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+Project Gutenberg's The Mortal Gods and Other Plays, by Olive Tilford Dargan
+
+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/license
+
+
+Title: The Mortal Gods and Other Plays
+
+Author: Olive Tilford Dargan
+
+Release Date: May 16, 2012 [EBook #39708]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MORTAL GODS AND OTHER PLAYS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Kentuckiana Digital Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ BOOKS BY OLIVE TILFORD DARGAN
+
+ PUBLISHED BY CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+
+ THE MORTAL GODS and Other Plays. 12mo, _net._ $1.50
+ LORDS AND LOVERS and Other Dramas. 12mo, _net._ 1.50
+ SEMIRAMIS and Other Plays. 12mo, _net._ 1.00
+
+
+
+
+ THE MORTAL GODS
+ AND OTHER PLAYS
+
+
+
+
+ THE MORTAL GODS
+ AND
+ OTHER PLAYS
+
+ BY
+ OLIVE TILFORD DARGAN
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SON'S
+ 1912
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1912, by Charles Scribner's Sons_
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+ _Published November, 1912_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ THE MORTAL GODS 1
+ A SON OF HERMES 107
+ KIDMIR 221
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE MORTAL GODS
+
+A PLAY IN FOUR ACTS
+
+
+
+
+_CHARACTERS OF THE PLAY_
+
+
+ HUDIBRAND, _King of Assaria_
+ HERNDA, _his daughter_
+ CHARTRIEN, _a Prince of Assaria_
+ BORDUC, _Prime Minister_
+ COUNT DORKINSKI, _Court Chamberlain_
+
+ CORDIAZ, _King of Goldusan_
+ MEGARIO, _Governor of Peonia, a province of Goldusan_
+ REJAN LEVAL, _a revolutionist_
+ SEÑORA ZIRALAY, _his sister_
+ ZIRALAY }
+ RUBIREZ }
+ GOLIFET } _nobles of Goldusan_
+ MAZARAN }
+ GUILDAMOUR }
+
+ MASIO }
+ GARZA }
+ GONZALO }
+ YSOBEL } _of Megario's hacienda_
+ GRIJA }
+ COQURIEZ }
+ IPARRO }
+
+ _Guests, officers, musicians, peons, &c._
+
+ Time: _Begins February, 1911_
+ Place: _Assaria; Goldusan_
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+
+SCENE: _A vast room in the palace of Hudibrand. As the curtain rises the
+place is in darkness save for a circlet of gold apparently suspended in
+mid-air near the centre of the room. As the light increases, the outline
+of a man's figure becomes distinguishable, and the circlet is seen to be
+resting on his head. Gradually the rim of gold fades to invisibility,
+while the figure of the man and the contents of the room become clear to
+the eye. The man might be mistaken for an American citizen in customary
+evening dress. He is Hudibrand._
+
+_At the left are two entrances, upper and lower. Rear, left, large
+windows. The wall rear makes a right angle about centre, the apex of
+which is cut off by a window. Right of centre the room seems to extend
+endlessly rearward, and is arranged to suggest an upland grove in the
+delicate, venturing days of spring. The ground, rising a little toward
+right, is covered with winter moss and tufts of short silvered grass.
+The trees are young birch, slight maples in coral leaf, cornel in
+flower, and an occasional dark foil of cedar. A brooklet ripples down
+the slope and off rear. Birds chirp and flit, and now and then a breeze
+stirs the grove as if it were one tender body. The lights are arranged
+to give the effect of night or day as one wishes._
+
+_It is winter without, the climate of Assaria's capital city being
+similar to that of New York._
+
+_Double doors lower right, through which Count Dorkinski enters to
+Hudibrand._
+
+
+ _Dor._ Your majesty, Sir Borduc has arrived.
+
+ _Hudi._ Hot-shod. We'll let him cool.
+
+ _Dor._ Where shall he wait,
+ My lord?
+
+ _Hud._ His usual corner. Keep him off
+ My Delhi rug.
+ [_Exit Dorkinski_]
+ Poor Bordy's fuming ripe.
+
+ [_Re-enter the Count_]
+
+ _Dor._ His Excellency calls, your majesty.
+
+ _Hud._ Which Excellency? They are thick as hops.
+
+ _Dor._ The Governor of Peonia.
+
+ _Hud._ In time and tune.
+ We'll see him here.
+ [_Exit Dorkinski_]
+ A pawn of mine who'd push
+ Beyond his square, and I must humor him
+ 'Neath meditative thumb.
+
+ [_Enter Megario_]
+
+ _Hud._ Welcome, Megario.
+
+ _Meg._ I've travelled far
+ To press your hand.
+
+ _Hud._ We made appointment here,
+ Knowing your visit to Assaria touched
+ Nothing of state or office.
+
+ _Meg._ [_Accepting his cue_] Nothing, sir. [_Looks about him_]
+ I thought I left the springtide in my rear,
+ Three thousand miles or so, but here it greets me.
+
+ _Hud._ A gimcrack of my daughter's. She would freak
+ With sun and time. My toyshop has no walls.
+ I juggle too with seasons, climates, zones,
+ But in the open where there's warrior room,
+ And startled Fate may spring against my will,
+ Giving an edge to mastery when I wrest
+ The whip from Nature, turn it on herself,
+ And set her elemental slaves to filch
+ Her gold for me. That, friend, is play.
+
+ _Meg._ For gods
+ And not as thief, but as divinity,
+ You take from crouching Nature.
+
+ _Hud._ Men have said
+ I pile up gold because its glitter soothes
+ A fever in my eyes. The clacking fools!
+ I am no Cheops making warts on earth.
+ No mummy brain! God built my pyramids,
+ Slaving through dark and chaos till there rose
+ My iron-hearted hills, and mountains locked
+ On ago-unyielded treasure waiting me.
+ There slept my gems till longing became fire
+ And broke the grip of stone,--there lay my gold,
+ Re-purged each thousand years till baited Time
+ Gave up the master's hour.
+
+ [_Hernda has come from the grove and moves up to his side_]
+
+ _Her._ [_Adoringly_] And you the master!
+
+ _Hud._ Daughter, you owe my lord Megario
+ Some pretty thanks.
+
+ _Her._ I give them, sir.
+
+ _Meg._ No, no!
+ I pray your Highness, no! My thanks to earth
+ That bears the flower of you, and to the light
+ That makes my eyes your beauty's treasurer.
+ But thanks from you to me, as jewels hung
+ Upon a beggar's neck, would set my rags
+ Unkindly in the sun.
+
+ _Her._ Then I am not
+ Your debtor?
+
+ _Meg._ Mine the debt, that mounts too fast
+ For feeble payment from thin purse of words.
+ Ah, every moment adds a suitor hope
+ To th' bankrupts in my heart.
+
+ _Her._ I fear, my lord,
+ Your coiner's name is Fancy, and I like
+ Truth's mintage best. [_To her father_]
+ What is this debt of mine,
+ So languished that a word of thanks may be
+ Its slender cover?
+
+ _Meg._ A word, if beauty speak it,
+ May mantle a bare world.
+
+ _Hud._ His Excellency
+ Is Governor of Peonia----
+
+ _Her._ In Goldusan!
+
+ _Hud._ And smoothed my road there----
+
+ _Meg._ Nay, your majesty,
+ My aid was but a garnish on the might
+ That moves with your own name.
+
+ _Hud._ Between us then,
+ We saved my holdings through a bluster there.
+ And what they brought me I've tossed here to make
+ This smile on winter.
+
+ _Meg._ What? You gave her all?
+
+ _Her._ How, sir? One word of mine would robe a world.
+ And my whole self not worth a little spot
+ Twitched from Spring's garment?
+
+ _Meg._ Oh, I'd grind the stars
+ To imperial dust that you might trample them,--
+ But this--this was a _fortune_!
+ [_To Hudibrand_] Sir, 'tis true
+ You care not for the gold.
+
+ _Hud._ I care for it
+ As men of hero times held dear the sword
+ That made them lords of battle.
+
+ _Her._ You are lord
+ Of Peace!
+
+ _Meg._ Write that upon the clouds, that eyes
+ Of men and angels may contending claim
+ The truth for earth and heaven!
+
+ _Hud._ Tush, sir, tush!
+
+ _Meg._ Can I forget how at your kingly touch
+ My fair Peonia, paling in treason's grip,
+ Thrilled from her deathward droop, renewed her heart
+ Through safe, ease-lidded nights, and woke once more
+ The rose of fortune?
+
+ _Hud._ There's no rumble now
+ Of riot?
+
+ _Meg._ Not a sound comes to our ears
+ But from the toiling strokes that steadily
+ Uproll Peonia's wealth.
+
+ _Hud._ Yet those who led
+ The last revolt are free.
+
+ _Meg._ Not all, your Highness.
+ A few crossed to Assaria, but expedition
+ Warms on their trail. Rejan LeVal is tracked
+ To your own capital.
+
+ _Hud._ Nay, mend that, sir.
+ We're safe here from such ruck.
+
+ _Meg._ The startled eel
+ Will make for muddy waters,--and 'tis sure
+ LeVal found murky welcome here.
+
+ _Hud._ My city!
+ What mutinous bolt turns here for him?
+
+ _Meg._ His friends
+ Are friends of power. How else could he elude
+ The thousand eyes in search?
+
+ _Hud._ [_Musing_] Treason at court?...
+
+ _Meg._ We'll mouse LeVal to 's cranny, do not doubt.
+ Then we shall ask Assaria's great seal
+ For his delivery to Goldusan.
+
+ _Hud._ That is assured you.
+
+ _Meg._ But your minister,
+ Sir Borduc, warns----
+
+ _Hud._ Ha! Warns?
+
+ _Meg._ He urges that
+ The extraditing power is at pause,
+ Blocked by the people's will.
+
+ _Hud._ I've given my word,--
+ A word that mobbish din ne'er added to,
+ Nor yet stripped of one letter that I chose
+ Should spell authority. You ask for more?
+
+ _Meg._ Pardon, your majesty! It is enough,
+ Beyond all stretch of need.
+
+ _Hud._ I call to mind
+ That Borduc waits,--and primed for tongue-work too.
+ The princess will content your Excellency?
+
+ _Meg._ [_With obeisance to Hernda_] 'Tis Heaven's honor!
+ I have left the earth!
+
+ _Hud._ You waste your art. She's in the milk-maid humor.
+ Would marry Hob. [_Exit, lower right_]
+
+ _Meg._ The Señor Hob? He says
+ You'll marry him? [_Hernda laughs_]
+ You care not if I die!
+
+ _Her._ You'll live, my lord.
+
+ _Meg._ You'll marry Hob. I die!
+
+ _Her._ He is not Hob. That is my father's mock
+ Because he's poor.
+
+ _Meg._ [_In hope_] Ah, poor?
+
+ _Her._ A beggarly
+ Ten millions,--not a penny more.
+
+ _Meg._ Ten millions!
+
+ _Her._ But that's my joy. I would not wed for gold.
+
+ _Meg._ O, pity me! I love you, señorita!
+
+ _Her._ No, no! I must not hear that.
+
+ _Meg._ Then I'll pray
+ Silence to be my friend and speak my dumb
+ Unuttered heart.
+
+ _Her._ You must not love me, sir.
+ But you may love--my father. When you praised him,
+ You too seemed fair to me.
+
+ _Meg._ I'll sing him till
+ The stars lie at our feet, if you will listen!
+
+ _Her._ He gave your country peace?
+
+ _Meg._ His royal name
+ Is dear as Cordiaz' in the grateful heart
+ Of Goldusan. That proud land lay unkept.
+ Her ores intombed, her vales without a plough,
+ Her rivers wasting down to shipless seas,
+ Her people starving, while her nobles strove
+ For shreds of power,--the clouted thing we called
+ A government. Then on our factions fell,
+ Strong as a god's, the hand of Hudibrand;
+ And now, compact, we stand by Cordiaz,
+ While every mountain groans with golden birth.
+ And every river turns its thousand wheels,
+ And every valley buried is in bloom.
+
+ _Her._ My dearest father! But I knew 'twas so!
+ And they who starved are fed and happy now?
+ They reap the bloom and share the golden flood?
+
+ _Meg._ All will be well when once we've scourged the land
+ Of rebels that drip poison from their tongues,
+ Stirring the meek and unambitious poor,--
+ Who sought no life but saintly, noble toil,--
+ With strangest rage, till maddened they would bite
+ The fostering hand of God.
+
+ _Her._ We've prisons where
+ We put such troublers. Has your land no jails?
+
+ _Meg._'Tis full of them! I mean--ah, we have jails,
+ But foes like these are wary, slip all watch,--
+ Flee and dart back, our weariness their charter
+ To tread with havoc's hoof. If I could find
+ Rejan LeVal, then might I rest from guard,
+ But not while he--unlassoed warrigal!--
+ May canter from his thicket and paw up
+ Peonia's fields!
+
+ _Her._ I'll lend an adjutant.
+ Ask Chartrien, who knows each foggy nook
+ And smirchèd corner of the capital,--
+ Having once made his pastime serve a quest
+ For such drab knowledge,--ask him help you find
+ This traitor.
+
+ _Meg._ Chartrien! Nay, the fox is safe
+ When th' hound too wears a brush.
+
+ _Her._ You mean the prince?
+ Speak, sir! Who hints me calumny,
+ Shall make the drum his chorus. I'll hear all.
+
+ _Meg._ A rumor drifts through Goldusan....
+
+ _Her._ Is that
+ An oddity? Here rumors are too thick
+ For ears to gather them.
+
+ _Meg._ But this--O, princess....
+ Fairest of earth, forgive me that I speak!
+
+ _Her._ You do not speak. And that I'll not forgive.
+
+ _Meg._ Ah, then,--but first,--is Chartrien near the king?
+
+ _Her._ No nearer than his heart.
+
+ _Meg._ I do offend.
+
+ _Her._ Offence now lies in silence. Speak, my lord.
+
+ _Meg._ When I left Goldusan, 'twas said--and with
+ No muffled hesitance--Prince Chartrien aids
+ The rebels there, and lays a train to rend
+ The State apart, that Cordiaz may drop
+ Into the gap,--then he with plausive cleat
+ Will make the fissure stanch, and seat himself
+ In unoppugnèd power.
+
+ _Her._ Why _he is Hob_! [_Silence. They both rise_]
+ A mad and sorry tale, you see.
+
+ _Meg._ I see.
+ He's in the capital?
+
+ _Her._ Beneath this roof.
+ The palace is his home. My father holds
+ His meagre millions guarded, nursing them
+ To a prince's portion.
+
+ _Meg._ We shall meet?
+
+ _Her._ To-night.
+ He's with a friend--a Spanish gentleman,--
+ But _not_ from Goldusan.
+
+ _Meg._ I made no guess.
+
+ _Her._ Deny that with your eyes. Your tongue's exempt.
+
+ _Meg._ And may I meet the Spanish gentleman?
+
+ _Her._ That's as he chooses. I may not command him.
+
+ [_Re-enter Count Dorkinski_]
+
+ _Dor._ His Highness, sir, is pleased to bid you join him.
+
+ _Meg._ His pleasure is his marshal. [_To Hernda, softly_] I've your leave
+ To love your father. That I go from you
+ To him, is Heaven's proof I do.
+
+ [_Exit Megario and the Count_]
+
+ _Her._ The proof
+ I seek, and would not find, is locked in Hell,
+ Not Heaven. Megario lied. Oh, Chartrien!
+
+ [_Retreats slowly into grove and pauses out of sight, rear. Enter,
+ upper left, Chartrien and LeVal_]
+
+ _LeV._ No,----
+
+ _Cha._ Prudence, dear LeVal!
+
+ _LeV._ I shall go mad
+ Shut in this gilded den,--this stifling hold
+ Of banditry.
+
+ _Cha._ Peace, friend!
+
+ _LeV._ I'd rather crouch
+ With brats of grime upon an unswept hearth
+ And claw my bread from cinders, than draw breath
+ In this gold-raftered house of blood!
+
+ _Cha._ Come, come!
+ Your wits fly naked, stripped of every caution,
+ And beat suspicion up that else might keep
+ Untroubled bed. Whist! We must move rose-shod
+ Through these next hours, not clack in passion's clogs.
+
+ _LeV._ I'll out of this! There's surge in me no fear
+ Can put in bonds.
+
+ _Cha._ Nay, here and here alone
+ Your life is safe. The hounds of Goldusan
+ Sniff through the cellars. They'll not scent you in
+ The royal shadow. That's more brilliancy
+ Than ever lit a rush in houndom. This
+ My home, I share with you, for mine it is
+ Till I've secured my gold from Hudibrand.
+
+ _LeV._ Ay, but Megario! While he's here these walls
+ Pen me in fire.
+
+ _Cha._ His visit is too brief
+ To be a danger.
+
+ _LeV._ Danger! To me, or him?
+ If we should meet, his fate as mine would be
+ In that encounter. These are hands would see to 't!
+
+ _Cha._ LeVal, forget----
+
+ _LeV._ Forget Céleste? My wife?
+ Forget she died of blows while he stood by
+ And smiled, because _she was my wife_!
+ Oh, God! Breathe air with him while this arm hangs
+ A limp discretion!
+
+ _Cha._ Peace! This mood unpent
+ Will wreck us. Keep your room if it must swell.
+ The princess gazes yonder, and your face
+ Is badged exposal. Go. I'll meet her question.
+ 'Twill not fash honor if a lie or two
+ Must be our guard.
+
+ [_Exit LeVal upper left. Hernda emerges from grove. Chartrien waits for
+ her as she comes circuitously, lightly hovering and hesitating_]
+
+ _Her._ [_At his side_] What lover's this?--dreams still
+ When love is by. Were he an olden knight
+ He'd ride to tourney and forget his spurs!
+
+ _Cha._ He would forget the world and fame and God
+ To see your eyes like this!
+
+ _Her._ You tremble, Chartrien.
+ Love so much?--yet stood here just--a stump--
+
+ _Cha._ That felt you coming, coming like a bird,
+ And watched and waited, envying every bough
+ Where you paused doubting, till you fluttering lit,
+ Down in the old stump's heart--
+
+ _Her._ There, I've forgot!
+ This is my lover ere that lure crept up
+ From Goldusan. Since you came back, I've felt
+ The shadow of a difference, and I've heard
+ The maids of Goldusan can draw men's souls
+ Out of their bodies for a dance in hell.
+
+ _Cha._ My love!
+
+ _Her._ O, Chartrien, are you mine? I feel
+ A question in your worship. When your eyes
+ Are warmest, love lies on them like
+ The shallow moon-gleam on a deep, dark sea
+ That is not kin with it. A sea that once
+ Was mine, and I could go, with circling arms,
+ Love-lanterned to its depth. But now the dark
+ Is round me fathomless----
+
+ _Cha._ My own!
+
+ _Her._ I try to rise,
+ To find my wings--and feel the air again
+ Without your drowning touch upon me----
+
+ _Cha._ Hernda!
+ Have I so nearly lost you? Come, beloved,
+ Sit here, and let me vow me yours again
+ Till in each word you feel my beating heart.
+
+ _Her._ My stars shall hear these vows.
+ [_Changes the light to pale, evening glow. Rear, right, are glimpses
+ of sky with frail, moving clouds, faint stars and a new moon_]
+ And see, my moon.
+ Intent and virginal.
+ [_She sits, and Chartrien lies on the ground, his breast covering
+ her feet_]
+ Now, now my heart
+ Holds not another thing but love and you!
+
+ _Cha._ No thought of those dread wings?
+
+ _Her._ None, none! And you?
+ [_Bends over him_]
+ All mine. I hold you now, fast in my world.
+ Sometimes you enter, come within my door.
+ And then I can not shut it for a wind
+ That clings about you from a farther sky.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Rises and takes her face between his hands_]
+ There's but one sky!
+
+ _Her._ A shuddering breath,
+ As from a planet strange, where you have walked
+ And I shall never go.
+
+ _Cha._ O, shut me in,
+ Rose of a heart! I'll not go out though Life
+ Beat at the door, and call her giant storms
+ To knock upon 't.
+
+ _Her._ Is this not life? And this
+ The only world?
+
+ _Cha._ The only world. My habitat
+ One perfect hour.
+
+ _Her._ One hour? Forever, love.
+
+ _Cha._ O, vow it for me, sweet,--again, again!
+ Till I believe once more in Arcadies
+ Born of a silken purse. In sunsets caught
+ In tinted tapestries, with jacinth heart
+ Gold-bleeding through the woven breath of dream.
+ In soft moon-hours that drop from painted skies,
+ In fairy woodlands aye unwintering,
+ In love's elf-ring no boding star may cross,
+ And you, my Hernda, sceptred in joy's name,
+ Tossing the apple planets in your hands--
+ These little, sovereign hands--as God might do,
+ Had he, poor God, your power.
+
+ _Her._ Love, you hurt.
+
+ _Cha._ Ah, tears in Arcady?
+
+ _Her._ Oh, what is this
+ Has come between us?
+
+ _Cha._ What? The universe.
+ I can not reach you even when my lips
+ Are on your heart.
+
+ _Her._ May I not come to you?
+
+ _Cha._ From this moon-world? No hope of that.
+
+ _Her._ See then,
+ The day! [_Changes the light to sunrise_]
+ Now may I come?
+
+ _Cha._ Forever playing!
+ The way lies here.
+
+ [_Steps to window and opens it. A snowy blast rushes in_]
+
+ _Her._ Stop, Chartrien! Shut it! Oh,
+ You've killed my Spring!
+
+ _Cha._ You will not come?
+
+ _Her._ You're mad.
+
+ [_Struggles with the window until she closes it, Chartrien watching
+ her_]
+
+ _Cha._ You do not like that road. But it is mine.
+ And children walk it. I have met them there.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, I am frozen! See!
+
+ _Cha._ [_With sudden contrition, pressing her to his breast_]
+ No, you are fire.
+ A fire that I will clasp, though it should burn
+ My holiest temple and betray my soul
+ To ashes!
+
+ _Her._ O, my love, what secret curbs
+ Your nature to this chafe? It rubs even through
+ Your ardor.--stabs me on your breast.
+ May I not know it? Is not confidence
+ Dear blood and life of love? Without it, ours
+ Must pale, ghost-cold, a chill between locked arms.
+
+ _Cha._ Is trust not love's prerogative
+ More royal sweet than any burdened share
+ Of secrecy?
+
+ _Her._ Not to the strong!
+
+ _Cha._ [_Smiling_] You strong?
+ By what brave test dost know it?
+
+ _Her._ And by what
+ Dost know me weak?
+
+ _Cha._ The proof awaits. But now,--
+ Emilio needs me,--
+
+ _Her._ Go!
+
+ _Cha._ Sweet, friendship too
+ Has bonds. Not all are love's.
+
+ _Her._ He's ill,--your friend?
+
+ _Cha._ As plague-bit life,--no worse.
+
+ _Her._ You'll wait upon
+ My father? Bid him but good-night?
+
+ _Cha._ No, Hernda.
+
+ _Her._ You shun him, Chartrien. I have watched you keep
+ A curious distance,--ay, as though your heart
+ Removed itself while your unwarmèd eyes
+ Made invoice of its treasure. Once you rushed
+ Unto his counsel as security
+ Hived in his word, and you, denied, were lost.
+ Are those hours gone? If you have grown too large
+ For his shrunk wisdom, bind you to his need.
+ Age unsuspected crowns him, and you take
+ Your young arm out of his.
+
+ _Cha._ He wants no staff.
+
+ _Her._ You'll go no more to Goldusan?
+
+ _Cha._ I must.
+
+ _Her._ And soon?
+
+ _Cha._ When Hudibrand is pleased to free
+ My fortune from his ward.
+
+ _Her._ You want it all?
+
+ _Cha._ Yes, all.
+
+ _Her._ For Goldusan?
+
+ _Cha._ My greatest need
+ Is there.
+
+ _Her._ What is that need?
+
+ _Cha._ You question me?
+
+ _Her._ May love not ask?
+
+ _Cha._ If love could understand.
+
+ _Her._ Have I grown dull? I do not know you, Chartrien.
+ You're so unfeatured by that Spanish cloud,
+ You're lowering friend. _He_ is the universe
+ Between our hearts. Ill? No. I saw him here,--
+ A tropic threat. 'Twas rage broke his suave guard,
+ Not illness.
+
+ _Cha._ Hernda!
+
+ _Her._ The Lord Megario
+ Has asked to compliment a brother guest.
+ May he be seen? Does his unmannered storm
+ Spare one amenity?
+
+ _Cha._ Megario knows?
+
+ _Her._ Knows what?
+
+ _Cha._ Oh!--nothing.
+
+ _Her._ So much more than naught
+ Your cheek is pale with it.
+
+ _Cha._ No matter, Hernda.
+
+ _Her._ An ashen matter truly, yet not light
+ As nothing. But your answer. May our guests
+ Exchange the roof-tree greeting?
+
+ _Cha._ No.
+
+ _Her._ Why not?
+ That "no" trails consequence. It can not be
+ Your period.
+
+ _Cha._ They are enemies.
+
+ _Her._ I knew!
+
+ _Cha._ Megario dealt my friend a bitter wrong,--
+ The foulest wrong that man may put on man.
+
+ _Her._ He's loyal to my father. I know that
+ Of him,--and of Emilio--nothing.
+
+ _Cha._ Sweet,
+ I beg one day!
+
+ _Her._ One day? What's hatching here
+ That's one day short its time?
+
+ [_Enter, lower right, Hudibrand, Megario, and Borduc_]
+
+ _Cha._ [_Drawing Hernda aside_] To-morrow, love!
+
+ _Her._ To-night!
+
+ _Hud._ You've won your suit, Megario.
+ If by our presence in your Goldusan
+ We can advance that sister country's peace.
+ The journey's naught. We'll count it done.
+
+ _Meg._ My lord,
+ All revolution will dispel as air
+ Before your eye. Our Cordiaz is great,
+ But his familiar subjects are too near
+ To take his height, while you they know to be
+ Of giant measure; and when once they see
+ Your majesties are brothered, Cordiaz
+ Will grow your twin in stature.
+
+ _Hud._ You've our word.
+
+ _Meg._ I treasure it,--and lest repeated thanks
+ Stale their sincerity. I beg to say
+ Good-night.
+
+ _Hud._ You have our leave. Good-night, my lord.
+
+ [_Megario bows impressively to Hudibrand, slightly to Borduc, and is
+ passing out when Hernda, who has crossed right, intercepts him_]
+
+ _Her._ You leave us early, Lord Megario.
+
+ _Meg._ I do not leave, your Highness. I am driven.
+ I go to drudgery with my secretaries,
+ Foregoing even the sleep that might have brought
+ Your dreamèd face to me.
+
+ _Her._ Is 't still your wish
+ To meet our Spanish guest?
+
+ _Meg._ He grants me that?
+
+ _Her._ He has refused a meeting.
+
+ _Meg._ Ah!... Refused.
+
+ _Her._ But there's a way, my lord. When you have passed
+ The second door without, turn to the left.
+ You'll find a vaulted passage,--at the end
+ An entrance to my wood. Come in, and wait.
+
+ _Meg._ You grace me so?
+
+ _Her._ It is not grace that breaks
+ The covenant of salt. But who keeps faith
+ With traitors? He is one, by every sign.
+ An evil thing blown to our royal hearth
+ Through Chartrien's open love that lets all winds
+ Pour in. And I'll have proof of it!
+
+ _Meg._ [_Over her hand_] You shall. [_Exit, lower right_]
+
+ _Cha._ [_Crossing to Hernda_] A long-spun courtesy, and with one merit,--
+ It ended in good-night.
+
+ _Her._ [_Gayly_] Unruly yet?
+ A truce until to-morrow!
+
+ _Cha._ You believe me?
+
+ _Her._ I would not doubt you for a world compact
+ Of virtues only, but it's no unreason
+ To fear you are deceived.
+
+ _Cha._ Dear Hernda----
+
+ _Her._ Come!
+ I love you, Chartrien. Let us have an hour
+ As light as joy, as sweet as peace, and call
+ Your friend to share it. He shall smile for me.
+ I vow it, by his most ungentle frown!
+
+ _Cha._ 'Twill take your deepest magic, for his heart
+ Holds naught that smiles are made of.
+
+ _Her._ Bring him here.
+ I'll make that heart my wizard bowl and mix
+ Such sweet and merry potions in 't, his griefs
+ Must doff their gray for motley. You shall see!
+
+ _Cha._ Art such a witch? [_Exit, upper left_]
+
+ _Her._ What's this I do? My soul
+ Leans shameward, but I'll trounce it up. The man,
+ If innocent, keeps so, untouched and clear.
+ If he aims darkly, creeps a weaponed hate
+ Upon my noble father, do I worse
+ Than cancel so the unwrought half of 's crime,
+ And make him less a villain?
+
+ _Bor._ May I speak
+ Against this southward jaunt?
+
+ _Hud._ Loud as you please,
+ My Bordy, but I go.
+
+ _Bor._ Your Highness makes
+ Assaria bow too low.
+
+ _Hud._ The State shall have
+ No name in this. I go as Cordiaz' friend,
+ Not as Assaria's king. I've interests there
+ That sort with quiet venture. Give it out
+ This move in part concerns my health.
+
+ _Bor._ That much
+ I welcome. You should rest, my lord.
+
+ _Hud._ Ha? Rest?
+ The twin of death! I'll rest when I am dust.
+ Nay, then I hope that storm and hurricane
+ Will keep me whirling. No,--I'll not go lame
+ Even in report. Say that this move concerns
+ My pleasure solely,--solely, Borduc.
+
+ _Her._ Father,
+ I have a suit. May I not go with you?
+ I long to make that land where you are loved,
+ More vivid than the dream that now it is.
+
+ _Hud._ And find what lodestar there draws Chartrien
+ From constancy? Well, you shall go.
+
+ _Bor._ Tut, tut!
+
+ _Her._ Dear father!
+
+ _Hud._ This will give domestic screen
+ And color to our tack.
+
+ _Bor._ A gadding throne--
+
+ _Hud._ Good Borduc, we will leave the throne at home.
+ Do not _you_ stay?
+
+ _Bor._ I've some authority,
+ You'll not dispute, my lord. Much as may go
+ With broad election. My investiture
+ Lies in the people's choice.
+
+ _Hud._ Ay, you're their bark
+ Of freedom, where their pride may hoist full sail,
+ But who wots better, Bordy, that 'tis puffed
+ With winds that know my port?
+
+ _Bor._ They think their choice
+ Is free. Sincere in that, they give my post
+ A dignity not even your majesty
+ May mock me out of.
+
+ _Hud._ Fools are noted most
+ For their sincerity,--a virtue that
+ Must stand a cipher if uncertified
+ By wit or wisdom.
+
+ _Bor._ Sir, Assarians
+ Are not the fools you think them. They are men
+ Who have the patriot's heart, and on their flag
+ Where you write "power" their love reads "liberty."
+
+ _Hud._ It does, praise be! And they may keep their flag
+ To wear around their eyes long as they will.
+ For then I dance my measure, while they bump
+ In hither-whither hoodman blind and pay
+ My fiddler too!
+
+ _Bor._ And what's my part in this?
+
+ _Hud._ The fiddler's, Borduc.
+
+ _Bor._ Sir?
+
+ _Hud._ And your next tune
+ Is Goldusan. Come, let's rehearse.
+
+ _Bor._ My lord,----
+
+ [_Exeunt, lower right, as Chartrien and LeVal enter left_]
+
+ _Her._ You've come, dear Señor! Was it savagery
+ To wrest the hour from you?
+
+ _LeV._ Too kindly done
+ For such a name,--though I was deep in bond
+ To sober thoughts, your Highness.
+
+ _Her._ Be so still.
+ We would not force our humor on your heart,
+ But share your own.
+
+ _LeV._ [_Smiling_] Can you be sad?
+
+ _Her._ As rains
+ That drench October. As the gray
+ That fringes twilight on the dark of moons.
+ As seas that sob above a swallowed ship,
+ Repenting storm. [_Leads to seat, right_]
+ Come, sir,--and I'll be sad
+ In what degree you choose, though I could wish it
+ Nearer a smile than rheum, and not so heavy
+ But that its sigh may float upon a song,
+ A gentle song that might be sorrow's garland
+ When moan wears down. Wilt hear one now, my lord?
+ I have a music-maker yon whose lute
+ Was nectared in a poet's tears the hour
+ He lost his dream. Say you will hear him! Nay,
+ That courtier "yes" can not o'ertake the "no"
+ Sped from your eyes. We'll have no music. Yet
+ The soul must love it ere one can be sad
+ To th' very sweet of sadness. O, I know!
+
+ _LeV._ I love it, but not here.
+
+ _Her._ What here forbids?
+ My bower! The eye translates its tenderness
+ To fairy sound, nor need of pipe or strings.
+
+ _LeV._ I can not hear the bells of fairydom
+ When life is making thunder's music 'gainst
+ This bauble house of play----
+
+ _Her._ [_Rising_] Sir, you forget----
+
+ _LeV._ Nay, I remember!
+
+ _Her._ What do you remember?
+
+ _LeV._ Ah!... Pardon, princess!
+
+ _Cha._ May I mend this peace?
+
+ _Her._ [_Sitting again by LeVal_] It is not broken yet.
+
+ _LeV._ Your gentleness
+ Has saved it, not my manners.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, my lord,
+ Would I had grace to cover sorrow's breach
+ As smoothly as a gap in courtesy!
+ Then you should smile!
+
+ _LeV._ I have a happiness
+ That makes it thievery in me to take
+ Your pity. You've a sadder need.
+
+ _Her._ I'll yield
+ No jocund vantage to that brow of yours.
+ You hear this sombre braggart, Chartrien?
+ Speaks as I were Despair's own fosterling!
+
+ _LeV._ You are. As I am Hope's. Do you not gaze
+ On earth's foul spots and cry "A sad world this!"
+ "We must endure!" "The dear God wills it so!"
+ And such and such like seed of misery
+ Till hopelessness sprouts chronic?--building then
+ Your house of life amid its smelling weeds,
+ Where you may dance--or pray--till you forget
+ Your creed keeps earth in tears?
+
+ _Her._ And yours, my lord?
+
+ _LeV._ Gives her a singing and forefeeling heart
+ Whose courage cleaves renunciation's cloud
+ That swathes her splendor and would sighing keep
+ Her livid 'mong the stars!
+
+ _Her._ You would divide
+ Omnipotence with God, and arrogant,
+ Assume the bigger half. But there are woes
+ That even your hope, though it go winged and armored,
+ Must fall before.
+
+ _LeV._ Not one that I'll not face
+ Until its features mould me destiny.
