaan. But when a famine covered all the
+land of Chanaan they went down into Egypt, and the king of Egypt brought
+them low with labouring in brick and made them slaves. Then they cried
+to their God, and he smote all the land of Egypt with plagues.... And
+God dried the Red Sea for them.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. It is true. It is true!</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. And they came to Chanaan, and drove before them the inhabitants
+of that land, and they dwelt in that country many days. And while they
+sinned not before their God they prospered, because the God that hates
+iniquity was with them.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. It is true.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. But when they departed from the way which their God appointed,
+then they were destroyed in many battles very sore, and were led
+captives into a land that was not theirs, and the temple of their God
+was cast to the ground. </p>
+
+<p>VOICES. Gentile dog! Shall we not render him to pieces?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. There is but one truth, brethren, whether it please or whether
+it displease.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Achior). Make an end.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. And I said to Holofernes: But now this people are returned to
+their God, and have possessed Jerusalem, and are seated in the hill
+country. (<i>With more emphasis</i>.) And I said further to Holofernes: Now
+therefore, my lord and governor, if there be any error in this people,
+let us go up and we shall overcome them. But if there be no iniquity in
+their nation, let my lord now pass by, lest their Lord defend them and
+we become a reproach before all the world.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It was well said.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Lady, it was well said&mdash;if the slave said it. (<i>To</i> Achior.) I
+demanded of you: How came you <i>here</i>?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. Thus. When I had finished speaking to Holofernes, all they that
+were about my lord and governor rose up in wrath and cried: Kill him.
+And the face of Holofernes darkened, and he said: And who art thou,
+Achior, that thou hast prophesied among us to-day that we should not
+make war with the people of Israel because of their God? And who is God
+but Nebuchadnezzar? Nebuchadnezzar by my hand will destroy the
+Israelites, and their God shall not deliver them. Their mountains shall
+be drunken with their blood and their fields shall be filled with their
+dead bodies. (<i>The</i> citizens <i>show alarm</i>.) And thou, Achior, shalt be
+delivered up to the Israelites in Bethulia, and when thou seest me again
+thou shalt fall among the slain.... And he commanded his servants, and
+they took me, and carried me secretly to the foot of the hill of
+Bethulia. And here am I!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>after a pause, positively</i>). It is a wicked device for our
+undoing.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. How so?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Plainly this fellow lies, and he has come subtly with a tale to
+spy out our strength. Presently he will seek to escape from us again to
+the Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. Spy! Stone him! Rend him!</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR (<i>to</i> Ozias). To Holofernes, my lord and governor, I spoke truth;
+and to you also I speak truth. Never has my mouth lied, nor my tongue
+uttered deceit. If death is ordained for my recompense, so be it.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Ozias). He is a fair youth, and has spoken truly and feared
+not.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>with meaning</i>). Lady, he is a fair youth, and fearless. But by
+what sign know you that he has spoken truly?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. By the glance of his eyes I know.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is a sign that suffices not. Shall it be said that Ozias was
+deceived, and shall Ozias imperil his renown, by reason of the glance of
+a youth when he looks at a woman&mdash;even you?... And if he lies not, then
+he is a fool and his folly was great.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. I spoke the truth to Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>fiercely</i>). But to speak truth did not content you. Having
+answered Holofernes, you must needs offer counsel to your lord and
+governor! Who were you to offer counsel to the greatest of all the
+captains of the earth? The protection of the mighty conqueror covered
+you, and lo! in your folly did you estrange yourself from him. Fool!</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes, my lord and governor, that which I was
+appointed to say&mdash;that, no more and no less.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And who appointed you to say that which you said?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. If there be a God in Israel, and if the Lord has not abandoned
+us, may not this youth be the messenger of the Most High to bring us
+comfort, and for a warning to the vainglory of Holofernes?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>with irony</i>). All is possible to the Lord. Yet may his purposes
+be hidden from us. (<i>To the soldiers</i>.) Until the Lord vouchsafe new
+wisdom to me, his servant, bind fetters about the feet of Achior, and
+take him to the house of bondage, and set a guard over him, for a spy is
+not more dangerous than a fool.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>springing forward</i>). It shall be done, Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The soldiers begin to put chains on</i> Achior.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>quietly</i>). Shame him not with fetters, lord Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>after a pause, to the soldiers</i>). Unbind him! (<i>The soldiers
+obey</i>.) Take him off! Speedily! Away! All! Let none remain! Hasten, I
+say!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exeunt back, all except</i> Ozias <i>and</i> Judith. <i>As he goes</i> Achior
+<i>kisses Judith's robe</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Achior, <i>as he does so</i>). Truth-teller!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>At a sign from</i> Judith, Haggith <i>re-enters the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Your face is turned from me, because of the youth. Yet you came
+out to see the governor of the city, and the governor could do no other
+than I have done.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>looking at him</i>). Ozias, you have shown me your heart.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Yea!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. And in the moment when the youth came you asked of me my
+counsel.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Yea!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Hear me now, for the words you have spoken before the people
+this day are not right.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What words?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. This promise that you have uttered to deliver the city to our
+enemies, unless within five days the Lord turn to help. Who are you that
+seek to stand instead of God among the children of men?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Stand instead of God! </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Who are you that have tempted God this day? For you cannot find
+the depth of the heart of man,&mdash;how then shall you search out God or
+comprehend his purpose? Brother, provoke not the Lord our God to anger.
+For if he will not help us within these five days, he has power to
+defend us when he will, even every day. Do not bind the counsels of God.
+For God is not as man that he may be threatened, neither as the son of
+man that he should be wavering. Therefore let us wait for salvation from
+him, and he will hear our voice,&mdash;if it please him. Moreover, this city
+is the key and the gateway to all Judea. If it be obstinate in
+resistance, Judea is not defiled, but if it be taken the whole land
+shall lie waste and God will require the profanation of it at our mouth.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. All that you have spoken is truth, and there is none to gainsay
+your words. From the beginning of your days we have known your wisdom,
+and your understanding is manifest.... (<i>With significance</i>.) But we are
+thirsty.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. If we are thirsty, let us give thanks to the Lord our God, who
+tries us, even as he did our fathers.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The people in the extremity of their thirst compelled me to an
+oath, which I will not break.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Say you the people, Ozias? As for them, you hold them lightly,
+and they are as naught in your eyes. So much you have avowed.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>in a new tone</i>). It is true. This day I hold the people lightly.
+But when the great madness and desperation of thirst comes at last upon
+them, who shall hold them? In that day they will seize the things
+forbidden, and they will drink the wine sanctified and reserved for the
+priests that serve the Lord. And to avert from me the wrath of Joachim,
+the high priest of Jerusalem, I have sent already a messenger to
+Jerusalem to bring a licence that this matter may be lawful.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>shocked</i>). Nay!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I say it will be so.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It shall not be so.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Then pray you to the Most High for the city, even for all of us,
+and the Lord will send rain for our cisterns and we shall faint no more.
+Pray, for you are a godly woman, and the God of Israel shall listen.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>with supreme impressiveness</i>). Hear me again, Ozias. This night
+I will do a thing which shall go throughout all the generations to the
+children of Israel. You shall stand this night in the gate of the city,
+and I will go forth from the city with my waiting-woman; and within the
+days that you have promised to deliver the city to our enemies the Lord
+will visit Israel by my hand.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. On what errand will you go?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Enquire not of my act, for I will not declare it until the
+things are finished that I do. But this I declare, that the Lord has
+inclined himself to me, and now he has sent Achior for a sign.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. You go to Holofernes!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. To Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Do not go!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But why shall I not go?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The perils of the heathen will surround you, and harm will surely
+befall you, for Holofernes will work lamentable evil upon you. And I
+cannot suffer it.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling</i>). Did not Ozias say that Holofernes was a great
+warrior and had compassion in his greatness?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>insistent</i>). I cannot suffer it, for if any shame come upon you
+I will not live.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. God will not see his handmaid shamed. Moreover I regard not
+myself in this thing, but the welfare of the people of Israel.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>kneeling</i>). Judith, I entreat you! For you are the light of my
+eyes, and without you the world is not.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>softly</i>). I know it. Think you that in these years I have not
+seen the depths of your heart, Ozias? Think you that I was blind in my
+tent? Think you that I watched not upon you? You were comely in my
+sight. But this day you have revealed your pride. For you seek not God,
+but the vanity of the earth, and you would make all Israel the
+instrument of your glory, denying the Lord. And I am sad.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Forgive me, Rose of Sharon.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>softly</i>). Who am I, to forgive my brother? Peace be upon you!
+(<i>She turns towards her house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>rising,</i>). Stay!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I go to prepare myself for that which I have to do. (<i>Exit into
+the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>A soldier shows himself, back.</i>)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Friend!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>approaching and saluting</i>). Lord! Your command!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Send to me the officer of the watch.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, the honourable lieutenant lies sick.</p>
+
+<p>(Haggith <i>appears at the door of the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Thirst has overcome him?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>bowing</i>). He raves on the bed, lord, and his tongue is
+like the tongue of a dog.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Who then commands the watch by the watchfires this night?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. I, lord. The watchfires wait the torch.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Will you, too, faint, and will your tongue be like the tongue of
+a dog?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>grimly</i>), Not mine, lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. DO the people complain?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, they whine and snivel mightily.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith <i>with a small sack.</i> </p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Is the secret way shut?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Shut and barred, lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It must be opened.... Stand! I will see to it.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. AS my lord wills.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Has the watch aught to drink?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. My lord knows that no drop is left in the gourds.</p>
+
+<p>(Ozias <i>waves him away, and he retires</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Haggith, <i>who is busy with the sack</i>). Woman, has the lady
+Judith perchance dreamed a dream?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>enigmatically</i>). My mistress has dreamed no dream. Why does
+the lord Ozias ask?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It seemed to me&mdash;(<i>stops</i>)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Dreams lift up fools. (<i>Exit into the house</i>.) (<i>Exit Ozias,
+L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The soldier strolls forward. Twilight begins to fall</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Enter</i> Haggith <i>from the house with more baggage</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>to the soldier; curtly; not looking at him</i>). So thou hast no
+water?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>with genial freedom</i>). Yea, Haggith, we have still a
+little.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Then thou has lied to the governor?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. <i>Him</i>? (<i>With a jerk of the shoulder</i>!) <i>He</i> knows! In
+truth now, thinkest thou he would expect us soldiers to keep guard
+without water? <i>He</i> knows! But he is a great lord, and in seemliness he
+asks for a lie, and that which he asks is given to him&mdash;in seemliness.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. But the officer raving as thou hast said with thirst?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Ah! It is the business of a worshipful officer to scorn
+deceit and to suffer.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. And all the people?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. The people are the people. But we soldiers are
+soldiers&mdash;and must drink, or we cannot guard. (<i>Yawns</i>.) Eh! I could lie
+down and snore for seven years, but I am appointed to watch all night.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>suddenly caressing</i>). Sweet warrior! Would I could rest thee!</p>
+<br />
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>startled by the change in her demeanour</i>). Haggith! Thou
+art marvellously and desirably changed.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I am practising to thy profit for that which lies before me and
+my mistress.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. What meanest thou?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Chut! If thou hast heard a word, let it die with thee&mdash;it will
+not burst thee.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord! turn away from me vain hopes and concupiscence.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. And so thou sleepest not this night!... Neither do I sleep.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. What?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I go with my mistress upon a journey.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. What journey? There can be no journey for thee, unless
+thou leave the city and wend to the Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>curt again</i>). Nevertheless we go upon a journey.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. It is madness.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. It may be.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Who can tell the heart of a master? Not I! When dost thou
+depart?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress is attiring.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Thou dost not attire her?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I! I, who have charge over all that is hers! Wilt thou tell me,
+then, what is the task of her tiring-women? Idle sluts!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. And this is thy baggage?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>matter-of-fact</i>). A cruse of oil, a bag of parched corn, fine
+bread, three lumps of figs&mdash;and a bottle of wine&mdash;yea, the last!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>drawing in his lips</i>). Ah! But thou wilt need an ass for
+this cargo.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>drily</i>). I am the ass.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Judith, <i>magnificently dressed</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The</i> soldier <i>retires, back</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Is all prepared?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. All is prepared, mistress.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Ozias, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>ecstatic at the sight of</i> Judith's <i>splendour</i>). O, loveliness!
+O, lily of the field! Who shall withstand you, and who shall say you
+nay?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling</i>). I am ready to depart.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The secret way is opened. I will lead you to it.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>gently</i>). The secret way? I will take no secret way.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. But hear me, lady. The peril from the archers far off&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. What did I say to you, lord Ozias? I said: You shall stand this
+night in the gate of the city, and I will go forth. My desire is that
+you command the gatemen to open the gates, so that I and my
+waiting-woman may pass out before all men, and in the sight of the Lord.
+(<i>She bends to examine</i> Haggith's <i>baggage</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>moved. Calling to the</i> soldiers). Ho! Let the gates of the city
+be opened, that the lady Judith may go forth.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Yea, lord. (<i>Calling to others, off.</i>) Gatemen!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gatemen man the gate-chains, and citizens rush in with cries</i>:
+'What shall happen to us? The lady Judith leaves the city? At
+night-fall? What is it?')</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>fiercely, to the crowd</i>). Get hence! Dogs!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>softly</i>). Let them stay, Lord Ozias, for that which I do, I do
+not in secret, neither shall it be hidden.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to the crowd</i>). Make a way clear to the gates.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Before I go, I will look into the valley whither I descend.
+(<i>She mounts to the vantage-point</i>).</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. Water! Water! Or we die!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>from the vantage-point</i>). Brethren, bewail not! Remember what
+things the Lord did to Abraham, and how he tried Isaac, and what
+happened to Jacob in Mesopotamia. For the Lord has not tried us in the
+fire as he did them, neither has he taken vengeance upon us. But the
+Lord scourges them that come near to him, to admonish them. (<i>She
+kneels. Following her example, everybody kneels</i>.) O Lord God of my
+father Simeon, the Assyrians are multiplied in their power; they trust
+in shield, and spear, and bow, and sling; and know not that thou art the
+Lord which breakest battles; the Lord is thy name. Behold their pride,
+and send thy wrath upon their heads; give into my hand, which am a
+widow, the power that I have conceived. For thy power standeth not in
+multitude, nor thy might in strong men. Smite the Assyrians by the
+deceit of my lips; break down their stateliness by the hand of a woman.
+And make my speech and deceit to be their wound and stripe, who have
+purposed cruel things against thy covenant and against the top of Zion.
+And make every nation and tribe to acknowledge that thou art the God of
+all power, and that there is none other that protecteth the people of
+Israel but thou. (<i>She rises. The crowd murmurs:</i> 'Amen.' <i>All rise.</i>
+Judith <i>comes down from the vantage-point. Silence</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>moved</i>). Open the gates.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Haggith). Nothing is forgotten?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Nothing.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>moves a step towards the gates.</i>)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The soul of my soul goes with you into the valley.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Haggith, <i>solemnly</i>). And the knife?</p>
+
+<p>(Haggith <i>gives a gesture. At the same moment a woman comes from the
+house with a knife, which she hands to</i> Haggith, <i>who hands it to</i>
+Judith, <i>who takes it ceremoniously, and hides it in her dress. The
+gates are now opened, and the distant plain under the setting sun is
+seen covered with the tents of the Assyrian army</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>goes slowly through the gates, followed by</i> Haggith <i>carrying
+the baggage</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>VOICES (<i>as</i> Judith <i>passes</i>). Water! Water!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>with deep emotion</i>). Close the gates. Light the watchfires.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gates begin slowly to close. The glow of the watchfires is seen</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="ACT_II">ACT II</a></h2>
+
+
+<h3>SCENE I</h3>
+
+<p><i>The valley of Jezreel. The city of Bethulia on the hill in the
+distance</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Haggith <i>with her baggage enters to</i> Ingur <i>and his men</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>The next morning but one</i>. </p>
+
+<p>INGUR. What art thou?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>prudishly and coldly</i>). If it please thee, I am a woman.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. No. Thou art a hedgehog.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>suddenly cajoling</i>). I ask pardon. When I saw thy great
+handsomeness I grew afraid, and my tongue was stiffened. In my country
+there is no man so handsome as thou art.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Ah! (<i>Much mollified</i>.) And what then is thy country?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I am a woman of the Hebrews, and I have come from Bethulia.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>astonished</i>). A woman of the Hebrews! From Bethulia! (<i>To his
+men</i>). Stand back from my face. (<i>The men retire. To</i> Haggith.) This is
+a rare strange tale.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Could I lie to <i>thee</i>? I have escaped from the city, which is
+given over to be consumed. I sought water for my thirst, for in Bethulia
+there is no water, and the people faint in the streets.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. But it is a long journey from Bethulia, and thou art fresh and
+delicate as though just risen from thy bed.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>smiling</i>). I can hide nothing from thee, mighty wolf. I am,
+indeed, but just risen from my bed. The night before last night I set
+forth secretly, and came into the valley yesterday at noon, and lay soft
+in a cave where three springs bubbled, and drank, and slept until this
+morning's sunrise.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. What is thy name?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Haggith.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Thy name is as strange as thy errand, and as thyself; and surely
+thou art a woman of the Hebrews, which is a race of lunatics, as I am
+told.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I have figs fit for a great king. (<i>Opens her sack and offers
+some figs</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>INGUR <i>(eating).</i> Um! And what else hast thou? Let me touch thee,
+Haggith. (<i>He touches her carefully</i>). Yes, thou art outlandish, and no
+doubt mad, but comely. Comely! Thou hast the likeness and feel of a
+woman. Always have I hankered after strange women, and now lo! one falls
+ripe into my mouth. (Haggith <i>shrinks. Reassuringly.</i>) In a way of
+speaking! In a way speaking! For thou art not in my mouth. And so thou
+earnest to slake thy thirst?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Yes, my roaring lion.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Listen! Thou hast saved thy life with water. But thou art lost.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Lost?</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Ay! A woman in the camps of the Assyrians&mdash;she is undone. She is
+a lamb in a den of terrible tigers. (<i>Comfortingly</i>.) No, no! I will
+protect thee, but I warn thee that thou art undone. I am honest.
+(<i>Caresses her</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>clumsily returning his caress</i>). <i>Thou</i> wilt not harm me.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. I will not tear thee to pieces, but thou shalt come away with me.
+(<i>She timidly strokes him</i>). Thou hast not the habit of this stroking.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me, when I encountered any noble
+Assyrian, to use him thus. It is true that I have not the habit.
+Nevertheless I do what I can.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>startled at the mention of a mistress</i>). Thy&mdash;thy mistress? Ye
+are two? Where then is thy mistress? Tell me upon the instant&mdash;is she
+fairer than thou?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Seven times more fair.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Fetch her!</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress is washing herself in a fountain of water by the
+cave. She sent me forward in peace and friendliness to announce her
+coming.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Fetch her! (<i>Suddenly perceiving</i> Bagoas <i>in the distance, he
+changes his manner</i>.) Stay! Bagoas is approaching, and he may have seen
+thee. His eyes are sharp. Stand off. (Haggith <i>moves away a little</i>.)
+But when I tell thee, fall down on thy face.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Is he a great captain?</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. His mightiness is the chief eunuch of the Prince, and there is
+none greater than he save only the Prince himself, for Bagoas has charge
+over all the women of the Prince's tents.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Women of the Prince's tents?</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Ay! Wives! Concubines! Virgins! Beyond counting. Didst thou think
+in thy Hebrew pride, that the Prince was a savage and a barbarian?...
+Down, damsel! Here is Bagoas. Embrace the earth for thy life's sake.
+(Haggith <i>obeys</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Bagoas, <i>with attendants, L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(Ingur <i>salutes him with extreme deference</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Who art thou?</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. Ingur, mightiness, commanding twenty footmen.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Begone from my sight. This morning the Prince condescends to
+walk through the camp, that all the armies may take joy in his
+countenance. It is not meet that he should be seen of any lower than a
+lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>indicating</i> Haggith). Mightiness, a woman of the Hebrews escaped
+from Bethulia to find water! And by my subtlety I have captured her.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. A woman of the Hebrews! (<i>Surveying</i> Haggith.) Rise, scum, and
+let me behold thy deformity. (Haggith <i>obeys</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>INGUR. And there is another yet to appear,&mdash;her mistress, seven times
+fairer.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Her mistress may be seven times fairer than this eyesore, and
+yet ugly. (<i>To</i> Haggith.) Who is thy mistress?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. The lady Judith.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Judith! A name fit only for a cat! Why is she here? How is she
+here? What is her secret and detestable purpose? For there is a trick in
+this thing.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I know not my mistress's purpose.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Tell me thy mistress's purpose, or I will have thee smothered.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I know only that if Holofernes&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>stopping her angrily</i>). Callest thou the illustrious one by his
+name? The most high <i>Prince</i> Holofernes, foul wench.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. The most high Prince Holofernes&mdash;if he so wills my mistress
+would speak with his highness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>laughing heartily</i>). Speak with the Prince? <i>Speak</i> with the
+Prince? Ha-ha! (<i>All the men laugh</i>.) What is the state of thy mistress?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. The lady Judith is a widow.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>still more amused</i>). Aha! A widow! And the Hebrew hag would
+<i>speak</i> with Prince Holofernes! (<i>The men laugh and jeer</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Judith, <i>R</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(Haggith <i>goes quickly to her. All the men stare at</i> Judith, <i>deeply
+impressed</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>aside to</i> Judith). There are many hussies in the camps,
+thousands and thousands, mistress. This lord is the chief eunuch.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside to an attendant</i>). If this be an example of the Bethulian
+women, I shall have a momentous business upon me when their city falls.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith, <i>signing to</i> Haggith <i>to stand aside, bows to the ground
+before</i> Bagoas; <i>then rises again</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>after a short pause</i>). You are very beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. There are beautiful women in Judea, but no man of Judea would
+look twice at such as I, a shrunken widow, like dried fish.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit</i> Ingur, <i>excitedly, L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I have heard how you have escaped out of Bethulia and come
+hither in order to find water. (<i>Blandly</i>.) Aught else?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. My desire also was to have speech privately with the great
+conqueror, Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Ah! We are well met, you and I. For I am Bagoas, chief eunuch to
+the illustrious Prince. (<i>Aside to second attendant</i>.) Run. Fetch the
+box of veils. (<i>Exit</i> second attendant, <i>L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>saluting once more</i>). I supplicate then, mighty Bagoas, that
+you lead me quickly to the illustrious Prince Holofernes.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Surely! Surely! It is my pleasure to content you. (<i>Aside, to
+attendant, anxiously</i>.) This dried fish by her damnable beauty will
+reach great power, and if I speak not softly to her now she will undo me
+in that day.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I humbly thank your mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. But it is necessary that you should relate to me your little
+affair. For no woman speaks to the illustrious Prince until she has
+spoken to me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It cannot be so.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>persuasively</i>). In my ear, privily. Approach. </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It cannot be so.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. What mean you&mdash;it cannot be so?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will utter my errand to the illustrious Prince Holofernes
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>losing his self-control; angrily</i>). What? Thou queasy chit!