+ The shape of radiance it shall wear for man
+ 'Neath an unslandered Heaven! I could not live
+ If in the life about me I saw not
+ The world within this world, and sped my hope
+ The way that it shall take.
+
+ _Her._ Is not that way
+ Called Peace, Emilio?
+
+ _LeV._ Not the peace that spills
+ More blood than war, builds bigger jails, and leaves
+ More waifs to suck the stunting, poisonous breast
+ Of Charity! Peace as white ashes spread
+ Upon injustice' fly-blown wrack----
+
+ _Her._ [_Leaving him_] You are
+ A revolutionist!
+
+ _LeV._ And black to you,
+ For revolution leads into the horizon,
+ And must be figured dark to rearward eyes
+ Though God beyond gives welcome.
+
+ _Her._ [_Coming gently back_] May we not
+ Be patient even as Christ, who found this world
+ The home of poverty and left it so?
+ Did he not say the poor are ever with us?
+
+ _LeV._ You too must tap that last and golden nail
+ In th' pauper's coffin!
+
+ _Her._ It is the nail of truth,
+ If Christ spoke true.
+
+ _LeV._ Words uttered to his day,
+ Not to all time. Not as a deathless brand
+ Burning his own millennium. Not meant
+ To take from man his goal, condemning him
+ To hug an ulcer to the sick world's end,
+ Which even your bosom must take to whitest bed
+ Although your festrous partner be not guessed
+ Nor visible. But if he did mean that----
+ That vicious thing--then he is false as hell,
+ Denying man's bright destiny,--and I,
+ Who vouch the triumph of an angel race,
+ Am more a god than he!
+
+ _Her._ You dare blaspheme----
+
+ _LeV._ Because it once was said to men, whom worms
+ Made dust of twice ten hundred years ago,
+ "The poor are always with you," such as you
+ Shall not forever pick your way to ease
+ O'er broken bodies, lifting up white brows
+ And hiding crimson feet! Daring to make
+ The Christ your sheltering sanction while you feed
+ On others' lives, and keep injustice sleek
+ Even as you cosset that dim thing, your soul,
+ And preen the wings you think bear you aloft
+ The puddled world!
+
+ _Her._ You lie! You do not know
+ Our gentle hearts, our----
+
+ _LeV._ Gentle? O, you're nice,
+ You later cannibals, and will not eat
+ Of babes at table, but you'll pipe their blood
+ From unoffending distance, while you pray
+ Your conscience numb and swear the source is clean.
+ Some dare to name that fount the Love of God,
+ And kneel him thanks!
+
+ _Her._ Oh, mad and impious!
+ Who is this, Chartrien, you've dared call your friend?
+
+ [_Megario steps from the grove_]
+
+ _Meg._ He's dumb as prudence, but my tongue is free.
+ This is Rejan LeVal, the man who hates
+ Your father,--and my country's enemy.
+
+ _LeV._ [_Plunging toward Megario_] Murderer!
+
+ _Cha._ [_Grasping LeVal_] Come! At once!
+
+ _Meg._ Your pardon, prince.
+ I must delay you. I feared your sympathy
+ Would gird itself 'gainst justice, and took care
+ To balk escape. [_To officer who appears behind him_]
+ Be off with him. You know
+ Your road. No stop this side Peonia's border.
+
+ _Cha._ Outlawry this! Stop, sir! You will not dare
+ Kidnap him on this soil!
+
+ _Meg._ [_Laughs_] Where Hudibrand
+ Is king?
+
+ [_Exit officer with LeVal, lower right_]
+
+ _Her._ This strains your privilege, my lord.
+
+ _Cha._ His privilege? My God! Did you....
+
+ _Her._ I did.
+
+ _Meg._ No third voice here is cordant. I will leave you.
+ My thousand times most gracious lady, thanks!
+ Again I bid you happiest good-night! [_Exit_]
+
+ _Her._ I am no adder, though your bitter eyes
+ Give me that name.
+
+ _Cha._ Not bitter. In my heart,
+ That wrapped you as the South its dearest bud,
+ There's nothing left to warm the thought of you
+ Even with my hate. You are the crown, the peak,
+ The unmeaning top of all to which I'm most
+ Indifferent. [_Turns away_]
+
+ _Her._ Look at me!
+
+ _Cha._ I look, and know
+ My eyes till now were cankered, look and see
+ The whole fair lie you are.
+
+ _Her._ Nay, Chartrien!
+
+ _Cha._ The book is open. There the brow yet shines
+ As God o'erlilied it,--an altar urn
+ Stuffed with profane decay. Those are the eyes
+ Like springs within a wood where no road leads
+ With murking pilgrim dust, yet Innocence
+ There paused looks up no more. That is the hand
+ That as a comrade angel's took my friend's,--
+ Reached out as though it parted Heaven's veil
+ To draw his grief within, then clapped him down
+ To Hell.
+
+ _Her._ The place for traitors. Let him go.
+ This moment is for us. 'Tis true your eyes
+ Were cankered, and I thought by surgeon means
+ To give them health, but deeper than the eyes
+ This trouble's seat. Deep as your changèd soul,
+ That forfeits its divinity to link
+ With an infection. Here you stood and heard
+ Those poured-out profanations with no move
+ Or sound of protest. That was left for me.
+
+ _Cha._ What truth may pierce such ignorance, fatuous, thick!
+ That man,--Megario,--with whom you've struck
+ Alliant palm, twisted a lawless law
+ To his deformed desire, and took the lands--
+ The priceless valley lands of Cana Ru--
+ From gentle dwellers there, whose titles bore
+ The rooted claim of dear ancestral graves
+ Nine generations deep,--and when they stood
+ The guardians of their doors, faced them with guns,
+ Dragged them to his bribed courts, weighed them with fines,
+ And sent them to his burning maguey fields
+ To slave and rot.
+
+ _Her._ No--don't----
+
+ _Cha._ The lands were sold
+ To Hudibrand----
+
+ _Her._ It can not be!
+
+ _Cha._ Not be?
+ That cry is stale as ignorance, as old
+ As wrong. I've heard it till my ears refuse
+ To register its emptiness. LeVal,
+ It was, rose first against Megario,--
+ Stood up and urged men to be Man,--and this,
+ That makes archangels in the ranks of Heaven,
+ Was treason upon earth. He lived--escaped--
+ But not his wife. Anointed woman, such
+ As centuries with conjoined virtues breed
+ Once and no more! She was condemned, enslaved,
+ And toiling in the steaming fields, fell down,
+ Was flogged, and died.
+
+ _Her._ No! no! no! no!
+
+ _Cha._ So she
+ Is free. But now LeVal goes back. My friend!
+ O, giant heart! I see you stagger, drop,
+ As feverous as the smitten earth----
+
+ _Her._ Who could
+ Believe such things? You're wrong! You must--you shall
+ Be wrong! He was a traitor, bitter-souled.
+ Undoing my father's work!
+
+ _Cha._ Farewell!
+
+ _Her._ Oh, Chartrien,
+ I did it for the best!
+
+ _Cha._ The woman's cry.
+ She'd wreck a world, and from that earthquake piled
+ Look up to say she did it for the best.
+
+ _Her._ You will not go? You loved me one hour past.
+ I am not changed. I'm Hernda still.
+
+ _Cha._ The same.
+ And yet I loved you. But no blush need burn
+ The soul escaped enchantment. 'Twas a charm
+ Enringed me with its bale till helpless there,
+ And feeble as a babe in bassinet,
+ I cooed away my manhood,--emptied time
+ With infant fingering toward your protean hair!
+
+ _Her._ You _loved_ me!
+
+ _Cha._ More than ever could be laid
+ To madness' charge, or god that passion whelms
+ With mortal longing till his skies become
+ His prison, and dark earth Elysian ground
+ Beneath the feet he loves!
+
+ _Her._ [_With arms beseeching_] Here, Chartrien, here!
+
+ _Cha._ Even when my eyes--so late--were wide to wrong
+ That binds the race to pain's dread Caucasus,
+ My mad imagination laid the gift
+ Of seership on you, dreamed that you would go
+ To meet the gleam of the delivering days,----
+
+ _Her._ With you!
+
+ _Cha._ Sail any sea of venture, beat
+ Through any storm to make the prophet's port,--
+ White priestess vassal to the truth that leads
+ The planet into light!
+
+ _Her._ Together, Chartrien!
+
+ _Cha._ That was my dream. Then coming to your side.
+ There was no life but yours,--no world that bled
+ And felt the vulture feeding. Groans of men
+ Grew still, or like the unavailing hum
+ Of far-off, aimless bees, scarce reached my ears
+ That heard, more near, as music from new earth,
+ Your children call me father. Ay, 'twas but
+ The storming undersea of passioning sex
+ That breaking to the sky o'erlaid my stars
+ And wore the mask of Heaven! That ebbless power,
+ That spawning tide of Nature, by whose might
+ She took primordial forts and made Life hers!
+ Still does it tear belated, unassuaged,
+ In wreck about the Mind's aspiring fanes.
+ And shakes the nesting Spirit from her towers,
+ Her heavenly brood unfledged!
+
+ _Her._ Oh! Oh!
+
+ _Cha._ Here--now--
+ I beat it back, and go my way unmated
+ Till beauty fair as yours has bred a soul
+ And signals me! [_Exit_]
+
+ _Her._ Stay, Chartrien! Oh, my love!
+
+ [_Falls. Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT II
+
+
+SCENE: _A grove in the outskirts of a town in Goldusan. Semi-tropical
+verdure. Rocks, shrubbery, trees, at convenience. A hidden cascade
+mumbles upper right, not loud enough to disturb conversation. At upper
+left, the pillared and vine-wreathed entrance to a mansion. A wall,
+rear, partly hidden by foliage. Paths lead off, right and left, lower,
+under trees. It is evening, and the grove is lit for revel. Gay flocks
+of people pass, then Hernda and Megario enter lower right._
+
+
+ _Meg._ Unsoft as winter! Thou hast brought thy north,
+ With thee, a frigid shade, here where the hours
+ Are poppy-fingered, and their dreaming breasts
+ Unshuttered as the summer!
+
+ _Her._ Is it true,
+ This joy, that smiles as though its fountained heart
+ Could not be emptied?
+
+ _Meg._ True as that I love you.
+
+ _Her._ But if it is no mask, why should revolt
+ O'ercloud your borders?
+
+ _Meg._ There's no just revolt.
+
+ _Her._ But Chartrien said----
+
+ _Meg._ Are you yet poison-tinct
+ With that old rebel tale his credulous heart
+ Dressed new in his while honor till both grew
+ One sooty treason?
+
+ _Her._ Where is Chartrien now?
+
+ _Meg._ Wherever he may hatch a discontent
+ And cluck us trouble. But of late he spurs
+ His heart of venture, and dartles to our towns
+ To stir the scum there.
+
+ _Her._ Scum? You've such a thing
+ In Cordiaz' happy land? I'll see that scum.
+ It breathes, does 't not? Has eyes, and tongue?
+ Can answer if one speaks?
+
+ _Meg._ You're merry, princess.
+
+ _Her._ As graves at night. All is not open here.
+ I shall go farther,--knock at doors where Truth
+ Keeps honest house, not gowned for holiday.
+
+ _Meg._ One want we have,--that you will stay with us
+ And be the fairy soul of Goldusan.
+ Then must our land, so measureless endeared,
+ Be cherished as the darling care of Heaven,
+ Where storm may breathe but as a twittering bird
+ That fears to shake its nest.
+
+ _Her._ You've only words!
+ Words like these thousand-thousand smiles that seem
+ Half real and half painted,--teasing, strange,--
+ All feeding one illusion round my way
+ Till even the ground unqualifies beneath me
+ And makes each step a question.
+
+ _Meg._ 'Tis the doubt
+ You look through that transforms our face
+ Of truth and paints us vaguely hued.
+ O, for our many smiles, wilt not give one?
+
+ _Her._ Nay, there's a darkness fringing on this grove.
+ It creeps above the walls, it touches me,
+ And makes me shudder winding at my feet!
+
+ _Meg._ You've sipped of fancy at a witch's knee! [_Plucks a flower_]
+ But see,--your serpent shadows nurture this.
+ Confess to its perfection, and be shriven
+ Of any thought less fair.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, if I might!
+ No, keep it. Let us find our friends.
+
+ _Meg._ [_Drops the flower_] My hand
+ Defiles it for you.
+
+ _Her._ Nay----
+
+ _Meg._ Where is the fan
+ I carried yester-night?
+
+ _Her._ 'Tis--lost.
+
+ _Meg._ 'Tis burnt!
+
+ _Her._ What wind's your gossip?
+
+ _Meg._ Truth paused at my ear.
+ But, princess, if there's any charm will draw
+ Your eyes to me unburdened of their hate,
+ I'll find it though it lie beneath the ruin
+ Of every other hope!
+
+ _Her._ I'll leave you, sir.
+
+ _Meg._ Forgive me! Love will speak,--ay, storm its need.
+ Though each vain word pile up the barricade
+ That fends the heart desired.
+
+ _Her._ My lord, no hate
+ Is in that barrier. I'm free of that.
+
+ _Meg._ Thanks for that little much. Your highness speaks
+ Of journeying. What can I say to gild
+ My own Peonia till it distant gleams
+ The gem of pilgrimage? There you will see
+ How earth is dressed when the devoted sun
+ Is pledged to her adorning. Trees that mass
+ Their bloom in forest heavens, giving her
+ A nearer sky. Unthwarted vines that scarf
+ Her mountain shoulders with their pendent clouds.
+ Lakes where a dreamer's bark may drift unoared
+ And chance no port save beauty. Everywhere
+ The dart and wave of color that would beckon
+ A neighbor planet looking once this way.
+ Come, be my guest. One day! I'll ask no more.
+
+ _Her._ I do not know. Señora Ziralay
+ Will be my guide. I go with her.
+
+ _Meg._ With her?
+
+ _Her._ What is 't? I touch the shadow. You are not
+ Her friend?
+
+ _Meg._ She hates in secret, while her smile
+ Levies the world for love.
+
+ _Her._ I'll hate where she does,
+ And know my soul is safe.
+
+ _Meg._ Her husband holds
+ By love and purse to Cordiaz, but she
+ Is a LeVal.
+
+ _Her._ LeVal? And kin to--_him_?
+
+ _Meg._ Rejan? His sister. And I know her nature
+ Is tinted as her blood, whatever hue
+ It wears at court.
+
+ _Her._ A sister to the man
+ That I gave up to death. And I have dared
+ To love her--take her kiss----
+
+ _Meg._ [_Cautioning_] She's here.
+
+ [_Enter, lower right, Señora Ziralay and Guildamour_]
+
+ _Her._ Señora!
+ We spoke of you.
+
+ _Señ._ And with such gloom?
+
+ _Meg._ No, no!
+
+ _Señ._ It lingers yet, my lord. Do I in absence cast
+ Such knitted shadows?
+
+ _Meg._ Safely asked of us,
+ Who know your bright philosophy. How fares
+ That magic broom with which you'd sweep the earth
+ Of every ill? Is 't still invincible?
+
+ _Señ._ Much worn of late, my lord, as you should know,
+ Who give it work.
+
+ _Meg._ You'd leave us not one grief
+ To keep us praying and rebuilding Heaven?
+ Abolish Death perhaps?
+
+ _Señ._ True mock! I would
+ Except the death that's like a waiting bed
+ When not another turn may mend the day;
+ When sleep is sweeter than the thumbèd book,
+ And hearth-near voices drowse like waves that lap
+ Shores unconcerned. Now we are murdered, all.
+
+ _Meg._ No, no. Señora!
+
+ _Gui._ Ay! Do we not vaunt,
+ And set it rarely down, a thing to note,
+ If age unmoor the life-disusèd raft,
+ For th' chartless cruise?
+
+ _Señ._ Now we go hurried out,
+ With half our dreams unpacked, and earth made poor
+ With a few grains of dust where should have risen
+ Our wisest years in flower.
+
+ _Meg._ Fate, fate, Señora!
+
+ _Señ._ What's fate but ignorance? And not always that
+ Comes hobbling with excuse. Sometimes a man,
+ Whose eyes fling lances at the foes of Life,
+ Is knouted from the world----
+
+ _Meg._ No more, I pray!
+ This is a festal night. Reserve your sermon
+ For our next fast.
+
+ [_A musical group plays softly under trees left. Enter lower right,
+ Hudibrand, Cordiaz, Rubirez, Vardas, Ziralay and others_]
+
+ _Hud._ Here, daughter? You've been sought.
+
+ _Cor._ The search was mine, your highness. I would beg
+ A grace of you.
+
+ _Her._ You grant one as you beg,
+ Your majesty. I'll not do less than give
+ Your own again. But pray you name it, sir.
+
+ _Cor._ This garden where our amity has borne
+ Its fairest blossom shall be called henceforth
+ The Grove of Peace, and we would beg your highness
+ To queen our christening.
+
+ _Her._ A queenly part,
+ And royally I thank you, but I'll play it
+ With humblest prayer that Heaven may keep unbroken
+ These new-sworn bonds between my land and yours.
+
+ _Cor._ So pray we all.
+
+ _Her._ Is this our scene?
+
+ _Cor._ Not here.
+ Come you this way, my friends. We'll cast the wine
+ To yon cascade, and let the waters bear it
+ Down to my capital.
+
+ [_All go off upper right, except two officers, who remain centre, and
+ a guard who walks to and fro by wall rear, sometimes visible,
+ sometimes hidden by the wood and rocks_]
+
+ _First Off._ This peace will prove
+ As stout as any spider's thread that swings
+ In a blowing rain. Fah!
+
+ _Second Off._ Climb what hill you please,
+ You see the rebels' smoke.
+
+ _First Off._ But where in name
+ Of magic does Bolderez get his gold?
+ The rebels we pick up have lost no meals.
+
+ _Second Off._ Enough he gets it. Goldusan sleeps well.
+ Bolderez is so near that if his men
+ Were eagles they could pick out Cordiaz' eyes
+ And he'd not wake to miss 'em.
+
+ _First Off._ Cordiaz
+ Is not asleep, but so bedimmed and fooled
+ By a thievish Cabinet that what he sees
+ Takes any name they give it.
+
+ _Second Off._ He is old.
+
+ _First Off._ Ah, there you hit it. Warriors should die young.
+ When age unsoldiers them their field-worn hearts
+ Have no defence against a crafty peace,
+ And falling power will seize on any prop
+ Be 't foul or fair, to keep on legs.
+
+ _Second Off._ My faith!
+ His crutches are so villanous, a fall
+ Were better than his gait.
+
+ [_Enter Ziralay, lower right_]
+
+ _First Off._ Well, Ziralay,
+ What news?
+
+ _Zir._ Where's Cordiaz?
+
+ _Second Off._ He comes.
+
+ [_Re-enter group from the cascade_]
+
+ _Zir._ [_To Cordiaz_] My lord,
+ The Assarian prince is captured, and is held
+ Within the town.
+
+ _Cor._ What? Chartrien?
+
+ _Zir._ Yes, my lord.
+
+ _Cor._ Fit period to this dedicated day!
+ Our gentle bonds are now forged whole. The man
+ Who was Bolderez' hope, most luminous
+ Of all who drew rebellion to him, now
+ Is darkly fallen.
+
+ _Rub._ This golden aid cut off,
+ Bolderez stands so bare his nakedness
+ Will sprint to nearest cover.
+
+ _Cor._ I'll see his face.
+ Bring here the prisoner.
+
+ _Off._ I'll speed the order,
+ Your majesty. [_Exit_]
+
+ _Rub._ Shall he be shot, my lord?
+
+ _Cor._ Shot? No. But kept close prisoned.
+
+ _Rub._ That is mercy
+ You have denied the blood of Goldusan.
+ Why grant it to Assaria?
+
+ _Var._ In him swells
+ A strength was never in LeVal. I urge
+ His instant death.
+
+ _Cor._ No, friends. He is a son
+ Of our great neighbor, and his death would wound
+ The courtesy of nations that is kept
+ By lenience unabraded.
+
+ _Var._ Breath so bold
+ Will from a prison fan the treachery
+ Whose flame would die without it.
+
+ _Her._ Father, speak!
+
+ _Cor._ We'll hear our friend, Assaria's majesty,
+ If he have word for us.
+
+ _Hud._ I pray your highness
+ To let no ghostly and unfounded fear
+ Of my Assaria----
+
+ _Cor._ Fear, my lord?
+
+ _Hud._ I mean
+ No more than ask you to be just, nor let
+ My presence here enforce your chivalry
+ To do your country wrong. Think of your people,
+ Not the approval of a gazing land
+ Whose distant nod is given in ignorance
+ Of your stern cause.
+
+ _Her._ Here's not my father! So
+ The clock runs backward, and time ends.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Cordiaz_] Your highness,
+ My voice is not so loud as others here,
+ But could I send it far as sound may go,
+ It should take mercy's part in this debate.
+
+ _Var._ You need no trump, my lord. A limpet's whistle
+ Would tell us where you stand.
+
+ _Meg._ I stand with Cordiaz,
+ His majesty of Goldusan!
+
+ _Cor._ This matter
+ Is not for open market. Come, my friends,
+ Let us go in. Please you to walk before.
+
+ [_Rubirez, Ziralay, Vardas, and Megario enter the house, upper left.
+ Their majesties linger at entrance. Guildamour retreats on path,
+ upper right. Officers go off, lower left. Hernda and Señora
+ Ziralay wait unnoticed, right_]
+
+ _Cor._ Is 't kindly done, my lord, to pose your station
+ In public against mine?
+
+ _Hud._ My neutral words
+ You've packed with import all your own. I strive
+ To bend not right or left, but keep my way
+ As even as Justice.
+
+ _Her._ [_To Señora_] Justice! There's a stone
+ That was my father.
+
+ _Cor._ Yet, my lord, this prince
+ Is of your house.
+
+ _Hud._ Is it for Cordiaz
+ To teach me mercy?
+
+ _Cor._ By my soul!
+
+ _Hud._ I know
+ Whence starts this softness. Mercy has no fane
+ Where you leave offering.
+
+ _Cor._ I know you too!
+ By holy Heaven, your head was never bared
+ In Justice' temple! You now seek my fall,
+ Because I've turned at last to check the hand
+ That rifles Goldusan. Is 't not enough
+ That I've unjewelled all her treasured hills
+ To alien avarice--that her forests bleed
+ The priceless sap of all primeval Springs
+ Into your golden stream? But I must lay
+ My people under bond,--sell them as slaves
+ To buy your stolen railways!
+
+ _Hud._ Stolen, sir?
+ I've paid----
+
+ _Cor._ I know what you have paid! You've sent
+ Your henchmen creeping in the night, to buy
+ At beggar's price our toil-built roads, and where
+ You could not buy, you bribed and thieved, till all
+ Was yours!
+
+ _Hud._ What of _my_ toil, that built the lines
+ Through half your provinces?
+
+ _Cor._ You paid yourself!
+ Took from my governors, half gulls, half thieves
+ Of your own breed, a hundred times the worth
+ Of every graded foot, in lands and mines
+ And water-power that holds the prisoned light
+ Of robbed futurity! Now we must buy
+ Once more those tracks, long over-bought,--pay you
+ A value centuple for every mile,--
+ Pay you in bonds--bonds in hell's verity--
+ Whose interest will outrun each reckoned year
+ The summed returns from our fool's purchase! No!
+ That is my word while I am Goldusan!
+
+ _Hud._ You wake too late. I'll tell you so, my lord,
+ Since this imprudent burst thrusts courtesy
+ From court. Your ministers have given assent----
+
+ _Cor._ Have _given_! You'll over-steal enough
+ To quit their boldest price!
+
+ _Hud._ I'll not defend
+ Your chosen servants, sir.
+
+ _Cor._ _My_ servants! Oh,
+ What State is free from scuttling greed that bores
+ For treasure through the stanchest hold?
+
+ _Hud._ This moral chant comes late from you, my lord,
+ Who've fingered heavily in many a pie
+ Spiced in the devil's kitchen.
+
+ _Cor._ But to sell
+ My people! Pay you this devouring price
+ For stock that hardy yields the groaning third
+ Of interest on your bonds! What shall we do
+ To pay it? Rob our treasury, and ask
+ Our worn-out slaves to fill it up again?
+ Not ask, but goad and lash,--for you must have
+ Your own--you honest mortgagees of babes
+ Unborn----
+
+ _Hud._ Is all the scarlet on our hands?
+ What of that mountain province, sold entire
+ To foreign pockets, and the dwellers there
+ Torn up like shrieking roots and cast abroad
+ To fasten where they could?
+
+ _Cor._ And where was that
+ But in your hell-mouthed mines? You wanted slaves
+ And got them.
+
+ _Her._ I shall die, Señora!
+
+ _Señ._ Listen!
+
+ _Hud._ The tyrant Cordiaz grown pitiful?
+ Then stones are butter, alabaster is
+ Uncrumpled down. You should have wept before
+ The Pueblo strike, then fewer corpses had
+ Gone out to sea.
+
+ _Cor._ Don't name that thing to me!
+ Don't speak of it! I will not bear that curse!
+
+ _Hud._ Mine aged convert, lies it in your will,
+ Or juster Heaven's?
+
+ _Cor._ 'Twas your property
+ My troops defended--and Rubirez lied.
+ Swore that the men foamed mad as tuskèd beasts,
+ And must be trashed to place,--men who had asked
+ No more than bread when you shut up your doors----
+
+ _Hud._ Not I, my friend.
+
+ _Cor._ Your tool then. One of all
+ Your million hookèd hands fast in the heart
+ Of my poor country, shut your doors, thereby
+ To starve the wretches till they crawled to you
+ And begged their chains again. But they--their veins
+ Were not all tapped--they'd blood left, and arose
+ From their dumb prayers to _fight_ for life--and then....
+
+ _Hud._ You sent the troops.
+
+ _Cor._ Because Rubirez lied!
+
+ _Hud._ Because you knew there'd be no after-sale
+ For your high favors, once let titles drift
+ Unguaranteed. And when your work was done--
+ _Your_ work, my tear-washed saint, why weary patience
+ Could not take further time to count the dead,
+ Or dig so many graves. They were piled up
+ And carted to the sea----
+
+ _Cor._ Oh, every tide
+ Brings back their faces--staring, staring up!
+ Will God not answer them? I dare not shut
+ My eyes....
+
+ _Hud._ And this is why you weep so late?
+ Come, Cordiaz, you're broken. Leave a throne
+ Your own fears shake. You know that I must win.
+ Own you are mastered----
+
+ _Cor._ Mastered! While I've breath
+ I am a king. If I win peace of God,
+ And his white angel let my dark soul out,
+ 'Twill be for this--the last throe of my strength
+ Was spent against you!
+
+ _Hud._ Madly you've uncased
+ Your madness, and I know my weapons.
+
+ _Cor._ So!
+ I too, my lord, know how to sleep and wake
+ With hand on steel.
+
+ _Hud._ Then is there more to say?
+
+ _Cor._ All's said. We're waited for. Assaria,
+ Will 't please you enter?
+
+ _Hud._ I thank you, Goldusan. [_They go in_]
+
+ _Her._ Don't comfort me, Señora. Not a breath.
+ I'll not disfigure shame with comfort's patch,
+ But droop as low as leprous dust, and take
+ Some pride in that. 'Tis dark here, dark. Pray God
+ I am asleep!
+
+ _Señ._ Dear princess!
+
+ _Her._ Men do well
+ To keep the women blind. If once they knew,
+ They'd breed no more, but let a bairnless world
+ Escheat to God. Yet you, Señora, knew,
+ And you have children. By your motherhood
+ You've bound you Life's accomplice,--given it heart
+ And veins and an accepting soul!
+
+ _Señ._ I have!
+ Deny our hearts these babes, and we deny
+ The future that we fight for. Ah, defeat
+ May be endured by those who hold in lap
+ The victors of to-morrow!
+
+ _Her._ Oh, my father!
+
+ _Señ._ This truth was edged and swift. You should have had
+ Love's lips to teach you----
+
+ _Her._ I've been taught, my friend,
+ But would not learn. [_Rising_] Señora, it was I
+ Betrayed your brother!
+
+ _Señ._ Yes.... I know.
+
+ _Her._ To death!
+ You do not understand. I killed him!
+
+ _Señ._ No.
+ There, love,--forget a little. I've a hope
+ He is not dead.
+
+ _Her._ Not dead? What gives you hope?
+
+ _Señ._ Perhaps the nameless mentor in the heart
+ That tells us when our loved shrines are lit
+ And when they're out forever. But there's more.
+ Whenever Lord Megario's eye meets mine
+ There's something couched there speaks me living wrong,
+ Not wrong that's ended--locked within a grave
+ No prayer may open. He is burning yet
+ With uncompleted vengeance--and its shame.
+
+ _Her._ Señora, you've a plan!
+
+ _Señ._ 'Twill take much gold.
+
+ _Her._ Ah, I have that.
+
+ _Señ._ And courage.
+
+ _Her._ Well!
+
+ _Señ._ Such as,
+ We're told, no woman has.
+
+ _Her._ Here is my life,
+ And any Fate may have it that will make
+ Your brother live. Will you forgive me then?
+
+ _Señ._ [_Kissing her_] Ah, dear, you could not know....
+
+ _Her._ How did you hear?
+
+ _Señ._ From Chartrien.
+
+ _Her._ You are friends?
+
+ _Señ._ So true he seems
+ Not friend but friendship to my soul. And I
+ Talk here, while yonder he----
+
+ _Her._ They dare not! No!
+ My father would.... My father? Oh, Señora! [_Sobs hopelessly_]
+
+ _Señ._ We'll find a door to this.
+
+ _Her._ Would Ziralay
+ Not help?
+
+ _Señ._ Had he the wit, he would not dare.
+ While I'm his wife he must keep double guard
+ Against suspicion.
+
+ _Her._ Oh!
+
+ _Señ._ If there's one true,
+ 'Tis Guildamour. I'll go to him.
+
+ _Her._ At once!
+ He took that path.
+
+ _Señ._ I know what shade he seeks
+ When he would brood.
+
+ [_Exit Señora, upper right. Hernda waits drooping, as if too weary for
+ thought. A group of ladies and gentlemen enter, lower right, among
+ them Guildamour_]
+
+ _Her._ [_Starting up_] Oh!--Guildamour!
+
+ _Gui._ Your highness!
+
+ [_Leaves his party chattering lower left, and crosses to Hernda_]
+
+ _Her._ Señora seeks you.
+
+ _Gui._ Ah, about the prince?
+
+ _Her._ We have a hope, my lord, your hand may turn
+ Some stone of rescue.
+
+ _Gui._ Mine are powerless hands,
+ Pinned to inaction's cross. My eyes may turn
+ No way that is not watched. To lift my lids
+ May raise a cry of "Treason!"
+
+ _Her._ There's no help?
+ In all this land no help?
+
+ _Gui._ Megario,
+ Could he be softened to it, is the man
+ Who might with safety slip a secret bolt
+ For Chartrien.
+
+ _Her._ He!
+
+ _Gui._ His name is set above
+ The nick of treason by his stern dispatch
+ Of poor LeVal,--and, that struck off, he yet
+ Is chronicled so dark that none would lay
+ A fair deed at his door.
+
+ _Her._ Megario!
+
+ _Gui._ I would not name him, but I know he loves you,
+ And there's no soul that love may not endue
+ With tinge of Heaven.
+
+ [_Re-enter Señora_]
+
+ _Her._ Señora!
+
+ _Señ._ [_Panting_] I have seen him!
+
+ _Gui._ The prince?
+
+ _Her._ Not Chartrien?
+
+ _Señ._ Yes!
+
+ _Gui._ Escaped?
+
+ _Señ._ The guards
+ Were of our heart--they let him make the wood--
+ I've hidden him----
+
+ _Her._ Oh, where?
+
+ _Señ._ Within the cave
+ Veiled by the waterfall. But safety there
+ Is minute-frail.
+
+ _Gui._ What way? He'll climb the wall?
+
+ _Señ._ And drop into the river.
+
+ _Gui._ Yes. What guard
+ Walks there? I see. 'Tis Miguel. And I know
+ Somewhat of him,--more than he'd tell the winds.
+
+ _Señ._ Thank Heaven for a sinner! When he's next
+ Behind the rocks, then to him, Guildamour,
+ And be his palsying conscience. Peg his feet
+ To the earth!
+
+ _Gui._ Trust me, Señora!
+
+ _Señ._ I'll lead off
+ Those babblers. Princess, you're the watch,--you'll give
+ The signal.
+
+ _Her._ Ah! What is 't?
+
+ _Señ._ Two pebbles dashed
+ Into the water is our sign.
+
+ _Her._ The guard!
+ He's gone!
+
+ _Gui._ It is our time. [_Exit into wood, rear_]
+
+ _Her._ [_As the talkative group move up_] Take them away,
+ Señora! It would kill me now to meet
+ A painted smile.
+
+ _Señ._ I'll go. And you--be swift.
+ Don't stop--don't think. [_Joins group_]
+ I know where lordings three
+ Wait for as many maids.
+
+ _A young lady._ You saw them pass?
+
+ _Señ._ Disconsolate.
+
+ _Young Lady._ O, to the river!
+
+ _Another._ Come!
+
+ [_They go off with Señora, lower left_]
+
+ _Her._ Now! [_Takes up two stones. Ziralay and Megario come out of
+ the house_] Oh! [_She drops the stones. They cross to her_]
+
+ _Meg._ You wait?
+
+ _Her._ I read the sentence.
+
+ _Zir._ Death.
+
+ _Her._ And when?
+
+ _Zir._ To-night. They've given Vardas charge
+ Of 't. He's an eager butcher,--does not know
+ Delay.
+
+ _Her._ You wished his death.
+
+ _Zir._ I voted no.
+ Megario laid my doubts.
+
+ _Her._ Did he do that?
+
+ _Zir._ He countered to their teeth.
+
+ _Her._ [_To Megario_] So merciful
+ Is hate?
+
+ _Meg._ The prince's death would mean the fall
+ Of Cordiaz, and our houses rock with his.
+
+ _Her._ Be clearer, pray you.
+
+ _Meg._ Vardas wants the throne,
+ And we've a sour and guilty faction here
+ Who'd see him on it, but they dare not move
+ Against a king yet rich in arms and friends.
+ And Hudibrand is not so absolute
+ That he may turn the army of Assaria
+ On the sole pivot of his word. For that,
+ Even he must knock the sleeping nation up
+ And ask good leave.
+
+ _Her._ You'd say, sir, Hudibrand
+ Would favor Vardas?
+
+ _Zir._ Short and plain, he does.
+
+ _Her._ What then?
+
+ _Meg._ The Assarians are proud, and where
+ They think their honor's pricked, their pride out-tops
+ Their judgment. Chartrien's death, whose ugly weight
+ Must lie with Cordiaz, will inflame their hearts
+ Till Hudibrand may send an army on us,
+ His people clapping to 't. In open day
+ They'll choose the road his cunning cut by night,
+ And pray him take it.
+
+ _Zir._ Ay, and where are we,
+ With Vardas crowned in Goldusan?
+
+ _Her._ I see.
+
+ _Meg._ He'd like my million acres in Peonia
+ Sliced for his foreign hounds!
+
+ [_Enter an officer_]
+
+ _Zir._ What trouble now?
+
+ _Off._ Prince Chartrien has escaped.
+
+ _Meg._ And you in charge?
+
+ _Off._ I sent him with good men, or so I thought,
+ Being pressed to another way----
+
+ _Meg._ His guards,--what name?
+
+ _Off._ Vinaldo, and a sergeant, who----
+
+ _Meg._ Vinaldo!
+ He's on the blue list, turning fast to black.
+ Did you not know it?
+
+ _Off._ I held him, sir, the pick
+ Of loyalty.
+
+ _Meg._ Well,--on. What else?
+
+ _Off._ They reached
+ The grove, passed in, and after prudent time,
+ The guards came out, smug as all right, and now
+ They're gone,--clear foot,--will doff you from the hills.
+
+ _Meg._ A tale for Vardas! You may save your beard,
+ But not your neck.
+
+ _Off._ I'll not shake yet. The prince
+ Is in the grove. We'll soon uncover him.
+
+ _Zir._ The walls are picketed?
+
+ _Off._ A double watch
+ Is on.
+
+ _Zir._ That's well enough.
+
+ _Off._ On chance he makes
+ The wall, I've reinforced the river guard.
+
+ _Meg._ Both sides?
+
+ _Off._ A close patrol, both east and west.
+ Though he had fishes' gills and dived the stream,
+ He'd not get by. That way is fast against him
+ As Belam's iron door.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Hernda_] You're ill?
+
+ _Her._ No, no!
+ I'm well--quite well.
+
+ _Meg._ The lily in your cheek
+ Lies not so bravely.
+
+ _Off._ [_To Ziralay_] If he gets out of this,
+ He'll steer around the moon. We'll find him, sir.
+ But he's most darkly hid. Has made a coat
+ Of leaves and plays the grouse trick on us.
+
+ _Zir._ Come!
+ His majesty must know. [_Ziralay and officer go into house_]
+
+ _Meg._ How may I help you? Let the service be
+ Of such poor nature as your dog might give,
+ And pride will whistle to it.
+
+ _Her._ O, my lord,
+ I half believe you. When our angels fall,
+ Then devils are not black. And I have lost
+ My father.
+
+ _Meg._ Devils! You've a tongue.
+
+ _Her._ Forgive
+ A heart unmantled, and too wild to choose
+ What word may veil it. I would say, my lord,
+ In this discolored world I now begin
+ To find you fair,----
+
+ _Meg._ O, heavenly retraction!
+
+ _Her._ And if I ask a service it will be
+ No paltry one, but such as makes the king
+ Bow to the knight.
+
+ _Meg._ I'll prove this grace
+ Is native in me, and not solely lent
+ Of your new bounty!
+
+ _Her._ Would you save the life
+ Of Chartrien?
+
+ _Meg._ I would. Though a treasonous tool
+ Of rebelry, he should be held by me
+ A prisoner of knightliest war.
+
+ _Her._ A prisoner!
+
+ _Meg._ You can not ask his freedom! That would give
+ My foes clear argument to pluck me bare,
+ And set me outlawed on the rebel side
+ Of this deplored division.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, not free!
+ And in your power!
+
+ _Meg._ To hold him prisoner,--that
+ I'd undertake, and make the action good
+ Even to this bloody council.
+
+ _Her._ You'd dare that?
+
+ _Meg._ My policy is open, and I'd dare
+ To put it into deed that must commend me
+ To their unwilling justice. To do more
+ Would disarray all sense,--be fullest like
+ The idiot's gesture that disrobes the wretch
+ Of his last sanity.
+
+ _Her._ Megario....
+
+ _Meg._ What secret is so dear these costly sighs,
+ Like gentle pickets ever reinforced,
+ Let it not pass?
+
+ _Her._ A secret? No!
+
+ _Meg._ But yes.
+ I push me by its fragile guardians,
+ And hear it beating in its citadel.
+
+ _Her._ What says it then?
+
+ _Meg._ You've seen the prince.
+
+ _Her._ My lord!
+
+ _Meg._ You know what shadow hides him.
+
+ _Her._ No, no, no!
+ My oath, sir, I've not seen him!
+
+ _Meg._ I would trust
+ One negative, not three. Give him to me,
+ And you will know he lives. Let him be found
+ By Vardas' men, and when you wake to-morrow
+ The earth will be without him.
+
+ _Her._ No, not you!
+ I'll go to Cordiaz. He'll save the prince
+ As he would save his throne. You've taught me that.
+
+ _Meg._ He'd lose it so. Should Cordiaz to-night
+ Set Chartrien free, he'd rise without a lord
+ To bid him one good-morrow.
+
+ _Her._ Ziralay....
+
+ _Meg._ Ask him? An ass whose ears if visible
+ Would signal Mars! Say he had courage for you,
+ He'd blunder with the prince to Vardas' arms.
+
+ _Her._ Ah, _you_ could do it,--set him free!
+
+ _Meg._ Nay--don't--
+ Don't ask it, if you've mercy! Your highness knows
+ I could not grant so much though lips I love
+ Above my soul should beg that treason of me.
+ Though they should take again those dearest words
+ That knighted me, and now lie in my heart
+ Like swelling seed of fortune! Let me shield
+ His life. In saintliest trust---- [_She shudders from him_]
+ You fear me so?
+
+ _Her._ I do! I do! You took away LeVal,
+ And he no longer lives.
+
+ _Meg._ He does! My oath,
+ He does!
+
+ _Her._ You spared him?
+
+ _Meg._ By my soul, he lives!
+ But let the word sleep in your vestal ear,
+ Until these smouldering troubles die to dust
+ And feed the grass above them. For the State
+ Believes LeVal is dead, nor taints me with
+ Such treacherous clemency. See how I lay
+ My safety and my honor in your hands?
+ I give them, hostages for Chartrien!
+ Ah, you should know how I will guard your trust,
+ For when I say to you he does not live,
+ Your eyes will slay the single, nurturing hope
+ Of my own life!
+
+ _Her._ [_Battling_] I can not! I'm not Fate
+ To do her awesome work.
+
+ _Meg._ We aid her most
+ With passive hand, as Chartrien's ghost will come
+ On mourning nights to tell you.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, I'll speak!...
+ No, no! Ah, never, never!
+
+ _Meg._ [_Resolute, giving up his suit_] I must join
+ The hunt. There's but one place--the cave----
+
+ _Her._ The cave!
+
+ _Meg._ Those guards are fools--or shy of water.
+
+ _Her._ Sir,
+ What cave?
+
+ _Meg._ He's there. Your cold, uncandid calm
+ Has babbled it. The frost is crafty that
+ Puts out such anxious fire.
+
+ _Her._ My lord, if I
+ Should tell you....
+
+ _Meg._ Quickly then! How canst debate
+ So fatally, knowing delay but robs him
+ Of venture's favor? Every moment steals
+ A bud of chance.
+
+ _Her._ How will you take him out?
+
+ _Meg._ I'll pass the gates unchallenged. Close without,
+ My car stands by,--a racer never spent,
+ And begs no pause. Know he is safe, and sleep.
+ Night will be secret, and we'll greet the sun
+ In my Peonia----
+
+ _Her._ Ah, Peonia's far!
+
+ _Meg._ And Vardas near.
+
+ _Her._ Take these two stones, my lord.
+ Cast them into the falls----
+
+ _Meg._ So! I was right!
+ But you must summon him.
+
+ _Her._ So soon a tyrant?
+
+ _Meg._ I'll take him from your hands,--no other way.
+ Your trust to me! And with my life I'll guard it!
+ For that you love him is my means to you.
+ Once in your heart, I'll win the throned place
+ Though all his saints defend it!
+
+ _Her._ True, my friend,
+ We shall be nearer, for anxiety
+ Will draw me to you with a longing like
+ The aching letch for morning in the eyes
+ Pain keeps astare. You then will be the goal
+ Of fondest question,--and from that--who knows?
+ Out of unbroken faith, and kindly shafts
+ 'Tween hearts disponent, bridges have been built
+ For love's plenipotence to cross.
+
+ _Meg._ You bid
+ Me hope?
+
+ _Her._ I do not say despair. Sometimes
+ A presto-worker sits within the soul
+ Of gratitude, and love that must give thanks
+ In name of one beloved, has then been known
+ To pass from the liege object to the heart
+ Whose compass held them both in selfless bounds
+ Of chivalry. And yet--I promise nothing!
+
+ _Meg._ I ask no promise but the one I find
+ In words that so deny it. Now the thought
+ Is born, I'll make the naked infant grow
+ Heir of my princely opportunity.
+ Go now. An instant may defeat us. Haste!
+ My purse must buy a guard.
+ [_Hernda goes off, upper right. Megario walks left and calls_]
+ Benito! Ho!
+ You and your fellow!
+ [_Enter two guards_]
+ I have work for you.
+ You've seen my gold before. Here's more of it.
+ Stand for my word.
+
+ [_Hernda returns with Chartrien_]
+
+ _Cha._ Gods give me time for one
+ Wild kiss! O, Heaven! To find and lose you in
+ One whirling breath!
+
+ _Meg._ [_His pistol at aim_] You are my prisoner.
+
+ [_Señora rushes on left_]
+
+ _Señ._ Oh, princess! Oh!
+
+ _Meg._ [_To guards_] Move on with him.
+
+ _Her._ Wait--wait----
+
+ _Meg._ No time.
+
+ _Her._ But I must tell----
+
+ _Cha._ Let fiends be dumb.
+ You damned and double traitress, this my hand
+ Could lay you dead!
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Hernda, who seems dazed_] My goddess, I'll be true!
+
+ [_Kisses her, and goes off, lower right, with Chartrien and
+ guards_]
+
+ _Señ._ You let him kiss you!
+
+ _Her._ Who?
+
+ _Señ._ Megario.
+
+ _Her._ I did not know it. I am dead, I think.
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT III
+
+
+SCENE: _A yard, walled and spiked, of Megario's hacienda. A long, low
+hut, the men's sleeping-quarters, at right. In upper centre, a smaller
+hut which serves for kitchen and also as sleeping-room for several
+women. On left, the yard continues, showing other huts used by families.
+The entrance gate is off stage, left. An unused gate, locked and barred
+in wall, right._
+
+_Hernda, in the guise of a young Maya woman known as Famette, stirs a
+pan of food which is heating on some coals in front of kitchen. Lissa
+stands in door of hut watching her._
+
+
+ _Lis._ [_Stepping out_] You mend, Famette. But when you came--all thumbs.
+ A woman grown and couldn't spoon up fish!
+
+ _Fam._ It was the smell. How can they eat it, Lissa?
+
+ _Lis._ You'll eat it too.
+
+ _Fam._ That? Never!
+
+ _Lis._ Another week
+ Will starve you to it.
+
+ [_Ysobel comes out of kitchen bearing apron full of cups and spoons
+ which she places on ground_]
+
+ _Yso._ [_Looking left_] Here's Masio in. [_Enters hut_]
+
+ _Lis._ He's always first.
+ [_Masio comes up left_] How did my boy get on?
+
+ _Mas._ I wasn't near him in the field.
+
+ _Lis._ He did
+ His stint?
+
+ _Mas._ I never heard.
+
+ _Lis._ No eyes, no ears,--
+ All belly, you!
+
+ _Mas._ [_Taking up spoon and cup from the pile_] Fish! fish!
+
+ _Lis._ Beans first. You know
+ The rules.
+
+ _Mas._ I've teeth can break 'em. Fish, Famette!
+ [_Famette puts fish into his cup_]
+ There'll be a blessed cleaning-up to-night.
+
+ _Lis._ More beating? Has the master come?
+
+ _Mas._ [_Nods_] And on
+ The rounds. He'll clear the yards. News from the north
+ Has turned him red and black.
+
+ _Fam._ A flogging? Oh,
+ If you were men you'd fight with your bare hands
+ Till you were free!
+
+ _Mas._ Free as the dead. Our blood
+ Would soak the earth and make more hennequin,--
+ That's all.
+
+ _Fam._ Then run away.
+
+ _Mas._ How far? The swamps?
+ To sleep with snakes--a week or less?
+
+ _Fam._ Across
+ The ridges.
+
+ _Mas._ Where the sun would lap you dry
+ As crackling cat-guts? Thirst would draw you in
+ To th' next hacienda well. The masters own
+ The water, and in this land, that's life.
+
+ _Fam._ No chance?
+ They never get away?
+
+ _Mas._ Sometimes a man
+ Makes Quito, but he soon comes back.
+
+ _Fam._ Comes back?
+
+ _Mas._ What else? In Quito there's no work. He starves.
+ And here--there's beans. So he gives up, and then
+ They send him back.
+
+ _Fam._ And he is flogged?
+
+ _Mas._ Ay, till
+ His bones crack.
+
+ _Fam._ Oh! He bears it?
+
+ _Mas._ Like a man,
+ My dear.
+
+ _Fam._ The coward!
+
+ _Mas._ So--back to the field,
+ Mute as a snail, and poorer too, for then
+ The dream is gone of any life but this.
+
+ _Fam._ They have no spirit--none!
+
+ _Mas._ Much as you'll have
+ This time next year.
+
+ _Fam._ Next year? I shall be gone.
+ My debt was just ten pesos.
+
+ _Mas._ [_Incredulous_] You were sold
+ For that?
+
+ _Fam._ I'll work it out.
+
+ _Mas._ Be 't ten or hundreds,
+ Who comes here stays. You'll soon know that, my bird,
+ And limber your fine neck.
+
+ [_As they talk, men and women enter in groups of scores and dozens
+ until there are several hundred in the yard. They are mostly of
+ mixed blood, their color ranging from the full brown of the Maya
+ to the pale olive of the Peonian aristocrat. At a spout, upper
+ left, they wash their hands, then drop about wearily. One man
+ sits near Famette, his head sunk on his chest. She lays her hand
+ on his shoulder_]
+
+ _Fam._ What, Garza, you?
+ Who were so blithe this morning, on your way
+ To freedom?
+
+ _Garza._ [_Rocking_] Mother of God! Oh, Mother of God!
+
+ _Fam._ What is it, Garza?
+
+ _Mas._ There you have it! You see
+ Who comes here stays.
+
+ _Fam._ But he was free! His friend
+ Brought twenty pesos to pay off his debt.
+
+ _Gonzalo._ And when he went to pay it, on the books
+ There stood two hundred pesos against Garza.
+
+ _Mas._ Two hundred--twenty,--you see, Famette,
+ How much a little "o" can do.
+
+ _Fam._ They dare
+ Do that? I'll see the magistrate! [_The men stare at her_]
+
+ _Mas._ [_Patting her shoulder_] Poor girl!
+
+ _Fam._ I will! Why not? What is he for?
+
+ _Gon._ What for?
+ To see we are well beaten when we ask
+ For justice. He must serve who pays him,--that's
+ The master.
+
+ _Fam._ Oh, you worse than slaves!
+
+ _Mas._ No names,
+ My proudling. Wait a year, then what you please.
+
+ [_The men have been eating. Ysobel stands in door of hut holding a
+ great bowl of beans from which the peons fill their cups. Lissa
+ gives out the fish. Her boy, Iduso, crouches by her skirts_]
+
+ _Lis._ [_To boy_] Not eat? Now you're a man? Twelve years to-day!
+
+ _Fam._ [_Bending over Iduso_] Is 't fever, Lissa?
+
+ _Lis._ [_With sullen jealousy_] Let him be, Famette.
+ What do you know? You've got no children.
+
+ _Fam._ I've
+ A little brother.
+
+ _Lis._ Brother! Nothing that.
+
+ _Fam._ He's just Iduso's age.
+
+ _Lis._ [_Softened_] And has to take
+ A man's work on him?
+
+ _Fam._ N-o----
+
+ _Lis._ I said it now.
+ What do you know? Look at your hands--not stumps
+ Like mine.
+
+ _Mas._ Who hugs the post to-night?
+
+ _Gon._ I heard
+ Of seven warned.
+
+ _Yso._ My man! He hasn't come!
+
+ _Mas._ God's mercy, give us peace! It was his turn
+ To put away the knives.
+
+ [_Ysobel leans against hut. Famette takes bowl from her_]
+
+ _Lis._ There's seven, you say?
+
+ _Ben._ None from this yard. Famette, you haven't seen
+ A flogging yet?
+
+ _Fam._ And never will, you beast!
+
+ _Ben._ Your never's short,--less than an hour.
+
+ _Fam._ What do you mean?
+
+ _Ben._ The whip draws blood to-night,
+ And we must all look on, for our soul's good.
+ It is the master's order.
+
+ _Fam._ I'll not go!
+
+ _Mas._ Why, God looks on, Famette, and so may we.
+ All Heaven sees it, and I'll pledge my--fish--
+ That not an angel blanches.
+
+ _Gon._ You should see
+ The master!
+
+ _Fam._ _He_ is there? Does _he_ look on?
+
+ _Mas._ O, not quite that. To eye the work
+ Would show too grossly, but you'll see him there,--
+ Somewhat aside, leaning against a yew,
+ Most carefully at ease. Then he will light
+ A delicate cigar that fills the grove
+ With a fantastic odor, like, we'll say,
+ Faint musk that creeps on burning pine.
+ You will approve the quality, Famette.
+ That is his signal.
+
+ _Fam._ Oh!
+
+ _Mas._ Long as he puffs,
+ And soft, white rings twirl upward to the leaves,
+ The lashes fall. And when, grown gently weary,
+ As 'twere half accident, from his high thoughts
+ Remote, he clears the cindered tip--like this--
+ The whip is still.
+
+ _Fam._ Where, where am I?
+
+ _Mas._ In hell,
+ Sweetheart.
+
+ _Fam._ Who are you, Masio? You are not
+ As these that suffer speechless.
+
+ _Mas._ Pinch the difference!
+ A little learning, and a few opinions
+ That brought me here.
+
+ _Fam._ [_Moving aside with him_] What did you do?
+
+ _Mas._ I spoke
+ The truth too near the ear of Cordiaz,
+ And there's no greater crime.
+
+ _Fam._ You are a prisoner?
+ But you're not guarded.
+
+ _Mas._ No, they leave me free,
+ In hope I'll run. Then they will shoot me down.
+ And you--what brought you here? Ten pesos
+ Could never buy you--nor a hundred either.
+
+ _Fam._ I mean to lead these men to join Bolderez:
+
+ _Mas._ What! Lead them out?
+
+ _Fam._ And you will help me do it.
+
+ _Mas._ Well, when I want to die. You're mad.
+ We're all
+ Sprats in a net. _You'll_ not get out, once let
+ The master see you. Better hide those eyes----
+
+ _Yso._ [_Running and catching Masio by the shoulder_]
+ You lied to me! You lied! They've got my Grija!
+ Down in the lower yard!
+
+ _Grija._ [_Entering and making his way to her_] No! Here I am.
+ Safe in, old tear-box.
+
+ _Yso._ Holy Mary!
+
+ [_Tells her beads rapidly as he leads her aside_]
+
+ _Fam._ [_Aroused_] Men!
+ If Osa looked from yonder mountain scarp,
+ Would she descend to lead such currish hearts
+ To liberty?
+
+ _Gon._ We are not dogs.
+
+ _Fam._ Then shame
+ To bear the life of dogs!
+
+ _Ben._ What do you know
+ Of Osa?
+
+ _Fam._ Know? Does she not guard the shrine
+ Cherished ten centuries in your secret hills?
+ Priestess and princess, daughter of your kings,--
+ The ancient poet kings who ruled and sang
+ In palaces where now your huddled huts
+ Give you a slave's foul shelter!
+
+ _A Voice._ Will she come?
+
+ _Fam._ To such as you? With heads hung down, and backs
+ Bared for the whip? The moment that you hold
+ Your manhood dearer than your life, she'll stand
+ Before you. Then you'll see----
+
+ _Mas._ For God's sake, hush!
+ The master!
+
+ _Ben._ [_As all look left_] No, it's Coquriez.
+
+ _Gon._ With his Gringo.
+
+ [_Coquriez enters with Chartrien. They cross right_]
+
+ _Cha._ Leave me alone.
+
+ _Coq._ My soul, am I not sick
+ Of your dumb lordship? Now the master's here,
+ I hope, by Jesu, that our ways will part.
+
+ [_Turns and joins the men, leaving Chartrien seated on the stone step
+ of one of the doors to the long hut, right. Megario enters unseen
+ and stands watching, left. They gradually become aware of his
+ presence, and all are silent_]
+
+ _Meg._ Coquriez!
+
+ _Coq._ [_Crossing left_] Here, sir!
+
+ [_The tension relaxes slightly. Lissa and Ysobel quietly distribute
+ food and the men eat in silence. Famette keeps in shadow, a shawl
+ over her head, and vainly tries to hear what Megario and Coquriez
+ are saying. They talk in low tones at left, then more centre,
+ front_]
+
+ _Coq._ Shoot the Gringo, sir?
+ I thought he was to live.
+
+ _Meg._ It must be done
+ To-morrow.
+
+ _Coq._ I'll do it.
+
+ _Meg._ Take him on the road,
+ And don't come back with him.
+
+ _Coq._ To-morrow, sir?
+
+ _Meg._ At day-break. Drop him cold. I was a fool
+ To let him live a day!
+ [_Famette has advanced too far and Megario sees her_]
+ Who's that?
+
+ _Coq._ There? Oh!
+ I bought her in last week.
+
+ _Meg._ The day I left?
+
+ _Coq._ I think 'twas then.
+
+ _Meg._ An old one,--so you said.
+
+ _Coq._ About the Gringo, sir,----
+
+ _Meg._ What is her name?
+
+ _Coq._ Famette.
+
+ [_Famette goes back to the women_]
+
+ _Meg._ A figure too.
+
+ _Coq._ It's not so easy
+ To drop a white-skin----
+
+ _Meg._ Come, Famette! Come here.
+ [_She turns and comes slowly_]
+ Old? By the gods! Why did you lie to me?
+
+ _Coq._ My lord ... you like none past fourteen.
+ She's that
+ Half over.
+
+ _Meg._ Brazen devil! Come, Famette.
+ I like your name. I like your face too, girl.
+ Don't be afraid. Show me your eyes. You won't?
+ Where have I seen you?
+
+ _Fam._ I'm a stranger, sir.
+ My home was in the north.
+
+ _Meg._ That fester-spot!
+ A stranger? Then we must be good to you.
+ Where do you sleep?
+
+ _Fam._ There, in the hut.
+
+ _Meg._ You'll have
+ A better soon. Next time I'll see your eyes. [_Going_]
+ Mind, Coquriez, to-morrow! Do that well,
+ I'll pardon this. [_Exit_]
+
+ _Fam._ What is 't you do to-morrow?
+ And why do you need pardon? You who serve
+ So well?
+
+ _Coq._ My pretty bird, I've been too slow.
+
+ _Fam._ Too slow?
+
+ _Coq._ I've limped, and lost.
+
+ _Fam._ Ah, Coquriez!
+
+ _Coq._ You're not afraid of _me_. You look at me,
+ And turned from him. That's honey on his curse!
+
+ _Fam._ He curses you? And you do all for him!
+ All that he asks you,--things he dares not do
+ With his own hand.
+
+ _Coq._ You care for that?
+
+ _Fam._ You risk
+ Your soul, perhaps,----
+
+ _Coq._ 'Tis certain. Pray for me,
+ Chiquita.
+
+ _Fam._ When?
+
+ _Coq._ To-morrow I must leave
+ The Gringo in the marshes.
+
+ _Fam._ Oh, 'twas that!
+ And paid with curses----
+
+ _Lis._ [_Calls, as a new batch of men come in_]
+ Come, Famette! Here's work!
+
+ _Fam._ We'll talk again. [_Hurries to Lissa_]
+
+ _A man._ The beans are cold.
+
+ _Another._ Soured too!
+ Gray Moses, here's a life!
+
+ _Mas._ Do you complain,
+ O, comrades? Now your hour is come? The pearl
+ O' the long ungarnished day? The holy hour
+ Of--beans? Why, think! What do we live for, men?
+ For sweaty moments battling 'gainst the sun
+ To strip the thorny hennequin? For nights
+ Of bitten sleep in unwashed pens? Not so.
+ Lift up your cups! Here is the crown of toil!
+ Each day we reach our life's supremest dome,
+ And know we're there! Can man ask more? Even kings,
+ Though the gold frontal of munificence
+ Is bowed before them, yet must fretting guess
+ The morrow's store. But we, my friends, we know!
+ Then let each separate and distinct legume,
+ Dear as the Egyptian treasure lost in wine,
+ Delay as preciously----
+
+ _Coq._ [_Cutting him across shoulders_]
+ Come down from that!
+ There's more for you, my friend, i' the lower yard.
+ I'll tie you up.
+
+ _Fam._ O, Coquriez, let him go.
+ _You_ should not care. His tongue was born with him,
+ And God may mend it. Let the fool alone.
+
+ _Coq._ Hmm, if you ask me----
+
+ _Fam._ Thank you, Coquriez.
+ I'll stand for him he'll not offend again.
+
+ _Mas._ My tongue is glue. 'Twill stick to its place.
+
+ _A man._ Fish! fish!
+
+ _Another._ He's had his share.
+
+ _The man._ Not half a cup!
+ O, Jesu, I am starved. I did my stint,
+ And helped the boy, Famette. Can I do that
+ On half a cup?
+
+ _Fam._ No, Berto, here is more.
+
+ _Yso._ The Gringo does not eat.
+
+ _Fam._ I'll take him this.
+
+ [_Fills cup from bowl of beans and goes to Chartrien, who is still
+ seated on the step, listless and observing nothing_]
+
+ _Fam._ Señor?
+
+ _Cha._ Who spoke? O, you, Famette? No, thanks.
+ I can not eat. [_Turns from her_] That's twice I've heard the voice
+ Of Hernda. Madness creeps, but surely comes.
+
+ _Fam._ [_Over his shoulder_] You must escape to-night.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Facing her_] Escape? To-night?
+
+ _Fam._ Here, hold the cup, and eat. Do, sir! We're watched.
+ To-morrow Coquriez leads you to the woods,
+ Comes back alone----
+
+ _Cha._ At last I know my hour.
+
+ _Fam._ But you shall live. Last night I worked till day
+ At that locked gate. 'Tis open. None suspects.
+ Outside there's water in a flask, and bread,--
+ Beneath the cactus at the left----
+
+ _Cha._ But how
+ Get out? I am locked in at night, and watched
+ At other hours.
+
+ _Fam._ Eat, eat, and listen, Señor!
+ To-night a flogging in the lower yard
+ Will empty this. You'll go with Coquriez.
+ Urge him to bring you back. Say you are ill,--
+ For that you are,--and come. Here I shall hide,
+ And as you pass, will suddenly step out
+ And speak to Coquriez. You fall behind,
+ In shadow of my hut, move round it, wait
+ This side, then see what's next to do.
+
+ _A man._ [_Calling_] Famette?
+ Where is Famette? She doesn't count the beans.
+
+ [_Famette goes back to the men_]
+
+ _Cha._ It is a lure. If I attempt escape,
+ Then Coquriez shoots me dead, his soul just clear
+ Of murder.
+
+ _Coq._ [_To Famette_] Our Gringo's learned to eat, I see.
+
+ _Cha._ Now do they change confederate nods, and gaze
+ Their mated thoughts. Down, down to dust, my heart!
+ The struggle's off. I'll fight no more. Yon stars
+ Have rest for me. Is 't so? Vain footing there.
+ What rest have they, that share with man the surge
+ From life to life? There Jupiters unfound
+ Whirl cooling till their straining sides may bear
+ Ocean and land and clinging bride of green;
+ And Saturns, nameless yet, cast travailing
+ Their ringed refulgence. Not the frozen moons
+ May fix in stillness, but sweep captive back
+ To flaming centres when their planets call.
+ There old, dead suns, that think their work is done,
+ Meet crashing, ground to cloudy fire whose worlds,
+ Far driven, traverse time and know men's days.
+ Ay, one may go beyond the ether's breath,
+ Farthest of all, to be another First,
+ Undreaming this our God. And I must shift
+ Eternal and unresting as those suns.
+ Then let Death hasten. He shall be as one
+ Who timely strips a wrestler of his cloak,
+ And, kindly freed, I shall uncumbered leap
+ To other battle, finding armor where
+ I find my cause.
+
+ _A man._ [_To Famette_] My turn. Here, give me that.
+
+ _Fam._ The Gringo's had no fish.
+
+ _The man._ Then give me his.
+ He doesn't care. Has run already from
+ The smell.
+
+ _Fam._ I'll give you half. The rest
+ I'll take to him.
+
+ _Coq._ He'll come for what he wants.
+
+ _Fam._ No, he is sick, poor devil! [_Goes to Chartrien_]
+
+ _Coq._ Humph!
+
+ _Fam._ [_To Chartrien_] You'll take
+ The chance? There is no other.
+
+ _Cha._ It's a trap.
+ You risk your life for me, a Gringo? No.
+
+ _Fam._ You must believe me! Oh, what can I say!
+
+ _Cha._ Say nothing. Go.
+
+ _Fam._ I love you, love you, Señor!
+
+ _Cha._ You would persuade me.
+
+ _Fam._ Sir, the wine you found
+ Behind your prison door,--and good, clean bread,--
+ I put them there!
+
+ _Cha._ 'Twas you, Famette? I thought
+ That Coquriez did it,--feared I'd die before
+ The master came.
+
+ _Fam._ Not his brute heart! And then
+ That night, of fever----
+
+ _Cha._ Yes! What then?
+
+ _Fam._ I lay
+ Outside your jail, my head against the wall,
+ That I might hear if once you groaned, or know
+ If sleep had come.
+
+ _Cha._ Can such love be for me?
+
+ _Fam._ You must--you _must_ believe me!
+
+ _Cha._ God, your eyes!
+ [_She lowers her head_]
+ ... 'Tis madness, bred of these sun-poisoned days,
+ And nights without a hope.... Look up, Famette.
+ I do believe you.
+
+ _Fam._ [_Kissing her rosary_] Mother, adored and blessed!
+
+ _Cha._ Wilt be a beggar soldier's bride, Famette?
+
+ _Fam._ You do not love me, Señor.
+
+ _Cha._ But I love
+ Your gentle heart that warms mine empty,--love
+ Your eyes, like memories burning,--and your voice
+ That's linked to an old wound in me,--but most
+ I love your soul that is as great as truth
+ And strong as sacrifice. You'll come to me
+ In Quito, if I make escape? I'll find
+ A way to bring you out----
+
+ _Fam._ You're mine?
+
+ _Cha._ Till death.
+
+ _Fam._ And after that?
+
+ _Cha._ I'll give you truth for truth.
+ Beyond this world I hope to meet a soul
+ Who did not walk in this, but ought to have,
+ For here her body dwelt. This side of death,
+ My life--a bitter one, that only you
+ Have sweetened--is your own, if you will have
+ So mean a gift.
+
+ [_Ipparro has entered the yard and becomes a centre of altercation.
+ He starts out taking Lissa's boy, Iduso. There is a shriek from
+ Lissa, and Famette hurries to her_]
+
+ _Lis._ My boy! My little one!
+ God strike you dead, Ipparro!
+
+ _Fam._ You'll not flog
+ The boy?
+
+ _Ipp._ He didn't do his stint by half.
+ You know the master's rules. He's twelve years old.
+ Must cut three thousand leaves.
+
+ _Fam._ A man's full work.
+ And he's so small.
+
+ _Lis._ And sick he is. Two days
+ He couldn't eat.
+
+ _Ipp._ You women!
+
+ _Fam._ Let him go.
+ A little child, Ipparro.
+
+ _Ipp._ Let him go?
+ Am I the master of the hacienda?
+ He'll tie _me_ up to-morrow!
+
+ _Fam._ It will kill
+ Iduso.
+
+ _Lis._ Such a little one, he is!
+ A baby yesterday,--to-day a man,--
+ How can that be?
+
+ [_An overseer enters left_]
+
+ _Overseer._ What's up? Come on with you!
+ The master waits,--burns like perdition! Come!
+ Come, all of you! The women too! Clear out!
+
+ [_Drives them out. Famette slips into her hut. Chartrien joins the men
+ and follows last with Coquriez. They stop left_]
+
+ _Coq._ Won't see the show?
+
+ _Cha._ I'll not go on.
+
+ _Coq._ Come then.
+ I'll lock you up. [_They turn back_]
+ We'll have an early march
+ To-morrow, mate. Must hit the brush by dawn.
+ There's little sleep for me.
+
+ _Cha._ Shall I have more
+ In that hot pen?
+
+ _Coq._ [_Laughs_] You'll make it up, I guess.
+
+ _Cha._ I understand. You'll murder me.
+
+ _Coq._ My soul!
+ Let's keep our manners, though we sit in hell,
+ My occupation's decent, nothing said.
+ The silent deed is clean, but mouth it once,
+ The hands will smell. Pah!
+ [_Famette steps out of hut_]
+ Here's my kitten!
+ A kiss, my honey-pot!
+
+ _Fam._ I've better for you.
+
+ [_Gives him a bottle of wine_]
+
+ _Coq._ My ducky! From the master's cellar!
+ ... How----
+
+ _Fam._ No matter. It is good.
+
+ _Coq._ Thief of my soul,
+ A kiss!
+
+ [_As he attempts to embrace her she springs back, pointing left_]
+
+ _Fam._ Look, look! He's gone! The Gringo flies!
+ O, Coquriez, you'll be shot!
+
+ _Coq._ [_Stunned for a moment, springs off shouting_]
+ Help! Stop him! Help! [_Exit left, firing his pistol_]
+ The Gringo! Stop him!
+
+ [_Famette runs to gate right, where Chartrien is removing bar_]
+
+ _Cha._ Come! Fly with me! Now!
+ I can not leave you here!
+
+ _Fam._ Go! Do not stop,
+ However weary, till you're safe in Quito.
+ The wounded hare, remember, takes no nap.
+
+ _Cha._ Come, come!
+
+ _Fam._ No, I am safe. And there's more work
+ For me. They'll come back here to search. Nay, go!
+ Another moment and we both shall die!
+
+ _Cha._ [_Kissing her_] I'll wait in Quito,--then a husband's kiss!