+Thou minx! Thou jade! Baggage! Mopsy! Shamelesss wench! Thou wilt not
+obey Bagoas, chief eunuch in the camps of the Assyrians! I will make
+thee the slave of my slave and the plaything of scullions. (<i>Stops.</i>
+Judith <i>smiles</i>. Haggith <i>subsides alarmed at her feet</i>.) Thou shalt be
+abandoned to the sutlers and the ass-drivers, and thus thou shalt learn
+who is Bagoas and what is his power! (<i>Stops again.</i> Judith <i>still
+smiles</i>.) The strumpets of the kitchens shall scorn thee! I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling sweetly</i>). Mightiness! Mightiness! I am your bondwoman,
+but it is appointed by heaven that I shall speak with the illustrious
+Prince Holofernes himself.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>controlling himself, smiling</i>). Well, if it is appointed by
+heaven, so shall it be. Forget my words. They had no evil intent, for I
+was trying you, as my duty is. (<i>Aside to attendant</i>.) The sweetness of
+her glance dissolves my backbone.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightinesss.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>to</i> Judith). Follow me, lady. (<i>Aside to</i> attendant.) Thinkest
+thou the Prince will come this way? (<i>Pointing</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Or that?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. If the Prince so much as sees her before the city is taken,
+never will the city be taken, and we shall all be her captives.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>beating the attendant</i>). I will lead her by the path to the
+cave, for the Prince will surely not come that way. (<i>To</i> Judith.)
+Follow me, lady.</p>
+
+<p>(Bagoas <i>moves R</i>. Judith <i>hesitates a moment as</i> Haggith <i>picks up her
+sack. Enter R. the heralds of Holofernes, followed by</i> Holofernes.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>to himself</i>). Holofernes! (<i>To his attendants</i>.) Hide her,
+rascals, or Assyria is undone. (<i>The attendants range themselves
+between</i> Judith <i>and</i> Holofernes.)</p>
+
+<p>(Bagoas <i>receives</i> Holofernes <i>with a prostration and high ceremony</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Where is this woman?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Woman, Prince?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>impatient</i>). This Hebrew woman, I say! One Ingur has run
+among the tents chattering, and the rumour of her has spread through the
+camps like a plague. By Nebuchadnezzar the one god, where is she, for it
+has been told to me that her beauty excels the beauty of all the women
+of the East and ravishes the eye exceedingly?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Ah! It is of Judith that the Prince deigns to speak. Lo! I had
+caught her and was bringing her to your highness. (<i>To</i> attendants.)
+Stand aside, dogs.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>is revealed to</i> Holofernes. <i>She prostrates herself and then
+rises</i>. Holofernes <i>gazes at her, entranced</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. So thou hast escaped out of Bethulia to find water for thy
+thirst?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. To find water, and to have speech with the most illustrious
+Prince.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Woman (<i>approaching her a step, and then standing still</i>),
+be of good comfort, and fear not in thy heart, for I never hurt any that
+was willing to serve Nebuchadnezzar, the god of all the earth. And if
+thy people that dwell in the mountains had not held me lightly, I would
+not have lifted up my spear against them, but they have done these
+things to themselves.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside, to</i> Holofernes). Terrible master, she is full of guile
+and deceitfulness, and came not at all for water, but for a hidden
+purpose against you. Therefore enquire of her closely.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Bagoas). Chastise thy tongue, ere it overthrow thee,
+fiend. There is no guile in that face. (<i>To</i> Judith.) Tell me now thy
+message and wherefore in truth thou art come. And tremble not, for thou
+shalt live this night.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Great prince, receive the words of your servant and suffer your
+handmaid to speak in your presence, and I will declare no lie to my
+lord.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Speak.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside to</i> Holofernes). It is a device against my lord. </p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Judith). Speak now, I command thee.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. My message concerns the fate of Bethulia, and of all the
+Assyrians, and of my lord. Life and death are in it, for I have communed
+with heaven.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Which heaven? Thine or mine?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. There is but one God.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>roughly</i>). And he is Nebuchadnezzar. Speak thy tale.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside to</i> Holofernes). It is a device.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>angrily</i>). Speak out all thy heart, and quickly!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will speak to my lord in my lord's tent.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>furious</i>). In my tent! Who art thou who defiest me, and
+what is thy licence, heathen slave, to defile the tent of Holofernes?
+Bind her. Take her away, and twist the cords about her neck, and
+strangle her, and cast her insolence into the lake.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>is seized and bound in an instant</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>in two minds</i>). Wait!</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. She is bound, illustrious prince.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Wait!</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside to</i> Holofernes). Prince, let not the benevolence of your
+heart be your undoing, for in the loveliness of her face is cunning and
+great peril. I have lived all my days amid the craftiness of women, and
+my lord also knows somewhat of their strange tricks, which bring ruin to
+the carnal.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>reflective</i>). Who would despise these Hebrews that have
+among them such women as she? (<i>Fiercely</i>). Surely it is not good that
+one man among them should be left; for if one were let go he might
+deceive the whole earth.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>advancing a step, appealingly</i>). Will the wise man cast away a
+pearl, and will my lord in anger lose his servant for ever?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>to</i> Holofernes). Let her not speak with my lord alone in my
+lord's tent.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I would speak with the illustrious prince&mdash;and with Bagoas
+also. (<i>She smiles</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>with a gesture</i>). I cannot lose thee. (<i>To attendants</i>.)
+Unbind her.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside</i>). May heaven be with us, for the woman is against us!</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Bagoas). Veil her, that her face and form be not seen
+as she passes to my tent, for she is mine.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>calling</i>). The veils! The veils! Where is the rascal?</p>
+
+<p><i>The attendant rushes in panting with the box of veils. He is followed
+by</i> Ingur.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>is elaborately veiled in a series of veils by</i> Bagoas <i>and his
+attendants</i>).</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Let her follow me.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exeunt, R, with great ceremony</i>, Holofernes <i>and his heralds, followed
+by</i> Judith.)</p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>as they go, stopping</i> Bagoas, <i>who goes last</i>). Mightiness,
+pardon your slave.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Well? </p>
+
+<p>INGUR (<i>pointing to</i> Haggith). Your slave captured the mistress. Reward
+him with this outlandish wench.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>carelessly</i>). The fool goeth out to seek his own damnation.
+Take her.</p>
+<br />
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="SCENE_II">SCENE II</a></h3>
+
+
+<p><i>Interior of the tent of</i> Holofernes. <i>A couch with curtains, L. The
+principal entrance to the tent is at the back. Secondary entrances in
+the hangings, L. and R.</i></p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>The same morning, later.</i></p>
+
+<p>Bagoas <i>and his attendant are unveiling</i> Judith.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Animal, wouldst thou dare to behold that which is thy lord's?
+Leave the last veil, and away with thee.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit back with the veils already removed from</i> Judith.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Queen of the night of Holofernes!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>through the veil</i>). Mighty Bagoas!</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. The Prince comes to look upon you in his tent.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Mighty Bagoas, deign to answer a question I will put.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Deign to ask, lady, and my humility shall answer; for your
+beauty has blinded Holofernes this day and he is your captive, and his
+servant is your servant, and there is no law in the camps of the
+Assyrians save your glance. (<i>He makes a covert gesture of half-amused
+resentful resignation</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Nebuchadnezzar is your god? Is it not so, Bagoas?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Nebuchadnezzar is henceforward the god of the Assyrians and of
+all the lands which their spears conquer. It is an official order.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. If Nebuchadnezzar laid a command upon you, would you disregard
+it?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I would not, for my skin is very valuable to me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. As Nebuchadnezzar is your god, so is the Lord of Israel mine.
+And my God laid a secret command upon me to speak with Prince Holofernes
+alone and with none other in his tent. Thus, and thus only, was it that
+I refused to speak in the presence even of the mighty Bagoas. But as I
+withstood you in the valley there, the God of Israel descended upon me
+and I heard the voice of God in my ear, and the voice said: 'It is
+permitted to thee to speak with Bagoas also.' Therefore I yielded to the
+importunity of Prince Holofernes and of Bagoas.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Your god is a wise god and has discernment.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. This I tell you, that there may be peace and good intelligence
+between us. Is there peace between us?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Lady, in my heat I admonished you with hard words and much
+vituperation.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>innocently</i>.) By Nebuchadnezzar, I heard none.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. There is peace between us. And in the closeness of our
+intelligence you and I will rule them that rule all Assyria.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Holofernes, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(Bagoas <i>prostrates himself</i>. Holofernes <i>walks about, ignoring</i>
+Judith.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Bagoas). At what hour is the Council of Captains?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. The Council awaits your highness.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Suddenly</i> Holofernes <i>snatches the veil from</i> Judith, <i>and throws it
+on the floor. He gazes at her.</i> Judith <i>prostrates herself</i>. Holofernes
+<i>drops on to the couch, and looks at everything except</i> Judith.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>imperiously</i>). Rise. (Judith <i>rises. A pause</i>. Holofernes
+<i>plays with a jewel on his costume. Without looking at</i> Judith.) And
+Achior? </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Illustrious Prince.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Did the slave reach Bethulia?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. The men of Bethulia took him, and he declared to them all that
+he had spoken to my lord Prince. And many approved him.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. And what sayest <i>thou</i> of Achior?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. O lord and governor, I say: Reject not the word of Achior, but
+lay it up in your heart.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou art bold.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. The word of Achior is true. For the Israelites shall not be
+punished, and the sword shall not prevail against them, except they sin
+against their God.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Not even <i>my</i> sword?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Not even the sword of my lord and governor, except they sin
+against their God. (<i>With significance</i>.) But they will sin.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Ah! They will sin? In what will they sin?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Death is fallen upon them, and they will provoke their God to
+anger, for their water is scant, and they faint in their thirst; and
+they will drink the holy wine which was sanctified and reserved for the
+priests who serve before the face of our God: which thing is not lawful
+for any of the people so much as to touch with their hands.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. What has all this to do with me? There is no god but
+Nebuchadnezzar.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It touches my lord and governor, because, knowing all this, I am
+fled from Bethulia, which shall be accurst; and the God of Israel has
+sent me to work things with my lord and governor whereat the whole earth
+shall be astonished.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>looking at her, interested</i>). What things? And what have I
+to do with thy god? I need not thy god, for after the Israelites have
+drunk their wine they will thirst again; and when the city is broken
+with fainting, it will fall safe into my hands while I sit and watch.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>with fire</i>). And when the city has fallen while the Assyrians
+sit and watch, and when all men whisper one to another that the greatest
+captain of the earth conquered by a device because he dared not attack
+boldly with spear, and bow, and sling&mdash;in that day will my lord and
+governor be content? Or will he be ashamed, and blush to lift up his
+eyes?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>disturbed</i>). It is a true word. </p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. It is a true word.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>savagely</i>). This day will I attack the city and take it,
+and though I make fifty thousand widows and orphans in Assyria I will
+compass Bethulia, and not one house in it shall be left standing, nor
+one Israelite alive.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>shaking her head slowly</i>). Why is my lord against the pleasure
+of the Most High? Do I not say, and has it not been revealed to me, that
+Bethulia shall not perish until its inhabitants have sinned before God?
+Listen, illustrious Prince, I will remain this night. And when the time
+comes I will go into the valley, and I will pray to God, and mayhap He
+will tell me when the Israelites in Bethulia have committed their sin.
+And I will come and show it to you, and thereupon my lord and governor
+shall go forth with all his army, and none shall resist him.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>fascinated</i>). Thou wilt come to me when the time is at hand
+for my triumph!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. And hearken further! I will lead my lord and governor in the
+midst of Judea, until he comes to Jerusalem; and I will set his throne
+in the midst of Jerusalem, and a dog shall not so much as open his mouth
+at my lord and prince. For these things were declared unto me from on
+high, and I am sent to tell them.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>aside to</i> Bagoas, <i>excitedly</i>). There is not such a woman
+from one end of the earth to the other, both for beauty of face and
+wisdom of words.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. It may well be so, Prince. But I have not seen the whole earth.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>to</i> Judith). Thou hast done well to come to me, that
+strength may be in my hands and destruction upon them that lightly
+regard Nebuchadnezzar, the one god. Thou art ravishing in countenance,
+and if thou do as thou hast spoken, thou shalt dwell in my house which
+is over against the house of King Nebuchadnezzar, and thou shalt be
+renowned through the east and through the west. Bagoas, prepare meat and
+wine for her.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>making as if to give an order</i>). To hear is to obey.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will not eat of my lord's meat, nor drink of his wine, lest
+there be offence; I have brought provision by my waiting-woman.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. But if thy provision fail?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>significantly</i>). My provision will not fail before the Lord
+works by my hand the things which He has determined. </p>
+
+<p>Bagoas <i>claps his hands. Enter an attendant</i>.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Fetch Haggith, the waiting-woman of the lady Judith! Quickly!
+(<i>Exit attendant. To</i> Holofernes.) Prince, shall the Hebrew woman eat
+and drink of her provision in my lord's tent?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. She shall eat and drink in my tent, and she shall not leave
+it.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Then it is right that my lord remains not. And moreover the
+Council humbly waits for my lord. (<i>Exit</i> Holofernes, <i>L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>to</i> Judith, <i>as he follows</i> Holofernes). Did I not say that you
+and I shall rule them that rule Assyria? (<i>Exit L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith, <i>back, with provisions</i>.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>excited, looking round to see if they are alone</i>). Mistress!
+Is it possible?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. What has taken thee?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Is this the tent of the monster?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Hush!</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>whispering</i>). It is greater and more magnificent than the
+temple at Bethulia. (<i>Looking into a corner</i>.) But unclean. Have they
+no besoms?... Ah! (<i>Looking up at the roof</i>.) The bigness of it makes me
+small like a child before it can walk. I could not live comfortably in
+such a great windy place. No! I prefer our own house to all this
+royalty.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Give me food, Haggith. Where hast thou been? (<i>She sits</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Mistress, I have been with the man Ingur! (<i>Arranging</i> Judith's
+<i>costume, and then setting out the food and wine</i>.) In obedience to your
+command. At Bethulia, being busied all my days with the ordering of your
+possessions, I had no time for traffic with men; neither desire. And I
+deemed them terrible and masterful creatures. And when you commanded me
+to go forth into the camps and delude and entangle with wiles whatever
+Assyrian I should meet, I was afraid. For it was in my heart that I
+could not accomplish this thing. Yet I have done it prettily. And it is
+easier to me far than sweeping with a besom. Either all men are
+simpletons and besotted with self-conceit, or Ingur exceeds greatly in
+folly. I have been given to him for his slave, but he is mine and knows
+it not. (<i>She sits</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Where hast thou left him?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Mistress I would not suffer that you should pass from my sight,
+and I followed you, and Ingur followed me gladly, and at last the guard
+seized him for that he was found within the precincts of the prince's
+quarter, which is forbidden to his rank, and many stripes will be his.
+Mistress, you eat not.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>trying to eat</i>). Yes, I eat. Do thou eat for me.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I have eaten and drunk&mdash;with Ingur.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But not of his provision?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>nodding</i>). He so softly entreated me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It is a sin and an offence for thee, being an Israelite.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. For such as my high-born mistress, it is an offence. But for
+the handmaid&mdash;pooh! She eats as she can, and the Lord turneth away his
+glance until she has finished her platter. Moreover, did you not lay it
+upon me to beguile the dolt? And verily, mistress, I have rejoiced much
+this day; and Ingur&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Silence with thy prattle. Bethink thee of the dread business
+upon which I am come down from Bethulia into the valley?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>subdued; offering food</i>). Eat, mistress.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I cannot. My soul rejects it, and my body is on fire with
+expectation and suspense. (<i>Rising</i>. Haggith <i>also rises</i>.) Stay thou
+where thou art, for I will go forth alone. I must commune with the God
+of Israel for my tranquillity, and I dare not seek him in the tent of
+the heathen. (<i>Exit, back</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(Haggith <i>gathers the meat together</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Holofernes <i>and</i> Bagoas, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>looking about the tent, alarmed</i>). Where is she? Has she
+fled? If she has escaped me, this shall be thy last day, Bagoas. What is
+this girl here?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Prince, has any woman yet slipped through these hands? This girl
+is the waiting wench of the lady Judith. (<i>To</i> Haggith.) Where is thy
+mistress, wench?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>frightened and foolish</i>). My mistress having eaten ... having
+eaten naught, is gone to&mdash;to&mdash;to&mdash;pray.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Bring her. Her god may wait, but not the illustrious Prince. Run
+with both thy legs.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Ye&mdash;es, mightiness. (<i>Exit, back</i>)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Bagoas, with thine arts thou shalt persuade the Hebrew woman
+to come to us and to eat and drink with us this night.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>grimly</i>). Persuasion shall be used, highness. My arts are many
+and various.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. It will be a shame for our person if we let such a woman go,
+not having delighted in her company. If we do not draw her to us she
+will laugh us to scorn.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Yea, highness. But my lord has but this moment appointed a great
+feast with his captains at sunset. How then shall he eat and drink with
+the lady Judith?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thick-skull! Speak not to me of my captains! The Council of
+the Captains was as dust in my mouth, and I could not away with it.
+Therefore I sharply dismissed the Council, and soothed their damnable
+pride with the promise of a mighty feast. But what care I for the
+captains? My heart thirsts horribly for this Hebrew woman, and I am full
+of a great madness.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. So be it, highness. Nevertheless, the Prince has promised to his
+captains a mighty feast, and the word of Holofernes is a rock that
+cannot be shaken.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Oh! What a calamity is love! And there is no slave so
+trodden down as him that is the slave of desire.... Bah! I will eat and
+drink quickly with the captains, and the woman shall await me here.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Judith, <i>back. On seeing</i> Holofernes <i>she prostrates herself</i>.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Arise, sorceress. (Judith <i>rises. To</i> Bagoas.) Go fetch
+leopard skins for her repose.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I will send for the skins on the instant, highness.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt go thyself to fetch them, elephant. And come not
+back without the finest skins in my wardrobe. See to it.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit</i> Bagoas, <i>back</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Come closer. (Judith <i>obeys</i>.) Look into my eyes. (Judith
+<i>obeys</i>.) Sorceress, thou knowest thy power.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I have no power, save that which is given to me from on high.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou wast praying to thy god?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Yea, highness. </p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Didst thou demand of him that he should tell thee if the
+Israelites in Bethulia had committed their sin, and if the time of my
+triumph was at hand?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. No, lord. I prayed for the forgiveness of the transgressions of
+thy handmaid.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Why didst thou not demand of him what I ask thee?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Who am I to hasten the God of Israel? In the night time, and in
+the darkness, when all men sleep,&mdash;then it is that my God condescends
+towards me, and my ear hears his secret purposes.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>low</i>). This night?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Who can search out heaven?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. This night?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It may be.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt come to me in the night and tell me thy
+message?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will come to thee in the night, great prince. </p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt eat and drink with me in my triumph?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>after a pause</i>). If it pleases my lord.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt eat of my meat and drink of my wine, which I will
+give thee?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>after a pause</i>). If my lord is alone and there is none with
+him. For it is not right that any should see me.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. I will be alone. But Bagoas shall stand at the door of the
+tent.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. As my lord wills.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>ecstatic, moving a little towards her; she responds</i>).
+Fairest among women! Can it be!... The way of God is wondrous.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears through the hangings R., and
+watches</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>solemnly and significantly</i>). There are yet hid greater things
+than this, and thou hast yet seen but a few of his works.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>sinking back on the couch, mysteriously afraid</i>).
+Sorceress!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The watcher disappears</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>cooingly</i>) Does my lord shrink from his handmaid?</p>
+
+<p>(Holofernes <i>stretches his hands to her</i>.)</p>
+<br />
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="SCENE_III">SCENE III</a></h3>
+
+
+
+<p>SCENE: <i>The same</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>The same night</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Wine and food are set by the couch</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>A lamp is burning</i>.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>at back entrance to tent, calling to people off</i>). To your
+beds, all of you. Let none remain. (<i>He stands a moment at the entrance;
+a few distant shouts are heard; then silence</i>. Bagoas <i>comes within the
+tent towards the couch. To</i> Holofernes.) The waiters are gone, Prince.
+There is no one left to disturb the night.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Hast thou seen her?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>after a pause</i>). No, prince.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. But didst thou look?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I looked, O illustrious.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Is there moonlight?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. The moon is clouded, highness.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Give me wine. (Bagoas <i>obeys</i>.) Bagoas!</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Prince?</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The hangings of the tent R., balloon inwards a little</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>looking behind him sharply, spilling some wine</i>). The wind
+is rising.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. It is but a night breeze.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>as he drinks gloomily</i>). Bagoas, she has escaped back to
+her own people.</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>aside</i>). I would she had, the jade! (<i>To</i> Holofernes.) Prince,
+she cannot escape. Every path from the valley is guarded.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. What guard could restrain such a woman?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. Ah! Prince! What guard could restrain her?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Dost thou echo me?</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS. I humbly think the thought of his highness.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Do thy thinking outside.</p>
+
+<p>(Bagoas <i>bows and moves towards the entrance</i>. Judith <i>is standing
+there. The two look at each other for a moment</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BAGOAS (<i>with a gesture, indicating</i> Judith). Highness!</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>Jumping up. To</i> Bagoas). Begone to thy post! </p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>glides in silently</i>. Bagoas <i>goes out. They pass by each other
+without a word or a salutation, but mutually scrutinizing</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. The great feast of the captains is over?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. The captains are departed, drunken with wine and their
+pride. But thy feast and my feast is not begun. (<i>Points to the
+repast</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>enigmatically</i>.) I am here.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>ecstatic</i>.) Art thou in truth here, or do my eyes behold
+that which is not?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Did I not say that I should come in the night?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Yea, I trusted thee. I trusted thee so much that at the
+feast of the captains I commanded that all my hosts shall attack
+Bethulia, with bow, and sling, and spear, at sunrise, and also I gave
+the word of Holofernes for a pledge that naught in the heavens or on the
+earth should resist the onset of the Assyrians; for some among them
+feared the word of Achior which they had heard.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. You have not done this thing?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. I have done it. </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Would you forestall God, and would you speak the decrees of God
+before they are uttered?</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou saidst thou wouldst pray to thy god this night and that
+he would tell thee when the Israelites in Bethulia had committed their
+sin, and that thou wouldst come to me to proclaim the hour of my
+triumph.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I said: I will pray to God and <i>mayhap</i> he will tell me.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou hast prayed, and thy god hath not answered?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. He has not answered.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>with bravado</i>). He is no god, then, thy god. Let us drink.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>as</i> Holofernes <i>moves towards her, solemnly</i>). Touch not your
+handmaid, and touch not the goblet. (<i>She goes to the skins, R</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>following</i> Judith <i>gently</i>). Thou art offended.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Stand afar off, Holofernes, and meddle not with her that
+communes with the Most High. </p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>kneels</i>. Holofernes <i>goes in the direction of the couch.