+
+ [_Goes. Famette puts up bar, then returns to her hut and sinks at
+ door_]
+
+ _Fam._ If I could pray! If I could pray! How far
+ Seems that old God I knew! A playhouse God
+ Who never saw the world! [_Leaps up_]
+ They're coming back!
+
+ [_Sits again, abjectly, her shawl over her head. Megario, Coquriez,
+ and peons, enter_]
+
+ _Meg._ Where is the woman?
+
+ _Coq._ There she sits,--the witch!
+
+ _Meg._ Stand up! Take off that shawl!
+
+ [_Famette stands up. A man snatches the shawl from her head_]
+
+ _Meg._ Famette! Not you?
+
+ _Fam._ [_Cowering_] I, master.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To men_] Search the yard. Turn every leaf
+ And stone.
+
+ [_The men scatter_]
+
+ _Mas._ I'll give that gate a look. [_Crosses to gate right_]
+
+ _Meg._ This was
+ Your drooping modesty! [_Turns on Coquriez_]
+ You fool!--to let
+ The man escape! By Heaven, you might have burnt
+ The hacienda down and not have made
+ My blood so hot!
+
+ _Coq._ It was the woman, sir.
+ She jumped before me, smiling like a devil,
+ And when I tried to pass she caught my knees
+ And held this thing up, saying 'twas for me.
+ I kicked her off----
+
+ _Meg._ No doubt!
+
+ _Coq._ And when I turned
+ The prisoner was gone.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Famette_] You saw him go?
+
+ _Fam._ Yes, master. Through the gate, like wings. And then
+ I gave the warning. Coquriez knows I did.
+
+ _Meg._ What did she say?
+
+ _Coq._ She cried "The Gringo flies!"
+ And pointed there.
+
+ _Mas._ [_Returning_] The upper gate is fast.
+ He went that way. [_Nods left_] Beneath the cypresses
+ Into the maguey fields.
+
+ _A man._ He'll not get far.
+ He has no water.
+
+ _Meg._ He will die in th' brush,
+ And I shall never know it. Alive or dead,
+ He must be found. I'll flog a man a day,
+ Until I see his bones.
+
+ _Gon._ [_Coming up_] He is not here.
+ We've looked in all the huts.
+
+ _Meg._ Ipparro?
+
+ _Ipp._ Sir!
+
+ _Meg._ Send men abroad, for fifty miles about,
+ To put the haciendas on the watch.
+ He must come in for water. Choose good men,
+ Who _ride_, and see no wenches by the way.
+
+ _Coq._ My lord, I've served you long----
+
+ _Meg._ Too long, you hound!
+ Where is your lady's token?
+
+ _Coq._ This, my lord.
+ She thrust it in my hand.
+
+ _Meg._ And left it too!
+
+ _Coq._ I knew 'twas yours.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Famette_] A thief too, are you?
+
+ [_Famette crouches, drawing shawl over her head_]
+
+ _Meg._ True,
+ Coquriez, you have served me long. I'll add
+ You've served me well until to-night.
+
+ _Coq._ O, pardon!
+
+ _Meg._ I trusted you. And held your hand as mine,
+ To make my wishes deeds.
+
+ _Coq._ 'Tis sworn your own!
+
+ _Meg._ Then prove it. Take this whip. Come, take it, man!
+ Now flog that witch.
+
+ _Coq._ Famette! A woman, sir?
+
+ _Meg._ The devil's second name is woman. Do it!
+
+ _Coq._ A heavy hand I've laid on men, my lord,
+ But never yet----
+
+ _Meg._ Her smile struck deep to make
+ Such putty of your heart.
+ [_Coquriez drops whip_] Pick up that whip!
+ _You_ want its kisses, do you? Pick it up,
+ Or you shall feel them to your traitor bones!
+ I'll have you flogged together!
+
+ [_Coquriez slowly picks up whip. Famette rises, throwing off her
+ shawl_]
+
+ _Fam._ Hear me, men!
+ For men you are,--not beasts. Your hands are strong
+ In ceaseless toil. Day after day you pile
+ Your master's wealth more high. Day after day
+ You sweat your way a little nearer death,
+ That he may kick your bodies from his path
+ And set your graves in hennequin. But know
+ Who toils may fight! The hand that lifts a spade
+ May bear a sword. The strength you give to him,
+ Use for yourselves. Your master is one man,
+ You are five hundred----
+
+ _Meg._ Gods! I'll stop your mouth!
+ You men there--go--you dozen at the gate--
+ Go to the dry-yard--load your backs with fibre--
+ And bring it here!
+ [_Men go out_]
+ I'll teach you now, you slaves!
+ You are five hundred--yes--and I am one,
+ But in me is the might of Goldusan!
+ The power of Cordiaz is in my whip,
+ And back of that is iron Hudibrand!
+ Kill me to-night, to-morrow you shall die,
+ Each dog of you,--you know it!
+ [_Men come in with fibre_]
+ Throw the stuff
+ Against the hut. There, pile it up. More, more!
+ Now, Coquriez, the gentle, you've refused
+ To ruffle your fond dove,--here's sweeter work,
+ And for no hand but yours. Put her within,
+ Then fire the hut. [_Utter silence_]
+ What terror's on you, beasts?
+
+ _Coq._ In God's name, sir, you dare not!
+
+ _Meg._ In the name
+ Of all who know how power is kept, I dare!
+ Move there, you dog!
+ [_Coquriez stands motionless_]
+ Do you refuse again?
+ Then ... in your heart. [_Shoots. Coquriez falls dead_]
+ Who'll be the next to stand on feet of lead
+ When I say "Do?" Gonzalo! Garza! Out!
+
+ [_The men do not move. Megario lifts his pistol_]
+
+ _Fam._ Spare them, Megario. I'll go in.
+
+ [_Enters hut, closing door_]
+
+ _Meg._ [_Trembling_] That voice!
+ Who is this woman? Speak! Who knows? I've heard....
+ Bah! I'm a fool!... Take up that lantern there,
+ Gonzalo. Break it on the fibre. Move!
+
+ [_He stands with his weapon drawn. The door of the hut in thrown
+ open and Famette appears. She wears a rich robe, gleaming white,
+ with blue and gold cabalistic broidery. In her hand is a sceptre,
+ on her head a crown with a single star. The men, with cries of
+ "Osa! Osa!" fall upon their knees, foreheads to ground, then leap
+ up, changed, and glaring. They seem ready to spring upon Megario_]
+
+ _Fam._ Shoot now, Megario! [_Silence_]
+ You dare not do it!
+ Kill me,--kill one of them,--shoot till your weapon
+ Pants its last murder, and a hundred hands
+ Will tear you limb from limb and bone from bone,
+ Till every separate shred of you be cast
+ To its own devil! Shoot, Megario!
+ [_His hand falls. Famette steps into the yard_]
+ Where are the masters who can help you now?
+ The mighty ones who know how power is kept?
+ Look on these men. Their blood sings as it sang
+ Through centuries gone,--with courage that was theirs
+ Ere ships came up like night on this doomed coast
+ Unloading hell!
+
+ _Meg._ Who are you, woman? Who?
+
+ _Fam._ The spirit of these people, absent long,
+ But come at last to be their hearts' old fire.
+ Four hundred years you've trampled on their bodies,
+ But see--look in their eyes--you have not slain
+ Their God.
+
+ _Meg._ Your name! Who are you?
+
+ _Fam._ Riven hills
+ May hide the shrine of long unsceptred kings,
+ And keep their royal secret year by year.
+
+ _Voices._ Hail, Osa! Osa, queen!
+
+ _Meg._ What do you want?
+
+ _Fam._ Three things, Megario.
+
+ _Meg._ What are they?
+
+ _Fam._ First,--
+ That I may pass from here, free as I came,
+ With every soul that will go out with me.
+
+ _Meg._ The way is open. Go.
+
+ _Fam._ And you with us.
+ Far as the coast, where willing transport waits
+ To bear us northward. Then you may go free.
+ [_Turns to the people_]
+ There brothers wait you, men,--there freedom's tongue
+ Is beacon fire. The whole of northland sings,
+ A canticle of flame. You'll go with me?
+
+ _Mas._ [_Loudly_] We'll follow Osa!
+
+ _Voices._ Osa! Osa! On!
+
+ _Fam._ Gonzalo, choose you men, a thrifty score,
+ To fill the water-jars and get us food
+ From the hacienda stores.
+ [_Gonzales passes out, men following at his signal_]
+ The third demand,
+ Megario, is this. That key you belt
+ So close--
+ [_Megario claps hand on key_]
+ Yes, that,--it must be mine, to unlock
+ A dungeon here and free a prisoner
+ Whom you for love of torture keep alive.
+
+ _Meg._ No, that's a lie.
+
+ _Fam._ Deny it to the stars
+ That saw you yesternight steal up like crime
+ To a dark grating, saw you gloat, and fling
+ The crumbs that will not let your victim die,
+ Though scarce they give him life.
+
+ _Meg._ [_Gasping_] A lie!
+
+ _Fam._ The key,
+ Megario.
+
+ _Meg._ I will not----
+
+ _Fam._ In my hand!
+ [_Megario takes key from his belt and hands it to her_]
+ I thank thee, God, my hand may turn the key
+ That frees Rejan LeVal! Now forward, men!
+ O, glorious to be men! Ipparro, walk
+ Beside our prisoner. Garza, be his aid.
+ Two days of marching, then the friendly sea.
+ And if you toil again amid these fields,
+ You'll take the fruit. On!
+
+ _Men._ Osa! To the sea!
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT IV
+
+
+SCENE: _The Grove of Peace, as in second act. Late afternoon. Two
+officers meet as curtain rises._
+
+
+ _First Off._ So Cordiaz is fallen.
+
+ _Second Off._ Joggled down
+ At last, poor man!
+
+ _First Off._ When all the ghosts he made
+ Come back to weep his fall, I'll swell the flood
+ With half a tear, no more.
+
+ _Second Off._ Then you're for Vardas?
+
+ _First Off._ By glory, no! He'll open Goldusan
+ To every thief that knocks.
+
+ _Second Off._ Trust Hudibrand
+ To guard the door. Till he has plucked the goose,--
+ Then they may shave it for their part.
+
+ _First Off._ So, friend?
+
+ _Second Off._ Phut! Goldusan's his box of snuff--held so--
+ And as he pleases, tchew!--'tis empty.
+
+ _First Off._ Come,
+ I'll walk your way. [_They move, right_]
+ What of this truce? Goes 't deep?
+
+ _Second Off._ As flattery may plough. It is our croon
+ Of compliment to our new-seated king.
+
+ _First Off._ Nay, president. We're a republic now.
+
+ _Second Off._ Spell 't king or president, it means the same.
+
+ _First Off._ But with Bolderez ours, the truce should last.
+
+ _Second Off._ Why, 't may, till night. Bolderez, friend,
+ Is not the revolution.
+
+ _First Off._ He's the heft of 't,
+ And's made a full surrender.
+
+ _Second Off._ Made his terms!
+ His officers are guardians of the State,
+ And he--he's stallion of the court, submits
+ To curb and comb that he may prouder prance
+ And keep the herd at stare. Surrender? Lord!
+ I think it!
+
+ [_Enter Third Officer, from left_]
+
+ _Third Off._ What's stirring, friends?
+
+ _Second Off._ Sleep-walkers.
+
+ _Third Off._ Ay,
+ This amnesty makes idlers.
+
+ _Second Off._ So to-day,
+ But work brews for to-morrow.
+
+ _Third Off._ You've a secret,
+ And I've a guess that picks the lock to 't.
+
+ _Second Off._ Come!
+ These leaves are listeners.
+
+ [_They go off, lower right. Enter by path upper right, Señora Ziralay
+ and Guildamour_]
+
+ _Gui._ To find you here
+ Makes my best hope a sluggard, far outgone
+ By th' dear event.
+
+ _Señ._ I came five days ago,
+ The princess with me, here to wait return
+ Of Hudibrand. That you have come with him,
+ Makes sober welcome blithe.
+
+ _Gui._ He's slack in health.
+
+ _Señ._ That's written plain.
+
+ _Gui._ What iron's in the man
+ That he yet lives?
+
+ _Señ._ He's been in conclave?
+
+ _Gui._ Yes.
+ Five nights he routed sleep from th' drowsy synod,
+ And hung upon us turning every flank,
+ Till Protest paled and Patience bled at heart.
+
+ _Señ._ And at the end?
+
+ _Gui._ He held our sealèd bonds,
+ And Vardas sat secure.
+
+ _Señ._ The bonds? We own
+ Our railways now?
+
+ _Gui._ We do. And Hudibrand
+ Owns us,--that is, the bonds. A good, stout noose
+ For a nation's neck.
+
+ _Señ._ And all these days he's been
+ In th' capital?
+
+ _Gui._ In closest session, though
+ A stage-fed rumor held that he was gone
+ From Goldusan. The harried people fear
+ Assarian power, and on the jealous watch,
+ Keep Hudibrand in burrow.
+
+ _Señ._ He's gay-blown
+ With confidence. I hear from Ziralay
+ He made a careless peace with all the friends
+ Of tottering Cordiaz.
+
+ _Gui._ That carelessness
+ Was sea-deep cunning. Favors will go high,
+ They'll find. Megario gave full half his lands
+ For place in th' Cabinet.
+
+ _Señ._ Megario moved
+ In blaze of censure, and did well to escape
+ Singed of but half his goods. Two prisoners lost----
+
+ _Gui._ Ah, Chartrien and....
+
+ _Señ._ Rejan!
+
+ _Gui._ Be guarded here.
+ Fate rustles at that name.
+
+ _Señ._ O, Guildamour,
+ Fear is the silent warder that divides
+ Our secret hearts. Give it the tongue of daring,
+ And like a blest interpreter 'twill bring
+ Our hopes together.
+
+ _Gui._ There is stir within.
+ Come from these walls, Señora. And if your hope
+ Is on the road with mine, I've news will make
+ The wayside sing. Winds gather here and yon
+ That may out-swagger even Hudibrand.
+
+ [_They go back along cascade path, as Hudibrand, Diraz, Mazaran, and
+ Golifet come out of house_]
+
+ _Gol._ [_Holding up letter_] Nay, fearless majesty might take more note
+ Of this despatch.
+
+ _Hud._ That beggar's mewl?
+
+ _Gol._ There's power
+ In every word. LeVal must harbor strength
+ We do not know of.
+
+ _Hud._ Tush! That is the vaunt
+ Of weakness, not of power.
+
+ _Maz._ What is 't he says?
+
+ _Gol._ Avers him free of this imposèd truce,
+ And gives a fair foe's warning he'll attack
+ Whene'er and how he can.
+
+ _Maz._ Well bragged.
+
+ _Dir._ His guns,
+ No doubt, are cooler than his pen.
+
+ _Maz._ What more?
+
+ _Gol._ Repudiates Bolderez, and declares
+ Himself the head of the Insurrectionists,
+ Sole authorized to speak and treat for them.
+ My lord, what shall I answer?
+
+ _Hud._ Answer? Humph!
+ Treat with a rag-pole? We'll not sag to that.
+
+ [_Re-enter, right, Señora and Guildamour_]
+
+ _Hud._ My dear Señora, is our freakish daughter
+ In hiding from us? We've not had her greeting.
+
+ _Señ._ She knew you close engaged, my lord, and left
+ The hour to you. I'll tell her of your pleasure.
+
+ _Hud._ My steps are yours. [_To his companions_]
+ Each where he would, my friends.
+ [_Goes in with Señora_]
+
+ _Dir._ I'm for a swim.
+
+ _Gol._ And I.
+
+ _Maz._ The river? With you!
+
+ _Gol._ [_Leading left_] Bolderez' men are gathering opposite,
+ Behind the river woods.
+
+ _Maz._ The pick of camps.
+
+ _Gol._ They know it too. There's water, and the trees
+ Are cool and friendly.
+
+ _Dir._ Was it not resolved
+ Bolderez' men should join the Federal Guards?
+
+ _Gol._ They do, in th' main. This is a straggling wing
+ Left in the hills, that we have given leave
+ To station here.
+
+ _Dir._ That's prudence too.
+
+ _Maz._ Why so?
+
+ _Dir._ I'm windward of a whisper.
+
+ _Gol._ About LeVal?
+
+ _Dir._ He's circling in. Let Hudibrand laugh low
+ Or the enemy will hear him.
+
+ _Gol._ This LeVal
+ Was dead and buried,--three months out of life,--
+ Shook from remembrance as the stalest clutter,--
+ Now, save our eyes, he's jumped alive and rides
+ Our foremost thought! Enough to send a man
+ Back to his marrows. I shall pray to-night.
+
+ _Maz._ A plunge for resolution! That will cool it.
+
+ [_Exeunt lower left. Señora comes out of house and crosses to seat,
+ right_]
+
+ _Señ._ 'Tis five o'clock. No sign! But he will come.
+ He comes!
+
+ [_Enter Chartrien, lower right. They meet silently and clasp
+ hands_]
+
+ _Cha._ My friend! I thought you far from here.
+ Safe in the capital. But nothing's strange
+ To those who've moved mid miracles. You've seen
+ LeVal?
+
+ _Señ._ I have.
+
+ _Cha._ I long to greet him. O,
+ Such walking of the dead renews the earth
+ And makes it habitable! I have heard
+ It was Famette who saved him,--added that
+ To array of deeds that must unlaurel all
+ The heroines of time.
+
+ _Señ._ There'll be an hour
+ To talk of that. Now you must see the princess.
+
+ _Cha._ Hernda is with you? _Here!_
+
+ _Señ._ And Hudibrand.
+ No danger there. He wants you now, and says
+ You'll find good grass if you will leap the stile.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Answering her smile_] So blind as that? Poor mole,
+ he's been in th' ground
+ Too long. Will never get his eyes.
+
+ _Señ._ Ay, he'll
+ Deny the sun till 't bakes him in his burrow.
+ But Hernda,--O, what welcome waits you, friend!
+ The ivory-crusted temple, shut and sealed
+ To eternal airs, is now a fane of rose,
+ Whose cloistral stairs, that wound so futilely,
+ Will now through fragrant twilight lead you up
+ To windowed Heaven. Come! Come, take your own!
+
+ _Cha._ No! Wait....
+
+ _Señ._ A lover speaks that word?
+
+ _Cha._ Señora,----
+
+ _Señ._ That wound she gave you here is open yet?
+ But you were wrong, and with your wretched doubts
+ Assailed her in the hour she lay on rack
+ To save you.
+
+ _Cha._ On rack for me? She gave me up.
+ Gave me to him,--Megario,--knowing that
+ Meant death.
+
+ _Señ._ And yet you live.
+
+ _Cha._ I--?
+
+ _Señ._ Live. Do you not know
+ You were to die that night?
+
+ _Cha._ I've heard.
+
+ _Señ._ Those hours
+ She gained for you meant life.
+
+ _Cha._ She gained for me?
+ I saw his lips on hers.
+
+ _Señ._ You did. And I--
+ I saw her face. The dead are warmer. She
+ Could bear that touch for your sake, and on that
+ Bore too your curse.
+
+ _Cha._ For me? I'll hear no more,
+ Señora.
+
+ _Señ._ You will see her now?
+
+ _Cha._ Not now,
+ Nor ever. I am here by pledge, to meet--
+ A friend.
+
+ [_Masio enters lower right_]
+
+ _Señ._ Is this--the man?
+
+ _Cha._ No, but I know him.
+ He's seeking me, I think.
+
+ _Señ._ I'll leave you then.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Seizing her hands_] Nothing to Hernda!
+
+ _Señ._ Nothing. You and she
+ For what may come. [_Goes in_]
+
+ _Cha._ You, Masio? From Famette?
+
+ _Mas._ No, from the camp.
+
+ _Cha._ The camp! But she is there?
+
+ _Mas._ That's guessing, sir. There's fernseed on her wings.
+ She flits invisible, then bat your eyes
+ You see her.
+
+ _Cha._ I've her word she'd meet me here.
+
+ _Mas._ Queer place. You come from Quito?
+
+ _Cha._ Yes. 'Twas there
+ I had her letter making this strange tryst.
+ I've travelled from that hour. Famette has left
+ Her name upon the air, and all the way
+ I heard it.
+
+ _Mas._ She's the bird of courage, dares
+ Go far as our LeVal himself. But here's
+ What brought me, sir. [_Gives Chartrien a letter_]
+ 'Tis from LeVal.
+
+ _Cha._ His hand!
+ His living hand! [_Reads, pales, and stands silent_]
+
+ _Mas._ Bad, sir?
+
+ _Cha._ No, good. 'Tis good.
+
+ _Mas._ Then I'll be off. My head's no show variety,
+ But I'd not trust it long in th' grove of Peace.
+ We'll see you soon in camp?
+
+ _Cha._ To-night, I hope.
+ Famette holds key to that.
+
+ _Mas._ The first star bring you! [_Exit_]
+
+ _Cha._ [_Reads letter_] _When you see the princess Hernda, kiss for
+ me the hand that gave me freedom. It was she unlocked my dungeon and
+ nursed my bones to life. What I am is hers, and therefore yours._
+ _Le Val._
+
+ Hast grown so spent, O Fortune, that one stroke
+ Must deal both death and life?--with hand that parts
+ The night, show too my rainbow loss?.... All, all
+ My future sold to the gray usurer Grief,
+ Who gathers up as sapped and withered leaves
+ Time's unimagined buds! No eve, no dawn
+ With Hernda! No brief night that makes
+ The sun unwelcome as he golds desire,
+ The warm mist-flower where we lie its heart!
+ Unbrace thee here, my courage! Valiancy,
+ First god and last in man, unbuckle here!
+ ... How meet Famette? Smile on her smiles? Deceive
+ Her love? She'll lay her head upon my heart
+ And hear it crying "Hernda!".... Hernda lost!
+ I must not dream here open to the risk
+ Of her unanswered eyes. Their lure would make
+ Dishonor, that on wreck feeds rampant, spring
+ Unshamed in me. I would forsake Famette.
+
+ [_Goes right, upper path. Hernda comes from house and crosses rapidly
+ to him_]
+
+ _Her._ Chartrien! Come! [_He turns slowly and meets her_]
+ You take my hand, here where
+ You wished me dead?
+
+ _Cha._ That you have offered it
+ Proves me forgiven.
+
+ _Her._ _You_ forgiven? Ah,
+ Has my atonement swollen above my fault
+ Till I may nod a pardon where I thought
+ To kneel for one?
+
+ _Cha._ LeVal has written me. [_Kisses her hand_]
+ This kiss is his salute, and that 'tis his,
+ Not mine, makes my lips bold to leave it here.
+
+ _Her._ Forgiven! Dawn is on my sky, that hung
+ Unutterably black! Yes, it is true
+ I saved LeVal. From Fate's own arms I snatched
+ My treachery's sequence, though his meantime pain
+ Is ever writ against me. Yet I too
+ Knew misery that might be mate of his.
+ And for that other wrong--here where we stand----
+
+ _Cha._ My wrong to you! Nay, don't forgive me that.
+ Leave me a wound to keep me ever paying
+ The debt of pain that solely eases guilt.
+
+ _Her._ I had to choose,--Oh, agony of choice!--
+ Between your death as certain as the night
+ And your surrender to Megario,
+ That seemed but death postponed, yet held a hope
+ Worth any hazard. That you live is proof
+ My choice was God's. My reasonless despair
+ Held Heaven's sanity. Ah, that you live
+ Is substance of reward, joy's permanent
+ Sweet soil, but there's a flower to spring from that,
+ A nodding ecstasy that I may pluck
+ For my own bosom,--is there not?
+
+ _Cha._ Don't--don't----
+
+ _Her._ You turn away? You've still a doubt of me?
+ Then modesty may save her frigid self.
+ I'll speak for love, the one best thing this side
+ Of Heaven. You've taken my hand, and now my heart,
+ And all myself would follow it. My heart,
+ My body, and my risen soul. Yes, risen!
+ My past of clay is quickened with a breath
+ That waits not death to know itself immortal,
+ And this is all my pride, that by that breath
+ I'm rich enough to give myself to you.
+ [_She waits for him to speak. He makes no answer_]
+ I am rejected, having but my shame
+ To cover naked love. Yet vanity
+ Finds me this scanted shroud. Seeing you here,
+ My hunger guessed at yours. I felt you came
+ To seek me, else my heart, timid with fault,
+ Had kept its silence, though my tongue had given
+ As now a friend's good welcome.
+
+ _Cha._ I have come,
+ But not to you.
+
+ _Her._ For why then? I've an ear
+ Of caution. Let my veins, at too swift flood,
+ Grow slow as prudence in what work you will.
+ Now that our aims are near as once our hearts,
+ You'll let me help? I swear by both our souls,
+ And yours the dearer one, that our desires
+ Are one bent bow, and if our arrows speed
+ They'll kiss at the same mark.
+
+ _Cha._ I'm fathoms deep,
+ But in a sea as sweet as ever closed
+ O'er drowned felicity!
+
+ _Her._ Why are you here?
+
+ _Cha._ To keep an oath!--that kept is our division,
+ Yet forfeited would so untreasure me
+ That being's god would blush dishallowed way
+ Quite out such husk of man!
+
+ _Her._ An oath?
+
+ _Cha._ Oh, first
+ In made self-curses I'll unload some part
+ Of this stuffed loathing for the wretch I am!
+
+ _Her._ Nay, I'll not listen.
+
+ _Cha._ Star that was a maiden,
+ Do not believe I loved you when my days
+ Ran tribute at your feet,----
+
+ _Her._ Say anything
+ But that. Those days were mine, and true.
+
+ _Cha._ False, false!
+ For love is generous as the heart of bounty,
+ Giving defect perfection. Narrowed hours,
+ Beseamed and flawed, take from its seer-lit eyes
+ The unstinted, dear proportion secret yet
+ In Time's full dream.
+
+ _Her._ 'Twas I who failed----
+
+ _Cha._ Not you!
+ That midnight moment held the dawn of this,
+ All this that now you are, and love had seen
+ The folded glory of yourself had love
+ Been there to see. But I cast dust upon
+ Your sleeping wings, and did not know your heart
+ Till wounds had laid it bare.
+
+ _Her._ How could you know
+ More than its native bosom where it dwelt
+ Strange and unguessed?
+
+ _Cha._ If I had loved,
+ Such soul of fragrance had not hid from me
+ This unbound blossoming.
+
+ _Her._ We must forget
+ Love's morning miracles forever missed.
+ His fair, warm day is left us,--sunset's gold,
+ And evening with the stars. That is enough
+ For me and you----
+
+ _Cha._ My pledge! I'm here to meet
+ Famette!
+
+ _Her._ Famette! I know her.
+
+ _Cha._ Know her! You?
+
+ _Her._ And know she loves. Then it is you she waits?
+
+ _Cha._ She saved my life. But that unvalued thing
+ Is debt's mere rubble. 'Tis her love makes up
+ The sum unpaid and out of reckoning.
+ And I--how can I tell you?
+
+ _Her._ If you loved,
+ Look up. No shame can be where love has been.
+
+ _Cha._ I've no defence,--yet say that you were lost
+ In midmost desert sands, and suddenly
+ A flower at your feet breathed of the woods
+ And darkling velvet shade where rest might be....
+
+ _Her._ But that's a miracle.
+
+ _Cha._ So was her love
+ To me. Or say that flam and falsity
+ Ensnarled your every way till no true thing
+ Seemed left on earth, and then in lifted flash
+ Truth's priestess eyes looked from a human face
+ And you were loved,--what startled warmth would say
+ Your heart yet lived? Would you keep back your life
+ In barren hug? Deny its sunless gray
+ To gentle eyes that asked but leave to lay
+ Their radiance there?
+
+ _Her._ I understand. She gave,
+ And I demanded. So the gods decree
+ Her boughs shall bloom and mine go bare.
+
+ _Cha._ Oh, Heaven!
+
+ _Her._ You love her, Chartrien?
+
+ _Cha._ Silence be on that.
+
+ _Her._ I'll know it,--hear you say it. Is your heart
+ Mine, or Famette's?
+
+ _Cha._ My life is hers.
+
+ _Her._ Your heart!
+
+ _Cha._ Is yours.
+
+ _Her._ Ah! Then--I give you to Famette.
+
+ [_He kneels to kiss her hand. Hudibrand appears in door of house,
+ left. Smiles, and crosses to them_]
+
+ _Hud._ Up to her lip, you rogue! A humble suitor
+ Gets humble favors.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Rising_] You, my lord?
+
+ _Hud._ Your hand,
+ My boy.
+
+ _Cha._ It was my head you wanted, sir,
+ When last we met.
+
+ _Hud._ Not so. I meant to save you,
+ But Hernda spiked my train. To have you die
+ Quite safely in a rumor was the sum
+ Of my intent against you.
+
+ _Cha._ You're not well,
+ My lord?
+
+ _Hud._ Most well!
+
+ _Her._ He's lost some sleep.
+
+ _Hud._ Tut, tut!
+
+ _Cha._ You stay full long in Goldusan. I thought
+ You nearer home.
+
+ _Hud._ I'm cruising in the gulf,
+ By th' morning papers,--the _reliable_ ones.
+ The gutter rags have guessed me,--but no matter.
+ I've seen the play through, and I go to-morrow.
+ Pouf! It has been a game!
+
+ _Cha._ You speak as 'twere
+ At end.
+
+ _Hud._ It ends to-day. [_Looks at watch_]
+ 'Tis just the hour.
+ Now Vardas is proclaimed the president
+ Of a liberated people.
+
+ _Cha._ What of that?
+
+ _Hud._ He's bowing now. "I thank you, gracious friends,
+ Most loyal citizens----"
+
+ _Cha._ What's that to do
+ With freedom's war?
+
+ _Hud._ It merely ends it.
+
+ _Cha._ What?
+ You think we fought for that? A change of caps
+ Upon two brigands' heads?
+
+ _Hud._ Tut, you've won more.
+ You with some justice warred on Cordiaz,
+ But Vardas is of heart so liberal
+ His people shall be rich in privileges
+ As many and as fair as in Assaria.
+ Myself will vouch it.
+
+ _Cha._ I will vouch it too.
+ As many pits fed with the souls of men,
+ As many images of God deformed
+ In lawless fray to hold the peaks of greed
+ And at the top sit on their goblin gold
+ Content with bestial purr, who might have touched
+ The heavens with song.
+
+ _Hud._ Is that for me, my boy?
+
+ _Cha._ As many lives tramped out in hunger's scramble,
+ As many factories where driven wives
+ Forget the altar dream of babes and home.
+ As many sweating traps where flames may feed
+ On flesh of maidens, leaving still, charred bones
+ Whose only fortune is to ache no more.
+ As many brazen mills that noise their thrift
+ Above the ceaseless shuttle of small feet,
+ While you, the great arch-master, think none hears
+ That drownèd pattering. As many marts
+ Where, in law's shadow, girl-eyed slaves are sold
+ To blows and lust. As many cripples thrown
+ Upon the dump-heap of a soulless Peace,
+ Each season piled to moaning wreck more high
+ Than ever War made in its darkest year.
+ As many holes where life must lie with death
+ For privilege of sleep. Oh, I could give
+ Black instances till yonder sun be set
+ Nor end your loathsome list!
+
+ _Hud._ A rare, hot sermon,
+ But I'm not Providence, that from my hand
+ Must pour unfailing bounty.
+
+ _Cha._ Humble, sir?
+ I thought you claimed a power that gave the world
+ The shape you chose.
+
+ _Hud._ But I must use the stuff
+ I find here. That I can't remake or change.
+ So must my world show flaws and ugly spots
+ Due to its substance, not to my good pattern.
+
+ _Cha._ That stuff, sir, is the same that lifted us
+ From four feet up to two! The elements
+ That played like death upon it but aroused
+ Their conqueror. In the embrace of winds
+ It made us ships and gave us wings. From dust,
+ The very dust that choked it, grew the dream
+ That lifts it deathless, an eternized God.
+ And surely as your grip makes it a slave,
+ You teach it freedom. In your clutch 'twill find
+ Once more the need creative, and upswell
+ With power that shall leave you by the way
+ As heaving seas leave straws upon the sand.
+ You shall be _nothing_. As a dream that dies
+ With waking--lost so utterly
+ The sleeper knows not that it was--so you
+ Shall be a vanished thing that man born free
+ Can not reclothe in guess!
+
+ _Hud._ Peonia's sun
+ Has touched your wits. You still think of revolt?
+
+ _Cha._ I think of victory.
+
+ _Hud._ Your comedy
+ Is past its hour. Come, Chartrien, give it up.
+ Confess the war is done.
+
+ _Cha._ Bolderez' guns
+ Will make confession of another sort.
+
+ _Hud._ O, ho! I see a light. You have not heard
+ The morning news. Bolderez has come in.
+
+ _Cha._ Come in? Your couriers flatter you. He holds
+ The heights of Gila with five thousand men.
+
+ _Hud._ That's yesterday. To-day those brave five thousand
+ Are soldiers of united Goldusan.
+ Bolderez is adviser to the State,
+ A tinker in high place, who solders fast
+ The civic split----
+
+ _Cha._ You dream! This is not true!
+
+ _Her._ Yes, Chartrien, it is true. We've lost Bolderez.
+
+ _Cha._ He--has--deserted?
+
+ _Hud._ No, he proves him loyal
+ To me, his master.
+
+ _Cha._ You?
+
+ _Hud._ He served me always.
+ You fool, this was _my_ revolution.
+
+ _Cha._ Yours?
+
+ _Hud._ Bolderez led my troops. It was for me
+ You fed his bony beggars. Ha! For me
+ You stuffed their hungry pockets with your gold!
+ I loosed your fortune when I know 'twould save
+ My own a gouge. But I've not dodged the score.
+ Those guns and horses for the Gazza scare
+ Cost me some paper----
+
+ _Cha._ You? My God! _Your_ war?
+
+ _Hud._ I knew the storm would sweep out Cordiaz,
+ So strode its back that I might hold the bit
+ When came my hour. My boy, you fought for _me_.
+ I made you do it--I, whom you have said
+ Shall be as nothing. Where's the mighty sea
+ Shall toss me as a straw----
+
+ _Her._ O, father, peace!
+ You see he dies!
+
+ _Hud._ Don't waste your tears. He'll live.
+ I've made good oxen out of wilder bulls.
+
+ _Her._ He cannot live! The pain of it, the pain!
+ When aspirations have returned as wounds,
+ Then even the soul must die!
+
+ _Hud._ They all get up.
+ Stout workers too,--quiet, serviceable,
+ Pestered no more with dreams. Here, give him this. [_Offers a flask_]
+
+ _Cha._ [_Rousing, pushing flask aside_] Ay, no more dreams.
+ [_Springs up_] But action! Keep Bolderez.
+ We have LeVal, whose undiscouraged heart
+ Bears on its tide the conquering desire
+ Of twenty thousand men!
+
+ _Hud._ Humph! Where are these
+ Invisible veterans?
+
+ _Cha._ Some gather now
+ About his banner,--some wait in the hills
+ Till they are sure it is his voice that calls,--
+ Some in your favor wrapped go to and fro
+ In your own camp, feeding a fire your gold
+ Can never light,--some dream till we have oped
+ Their prison doors,--in every part and corner
+ Of Goldusan, there's courage on the leap
+ To reach his side.
+
+ _Hud._ What dribble!
+
+ _Cha._ Rein this storm?
+ No human hand, nor Heaven's now, may leash it.
+ It is the throe when travailing Life is shaken
+ In absolute birth that makes undreamèd news
+ Even in the ear of God.
+
+ _Hud._ Fanatic! Fool!
+ Have I not tried to teach you----
+
+ _Cha._ Teach yourself!
+
+ _Hud._ Come, come!
+
+ _Cha._ I mean the words. The race has learned
+ Its lesson while you've played with sand. At last
+ The dumb, trod way has spoken 'neath man's feet,
+ And by that word uncovered he has learned
+ What he shall _not_ be,--knows what heights of sun
+ Are his, and seeing takes his road,--no more
+ Battering in wild and bruisèd ignorance
+ A destiny of stone. Ay, consciousness
+ Has wakened in itself the unknown god
+ That gives the race its eyes. You, you a king?
+ Who do not know that every man is heir
+ To kingship that must leave such thrones as yours
+ Outcoursed and little recked as the strewn toys
+ Of childhood!
+
+ _Hud._ Mud-sill dynasties. You know
+ That I am master.
+
+ _Cha._ Master? You believe
+ That man, at top of conquest, who has made
+ Nature his weariless serf, and set the yoke
+ From his own neck on her divinities,
+ Will seal to you--weak, myriadth part of him--
+ Those wizard captives bending to the dream
+ Of his new world? Gird you with fortune that
+ He wrenched from stony ages?--let you gorge
+ The magic fruit snatched by his perilled being
+ In starward battle up the abysmal steep?
+
+ _Hud._ I am a fact,--not words.
+
+ _Cha._ You can believe it?
+ At last on dawn-browed heights, with victor foot
+ On mysteries bound the genii of his wish,
+ He'll trail his hopes to kennel? Let you pluck
+ His universe unflowered, and shrink life
+ To growling brevity 'tween lash and bone?
+ A slave to _you_? Obstructive clod,
+ Who could not stir with one life-budding dream
+ Though holy imagination tipped with fire
+ Should score her script upon you!
+
+ [_A physical pain overcomes Hudibrand. Hernda runs to his side. He
+ regains composure, his manner forbidding solicitude_]
+
+ _Hud._ I am patient.
+ One word of mine would send you manacled
+ To prison. If you are here to lay down arms----
+
+ _Cha._ I'm not.
+
+ _Her._ O, father! The amnesty!
+
+ _Hud._ That shelter
+ Is not for him!
+
+ _Cha._ Then speak your word, and learn
+ You fight not men but man. Wide as the world
+ His spirit blows against you, and little part
+ You'll cage in this one shackled body.
+
+ _Hud._ One?
+ We'll drag the earth, or net the pack of you!
+ LeVal, marauding ghost, we'll prick his blood
+ Beneath his spectral mask. And that mad trull,
+ Famette, your holy maid----
+
+ _Cha._ She's safe from you!
+ God is about her as she walks among
+ Your hope-lorn slaves and touches their dead hearts
+ To life.
+
+ _Hud._ To folly they are sick of! Ah,
+ Once more I've news. Your swarthy Joan has fled,
+ And all her magic warriors of a day
+ Again are beggars.
+
+ _Cha._ Fled?
+
+ _Hud._ To her cactus lair.
+ But she'll trapse back between two bayonets,
+ Stripped of her phantom wings.
+
+ _Cha._ She is not gone.
+ That heart of truth! When she deserts LeVal
+ There'll be a breach in Heaven, and fiends may claim
+ The day for hell and you.
+
+ _Hud._ 'Tis mine without
+ Such warm avouch. Your chaparral cock and hen
+ Have parted company. Her followers now,
+ Cursing and naked, straggle to our camps----
+
+ _Her._ Your pardon, sir! You are deceived.
+
+ _Hud._ Ho, ho!
+
+ _Her._ They're with LeVal. Not one stout heart is lost.
+ Famette but lends her captaincy to his
+ In needful absence----
+
+ _Hud._ You are much too wise.
+
+ _Her._ I know Famette.
+
+ _Hud._ You--what? Know _her_?
+
+ _Her._ I do.
+
+ _Hud._ This is the fruit of that mad jaunt,
+ Through Goldusan! Where have you seen her?
+
+ _Her._ Here.
+
+ _Hud._ Not here? That woman? Are you mad, my girl?
+
+ _Her._ I love Famette. If we were one, I'd be
+ But cinders in her saintly fire.
+
+ _Hud._ Here, miss?
+ You've had her with you? Sniffed and cheeped together,
+ And drowned my kingdom in a gossip cup?
+
+ _Her._ If men, the bravest, are but flies upon
+ Your monarch ermine, that with careless shake
+ You scatter, can you fear a woman?
+
+ _Hud._ What?
+ Mocked by a chit? I fear? You mannerless filly,
+ I've let you plunge and ramp o'er all my fields,
+ But I'll not have you whinnying at the fence
+ Till roadside jades break through! She has been _here_?
+
+ _Her._ She has. Dined at my board, slept in my bed,
+ And so shall do again.
+
+ _Hud._ I'll welcome her!
+ And send you trucking home! You shall not wait
+ For any whimsy this or that!
+
+ _Her._ But, sir,----
+
+ _Hud._ No trumpery packing,--no unready whine!
+ This hour! That you should moil your royalty
+ Touching such scum!
+
+ _Her._ Nay, I was scum until she gave me substance.
+ I had no soul until she made hers mine,
+ No cleanliness of heart till I knew hers,
+ No knowledge till I looked through her clear eyes,
+ No riches till I wrapped me in her rags----
+
+ _Hud._ You're raving!
+
+ _Her._ No. Ah, father, father, I'm
+ Famette,--your daughter! I've not been in Cana,
+ But in the pits your greed has dug,--down, down
+ Where misery is so vile its own abyss
+ Shudders to hold it. Chartrien, now you know
+ My tale untold. I see your mind runs back
+ To light a way it travelled in the dark.
+ O, you were blind! I'd know you near though masked
+ In utter change.
+
+ _Cha._ I'm folded now in sun
+ That makes me blind again. Are you Famette?
+
+ _Her._ [_Showing her bared arm_] See this brown circlet
+ left that you might find
+ A trace of her? I've crossed the universe----
+ Through hell--and reached you, have I not?
+
+ _Cha._ [_Embracing her_] All sweet
+ Forfending stars now heap their fortunes one
+ And drop it on my heart that borrows heaven
+ To hold the imponderable gift!
+
+ _Her._ Ah, poor Famette!
+
+ _Cha._'Twas you--in that foul hacienda pen?
+ And would not speak?
+
+ _Her._ I meant to save you, sir.
+ And had I told you then, would you have set
+ So blithely off to Quito?
+
+ _Cha._ And left you there!
+ How can you think it?
+
+ _Her._ Do I, sir? Nay, love,
+ Nor ever did. I knew you'd ruin all
+ With your big "won'ts" and "don'ts."
+
+ _Cha._ O, sagest heart!
+ But here you kept my joy-gates shut so long.
+ Why such slow mercy, golden one?
+
+ _Her._ You'll hear it?
+ There is a teasing devil in me, Chartrien,
+ That must have play.
+
+ _Cha._ Ah, no!
+
+ _Her._ Ay, and an ounce
+ Or so of cruelty, that would not let
+ Your frailty go unpinched.
+
+ _Cha._ Nay, 'tis not so!
+
+ _Her._ You'd rather think I put to royal test
+ Your godship? Wooed with lips so near your own,
+ And found you stanch to honor? That may be,
+ But I've a shameless reason dearer still.
+ I wanted all your love for Hernda,--all.
+ And had I said too soon that we were one,
+ Then on your breast my heart had never known
+ Which maid you clasped.
+
+ _Cha._ You ever, sweet!
+
+ _Her._ Yet she
+ Is dear. My joy could never be content
+ Within your heart beside unfaith to her.
+ She must have room there, not in name of love,
+ But truth. So you shall hold us both.
+
+ _Cha._ Like this?
+ Grow to my heart, O garland of myself!
+ Be breath of me, till, like a double tree,
+ Root, sap, and bloom are one,
+ And in our noble fruiting Time forgets
+ To mourn Hesperides!
+
+ _Her._ Heaven hold thy wish
+ The prayer thou meanest it!
+
+ _Cha._ One bliss is man's
+ The perfect angels know not. In the arms,
+ Warm, rhythmic, round his battling soul, to feel
+ Spur of his noblest blood, and know his dreams
+ Are mated,--find in lightest winds that stir
+ Love's tremulous hair, the brave wing of his hope
+ That needs go farthest,--and when seasons fail,
+ And weary spirit turns from waste to waste,
+ Know lips that he may touch and touching kiss
+ The fallow world to harvest. Thus, and thus!
+
+ [_Hudibrand, forgotten by the lovers, has fought through another moment
+ of agony, and advances, taking hold of Hernda_]
+
+ _Hud._ Are you my daughter?
+
+ _Her._ I am, but I've known hours
+ When shame, a cleansing fire, searched through my blood
+ For any drop that owned you father.
+
+ _Hud._ In!
+ Go in! [_To Chartrien_] And you--I'll rid the earth of you,
+ And take its thanks! [_Staggers with a return of pain_]
+
+ _Her._ [_Her arms about him_] O, father, let us help!
+ What is it, father?
+
+ _Hud._ Nothing. Keep away!
+ Away!
+
+ [_Throws her off. Enter, lower right, an officer attended_]
+
+ _Off._ Your majesty, there's sure report
+ LeVal makes ready to oppose his guns
+ To our weak garrison.
+
+ _Hud._ [_Ironic_] The spectre's near?
+
+ _Off._ Across the stream,--the east and wooded bank.
+ A hundred times our force could not dislodge
+ His guns from such a vantage.
+
+ _Hud._ Guns? LeVal?
+ He has no guns!
+
+ _Off._ You'll hear them soon. I beg
+ Your highness' pardon, but your dignity
+ Would not be touched if you should hasten out.
+
+ [_Enter, lower left, Golifet, Diraz, Mazaran_]
+
+ _Gol._ My lord!
+
+ _Hud._ What is this tale? You, Golifet?
+ You are in charge!
+
+ _Gol._ 'Tis treachery, sir! I warned
+ Your majesty----
+
+ _Hud._ Come, what's the story?
+
+ _Gol._ This.
+ Bolderez' officers whom we gave leave
+ To station near us, thus to put more guard
+ Between the town and rebels that might creep
+ Down from the hostile hills----
+
+ _Hud._ This egg's all shell.
+ Come, sir, the meat!
+
+ _Gol._ They were in secret yoked
+ Most traitorously with LeVal, and all their men
+ Were coupled to his cause. They gave him cover
+ To lead his army up----
+
+ _Hud._ His army, sir?
+
+ _Gol._ His followers----
+
+ _Hud._ There may be treachery
+ Uncapped among us.
+
+ _Gol._ 'Twas by your advice
+ We gave them leave to camp----
+
+ _Hud._ I trusted fools!
+ Or traitors! You've a choice of names.
+
+ _Off._ I beg
+ Your majesty to come with us. They'll fire
+ At any moment.
+
+ _Hud._ Fire? Then we shall know
+ At last where we may find LeVal. You've wired
+ To Vardas, Golifet? He must despatch
+ The Federal Guards----
+
+ _Gol._ It is too late.
+
+ _Hud._ Too late?
+
+ _Maz._ We can not save the town.
+
+ _Off._ The citizens
+ Are fleeing. Do not delay, your majesty!
+
+ [_Fire of guns is heard_]
+
+ _Hud._ Cowards! Before you fly, arrest that man.
+ Look to it, Golifet. You'll answer for him.
+ Let him be trebly guarded.
+
+ _Gol._ Is not this
+ The missing lord, Prince Chartrien?
+
+ _Hud._ Ay, that traitor!
+
+ _Gol._ At this hot juncture, prudence must forbid
+ A needless insult to the enemy
+ That may too soon be master.
+
+ _Hud._ Insult!
+
+ _Gol._ Come,
+ My lord.
+
+ _Hud._ By every god that was or is----
+
+ [_Guns again heard_]
+
+ _Gol._ Please you, retire, your majesty!
+
+ [_Men gather excitedly from different parts of the grove. Guests and
+ servants desert the house_]
+
+ _Maz._ Come, come!
+
+ [_A shell breaches the wall, rear. Stones fly among the trees. The
+ house is battered and portico torn away_]
+
+ _Hud._ Grant me this favor. Let me be the last
+ To leave the Grove of Peace. Ha, ha! The last!
+
+ _Her._ Come, father!
+
+ _Hud._ Go! I've asked a favor, friends.
+
+ [_They turn from him and pass slowly out. Hernda and Chartrien
+ remain_]
+
+ _Her._ Now you will come?
+
+ _Hud._ When _you_ have gone! Go, go!
+
+ [_More shells. Chartrien carries Hernda away, lower left_]
+
+ _Hud._ [_Alone, racked with pain_] My foe is nearer than those
+ feeble guns.
+ Bah! I could crush them! Here I am fordone.
+ No, no! I'll not surrender. I will live!
+ I'll keep my world. I fought for it, and won.
+ 'Tis mine! I will not leave it to these mice
+ To scramble over. [_The agony seizes him_]
+ A coward foe, that gives
+ No even chance. Strikes from the dark, with blade
+ Tempered secure in undiscovered fire.
+ ... Shall then the world go on and I not here?
+ I shall be here,--a pile of dust, no more,----
+ That is the hell of hells,--while other dead,
+ Who made them souls here out of faith and clay,
+ Race on unflagging,--on and leave me still,--
+ The everlasting mute!... Souls? That's a lie.
+ A ranting, tom-tom lie, to ease us on
+ The wheel. I'll none of that. The sick mind's pap!
+ Imagination's vent, lest misery
+ O'er-rack the world! Protective fume
+ Enclouding man's last grapple till none see
+ If he or Death be victor, and on the doubt
+ He rides to Heaven!...
+ ... Was 't truth that Chartrien spoke?
+ The race has found its eyes? Man is no more
+ A blind and hopeless struggler cornered fast
+ By ills unconquerable?--his lusting wars,
+ Diseases, hungers, Hudibrands? Then what
+ A chance was there, my heart? If I had fought
+ Upon his side!... _That_ battle would have made
+ Red Fate throw down her bludgeon,--won us place
+ To vanward of the gods!... If I had fought
+ With him.... Obstructive clod!... My God! _My_ God?
+
+ [_He dies. Sunset has passed, and the darkness grows rapidly
+ until nothing is seen but the gleam of a fallen crown.
+ Curtain_]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+A SON OF HERMES
+
+A COMEDY IN FIVE ACTS
+
+
+
+
+_CHARACTERS_
+
+
+ BIADES, _a young Athenian_
+ PELAGON, _his uncle_
+ SACHINESSA, _wife of Pelagon_
+ PHANIA, _their daughter_
+ SYBARIS, _a neighbor's daughter_
+ CREON, _friend of Biades_
+ AMENTOR, _a senator_
+ MENAS, _friend of Pelagon_
+ CLEARCHUS, _an Athenian youth disguised as a dancer_
+ PHILON, _a priest_
+ STESILAUS, _a lord of Sparta_
+ PYRRHA, _his daughter_
+ ARCHIPPE, _his wife_
+ ALCANOR, _his son_
+ LYSANDER, _friend of Stesilaus_
+ HIERON, _a young Spartan_
+ AGIS, LENON, GIRARDAS, _his friends_
+ DIANESSA, MYRTA, THEONIS, NACIA, ARTANTE, _Spartan maidens_
+ THE EPHORS
+ _Senators, citizens, soldiers, dancers, etc._
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+
+SCENE: _Pelagon's garden, Athens. Wall, rear, shutting off street.
+Upper right, path to street gate. Upper and middle left, entrances to
+Pelagon's house. Lower left, path to a neighbor's dwelling. Lower right,
+path leading deeper into garden._
+
+
+ [_Enter, upper left, Pelagon, Stesilaus and Lysander_]
+
+ _Lys._ A gracious senate! If such welcome keys
+ The tune to come, then our ambassadry
+ Is concord's instrument, and we may bear
+ Fair music back to Sparta.
+
+ _Ste._ Tut, the smiles
+ Of Athens are as flying leaves, divorced
+ From the tree's heart, as apt to light
+ On vagrancy as merit.
+
+ _Pel._ Stesilaus
+ Bears hard as truth. Yet I was warmed to note
+ The council's greeting.
+
+ _Ste._ Ever Sparta's friend!
+
+ _Pel._ And friend of peace. The age no more can bear
+ The locked alarum of our rivalling States.
+ We must the groaning tussle bring to end,
+ Or ends the world.
+
+ _Lys._ 'Twas wisdom's cue you gave us,--
+ To say we had our Sparta's sovereign word
+ For Athens' terms.
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, hold your embassage
+ Unstrictured, friends. In that lies flattery
+ Each lord will take to himself and thereon feed
+ A grace which will, in sort, come back to you.
+ What hour was fixed for answer? I lost that.
+
+ _Lys._ The last hour of the sun.
+
+ _Pel._ The crier stood
+ Wrong side of my good ear, and I'll not twist
+ To set the gossips nudging me to th' grave,
+ Robbed in a shrug of twenty grizzled years.
+ [_Looks about the garden_]
+ Where's Biades? He's always trailing here,
+ Save in the tick of need. I'd have him bid
+ The ambassadors lie at my house. Lysander,
+ You'll be my suitor to your comrades? Say
+ We've heart and room for all.
+
+ _Lys._ For all, my lord?
+
+ _Pel._ And more!
+
+ [_Exit Lysander_]
+
+ _Ste._ My Sparta thanks you, Pelagon.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, such an honor shall not pass me, sir.
+ Now where is Biades?
+
+ _Ste._ Your nephew, friend?
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, Stesilaus. Bar my blood in him,
+ He'll fasten on your heart.
+
+ _Ste._ Report has been
+ Too dear his friend. What buzz about a youth
+ Of twenty-five! Sir, Attica is mad
+ To give him captainship. In Sparta now,
+ The spurring callant would be kept in ranks,
+ And yoked with Prudence till he learned her jog.
+
+ _Pel._ In ranks! I see him! Well, just in your ear,
+ He sweeps a pretty curvet. With my wife
+ His slave, and Phania neck-deep in love,
+ He rides the very comb of my poor house.
+ If you would say to him, hold here or there,
+ I'd take it not amiss. But I do love him.
+ And now a bout with th' cook. The pest sends word
+ A double score of sudden guests are all
+ He'll have at table. Mine own table, sir!
+ Ha, there is Biades! He'll wait upon you.
+ Pray touch him as I've hinted. But no word
+ About our daughters, friend. We'll let that lie.
+
+ [_Exit upper left. Enter Biades upper right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Most noble Stesilaus, my heart greets you!
+
+ _Ste._ Greeting to Biades, whom Athens makes
+ Her general!
+
+ _Bia._ Would, my lord, this dignity
+ Were laid on senior years. Your Sparta's way
+ Is best,--to keep the cool, meridian bays
+ From youth-flushed brows. My moist and charmèd eyes
+ Spoke inward to my soul when they beheld
+ The ambassadors before the council, each
+ With staff unneeded, and gray locks that seemed
+ As wisdom's holy place.
+
+ _Ste._ You sat with us?
+ I did not mark you there.
+
+ _Bia._ I kept in modest shadow,
+ Which is youth's fairest mantle,--though my rank
+ Moves back for none. But, sir, the Spartan elders!
+ Ah, might I see more men in Athens who
+ Thus honor age, and age that honors men!
+
+ _Ste._ Breathe that into your shrines.
+
+ _Bia._ The gods who smile
+ On folly young, must weep when reverend years
+ And wisdom part. Mayhap you've noticed, sir,
+ In my good uncle here ... a falling off.
+ I would not speak but that I know your eyes
+ Can not keep curtain when the blabbing sun
+ Makes it no secret.
+
+ _Ste._ Somewhat I have seen.
+
+ _Bia._ Somewhat will grow to much ere you take leave.
+
+ _Ste._ I fear it, Biades.
+
+ _Bia._ And yet, my lord,
+ Time has not carried him ahead of you
+ More years than half a score.
+
+ _Ste._ Tis t'other way.
+ I'm elder by that much.
+
+ _Bia._ Not you, my lord? [_Muses flatteringly_]
+ The Spartan way is best. Was 't Pelagon
+ Led you to say you had full power to treat
+ With Athens?
+
+ _Ste._ It was he.
+
+ _Bia._ I thought it. [_Sighs_] Sir,
+ In the Athenian mind there dwells a child
+ No length of days can age. We do not grow
+ As Spartans. But our vanity's no dwarf.
+ Tops with the highest, you've some cause to know.
+
+ _Ste._ What of 't? Unlatch! unlatch!
+
+ _Bia._ The people, sir,
+ Always our rearward urge, knowing you've power
+ To assent to all they ask, will ask for more
+ Than all.
+
+ _Ste._ Think'st that?
+
+ _Bia._ In your brave time you've met
+ Athenians of the best. Didst ever know
+ One modest?--slow to ask for what he thought
+ His own?--or what he might by mere demand
+ Make his?
+
+ _Ste._ They are well stomached,--true. No doubt
+ They'll press us far.
+
+ _Bia._ They will. And if refused,--
+ Well, they are children,--and must bite and scratch.
+ With strutting rage, may pelt you out of Athens.
+ But why not say you are in part empowered.
+ And must return to Sparta with the terms
+ Before a vowed conclusion?
+
+ _Ste._ Late for that,
+ Young sir. The tongue we used to the Council
+ Must serve in the Assembly. We have said
+ We have full power.
+
+ _Bia._ To treat, not to assent.
+ That was your word.
+
+ _Ste._ Hmm! Now the cloud is off
+ The dunce's script, and I read clear why you
+ At twenty-five have Athens' voice to sail
+ 'Gainst Syracuse.
+
+ [_Re-enter Pelagon_]
+
+ _Bia._ No word unto my uncle!
+
+ _Ste._ My brain will serve.
+
+ _Pel._ They've come,--your comrades,--all!
+ If honor now were substance, my poor walls
+ Would groaningly unroof and beg the sky
+ For room to embrace it! Go you, Biades.
+ Repeat my welcome, with increase of grace
+ Your tongue is rich in.
+ [_Exit Biades, upper left_]
+ Now the full time comes.
+ We'll speak of that that's centre of our hearts,--
+ Our daughters, friend. This is the hour that ends
+ A watch of twenty years.
+
+ _Ste._ A patient score.
+ So long your daughter has been mine, so long
+ Has mine been yours.
+
+ _Pel._ Like flower upon a stalk
+ Long nursed and tended, comes the end upon
+ This day of budding peace. You've had no whiff,
+ No hint untoward, that what we did had best
+ Been left undone?
+
+ _Ste._ Sir, what I do, I do!
+ When we changed babes not past their cradle sleep,
+ My mind then glossed the act with comment fair
+ As our unfructured hope. So does it still.
+ By Nestor, though I'm thitherward of prime,
+ There's none will say that with accreted years
+ I moult sagacity!
+
+ _Pel._ Eh, so! 'Twas well.
+ I've never doubted it. Here have I reared
+ Your Phania, Spartan-thewed, who now shall home
+ With Athens' gentle nurture in her veins
+ To hither yearn in blood of every son
+ She bears to Sparta. And you my Pyrrha bring
+ Back to her land to live a Spartan dame
+ Among Athenian mothers. So we feed
+ The unity we dream on,--quicken time,
+ Foresued, to give our tousing, touchy States
+ One civic heart.
+
+ _Ste._ Has Sachinessa kept
+ A secret tongue?
+
+ _Pel._ A nut not closer sits
+ About its kernel. And your wife, my friend?
+ What of Archippe? Did she hold for long
+ Against the exchange?
+
+ _Ste._ She did. Nor ever learned
+ To love your Pyrrha. For that cause,--and that
+ Our even trust might move with even faith,
+ Nor odds of grace to you,--I've stood her guard,
+ And made her comrade where a son might claim
+ The dearest post.
+
+ _Pel._ Good thanks, my Stesilaus.
+ From your wife's audit I'd not brush a doit,
+ But to the credit of my dame can set
+ A fairer sum. Æneas' curlèd lad
+ Lay not more dearly in his Dido's lap
+ Than your sweet Phania in the swaddling love
+ Of Sachinessa. Ay, she'll swear me now
+ That not to gain her own will she give up
+ Her foster darling.
+
+ _Ste._ Humph!
+
+ _Pel._ The little duck!
+ She has so chucked herself into my heart
+ 'Twill put me sad about to oust her.
+
+ _Ste._ Duck!
+ When I lose Pyrrha, sir, that hour I lose
+ This good right arm!
+
+ _Pel._ [_Meditative_] Hmm! So!... Come, my friend.
+ The dinner's toward, and the host astray.
+ The love's deep-vouched that puts such duty off
+ For one more word. [_Pauses as they move left_]
+ We'll give no open voice
+ To our most dear concern till we have met
+ Our daughters.
+
+ _Ste._ [_Gloomy_] Met our daughters! Have it so.
+
+ [_Exeunt upper left. Enter, middle left, Phania and Biades_]
+
+ _Bia._ Come, Phania! The old cocks are off.
+
+ _Pha._ They're gone?
+
+ _Bia._ Good flitting too! I feared they'd perch till night,
+ Crowing the deeds of Stesilaus the Great
+ And Pelagon the Wise.
+
+ _Pha._ These Spartans! If
+ They'd rest their clubs without the door, our shins
+ Would give them thanks. Why are we so besieged?
+
+ _Bia._ Why, Phania, why? Because your father dotes
+ On dull and sodden peace that never was
+ Save in an old man's dream. We dine our foes!
+ The city must throw ope her gates, forsooth,
+ Lest the dear enemy should take some hurt
+ Scaling the walls! They'd bleed us as we sleep,
+ And Pelagon would vow the sword at 's throat
+ Were Sachinessa's dozing kiss.
+
+ _Pha._ Ho, hear
+ The captain speak! You go to Syracuse,
+ And not content? 'Tis well there's one cries peace.
+
+ _Bia._ What's Syracuse? To conquer Sparta,--that
+ Were warrior's work! Your father robs me of it,
+ Bringing the water where I set my fires.
+ But come! I've not made love to a soul to-day
+ Save ancient Sparta. Ha! it is an art
+ That should be spared such sweat. The Heavens mean
+ That I shall pull to yoke these two days left,
+ And love take beggar's chance.
+
+ _Pha._ Ah, but two days!
+
+ _Bia._ Come to our myrtle nook----
+
+ _Pha._ Nay, Sybaris
+ Might turn me out. That is her royal seat
+ When you'll play consort.
+
+ _Bia._ What, my Phania? Dour?
+ Does Creon keep away?
+
+ _Pha._ I'm not for him.
+ You know it, Biades.
+
+ _Bia._ But he does not.
+ Too oft I find him here.
+
+ _Pha._ And Sybaris
+ Comes out of count, knowing you like this spot.
+ Yon path is worn of every blade.
+
+ _Bia._ Her feet
+ Can be so cruel?
+
+ _Pha._ You love her still!
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, sweet.
+ Not for three days. Believe me, cousin!
+
+ _Pha._ _Cousin!_
+ Athene save us! See her now,--the plague!
+
+ _Bia._ By gentle Eros, Phania, we'll be kind.
+ I loved her once.
+
+ _Pha._ How tall she is!
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, moves
+ A very sylph!
+
+ [_Sybaris comes on, lower right_]
+
+ _Syb._ A fair day's greeting, friends!
+
+ _Bia._ We double it for thee.
+
+ _Pha._ My dearest Syb!
+ Do you turn snail, you keep your house so long?
+ Why, _hours_, I think!
+
+ _Syb._ Indeed!
+
+ _Bia._ Where lovers watch
+ The dial, that's an age.
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, so!
+
+ _Bia._ [_To Phania_] Do I
+ Not know?
+
+ _Syb._ An age? Ay, love grows old and fades in 't.
+
+ _Bia._ A thousand moons in journey o'er my love
+ Would leave 't no withered hour! By the fair soul
+ Of one who knows me true!
+
+ _Syb._ That is no woman.
+
+ _Pha._ A pretty oath!
+
+ _Syb._ But not a new one, dear.
+
+ _Bia._ Plead, Phania, dove! Let her not chide
+ Poor penitence on knee. In two days' time
+ I sail to war, yet stony Sybaris
+ Would break love's wings with doubt--put me aboard
+ With sighs to sink my ship----
+
+ _Pha._ Nay, Sybaris!
+ I'll vow him constant now.
+
+ _Syb._ Inconstancy
+ Once stopped for breath, and fools came with a chair.
+
+ _Bia._ No thaw in thee? Plead, Phania, sweet! Your lips
+ Are unimpeached where mine too oft have worn
+ Conviction's droop.
+
+ _Pha._ Forgive, dear Sybaris!
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, be my tongue! Tell her that as the bee
+ Betrays the honey-buds yet hiveward flies,
+ I've left all by-roads for the true home-path.
+
+ _Syb._ Then you have trailed all others stale. There's none
+ Left new but that.
+
+ _Bia._ Tell her when I have sailed
+ From Athens' eyes into the sun that eve
+ May skirt with blood----
+
+ _Pha._ No, no!
+
+ _Bia._ --to walk with you
+ The haven's brim, watching the waves that throw
+ The sea-heart there, and know that from my ship
+ Pulses a heart to love's dream-sandalled feet
+ As constant as the sea to Athens' shore.
+ [_Sybaris moves relentingly nearer. Biades behind Phania, who sits on
+ bench, leans to talk into her ear, but keeps his eyes tenderly on
+ Sybaris_]
+ Ah, tell her, Phania, sleep is slow to come
+ Where warriors bed, and unforgiven hours
+ Are thorny comrades for an age-long night.
+
+ _Syb._ Then here's my hand. Pray Pallas 'tis no fool's!
+
+ _Bia._ Yours too, my Phania! In one breath I seal
+ Judge and defender mine! [_Kissing their hands_]
+ Now with my ship
+ Will prayers go tendant, mending every sail
+ That storm may batter. Typhon, whirl the sea
+ To insurrection,--send her meekest wave
+ To crinkle round the sun, and hiss from Heaven
+ The mariner's port-star,--I shall be safe
+ While I have implorators fair as ye
+ To melt the gods!
+
+ _Syb._ Ah, Biades, thou must
+ Be loved or die. Is 't heart or vanity,
+ That's so insatiate?
+
+ _Pha._ Nay, you have forgiven!
+
+ _Syb._ But will not coo yet. Is that Creon comes?
+ [_Looking to upper right_]
+ You'll meet him, Phania?
+
+ _Pha._ He knows his way.
+
+ _Bia._ Has news!
+ I'll pick the pigeon. [_Goes up right_]
+
+ _Pha._ O, my Sybaris,
+ Thanks for this generous peace! But who could long
+ Be harsh to Biades?
+
+ _Syb._ Such steel's not in me.
+ I but stood off, a shadow of resolve,
+ To hear him woo me back. His coldest words
+ Are ta'en from music, but when warm in suit,
+ Then music sues to him.
+
+ _Pha._ Woo _you_? Didst say
+ _Woo you_? Couldst think--couldst dream--couldst let blind sense
+ So flatter?
+
+ _Syb._ Blind? Well, you've no eye to lend.
+
+ _Pha._ His words were all for me, and through my heart
+ Were sifted to your ears.
+
+ _Syb._ For you, my dear?
+ Now what a gosling 'tis!
+
+ _Pha._ Oh! Ask him then!
+
+ _Syb._ You'll beat that bush. I have no doubt in cover.
+
+ [_Biades returns with Creon_]
+
+ _Cre._ You'll not go out?
+
+ _Bia._ No, friend.
+
+ _Cre._ I warn you, sir!
+ It is your reputation left i' the street
+ That knocks for you.
+
+ _Bia._ 'Twill care for itself.
+
+ _Cre._ Nay, come!
+ Soon every ear in Athens will be crammed
+ Wi' the tale.
+
+ _Syb._ What tale?
+
+ _Cre._ 'Tis said that Biades
+ Was cap and spur to riot that defaced
+ The Hermæ yesternight.
+
+ _Bia._ Denosed, you mean.
+
+ _Pha._ O, do not jest! I tremble, Biades!
+
+ _Cre._ You must o'ertake the lie, my lord, ere winds
+ Be up with 't.
+
+ _Bia._ Let it fly, my Creon. When
+ Its wings are worn 'twill down for any heel
+ To trample.
+
+ _Cre._ Not this feather. It broods on the air,
+ And its dark issue makes eclipse your sun
+ Can push no beam through.
+
+ _Bia._ Sinon's pate has hatched
+ The ebon chick.
+
+ _Cre._ You're not far out. He wants
+ The generalship.
+
+ [_Enter Hippargus, upper right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Here comes a tongue to market.
+ Most purchasable, tho' neither cut nor dried.
+
+ _Cre._ The senate's messenger!
+
+ _Bia._ Greeting, Hippargus.
+
+ _Hip._ Greeting, my lord,--and I must lay command
+ On that, for you are charged on the instant to appear
+ Before the Council.
+
+ _Bia._ The instant? Cramped to that?
+ And what to do there, sir?
+
+ _Hip._ Give proof you touched
+ With no profaning and injurious hand
+ Our threshold gods.
+
+ _Bia._ Go gently back, Hippargus,
+ And tell the senators I pardon them,
+ Knowing they do mistake. They would not lay
+ So dull an antic on me, and this charge
+ Is meant for Bico, my fat monkey here,
+ Whom they may have for trial.
+
+ _Hip._ Spare such jest,
+ My worthy lord. A hundred tongues have sworn
+ You said in open street, nor cared who heard,
+ The guardian Hermæ might be nipped of ears,
+ And noses too, yet serve our pious turn,
+ Since they smell out no faults and citizens
+ Confess none.
+
+ _Bia._ Ah! Do they make wit a crime,
+ Who have no taint of its color? Say 'twere red
+ The senators would never be mistook
+ For woodpeckers. Gods! When they prate, I know
+ Athene's owl is stuffed, and her wise serpent
+ An old-year slough! Off now! Your pannier's full.