+Silence</i>. Bagoas <i>has been seen once or twice in the porch of the tent,
+his back turned. He has now gone again. Two half-veiled Assyrian women
+appear through the hangings, R., and watch a moment, then vanish</i>.
+Judith <i>slowly rises</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. What has befallen thee?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It has befallen me that this moment the God of Israel has spoken
+and my ear has heard his command. (<i>Approaching</i> Holofernes.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. What saith thy god?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. My ear has heard that the Israelites in Bethulia have committed
+their sin, and at sunrise the Assyrians shall assault Bethulia and none
+shall withstand them.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. A miracle!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. A miracle in thy tent, O great warrior!</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. To-morrow is appointed to be the day of my triumph.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>moved</i>). Yea, it is so.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>gratefully</i>). Hear me, Judith. Thy god shall be my god.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. In truth thou art set apart to be his. HOLOFERNES (<i>close to
+her</i>). Thy body trembles.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>smiling</i>). Thinkst thou then that I was not afraid for thee?
+But my fear is gone from me, for now I know thy fate and the decree of
+heaven concerning thee.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>aside</i>). To-morrow is appointed for my triumph, but this
+night also shall I exult. (<i>To</i> Judith.) Let us eat and drink together,
+for we are alone in the night, and thou hast promised.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>gaily</i>). Let us feast.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>animated by her responsive tone</i>). Take off thy tunic; thou
+art in thy own house. Let Holofernes be thy tire-woman. (<i>Approaching
+her</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. No! (<i>Moving from him to the further side of the couch</i>.) But he
+shall be my slave to serve me. Pour out the wine, great slave.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>While</i> Holofernes <i>cheerfully obeys</i>, Judith <i>takes the knife from her
+garments and places it behind the couch. Then, as he stands with the
+wine, gazing at her and separated from her only by the couch, she slowly
+removes her tunic and appears in indoor attire. She comes towards him
+and takes the wine from him and drinks</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. I feared that in the strictness of thy Hebrew scruples thou
+wouldst not drink of my wine.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will drink again. (<i>She does so</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES <i>(taking the goblet and drinking).</i> Dost thou verily know thy
+power and thy dominion, Judith?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>simply</i>). Yes, I know it now better than thou.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Thou dost not. For I am mad for thee, and thou hast set thy
+seal upon me for evermore. My heart cannot hold thee, for thou hast
+filled it to overflowing, and all men see that my heart is full of thee
+and runneth over. Yea, I have a hundred and two and thirty thousand that
+bow themselves at my feet and that live and die by my glance. And I am
+at <i>thy</i> feet and thy glance is my joy and my sorrow according to thy
+whim. Judith, I entreat thee, command me something. For whatever thou
+command me, that will I execute. And be not afraid in thy command, for
+my power is very great and there is none like it save only my lord
+Nebuchadnezzar's.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>tenderly</i>). I command thee that thou be happy. For thy captive
+has no other desire.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. Say not my captive. For it is I that am thy prisoner. And I
+will set thee on my throne, and in my great boldness I will dare to sit
+beside thee. But thou shalt reign. And we will live together in Assyria
+long years.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>changing her mood</i>). There is no requisition in the grave
+whether you have lived ten or an hundred or a thousand years. But the
+God of Israel is a shield.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>eagerly</i>). And I have told thee that thy god shall be my
+god; but in secret, because of that which I owe to King Nebuchadnezzar.
+Yet shall the whole earth know that thou, Judith, alone art my god.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But thou hast other wives.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. No!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Yes! It has been whispered to me that thou hast many wives, and
+concubines without number.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES. It is a lie. For from this night I have put away from me all
+women but thee, and there is not one among them to compare with thee.
+(<i>Appealingly</i>). And since the judgment of heaven hath done a miracle
+by thee in the tent of Holofernes this night, wilt thou deny, O
+tenderness! that thou hast been divinely appointed to me, and I to thee?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I will not deny that the Lord is in this thing. And for thy
+comfort I will tell thee that which thou knowest not.</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>expectant</i>). Tell me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Before I escaped from Bethulia, as I lay on my bed, a vision
+came to me, and it was the vision of Holofernes in the likeness of his
+majesty and his might. And I saw the vision by my bed, and so it was
+that I came down into the valley.... (<i>Softly</i>.) And wouldst thou that I
+should have uttered this secret to any but thee!</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>full of emotion</i>). I will kiss thy lips, and thou art mine,
+O fragrance!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Kiss my lips.</p>
+
+<p>(Holofernes <i>kisses her, and then in an excess of feeling stumbles
+backward</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears at the opening R., and watches</i>.
+Bagoas, <i>in the porch of the tent, turns and sees her, and dashes at her
+with a weapon. Both disappear through the opening, R.</i>) </p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>moving with stealth towards the hidden knife, comfortingly</i>). O
+mighty child, where is thy strength, and where is thy terribleness? Rest
+thee a moment on the couch, and thy soul's captive will tend thee.</p>
+
+<p>(Holofernes <i>drops on the couch, and</i> Judith <i>caresses him</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HOLOFERNES (<i>murmuring</i>). My great joy has overthrown me.</p>
+
+<p>(Judith, <i>seizing the knife and leaning over</i> Holofernes, <i>kills him
+while she is still caressing</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>as she uses the knife; murmuring</i>). Thou that wouldst go
+against the pleasure of the Most High! Thou that wouldst defile Judea!
+Thou that hast dishonoured with thy kiss the widow of Manasses! Thou
+that hast compelled me to guile and deceit and much lying so that I
+might perform the will of God! The grave shall be thy house!</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>turning to</i> Haggith, <i>firmly and impressively</i>). I have done
+that which I had to do, and the power of Assyria is fallen.
+(<i>Pointing</i>.) Take the head by the beard, and put it in thy sack, and
+let us depart.</p>
+
+<br />
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="ACT_III">ACT III</a></h2>
+<br />
+
+<h3>SCENE I</h3>
+<br />
+
+<p>SCENE: <i>Same as Act I</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>A few hours later than Act II, Scene III, the same night. The
+sole light is that of torches, and watchfires (off).</i></p>
+
+<p><i>The gatemen are at the gates</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>There is a knocking on the outside of the gates</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter First Soldier, running</i>.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>to a gateman, who is climbing up in order to look over
+the top of the gates</i>). Look not over, booby. Thy fool's face might meet
+the point of an Assyrian spear. (<i>The gateman slips down quickly</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Renewed knocking</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>shouting</i>). None can enter the city till sunrise. And
+not then if I like not the aspect of his phiz.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>off</i>). It is Haggith, servant of the lady Judith. Open the
+gates quickly, for I am become a woman of much consequence.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith? It is the voice of Haggith; yet it may also be
+devils. (<i>To another soldier who has entered</i>.) Run! Rouse the lord
+Ozias. (<i>Exit soldier</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. I have water with me. Many gourds! Fresh water! Cool water! </p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gatemen begin to work the gate-chains</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. What do ye, dogs? Stop, and await the order of the lord
+Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>GATEMEN (<i>continuing to work the chains</i>). Water! Water!</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Pull, then, dogs. If there is water and it is wet I will
+taste it. But if there is not water, I will slay the first soul that
+enters. (<i>As the gates begin to open a little</i>.) Hold! No wider!</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith <i>with two gourds</i>.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gourds are snatched from her, and the men, including the First
+Soldier, drink</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER (<i>as he drinks</i>). Yea, it is indeed Haggith. Where is thy
+mistress, and whence comest thou, my beloved water-carrier, for thou art
+my beloved? (Haggith <i>slaps his face</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Ozias, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>furious</i>). Why are the gates opened? What is this?</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith, lord, with water that is stronger than wine.
+(<i>Handing a gourd to</i> Ozias <i>to soothe him</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Where is thy mistress, wench? (<i>Drinks</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>stiffly</i>). I am the forerunner of my mistress, who has sent
+me, and before many hours are passed the lady Judith will come also.
+(<i>She goes to the gates and beckons</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What art thou doing?</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Ingur, <i>bearing a sack</i>.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. An Assyrian! An Assyrian! (<i>Men spring at</i> Ingur.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Let him alone; he is my bondman and I have tamed him.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Shut the gates, for I will enquire into this matter.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. There are yet ten other Assyrians outside the gates, carrying
+gourds for me.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Ten other Assyrians! It is a trick!</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>proudly</i>). By my command they are chained by their necks, neck
+to neck. Fetch in the gourds, men, and give the people to drink.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gourds are brought in amid cries and excitement. They are taken
+off, L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Shut the gates, I say.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. And the ten Assyrians, great lord?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Let them await my enquiry where they stand.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias, if they flee?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Hold thy mouth, gaby! Wouldst <i>thou</i> flee with thy neck chained
+to nine necks? Moreover, where will they flee? For the camps of the
+Assyrians are broken, and in their terrible confusion the Assyrians fall
+one upon another.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The gatemen talk among themselves and stare at the Assyrians outside,
+who cannot be seen by those within the city. The gates remain open a
+little</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>impatiently</i>). What is thy tale, Haggith?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress has slain Holofernes in his tent in the night, and
+the power of Assyria is undone.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>astounded</i>). Slain Holofernes! Thou art mad in thy raving.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>to</i> Ingur). Open the mouth of the sack, and let my lord behold
+the head of Holofernes and see that I am mad. (<i>To soldier</i>.) A torch,
+that the Lord Ozias may discover the manner of my raving.</p>
+
+<p>(Ozias <i>looks into the sack and sees the head of</i> Holofernes.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. And my mistress is the right hand of the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!</p>
+
+<p>VOICES (<i>deeply moved</i>). His name shall live for ever.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. How did thy mistress accomplish this mighty deed?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. AS for that, she will tell it to my lord with her own voice
+when she shall come. And now will my lord give ear to the commands of
+the lady Judith, which she doth lay upon my lord by me, Haggith? First,
+the head of Holofernes shall be set upon a spear on the highest wall in
+the great square before the temple. So shall all the Israelites know
+that God yet watcheth over Israel. (<i>To the soldiers</i>.) Take the sack
+and do as my lady hath ordained by me, Haggith.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to men, who hesitate</i>). Take the sack. It is my command.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exeunt two men, L., with sack</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Next, ye shall send men for water to the wells beneath the city
+that all may drink, for already the Assyrians are fled from the wells,
+knowing that Holofernes is dead. And ye shall send forth all your army
+into the valley to fall upon the Assyrians, for they are afraid of the
+judgment of God, and none dare abide in the sight of his neighbour.
+Neither can they stand against the chosen race of God.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to First Soldier</i>). Let every armed man in the city be roused,
+and publish the order of Ozias that the Captains lead their bands
+swiftly into the valley by the secret way to fall upon the Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit First Soldier and another, with joyous cries, L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Thus hath the lady Judith spoken by me, Haggith.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Whither is thy mistress gone, and why does she tarry?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress is hidden in a sure place in the valley, for there
+is one among the Assyrians who fears not God. And he is Bagoas, the
+chief eunuch of Holofernes, and he has sworn an oath to kill my
+mistress, for that by guile she did cut off the head of Holofernes. And
+Bagoas searches for my mistress in the folds of the valley. But he will
+not find her.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>perturbed</i>). How knowst thou that he will not find her?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Because the Lord of Israel is a sharp sword and protecteth his
+servants.... And also because my mistress is most cunningly hidden.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Charmis, <i>L</i>.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>joyously excited</i>). What is the miracle that I hear, Ozias?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>blandly</i>). There is no miracle; but that which I had planned
+with the lady Judith has come to pass. Take women and old men Charmis,
+and go ye to the wells and bring water to the city, for the wells are
+delivered into my hands.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>hesitating</i>). Women and old men? But the onslaught against the
+Assyrians of which I hear?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>imperiously</i>). Go quickly. For who is the governor of this city?
+Is it thou or is it I? </p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exit</i> Charmis, <i>L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Men and women have gathered joyously in the street</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>VOICES (<i>mockingly, indicating</i> Ingur, <i>with a tendency to horseplay</i>).
+The Assyrian! The Assyrian!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Take him to the guard-house and chain him to Achior.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. He shall not go, lord Ozias. For as my mistress beguiled
+Holofernes, so did I beguile Ingur, and he is my slave. But I have not
+cut off his head, and he is dear to me because I have not cut off his
+head. And he is mine, and let none touch him (<i>looking at the
+soldiers</i>), or my anger, which is the anger of the lady Judith, shall be
+upon that man. (<i>Hearing a noise, she glances at the house</i>.) What do I
+see? The sluts are in the tent of my mistress, which is forbidden them.
+Out, sluts! (<i>Exit angrily into the house</i>!)</p>
+
+<p>(Ingur <i>follows her quickly for protection</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Messenger.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. And you?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER (<i>saluting</i>). Do my eyes behold the great lord Ozias,
+governor of Bethulia?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Your eyes behold him.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. It is not yet dawn, nevertheless the streets of the city are
+full of a great going and coming, but I found none to lead me to the
+house of the lord Ozias. Yet when I saw my lord's visage my heart said:
+'This is he.'</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What is your affair with me?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. I am a messenger.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>curtly</i>). Speak quickly, for the government of this city in this
+hour is no common matter, and the whole charge of it lies upon me.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. And I am no common messenger. I come with wings through the
+night from Jerusalem, from Joachim, the high priest.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Ah! (<i>Changing his tone and beckoning the messenger aside</i>.) What
+tidings do you bear?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. I bear the licence from Joachim.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What licence?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. The licence for the people of Bethulia to drink the wine
+which is sanctified and reserved to the priests which serve the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>affecting to be puzzled</i>). Who hath demanded this licence from
+Joachim?</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER (<i>surprised</i>). The lord Ozias sent a messenger to Jerusalem to
+beseech that the licence should be granted. And my lord's messenger
+travelled so swiftly that in the moment when he reached the temple at
+Jerusalem he fell sick and vomited, and I have come to Bethulia in his
+place, for after he had vomited he unfolded to me the secret way
+into the city.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>grandly</i>). It is true. In the heavy multitude of my cares I had
+forgotten this matter of the licence.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER (<i>confidentially</i>). And Joachim hath bidden me to say privily
+that if any have already in their extremity drunk of the sanctified wine
+it shall be denied utterly&mdash;for the sake of the church.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Ah!</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. And here is the licence. (<i>Offering it</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Friend, keep the licence and render it back to Joachim, the high
+priest in Jerusalem. For I need it not, and I demanded it only by excess
+of prudence such as becomes the governor of a city besieged and
+thirsting. But we Bethulians are a faithful and a constant people, and
+we have trusted in the Most High. And if perchance any have drunk of the
+sanctified wine unknown to me (<i>with a grimace</i>)&mdash;it shall be denied
+utterly, for the sake of seemliness.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. But in the days of trial to come, will not the lord Ozias
+have need of the licence?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>grandly</i>). Friend, return ye to Joachim and say to him that the
+Lord has delivered Bethulia from the Assyrians by the subtlety of his
+servant Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER (<i>amazed</i>). What says my lord?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Yea, this night the head of Holofernes is set on a spear in the
+square before the temple, and the Assyrians flee one from another in
+disorder, and my hosts are about to descend upon them and rend them to
+pieces where they stand foolishly in the valley.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. But this thing is marvellous beyond the understanding of man!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. It is indeed marvellous.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. And when Joachim enquires of me who hath taken Holofernes the
+great captain to behead him, and by what device, what shall I answer to
+Joachim?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. You will answer that Ozias, knowing the weakness of Holofernes,
+sent down to him secretly a woman, a certain Judith of Bethulia, and
+upon the counsel of Ozias the woman by wiles compassed the death of
+Holofernes as I have told you.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. It is a tale which fathers shall tell to their children, and
+to their children's children, and men shall wonder thereat for all time.
+And now your servant will say to you a thing which has not been told to
+him but which his ear has heard. It was said among the mighty that if my
+lord Ozias should save Judea from the heathen, he would receive notable
+advancement and be raised up among the great ones of the land. (Ozias
+<i>bows</i>.) Yet will Joachim not be astonished, for it was spoken in
+Jerusalem that among all the Israelites there is none like the lord
+Ozias for cunning and obstinacy in defence.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>nettled</i>). Nevertheless it is meet that Joachim should be
+astonished, for with five thousand have I set at naught one hundred and
+two and thirty thousand, and in the chronicles of Israel there is
+written down no deed to match the delivery of Judea from the Assyrians.</p>
+
+<p>MESSENGER. The God of Israel hath saved Israel.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The God of Israel hath save Israel,&mdash;by my hand. Go ye, and when
+you have eaten and drunk, set ye forth again for Jerusalem.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The Messenger salutes and exit, L</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Throughout this scene excited and joyous men and women frequently pass
+the street in twos and threes</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Dawn is breaking and the torches begin to pale</i>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Haggith <i>and</i> Ingur <i>from the house.</i></p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Where art thou going?</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Lord Ozias, I came up from the valley to bring water, and to
+give tidings. Now I go down again to the valley with Ingur and his men
+to seek out my mistress, and to take new raiment to her, and lead her to
+the city; for since the Israelites are fallen upon the Assyrians, my
+mistress is no longer in danger.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Achior.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Slave, who hath dared to loose thee?</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. There was none left to guard, and I came forth.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to a soldier</i>). Seize this fellow and bind him with fetters.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The torches are by this time extinguished</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. Lord, it cannot be so. For the lady Judith commanded me to
+bring Achior also, for her protection, seeing that the youth came from
+the Assyrians at the bidding of the God of Israel to give comfort to
+Israel, and for a sign to my mistress.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>after a pause</i>). I also will go with you, for it is right that
+the governor should do honour to the lady Judith.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me to say to the lord Ozias that he
+should remain in the city to prepare for her a welcome. (<i>She points to
+the gates and</i> Achior <i>gladly moves forward. She takes</i> Ingur <i>by the
+ear</i>.) Bestir thy legs, booby!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. The subtlety of women is past knowing.</p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH (<i>at the gates, maliciously</i>). It may be. But would the lord
+Ozias invite the displeasure of my mistress? It is day. Let my lord sit
+in the sun.</p>
+
+<br />
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="ACT_III_SCENE_II">SCENE II</a></h3>
+
+
+<p>SCENE: <i>The same</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Charmis <i>is alone at the open gates. Glimpses are caught of the people
+beyond the gates</i>.</p>
+
+<p>TIME: <i>Afternoon of the same day</i>.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS (<i>entering to</i> Charmis, <i>at the gates</i>). They say there is now
+much water in Bethulia.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. Seeing that I have toiled mightily seven hours this day in
+charge of six score crazy carriers to carry water up from the wells!
+Would that Ozias had granted me a whip to sharpen their brains! And now
+Ozias hath left me in charge of the gates.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Where is Ozias, and what does he do?</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. He stands here beyond the gates to receive Judith and the women
+who have gone forth to meet her.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. What is the deed of Judith? (<i>The noise of an approaching
+procession is heard</i>. Charmis, <i>ignoring</i> Chabris, <i>goes a little
+outside the gates to watch.</i> Chabris <i>continues in a louder voice</i>.) The
+streets of the city are empty. I say the streets of the city are empty.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS. Dodderer! The whole city is afoot on the hill-side, and all the
+Assyrians left alive are fled in panic into the East.</p>
+
+<p>CHABRIS. Then I will return to my house and drink again. No! I will
+remain, and my eyes shall regard the women, as of old. </p>
+
+<p><i>Enter through the gates a procession of women (including</i> Rahel),
+<i>waving branches. At the end of the procession come</i> Haggith <i>and</i>
+Ingur, <i>and finally</i> Judith, <i>with</i> Achior <i>on one hand, and </i> Ozias <i>on
+the other. Townspeople and soldiers, garlanded, follow the procession</i>.</p>
+
+<p>BALLET.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Judith). O daughter, blessed be thou above all the women of
+the earth. Thou art the exaltation of Jerusalem and the great glory of
+Israel, for the Lord hath directed thee to the cutting off of the head
+of the chief of our enemies, and thou hast revenged our ruin.</p>
+
+<p>VOICES. So be it.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Holofernes came out of the mountains from the north, and his
+horsemen covered the hills; and he bragged that he would burn up the
+borders of Israel, and kill her young men with the sword, and make the
+virgins as a spoil. But the Almighty Lord hath disappointed the
+Assyrians by the hand of a woman; and my sandals ravished the eye of
+Holofernes, and my beauty took his mind prisoner, and the knife passed
+through his neck. Let all creatures serve the Lord! </p>
+
+<p>VOICES. So be it!</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Charmis, I appoint you to lead the people to the Temple, where
+are the banners of the Assyrians which we have captured this day, and
+each woman shall take a banner, and all shall return to this place
+before the house of the Lady Judith.</p>
+
+<p>CHARMIS (<i>swollen with pride</i>). I obey, lord Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The procession begins to move away, L</i>. Haggith <i>displays her
+importance and bullies</i> Ingur, <i>who accompanies her</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>RAHEL (<i>to</i> Chabris). What, grandad! You are abroad once more! (<i>She
+takes him with her like a disobedient child</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Exeunt, processionally, all except</i> Judith, Ozias <i>and</i> Achior.)</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Achior). Thou goest not with the people?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH (<i>to</i> Achior). Stay, I pray you, Achior.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>to</i> Judith, <i>with growing excitement</i>). I wish to speak privily
+with the lady Judith, <i>now</i>!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Let us speak here.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Shall we not go into your house, you and I?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. My house is not ready to receive you, Ozias.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Let it be so. But before Achior I will not speak.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Achior, go into my house, and do honour to my dwelling, and
+repose in it.</p>
+
+<p>ACHIOR. Gladly, O lady! (<i>Exit into the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. What is the urgency that oppresses you, Ozias, and why are you
+troubled in the hour of triumph?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>losing control of himself</i>). Who is the heathen Achior that you
+should prefer him and make your mouth sweet to him?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Leave Achior, and let us come at once to the matter that
+presses.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Oh! I will not speak smoothly for a pretence! Thou knowest that
+my jealousy smokes against Achior. Yea, and against Holofernes also.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But Holofernes is dead.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Before he went down to his place, didst thou not sin with him?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. As the Lord liveth, my countenance deceived him to his
+destruction, yet did he not shame me.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Blessed be our God!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. But how does this matter touch thee, and what is my virtue in
+thy regard?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Let Holofernes suffice thee, and drive not me also to death with
+the softness of thy voice. Art thou not aware that the soul of my soul
+burns for thee and will not wait&mdash;the more so since thou hast done a
+mighty deed and art proved a woman beyond all women?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Nay! I have done naught; but the Lord hath saved Israel by <i>thy</i>
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. What is this humbleness?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. AS I came towards the city with Achior, the messenger from
+Jerusalem met us in the way, and he was full to bursting of the word of
+Ozias, and that Ozias had delivered Israel, and that what I did I did
+by thy device and at thy command. But the messenger in speaking knew not
+that he spoke to Judith, and I let him go.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Judith&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Yet it seems to me that thou wast ignorant of all that which I
+went out to do, and my plan was hidden from thee.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>powerfully persuasive</i>). Hearken to me, Judith. I swear it was
+for thee that I boasted. My aim was that thy mighty deed should gain
+preferment in Jerusalem. But thou art a woman and therefore preferment
+is not for thee. Yet now by reason of my boasting I shall be greatly
+advanced and lifted up, and in all Judea there will be none higher than
+me, and thus wilt thou also be advanced and lifted up.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I desire no preferment.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. But I would have it in thy behalf; and my appetite is double. I
+rage for glory and dominion, and I rage also for thee. And I will offer
+thee glory and dominion, for I seek these things as a gift to thy
+beauty. And if I cannot lay them on thy lap my heel shall spurn mankind
+and I will tread it to dust. My desires are terrible; they will not be
+withstood; they consume me daily, but daily I am renewed. I am on fire,
+but by the fierceness of the fire I am strengthened. I was conceived
+for greatness and my mother bore me for mastery, and the huge earth
+shall shake with the terror of my commands.... And I am held between thy
+fingers.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I deny not thy greatness.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Surely thou canst not. For thou too art great. And my greatness
+yearns to thine.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Wilt thou listen?</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. I hear.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. With this greatness of thine goes deceit and laxity of mind.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Yet when thou didst thy mighty deed didst thou not deceive
+cruelly?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I deceived not for myself, but for Israel; and my guile was for
+the glory of God. But thy heart is set only upon advancement and power,
+which is corruption.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Judith, canst thou not lift thy thoughts beyond good and evil,
+and canst thou not contemplate the marvellous greatness of man? I will
+abase myself before none but thee, and in my ear there is no commandment
+but thine; and all other decrees will I mock. I would have thee in
+marriage, and I would have no other but thee. Wilt thou take me to
+thee, and wilt thou yield thyself without fear to the terrible flame of
+my love? For thus shalt thou fulfil thyself and me. But give heed before
+thou answerest, and know that if thou turnest from me, I will make all
+the nations of the earth to tremble with my fury.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Thou art great also in thy loving.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Once thou didst love me.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Nay! I but looked upon thee in kindness. But now I will not go
+to thee in marriage.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>half admiring</i>). Thou art not then afraid of my wrath!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. I am Judith.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>with a fresh access of violence</i>). Thou hungerest for Achior.
+Wouldst thou marry a heathen, thou a Hebrew woman?</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. And thou, if I had not accomplished the will of the Lord, and if
+thou hadst been carried to Babylon as thou saidst, wouldst thou not have
+denied the Most High and gone after other gods? But Achior believeth in
+our God, and this day will be joined into the house of Israel. </p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>savagely scornful</i>). What is Achior but a simpleton!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. It may be. But I love him and he shall rule me ... for he came
+hither for a sign from the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS (<i>savagely resentful</i>). Oh! If I did not love thee, would I not
+undo thee!</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. Thou! Thou art Ozias, but I am she who cut off the head of a
+mightier than thou, even Holofernes in his tent. Go thy ways and fulfil
+greatness. As for me I will remain obediently in my house, and truth and
+righteousness shall reign in my house.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The procession returns, the women bearing the banners of the
+Assyrians</i>. Achior <i>enters from the house</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>(Judith <i>is crowned with olives</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. And now let the priests and the elders enter with me into my
+house, and Achior shall follow them, so that he may be received into
+Israel, and I will be betrothed to him with all the ceremonies of the
+law, for he came to me as a messenger from God. And when the marriage
+has been performed, I will submit myself to him as a wife to her
+husband. </p>
+
+<p>HAGGITH. And let Ingur also be received into Israel, for he has repented
+of his idolatries. And he shall be my husband, yet shall he not rule me.</p>
+
+<p>OZIAS. Brethren, hearken! This night I go to Jerusalem, for I am called
+to higher things, because I have delivered Israel. And I shall not
+return to this little city; but ye will have tidings of me in the years
+to come, and ye will say proudly to the strangers within your gates: He
+was a Bethulian and once he ruled over us.</p>
+
+<p>JUDITH. The lord Ozias is called to greatness. Peace go with him.</p>
+
+<p>ALL. So be it.</p>
+
+<p>CURTAIN.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Judith, by Arnold Bennett
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
+
diff --git a/old/12794.txt b/old/12794.txt
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+++ b/old/12794.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Judith, by Arnold Bennett
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Judith
+
+Author: Arnold Bennett
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2004 [EBook #12794]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JUDITH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Sander van Rijnswou and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+_NOVELS_
+
+
+A MAN FROM THE NORTH
+ANNA OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+LEONORA
+A GREAT MAN
+SACRED AND PROFANE LOVE
+WHOM GOD HATH JOINED
+BURIED ALIVE
+THE OLD WIVES' TALE
+THE GLIMPSE
+THE ROLL CALL
+HELEN WITH THE HIGH HAND
+CLAYHANGER
+HILDA LESSWAYS
+THE CARD
+THE REGENT
+THE PRICE OF LOVE
+THESE TWAIN
+THE LION'S SHARE
+THE PRETTY LADY
+
+
+_FANTASIES_
+
+
+THE GRAND BABYLON HOTEL
+THE GATES OF WRATH
+THERESA OF WATLING STREET
+THE LOOT OF CITIES
+HUGO
+THE GHOST
+THE CITY OF PLEASURE
+
+
+_SHORT STORIES_
+
+
+TALES OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+THE GRIM SMILE OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+THE MATADOR OF THE FIVE TOWNS
+
+
+_BELLES-LETTRES_
+
+
+JOURNALISM FOR WOMEN
+FAME AND FICTION
+HOW TO BECOME AN AUTHOR
+THE TRUTH ABOUT AN AUTHOR
+MENTAL EFFICIENCY
+HOW TO LIVE ON TWENTY-FOUR HOURS A DAY
+THE HUMAN MACHINE
+LITERARY TASTE
+FRIENDSHIP AND HAPPINESS
+THOSE UNITED STATES
+PARIS NIGHTS
+MARRIED LIFE
+LIBERTY
+OVER THERE: WAR SCENES
+THE AUTHORS CRAFT
+BOOKS AND PERSONS
+SELF AND SELF-MANAGEMENT
+
+
+_DRAMA_
+
+
+POLITE FARCES
+CUPID AND COMMONSENSE
+WHAT THE PUBLIC WANTS
+THE HONEYMOON
+THE TITLE
+THE GREAT ADVENTURE
+MILESTONES (In Collaboration with Edward Knoblock)
+
+_In Collaboration with Eden Phillpotts_
+
+THE SINEWS OF WAR: A ROMANCE
+THE STATUE: A ROMANCE
+
+
+
+
+*JUDITH*
+
+A PLAY IN THREE ACTS
+
+_Founded on the apocryphal book of "Judith"_
+
+
+BY
+
+ARNOLD BENNETT
+
+
+
+
+LONDON
+
+1919
+
+_First published April 30, 1919_
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+This play was presented for the first time at the Devonshire Park
+Theatre, Eastbourne, on Monday, April 7th, 1919, with the following
+cast:
+
+Judith LILLAH MCCARTHY
+Haggith ESME HUBBARD
+Rahel MADGE MURRAY
+Ozias CAMPBELL GULLAN
+Holofernes CLAUDE KING
+Bagoas ERNEST THESIGER
+Achior GEOFFREY DOUGLAS
+Chabris E.H. PATERSON
+Charmis FEWLASS LLEWELLYN
+Ingur FREDERICK VOLPE
+Messenger FELIX AYLMER
+Soldier CLIFFORD MOLLISON
+Attendant EDWIN OXLEE
+
+The play was produced by WILFRED EATON
+
+
+
+
+
+CHARACTERS
+
+
+_Hebrews_
+
+JUDITH
+HAGGITH, her waiting-woman
+RAHEL
+OZIAS, Governor of Bethulia
+CHABRIS, an elder
+CHARMIS, an elder
+A SOLDIER
+A MESSENGER
+
+
+_Assyrians_
+
+HOLOFERNES, General of the Assyrian armies
+BAGOAS, his chief eunuch
+ACHIOR, a captain
+INGUR, a soldier
+AN ATTENDANT ON BAGOAS
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+_A street in the city of Bethulia_.
+
+
+ACT II
+
+SCENE I. _The valley near the Assyrian camp. Time, morning; two days later_.
+
+SCENE II. _The tent of Holofernes. Time, later, the same morning_.
+
+SCENE III. _The same. Time, the same night_.
+
+
+ACT III
+
+SCENE I. _Same as Act I. Time, later, the same night._
+
+SCENE II. _The same. Time, the next day_.
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+_A street in the city of Bethulia in Judea. Bethulia is in the hill
+country, overlooking the great plain of Jezreel to the south-west. Back,
+the gates of the city, hiding the view of the plain. Right, Judith's
+house, with a tent on the roof. Left, houses. The street turns abruptly,
+back left, along the wall of the city. Left centre, a built-up
+vantage-point, from which the plain can be seen over the gates_.
+
+TIME: _Fifth century B.C.
+
+Towards evening_.
+
+Ozias _is standing alone in the street, drinking from a leathern bottle.
+Enter_ Chabris, _back left_.
+
+OZIAS _(quickly, but with perfect calmness, hiding the bottle in his
+garments_). Old man! It is years since I saw you. How came you past the
+guard, old man?
+
+CHABRIS. Old? Old? I am not yet a hundred. Who are you?
+
+OZIAS. Ozias.
+
+CHABRIS. Ah! So this is Ozias, the son of Ezbon. Before your father
+could walk I have nursed him on my knee; and he was filled like the full
+moon--with naughtiness.
+
+OZIAS. What has brought you at last out of your house? Are you come to
+prophesy once more?
+
+CHABRIS. I have given up prophesying.
+
+OZIAS. A profession full of risks.
+
+CHABRIS. I pass my endless days in meditation and solitude.
+
+OZIAS. That sounds much safer. How comely is the wisdom of old men!
+
+CHABRIS. And what do you do, sprig?
+
+OZIAS. Has none told you?
+
+CHABRIS. I see nobody but my daughter's granddaughter, and her I forbid
+to speak to me, because being a woman she has the tongue of a woman, and
+a woman's tongue is unfavourable to meditation. How should I be told?
+
+OZIAS. I am the governor of this great city of Bethulia.
+
+CHABRIS. You are responsible for this city?
+
+OZIAS. I am.
+
+CHABRIS. Now I understand my misfortune. And the truth was in me when I
+said to your mother as she lay dying: Better it is to die without
+children than to have them that are ungodly.
+
+OZIAS. Oh! How comely a thing is the judgment of grey hairs!
+
+CHABRIS. You ask me what has brought me at last out of my house. I will
+tell you. Thirst! Thirst has brought me out of my house. Every morning
+and every evening my great-grandchild serves me with pulse and water.
+For five days she has furnished less and less water, and this day--not a
+drop! Can one eat pulse without water to drink? Half an hour ago I went
+to her to reason with her, and she lay on her bed cracked, and raved
+that she herself had not drunk for three days and that there was no
+water left in all Bethulia. So I came at last out of my house into the
+streets of this city famous for its cool fountains which never fail. And
+lo! I meet the governor of this city, and he is Ozias! Ozias! Seven days
+do men mourn for him that is dead, but for an ungodly man all the days
+of his life! Why is there no water in Bethulia, sprig?
+
+OZIAS. Old man, meditation is good and solitude is good, but think not
+because you sit staring all day at your own belly that the sun and stars
+have ceased to revolve round the earth and the kings of this world to
+make war. Is it possible that you do not know what has happened?
+
+CHABRIS. I only know that I cannot eat pulse without water to drink.
+
+OZIAS. Bethulia is besieged.
+
+CHABRIS. Who is besieging Bethulia?
+
+OZIAS. Holofernes.
+
+CHABRIS. I have never heard his name. Who is he?
+
+OZIAS. Never heard the name of the chief captain of Nebuchadnezzar? Have
+you heard the name of Nebuchadnezzar, by chance?
+
+CHABRIS. I seem to remember it.
+
+OZIAS. Come up here. (_They go up the steps to the vantage-point_.)
+Look! A hundred and twenty thousand foot-soldiers. Twelve thousand
+archers on horseback. Oxen and sheep for their provisions. Twenty
+thousand asses for their carriages. Camels without number. Infinite
+victuals; and very much gold and silver. The like was never seen before.
+
+CHABRIS (_stepping down_.) Why has Nebuchadnezzar set about this thing?
+What harm has Bethulia done to him?
+
+OZIAS. Much harm. Nebuchadnezzar has decided to be God. He has decreed
+that all nations and tribes shall call upon him as God. And he has
+conquered the whole earth, excepting only Judea; and Bethulia is the
+gate into Judea, and Bethulia has not listened to his decree, and I am
+the governor of Bethulia. So Nebuchadnezzar the great king is very angry
+and Holofernes is the tool of his wrath.
+
+CHABRIS (_going up the steps again and gazing_.) How many did you say?
+
+OZIAS. A hundred and twenty thousand foot and twelve thousand horse.
+
+CHABRIS. At any rate this will be the last war.
+
+OZIAS. Why?
+
+CHABRIS. Why! Because plainly war cannot continue on such a scale. Or if
+it does, mankind is destroyed. Nebuchadnezzar has rendered war
+ridiculous.
+
+OZIAS _(laughs; then half to himself, sarcastically)._ What is heavier
+than lead, and what is the name thereof, but an aged fool?
+
+CHABRIS (_descending again, self-centred_). It remains that I cannot eat
+pulse without water to drink. (_To_ Ozias.) And surely Bethulia has more
+wells than any other city of Judea.
+
+OZIAS. The wells are at the foot of the hills, and Holofernes has
+seized them all.
+
+CHABRIS. That is not fighting.
+
+OZIAS. It is war.
+
+CHABRIS. No, no! In my time soldiers fought fairly.
+
+OZIAS. And killed each other. Why should Holofernes sacrifice thousands
+of lives to take the heights when he can reach the same result by
+letting his men sit still and watch?
+
+CHABRIS. I say this is not war. Once I travelled many days to Nineveh.
+It is a city of extravagance, and when I beheld its mad, new-fangled
+ways, I knew that the last day was nigh. I was right. Three thousand and
+five hundred years since Jehovah created Adam, and Eve from his rib ...
+Too long! Too long! And what is pulse without water? I must have water.
+
+OZIAS. It is thirty-four days since Holofernes took the wells. If you
+have received water up to yesterday your great-grandchild must indeed
+have thirsted that you might drink. I have distributed water by measure,
+but now the cisterns are empty, and women and young men fall down in the
+streets, and there is no water in Bethulia. We are all in like case, the
+high and the lowly.
+
+CHABRIS. Then give me your bottle.
+
+OZIAS. What bottle?
+
+CHABRIS. I saw you put it from your lips as I came.
+
+OZIAS. It behoves you to understand, old man, that my solemn duty as
+governor is to maintain my own strength, for if I fell the city would
+fall. Without me to inspire them the populace would yield in a moment.
+What is the populace? Poltroons, animals, sheep, rabbits, insects, lice!
+
+CHABRIS. Give me the bottle.
+
+OZIAS. It is as empty as the cisterns.
+
+CHABRIS. Give it to me, or I will cry through the streets that you are
+concealing water. (Ozias _gives him the bottle_. Chabris _drinks_. Ozias
+_snatches the bottle away and conceals it_.) Ah!
+
+(_A figure is glimpsed in the tent on the roof of_ Judith's _house_.
+Ozias _starts_.)
+
+CHABRIS. What is that up yonder?
+
+OZIAS. Nothing.
+
+CHABRIS. Whose house is this?
+
+OZIAS. It is the house of Judith, the daughter of Merari.
+
+CHABRIS. Ah! Merari, the son of Ox, the son of Oziel--Oziel and I were
+little playful boys together--the son of Elcia, the son of Raphaim, the
+son of Eliab, the son of Nathanael, the son of----
+
+OZIAS. Old man, your memory is terrible. Have pity!
+
+CHABRIS. The draught has revived me. So Merari married and had a
+daughter. What manner of woman is she?
+
+OZIAS. She is the widow of Manasses, who died of the heat in the barley
+harvest. And she is childless. And she is very rich; for Manasses left
+her gold and silver and menservants and maid-servants and cattle and
+lands. And she has remained a widow in her house three years and four
+months, and never has she come forth. And there is none to give her an
+ill word, for she fears the Lord greatly.
+
+CHABRIS. Yes. But what _manner_ of woman is she?
+
+OZIAS. She is beautiful to behold.
+
+CHABRIS (_to himself_). Oh! _That_ manner of woman!
+
+OZIAS. And she has fasted all the days of her widowhood, except the eves
+of the Sabbaths and the Sabbaths, and the eves of the new moons and the
+new moons, and the feasts and solemn days of the House of Israel.
+
+CHABRIS. You are most deeply versed in her life. Is she exceeding
+beautiful?
+
+OZIAS. She is exceeding beautiful.
+
+CHABRIS. Then it was she who _peeped_ (_with a peculiar emphasis on the
+word_) from the tent a moment since.
+
+OZIAS. Old man, you have eyes.
+
+CHABRIS. It is the draught of water.
+
+OZIAS. She is said to take the air in her tent daily at this hour.
+
+CHABRIS (_accusingly_). And that is why you are here, Ozias.
+
+OZIAS. No! I come here to reflect upon my plans for the saving of the
+city, and because of this vantage-point, to view the army of the
+Assyrians.
+
+CHABRIS. This vantage-point is new since my day. You have built it
+here, not to see the Assyrians, but to see Judith. And that is why you
+have set a guard to keep the street empty.
+
+OZIAS. And if it be so, what then? Old man, you are so old that to
+confess in your ear is sweet, like murmuring secrets into the grave. If
+I do come to this place to watch for the marvellous vision of Judith,
+what then?
+
+CHABRIS. What then? And the populace of Bethulia dying of thirst?
+
+OZIAS. The populace!... Mice! Rats! Beetles! (_He makes the motion of
+crushing with his foot_.)
+
+CHABRIS. Yet the city is doomed. You can have no hope.
+
+OZIAS. No hope? Am I then a dead body? Am I a rotting corpse? True, the
+city will be taken, and when the city is taken I may be killed. But in
+your meditations, old man, has it not occurred to you that death must be
+highly interesting? Or I may be seized for a slave. But either I should
+cease speedily to be a slave, or I should become the most powerful slave
+in Babylon. (_Reflectively_.) We might be enslaved together.
+
+CHABRIS. Who?
+
+OZIAS. Judith and I. The history of the world is full of miracles.
+Meanwhile, I live, and the strong savour of life inflames my nostrils;
+and the ever-increasing magnificence and terror of war is like wine in
+my mouth. I shake with delight at the vastness and the mystery of the
+future.... And there is woman!
+
+CHABRIS. I feel I can eat my pulse now.
+
+OZIAS. There is still woman.
+
+_A fracas is heard, back. Enter_ Rahel, _running, followed by two
+soldiers and a mixed group of Bethulians, including_ Charmis, _an
+elder_.
+
+RAHEL (_to_ Chabris, _like a termagant_). Why did you go forth alone,
+grandad, frightening me when I looked and could not find you? At your
+age! Come back with me this moment.
+
+CHABRIS. Ay! There is still woman!
+
+OZIAS (_angrily, to_ first soldier). Did I not give an order to bar the
+street?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. My lord, some of these are elders of high authority, and
+would pass. As for the girl----
+
+RAHEL (_to_ Chabris). This moment! (_She faints and falls_.)
+
+CHABRIS (_indifferently, as_ Charmis _moves towards_ Rahel). Let her
+lie. She will come to of herself--or not, as God wills.
+
+OZIAS (_to the soldiers, with cold fierceness_). Get back to your
+places. (_Exeunt soldiers_.)
+
+CHARMIS (_looking at_ Ozias _and indicating_ Rahel). She is the
+fourteenth I have seen faint from thirst in the streets this day.
+
+OZIAS (_soothingly_). Alas! And you or I may be the next. We are all in
+like case. But what is to be done?
+
+(_Confused feeble exclamations from the group of citizens:_ 'We want to
+know. We are come for that. There is but one thing to be done.')
+
+OZIAS (_still soothingly_). Who among you will be the spokesman?
+
+CHARMIS. We are all spokesmen.
+
+OZIAS. Even the children?
+
+CHARMIS. Even the children. In our extremity we are all spokesmen.
+
+OZIAS. But not all at once. Will you begin, honourable Charmis? You know
+that I am the servant of the citizens.
+
+CHARMIS (_nervously oratorical_). Lord Ozias, may the God of Israel
+judge between us and you, for you have done us a great injury. (_Looks
+round for approval. The group approves._)
+
+OZIAS. An injury? I? Have I not said that I am the servant of the
+citizens?
+
+CHARMIS (_more confidently_). And I say again that you have done us a
+great injury, in that you have not asked peace of the Assyrians. For we
+have no helper, and the God of Israel has sold us into the hands of the
+Assyrians. We are thrown down before them with thirst and with great
+destruction. Therefore now we demand--(_looks round_)--I say we demand
+that you call the Assyrians, and deliver the whole city for a spoil to
+the people of Holofernes and to all his army. For it is better for us to
+be made a spoil than to die of thirst. We will be the slaves of
+Holofernes, so that our souls may live and so that we may not see the
+death of our infants before our eyes, nor our wives nor our children
+die. (_A mother in the group convulsively seizes her child. Pause_.
+Ozias _walks about_.) We take to witness against you the heaven and the
+earth and our God and the God of our fathers, which punishes us
+according to our sins and the sins of our fathers; and we demand of you
+that you deliver up the city to Holofernes and his host. (_A silence_.)