+ Trot and unpack.
+
+ [_Exit Hippargus_]
+
+ _Cre._ Out! Follow, and deny
+ This answer! Dare you, standing on the top
+ And slippery point of fortune, throw your cap
+ In Heaven's face?
+
+ _Bia._ Dare I do less? No, friend.
+ The Council fears me, and would see me down.
+ My power is in the people, who for gold
+ And merry flattery give me their love.
+ But now they're on the quibble how to turn,
+ To me or Sinon. I'll not let them see
+ My office brought to question, and myself
+ Outfaced by perjurers in Sinon's keep.
+ Nay, when they find I'm not the senate's groom,
+ But know myself, their pride will know me too,
+ And I shall go to bed as I rose up,
+ The Athenian general.
+
+ _Cre._ The street will bellow.
+ I'll listen to it, and pick interpretation
+ From 'ts roar. You'll come with me?
+
+ _Bia._ Though oracles,
+ On every curb and step, begged audience,
+ I'd not go out.
+
+ [_Exit Creon_]
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, me!
+
+ _Bia._ Why so? I'm not a hare
+ To jump because a leaf falls. Wag the hour,
+ And Pleasure wait on us! If she fill not
+ My cup to-day, I fear it must go empty
+ A good twelvemonth. There are fair maids
+ In Syracuse, but they'll peer on me through
+ A crimson lattice.
+
+ _Pha._ You'll not see them, sir!
+ Or break a thousand oaths! So oft you've sworn
+ No beauty out of Athens could persuade
+ Your eyes to worship.
+
+ _Syb._ Then the Spartan maid
+ Lodged here will let him sleep.
+
+ _Bia._ What maid is this?
+
+ _Pha._ Why, Pyrrha,--Stesilaus' daughter.
+
+ _Bia._ Here?
+
+ _Pha._ Ay, everybody's here.
+
+ _Syb._ I saw her leave
+ The chariot. Such clothes!
+
+ _Pha._ _No_ clothes, you mean!
+
+ _Syb._ [_In shocked aside_] Just to the knees!
+
+ _Pha._ And open to the hips!
+
+ _Syb._ You say it!
+
+ _Pha._ And manners, none. I took her nuts
+ And sugared poppy seeds. She said she kept
+ No parrot.
+
+ _Syb._ Here's a guest!
+
+ _Pha._ And when I said
+ I _lived_ on them----
+
+ _Bia._ My dainty!
+
+ _Pha._ --then she asked
+ If that made me so little!
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, they feed
+ To grow in Sparta. Breed but monsters there.
+ No arts, no grace, no soft and tendrilled speech
+ That creeps to ends of being and looks back
+ Exultant and afraid. They are not men,
+ But, wearing human port, would force on us
+ A beastly comradeship. Set me to woo
+ A toad bred in a ditch of Attica,
+ But not a maid of Sparta! Were she fair
+ As was Persephone when she drew the god
+ From nether earth, yet sprung from that hard soil,
+ I'd let her beauty pass.
+
+ _Syb._ Hist, Biades!
+ She's yonder.
+
+ [_They look middle left, where Pyrrha appears_]
+
+ _Pha._ I like the garden best when 't wears
+ Pale Cybele's gown. Apollo makes it harsh
+ In black and gold--Ah, Pyrrha! You have found
+ Our blossomy corner. Welcome to it, and know
+ My neighbor, Sybaris,--and Biades.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I greet you, friends of Athens.
+
+ _Pha._ Will you sit?
+
+ _Bia._ [_Who has not removed his gaze from her since her entrance_]
+ A walk! That was your wish.
+ I'll show the paths.
+
+ _Syb._ Nay, here's a seat.
+
+ _Bia._ There's Artystone's rose,
+ Brought from the Mysian stream----
+
+ _Pha._ She'll stay with us.
+
+ _Bia._ The ivory cup of Isis, where each night
+ Her one tear falls,--and flowers whose sisters blow
+ In walled Ecbatana.
+
+ _Syb._ Come, sit by me,
+ Dear Pyrrha.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I would see the garden.
+
+ _Syb._ [_Rising_] Would?
+ We'll guide you then.
+
+ _Pha._ Ay, who would dawdle here?
+
+ _Bia._ But rest a moment, Pyrrha. I mind me now,
+ That from this spot the eye may best o'ersweep
+ The full design. Yon mass of planes----
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'll walk
+ Alone. [_Moves off, lower right_]
+
+ _Syb._ Well!
+
+ _Pha._ Said I not?
+
+ _Syb._ Does nothing that
+ She's asked! And stares as though a woman's eyes
+ Were made to see with, when their chiefest use
+ Is not to see!
+
+ _Pha._ Crude as her Spartan rocks!
+
+ _Bia._ I'll follow.
+
+ _Syb._ Nay, she'd _walk alone_!
+
+ _Bia._ She's Athens' guest.
+ I'll not be rude, whatever lack in her
+ Provokes me to it.
+
+ _Pha._ Nor shall I, by all
+ The grace in th' world!
+
+ _Syb._ You shame us, Biades.
+ We'll go with you.
+
+ [_Each taken an arm of Biades as he goes right. Pelagon enters, upper
+ left_]
+
+ _Pel._ Daughter, this way!
+
+ [_Phania returns reluctantly. The others pass off, right_]
+
+ _Pel._ My chick,--
+ Nay, I'll be brief. I know young feet would flock.
+
+ _Pha._ O, father dear, I'd please you first! [_Kissing him_]
+
+ _Pel._ Well, well!...
+ You've seen Lord Stesilaus?
+
+ _Pha._ Just a peek.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, he's no bear.
+
+ _Pha._ He'll bite though. I know that.
+
+ _Pel._ Now, Phania, now! I have a reason, miss,
+ A most dear reason you should win the love
+ Of Stesilaus.
+
+ _Pha._ Love!
+
+ _Pel._ I mean, my duck,
+ A father's gentle love.
+
+ _Pha._ But, daddy, he's----
+ So tall!
+
+ _Pel._ He has a heart, my daughter.
+
+ _Pha._ Fum!
+ Are you so sure?
+
+ _Pel._ Find it the shortest way.
+ Remember he's your--hmm!--remember--hmm!--
+ That he's a man--as I am--and his pride
+ But April frost. Be as he were myself----
+
+ _Pha._ As you? Oh, dear! [_Under his arm_]
+ And must I cuddle so?
+ Nay, that's for my own fa-fa!
+
+ _Pel._ Little Phania!
+ I'll lose my pipit,--lose my bonny bird!
+
+ _Pha._ Lose me? O, never, daddy, never! I'm
+ Your pipsey, wipsey, umpsey, ownty own!
+
+ _Pel._ [_Resolutely_] Wait here. I'll send him by.
+
+ _Pha._ But, father, why----
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, that's my secret. Not for little birds.
+
+ [_Exit upper left. Phania waits until he disappears, then turns
+ flying, and vanishes lower right. Archippe and Sachinessa
+ enter, middle left_]
+
+ _Sac._ Blest be Athene, there's nobody here!
+ The house is overrun, and Pelagon
+ Has twenty shadows, one at every door.
+ Out, in,--in, out,--with ears like aprons held
+ For every whisper! Here we're safe to talk.
+
+ _Arc._ O, dearest Sachinessa, what's to do?
+
+ _Sac._ We'll go to Philon. If he says confess----
+
+ _Arc._ Confess? I'll never do it! I will take
+ What way he will but that, though 't be the one
+ Leads out of life. You do not know my lord!
+
+ _Sac._ Your Stesilaus is no god, Archippe.
+ I'll tell you that.
+
+ _Arc._ If it should come to him
+ We never changed our daughters! If he learns
+ That twenty years I've made him wear the hood,
+ His roof no more would shade me. Nay! Confess?
+ Oh, Sachinessa, I should lose him quite!
+
+ _Sac._ That could be borne, I think.
+
+ _Arc._ But lose my Pyrrha?
+ Be driven out from her? See her no more?
+
+ _Sac._ There, friend, you stir me. Such a piece of man!
+ To strike like that because a woman's wit
+ Has clipped his own! He's not suspected you
+ In all these years?
+
+ _Arc._ Not once. I've watched myself
+ As I were my own jailer, fenced my heart,
+ And made my love a thief that gave my child
+ No open looks, but by her bed at night
+ Stole comfort as she slept.
+
+ _Sac._ Not I, Archippe!
+ I've laughed above the snores of Pelagon,
+ Knowing my darling near, whom he thought far
+ As Sparta. Come! You're taller by a head
+ Than I, yet die with quaking. And I thought
+ Each Lacedæmon wife a lioness.
+
+ _Arc._ Ah, but their lords are lions.
+
+ _Sac._ Well, they've mane
+ Enough, but they'd not shake it in my face.
+
+ _Arc._ Will you confess?
+
+ _Sac._ Why, no. For Pelagon
+ Would play the spousal saint, sit on the clouds,
+ And with a piety intolerable
+ Forgive his perjured wife. What soul could bear it?
+ But I'll not part with Phania, know you that!
+
+ _Arc._ What then?
+
+ _Sac._ We'll go to Philon. How to keep
+ Our secret and our daughters,--that's a nut
+ To break the oracle's teeth.
+
+ _Arc._ If 't can be done!
+
+ _Sac._ It must be done, Archippe. Come,--I hear
+ A chatter. This way out.
+
+ [_They leave, upper right. Biades, Pyrrha, Sybaris, and Phania enter
+ lower right_]
+
+ _Pha._ What of our garden,
+ Now all is seen?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Here gods should live, not men.
+ At every turn I seemed to lose the step
+ Of a departing deity.
+
+ _Syb._ We are content
+ With our Athenian lords, and seek no charm
+ To turn them into gods.
+
+ _Bia._ [_Showing a locket_] I've here a charm
+ Does more than that. This jewel webbed
+ In mystic rings--and set----
+
+ _Syb._ The Persian gem!
+ You promised me----
+
+ _Bia._ It is a magic stone,
+ That gazed upon by a true-minded maid----
+
+ _Pha._ [_Securing the trinket_] I'll see it, sir!
+ I've heard you vow your bride
+ Should wear this locket.
+
+ _Bia._ [_To Phania_] So she shall.
+ [_To Sybaris_] None else!
+ [_To Pyrrha_]
+ You hear my oath. Come, Sybaris, sit here
+ And, Phania,--come! You both shall peep at fate
+ Through a ruby portal, if your hearts be true.
+ Now fix your look----
+
+ _Pha._ We'll see the same!
+
+ _Bia._ Not so.
+ Each fortune's connate with the gazer's star,
+ And tinted as she dreams. Direct your eyes
+ With flawless constancy, or you'll see naught.
+
+ _Pha._ Not lift them once?
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, fasten every thought
+ Deep in the jewel's fire, till I have said
+ The Persian chant of welcome to the spirit
+ Whose magic you shall see.
+
+ _Pha._ A spirit? Oh!
+
+ _Bia._ But she is fair,--framed as divinity
+ For adoration.
+
+ _Syb._ She!
+
+ _Bia._ Lift not your eyes.
+
+ [_Stands behind Phania and Sybaris and makes the incantation an ardent
+ address to Pyrrha_]
+
+ Spirit of Fate, what mystical wooing
+ May win thee to pause where we pray?
+ Misers of Dream their locks are undoing,--
+ Mistress of Keys, wilt thou stay?
+
+ Priestess, thyself, O fairer than dreaming,
+ Art deity's answer to prayer!
+ Dusk in thine eyes is the seer-burthen gleaming,
+ And moon-wands at rest in thy hair.
+
+ Far-foot Desire is lost in the winding
+ Of valleys and gardens of thee!
+ Hoop of white arms is circumferent binding
+ The star-pastured world and me!
+
+ [_Sybaris throws the locket at his feet. He turns and sees that she
+ and Phania have risen and are staring at him_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_After a silence_] I do not know this game. Will leave you to it.
+ [_Exit, middle left_]
+
+ _Syb._ And I'll go home! [_Exit, lower left_]
+
+ _Pha._ And I'll go tell my father!
+ [_Exit, upper left_]
+
+ _Bia._ And I'll go stand in th' donkey mart and bray
+ Till a farmer buys me! Witched, and by a Spartan!
+ Mad as the fleeing ass of Thessaly! [_Exit, upper right_]
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT II
+
+
+SCENE: _The same as first act, a few minutes later. Phania in discovered
+in rear. Stesilaus walks frozenly back and forth, front, while she
+timidly advances and retreats._
+
+
+ _Pha._ [_Approaching_] I'm Phania, sir.
+
+ _Ste._ [_Looks at her incredulously, then walks left, leaving her centre_]
+ My blood and bone in that!
+ What dwarf-dish has she fed on? Ugh!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Crossing_] I've come
+ To walk with you. You like our garden, sir?
+ We've bulbuls in it,--and wee, visiting wings
+ From the unknown south. Can see them if you watch
+ A place I know. They dart like breathing bits
+ Of chrysoprase and sard o' the sun.
+
+ _Ste._ Humph! You
+ Are Phania?
+
+ _Pha._ [_Braver_] Troth, I am! Wilt see a nest--
+ So small as--that! Could put it on your thumb.
+ [_Takes his hand_]
+ I'll show you, sir. Don't you love _little_ things?
+ They wiggle to the heart, my daddy says.
+ You love my _daddy_, don't you?
+
+ _Ste._ Ugh! Your--Ugh!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Defensive_] _I_ love him,--yes, and all his friends. I do,
+ Though they're--so tall. I come just to your beard.
+ See now! [_Leans against him_]
+
+ _Ste._ Get off! You squeaking pewit! Ugh!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Quiveringly_] Have I displeased you, sir?
+
+ _Ste._ Displeased me? No.
+ You make contentment creep on honored bones
+ Far back as Lacedæmon's earliest grave
+ That opened for my house. You turn my blood
+ That's not yet earthed, and hot as Sparta's pride,
+ To drops that mutiny 'gainst their own succession
+ And beg to be the end. Displeased? Oh, no!
+ [_Retires, rear_]
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, sir----
+
+ [_Fails, and goes off weeping, lower right. Enter, upper right, Biades
+ and Creon_]
+
+ _Cre._ But this confusion, many-throated,
+ Has single voice and warns articulate.
+ A treasonous tempest rises, and you stand
+ A god indifferent when you should bethink
+ Yourself most mortal. Vilest mouths puff bold
+ In Sinon's service. You must wax your way
+ To th' Council----
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, no bending there!
+
+ _Cre._ But----
+
+ _Bia._ Peace!
+ Here's Stesilaus! He's most heavy shipped.
+ What is aboard? And now comes Pelagon,
+ With 's threshing-tongue a-ready. Chaff will fly.
+
+ [_Enter Pelagon, upper left_]
+
+ _Pel._ What thinkst of Phania? Is she not a chick?
+
+ _Ste._ You've tricked me, Pelagon! What fubbery
+ Have you put on me?
+
+ _Pel._ Sir? Now, now! Why, friend!
+
+ _Ste._ That's not my daughter!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Drawing Creon back_] Whist!
+
+ _Ste._ I'll see my own!
+ _My_ Phania! Not that bib,--that mewling piece,
+ With th' milk still in her mouth!
+
+ _Pel._ Speak so of her?
+ A bud in th' dew! A cherry next its leaf!
+ A pippin on the limb!
+
+ _Ste._ Not mine, I say!
+
+ _Pel._ If you repent you did beget her, sir,
+ I'll be your shift and own the curtained deed
+ 'Fore man and Heaven.
+
+ _Ste._ That my child?
+
+ _Pel._ Yours, friend.
+
+ _Ste._ Would she had never left Archippe's lap
+ For Sachinessa's! Patience, cool my tongue!
+ But I've done better by your Pyrrha!
+
+ _Pel._ Soft,
+ Beseech you, Stesilaus! Here's no place
+ For trumpeting our secret. And brief time
+ Forbids it present voice. The hour is on
+ To hear the people's answer. Come, my lord.
+ Your comrades go before you. We're past late.
+
+ _Ste._ Friend Pelagon, though courtesy be pressed
+ To th' kibe, I'll urge you keep at home. 'Tis best
+ You be not seen in this. The lords, who know
+ You lean to Sparta,--and for that all thanks,--
+ Are pricked therewith to oppose us, when they else
+ Might voice us favor.
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, they know me, friend.
+ My eye sets them at guard. They feel it, sir!
+ Puts them on screw. Well, so,--I'll stay behind.
+ But let me set you forth. [_Exeunt, upper right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Is 't trick, or truth?
+
+ _Cre._ Touch me! A needle's point
+ Could find no spot amazement hath not taken!
+
+ _Bia._ Didst hear it Creon? Pyrrha an Athenian!
+ O, words of miracle, if ye be true,--
+ Friend, friend, I'm in a whirl upon a way
+ To use this strange unearthment for the good
+ Of Athens. You'll be silent. Creon?
+
+ _Cre._ Nay,
+ I think----
+
+ _Bia._ And now I've lost fair Phania!
+
+ _Cre._ Lost?
+
+ _Bia._ With Mars i' the dusk of this debated time,
+ The Athenian general may not wive himself
+ With Sparta.
+
+ _Cre._ True!
+
+ _Bia._ I might give up command,
+ And be no more my country's armored watch....
+ Nay, Attica is first! That's sworn. I'll plunge
+ The sacrificial knife deep as my love.
+ And now 'tis done. Ah, Creon, tend thee well
+ My gentle loss.
+
+ _Cre._ This sets thee o'er thyself!
+ O noblest bounty that in grace compeers
+ With emulous Heaven! What in me can pay----
+
+ _Bia._ No more of 't now. But what a secret this!
+ If 't solely were my own--
+
+ _Cre._ It is, my lord!
+ 'Tis yours. I have no speech, no tongue for 't!
+
+ _Bia._ Thanks,
+ My Creon, thanks! And will you go once more
+ To th' street, where now it seems I have some need
+ Of loyal ears?
+
+ _Cre._ I serve you, Biades. [_Exit, upper right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Fast hooked, and feels no barb. If he'll lie dark
+ Till I would stir the waters.... Is it truth?
+ Pyrrha! Athenian born and Spartan bred!
+ By Mars and Eros! Here's a captain's bride!
+ There's flutter in me like a forest shook
+ With waking birds!
+
+ [_Re-enter Phania, still weeping_]
+
+ _Bia._ Why, Phania! Such a shower,
+ My kitkin!
+
+ _Pha._ Stesilaus sh-shook me so!
+ Called me a sque-e-aking pewit!
+
+ _Bia._ Ha! He did?
+ Well, listen to me, Phania. Come, look up.
+ [_Lifts her chin_]
+ A maid with little eyes should never weep.
+ Leave that to Juno orbs. They swim in sorrow
+ Like full moons in a lake, but beads like yours
+ Are only bright when dry. Shun grief as you
+ Shun mud. [_Exit, middle left_]
+
+ _Pha._ [_Gasping_] Why--Biades--he's gone!
+ He said----
+ Oh, oh! If I could die----
+
+ [_Sobs with abandon. Enter Alcanor, upper left. He pauses before
+ her. She looks up bewildered_]
+
+ _Alc._ Ah, gentle star,
+ What shrouds thee in this rain? Yet thou'rt not hid.
+ Thy beauty shining on these clouds of pearl
+ Makes every drop that dies reflecting thee
+ A little, falling sun.
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, Biades said----
+ He said--he said----
+
+ _Alc._ If what he said so troubles,
+ Let me unsay it with a kiss that makes
+ Trouble forgot and dumb. [_Kisses her_]
+
+ _Pha._ [_On his bosom_] I'm not--I'm not--
+ Not _ugly_, sir?
+
+ _Alc._ O, dove of Aphrodite!
+ Earth stores her beauty in this single face,
+ That she may show one jewel to the skies
+ When gods boast they have all!
+
+ [_Phania purrs comfortedly, then releases herself_]
+
+ _Pha._ How dare you, sir,
+ Attack me? Who are you?
+
+ _Alc._ I do not know.
+
+ _Pha._ Not know?
+
+ _Alc._ Nothing of self or where I am.
+ It may be those are trees on giant guard,
+ And these bright peeping things are flowers' eyes,
+ And this is happy grass we stand upon,
+ And that blue watcher is the faithful sky,
+ But I know naught except my soul is yours,
+ O, maid-magician, in whose snare I lie
+ Kissing the net that binds me! [_Kissing her fallen curls_]
+
+ _Pha._ But you know
+ Your name!
+
+ _Alc._ Not in this world a minute old
+ That now I find me in, but in time past
+ I was Alcanor, Stesilaus' son.
+
+ _Pha._ O!--then--why--all is well! You're noble, sir!
+ My father will approve you.
+
+ _Alc._ Hast a father?
+ And art not magic-born? Then I perceive
+ I must go back and find my earthly wits.
+
+ _Pha._ Nay, he is Pelagon, your father's friend.
+
+ _Alc._ You're Phania, then!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Giving her hand_] I am.
+
+ _Alc._ No more than this?
+ No kiss?
+
+ _Pha._ [_Very shy_] You've had it, sir.
+
+ _Alc._ A phantom one!
+ 'Twas in a dream, as two ghost-lovers meet
+ On an Elysian path. Too cold for earth!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Touching her cheek_] Nay, it is warm here yet.
+
+ [_He takes her in his arms, and they withdraw lower right. Pelagon
+ enters, upper right, in time to witness the embrace_]
+
+ _Pel._ [_Rousing from his horror_] Her brother! Gods!
+ Whip me all hagglers! We have stood so long
+ At door of our confession that this shame
+ Gets by us. Phania and Alcanor! Oh!
+ No shuffling now! When Stesilaus comes,
+ The tale must out!
+
+ [_Enter Pyrrha, middle left. She crosses, passing Pelagon, who retreats
+ rear, unseen by her. She loiters right_]
+
+ _Pel._ Here's opportunity
+ At beck. I'll follow. [_Advances_] Ahem! My daughter,----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Sir?
+ You seek your daughter? I will look this way.
+ [_Goes farther right_]
+
+ _Pel._ I must advance, and take her Spartan guard
+ With gentleness. My love, 'tis you I seek.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Stiffly_] You'd speak to me?
+
+ _Pel._ My little Pyrrha,----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Little!
+
+ _Pel._ I think of Phania. In my heart you both
+ Hold undivided place. Shall we not chat a bit,
+ My Pyrrha?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Kitchen maids do that, not men
+ Of State.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, there's a time when one may cast
+ The civic garment and take household ease
+ In modest robe.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Aside_] A swaddling band would fit him!
+
+ _Pel._ You will not hear me?
+
+ _Pyrr._ I wait upon you, sir.
+ For if your hostship I forget, and leave
+ The fees of grace unpaid, I yet must know
+ You are my father's friend. Say what you will,
+ My lord.
+
+ _Pel._ That word undears me! Let your tongue
+ Breach colder custom and give me a name
+ That brings me near in love as Stesilaus.
+ Wilt call me father, Pyrrha?
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Retreating_] You, my lord?
+
+ _Pel._ They've frozen her, poor child! Must blow more warm.
+ Indeed a father. Call me what I am,
+ For so I love you, Pyrrha.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Is it thus
+ The Athens sages talk?
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, we're not cut
+ Of ice as Spartans are. Here your poor heart
+ Shall know what sun is, and the Springs you've lost,
+ Betrayed without a bloom in frigid Sparta,
+ In Athens shall blow fair. You are amazed,
+ My sweet, but by this kiss----
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Giving him a blow_] You goose-eyed goat!
+ I strike not at your years, Lord Pelagon,
+ But at your mind which has not come of age
+ And gives me elder right.
+
+ [_Exit, middle left. While Pelagon is recovering, enter Stesilaus,
+ upper right_]
+
+ _Pel._ [_Welcoming the interruption_] You, Stesilaus?
+ So soon, friend, from the Assembly?
+
+ _Ste._ Late, sir, late!
+ More haste had been more prudence.
+
+ _Pel._ Why, why, why!
+
+ _Ste._ Where is your buttery nephew, Biades?
+ Who slips to the seat of question and melts all
+ Into one potch of folly!
+
+ _Pel._ But I'd know----
+
+ _Ste._ Why I am here, not there? A crater mouth
+ That calls itself a people hissed eruption
+ Into my face, and without bow I set
+ My back to 't, sir!
+
+ _Pel._ Blame me for all! I knew
+ I should not stay behind! The gods do know
+ I am the voice of Athens. 'Tis no pride
+ That speaks bare truth. I'll go----
+
+ _Ste._ Tuh, tuh!
+ A word with Biades----
+
+ _Pel._ But not too sharp,
+ My friend. He is of weight----
+
+ _Ste._ No sharper than
+ My stick! Then I set out for Sparta, where
+ The very ground knows Stesilaus walks!
+
+ _Pel._ And Phania goes with you?
+
+ _Ste._ Not if the chit
+ May corner in your kitchen! She's worth that.
+
+ _Pel._ You'll leave her here?
+
+ _Ste._ It will content me. I'll
+ Surrender both.
+
+ _Pel._ What? Both! Nay, your free heart
+ Shall not outdo my own.
+
+ _Ste._ You'll give me Pyrrha?
+
+ _Pel._ Friend of my soul, I will!
+
+ _Ste._ [_Moved_] Thanks, Pelagon.
+ She's dearer than my son. More like my blood.
+ Alcanor is too soft and woman-lipped.
+ Too much Archippe in him from his birth,
+ Nor blows could drive it out.
+
+ _Pel._ And mine own eyes
+ Have seen a cooing match between himself
+ And Phania.
+
+ _Ste._ Zeus! His sister!
+
+ _Pel._ While we speak,
+ The fated pair are yonder----
+
+ _Ste._ I'll get him home!
+ And leave the witch to you! Had I a doubt
+ To hold me back, this turn would be
+ Decision's point. She must stay here.
+
+ _Pel._ But how
+ Make answer to our wives? Our wisdom's nicked
+ Where it is tenderest if we confess.
+
+ _Ste._ What's to confess? I know my will and do it.
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, ay, you bear your wife in a sack, but mine
+ Is on her feet and goes her pace. Look yon!
+ They come together! A brace, and one of them
+ Would tie my tongue.
+
+ _Ste._ Tie water in a brook!
+
+ [_Archippe and Sachinessa enter upper right_]
+
+ _Sac._ We do not come to shame you, noble lords
+ And husbands, though we've that to bear which put
+ To honest ballad would uncrest your pride
+ And clip a reef or two from the tall sail
+ Of dignity.
+
+ _Ste._ Why, madam, this approach?
+
+ _Sac._ I walk, sir, in my garden when I please.
+
+ _Arc._ We have a suit, my honored lords, which you
+ May think full strange, remembering our prayers
+ Of twenty years ago.
+
+ _Ste._ What suit canst have?
+ If you must try the goose-step out of doors,
+ Go thank the gods for suiting you with me,
+ Who save you from all suit by hearing none.
+
+ _Sac._ Not hear us, sir? I'll catch you by the ears
+ And shake the pride-wool out, but you shall hear!
+ Suited with you! And then go thank the gods!
+
+ _Pel._ Why, Sachinessa, love! What you, duck?
+
+ _Sac._ This, Pelagon. When in that sad year gone
+ You took my child from me----
+
+ _Pel._ What? That again?
+
+ _Sac._ Not that, but this. I did not stay you then,
+ Being young in wedlock and my wit at cheep
+ In its first feathers. But this second time
+ When you lift up your hand to cut the bough
+ Whose root is in my heart, I'll speak so loud
+ That if your dull ear miss, I'll reach you yet
+ By way o' the stars that will cry back my wrong
+ When they so hear it.
+
+ _Pel._ You would beg for Phania?
+
+ _Sac._ I would. There is no source of love so great
+ As brooding care. That makes the mother, not
+ The childing pangs. Though she, from the first hour,
+ Will cherish what she must so dearly buy,
+ 'Tis day by watchful day her swelling love
+ Is born. So I, as new days past, forgot
+ The child of my brief pain, and gave to one
+ That nestled in her place my care-born love.
+ Now you would strike again----
+
+ _Pel._ Sweet, by my soul,--
+ Nay, Sachinessa, dearest heart, be calm.
+ Your words have never in our mated life
+ Moved me as now. If Stesilaus yields,
+ And his stern will be broken by your plea,
+ I am content.
+
+ _Ste._ I'm so far moved, my friend,
+ That I will hear Archippe speak her wish.
+ Her love for Pyrrha will not match with that
+ Your wife bestows on Phania.
+
+ _Arc._ Ay, my lord,
+ I've never loved the stranger as my own,
+ But she is dearer than my own grown strange.
+ I see in Phania all my tender loss,
+ But it is lost forever. Give me, Pyrrha.
+ I have no other daughter.
+
+ _Ste._ Keep her, dame.
+ But make this weakness not your heckling ground
+ Where you would spar for favors. No more suits!
+
+ _Pel._ And, Sachinessa, hear the same from me.
+
+ _Sac._ You borrow feathers and I'll twitch 'em out!
+
+ _Ste._ [_To Archippe_] Lest you should badger, footed safe on this,
+ Know that my judgment's not earwigged by you
+ To this repeal, but now configures pat
+ To the act itself, that keeps a constant step
+ With our first purpose. Our intent comes out
+ With even edges, though reversed in face.
+ An Athens' maid shall be a Spartan mother,
+ And here shall dwell a dame of Spartan blood.
+
+ _Pel._ You hear it, Sachinessa. I'm not one
+ To throw my pack away in sight of home.
+ Come mud, come mire, I bear my judgment out,
+ As Athens knows.
+
+ _Sac._ I'll swear to it there's no man
+ I' the city better hides the sun with a sieve!
+
+ _Ste._ And secondly, my dame, know that I've won
+ My high contention that the laws of Sparta
+ Are best for brooding earth a godlike race.
+ For here my proof enroots in warmest life
+ That they can aggrandize the chalky veins
+ Of pampered Attica to ducts that bear
+ The red, unconquered sap of Lacedæmon.
+
+ _Sac._ So Pyrrha is your proof!
+
+ _Ste._ No question there.
+ A weak, Athenian babe grows up the pride
+ Of Sparta, while a budling of her own,
+ Nursled by Athens' soft and careless shift,
+ Scarce grows to woman's level----
+
+ _Sac._ Why, you puffed----
+ You pride-blown----
+
+ _Arc._ Come with me!
+
+ _Sac._ But such a bladder!
+ He'd top a flood into the second world
+ And wet but half his skin!
+
+ _Arc._ Nay, Sachinessa,
+ Our suit is won. No words! We'll haste once more
+ To Philon's shrine. For this dear joy I'll bend
+ A willing knee. Come, come!
+ [_Draws her away, upper right_]
+
+ _Pel._ [_Capering_] Could reel it now
+ Like school-boy 'scaped a whipping!
+
+ _Ste._ Shame! Your years
+ Will blush. [_Goes left_] Now Biades, and then farewell!
+
+ _Pel._ Ah, there's my mourning cloak! I'll go at once
+ To th' Council, and----
+
+ _Ste._ Vain labor, Pelagon.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, I will stir them!
+
+ [_Exit, upper right. Biades enters left. He is arrayed in a purple
+ gown with long train held up by his monkey. A peacock fan swings
+ from a girdle, and jewels dangle from his ears. He carries a
+ scroll from which he reads as he walks, tittering over the
+ matter. Stesilaus watches him curiously, then amazedly recognizes
+ him_]
+
+ _Ste._ Biades! Is 't he?
+ May eyes report it to a brain unshaken?
+ ... Ho, sir,--or madam?
+
+ _Bia._ Did you speak, my lord?
+ Your pardon! I was buried here,--quite drowned
+ I' the honey of this tale. Sir, it suggests,--
+ But that's not it,--the style, so quaint, so pure,--
+ It plays with thoughts and leaves them bright as shells
+ The sea has polished to their curling edges.
+ You'll hear this line? 'Tis worth a pause. Eh, not?
+ You've never wooed the script? Ah, I forget.
+ War is the art of Sparta.
+
+ _Ste._ Are you man?
+
+ _Bia._ What's that to an artist, sir? Life in me packs
+ The germinal grain of all, and what may come
+ To birth and bloom, I leave to nursing Fate.
+ But you seem ruffled,--warm. Pray have my fan.
+ Then take my parchment,--sit you in this nook
+ And read of Corys and his water-nymph
+ Until the charm of an unhurrying world
+ Steals wave-like round you.
+
+ _Ste._ Olympus! Was 't this voice
+ That tripped my reason? Led my cautious years
+ To take instruction from a dizzened ape
+ And lose the cause they guarded? Was 't myself
+ So slubbered judgment----
+
+ _Bia._ Ah, must I believe
+ You honored my good counsel?
+
+ _Ste._ Good!
+
+ _Bia._ 'Twas good
+ For Athens. Ha, you slipped into the noose
+ As easily as my finger takes this ring.
+ A wondrous sapphire here. You know the stone?
+ This is from Egypt,--has the desert fire
+ 'Neath Nilus' liquid smile. Is 't not a treasure?
+ But I forget. Your Sparta has no gems.
+ By Hera's belt, your country goes too bare
+ For this adornèd earth!
+
+ _Ste._ Come, Biades!
+ Throw off that gown, and with a captain's sword
+ Deny this folly!
+
+ _Bia._ Friend, 'tis not my hour
+ For exercise. Our moods, I see, would quarrel.
+ But here's my thornless world. You'll pardon me.
+
+ [_Resumes walking and reading as before. Pyrrha enters, middle left,
+ and stands watching him. He looks up and is struck motionless to
+ find her eyes upon him. She comes nearer for a detached scrutiny,
+ then crosses right_]
+
+ _Ste._ Find me Alcanor, daughter. And this hour
+ We leave for Sparta.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I am ready, sir.
+
+ [_Exit, lower right. Stesilaus goes into house, upper left_]
+
+ _Bia._ She has good eyes, and used them. Overshot,
+ By Hermes! I must follow,--'twixt this fool
+ And meditation's eye must interpose
+ My soldier self!
+
+ [_Tears off robe, under which he wears a simple, belted tunic, flings
+ jewels from his ears, and drives out Bico. Goes off, lower right.
+ Enter Pelagon, much ruffled, from street_]
+
+ _Pel._ Where's Stesilaus? Stesilaus, ho!
+ Find Stesilaus!
+ [_Stesilaus returns, upper left_]
+ O, my friend, they're mad,
+ And you must fly! I never was so battered!
+ The senators cry out you played with them
+ As though their stationed honors were a row
+ Of last year's weanlings,--first to say you bore
+ Full power to treat, then at their open answer
+ To cover and prefer the opposite,
+ Declaring that their noble terms must cool
+ On th' road to Sparta! As I speak your comrades
+ Are driven through the gates. You must not stay.