+
+(Ozias _ascends solemnly to the vantage-point._)
+
+OZIAS (_dominating the assembly_). Friends, it would seem that Charmis
+has made an end. His words are excellent and full of pity. Who follows
+him? Who will speak next? My ear waits. (_A silence_.) Ah! Then give
+heed. The words of Charmis are full of pity, but I also have pity. Do
+not I too cherish our women, and our maidens and our young children? And
+because I pity I would not yield to the monster Holofernes. Yes, the
+monster! This is not war that he wages. Once our enemy strove fairly
+with the warriors of Israel. Now he makes our women and children to die
+of thirst. The magnificence of war is gone from the earth, and
+Holofernes by the excess of his hosts has rendered war ridiculous.
+(Chabris _raises his hands_.) The peoples of the earth will perceive
+that henceforward the institution of war cannot continue, and after this
+there will be no more war. But meanwhile, if I go crouching to the feet
+of Holofernes, what will happen and what will come to pass? Surely it
+will come to pass that the monster who has sat down to watch us die of
+thirst will slay our little children and our old men, and dishonour our
+women, and ravish our innocent virgins; for the enslaving of the
+conquered will not content his anger nor satisfy the lust of his great
+hosts. Shall these things be? I say they shall not be. But what am I,
+save the servant of the citizens of Bethulia? And what do I speak, save
+the thought that is in your hearts? There is no cowardice in you. You
+are not sheep, nor rabbits, nor beetles, nor lice. You are valiant men,
+and women lion-hearted. Without you I am naught, and if I defy
+Holofernes, my fortitude is yours and my resolve springs from you.
+Charmis has invoked the holy name of the God of Israel. Let Israel not
+forget its God, for never has the Most High forsaken Israel. Brethren,
+be of good courage. Let us yet endure five days. Five short days. And if
+these days pass and the God of Israel turn not his mercy towards us,
+then will I do according to the word of Charmis. Such is my oath to you.
+And so it shall be.
+
+Haggith _enters from the house of_ Judith.
+
+HAGGITH. My lord Ozias!
+
+OZIAS (_quickly descending the steps_). What say you?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress, the lady Judith, will speak with you. She comes.
+
+RAHEL (_half rising_). Water!
+
+OZIAS (_excited_.) The lady Judith comes out of her house after three
+years.
+
+VOICES IN THE GROUP (_excited and impressed_.) Judith is coming, after
+three years! Judith! The widow!
+
+OZIAS (_sternly to the group_). Get hence, everyone to his own charge.
+Soldiers! Clear the street! (Two soldiers _advance, running to obey_.)
+The men to the walls and towers. The women and children to their houses.
+(_To_ Rahel, _who has risen, indicating_ Chabris.) Take the aged fool
+away, girl. (_Ruthlessly and contemptuously_.) Get home, all of you.
+Rabble! Insects! Lice!
+
+(_The street is cleared, not without difficulty, and_ Ozias _is left
+alone with_ Haggith.)
+
+_After a pause_, Judith _enters slowly, in widow's apparel and
+sackcloth_.
+
+(_Exit_ Haggith _into the house_.)
+
+JUDITH. Greetings, Lord Ozias.
+
+OZIAS. Lady, greetings. (_They salute_.)
+
+JUDITH. Where are the people?
+
+OZIAS. I invited them to go away.
+
+JUDITH. Why?
+
+OZIAS. Your waiting-woman said that you would speak with me.
+
+JUDITH. But what I have to say I would have said before them.
+
+OZIAS. Forgive your servant.
+
+JUDITH. No! It is I, the woman, who should ask to be absolved.
+
+OZIAS. I beseech you----
+
+JUDITH (_simply_). Perhaps you dismissed the people because it is not
+meet for them to see all the workings of the mind which has authority
+over them.
+
+OZIAS (_warmly responsive_). Ah! Lady! In your wisdom and your
+understanding you have comprehended what it is to be the governor of a
+besieged city. You, alone!
+
+JUDITH. This is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia.
+
+OZIAS. It is a day memorable beyond all the days of Bethulia--because
+Judith, the widow of Manasses, has issued from her house and from her
+secrecy, and because after long years she has lightened the city with
+her countenance.
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). We hold converse with words, but the shadow of
+destruction is over us, and our hearts are darkened, and we hide our
+hearts in speech. Ozias, governor of Bethulia, show me your heart.
+
+OZIAS. I dare not.
+
+JUDITH. Dare! I am not afraid.
+
+OZIAS. YOU are more beautiful than aforetime--were it possible.
+
+JUDITH (_accepting the compliment_). And if I am?
+
+OZIAS. That is what is in my heart! Behold my heart, and the depths of
+my heart. Look deep, and deeper, and still you will see naught therein
+but the beauty and the subtlety of Judith.
+
+JUDITH. It is no common man that with the parched tongue of thirst can
+talk thus while unspeakable calamity assails the city.
+
+OZIAS. It is Ozias.
+
+JUDITH (_gently_). I came not to meet Ozias, but the governor of
+Bethulia. From my tent I hearkened to the words which he spoke to the
+people, and the Lord said to me: Go down to him, thou, a woman. And I am
+here.
+
+OZIAS. The Lord reigns! That which I said to the people did not please
+the ear of Judith?
+
+JUDITH. No.
+
+OZIAS. I spoke to the people according to their understanding. Have you
+not said it is not meet for the people to know the thoughts of the
+ruler? Hearken again? And I will speak now to the wise woman. I
+flattered the people with vain praise of their courage, when they have
+no courage. I affrighted the people with a prophecy of terror, when
+there is no terror--for Holofernes is a great warrior, and has
+compassion in his greatness, for he is a Babylonian. I gave them hope of
+succour when succour is none--for, with a hundred and twenty thousand
+footmen and twelve thousand horse against us (_with dry humour_) to
+count upon the mercy of the Lord is presumption.
+
+JUDITH (_moves aside and returns. Sweetly_). Why then did you speak thus
+to the people? And to what end did you deceive them? I beseech you yet
+again to show me your heart, for it is right that I should know.
+
+OZIAS. I saw the vastness of the future as in a vision. If the God of
+Israel perchance is merciful, and the city is saved at the eleventh
+hour, then it will be said in Jerusalem that there is none like Ozias of
+Bethulia for steadfastness, for he alone by his ardour revived the
+fainting populace and held firm the city; and great will be my
+recompense.... But that is a dream. Always I have faced the substance of
+things, and the substance is that Nebuchadnezzar has decreed to rule
+over the whole earth, and from the east to the west there is no living
+man that shall not bow down before Nebuchadnezzar. Bethulia will fall.
+I, the governor, shall be taken captive and shown to Nebuchadnezzar, and
+in that day Holofernes shall say to Nebuchadnezzar: Lo! Here is Ozias
+the Israelite who resisted thy mighty armies for thirty-four days and
+yet five days more. Use him if it seem good to thee. And I shall be
+lifted up to be a satrap of Nebuchadnezzar, and I shall partake of the
+bright glory of Nebuchadnezzar. And--(_hesitates_.)
+
+JUDITH (_subtly and sweetly_). And?
+
+OZIAS (_in an outburst_). What am I without you, O Judith? Before
+Manasses loved you, did I not love you? For three years have I not
+watched over you in all honour and respect, and troubled you not with my
+importunity until this day, which is the day of days? What am I without
+you, and what shall be my dominion and my satrap's throne if you do not
+sit in majesty by my side, O Rose of Sharon and matchless among women?
+
+Judith (_as before_). My lord, you are like a rushing river.
+
+OZIAS. You have seen my heart.
+
+JUDITH. I have seen it.
+
+OZIAS. And what say you?
+
+_There is the sudden sound of a disturbance. Enter, from back, soldiers,
+holding_ Achior, _and a group of excited citizens_. Haggith _appears at
+the house-door._
+
+OZIAS (_fiercely_). What! Are my commands no more than the wind in the
+corn, and is there to be naught but tumult within the walls of this
+city?
+
+VOICES IN THE GROUP. An Assyrian! An Assyrian!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias! We saw this man lying bound at the foot of
+the hill, and we descended and loosed him and brought him privily into
+Bethulia by the secret way. And now we present him to my lord.
+
+OZIAS Fools! Then no longer is the secret way secret.
+
+VOICES. Slay him! Stone him! Whip the dog!
+
+JUDITH (_nobly scornful, to the crowd_). Oh! Brave! Oh! Men of courage
+and high valour!
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Achior). Who are you?
+
+ACHIOR. Achior.
+
+OZIAS. Your condition?
+
+ACHIOR (_with calm, genial candour_). Captain of all the Ammonites in
+the army of Holofernes.
+
+JUDITH. Let them loose him, Lord Ozias. His eyes are not the eyes of
+treachery.
+
+OZIAS (_to the soldiers_). Loose him. (_To_ Achior.) And how come you
+here? Speak the truth--and fear.
+
+ACHIOR. My mouth shall say truth, but I will not fear.
+
+OZIAS. My hand is terrible.
+
+ACHIOR. Thus it happened. When the children of Israel had shut up the
+passages of the hill country and had fortified all the tops of the high
+hills, Holofernes was very angry. And he called the captains of Ammon
+and said to them: Tell me now, ye sons of Chanaan, who these Israelites
+are that dwell in the hill country, and wherein is their power and
+strength, and why they have determined not to come and meet me, more
+than all the inhabitants of the west? And I, Achior, answered the
+question of Holofernes.
+
+OZIAS. And what answer gave you?
+
+ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes: This people is descended of the Chaldeans.
+But they left the way of their ancestors and would not follow the gods
+of their fathers; and they worshipped the God of heaven. So they were
+cast out from the face of the gods of Chaldea, and they fled into
+Mesopotamia. And they came to Chanaan. But when a famine covered all the
+land of Chanaan they went down into Egypt, and the king of Egypt brought
+them low with labouring in brick and made them slaves. Then they cried
+to their God, and he smote all the land of Egypt with plagues.... And
+God dried the Red Sea for them.
+
+VOICES. It is true. It is true!
+
+ACHIOR. And they came to Chanaan, and drove before them the inhabitants
+of that land, and they dwelt in that country many days. And while they
+sinned not before their God they prospered, because the God that hates
+iniquity was with them.
+
+VOICES. It is true.
+
+ACHIOR. But when they departed from the way which their God appointed,
+then they were destroyed in many battles very sore, and were led
+captives into a land that was not theirs, and the temple of their God
+was cast to the ground.
+
+VOICES. Gentile dog! Shall we not render him to pieces?
+
+JUDITH. There is but one truth, brethren, whether it please or whether
+it displease.
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Achior). Make an end.
+
+ACHIOR. And I said to Holofernes: But now this people are returned to
+their God, and have possessed Jerusalem, and are seated in the hill
+country. (_With more emphasis_.) And I said further to Holofernes: Now
+therefore, my lord and governor, if there be any error in this people,
+let us go up and we shall overcome them. But if there be no iniquity in
+their nation, let my lord now pass by, lest their Lord defend them and
+we become a reproach before all the world.
+
+JUDITH. It was well said.
+
+OZIAS. Lady, it was well said--if the slave said it. (_To_ Achior.) I
+demanded of you: How came you _here_?
+
+ACHIOR. Thus. When I had finished speaking to Holofernes, all they that
+were about my lord and governor rose up in wrath and cried: Kill him.
+And the face of Holofernes darkened, and he said: And who art thou,
+Achior, that thou hast prophesied among us to-day that we should not
+make war with the people of Israel because of their God? And who is God
+but Nebuchadnezzar? Nebuchadnezzar by my hand will destroy the
+Israelites, and their God shall not deliver them. Their mountains shall
+be drunken with their blood and their fields shall be filled with their
+dead bodies. (_The_ citizens _show alarm_.) And thou, Achior, shalt be
+delivered up to the Israelites in Bethulia, and when thou seest me again
+thou shalt fall among the slain.... And he commanded his servants, and
+they took me, and carried me secretly to the foot of the hill of
+Bethulia. And here am I!
+
+OZIAS (_after a pause, positively_). It is a wicked device for our
+undoing.
+
+JUDITH. How so?
+
+OZIAS. Plainly this fellow lies, and he has come subtly with a tale to
+spy out our strength. Presently he will seek to escape from us again to
+the Assyrians.
+
+VOICES. Spy! Stone him! Rend him!
+
+ACHIOR (_to_ Ozias). To Holofernes, my lord and governor, I spoke truth;
+and to you also I speak truth. Never has my mouth lied, nor my tongue
+uttered deceit. If death is ordained for my recompense, so be it.
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Ozias). He is a fair youth, and has spoken truly and feared
+not.
+
+OZIAS (_with meaning_). Lady, he is a fair youth, and fearless. But by
+what sign know you that he has spoken truly?
+
+JUDITH. By the glance of his eyes I know.
+
+OZIAS. It is a sign that suffices not. Shall it be said that Ozias was
+deceived, and shall Ozias imperil his renown, by reason of the glance of
+a youth when he looks at a woman--even you?... And if he lies not, then
+he is a fool and his folly was great.
+
+ACHIOR. I spoke the truth to Holofernes.
+
+OZIAS (_fiercely_). But to speak truth did not content you. Having
+answered Holofernes, you must needs offer counsel to your lord and
+governor! Who were you to offer counsel to the greatest of all the
+captains of the earth? The protection of the mighty conqueror covered
+you, and lo! in your folly did you estrange yourself from him. Fool!
+
+ACHIOR. I said to Holofernes, my lord and governor, that which I was
+appointed to say--that, no more and no less.
+
+OZIAS. And who appointed you to say that which you said?
+
+JUDITH. If there be a God in Israel, and if the Lord has not abandoned
+us, may not this youth be the messenger of the Most High to bring us
+comfort, and for a warning to the vainglory of Holofernes?
+
+OZIAS (_with irony_). All is possible to the Lord. Yet may his purposes
+be hidden from us. (_To the soldiers_.) Until the Lord vouchsafe new
+wisdom to me, his servant, bind fetters about the feet of Achior, and
+take him to the house of bondage, and set a guard over him, for a spy is
+not more dangerous than a fool.
+
+CHARMIS (_springing forward_). It shall be done, Ozias.
+
+(_The soldiers begin to put chains on_ Achior.)
+
+JUDITH (_quietly_). Shame him not with fetters, lord Ozias.
+
+OZIAS (_after a pause, to the soldiers_). Unbind him! (_The soldiers
+obey_.) Take him off! Speedily! Away! All! Let none remain! Hasten, I
+say!
+
+(_Exeunt back, all except_ Ozias _and_ Judith. _As he goes_ Achior
+_kisses Judith's robe_.)
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Achior, _as he does so_). Truth-teller!
+
+(_At a sign from_ Judith, Haggith _re-enters the house_.)
+
+OZIAS. Your face is turned from me, because of the youth. Yet you came
+out to see the governor of the city, and the governor could do no other
+than I have done.
+
+JUDITH (_looking at him_). Ozias, you have shown me your heart.
+
+OZIAS. Yea!
+
+JUDITH. And in the moment when the youth came you asked of me my
+counsel.
+
+OZIAS. Yea!
+
+JUDITH. Hear me now, for the words you have spoken before the people
+this day are not right.
+
+OZIAS. What words?
+
+JUDITH. This promise that you have uttered to deliver the city to our
+enemies, unless within five days the Lord turn to help. Who are you that
+seek to stand instead of God among the children of men?
+
+OZIAS. Stand instead of God!
+
+JUDITH. Who are you that have tempted God this day? For you cannot find
+the depth of the heart of man,--how then shall you search out God or
+comprehend his purpose? Brother, provoke not the Lord our God to anger.
+For if he will not help us within these five days, he has power to
+defend us when he will, even every day. Do not bind the counsels of God.
+For God is not as man that he may be threatened, neither as the son of
+man that he should be wavering. Therefore let us wait for salvation from
+him, and he will hear our voice,--if it please him. Moreover, this city
+is the key and the gateway to all Judea. If it be obstinate in
+resistance, Judea is not defiled, but if it be taken the whole land
+shall lie waste and God will require the profanation of it at our mouth.
+
+OZIAS. All that you have spoken is truth, and there is none to gainsay
+your words. From the beginning of your days we have known your wisdom,
+and your understanding is manifest.... (_With significance_.) But we are
+thirsty.
+
+JUDITH. If we are thirsty, let us give thanks to the Lord our God, who
+tries us, even as he did our fathers.
+
+OZIAS. The people in the extremity of their thirst compelled me to an
+oath, which I will not break.
+
+JUDITH. Say you the people, Ozias? As for them, you hold them lightly,
+and they are as naught in your eyes. So much you have avowed.
+
+OZIAS (_in a new tone_). It is true. This day I hold the people lightly.
+But when the great madness and desperation of thirst comes at last upon
+them, who shall hold them? In that day they will seize the things
+forbidden, and they will drink the wine sanctified and reserved for the
+priests that serve the Lord. And to avert from me the wrath of Joachim,
+the high priest of Jerusalem, I have sent already a messenger to
+Jerusalem to bring a licence that this matter may be lawful.
+
+JUDITH (_shocked_). Nay!
+
+OZIAS. I say it will be so.
+
+JUDITH. It shall not be so.
+
+OZIAS. Then pray you to the Most High for the city, even for all of us,
+and the Lord will send rain for our cisterns and we shall faint no more.
+Pray, for you are a godly woman, and the God of Israel shall listen.
+
+JUDITH (_with supreme impressiveness_). Hear me again, Ozias. This night
+I will do a thing which shall go throughout all the generations to the
+children of Israel. You shall stand this night in the gate of the city,
+and I will go forth from the city with my waiting-woman; and within the
+days that you have promised to deliver the city to our enemies the Lord
+will visit Israel by my hand.
+
+OZIAS. On what errand will you go?
+
+JUDITH. Enquire not of my act, for I will not declare it until the
+things are finished that I do. But this I declare, that the Lord has
+inclined himself to me, and now he has sent Achior for a sign.
+
+OZIAS. You go to Holofernes!
+
+JUDITH. To Holofernes.
+
+OZIAS. Do not go!
+
+JUDITH. But why shall I not go?
+
+OZIAS. The perils of the heathen will surround you, and harm will surely
+befall you, for Holofernes will work lamentable evil upon you. And I
+cannot suffer it.
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). Did not Ozias say that Holofernes was a great
+warrior and had compassion in his greatness?
+
+OZIAS (_insistent_). I cannot suffer it, for if any shame come upon you
+I will not live.
+
+JUDITH. God will not see his handmaid shamed. Moreover I regard not
+myself in this thing, but the welfare of the people of Israel.
+
+OZIAS (_kneeling_). Judith, I entreat you! For you are the light of my
+eyes, and without you the world is not.
+
+JUDITH (_softly_). I know it. Think you that in these years I have not
+seen the depths of your heart, Ozias? Think you that I was blind in my
+tent? Think you that I watched not upon you? You were comely in my
+sight. But this day you have revealed your pride. For you seek not God,
+but the vanity of the earth, and you would make all Israel the
+instrument of your glory, denying the Lord. And I am sad.
+
+OZIAS. Forgive me, Rose of Sharon.
+
+JUDITH (_softly_). Who am I, to forgive my brother? Peace be upon you!
+(_She turns towards her house_.)
+
+OZIAS (_rising,_). Stay!
+
+JUDITH. I go to prepare myself for that which I have to do. (_Exit into
+the house_.)
+
+(_A soldier shows himself, back._)
+
+OZIAS. Friend!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_approaching and saluting_). Lord! Your command!
+
+OZIAS. Send to me the officer of the watch.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, the honourable lieutenant lies sick.
+
+(Haggith _appears at the door of the house_.)
+
+OZIAS. Thirst has overcome him?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_bowing_). He raves on the bed, lord, and his tongue is
+like the tongue of a dog.
+
+OZIAS. Who then commands the watch by the watchfires this night?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. I, lord. The watchfires wait the torch.
+
+OZIAS. Will you, too, faint, and will your tongue be like the tongue of
+a dog?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_grimly_), Not mine, lord.
+
+OZIAS. DO the people complain?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord, they whine and snivel mightily.
+
+_Enter_ Haggith _with a small sack._
+
+OZIAS. Is the secret way shut?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Shut and barred, lord.
+
+OZIAS. It must be opened.... Stand! I will see to it.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. AS my lord wills.
+
+OZIAS. Has the watch aught to drink?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. My lord knows that no drop is left in the gourds.
+
+(Ozias _waves him away, and he retires_.)
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Haggith, _who is busy with the sack_). Woman, has the lady
+Judith perchance dreamed a dream?
+
+HAGGITH (_enigmatically_). My mistress has dreamed no dream. Why does
+the lord Ozias ask?
+
+OZIAS. It seemed to me--(_stops_)
+
+HAGGITH. Dreams lift up fools. (_Exit into the house_.) (_Exit Ozias,
+L_.)
+
+(_The soldier strolls forward. Twilight begins to fall_.)
+
+(_Enter_ Haggith _from the house with more baggage_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_to the soldier; curtly; not looking at him_). So thou hast no
+water?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_with genial freedom_). Yea, Haggith, we have still a
+little.
+
+HAGGITH. Then thou has lied to the governor?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. _Him_? (_With a jerk of the shoulder_!) _He_ knows! In
+truth now, thinkest thou he would expect us soldiers to keep guard
+without water? _He_ knows! But he is a great lord, and in seemliness he
+asks for a lie, and that which he asks is given to him--in seemliness.
+
+HAGGITH. But the officer raving as thou hast said with thirst?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Ah! It is the business of a worshipful officer to scorn
+deceit and to suffer.
+
+HAGGITH. And all the people?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. The people are the people. But we soldiers are
+soldiers--and must drink, or we cannot guard. (_Yawns_.) Eh! I could lie
+down and snore for seven years, but I am appointed to watch all night.
+
+HAGGITH (_suddenly caressing_). Sweet warrior! Would I could rest thee!
+
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_startled by the change in her demeanour_). Haggith! Thou
+art marvellously and desirably changed.
+
+HAGGITH. I am practising to thy profit for that which lies before me and
+my mistress.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What meanest thou?
+
+HAGGITH. Chut! If thou hast heard a word, let it die with thee--it will
+not burst thee.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord! turn away from me vain hopes and concupiscence.
+
+HAGGITH. And so thou sleepest not this night!... Neither do I sleep.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What?
+
+HAGGITH. I go with my mistress upon a journey.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What journey? There can be no journey for thee, unless
+thou leave the city and wend to the Assyrians.
+
+HAGGITH (_curt again_). Nevertheless we go upon a journey.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. It is madness.