+ They'll have your life, they are so worked. Come, come!
+ I know a way--I'll get you through----
+
+ _Ste._ I'll go
+ The way I came.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, nay, I'll slip you out!
+ Leave here your wife and daughter. In gentler hour
+ I'll send them after, with your son,--
+
+ _Ste._ I'll speak
+ To Pyrrha----
+
+ _Pel._ No! This way! The world's at somersault!
+ The turtle's on his back, his claws to Heaven!
+ No one would hear me! _Me!_ The voice of Athens!
+ And jeered me down, for I was Biades' kin,--
+ Though why the wind sits so I know not!
+ Come--come--I was so battered----
+
+ [_Exeunt, upper left. Pyrrha and Biades enter, lower right_]
+
+ _Bia._ But one word!
+
+ _Pyrr._ I've let you shower words in hope to drain
+ Your breath of them, but they grow to a hail.
+ Pelt me no more, Athenian.
+
+ _Bia._ O, that name
+ I held my pearl of honor is become
+ A wounding thorn! I'll wear 't no more.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You'll be
+ A Spartan?
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, if you are one!
+
+ _Pyrr._ So vows
+ An Athens' captain.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, I have no place,
+ No rank, no office, duty or pursuit,
+ But this my gage is in. Nor rest till I have won!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Then you'll die weary, sir. So long 'twill take
+ To make me yours.
+
+ _Bia._ If you will love my shade
+ I'll on the instant make myself a ghost!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Love's burning deeds do ever lie before him.
+ He ne'er gets past to make them history.
+
+ _Bia._ O, hear my oath! Thy birthland shall be mine!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Whist, Biades! The gods might hear you too.
+
+ _Bia._ I'll swear it in the ears of Zeus!
+
+ _Pyrr._ By what
+ Irreverenced deity wilt break it?
+
+ _Bia._ Ah,
+ By none, fair Pyrrha! I'll stake my golden part
+ In love's eternity, no land's more dear
+ To my own heart than that which gave you birth.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ay, for on Spartan soil the laurel grows
+ Which you would pluck from drenched defeat and set
+ Among your bays. So dear as that!
+
+ [_A clamor is heard in street_]
+
+ _Bia._ I'll woo
+ In better time. Till then let this pure gem
+ Speak for me on your breast. 'Tis like my love,
+ No sudden thing. For as this captive fire
+ Dreamed in the heart of earth and could not wake
+ Till beauty born in man sent down his kiss,
+ So lay my love in Life from her first breath,
+ Deep as unconsciousness, till at your step
+ It knew itself. You scorn the half-hour flame,
+ But in your coming like an instant dawn
+ Find all its brevity. Ay, Pyrrha, sweet!
+ And let my token lie, a patient prayer,
+ Upon your bosom. Heaven should have its sun!
+
+ [_Drops the locket into the folds of her dress. She casts it to the
+ ground_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Athens is such a sun, and Sparta as my foot
+ Shall overcloud it! [_Exit, middle left_]
+
+ _Bia._ Had she crushed my gem
+ To bleeding dust, I'd pay it o'er to see
+ Such flame unsheathe. Bright Eos necklaced with
+ A darkling east could not more beauteously
+ Threat earth with storm. [_Takes up the locket_]
+ You'll wear it yet, my terror,
+ Or I'll cut out the tongue that can not wag
+ To a woman's heart.
+ [_Enter Creon from street_]
+ What, Creon? Dumb with news?
+ Which I will guess before your tongue's uncrimped.
+ We've lost our gentle guests? Our Spartan friends
+ Are off?
+
+ _Cre._ They're driven out. But that is old.
+ Atop that tale, like mountain on a hump,
+ Comes one will wake you, sir! The tumbling streams
+ That bore the Spartans out, rage back again,
+ A gathered flood against you,--you, my lord!
+
+ _Bia._ Ah!
+
+ _Cre._ Sinon's poison spreads till men
+ That yesterday lay down before you, now
+ Cry for your death. I warned you, friend!
+
+ _Bia._ You did.
+ Be happy then. Your duty's done.
+
+ _Cre._ Oh, sir,
+ Your house is sacked, and all your golden plate,
+ Parcelled on robber backs, is carried out
+ And spots the city with a hundred suns!
+
+ _Bia._ There's more i' the world. Let that not trouble you.
+
+ _Cre._ Your robes are in the street, and carters' wheels
+ Grow royal with them!
+
+ _Bia._ Well, there yet are looms.
+ While weavers know their art this is no loss.
+
+ _Cre._ Your pictures----
+
+ _Bia._ What? If they've one finger laid
+ On those immortal treasures----
+
+ _Cre._ All are riddled!
+
+ _Bia._ All, Creon? Not my Zeuxis? No! The stones
+ Hurled at it would have paused as though a god
+ Were hidden there!
+
+ _Cre._ All, friend.
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, these are tears.
+ But I will chide them and think on my sword.
+ Now I must bend me to the senators,--
+ Get leave to call my troops,--
+ [_Enter a body of senators, Amentor at their head_]
+ Most noble lords,
+ I was about to seek you.
+
+ _Amen._ Shifts your mood,
+ Proud Biades? The answer's not yet cold
+ That came so hot from you,--a two-edged shame
+ That struck into your honor as our own!
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, gentle senators, Athenian fathers!
+ That you could note so low, so foul a charge
+ As secret Sinon brought against my name,
+ Gave me the block, the bellows, and the fire
+ Wherewith I forged my answer,--one that kept
+ My honor whole, and if your own needs surgery,
+ Lay 't not to me, but let good sense mend all,
+ And give me leave to go against this mob
+ Now scarring Athens' beauty.
+
+ _Amen._ Go alone.
+
+ _Bia._ I have an army.
+
+ _Amen._ Ask Lord Sinon that.
+
+ _Bia._ When fishes drown!
+
+ _Amen._ Put out your single arm,
+ And feel your army in it. Athens' troops
+ Are now in Sinon's charge. You are no more
+ Her general. You are banished.
+
+ _Bia._ Is this so?
+
+ _Senators._ It is.
+
+ _Bia._ Then I am dumb. Words on your heat
+ Would fall as snow,--and I am not a man
+ To let my scars speak, though my body bears
+ Enough to cry you shame.
+
+ _Amen._ We know your valor,
+ But with it goes a pride no State could bear
+ But that it must. Make your escape, my lord.
+ The people pressed us, and we save your life
+ By this decree.
+
+ _Bia._ O, Athens that did love me!
+
+ _Amen._ And now repents that love, for know you, sir,
+ Though men may be irreverent as they choose,
+ They'll follow only who revere their gods.
+
+ [_Exeunt senators_]
+
+ _Cre._ But you were meek!
+
+ _Bia._ If I had let them know
+ I've yet a tongue, they might have had that too,
+ And in the courts where I must sue for love
+ 'Twill be my royal member,--all my suite
+ And kingly plenitude.
+
+ _Cre._ They will repent.
+
+ _Bia._ On knees, sir! Banished! O, my heart could lend
+ Hot Sirius fire!
+
+ _Cre._ You! Banished!
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, while sense
+ From wit and speech are undivorced, and courage
+ Knits them in purpose drinking up the seas
+ That distance me from Athens, who shall say
+ I'm banished? Bribe mankind and nature too,
+ Ye bleary senators! Suborn the winds!
+ Put me at end of farthest watery leagues!
+ While there's no rift between me and my gods,
+ I'll shake this night as from Apollo's brow
+ And show my day emergent!
+
+ _Cre._ Where wilt go?
+
+ _Bia._ To Persia first, where I am dear to Phernes.
+ And then, perchance, with Persia at my back,
+ Sparta may find me fair, though now I'm black
+ As Pluto's poker. We'll not flag, my heart,
+ Till every fleet o' the world rides here and makes
+ This saucy harbor tremble! What an ague then
+ Shall shake thee, Athens, thinking on this hour!
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT III
+
+
+SCENE: _The assembly ground of the Spartans. Maidens discovered. A dance
+is ending._
+
+
+ _Nac._ We limped through that. Apollo! Are there thorns
+ I' the grass? We'll better it. Come!
+
+ _Dia._ No time. I hear
+ The senators.
+
+ _Nac._ They wait beyond the bridge
+ For old Aristogeiton. Come, my maids!
+ You, Dianessa need to school your toes.
+ 'Twas you played wild-foot--twice!
+
+ _Art._ Save her a slip
+ When Agis' eye is on her!
+
+ _Nac._ Faith, she'd be
+ No bride this year!
+
+ _Dia._ What ache for that? His love
+ Is slight if 't hangs upon my toes.
+
+ _Nac._ My troth!
+ Less might catch more!
+
+ _Dia._ You, Nacia, are not so lithe
+ As a ferret in a hoop. An Athens maid
+ Might labor so in all her skirts.
+
+ _Nac._ Ho, ho!
+ A little puff blow such a fire? The coals
+ Were hot then!
+
+ _Myr._ Nay, my girls, we'll douse you both
+ I' the river yonder if you flame at naught.
+ How, Dianessa, dance the maids of Athens?
+ But surely not in skirts!
+
+ _Dia._ My father saw them,
+ And so he said.
+
+ _Myr._ Why dance at all then? Grace
+ That cadent girdles the invisible waves
+ Of flute and harp is born of faining limbs,
+ And hide them who may see it?
+
+ _The._ No doubt they bob
+ Like bears in blankets, and believe they dance.
+
+ _Nac._ Pyrrha could say. But since she came from Athens
+ Who hears her speak?
+
+ _Art._ She keeps from all our games,
+ And scorns the wrestle, though our noblest youths
+ Have sent her challenge.
+
+ _The._ Ay! Lets Dianessa wear
+ The vestal bays, nor cares if Hieron
+ Be there to see.
+
+ _Myr._ Come, Pyrrha, tell us how
+ The Athenian maidens dance with shrouded feet.
+
+ _Pyrr._ They wear their robes as Morning does the mist
+ That makes her beauty greater and her dream
+ Live on in men.
+
+ _Dia._ Ah, maidens, here's a tale
+ For the other ear.
+
+ _Pyrr._ The bare and brazen sun
+ That's up without a cloud, cheers to the hunt,
+ The fight, the bruited path,--makes careful dames
+ Send linen to the ford, and say "Zeus grant,
+ We'll air the beds!"
+
+ _Nac._ Ay, wives must know their season.
+
+ _Pyrr._ But let night-swimming Morn come up
+ In foamy veil, and her priest-hearted rose
+ Stays lusty feet and gives adventure's hour
+ To the achieving soul.
+
+ _Art._ What kin is this
+ To th' matter?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Why, Artante, when we dance
+ Half naked as we do before the youths,
+ They say of us "A bed-mate there, and strong
+ To bear and breed brave warriors for my house."
+ But they in Athens who so watch the dance,
+ See sheatheless Being shine through form that would,
+ Not softened thus, first fill the ruder eye
+ And leave unseen the token of a grace
+ Earth may not shadow.
+
+ _Dia._ Nay, you speak Athenian!
+ Let's have it in our tongue.
+
+ _Nac._ What grace can be
+ So badgered in a gown?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ask flying doves,
+ That rhythm the air till it doth ache with loss
+ When they have passed. So have these maidens taught
+ The silken fold to be their wingèd part.
+
+ _Myr._ Ask her no more. Alack, our Pyrrha drank
+ Of charmed Ilissus,--must go back to Athens!
+
+ _Nac._ But come! Our dance! We yet are Spartan maids.
+
+ _Dia._ [_Taking wreath from her hair_] Our flowers are far from morning.
+ See, these buds
+ Are pale as they had never known the dew.
+ But I know where some fleecy clusters blow
+ And daintily edge the stream. Like tiny birds,
+ Green-necked and lily-winged, they are alight
+ A hundred to a stem. I'll have a wreath
+ Of them.
+
+ _Myr._ And I. These sad things are less bright
+ Than locks they should adorn.
+
+ _Art._ New garlands, all!
+ Where grow these favors? Dianessa, lead!
+
+ [_They go off, rear left. Pyrrha waits a meditative moment, then turns
+ to follow. A bough brushes her cheek. She puts up her hand and
+ plucks a bunch of berries from it_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ 'Tis like his ruby. Nature loved them both
+ With the same kiss,--the berry and the stone.
+ [_Fastens cluster to her bosom_]
+ "Heaven should have its sun." This sun will fade,
+ But that I threw away had ne'er lost hue
+ So near my heart, giving and taking fire.
+ [_Something thrown from the bushes falls at her feet. She gazes at it,
+ not taking it up_]
+ Ah! Biades' jewel! Who.... [_Looks about guardedly_]
+
+ [_Biades comes from the woods. He is dressed as a Helot in a scant
+ tunic of goat-skin, and wears a large cap_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Whose slave are you,
+ Bold Helot?
+
+ _Bia._ [_Kneeling_] Thine! [_Takes off cap, revealing his quantity of
+ dark curls_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Are you in love with death,
+ That you have come to Sparta?
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, I come
+ A banished man.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I've heard how you were plucked.
+
+ _Bia._ No feather left.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Life, sir, is yours, and you
+ Cast it away in Lacedæmon.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay,--
+
+ _Pyrr._ You whose dark outrage made her honor bleed,
+ Think on her burning wound to set the foot
+ Of impudence and live?
+
+ _Bia._ I know the Spartans.
+ They will exalt my courage above death.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Courage that reckons so bates its own worth
+ Till a coward might disport it. You will meet
+ Death's mercy but no other.
+
+ _Bia._ No, the virtue
+ Dearest in them they'll hold dear in myself.
+ But if not so,--blow out your candle, Fate,
+ I'll go to bed.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Why not have fled to Persia?
+ She's softer mannered,--has no aching pride
+ Your death would poultice.
+
+ _Bia._ Pyrrha lives in Sparta.
+ Howe'er I set my feet, love turned them here.
+ Which way I bent some tingèd thought of thee
+ Crept as a secret sun to every sense
+ And made the hidden threads of being blush
+ Like coral boughs when Aphrodite's foot
+ Is on the wave.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Athenian, what canst hope
+ From Stesilaus' daughter?
+
+ _Bia._ I ask naught.
+ But had a gem of hers that hourly cried
+ To clasp its mistress, and to bring it thus,
+ With Death a looker-on, I thought might make
+ The peasant service shine so sovranly
+ That even her royal and offended eyes
+ Might gently entertain it.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Deck the bark
+ Of yon shag ilex and 'twill wear your trinket
+ With the same grace and thanks.
+
+ _Bia._ Thy grace is hers
+ Who walked unrobed from hands of the high gods
+ Grown jealous of the beauty they had made.
+ Not this, nor any jewel may adorn it,
+ Though swartest pebbles might grow ruby proud,
+ And rubies throb with breath to be so worn.
+ And for thy thanks, I have not come this way
+ To ask for them. Keep them for one so poor
+ He lets his heart for hire.
+ [_Puts locket slowly under his tunic_]
+ And yet my ears
+ Fed on a sigh when I was hidden there.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Who is so strong as never to have sighed?
+ That secret moment was my weakest too.
+ I'm now a Spartan, and my father's name
+ Is Stesilaus. You may know it, sir,
+ Who wert of Athens, but whose country now
+ Is so much ground as you may beg of foes,
+ And that, Zeus help, they'll measure without grudge.
+ You're not so tall your grave would scant a field,
+ Or make a garden less.
+
+ [_Sounds of approach across bridge, lower right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Does Fate come noisy-footed?
+ I thought she crept, and loved the jungle-leap.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Hide, sir! I'll be as secret as these shrubs,
+ And not reveal you sooner. With the night
+ You may steal out of Sparta.
+
+ _Bia._ I'll go out winged
+ With Spartan ships, and honor as a bride
+ Shall sail with me!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Are you so mad? Then die!
+
+ [_Enter ephors and senators, all old men, followed by warriors, then
+ youths, wives, maidens, children, and attendant slaves. Biades
+ draws his cap down and lies slouching on the grass. The ephors
+ and senators take seats which the Helots have prepared for them_]
+
+ _First Ephor._ What! Must we wait? Where are these merry slips?
+
+ _First Senator._ The woods are dancing yonder. By that sign
+ They come.
+
+ [_Re-enter Dianessa, Myrta, and companions, who dance before the
+ assembly, the figure symbolizing the capture of Persephone.
+ They continue dancing, the youths joining, until every maid
+ has won a partner._]
+
+ _Ste._ [_To Archippe_] Our Pyrrha does not dance. Why's that?
+
+ _Arc._ No why at all. I'll rate her. Sulky chuff!
+
+ _Ste._ Ay, you'll be on her heels!
+
+ _Arc._ The younger maids
+ Are chosen. She'll be left. There's Hieron
+ With eyes like begging moons which way she goes,
+ But she draws off,--
+
+ _Ste._ Well, well! She'll please herself.
+
+ _Arc._ In Phania, I'd have had a daughter now----
+
+ _Ste._ What, madam? Gabble here? Be done!
+
+ _Agis._ [_Among the young men_] I thirst.
+ [_To Biades_] Up, slave! Fill me a cup. Come, move, you drone!
+
+ [_Biades slowly rises and goes to spring under trees, rear_]
+
+ _A Young Lord._ What Helot's that?
+
+ _Another._ Some dog o' the farms. A staff
+ On 's back might help his legs.
+
+ _Another._ I'll put mine to 't.
+
+ [_Biades lazily returns with cup. In handing it to Agis he spills part
+ of the contents_]
+
+ _Agis._ [_Emptying the cup in Biades' face_] By Dis and Rhadamanthus! Sot!
+ Whose man
+ Is this?
+
+ _Bia._ My own, you Spartan whelp!
+
+ [_Gives Agis a blow, so unexpected that it knocks him down. His head
+ strikes the root of a tree and he does not rise. A number of
+ Spartans rush upon Biades. Others bear Agis off, left_]
+
+ _Voices._ The dog!
+ Tread him to earth! Down! down!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Springing from them and taking off his cap_]
+ What, Greeks? You'd kill
+ A brother?
+
+ _A Voice._ Biades!
+
+ _Bia._ My friends----
+
+ _Voices._ Ha, ha! His friends!
+
+ _Lys._ What friending was 't you gave us on the day
+ You drove us out of Athens? Hoot and club
+ Then spoke how dear you loved us. We had not
+ Brought off our lives if your desire had dared
+ Blow full on Athens' heat.
+
+ _Gir._ Brought off our lives?
+ Where's Heracordus? Stoned at Athens' gate,
+ And dead upon the road.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, brothers----
+
+ _Gir._ Ha!
+ If you're a brother, weep beside his grave.
+ I'll show it you.
+
+ _Lys._ And all the graves where lie
+ The dead we brought two bleeding years ago
+ From Decalea's wall, where you gave entry
+ Then broke the truce with charge!
+
+ _Bia._ But hear, my lords----
+
+ _Gir._ Come, wail beside them till they wake and ask
+ What new calamity brews in your tears!
+
+ [_Enter Lenon_]
+
+ _Len._ Agis yet swoons. That root was edged with death.
+ We fear he's gone.
+
+ _Gir._ For this alone, Athenian,
+ You should not live,--though all your else-wrought deeds
+ Were mercy's pawn for you.
+
+ _Bia._ Ye fathers, hear!
+ If ye know Justice,--and the world has said
+ Her lovers dwell in Sparta,--shall he cry
+ To scorn-shut ears, whose injuries taking voice
+ Should pass in thunder where your virtues sleep?
+ Hear one whose wrongs have bruised him to your coast,
+ And let it not be said that you from safe
+ Unshaken rocks met suppliant hands with spears!
+
+ _Ste._ Ye noble elders, there's a sort of mercy
+ On which dishonor feeds. As pasty, soft
+ As butter in the sun, it chokes the sluice
+ Of reason,--in marshy obliteration lays
+ The marks and bounds of justice,--nauseous spreads
+ Till mind is left no throne. Let it not come
+ Where sit the guards of honor!
+
+ _Bia._ I grant you so.
+ But what I ask is not thus natured, sir!
+ Sages of Lacedæmon, there's a mercy
+ That veins the very rock of Justice' seat.
+ It is the agent of divinest mould
+ In all the world. By it the mind grows fair
+ With blossoms deity may gather. 'Tis
+ As precious to the soul as south-lipped winds
+ To the winter-aching earth. Go bare of it,
+ Though ye know Virtue ye wear not her pearl.
+ I beg my life that you in saving me
+ May save the heavenliest favor given to men,
+ Nor crush it out of Sparta, leaving her
+ The scarred and barren terror gods forsake.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ Shall hear his plea? He may have argument
+ Of worthy note.
+
+ _Second Senator._ 'Tis not our way to judge
+ The dumb.
+
+ _Third Ephor._ [_Very old, creakingly_]
+ Why, if a lion, boar, or pard,
+ Or any beast, should pause as we did burn
+ In chase, and beg us hear his cause, I think
+ Our ears would ope.
+
+ _Ste._ Ay, and the earth too, sir,
+ Bearing such wonder on it! Folly's self
+ Would be too wise to listen to this man,
+ Yet ye would hear him!
+
+ _Fourth Ephor._ More than would. We will.
+
+ _Bia._ This clemency shows like yourselves,--the gem
+ Of mind's adornment, as ye are the lustre
+ Of Sparta's matchless race!
+
+ _Ste._ Now he is off.
+ Will gallop with us to what ditch he choose.
+
+ _First Senator._ Speak, Biades.
+
+ _Bia._ Of Agis then, my lords,--
+ This newly raw offence,--be my first word.
+ And I'll not stay for garnish. Truth is bare,
+ And bravest so. Though 'twas my Helot guise
+ Drew Agis' insult on me, think you, sirs,
+ It fell upon a proud and free-born Greek,
+ And who is here that could with putting on
+ A slave's vile dress put on his nature too,
+ Drain off his ancient, high nobility,
+ And in one brutish instant lose the blood
+ That made his fathers heroes? Is there one?
+
+ _First Ephor._ We grant you, none.
+
+ _Bia._ Your hearts then struck my blow,
+ Therefore must pardon it. If Agis' death
+ Falls from it, 'tis but accident that sleeps
+ In every motion, and in mine awoke
+ Untimely. Who, so shorn of wisdom, thinks
+ That I, a suitor here for barest life,
+ Meant him a vital stroke that would o'ercry
+ My prayers and make a mock of suppliance?
+ I'll mourn with you, my lords, but ask you wring
+ The neck of Fate, and leave my head where 'tis
+ To praise the just of Sparta.
+
+ _Third Senator._ So we might
+ But for the heavier charges that engage
+ The sighs of mercy 'gainst you ere they blow
+ This deed a pardon. What of Decalea?
+
+ _Bia._ That was a ruse the Spartans taught me, sir,
+ When at Eleusis they ensnared my troops
+ Within the gates, and naught passed out again
+ Save rivers of their blood. If I must die
+ For Decalea, die you with me, men,
+ For red Eleusis.
+
+ _Fourth Senator._ This is justice too.
+ I saw Eleusis. He is clear on that.
+
+ _Ste._ I warn you, senators! The fleetest wit
+ That pauses on his guile is honey-mired
+ And ne'er gets farther.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We'll not keep his road
+ An inch past justice, but we'll go so far.
+
+ _Ste._ So you resolve, but Hecate at his smile
+ Would plod beside him like a market lass,
+ Forgetting vengeance.
+
+ _Bia._ Honored Stesilaus:----
+
+ _Ste._ Honored? Ay, Biades! With gibe and jeer
+ That shook the walls of Athens! By my staff,
+ I'll----
+
+ _Bia._ Noble fathers, hear me for yourselves,
+ Who, loved of Pallas, in this council sit
+ Her earthly heirs and nature's demigods!
+ This rage of Stesilaus is itself
+ Sanction and seal for my adoption here,
+ A son of Sparta.
+
+ _Ste._ Ha! Now he would drive
+ The mares of Diomed!
+
+ _Bia._ My lords,----
+
+ _Ste._ Prove this?
+
+ _Bia._ Why made you Stesilaus head and tongue
+ Of envoy unto Athens? For you thought
+ His mind, most apt, fluidic, politic,
+ More quick than danger, would take shape of need,
+ Repairing your defense fast as you found
+ Your safety cramped. If I o'ercame him then
+ With wit that watched with sleepless spear at door
+ Of Athens' housèd trust, must you not crown in me
+ The quality held sovereign in him?
+
+ _Ste._ You hear, you elders,--must!
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, must,--and must!
+ Or at the fontal spring of justice break
+ Your cups and thirst. No alien dripple may
+ Content you then.
+
+ _First Senator._ We listen, Biades.
+
+ _Bia._ When swords of an uneven temper meet,
+ Who scorns the better proved? Nay, you do set
+ Your love upon it,--in your armory
+ Give it a burnished place. And I who crossed
+ With Stesilaus, for my triumph ask
+ To be of Sparta's armor.
+
+ _Ste._ Our dead shall answer!
+
+ _Bia._ They shall. For every heart my steel made cold,
+ Is proof how well I served my Athens,--proof
+ Of loyal heat with which I'll serve the State
+ That makes me hers! A true-bred Greek, outthrust
+ And homeless, seeks a foster-land, that he
+ May lift for her his sword, nor wasteful let
+ The chiefest virtue in him die unused
+ While his lost name no more climbs to the gods.
+
+ _Second Senator._ Would you ally with us 'gainst Attica?
+
+ _Bia._ I'm yours for that. By th' mother of the sea,
+ Her tears shall wash your feet!
+
+ _Third Senator._ What way wouldst take?
+
+ _Bia._ The way to Phernes and the Persian fleet
+ Now boastful before Rhodes. Grant me a convoy,
+ I'll forge with Persia Lacedæmon's sword,
+ And cut the crest from Athens.
+
+ _Fourth Senator._ We have failed
+ With Phernes.
+
+ _Bia._ You'll not fail again. He's sworn
+ My friend.
+
+ _First Senator._ Our ships are few.
+
+ _Bia._ But Corinth holds
+ Her sea-wings spread for any need of yours.
+
+ _Ste._ Hear me, ye warriors! He will lead
+ Our force afar, then stir up neighbor foes
+ To scourge unarmored Sparta! Think that one,
+ Cradled in silk and fed on nectared drops----
+
+ _Bia._ There, sir, I'm bold to say you're off the road
+ Of truth. My nurse was of your people, brought
+ From sterner Sparta for my orphan rearing,
+ By my good uncle Pelagon,--a man
+ Ye know your friend. From her wise hands I took
+ Your doughty-nurturing bread, and broth black-brewed,
+ That drives the shade of fear from veins of men.
+
+ _Ste._ I've bread now in my wallet. Let us see
+ Your teeth in 't.
+
+ [_Takes out a piece of coarse, stale bread and offers it to
+ Biades_]
+
+ _Bia._ Pardon, sir! I do not hunger.
+ A Helot shared with me.
+
+ _Ste._ 'Twill keep till you
+ Would sup. But, you must try our broth, sir. Pulse
+ Is seething yonder. Youths, bring here a bowl.
+ We have a guest who'd call his childhood up
+ In good black brew. Hark, Lenon!
+
+ [_Whispers to Lenon, who goes off left_]
+
+ _Third Ephor._ It is truth.
+ Amycla was your nurse. I know the year
+ That she was sent to Athens.
+
+ _Bia._ On her lap
+ I learned a love for Sparta that returned
+ In warrior days to blunt my assaulting sword
+ And wound me from your side. She taught me too
+ The lyric wafture that dead hero-lips
+ Send on undying,--songs your young men sing,
+ And old men flush to hear,--and as a youth
+ I longed to make my civil Athens street
+ Echo to Sparta with a brother's call.
+
+ _Third Ephor._ But I am moved.
+
+ _Fourth Ephor._ And I.
+
+ _Ste._ Art grown so old
+ You'll feed on pap again? Come, Biades,
+ A song Amycla taught you! One will prove
+ Your love remembers Sparta.
+
+ _Bia._ Sir, I'm not
+ Your zany.
+
+ _Ste._ But you'd make my country one,
+ To antic for you.
+
+ [_Re-enter Lenon with bowl of broth_]
+
+ _Ste._ Here's your portion, sir.
+ Amycla made no better. Will you drink?
+
+ [_Gives bowl to Biades, who regards the black mixture dubiously. All
+ are silent, watching him. He looks at Pyrrha_]
+
+ _Bia._ [_To Pyrrha_] Is 't poison?
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Stolid_] It may be.
+
+ _Bia._ [_To Senators_] Your will's in this?
+
+ _First Senator._ It is.
+
+ _Bia._ If this be pledge that binds me yours,
+ Fellow of board and field, I drink long life
+ To our compact. But if death waits here,--to you,
+ O comrade shades, and our good fellowship!
+ [_Drinks. The Spartans applaud_]
+
+ _Ste._ You lean to him, and Sparta topples with you!
+
+ _A Young Man._ [_Entering_] Agis is up! He comes! And bears no grudge
+ For a good Greek blow. Says you could give no less.
+
+ [_Enter Agis_]
+
+ _Bia._ High Zeus, I thank thee! Agis, thou dost live
+ To take my pardon and to give me thine! [_They take hands_]
+
+ _Ste._ So soft?
+
+ _Lys._ Better than blows.
+
+ _Ste._ Ha! Like disease
+ He'll spread the woman till our eyes drop tears
+ Instead of fire. When Spartan eagles moult,
+ They'll go no farther than Athenian owls.
+
+ _Lys._ He's valiant.
+
+ _Ste._ There's no braver tongue.
+
+ _Lys._ And friend
+ To Phernes.
+
+ _Ste._ So he says.
+
+ _Lys._ Nay, that's well known.
+
+ _Ste._ My captain comrades, and ye aged fathers,
+ If ye had seen him strut, a vanity
+ As brainless as the monkey at his heels,
+ With woman velvets making slut of wealth
+ Trailing foul dust,--a peacock fan at 's cheek
+ Where a soldier's beard should grow, and bangled ears
+ Whose swinging jewels tickled a white neck
+ Soft as a harlot's pillow,--this at time
+ His city laid such honor on his head
+ As would have kept a brave man on his knees
+ For wisdom to uphold it,--had ye looked on this,
+ Ye'd call the weakest maiden from her wheel
+ To lead our wars ere trust to Biades!
+
+ _First Ephor._ A picture this,--shakes faith.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ We trust too far.
+
+ _Ste._ Sirs, had ye seen what I but paint----
+
+ _Bia._ My lords,
+ I'll wrestle with the stoutest Spartan youth
+ That makes your wars most dreaded, and these limbs,
+ Now shrunk with fasting, wasted and forsook
+ By Fortune that once fed them as her own,
+ Will prove my right to captain Sparta's host!
+
+ _Ste._ Our women could undo you, girl of Athens!
+ Meet his bold brag with this. One of our maids
+ Shall throw him! Ay! Then he'll betake his shame
+ To any shade will hide it.
+
+ _Hie._ Sir, I sue
+ To lay this boast.
+
+ _Agis._ My prayer be first, my lords!
+
+ _Voices._ A lot! A lot!
+
+ _Ste._ Nay, sons, a fall from you
+ Would give him hope to pick his honor up
+ And steal again to favor. He will plead
+ That you, full-fed, met him in famished hour,
+ When Fate hung him with bruises leeching strength,
+ And gave you victory. Let my offer hold.
+ A maiden to him, and we'll hear no more
+ Of valorous Biades.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We are agreed.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ Who is our strongest maid?
+
+ _Lys._ We've six whose claims
+ Push equal. All in public game have won
+ The bow of Artemis.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We'll choose from these.
+
+ _Bia._ Olympus, shower me woes! I will not cringe,
+ So they be man's. But save me from a mock
+ That makes misfortune past seem sweet as drops
+ From Hera's healing cup!
+
+ _Dia._ A mock? The gods
+ Have never honored you till now.
+
+ _Myr._ See these,
+ My bantling? Arms that made Kalides wear
+ A three months' bruise!
+
+ _The._ And these have locked the strength
+ Of Lenon in defeat!
+
+ _Dia._ Ask Mirador
+ If he liked well the sandy bed I gave him.
+
+ _Nac._ Bethink you now how you'll outcrow disgrace,
+ For you'll be short of breath when you've gone through
+ The brash I'll give you.
+
+ _Dia._ Then he'll show his reefed
+ And wattled skin, and say that want of bread
+ O'ercame him, not our valor.
+
+ _Art._ Look you, maids!
+ His hollow eyes do beg some pity of us.
+ We'll give him yet a chance, and mate him with
+ Our lame Coraina. She's near well again.
+ Will drop her crutch to be our champion.
+
+ _Bia._ Zeus,
+ Behold me patient! Furies, though I lack
+ Some vaunting flesh, the sharpest ill that on
+ My body ravins feeds a spirit that
+ Might meet with Heracles and give him need
+ Of both his arms!
+
+ _Dia._ Ha! Better! Maids, his tongue
+ Will fight yet!
+
+ _Ste._ Peace! The ephors choose
+ That Dianessa bear this honor off.
+ She threw strong Mirador, first of the youths,
+ Which puts her o'er the rest.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We've else determined
+ That with the fall the Athenian forfeits life.
+
+ _Bia._ And if I win, my lords? Since life must pay
+ Defeat, should victory not solicit me
+ With counterpoisèd prize?
+
+ _First Ephor._ We shall accept you
+ Leader and comrade, and give escort fair
+ To bear your suit to Phernes.
+
+ _Lys._ More! The maid
+ Shall be your bride, and bind you son and brother
+ To Sparta's love.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ You, Stesilaus, assent?
+
+ _Ste._ Since without risk you may pursue your folly,
+ I'll not oppose you.
+
+ _First Ephor._ Dianessa, you
+ Abide our will?
+
+ _Dia._ And welcome it. 'Twill work
+ Like Mars in me, and make my arm
+ The gallows of his fame. The Athenian lady!
+ I'd choose a husband among men.
+
+ _Bia._ And I,
+ My generous, dear lords, would woo and win
+ Some mute and humble maid. I would not force
+ The noble Dianessa bend her head
+ To one unworthied by a hostile Fate.
+
+ _First Ephor._ Tut, sir! If Fortune's love returns with heat
+ That makes you conqueror, by that same sun
+ Her pride will melt, and you will find her meek
+ As gosling in your hand.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ 'Tis settled so.
+ Wear what you win.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Rising_] Ye reverend men, and you,
+ My noble father, may my suit reveal
+ My love to Sparta and your love to me,
+ Which has not spoken in this act of yours
+ That overpeers me and gives up my due
+ To Dianessa.
+
+ _First Ephor._ Ha?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Though Mirador
+ Was forced below her, never in a bout
+ Has she ta'en honors from me, while I oft
+ Have left her down.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ Speak'st truly?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Hear herself
+ Avouch it.