+
+HAGGITH. It may be.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Who can tell the heart of a master? Not I! When dost thou
+depart?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress is attiring.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Thou dost not attire her?
+
+HAGGITH. I! I, who have charge over all that is hers! Wilt thou tell me,
+then, what is the task of her tiring-women? Idle sluts!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. And this is thy baggage?
+
+HAGGITH (_matter-of-fact_). A cruse of oil, a bag of parched corn, fine
+bread, three lumps of figs--and a bottle of wine--yea, the last!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_drawing in his lips_). Ah! But thou wilt need an ass for
+this cargo.
+
+HAGGITH (_drily_). I am the ass.
+
+_Enter_ Judith, _magnificently dressed_.
+
+(_The_ soldier _retires, back_.)
+
+JUDITH. Is all prepared?
+
+HAGGITH. All is prepared, mistress.
+
+_Enter_ Ozias, _L_.
+
+OZIAS (_ecstatic at the sight of_ Judith's _splendour_). O, loveliness!
+O, lily of the field! Who shall withstand you, and who shall say you
+nay?
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). I am ready to depart.
+
+OZIAS. The secret way is opened. I will lead you to it.
+
+JUDITH (_gently_). The secret way? I will take no secret way.
+
+OZIAS. But hear me, lady. The peril from the archers far off--
+
+JUDITH. What did I say to you, lord Ozias? I said: You shall stand this
+night in the gate of the city, and I will go forth. My desire is that
+you command the gatemen to open the gates, so that I and my
+waiting-woman may pass out before all men, and in the sight of the Lord.
+(_She bends to examine_ Haggith's _baggage_.)
+
+OZIAS (_moved. Calling to the_ soldiers). Ho! Let the gates of the city
+be opened, that the lady Judith may go forth.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Yea, lord. (_Calling to others, off._) Gatemen!
+
+(_The gatemen man the gate-chains, and citizens rush in with cries_:
+'What shall happen to us? The lady Judith leaves the city? At
+night-fall? What is it?')
+
+OZIAS (_fiercely, to the crowd_). Get hence! Dogs!
+
+JUDITH (_softly_). Let them stay, Lord Ozias, for that which I do, I do
+not in secret, neither shall it be hidden.
+
+OZIAS (_to the crowd_). Make a way clear to the gates.
+
+JUDITH. Before I go, I will look into the valley whither I descend.
+(_She mounts to the vantage-point_).
+
+VOICES. Water! Water! Or we die!
+
+JUDITH (_from the vantage-point_). Brethren, bewail not! Remember what
+things the Lord did to Abraham, and how he tried Isaac, and what
+happened to Jacob in Mesopotamia. For the Lord has not tried us in the
+fire as he did them, neither has he taken vengeance upon us. But the
+Lord scourges them that come near to him, to admonish them. (_She
+kneels. Following her example, everybody kneels_.) O Lord God of my
+father Simeon, the Assyrians are multiplied in their power; they trust
+in shield, and spear, and bow, and sling; and know not that thou art the
+Lord which breakest battles; the Lord is thy name. Behold their pride,
+and send thy wrath upon their heads; give into my hand, which am a
+widow, the power that I have conceived. For thy power standeth not in
+multitude, nor thy might in strong men. Smite the Assyrians by the
+deceit of my lips; break down their stateliness by the hand of a woman.
+And make my speech and deceit to be their wound and stripe, who have
+purposed cruel things against thy covenant and against the top of Zion.
+And make every nation and tribe to acknowledge that thou art the God of
+all power, and that there is none other that protecteth the people of
+Israel but thou. (_She rises. The crowd murmurs:_ 'Amen.' _All rise._
+Judith _comes down from the vantage-point. Silence_.)
+
+OZIAS (_moved_). Open the gates.
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Haggith). Nothing is forgotten?
+
+HAGGITH. Nothing.
+
+(Judith _moves a step towards the gates._)
+
+OZIAS. The soul of my soul goes with you into the valley.
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Haggith, _solemnly_). And the knife?
+
+(Haggith _gives a gesture. At the same moment a woman comes from the
+house with a knife, which she hands to_ Haggith, _who hands it to_
+Judith, _who takes it ceremoniously, and hides it in her dress. The
+gates are now opened, and the distant plain under the setting sun is
+seen covered with the tents of the Assyrian army_.)
+
+(Judith _goes slowly through the gates, followed by_ Haggith _carrying
+the baggage_.)
+
+VOICES (_as_ Judith _passes_). Water! Water!
+
+OZIAS (_with deep emotion_). Close the gates. Light the watchfires.
+
+(_The gates begin slowly to close. The glow of the watchfires is seen_.)
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+ACT II
+
+
+SCENE I
+
+_The valley of Jezreel. The city of Bethulia on the hill in the
+distance_.
+
+Haggith _with her baggage enters to_ Ingur _and his men_.
+
+TIME: _The next morning but one_.
+
+INGUR. What art thou?
+
+HAGGITH (_prudishly and coldly_). If it please thee, I am a woman.
+
+INGUR. No. Thou art a hedgehog.
+
+HAGGITH (_suddenly cajoling_). I ask pardon. When I saw thy great
+handsomeness I grew afraid, and my tongue was stiffened. In my country
+there is no man so handsome as thou art.
+
+INGUR. Ah! (_Much mollified_.) And what then is thy country?
+
+HAGGITH. I am a woman of the Hebrews, and I have come from Bethulia.
+
+INGUR (_astonished_). A woman of the Hebrews! From Bethulia! (_To his
+men_). Stand back from my face. (_The men retire. To_ Haggith.) This is
+a rare strange tale.
+
+HAGGITH. Could I lie to _thee_? I have escaped from the city, which is
+given over to be consumed. I sought water for my thirst, for in Bethulia
+there is no water, and the people faint in the streets.
+
+INGUR. But it is a long journey from Bethulia, and thou art fresh and
+delicate as though just risen from thy bed.
+
+HAGGITH (_smiling_). I can hide nothing from thee, mighty wolf. I am,
+indeed, but just risen from my bed. The night before last night I set
+forth secretly, and came into the valley yesterday at noon, and lay soft
+in a cave where three springs bubbled, and drank, and slept until this
+morning's sunrise.
+
+INGUR. What is thy name?
+
+HAGGITH. Haggith.
+
+INGUR. Thy name is as strange as thy errand, and as thyself; and surely
+thou art a woman of the Hebrews, which is a race of lunatics, as I am
+told.
+
+HAGGITH. I have figs fit for a great king. (_Opens her sack and offers
+some figs_.)
+
+INGUR _(eating)._ Um! And what else hast thou? Let me touch thee,
+Haggith. (_He touches her carefully_). Yes, thou art outlandish, and no
+doubt mad, but comely. Comely! Thou hast the likeness and feel of a
+woman. Always have I hankered after strange women, and now lo! one falls
+ripe into my mouth. (Haggith _shrinks. Reassuringly._) In a way of
+speaking! In a way speaking! For thou art not in my mouth. And so thou
+earnest to slake thy thirst?
+
+HAGGITH. Yes, my roaring lion.
+
+INGUR. Listen! Thou hast saved thy life with water. But thou art lost.
+
+HAGGITH. Lost?
+
+INGUR. Ay! A woman in the camps of the Assyrians--she is undone. She is
+a lamb in a den of terrible tigers. (_Comfortingly_.) No, no! I will
+protect thee, but I warn thee that thou art undone. I am honest.
+(_Caresses her_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_clumsily returning his caress_). _Thou_ wilt not harm me.
+
+INGUR. I will not tear thee to pieces, but thou shalt come away with me.
+(_She timidly strokes him_). Thou hast not the habit of this stroking.
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me, when I encountered any noble
+Assyrian, to use him thus. It is true that I have not the habit.
+Nevertheless I do what I can.
+
+INGUR (_startled at the mention of a mistress_). Thy--thy mistress? Ye
+are two? Where then is thy mistress? Tell me upon the instant--is she
+fairer than thou?
+
+HAGGITH. Seven times more fair.
+
+INGUR. Fetch her!
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress is washing herself in a fountain of water by the
+cave. She sent me forward in peace and friendliness to announce her
+coming.
+
+INGUR. Fetch her! (_Suddenly perceiving_ Bagoas _in the distance, he
+changes his manner_.) Stay! Bagoas is approaching, and he may have seen
+thee. His eyes are sharp. Stand off. (Haggith _moves away a little_.)
+But when I tell thee, fall down on thy face.
+
+HAGGITH. Is he a great captain?
+
+INGUR. His mightiness is the chief eunuch of the Prince, and there is
+none greater than he save only the Prince himself, for Bagoas has charge
+over all the women of the Prince's tents.
+
+HAGGITH. Women of the Prince's tents?
+
+INGUR. Ay! Wives! Concubines! Virgins! Beyond counting. Didst thou think
+in thy Hebrew pride, that the Prince was a savage and a barbarian?...
+Down, damsel! Here is Bagoas. Embrace the earth for thy life's sake.
+(Haggith _obeys_.)
+
+_Enter_ Bagoas, _with attendants, L_.
+
+(Ingur _salutes him with extreme deference_.)
+
+BAGOAS. Who art thou?
+
+INGUR. Ingur, mightiness, commanding twenty footmen.
+
+BAGOAS. Begone from my sight. This morning the Prince condescends to
+walk through the camp, that all the armies may take joy in his
+countenance. It is not meet that he should be seen of any lower than a
+lieutenant.
+
+INGUR (_indicating_ Haggith). Mightiness, a woman of the Hebrews escaped
+from Bethulia to find water! And by my subtlety I have captured her.
+
+BAGOAS. A woman of the Hebrews! (_Surveying_ Haggith.) Rise, scum, and
+let me behold thy deformity. (Haggith _obeys_.)
+
+INGUR. And there is another yet to appear,--her mistress, seven times
+fairer.
+
+BAGOAS. Her mistress may be seven times fairer than this eyesore, and
+yet ugly. (_To_ Haggith.) Who is thy mistress?
+
+HAGGITH. The lady Judith.
+
+BAGOAS. Judith! A name fit only for a cat! Why is she here? How is she
+here? What is her secret and detestable purpose? For there is a trick in
+this thing.
+
+HAGGITH. I know not my mistress's purpose.
+
+BAGOAS. Tell me thy mistress's purpose, or I will have thee smothered.
+
+HAGGITH. I know only that if Holofernes----
+
+BAGOAS (_stopping her angrily_). Callest thou the illustrious one by his
+name? The most high _Prince_ Holofernes, foul wench.
+
+HAGGITH. The most high Prince Holofernes--if he so wills my mistress
+would speak with his highness.
+
+BAGOAS (_laughing heartily_). Speak with the Prince? _Speak_ with the
+Prince? Ha-ha! (_All the men laugh_.) What is the state of thy mistress?
+
+HAGGITH. The lady Judith is a widow.
+
+BAGOAS (_still more amused_). Aha! A widow! And the Hebrew hag would
+_speak_ with Prince Holofernes! (_The men laugh and jeer_.)
+
+_Enter_ Judith, _R_.
+
+(Haggith _goes quickly to her. All the men stare at_ Judith, _deeply
+impressed_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_aside to_ Judith). There are many hussies in the camps,
+thousands and thousands, mistress. This lord is the chief eunuch.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to an attendant_). If this be an example of the Bethulian
+women, I shall have a momentous business upon me when their city falls.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+(Judith, _signing to_ Haggith _to stand aside, bows to the ground
+before_ Bagoas; _then rises again_.)
+
+BAGOAS (_after a short pause_). You are very beautiful.
+
+JUDITH. There are beautiful women in Judea, but no man of Judea would
+look twice at such as I, a shrunken widow, like dried fish.
+
+(_Exit_ Ingur, _excitedly, L_.)
+
+BAGOAS. I have heard how you have escaped out of Bethulia and come
+hither in order to find water. (_Blandly_.) Aught else?
+
+JUDITH. My desire also was to have speech privately with the great
+conqueror, Holofernes.
+
+BAGOAS. Ah! We are well met, you and I. For I am Bagoas, chief eunuch to
+the illustrious Prince. (_Aside to second attendant_.) Run. Fetch the
+box of veils. (_Exit_ second attendant, _L_.)
+
+JUDITH (_saluting once more_). I supplicate then, mighty Bagoas, that
+you lead me quickly to the illustrious Prince Holofernes.
+
+BAGOAS. Surely! Surely! It is my pleasure to content you. (_Aside, to
+attendant, anxiously_.) This dried fish by her damnable beauty will
+reach great power, and if I speak not softly to her now she will undo me
+in that day.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+JUDITH. I humbly thank your mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS. But it is necessary that you should relate to me your little
+affair. For no woman speaks to the illustrious Prince until she has
+spoken to me.
+
+JUDITH. It cannot be so.
+
+BAGOAS (_persuasively_). In my ear, privily. Approach.
+
+JUDITH. It cannot be so.
+
+BAGOAS. What mean you--it cannot be so?
+
+JUDITH. I will utter my errand to the illustrious Prince Holofernes
+alone.
+
+BAGOAS (_losing his self-control; angrily_). What? Thou queasy chit!
+Thou minx! Thou jade! Baggage! Mopsy! Shamelesss wench! Thou wilt not
+obey Bagoas, chief eunuch in the camps of the Assyrians! I will make
+thee the slave of my slave and the plaything of scullions. (_Stops._
+Judith _smiles_. Haggith _subsides alarmed at her feet_.) Thou shalt be
+abandoned to the sutlers and the ass-drivers, and thus thou shalt learn
+who is Bagoas and what is his power! (_Stops again._ Judith _still
+smiles_.) The strumpets of the kitchens shall scorn thee! I--I----
+
+JUDITH (_smiling sweetly_). Mightiness! Mightiness! I am your bondwoman,
+but it is appointed by heaven that I shall speak with the illustrious
+Prince Holofernes himself.
+
+BAGOAS (_controlling himself, smiling_). Well, if it is appointed by
+heaven, so shall it be. Forget my words. They had no evil intent, for I
+was trying you, as my duty is. (_Aside to attendant_.) The sweetness of
+her glance dissolves my backbone.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightinesss.
+
+BAGOAS (_to_ Judith). Follow me, lady. (_Aside to_ attendant.) Thinkest
+thou the Prince will come this way? (_Pointing_.)
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS. Or that?
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS. If the Prince so much as sees her before the city is taken,
+never will the city be taken, and we shall all be her captives.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness.
+
+BAGOAS (_beating the attendant_). I will lead her by the path to the
+cave, for the Prince will surely not come that way. (_To_ Judith.)
+Follow me, lady.
+
+(Bagoas _moves R_. Judith _hesitates a moment as_ Haggith _picks up her
+sack. Enter R. the heralds of Holofernes, followed by_ Holofernes.)
+
+BAGOAS (_to himself_). Holofernes! (_To his attendants_.) Hide her,
+rascals, or Assyria is undone. (_The attendants range themselves
+between_ Judith _and_ Holofernes.)
+
+(Bagoas _receives_ Holofernes _with a prostration and high ceremony_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. Where is this woman?
+
+BAGOAS. Woman, Prince?
+
+HOLOFERNES (_impatient_). This Hebrew woman, I say! One Ingur has run
+among the tents chattering, and the rumour of her has spread through the
+camps like a plague. By Nebuchadnezzar the one god, where is she, for it
+has been told to me that her beauty excels the beauty of all the women
+of the East and ravishes the eye exceedingly?
+
+BAGOAS. Ah! It is of Judith that the Prince deigns to speak. Lo! I had
+caught her and was bringing her to your highness. (_To_ attendants.)
+Stand aside, dogs.
+
+(Judith _is revealed to_ Holofernes. _She prostrates herself and then
+rises_. Holofernes _gazes at her, entranced_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. So thou hast escaped out of Bethulia to find water for thy
+thirst?
+
+JUDITH. To find water, and to have speech with the most illustrious
+Prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Woman (_approaching her a step, and then standing still_),
+be of good comfort, and fear not in thy heart, for I never hurt any that
+was willing to serve Nebuchadnezzar, the god of all the earth. And if
+thy people that dwell in the mountains had not held me lightly, I would
+not have lifted up my spear against them, but they have done these
+things to themselves.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside, to_ Holofernes). Terrible master, she is full of guile
+and deceitfulness, and came not at all for water, but for a hidden
+purpose against you. Therefore enquire of her closely.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Bagoas). Chastise thy tongue, ere it overthrow thee,
+fiend. There is no guile in that face. (_To_ Judith.) Tell me now thy
+message and wherefore in truth thou art come. And tremble not, for thou
+shalt live this night.
+
+JUDITH. Great prince, receive the words of your servant and suffer your
+handmaid to speak in your presence, and I will declare no lie to my
+lord.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Speak.
+
+JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to_ Holofernes). It is a device against my lord.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Judith). Speak now, I command thee.
+
+JUDITH. My message concerns the fate of Bethulia, and of all the
+Assyrians, and of my lord. Life and death are in it, for I have communed
+with heaven.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Which heaven? Thine or mine?
+
+JUDITH. There is but one God.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_roughly_). And he is Nebuchadnezzar. Speak thy tale.
+
+JUDITH. I will speak to my lord alone.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to_ Holofernes). It is a device.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_angrily_). Speak out all thy heart, and quickly!
+
+JUDITH. I will speak to my lord in my lord's tent.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_furious_). In my tent! Who art thou who defiest me, and
+what is thy licence, heathen slave, to defile the tent of Holofernes?
+Bind her. Take her away, and twist the cords about her neck, and
+strangle her, and cast her insolence into the lake.
+
+(Judith _is seized and bound in an instant_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_in two minds_). Wait!
+
+BAGOAS. She is bound, illustrious prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Wait!
+
+BAGOAS (_aside to_ Holofernes). Prince, let not the benevolence of your
+heart be your undoing, for in the loveliness of her face is cunning and
+great peril. I have lived all my days amid the craftiness of women, and
+my lord also knows somewhat of their strange tricks, which bring ruin to
+the carnal.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_reflective_). Who would despise these Hebrews that have
+among them such women as she? (_Fiercely_). Surely it is not good that
+one man among them should be left; for if one were let go he might
+deceive the whole earth.
+
+JUDITH (_advancing a step, appealingly_). Will the wise man cast away a
+pearl, and will my lord in anger lose his servant for ever?
+
+BAGOAS (_to_ Holofernes). Let her not speak with my lord alone in my
+lord's tent.
+
+JUDITH. I would speak with the illustrious prince--and with Bagoas
+also. (_She smiles_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_with a gesture_). I cannot lose thee. (_To attendants_.)
+Unbind her.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside_). May heaven be with us, for the woman is against us!
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Bagoas). Veil her, that her face and form be not seen
+as she passes to my tent, for she is mine.
+
+BAGOAS (_calling_). The veils! The veils! Where is the rascal?
+
+_The attendant rushes in panting with the box of veils. He is followed
+by_ Ingur.
+
+(Judith _is elaborately veiled in a series of veils by_ Bagoas _and his
+attendants_).
+
+HOLOFERNES. Let her follow me.
+
+(_Exeunt, R, with great ceremony_, Holofernes _and his heralds, followed
+by_ Judith.)
+
+INGUR (_as they go, stopping_ Bagoas, _who goes last_). Mightiness,
+pardon your slave.
+
+BAGOAS. Well?
+
+INGUR (_pointing to_ Haggith). Your slave captured the mistress. Reward
+him with this outlandish wench.
+
+BAGOAS (_carelessly_). The fool goeth out to seek his own damnation.
+Take her.
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE II
+
+
+_Interior of the tent of_ Holofernes. _A couch with curtains, L. The
+principal entrance to the tent is at the back. Secondary entrances in
+the hangings, L. and R._
+
+TIME: _The same morning, later._
+
+Bagoas _and his attendant are unveiling_ Judith.
+
+BAGOAS. Animal, wouldst thou dare to behold that which is thy lord's?
+Leave the last veil, and away with thee.
+
+FIRST ATTENDANT. Yea, mightiness!
+
+(_Exit back with the veils already removed from_ Judith.)
+
+BAGOAS. Queen of the night of Holofernes!
+
+JUDITH (_through the veil_). Mighty Bagoas!
+
+BAGOAS. The Prince comes to look upon you in his tent.
+
+JUDITH. Mighty Bagoas, deign to answer a question I will put.
+
+BAGOAS. Deign to ask, lady, and my humility shall answer; for your
+beauty has blinded Holofernes this day and he is your captive, and his
+servant is your servant, and there is no law in the camps of the
+Assyrians save your glance. (_He makes a covert gesture of half-amused
+resentful resignation_.)
+
+JUDITH. Nebuchadnezzar is your god? Is it not so, Bagoas?
+
+BAGOAS. Nebuchadnezzar is henceforward the god of the Assyrians and of
+all the lands which their spears conquer. It is an official order.
+
+JUDITH. If Nebuchadnezzar laid a command upon you, would you disregard
+it?
+
+BAGOAS. I would not, for my skin is very valuable to me.
+
+JUDITH. As Nebuchadnezzar is your god, so is the Lord of Israel mine.
+And my God laid a secret command upon me to speak with Prince Holofernes
+alone and with none other in his tent. Thus, and thus only, was it that
+I refused to speak in the presence even of the mighty Bagoas. But as I
+withstood you in the valley there, the God of Israel descended upon me
+and I heard the voice of God in my ear, and the voice said: 'It is
+permitted to thee to speak with Bagoas also.' Therefore I yielded to the
+importunity of Prince Holofernes and of Bagoas.
+
+BAGOAS. Your god is a wise god and has discernment.
+
+JUDITH. This I tell you, that there may be peace and good intelligence
+between us. Is there peace between us?
+
+BAGOAS. Lady, in my heat I admonished you with hard words and much
+vituperation.
+
+JUDITH (_innocently_.) By Nebuchadnezzar, I heard none.
+
+BAGOAS. There is peace between us. And in the closeness of our
+intelligence you and I will rule them that rule all Assyria.
+
+_Enter_ Holofernes, _L_.
+
+(Bagoas _prostrates himself_. Holofernes _walks about, ignoring_
+Judith.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Bagoas). At what hour is the Council of Captains?
+
+BAGOAS. The Council awaits your highness.
+
+(_Suddenly_ Holofernes _snatches the veil from_ Judith, _and throws it
+on the floor. He gazes at her._ Judith _prostrates herself_. Holofernes
+_drops on to the couch, and looks at everything except_ Judith.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_imperiously_). Rise. (Judith _rises. A pause_. Holofernes
+_plays with a jewel on his costume. Without looking at_ Judith.) And
+Achior?
+
+JUDITH. Illustrious Prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Did the slave reach Bethulia?
+
+JUDITH. The men of Bethulia took him, and he declared to them all that
+he had spoken to my lord Prince. And many approved him.
+
+HOLOFERNES. And what sayest _thou_ of Achior?
+
+JUDITH. O lord and governor, I say: Reject not the word of Achior, but
+lay it up in your heart.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou art bold.
+
+JUDITH. The word of Achior is true. For the Israelites shall not be
+punished, and the sword shall not prevail against them, except they sin
+against their God.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Not even _my_ sword?
+
+JUDITH. Not even the sword of my lord and governor, except they sin
+against their God. (_With significance_.) But they will sin.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Ah! They will sin? In what will they sin?
+
+JUDITH. Death is fallen upon them, and they will provoke their God to
+anger, for their water is scant, and they faint in their thirst; and
+they will drink the holy wine which was sanctified and reserved for the
+priests who serve before the face of our God: which thing is not lawful
+for any of the people so much as to touch with their hands.
+
+HOLOFERNES. What has all this to do with me? There is no god but
+Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+JUDITH. It touches my lord and governor, because, knowing all this, I am
+fled from Bethulia, which shall be accurst; and the God of Israel has
+sent me to work things with my lord and governor whereat the whole earth
+shall be astonished.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_looking at her, interested_). What things? And what have I
+to do with thy god? I need not thy god, for after the Israelites have
+drunk their wine they will thirst again; and when the city is broken
+with fainting, it will fall safe into my hands while I sit and watch.
+
+JUDITH (_with fire_). And when the city has fallen while the Assyrians
+sit and watch, and when all men whisper one to another that the greatest
+captain of the earth conquered by a device because he dared not attack
+boldly with spear, and bow, and sling--in that day will my lord and
+governor be content? Or will he be ashamed, and blush to lift up his
+eyes?
+
+HOLOFERNES (_disturbed_). It is a true word.
+
+BAGOAS. It is a true word.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_savagely_). This day will I attack the city and take it,
+and though I make fifty thousand widows and orphans in Assyria I will
+compass Bethulia, and not one house in it shall be left standing, nor
+one Israelite alive.
+
+JUDITH (_shaking her head slowly_). Why is my lord against the pleasure
+of the Most High? Do I not say, and has it not been revealed to me, that
+Bethulia shall not perish until its inhabitants have sinned before God?
+Listen, illustrious Prince, I will remain this night. And when the time
+comes I will go into the valley, and I will pray to God, and mayhap He
+will tell me when the Israelites in Bethulia have committed their sin.
+And I will come and show it to you, and thereupon my lord and governor
+shall go forth with all his army, and none shall resist him.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_fascinated_). Thou wilt come to me when the time is at hand
+for my triumph!
+
+JUDITH. And hearken further! I will lead my lord and governor in the
+midst of Judea, until he comes to Jerusalem; and I will set his throne
+in the midst of Jerusalem, and a dog shall not so much as open his mouth
+at my lord and prince. For these things were declared unto me from on
+high, and I am sent to tell them.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_aside to_ Bagoas, _excitedly_). There is not such a woman
+from one end of the earth to the other, both for beauty of face and
+wisdom of words.
+
+BAGOAS. It may well be so, Prince. But I have not seen the whole earth.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_to_ Judith). Thou hast done well to come to me, that
+strength may be in my hands and destruction upon them that lightly
+regard Nebuchadnezzar, the one god. Thou art ravishing in countenance,
+and if thou do as thou hast spoken, thou shalt dwell in my house which
+is over against the house of King Nebuchadnezzar, and thou shalt be
+renowned through the east and through the west. Bagoas, prepare meat and
+wine for her.
+
+BAGOAS (_making as if to give an order_). To hear is to obey.
+
+JUDITH. I will not eat of my lord's meat, nor drink of his wine, lest
+there be offence; I have brought provision by my waiting-woman.
+
+BAGOAS. But if thy provision fail?
+
+JUDITH (_significantly_). My provision will not fail before the Lord
+works by my hand the things which He has determined.
+
+Bagoas _claps his hands. Enter an attendant_.
+
+BAGOAS. Fetch Haggith, the waiting-woman of the lady Judith! Quickly!
+(_Exit attendant. To_ Holofernes.) Prince, shall the Hebrew woman eat
+and drink of her provision in my lord's tent?
+
+HOLOFERNES. She shall eat and drink in my tent, and she shall not leave
+it.
+
+BAGOAS. Then it is right that my lord remains not. And moreover the
+Council humbly waits for my lord. (_Exit_ Holofernes, _L_.)
+
+BAGOAS (_to_ Judith, _as he follows_ Holofernes). Did I not say that you
+and I shall rule them that rule Assyria? (_Exit L_.)
+
+_Enter_ Haggith, _back, with provisions_.
+
+HAGGITH (_excited, looking round to see if they are alone_). Mistress!
+Is it possible?
+
+JUDITH. What has taken thee?
+
+HAGGITH. Is this the tent of the monster?
+
+JUDITH. Hush!
+
+HAGGITH (_whispering_). It is greater and more magnificent than the
+temple at Bethulia. (_Looking into a corner_.) But unclean. Have they
+no besoms?... Ah! (_Looking up at the roof_.) The bigness of it makes me
+small like a child before it can walk. I could not live comfortably in
+such a great windy place. No! I prefer our own house to all this
+royalty.
+
+JUDITH. Give me food, Haggith. Where hast thou been? (_She sits_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Mistress, I have been with the man Ingur! (_Arranging_ Judith's
+_costume, and then setting out the food and wine_.) In obedience to your
+command. At Bethulia, being busied all my days with the ordering of your
+possessions, I had no time for traffic with men; neither desire. And I
+deemed them terrible and masterful creatures. And when you commanded me
+to go forth into the camps and delude and entangle with wiles whatever
+Assyrian I should meet, I was afraid. For it was in my heart that I
+could not accomplish this thing. Yet I have done it prettily. And it is
+easier to me far than sweeping with a besom. Either all men are
+simpletons and besotted with self-conceit, or Ingur exceeds greatly in
+folly. I have been given to him for his slave, but he is mine and knows
+it not. (_She sits_.)
+
+JUDITH. Where hast thou left him?
+
+HAGGITH. Mistress I would not suffer that you should pass from my sight,
+and I followed you, and Ingur followed me gladly, and at last the guard
+seized him for that he was found within the precincts of the prince's
+quarter, which is forbidden to his rank, and many stripes will be his.
+Mistress, you eat not.
+
+JUDITH (_trying to eat_). Yes, I eat. Do thou eat for me.
+
+HAGGITH. I have eaten and drunk--with Ingur.
+
+JUDITH. But not of his provision?
+
+HAGGITH (_nodding_). He so softly entreated me.
+
+JUDITH. It is a sin and an offence for thee, being an Israelite.
+
+HAGGITH. For such as my high-born mistress, it is an offence. But for
+the handmaid--pooh! She eats as she can, and the Lord turneth away his
+glance until she has finished her platter. Moreover, did you not lay it
+upon me to beguile the dolt? And verily, mistress, I have rejoiced much
+this day; and Ingur----
+
+JUDITH. Silence with thy prattle. Bethink thee of the dread business
+upon which I am come down from Bethulia into the valley?
+
+HAGGITH (_subdued; offering food_). Eat, mistress.
+
+JUDITH. I cannot. My soul rejects it, and my body is on fire with
+expectation and suspense. (_Rising_. Haggith _also rises_.) Stay thou
+where thou art, for I will go forth alone. I must commune with the God
+of Israel for my tranquillity, and I dare not seek him in the tent of
+the heathen. (_Exit, back_.)
+
+(Haggith _gathers the meat together_.)
+
+_Enter_ Holofernes _and_ Bagoas, _L_.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_looking about the tent, alarmed_). Where is she? Has she
+fled? If she has escaped me, this shall be thy last day, Bagoas. What is
+this girl here?
+
+BAGOAS. Prince, has any woman yet slipped through these hands? This girl
+is the waiting wench of the lady Judith. (_To_ Haggith.) Where is thy
+mistress, wench?
+
+HAGGITH (_frightened and foolish_). My mistress having eaten ... having
+eaten naught, is gone to--to--to--pray.
+
+BAGOAS. Bring her. Her god may wait, but not the illustrious Prince. Run
+with both thy legs.
+
+HAGGITH. Ye--es, mightiness. (_Exit, back_)
+
+HOLOFERNES. Bagoas, with thine arts thou shalt persuade the Hebrew woman
+to come to us and to eat and drink with us this night.
+
+BAGOAS (_grimly_). Persuasion shall be used, highness. My arts are many
+and various.
+
+HOLOFERNES. It will be a shame for our person if we let such a woman go,
+not having delighted in her company. If we do not draw her to us she
+will laugh us to scorn.
+
+BAGOAS. Yea, highness. But my lord has but this moment appointed a great
+feast with his captains at sunset. How then shall he eat and drink with
+the lady Judith?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thick-skull! Speak not to me of my captains! The Council of
+the Captains was as dust in my mouth, and I could not away with it.
+Therefore I sharply dismissed the Council, and soothed their damnable
+pride with the promise of a mighty feast. But what care I for the
+captains? My heart thirsts horribly for this Hebrew woman, and I am full
+of a great madness.
+
+BAGOAS. So be it, highness. Nevertheless, the Prince has promised to his
+captains a mighty feast, and the word of Holofernes is a rock that
+cannot be shaken.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Oh! What a calamity is love! And there is no slave so
+trodden down as him that is the slave of desire.... Bah! I will eat and
+drink quickly with the captains, and the woman shall await me here.
+
+_Enter_ Judith, _back. On seeing_ Holofernes _she prostrates herself_.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Arise, sorceress. (Judith _rises. To_ Bagoas.) Go fetch
+leopard skins for her repose.
+
+BAGOAS. I will send for the skins on the instant, highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt go thyself to fetch them, elephant. And come not
+back without the finest skins in my wardrobe. See to it.
+
+(_Exit_ Bagoas, _back_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. Come closer. (Judith _obeys_.) Look into my eyes. (Judith
+_obeys_.) Sorceress, thou knowest thy power.
+
+JUDITH. I have no power, save that which is given to me from on high.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou wast praying to thy god?
+
+JUDITH. Yea, highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Didst thou demand of him that he should tell thee if the
+Israelites in Bethulia had committed their sin, and if the time of my
+triumph was at hand?
+
+JUDITH. No, lord. I prayed for the forgiveness of the transgressions of
+thy handmaid.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Why didst thou not demand of him what I ask thee?
+
+JUDITH. Who am I to hasten the God of Israel? In the night time, and in
+the darkness, when all men sleep,--then it is that my God condescends
+towards me, and my ear hears his secret purposes.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_low_). This night?
+
+JUDITH. Who can search out heaven?
+
+HOLOFERNES. This night?
+
+JUDITH. It may be.
+
+HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt come to me in the night and tell me thy
+message?
+
+JUDITH. I will come to thee in the night, great prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. And thou wilt eat and drink with me in my triumph?
+
+JUDITH (_after a pause_). If it pleases my lord.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou wilt eat of my meat and drink of my wine, which I will
+give thee?
+
+JUDITH (_after a pause_). If my lord is alone and there is none with
+him. For it is not right that any should see me.
+
+HOLOFERNES. I will be alone. But Bagoas shall stand at the door of the
+tent.
+
+JUDITH. As my lord wills.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_ecstatic, moving a little towards her; she responds_).
+Fairest among women! Can it be!... The way of God is wondrous.
+
+(_A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears through the hangings R., and
+watches_.)
+
+JUDITH (_solemnly and significantly_). There are yet hid greater things
+than this, and thou hast yet seen but a few of his works.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_sinking back on the couch, mysteriously afraid_).
+Sorceress!
+
+(_The watcher disappears_.)
+
+JUDITH (_cooingly_) Does my lord shrink from his handmaid?
+
+(Holofernes _stretches his hands to her_.)
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE III
+
+
+SCENE: _The same_.
+
+TIME: _The same night_.
+
+_Wine and food are set by the couch_.
+
+_A lamp is burning_.
+
+BAGOAS (_at back entrance to tent, calling to people off_). To your
+beds, all of you. Let none remain. (_He stands a moment at the entrance;
+a few distant shouts are heard; then silence_. Bagoas _comes within the
+tent towards the couch. To_ Holofernes.) The waiters are gone, Prince.
+There is no one left to disturb the night.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Hast thou seen her?
+
+BAGOAS (_after a pause_). No, prince.
+
+HOLOFERNES. But didst thou look?
+
+BAGOAS. I looked, O illustrious.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Is there moonlight?
+
+BAGOAS. The moon is clouded, highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Give me wine. (Bagoas _obeys_.) Bagoas!
+
+BAGOAS. Prince?
+
+(_The hangings of the tent R., balloon inwards a little_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_looking behind him sharply, spilling some wine_). The wind
+is rising.
+
+BAGOAS. It is but a night breeze.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_as he drinks gloomily_). Bagoas, she has escaped back to
+her own people.
+
+BAGOAS (_aside_). I would she had, the jade! (_To_ Holofernes.) Prince,
+she cannot escape. Every path from the valley is guarded.
+
+HOLOFERNES. What guard could restrain such a woman?
+
+BAGOAS. Ah! Prince! What guard could restrain her?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Dost thou echo me?
+
+BAGOAS. I humbly think the thought of his highness.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Do thy thinking outside.
+
+(Bagoas _bows and moves towards the entrance_. Judith _is standing
+there. The two look at each other for a moment_.)
+
+BAGOAS (_with a gesture, indicating_ Judith). Highness!
+
+HOLOFERNES (_Jumping up. To_ Bagoas). Begone to thy post!
+
+(Judith _glides in silently_. Bagoas _goes out. They pass by each other
+without a word or a salutation, but mutually scrutinizing_.)
+
+JUDITH. The great feast of the captains is over?
+
+HOLOFERNES. The captains are departed, drunken with wine and their
+pride. But thy feast and my feast is not begun. (_Points to the
+repast_.)
+
+JUDITH (_enigmatically_.) I am here.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_ecstatic_.) Art thou in truth here, or do my eyes behold
+that which is not?
+
+JUDITH. Did I not say that I should come in the night?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Yea, I trusted thee. I trusted thee so much that at the
+feast of the captains I commanded that all my hosts shall attack
+Bethulia, with bow, and sling, and spear, at sunrise, and also I gave
+the word of Holofernes for a pledge that naught in the heavens or on the
+earth should resist the onset of the Assyrians; for some among them
+feared the word of Achior which they had heard.
+
+JUDITH. You have not done this thing?
+
+HOLOFERNES. I have done it.
+
+JUDITH. Would you forestall God, and would you speak the decrees of God
+before they are uttered?
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou saidst thou wouldst pray to thy god this night and that
+he would tell thee when the Israelites in Bethulia had committed their
+sin, and that thou wouldst come to me to proclaim the hour of my
+triumph.
+
+JUDITH. I said: I will pray to God and _mayhap_ he will tell me.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou hast prayed, and thy god hath not answered?
+
+JUDITH. He has not answered.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_with bravado_). He is no god, then, thy god. Let us drink.
+
+JUDITH (_as_ Holofernes _moves towards her, solemnly_). Touch not your
+handmaid, and touch not the goblet. (_She goes to the skins, R_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_following_ Judith _gently_). Thou art offended.
+
+JUDITH. Stand afar off, Holofernes, and meddle not with her that
+communes with the Most High.
+
+(Judith _kneels_. Holofernes _goes in the direction of the couch.
+Silence_. Bagoas _has been seen once or twice in the porch of the tent,
+his back turned. He has now gone again. Two half-veiled Assyrian women
+appear through the hangings, R., and watch a moment, then vanish_.
+Judith _slowly rises_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. What has befallen thee?
+
+JUDITH. It has befallen me that this moment the God of Israel has spoken
+and my ear has heard his command. (_Approaching_ Holofernes.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. What saith thy god?
+
+JUDITH. My ear has heard that the Israelites in Bethulia have committed
+their sin, and at sunrise the Assyrians shall assault Bethulia and none
+shall withstand them.
+
+HOLOFERNES. A miracle!
+
+JUDITH. A miracle in thy tent, O great warrior!
+
+HOLOFERNES. To-morrow is appointed to be the day of my triumph.
+
+JUDITH (_moved_). Yea, it is so.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_gratefully_). Hear me, Judith. Thy god shall be my god.
+
+JUDITH. In truth thou art set apart to be his. HOLOFERNES (_close to
+her_). Thy body trembles.
+
+JUDITH (_smiling_). Thinkst thou then that I was not afraid for thee?
+But my fear is gone from me, for now I know thy fate and the decree of
+heaven concerning thee.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_aside_). To-morrow is appointed for my triumph, but this
+night also shall I exult. (_To_ Judith.) Let us eat and drink together,
+for we are alone in the night, and thou hast promised.
+
+JUDITH (_gaily_). Let us feast.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_animated by her responsive tone_). Take off thy tunic; thou
+art in thy own house. Let Holofernes be thy tire-woman. (_Approaching
+her_.)
+
+JUDITH. No! (_Moving from him to the further side of the couch_.) But he
+shall be my slave to serve me. Pour out the wine, great slave.
+
+(_While_ Holofernes _cheerfully obeys_, Judith _takes the knife from her
+garments and places it behind the couch. Then, as he stands with the
+wine, gazing at her and separated from her only by the couch, she slowly
+removes her tunic and appears in indoor attire. She comes towards him
+and takes the wine from him and drinks_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES. I feared that in the strictness of thy Hebrew scruples thou
+wouldst not drink of my wine.
+
+JUDITH. I will drink again. (_She does so_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES _(taking the goblet and drinking)._ Dost thou verily know thy
+power and thy dominion, Judith?
+
+JUDITH (_simply_). Yes, I know it now better than thou.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Thou dost not. For I am mad for thee, and thou hast set thy
+seal upon me for evermore. My heart cannot hold thee, for thou hast
+filled it to overflowing, and all men see that my heart is full of thee
+and runneth over. Yea, I have a hundred and two and thirty thousand that
+bow themselves at my feet and that live and die by my glance. And I am
+at _thy_ feet and thy glance is my joy and my sorrow according to thy
+whim. Judith, I entreat thee, command me something. For whatever thou
+command me, that will I execute. And be not afraid in thy command, for
+my power is very great and there is none like it save only my lord
+Nebuchadnezzar's.
+
+JUDITH (_tenderly_). I command thee that thou be happy. For thy captive
+has no other desire.
+
+HOLOFERNES. Say not my captive. For it is I that am thy prisoner. And I
+will set thee on my throne, and in my great boldness I will dare to sit
+beside thee. But thou shalt reign. And we will live together in Assyria
+long years.
+
+JUDITH (_changing her mood_). There is no requisition in the grave
+whether you have lived ten or an hundred or a thousand years. But the
+God of Israel is a shield.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_eagerly_). And I have told thee that thy god shall be my
+god; but in secret, because of that which I owe to King Nebuchadnezzar.
+Yet shall the whole earth know that thou, Judith, alone art my god.
+
+JUDITH. But thou hast other wives.
+
+HOLOFERNES. No!
+
+JUDITH. Yes! It has been whispered to me that thou hast many wives, and
+concubines without number.
+
+HOLOFERNES. It is a lie. For from this night I have put away from me all
+women but thee, and there is not one among them to compare with thee.
+(_Appealingly_). And since the judgment of heaven hath done a miracle
+by thee in the tent of Holofernes this night, wilt thou deny, O
+tenderness! that thou hast been divinely appointed to me, and I to thee?
+
+JUDITH. I will not deny that the Lord is in this thing. And for thy
+comfort I will tell thee that which thou knowest not.
+
+HOLOFERNES (_expectant_). Tell me.
+
+JUDITH. Before I escaped from Bethulia, as I lay on my bed, a vision
+came to me, and it was the vision of Holofernes in the likeness of his
+majesty and his might. And I saw the vision by my bed, and so it was
+that I came down into the valley.... (_Softly_.) And wouldst thou that I
+should have uttered this secret to any but thee!
+
+HOLOFERNES (_full of emotion_). I will kiss thy lips, and thou art mine,
+O fragrance!
+
+JUDITH. Kiss my lips.
+
+(Holofernes _kisses her, and then in an excess of feeling stumbles
+backward_.)
+
+(_A half-veiled Assyrian woman appears at the opening R., and watches_.
+Bagoas, _in the porch of the tent, turns and sees her, and dashes at her
+with a weapon. Both disappear through the opening, R._)
+
+JUDITH (_moving with stealth towards the hidden knife, comfortingly_). O
+mighty child, where is thy strength, and where is thy terribleness? Rest
+thee a moment on the couch, and thy soul's captive will tend thee.
+
+(Holofernes _drops on the couch, and_ Judith _caresses him_.)
+
+HOLOFERNES (_murmuring_). My great joy has overthrown me.
+
+(Judith, _seizing the knife and leaning over_ Holofernes, _kills him
+while she is still caressing_.)
+
+JUDITH (_as she uses the knife; murmuring_). Thou that wouldst go
+against the pleasure of the Most High! Thou that wouldst defile Judea!
+Thou that hast dishonoured with thy kiss the widow of Manasses! Thou
+that hast compelled me to guile and deceit and much lying so that I
+might perform the will of God! The grave shall be thy house!
+
+_Enter_ Haggith, _L_.
+
+JUDITH (_turning to_ Haggith, _firmly and impressively_). I have done
+that which I had to do, and the power of Assyria is fallen.
+(_Pointing_.) Take the head by the beard, and put it in thy sack, and
+let us depart.
+
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+ACT III
+
+
+SCENE I
+
+
+SCENE: _Same as Act I_.
+
+TIME: _A few hours later than Act II, Scene III, the same night. The
+sole light is that of torches, and watchfires (off)._
+
+_The gatemen are at the gates_.
+
+_There is a knocking on the outside of the gates_.
+
+_Enter First Soldier, running_.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_to a gateman, who is climbing up in order to look over
+the top of the gates_). Look not over, booby. Thy fool's face might meet
+the point of an Assyrian spear. (_The gateman slips down quickly_.)
+
+(_Renewed knocking_.)
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_shouting_). None can enter the city till sunrise. And
+not then if I like not the aspect of his phiz.
+
+HAGGITH (_off_). It is Haggith, servant of the lady Judith. Open the
+gates quickly, for I am become a woman of much consequence.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith? It is the voice of Haggith; yet it may also be
+devils. (_To another soldier who has entered_.) Run! Rouse the lord
+Ozias. (_Exit soldier_.)
+
+HAGGITH. I have water with me. Many gourds! Fresh water! Cool water!
+
+(_The gatemen begin to work the gate-chains_.)
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. What do ye, dogs? Stop, and await the order of the lord
+Ozias.
+
+GATEMEN (_continuing to work the chains_). Water! Water!
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Pull, then, dogs. If there is water and it is wet I will
+taste it. But if there is not water, I will slay the first soul that
+enters. (_As the gates begin to open a little_.) Hold! No wider!
+
+_Enter_ Haggith _with two gourds_.
+
+(_The gourds are snatched from her, and the men, including the First
+Soldier, drink_.)
+
+FIRST SOLDIER (_as he drinks_). Yea, it is indeed Haggith. Where is thy
+mistress, and whence comest thou, my beloved water-carrier, for thou art
+my beloved? (Haggith _slaps his face_.)
+
+_Enter_ Ozias, _L_.
+
+OZIAS (_furious_). Why are the gates opened? What is this?
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Haggith, lord, with water that is stronger than wine.
+(_Handing a gourd to_ Ozias _to soothe him_.)
+
+OZIAS. Where is thy mistress, wench? (_Drinks_.)
+
+HAGGITH (_stiffly_). I am the forerunner of my mistress, who has sent
+me, and before many hours are passed the lady Judith will come also.
+(_She goes to the gates and beckons_.)
+
+OZIAS. What art thou doing?
+
+_Enter_ Ingur, _bearing a sack_.
+
+VOICES. An Assyrian! An Assyrian! (_Men spring at_ Ingur.)
+
+HAGGITH. Let him alone; he is my bondman and I have tamed him.
+
+OZIAS. Shut the gates, for I will enquire into this matter.
+
+HAGGITH. There are yet ten other Assyrians outside the gates, carrying
+gourds for me.
+
+OZIAS. Ten other Assyrians! It is a trick!
+
+HAGGITH (_proudly_). By my command they are chained by their necks, neck
+to neck. Fetch in the gourds, men, and give the people to drink.
+
+(_The gourds are brought in amid cries and excitement. They are taken
+off, L_.)
+
+OZIAS. Shut the gates, I say.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. And the ten Assyrians, great lord?
+
+OZIAS. Let them await my enquiry where they stand.
+
+FIRST SOLDIER. Lord Ozias, if they flee?
+
+HAGGITH. Hold thy mouth, gaby! Wouldst _thou_ flee with thy neck chained
+to nine necks? Moreover, where will they flee? For the camps of the
+Assyrians are broken, and in their terrible confusion the Assyrians fall
+one upon another.
+
+(_The gatemen talk among themselves and stare at the Assyrians outside,
+who cannot be seen by those within the city. The gates remain open a
+little_.)
+
+OZIAS (_impatiently_). What is thy tale, Haggith?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress has slain Holofernes in his tent in the night, and
+the power of Assyria is undone.
+
+OZIAS (_astounded_). Slain Holofernes! Thou art mad in thy raving.
+
+HAGGITH (_to_ Ingur). Open the mouth of the sack, and let my lord behold
+the head of Holofernes and see that I am mad. (_To soldier_.) A torch,
+that the Lord Ozias may discover the manner of my raving.
+
+(Ozias _looks into the sack and sees the head of_ Holofernes.)
+
+OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!
+
+HAGGITH. And my mistress is the right hand of the Lord.
+
+OZIAS. Great is the Lord of Israel!
+
+VOICES (_deeply moved_). His name shall live for ever.
+
+OZIAS. How did thy mistress accomplish this mighty deed?
+
+HAGGITH. AS for that, she will tell it to my lord with her own voice
+when she shall come. And now will my lord give ear to the commands of
+the lady Judith, which she doth lay upon my lord by me, Haggith? First,
+the head of Holofernes shall be set upon a spear on the highest wall in
+the great square before the temple. So shall all the Israelites know
+that God yet watcheth over Israel. (_To the soldiers_.) Take the sack
+and do as my lady hath ordained by me, Haggith.
+
+OZIAS (_to men, who hesitate_). Take the sack. It is my command.
+
+(_Exeunt two men, L., with sack_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Next, ye shall send men for water to the wells beneath the city
+that all may drink, for already the Assyrians are fled from the wells,
+knowing that Holofernes is dead. And ye shall send forth all your army
+into the valley to fall upon the Assyrians, for they are afraid of the
+judgment of God, and none dare abide in the sight of his neighbour.
+Neither can they stand against the chosen race of God.
+
+OZIAS (_to First Soldier_). Let every armed man in the city be roused,
+and publish the order of Ozias that the Captains lead their bands
+swiftly into the valley by the secret way to fall upon the Assyrians.
+
+(_Exit First Soldier and another, with joyous cries, L_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Thus hath the lady Judith spoken by me, Haggith.
+
+OZIAS. Whither is thy mistress gone, and why does she tarry?
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress is hidden in a sure place in the valley, for there
+is one among the Assyrians who fears not God. And he is Bagoas, the
+chief eunuch of Holofernes, and he has sworn an oath to kill my
+mistress, for that by guile she did cut off the head of Holofernes. And
+Bagoas searches for my mistress in the folds of the valley. But he will
+not find her.
+
+OZIAS (_perturbed_). How knowst thou that he will not find her?
+
+HAGGITH. Because the Lord of Israel is a sharp sword and protecteth his
+servants.... And also because my mistress is most cunningly hidden.
+
+_Enter_ Charmis, _L_.
+
+CHARMIS (_joyously excited_). What is the miracle that I hear, Ozias?
+
+OZIAS (_blandly_). There is no miracle; but that which I had planned
+with the lady Judith has come to pass. Take women and old men Charmis,
+and go ye to the wells and bring water to the city, for the wells are
+delivered into my hands.
+
+CHARMIS (_hesitating_). Women and old men? But the onslaught against the
+Assyrians of which I hear?
+
+OZIAS (_imperiously_). Go quickly. For who is the governor of this city?
+Is it thou or is it I?
+
+(_Exit_ Charmis, _L_.)
+
+(_Men and women have gathered joyously in the street_.)
+
+VOICES (_mockingly, indicating_ Ingur, _with a tendency to horseplay_).
+The Assyrian! The Assyrian!
+
+OZIAS. Take him to the guard-house and chain him to Achior.
+
+HAGGITH. He shall not go, lord Ozias. For as my mistress beguiled
+Holofernes, so did I beguile Ingur, and he is my slave. But I have not
+cut off his head, and he is dear to me because I have not cut off his
+head. And he is mine, and let none touch him (_looking at the
+soldiers_), or my anger, which is the anger of the lady Judith, shall be
+upon that man. (_Hearing a noise, she glances at the house_.) What do I
+see? The sluts are in the tent of my mistress, which is forbidden them.
+Out, sluts! (_Exit angrily into the house_!)
+
+(Ingur _follows her quickly for protection_.)
+
+_Enter_ Messenger.
+
+OZIAS. And you?
+
+MESSENGER (_saluting_). Do my eyes behold the great lord Ozias,
+governor of Bethulia?
+
+OZIAS. Your eyes behold him.
+
+MESSENGER. It is not yet dawn, nevertheless the streets of the city are
+full of a great going and coming, but I found none to lead me to the
+house of the lord Ozias. Yet when I saw my lord's visage my heart said:
+'This is he.'
+
+OZIAS. What is your affair with me?
+
+MESSENGER. I am a messenger.
+
+OZIAS (_curtly_). Speak quickly, for the government of this city in this
+hour is no common matter, and the whole charge of it lies upon me.
+
+MESSENGER. And I am no common messenger. I come with wings through the
+night from Jerusalem, from Joachim, the high priest.
+
+OZIAS. Ah! (_Changing his tone and beckoning the messenger aside_.) What
+tidings do you bear?
+
+MESSENGER. I bear the licence from Joachim.
+
+OZIAS. What licence?
+
+MESSENGER. The licence for the people of Bethulia to drink the wine
+which is sanctified and reserved to the priests which serve the Lord.
+
+OZIAS (_affecting to be puzzled_). Who hath demanded this licence from
+Joachim?
+
+MESSENGER (_surprised_). The lord Ozias sent a messenger to Jerusalem to
+beseech that the licence should be granted. And my lord's messenger
+travelled so swiftly that in the moment when he reached the temple at
+Jerusalem he fell sick and vomited, and I have come to Bethulia in his
+place, for after he had vomited he unfolded to me the secret way
+into the city.
+
+OZIAS (_grandly_). It is true. In the heavy multitude of my cares I had
+forgotten this matter of the licence.
+
+MESSENGER (_confidentially_). And Joachim hath bidden me to say privily
+that if any have already in their extremity drunk of the sanctified wine
+it shall be denied utterly--for the sake of the church.
+
+OZIAS. Ah!
+
+MESSENGER. And here is the licence. (_Offering it_.)
+
+OZIAS. Friend, keep the licence and render it back to Joachim, the high
+priest in Jerusalem. For I need it not, and I demanded it only by excess
+of prudence such as becomes the governor of a city besieged and
+thirsting. But we Bethulians are a faithful and a constant people, and
+we have trusted in the Most High. And if perchance any have drunk of the
+sanctified wine unknown to me (_with a grimace_)--it shall be denied
+utterly, for the sake of seemliness.
+
+MESSENGER. But in the days of trial to come, will not the lord Ozias
+have need of the licence?
+
+OZIAS (_grandly_). Friend, return ye to Joachim and say to him that the
+Lord has delivered Bethulia from the Assyrians by the subtlety of his
+servant Ozias.
+
+MESSENGER (_amazed_). What says my lord?
+
+OZIAS. Yea, this night the head of Holofernes is set on a spear in the
+square before the temple, and the Assyrians flee one from another in
+disorder, and my hosts are about to descend upon them and rend them to
+pieces where they stand foolishly in the valley.
+
+MESSENGER. But this thing is marvellous beyond the understanding of man!
+
+OZIAS. It is indeed marvellous.
+
+MESSENGER. And when Joachim enquires of me who hath taken Holofernes the
+great captain to behead him, and by what device, what shall I answer to
+Joachim?
+
+OZIAS. You will answer that Ozias, knowing the weakness of Holofernes,
+sent down to him secretly a woman, a certain Judith of Bethulia, and
+upon the counsel of Ozias the woman by wiles compassed the death of
+Holofernes as I have told you.
+
+MESSENGER. It is a tale which fathers shall tell to their children, and
+to their children's children, and men shall wonder thereat for all time.
+And now your servant will say to you a thing which has not been told to
+him but which his ear has heard. It was said among the mighty that if my
+lord Ozias should save Judea from the heathen, he would receive notable
+advancement and be raised up among the great ones of the land. (Ozias
+_bows_.) Yet will Joachim not be astonished, for it was spoken in
+Jerusalem that among all the Israelites there is none like the lord
+Ozias for cunning and obstinacy in defence.
+
+OZIAS (_nettled_). Nevertheless it is meet that Joachim should be
+astonished, for with five thousand have I set at naught one hundred and
+two and thirty thousand, and in the chronicles of Israel there is
+written down no deed to match the delivery of Judea from the Assyrians.
+
+MESSENGER. The God of Israel hath saved Israel.
+
+OZIAS. The God of Israel hath save Israel,--by my hand. Go ye, and when
+you have eaten and drunk, set ye forth again for Jerusalem.
+
+(_The Messenger salutes and exit, L_.)
+
+(_Throughout this scene excited and joyous men and women frequently pass
+the street in twos and threes_.)
+
+(_Dawn is breaking and the torches begin to pale_.)
+
+_Enter_ Haggith _and_ Ingur _from the house._
+
+OZIAS. Where art thou going?
+
+HAGGITH. Lord Ozias, I came up from the valley to bring water, and to
+give tidings. Now I go down again to the valley with Ingur and his men
+to seek out my mistress, and to take new raiment to her, and lead her to
+the city; for since the Israelites are fallen upon the Assyrians, my
+mistress is no longer in danger.
+
+_Enter_ Achior.
+
+OZIAS. Slave, who hath dared to loose thee?
+
+ACHIOR. There was none left to guard, and I came forth.
+
+OZIAS (_to a soldier_). Seize this fellow and bind him with fetters.
+
+(_The torches are by this time extinguished_.)
+
+HAGGITH. Lord, it cannot be so. For the lady Judith commanded me to
+bring Achior also, for her protection, seeing that the youth came from
+the Assyrians at the bidding of the God of Israel to give comfort to
+Israel, and for a sign to my mistress.
+
+OZIAS (_after a pause_). I also will go with you, for it is right that
+the governor should do honour to the lady Judith.
+
+HAGGITH. My mistress commanded me to say to the lord Ozias that he
+should remain in the city to prepare for her a welcome. (_She points to
+the gates and_ Achior _gladly moves forward. She takes_ Ingur _by the
+ear_.) Bestir thy legs, booby!
+
+OZIAS. The subtlety of women is past knowing.
+
+HAGGITH (_at the gates, maliciously_). It may be. But would the lord
+Ozias invite the displeasure of my mistress? It is day. Let my lord sit
+in the sun.
+
+
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE II
+
+
+SCENE: _The same_.
+
+Charmis _is alone at the open gates. Glimpses are caught of the people
+beyond the gates_.
+
+TIME: _Afternoon of the same day_.
+
+CHABRIS (_entering to_ Charmis, _at the gates_). They say there is now
+much water in Bethulia.
+
+CHARMIS. Seeing that I have toiled mightily seven hours this day in
+charge of six score crazy carriers to carry water up from the wells!
+Would that Ozias had granted me a whip to sharpen their brains! And now
+Ozias hath left me in charge of the gates.
+
+CHABRIS. Where is Ozias, and what does he do?
+
+CHARMIS. He stands here beyond the gates to receive Judith and the women
+who have gone forth to meet her.
+
+CHABRIS. What is the deed of Judith? (_The noise of an approaching
+procession is heard_. Charmis, _ignoring_ Chabris, _goes a little
+outside the gates to watch._ Chabris _continues in a louder voice_.) The
+streets of the city are empty. I say the streets of the city are empty.
+
+CHARMIS. Dodderer! The whole city is afoot on the hill-side, and all the
+Assyrians left alive are fled in panic into the East.
+
+CHABRIS. Then I will return to my house and drink again. No! I will
+remain, and my eyes shall regard the women, as of old.
+
+_Enter through the gates a procession of women (including_ Rahel),
+_waving branches. At the end of the procession come_ Haggith _and_
+Ingur, _and finally_ Judith, _with_ Achior _on one hand, and_ Ozias _on
+the other. Townspeople and soldiers, garlanded, follow the procession_.
+
+BALLET.
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Judith). O daughter, blessed be thou above all the women of
+the earth. Thou art the exaltation of Jerusalem and the great glory of
+Israel, for the Lord hath directed thee to the cutting off of the head
+of the chief of our enemies, and thou hast revenged our ruin.
+
+VOICES. So be it.
+
+JUDITH. Holofernes came out of the mountains from the north, and his
+horsemen covered the hills; and he bragged that he would burn up the
+borders of Israel, and kill her young men with the sword, and make the
+virgins as a spoil. But the Almighty Lord hath disappointed the
+Assyrians by the hand of a woman; and my sandals ravished the eye of
+Holofernes, and my beauty took his mind prisoner, and the knife passed
+through his neck. Let all creatures serve the Lord!
+
+VOICES. So be it!
+
+OZIAS. Charmis, I appoint you to lead the people to the Temple, where
+are the banners of the Assyrians which we have captured this day, and
+each woman shall take a banner, and all shall return to this place
+before the house of the Lady Judith.
+
+CHARMIS (_swollen with pride_). I obey, lord Ozias.
+
+(_The procession begins to move away, L_. Haggith _displays her
+importance and bullies_ Ingur, _who accompanies her_.)
+
+RAHEL (_to_ Chabris). What, grandad! You are abroad once more! (_She
+takes him with her like a disobedient child_.)
+
+(_Exeunt, processionally, all except_ Judith, Ozias _and_ Achior.)
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Achior). Thou goest not with the people?
+
+JUDITH (_to_ Achior). Stay, I pray you, Achior.
+
+OZIAS (_to_ Judith, _with growing excitement_). I wish to speak privily
+with the lady Judith, _now_!
+
+JUDITH. Let us speak here.
+
+OZIAS. Shall we not go into your house, you and I?
+
+JUDITH. My house is not ready to receive you, Ozias.
+
+OZIAS. Let it be so. But before Achior I will not speak.
+
+JUDITH. Achior, go into my house, and do honour to my dwelling, and
+repose in it.
+
+ACHIOR. Gladly, O lady! (_Exit into the house_.)
+
+JUDITH. What is the urgency that oppresses you, Ozias, and why are you
+troubled in the hour of triumph?
+
+OZIAS (_losing control of himself_). Who is the heathen Achior that you
+should prefer him and make your mouth sweet to him?
+
+JUDITH. Leave Achior, and let us come at once to the matter that
+presses.
+
+OZIAS. Oh! I will not speak smoothly for a pretence! Thou knowest that
+my jealousy smokes against Achior. Yea, and against Holofernes also.
+
+JUDITH. But Holofernes is dead.
+
+OZIAS. Before he went down to his place, didst thou not sin with him?
+
+JUDITH. As the Lord liveth, my countenance deceived him to his
+destruction, yet did he not shame me.
+
+OZIAS. Blessed be our God!
+
+JUDITH. But how does this matter touch thee, and what is my virtue in
+thy regard?
+
+OZIAS. Let Holofernes suffice thee, and drive not me also to death with
+the softness of thy voice. Art thou not aware that the soul of my soul
+burns for thee and will not wait--the more so since thou hast done a
+mighty deed and art proved a woman beyond all women?
+
+JUDITH. Nay! I have done naught; but the Lord hath saved Israel by _thy_
+hand.
+
+OZIAS. What is this humbleness?
+
+JUDITH. AS I came towards the city with Achior, the messenger from
+Jerusalem met us in the way, and he was full to bursting of the word of
+Ozias, and that Ozias had delivered Israel, and that what I did I did
+by thy device and at thy command. But the messenger in speaking knew not
+that he spoke to Judith, and I let him go.
+
+OZIAS. Judith----
+
+JUDITH. Yet it seems to me that thou wast ignorant of all that which I
+went out to do, and my plan was hidden from thee.
+
+OZIAS (_powerfully persuasive_). Hearken to me, Judith. I swear it was
+for thee that I boasted. My aim was that thy mighty deed should gain
+preferment in Jerusalem. But thou art a woman and therefore preferment
+is not for thee. Yet now by reason of my boasting I shall be greatly
+advanced and lifted up, and in all Judea there will be none higher than
+me, and thus wilt thou also be advanced and lifted up.
+
+JUDITH. I desire no preferment.
+
+OZIAS. But I would have it in thy behalf; and my appetite is double. I
+rage for glory and dominion, and I rage also for thee. And I will offer
+thee glory and dominion, for I seek these things as a gift to thy
+beauty. And if I cannot lay them on thy lap my heel shall spurn mankind
+and I will tread it to dust. My desires are terrible; they will not be
+withstood; they consume me daily, but daily I am renewed. I am on fire,
+but by the fierceness of the fire I am strengthened. I was conceived
+for greatness and my mother bore me for mastery, and the huge earth
+shall shake with the terror of my commands.... And I am held between thy
+fingers.
+
+JUDITH. I deny not thy greatness.
+
+OZIAS. Surely thou canst not. For thou too art great. And my greatness
+yearns to thine.
+
+JUDITH. Wilt thou listen?
+
+OZIAS. I hear.
+
+JUDITH. With this greatness of thine goes deceit and laxity of mind.
+
+OZIAS. Yet when thou didst thy mighty deed didst thou not deceive
+cruelly?
+
+JUDITH. I deceived not for myself, but for Israel; and my guile was for
+the glory of God. But thy heart is set only upon advancement and power,
+which is corruption.
+
+OZIAS. Judith, canst thou not lift thy thoughts beyond good and evil,
+and canst thou not contemplate the marvellous greatness of man? I will
+abase myself before none but thee, and in my ear there is no commandment
+but thine; and all other decrees will I mock. I would have thee in
+marriage, and I would have no other but thee. Wilt thou take me to
+thee, and wilt thou yield thyself without fear to the terrible flame of
+my love? For thus shalt thou fulfil thyself and me. But give heed before
+thou answerest, and know that if thou turnest from me, I will make all
+the nations of the earth to tremble with my fury.
+
+JUDITH. Thou art great also in thy loving.
+
+OZIAS. Once thou didst love me.
+
+JUDITH. Nay! I but looked upon thee in kindness. But now I will not go
+to thee in marriage.
+
+OZIAS (_half admiring_). Thou art not then afraid of my wrath!
+
+JUDITH. I am Judith.
+
+OZIAS (_with a fresh access of violence_). Thou hungerest for Achior.
+Wouldst thou marry a heathen, thou a Hebrew woman?
+
+JUDITH. And thou, if I had not accomplished the will of the Lord, and if
+thou hadst been carried to Babylon as thou saidst, wouldst thou not have
+denied the Most High and gone after other gods? But Achior believeth in
+our God, and this day will be joined into the house of Israel.
+
+OZIAS (_savagely scornful_). What is Achior but a simpleton!
+
+JUDITH. It may be. But I love him and he shall rule me ... for he came
+hither for a sign from the Lord.
+
+OZIAS (_savagely resentful_). Oh! If I did not love thee, would I not
+undo thee!
+
+JUDITH. Thou! Thou art Ozias, but I am she who cut off the head of a
+mightier than thou, even Holofernes in his tent. Go thy ways and fulfil
+greatness. As for me I will remain obediently in my house, and truth and
+righteousness shall reign in my house.
+
+(_The procession returns, the women bearing the banners of the
+Assyrians_. Achior _enters from the house_.)
+
+(Judith _is crowned with olives_.)
+
+JUDITH. And now let the priests and the elders enter with me into my
+house, and Achior shall follow them, so that he may be received into
+Israel, and I will be betrothed to him with all the ceremonies of the
+law, for he came to me as a messenger from God. And when the marriage
+has been performed, I will submit myself to him as a wife to her
+husband.
+
+HAGGITH. And let Ingur also be received into Israel, for he has repented
+of his idolatries. And he shall be my husband, yet shall he not rule me.
+
+OZIAS. Brethren, hearken! This night I go to Jerusalem, for I am called
+to higher things, because I have delivered Israel. And I shall not
+return to this little city; but ye will have tidings of me in the years
+to come, and ye will say proudly to the strangers within your gates: He
+was a Bethulian and once he ruled over us.
+
+JUDITH. The lord Ozias is called to greatness. Peace go with him.
+
+ALL. So be it.
+
+CURTAIN.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Judith, by Arnold Bennett
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