+
+ _Dia._ Ay, you overmate me, but
+ The gap between us will not cast the match
+ To Biades. And I was chosen.
+
+ _Fourth Ephor._ Nay,
+ You must give place.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I've other reason, sir.
+ It is my dear, war-honored father lays
+ This match on Sparta, and my pride of house
+ Would bear his counsel through the act that sets
+ The sage's seal upon it.
+
+ _First Ephor._ A daughter, sir!
+
+ _Ste._ Bare duty might so speak.
+
+ _Pyrr._ This gives me warmth
+ My maiden comrades lack. By every vein
+ My father gave me, his time-laurelled brow
+ Shall never wear a garland less!
+
+ _Second Ephor._ Well sworn!
+
+ _Pyrr._ And for I saw----
+
+ _Third Ephor._ More reasons?
+
+ _Pyrr._ --the rude shame
+ The Athenian put upon the ambassadors,
+ And mine own eyes bore him in lowest semblance,
+ Demeaned from manhood, his dishonor wrapped
+ In purple cost that left it yet more naked.
+ I swear he shall not honored lead our wars!
+ If our gray heroes fail us, we have dames
+ To choose from,--need not go to Athens!
+
+ _First Ephor._ This speaks! The victory's won where courage makes
+ Such stout provision.
+
+ _Pyrr._ If I fail, my lords,
+ Then gods are mongers and their favors sell,
+ Denying honest prayers.
+
+ _Lys._ Come, Biades.
+ Art ready?
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, long past!
+
+ _First Ephor._ Your places then.
+
+ _Ste._ Delay you! Biades, with modesty
+ Unlooked for, but most fit, you gave up claim
+ To Dianessa.----
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, 'twas but an offer
+ Whose bounty met refusal.
+
+ _Ste._ I'll accept it
+ In Pyrrha's name.
+
+ _Bia._ So prudent against loss?
+ This caution, sir, gives me a victor's heart.
+
+ _Ste._ Triumph is hers a certain thousand times,
+ And yours a dicer's once, slipped you between
+ Hiccough and snore of gods at shutting time.
+ But since that once will have a thousandth chance
+ To trouble me, I'll grant you free of Pyrrha.
+
+ _Bia._ Wait till 'tis begged. Lysander spoke with kind
+ And equal honor, which did soften me
+ To leave his daughter his. And others here
+ Have tendered me the gentle looks that breed
+ The answering benison till hearts of earth
+ Feel heaven's element. But you, whose hate
+ Should hiss from crawling shape, not upright man's,
+ Wake fires in me that eat through godly patience
+ And sweep to battle. I'll endure no further.
+ Back with your taunts! And if 'twill make you sore
+ Where pride is daintiest, I'll your daughter wed
+ Because she is your daughter!
+
+ _Ste._ Bark, you puppy,
+ But you'll not carry it!
+
+ _Bia._ Were she featured foul
+ As snaked Medusa,--her brow a hanging night,--
+ Her figure hooped as age when chin and toes
+ Are neighbors,--and of speech so scaly, harsh
+ As Stesilaus,--I, with no more color
+ Or shade of reason than that you deny me,
+ Would make her bride. The ephors gave their word,
+ And what I win I'll wear!
+
+ _First Ephor._ We'll see you do.
+ Content you, Stesilaus. None will weep
+ To know your bluff soul matched. To place! To place!
+
+ [_They wrestle. Pyrrha loses. Silence, then applause for Biades_]
+
+ _A Lord._ My heart upheld him, for I know him brave.
+
+ _Another._ I saw his dripping sword on Theban plain
+ Cut through the knotted fray and make two fields
+ O' the combat.
+
+ _Another._ He can pray too, Delphi knows!
+
+ _Another._ But when his gallant prayers their action find
+ The gods themselves rage in them.
+
+ _First Ephor._ [_To Pyrrha_] Daughter, take
+ Fair thanks from us for brave support of Sparta,
+ And having lost, more thanks for giving her
+ Another soldier. Has defeat made soft
+ Your heart for swift espousal?
+
+ _Bia._ Let me woo
+ In slower way, good father. Tho' my boast
+ Rose high 'gainst Stesilaus' scorn, I'm not
+ Of heart so rash that I would lose her love
+ By taking it. With Sparta's aid now mine,
+ I'll ask her choose a noble guard and sail
+ With me, that I, by time and fortune graced,
+ May win a double suit, herself and Persia.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We'll think of it. Our plans are still unthreshed.
+ Come with us, Biades.
+
+ [_Ephors, with senators and Biades, lead the way over bridge. All
+ follow except Stesilaus and Pyrrha_]
+
+ _Ste._ How was 't he won?
+ And he was livid famine! Scurfed with weeks
+ Of beggary! While you--such arms had saved
+ Antiope from Theseus!
+ [_Pyrrha droops silent_]
+ Up, my daughter!
+ We'll make this fall our hope. You shall take sail
+ With Biades----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Gods hear me, no!
+
+ _Ste._ You will.
+ I know his aim. He will betray our force
+ To Athens,--pardon's price. Athenian ease
+ Is in his marrow like a siren sleep,
+ And all this hardy show is but to buy
+ His languors back. You'll watch within his ship,
+ With Hieron a second secret eye,
+ And when his treachery ripens, take command
+ And bring him bound to Sparta.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Be so near?
+ Sail in his ship?
+
+ _Ste._ Be near him as a wife.
+ Watch close. Lie in his thoughts, though not his bed.
+ And if he presses to the shrine of favor,
+ Here is my dagger. This will be your guard.
+ Let him meet death upon it,--and that death
+ Be honor's sanctuary. Come! My brow
+ Must smooth submissive to the senators.
+ Clear too your face with summer policy.
+ Thus openly we'll hide. The State's turned fool,
+ And naught between her and perdition save
+ An old man and a girl! [_Exit_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Gazing at dagger_] If this cold blade
+ Were seeking traitors 't might look in my heart.
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT IV
+
+
+SCENE: _On board a galley off Athens. An open door left of centre, rear,
+shows a moonlit sea. Cressets burning within. Pyrrha discovered, seated
+and fingering a dagger. A diminishing sound of dipping oars and rowers
+singing._
+
+
+ God of the bold who ride
+ With song o'er their dead
+ Whose unsown graves wait wide,
+ The singers' bed,--
+ Poseidon, befriend, befriend,
+ And the good wind send!
+
+ The sirens are on their rocks;
+ Like a piercèd moon
+ Weeping her gold, their locks
+ To the waters run.
+ Poseidon, befriend, befriend,
+ And the good wind send!
+
+ Fleet are the foam-toothed hounds
+ That hunt unfed,
+ With hunger that aches like wounds,
+ And ships their bread.
+ Poseidon, befriend, befriend,
+ And the good wind send!
+
+ [_Enter Lysander_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Lysander! You? Is 't battle?
+
+ _Lys._ At dawn we move
+ Upon the Athenian ships.
+
+ _Pyrr._ They've come from harbor?
+
+ _Lys._ Nay, lurking still, fear-cabled to the land,
+ Like weanlings round a skirt.
+
+ _Pyrr._ At last a battle!
+ And Biades is true. The watch is done.
+ I'm sick of spying, hanging on him like
+ A doubt with teeth. He leaves this galley then?
+
+ _Lys._ Commands from the _Ino_, now so brave repaired
+ She sits her place as though the sea and air
+ Debated who should claim her, and she no more
+ Adorns both elements than herself's adorned
+ By our young admiral.
+
+ _Pyrr._ He is gone? So soon?
+
+ _Lys._ Went, but is here again, and here must stay
+ These next three hours or more.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Why so, Lysander?
+
+ _Lys._ We sacrifice aboard Thrasyllus' ship,
+ Where now the captains gather, and the hand
+ Of one who leads the foe to his fathers' hearth
+ Would cloud the omen. He must keep apart.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You've told him that?
+
+ _Lys._ We have not dared.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Not dared?
+ Way, Spartan lions, for the Athenian puppy!
+
+ _Lys._ He's tender with his honor.
+
+ _Pyrr._ His honor!
+
+ _Lys._ Soft!
+ We shunt all danger if you mew him here
+ Unwitting of our hand.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I do not wear
+ Athene's ægis on my jerkin, friend.
+
+ _Lys._ You can divinely drug his vanity
+ Without immortal aid. Attach him by 't,
+ For free he'll chafe. Drift with him in such wise
+ He'll not suspect our rudder.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ay, more lies.
+
+ _Lys._ Truth is no absolute virtue. 'Tis a vice
+ If 't takes a screw from safety.
+
+ _Pyrr._ There is law
+ Higher than Sparta utters. If not so,
+ What mean our altars, and a kneeling world?
+
+ _Lys._ Hmm! I delay the sacrifice. Dost know
+ I take my Dianessa? A virgin's hand
+ Must weave the victim's garland.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ah, the moon
+ Of Artemis! A virgin's hand. They ask
+ Not mine?
+
+ _Lys._ You are a bride in Sparta's eyes.
+ Would Truth might speak it too! For Biades
+ Has won all love but yours.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'll wed no traitor.
+
+ _Lys._ What? He is false?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ay, false to Athens.
+
+ _Lys._ Phut!
+
+ [_Enter Hieron_]
+
+ _Hie._ How like you this, sir? Biades has stripped
+ The galley of its rowers,--sent them all
+ To his gilded _Ino_,--every boat in charter
+ To bear his trappings,--parchments, maps, and gifts
+ From Phernes,--curtains, instruments----
+
+ _Lys._ The stuff
+ Goes with the admiral, and what other way
+ Than by the boats? Say naught of 't.
+
+ _Hie._ This a time
+ To spend a feathering!
+
+ _Lys._ Nay----
+
+ _Hie._ And why send all?
+ A half--a third--had answered. There's not left
+ An oarsman on the galley save the men
+ Who brought you from the _Thetis_.
+
+ _Lys._ You've the guard,--
+ Yourself its head. Give Biades his way
+ When prudence pays no cost. We've hedged and hemmed
+ His wrestling will until his pride is brashed
+ To the rebel quick----
+
+ _Hie._ Sst! He is here.
+
+ [_Biades stands in door_]
+
+ _Bia._ Lysander,
+ They hail you from Thrasyllus' ship. You stay
+ The rites.
+
+ _Lys._ [_Troubled_] But is it time----
+
+ _Bia._ Full time.
+
+ _Lys._ My boat----
+
+ _Bia._ Is waiting.
+
+ _Lys._ I--you, sir----
+
+ _Bia._ You'll bear my grace
+ To our priestly captains?
+
+ _Lys._ You stay here?
+
+ _Bia._ I shall,
+ If you'll not press me other. As you pray
+ For clearer omen and a morning battle,
+ Let only those whose land holds them untainted
+ Stand in the holy ring.
+
+ _Lys._ Above our prayers
+ This act will speak to Heaven in Sparta's name
+ And make her gods your own.
+
+ _Bia._ If that might be,
+ Lysander! To have no altars is a fate
+ Man can not bear for long.
+
+ _Hie._ The rowers, sir!
+ How soon do they return?
+
+ _Bia._ They've leave to see
+ The midnight toward with their fellow crew
+ On the _Ino_.
+
+ _Hie._ Midnight!
+
+ _Bia._ Loyal beggars, all.
+ They're sad to lose their captain, and I pay
+ Their grieving flattery with this stinted lease
+ From duty here. They'll use 't in prayerful rite----
+
+ _Hie._ Not prayer! The casks will drip too free for that.
+ If any prayers come from the heart to throat,
+ They'll downward wash again, not out and fly.
+ Say'st midnight, sir?
+
+ _Bia._ I do. They will return
+ In time to set the galley from the cast
+ Of morning danger.
+
+ _Hie._ Move again? The ship
+ Is now to rearward, by some rods.
+
+ _Bia._ She is.
+ And shall go farther. Here's no fighting deck.
+
+ _Hie._ Ay, these soft cabins, Corinth-modelled as
+ A prince, would make a floating holiday,
+ Put soldiers from their place.
+
+ _Bia._ The ship must lie
+ Full east, on th' safest wave. We've treasure 'neath
+ These sails that make their weathered woof more dear
+ Than threaded gold of Hera's mantle.
+
+ _Hie._ Ah,
+ You mean the women.
+
+ _Bia._ No,--a woman. Come,
+ Lysander.
+
+ _Lys._ Sir, what time wilt take your place
+ Aboard the _Ino_?
+
+ _Bia._ Give me till the midnight,
+ I'll from that moment be your admiral.
+ But for these gentle hours that lie between,
+ I would as merest man use their light wings
+ To chase a hope through heaven.
+
+ _Lys._ [_With a glance at Pyrrha_] And bring it down,
+ My lord!
+
+ [_Exeunt Lysander, Biades, and Hieron_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Now, Impudence, no more's to do!
+ Go up and take thy crown. Before my eyes
+ He teaches them he wooes me, and my pride
+ Mutely abets his guile. [_Holds up the dagger_] My fine defence,
+ Thou'rt warder to a bosom unbesieged.
+ In Biades' contempt I have a guard
+ That saves thine office. Go, you glittering mock!
+ [_In a passion of resolution she throws the dagger through the door_]
+ That's done. No matter. He does not look at me,
+ Or looks as though his eyes begged pardon of him,
+ For their chance stop on nothing.
+
+ [_Re-enter Biades, the dagger in his hand_]
+
+ _Bia._ Here's a toy
+ Caught from the rigging. Yours, I think.
+ [_Offers it to her. She does not take it_]
+ It must be dear. I've seen you fondle it.
+ Is it not yours?
+
+ _Pyrr._ It was.
+
+ _Bia._ Then is. And worth
+ Your keeping. A good blade, though Spartan plain.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'm weary of it. In Athens I shall find
+ Another pattern.
+
+ _Bia._ [_Testing blade_] Fine and strong. Will wear
+ A hundred years, then make a door for death.
+ [_Turns it against his heart. She starts_]
+ You'll take it, Pyrrha. To throw it to the sea
+ Were waste for an Athenian.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Keep it then.
+
+ _Bia._ You give this blade to me?
+
+ _Pyrr._ I care not. Keep
+ What you have praised.
+
+ _Bia._ [_Pressing it against his cheek_] A gentle weapon,--but
+ I've somewhat 'gainst it.
+ [_Goes to door and throws it far into the sea_]
+ Kiss the waves, my friend!
+
+ [_Returns to Pyrrha and sits by her_]
+
+ _Bia._ [_Softly_] I leave the ship to-night.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Uneasy_] And time you led
+ The fleet to battle. You've excused delay
+ Till palling breath became the shroud of action,
+ And yet refused it funeral.
+
+ _Bia._ I know
+ How you have doubted. O, this soul of Sparta,
+ That can not trust! It peeps from every eye,
+ Deepest where kindest. Tags each friendly word
+ With its unspoken dread,--and comradeship,
+ That strives to wrap it in a gala cloak,
+ Strains vainly round the huge, dun doubt, agape
+ In dreary revelation.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You are free
+ To leave us.
+
+ _Bia._ Free? Five Spartan nobles watch
+ Beside me, move with every step, for so
+ The admiral must be honored! Hieron
+ Foregoes his place at sacrifice to serve
+ My dignity. Not for his gods he'll put
+ A furlong 'tween us.
+
+ _Pyrr._ He's the ship's good eye.
+ And all the men except the lords of guard
+ Are, by your grace, a-neighboring. Would you leave
+ The galley without watch?
+
+ _Bia._ No, Pyrrha, sweet.
+ But I would woo you with no ear at the door.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Rising_] My lord!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Indifferent_] Nay, then. I can't oppose the sex
+ Of Aphrodite. My one frailty.
+
+ _Pyrr._ One!
+
+ _Bia._ What? I have more?
+
+ _Pyrr._ The moments of your life
+ Are not so many!
+
+ _Bia._ Gods be thanked, I'm young!
+ How may I change to please a Spartan scold?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Be anything you're not.
+
+ _Bia._ You have not heard
+ I am the admiral of the Spartan fleet,
+ With Persian Phernes yonder at my beck,
+ Broad-winged with all Phoenicia? You know not
+ I am a general?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Oh, to be that name,
+ Not make 't thy bauble! What dost know
+ Of secret, sleepless hours, and delving thought
+ That nations may lie safe? By what grave right
+ Wear you the title? What deep sacrifice?
+
+ _Bia._ Leave sacrifice to fools and women! Ay,
+ More lies are huddled in that saintly word
+ Than ever smirked outside it. The strong soul
+ Low bowing there, lies to his god,--the weak
+ Lies to the world behind a holy shield
+ That turns the spear of justice. Pallas, hear!
+ A general makes himself a master, lest
+ The State make him a servant.
+
+ _Pyrr._ True in _Athens_!
+ But you've another name. I've heard you called
+ The young philosopher. Play you at that.
+ 'Twill tire naught but the tongue. Yours will go far.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, spare me toil of spirit searching through
+ Earth, sea, and sky for phrases magical
+ To wrap creation in, as 'twere a babe
+ Each man might call his own could he but find
+ Some good-wife fancy to deliver it.
+ No other hope?
+
+ _Pyrr._ They name you poet, too.
+ Build round your spirit an Elysian cheat
+ And buzz it through upon a golden wing.
+ Is that not idle enough?
+
+ _Bia._ You touch me now
+ With flattery's gold point. I wince and love
+ The pain. Yet I'd not be a frolic breath
+ At play with Spring and florets in the dew,
+ Or move in rhymèd courtesies before
+ The smile or frown of gods. Trick my dear soul
+ In May-day rags to catch a languid eye.
+ Babble of moods and minds, how some think this,
+ Some that, and some have never thought. Drone how
+ On such a day one struck another down,
+ Or led a fleet, or laid a city wall.
+
+ _Pyrr._ What would you sing then, pray?
+
+ _Bia._ I would not sing.
+ Was there not poetry before men spake?
+ I'd go behind the broidered veil we've wrought
+ Before the face of one that we loved much
+ And then forgot for beauty of the shroud.
+ The old lere's lost, the new but irks our dream.
+ We listen to ourselves, while round us ever
+ Are worlds that vainly pluck us to their doors,
+ Giving us sign in lightning, heat, and wave,
+ In flake of snow, flint-spark, and crystal rock,
+ In stones that make the iron creep, and color,
+ Fair flag and challenge to our shuttered minds.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Moving nearer_] Oh!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Seeming to forget her_] Round our lives is life whose destiny
+ Is that frontier no word of ours has crossed,
+ But man to come shall plant and harvest there,
+ Where his soul sets the plough.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Softly_] You know that too?
+
+ _Bia._ That life shall warm his barest common way
+ Of in and out. In field and market-place,
+ He'll lay his cheek 'gainst its unbodied love
+ And flush translations of its silent touch.
+ Then will be poets! Thought that now must fail
+ In bird-wing flight, shall from a violet's eye
+ O'erlook the sun. Till then I will not sing.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Not fight, philosophize, or sing!
+ What's left for an Athenian?
+
+ _Bia._ [_Remembering her_] Love, fair Pyrrha!
+ You know the tale how Chaos once uncurled
+ Her laboring bulk from round a fire-leafed rose
+ And sent its petals drifting down to fields
+ Where mortals foot with chance? Whoso they touch
+ Are lovers always, and one came to me.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Now here's ambition! And you live for that?
+
+ _Bia._ Ay there's the charm contents me with dull earth,
+ And puts a rainbow in my listless hand.
+ The way is pleasant if the road be love's,
+ And I'd not shorten it by one maid's eye.
+ To be a lover,--that's the graceful thing.
+ Then one moves velvetly, forgets no curve,
+ And lives his picture, line and color true.
+
+ _Pyrr._ That rôle's struck from your play, you'll find, my lord.
+ Maidens will smile, but scorn will set the lip,
+ And women's eyes be warm, but hate their fire
+ For you, the traitor.
+
+ _Bia._ Traitor?
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_In the door_] See the gleam
+ On Athens, yours no more. The softest breast
+ Within her walls is steel when you are named.
+
+ _Bia._ But there are maids in Sparta.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Not for you,
+ A traitor to the soil that gave you life.
+
+ _Bia._ That soil first cast me off.
+
+ _Pyrr._ A mother strikes
+ Her child, but should the child return the blow
+ Gods would droop eyes and blush.
+
+ _Bia._ But were I true
+ To my own land, I should be false to yours.
+
+ _Pyrr._ A virtue that. A maid might love you then.
+
+ _Bia._ A Spartan maid?
+
+ _Pyrr._ A Spartan maid. But now
+ We hold you as no more than loathèd bait
+ To capture Athens. Used as a stuck fly
+ To hook a chub!
+
+ [_Enter Hieron_]
+
+ _Bia._ What saucy fury sports
+ With Hieron? His even smile's unfixed
+ As the middle of two minds.
+
+ _Hie._ Sir, Phernes sends
+ Six maidens from his ship to dance before you.
+ The noble Persian chooses time most fit
+ For wantoning,--the hour of sacrifice
+ And battle prayer.
+
+ _Bia._ You're justly kindled. What
+ Though it be royal custom in his East,--
+ A grace from king to king,--to garnish danger
+ With frillet of relief that makes death seem
+ The last-dropped toy, we'll dare to let him know
+ That we are Greeks, and walk the edge of graves
+ With eyes upon the gods. Go, pack them off!
+
+ _Hie._ Why,--so I meant. The act struck rudely on
+ Our ritual hour. But if his Eastern mind
+ Paints it a courtesy----
+
+ _Bia._ A sovereign honor.
+
+ _Hie._ He is of haughty blood,--burns at rebuff----
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, like a hornet blind. A thousand times
+ I've eased his fret and run his humor's mould
+ Like summer wax, lest he should break from Sparta
+ That stood in rigid ruin. Now I leave it!
+ His anger can be put to gentlest sleep,
+ But 'tis no babe when stirred. Choose as you will.
+
+ _Hie._ The honor is to you. Be yours the answer.
+
+ _Bia._ I'm worn with him. Three hours to-day I played
+ His vanity, while chance touched either side,
+ Waiting the word that should cut through suspense
+ And seal him ours for battle.
+
+ _Hie._ To huff his pride
+ 'Tween this and dawn would poorly soothe our own
+ At an uncertain cost. But let him leer
+ I' the oracles' face....
+
+ _Bia._ He has not sent Alissa?
+
+ _Hie._ There's one so calls herself. Spoke out the name
+ As we should fall before it.
+
+ _Bia._ She's most free
+ In Phernes' heart. Knows all the honey-ways
+ To his secret soul, and what is said to her
+ He'll hear ere morn. As you love victory,
+ I hope you met her gently.
+
+ _Hie._ If surprise
+ Made greeting harsh, I will undo that harm
+ With softer welcome. And beseech you, sir,
+ To suffer this mistimed civility
+ For Sparta's sake.
+
+ _Bia._ I will, dear Hieron,
+ Since 'tis your suit.
+
+ _Hie._ Thanks, thanks, my lord.
+
+ _Bia._ Let them come in. I'll see their briefest dance,
+ And give Alissa one commending word,
+ Which straight as faithful bee she'll hive
+ In Phernes' ear.
+ [_Exit Hieron_]
+ What think you of it, Pyrrha?
+ You do approve me?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Approve your wits, my friend.
+ Had they been Spartan trained, you'd bring them off,
+ Untarnished still, from argument with Zeus.
+
+ _Bia._ When Pallas praises, bow.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Poor Hieron
+ Is now the sweating agent of your will
+ To see these callets dance.
+
+ _Bia._ Unpitiful!
+ I'd touch my lips to Lethe, and you'd snatch
+ The oblivious drop from me! You know how dear
+ The bond that shall be cut with sword of dawn,--
+ So close no seer may tell which shall bleed most,
+ Athens or her lost son.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Art low at last?
+
+ _Bia._ Dun, dun, my Pyrrha, as a Barbary pigeon!
+ So low not all my pride can vaunt me up.
+ Then let me have my wine,--the draught of eyes,
+ Of music and of smiles, till I be drunk
+ And sleep.
+
+ [_Enter six Athenian youths, led by Clearchus, all disguised as Persian
+ dancers. As they dance before Biades his pleasure quickens to
+ abandonment_]
+
+ _Bia._ Ah, Pyrrha, you've denied my heart
+ All noble love, but here's a pleasure left.
+ Soft eyes and gentle bosoms may be mine
+ Where scorn is taught to sleep and never sting.
+ ... That is Alissa. We must honor her.
+
+ [_He signals Clearchus, and the others pass out, leaving him to dance
+ alone. As he ventures more flirtatiously about Biades, Pyrrha's
+ disgust increases and she retreats. Clearchus, dancing mockingly,
+ follows her to door, and when she has passed through audaciously
+ closes it_]
+
+ _Bia._ Now! Quick! In name of Zeus! The senators
+ Received my message?
+
+ _Clea._ [_Darting to Biades_] Ay, the answer's here!
+ [_Gives him a parchment_]
+ Full pardon! Athens will lay down her walls
+ To make your entry proud! Her gates are small,
+ For honor she intends you!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Glances at parchment and sobs_]
+ My Athens! Mine! Though she should take my life,
+ And my bruised body fling unburied forth,
+ Yet would my shade drop kisses on her soil
+ And weep to leave it for Elysium! [_With sudden control_]
+ What of my plan?
+
+ _Clea._ Adopted, in each item.
+ Soon as the dropping moon is in the sea,
+ The Athenian rowers, coming as your own,
+ Will board this galley and bear her a bird
+ To th' harbor nest.
+
+ _Bia._ They've force to meet the guards?
+
+ _Clea._ Thrice measured, sir. The _Theia_----
+
+ _Bia._ My own ship!
+
+ _Clea._ Your own--will meet you, every sailor true
+ As when he wept your banishment. And Phaon,
+ Critias, Pelagon, Antiganor,
+ With twenty senators and men of name,
+ Wait on her deck in welcome.
+
+ _Bia._ Back, ye tears!
+ The rowers know my signal?
+
+ _Clea._ Yes, my lord.
+ Three cressets on the left,--set here in this
+ Embrasure. They will watch, near as they dare,
+ And instantly as darts your triple gleam
+ Their oars will sweep you answer.
+
+ [_A commotion without_]
+
+ _Bia._ Hist! What's wrong?
+
+ [_Enter Hieron and Pyrrha. Hieron goes to Clearchus and tears off
+ his veil and head-dress_]
+
+ _Clea._ O, pardon! I'll confess!
+
+ _Hie._ 'Tis you, my lord,
+ I now unmask, not this bought wretch.
+
+ _Bia._ What, sir?
+
+ _Hie._ Your Persian dancers are Athenian boys,
+ All slim as lizards. We o'er-eyed their steps,
+ And on suspicion gave them such a pinch
+ The truth flew out.
+
+ _Bia._ Their guilt does not prove mine.
+ Is it my crime that Athens touched me near
+ With bribe of pardon?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Hear the boy. You are
+ Clearchus? And of Athens?
+
+ _Clea._ I am.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You brought
+ His pardon. Did he welcome it?
+
+ _Clea._ He did.
+
+ _Bia._ He lies! The coward lies!
+
+ _Clea._ He did agree
+ That Phernes should draw off his fleet and join
+ With Athens.
+
+ _Bia._ Oh! Where are the Olympian thunders
+ That they now let you live?
+
+ _Hie._ Draw off his fleet
+ To-night?
+
+ _Clea._ Ere dawn.
+
+ _Bia._ That such an atom--such
+ A trifle of a body could enclose
+ So great a lie!
+
+ _Clea._ The Persian is at watch,
+ Waiting the signal----
+
+ _Bia._ Toad!
+
+ _Clea._ If pardon came,
+ Two cressets set----
+
+ _Bia._ I'll shred him!
+
+ _Clea._ At the left----
+ Just here, my lord, would start the Persian ships
+ For Athens.
+
+ _Bia._ Oh!
+
+ _Clea._ But if three cressets burnt,
+ Then he would hold to Sparta.
+
+ _Hie._ Three?
+
+ _Clea._ Three, sir.
+ Look in his bosom if you'd read the proof.
+ His pardon's there.
+
+ _Bia._ By the altars I have lost,
+ By Sparta's yet unwon, I swear he lies!
+
+ [_Pyrrha snatches the parchment from his bosom_]
+
+ _Bia._ You bat--you mole--you cur-born flea----
+
+ _Clea._ [_To Hieron_] O, sir,
+ Your mercy! Save me from him!
+
+ _Hie._ Wait without.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Full pardon! Bring the irons! We are sold!
+ Irons for Biades!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Accepting defeat_] Ay, let me wear
+ My honor's livery. Every foe-locked gyve
+ Will be my country's kiss, and make my blood
+ Flow proud beneath it. Irons! Load me down,
+ Now that you know me man, and not the thrall
+ Of vilest fear that buys suspected breath
+ With a mother-city's doom.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'll grant you, sir,
+ That by this act you do no longer lie
+ In the unconsidered trash of estimation,
+ But have crept up in my surprisèd mind
+ To where I keep my jewels of regard.
+ That is soon said,--but for the rest, you die.
+ And more than die, for we shall hurl your name
+ A palsy over Athens.
+
+ _Bia._ You'll not fight
+ Athens and Persia!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Persia is not lost.
+ Your signal is unlit.
+
+ _Hie._ But we'll light ours!
+ Three cressets----
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Stopping him_] Wait! The event's too great
+ To helve with such slight word. That snivelling blab
+ May've lied, or crossed the signals, for the young
+ Are easiest dyed in craft, and take its hue
+ As natively as innocence doth wear
+ Its smile in sleep.
+
+ _Hie._ What then?
+
+ _Pyrr._ You'll go to Phernes.
+
+ _Hie._ There are no boats.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Tut, take the boats that brought
+ Those purfled cymlings here. Their rowers too.
+ Ah, Biades, you'll serve us still. And thought
+ To trap all Sparta with this tip-toe bait!
+ We have a saying. "Wit against the world,--"
+ And there's another too, "The last lie wins."
+ Hast heard it, Biades? We'll bear your word
+ To Phernes that with dawn you move with him
+ Upon the Athenian sails.
+
+ _Bia._ He'll hear no word
+ From Spartan mouth. So 'twas agreed between us,
+ To annul such move as this if chance should strip
+ My bent of cover. I alone may reach
+ His ear with Sparta's prayer.
+
+ _Pyrr._ We'll cast for proof
+ Of that. If true, we shall remember, sir,
+ That Sparta has won cities with no aid
+ From Persia.
+
+ _Bia._ You'll not go alone to meet
+ The strength of Athens?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Your far-wingèd name
+ And sea-born battle-skill shall go with us.
+ Your single arm's no loss, but in your fame,
+ Yet ours to use, the Spartan strength
+ Is doubled. Ha! They call us landmen,--say
+ We must have feet on ground ere we can fight.
+ But you they fear, bred to the wave, and first
+ Of their commanders.
+
+ _Bia._ Let me die, but leave
+ My name unmurdered.
+
+ _Pyrr._ It shall be outflung
+ In challenge to the Athenians. They know well
+ The sailor rabble loves you, and will oppose
+ But half a heart to Biades. Some too,
+ Of higher place, believe you wronged, and fear
+ The angered gods will station on your side.
+ By spearman Ares, you shall keep the oath
+ Great-sworn on Sparta's ground, to set her lance
+ Through Athens' triple shield! Ay, though you lie
+ In irons waiting death.
+
+ _Bia._ The sunken souls
+ Of deepest, damnèd Dis have never borne
+ So vile a sting! You can not mean it, Pyrrha.
+ Cast on my soul what Pluto would disbar
+ From his fire-vaulted hell? I'll proudly die
+ For treachery to you, but clear my name
+ To Athens. Take not life and honor too!
+
+ _Pyrr._ One you may save,--your life.
+
+ _Bia._ What do you say?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Draw Phernes back to us, and you shall live.
+
+ _Bia._ You offer me but death, knowing I could not live
+ A traitor.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You choose to die as one?
+
+ _Bia._ Oh, Zeus,
+ All-giver, hear!
+
+ _Pyrr._ What gain is death to you
+ If reputation dies eternally
+ In Athens' hate? Sparta will do as much
+ As spare your life.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay----
+
+ _Pyrr._ She shall nothing know
+ Of this hour's lapse----
+
+ _Bia._ O, bitter stars! O, Death
+ Past fatal!--reaching o'er thy charnel bound
+ To usurp the immortal garden! Die a traitor!
+ Never will dew from a forgiving eye
+ Fall on my grave!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Nor will the upbraiding gaze
+ Of Heaven be more tender. For you chose
+ To risk your country's life on turn of chance,
+ Having no surety that drawn to danger
+ You then could pluck her out. Ah, made her fate
+ Your stake at dice, because, escaped the hazard,
+ You'd toss with her to fortune! And your guilt
+ Is heavy in her fall as though your hand
+ Bore down her last defence and fierce untrussed
+ Her heart to th' wolvish air.
+
+ _Bia._ Oh, Pyrrha, Pyrrha!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Then why haste on to death? The noblest shades
+ Will make no room for you where'er they walk.
+ Why rush through the first gate to meet their cold
+ Immortal scorn?
+
+ _Bia._ But life with honor gone!
+
+ _Pyrr._ If death could buy it, then 'twere wise
+ To buy so goldenly. But that's too late.
+ Choose life,--with honor such as Sparta lays
+ On those who serve but her. This treachery
+ That we've by hap unbagged in 'ts eanling hour
+ Shall be safe snugged again. And cherished too!
+ For in my eyes it is the one brave flower
+ Of your most barren being. None shall know it,
+ And Sparta, as she will, may laurels weave
+ About your faith.
+
+ _Bia._ But Hieron?
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_To Hieron_] You'll swear with me? [_He hesitates_]
+ In Sparta's name? [_Takes his hand_] And mine?
+
+ _Bia._ No, no!
+
+ _Hie._ I'll swear.
+
+ _Bia._ Oh, not that price! No, till the end
+ O' the world!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Life, Biades, life!
+
+ _Bia._ I will not do it!
+ Athens may singly conquer!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Then you die
+ By Sparta's hand, and Athens holds your name
+ Accursed through time. The irons, Hieron.
+
+ [_Biades hunches despairingly, his face hidden_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Apart_] Gods! He will yield!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Looking up_] I'll do it,--dare to live,--
+ And Attica may call me what she will.
+ A traitor breathes, and feels the blessed sun.
+ He's ne'er so poor but can his housing find
+ In alms-lapped Nature. Her unchoosing airs
+ Ask not his name before they touch his brow
+ And tell him when 'tis spring. He yet may dream
+ In unrebuking shades, and birds will sing
+ As liquidly as though he were not by.
+ Food is yet food, and wine is ever wine.
+ I will not die. [_Rises_] By Maia's son, I'll live!
+ What is my country but the bit of earth
+ Where chance did spawn me? 'Tis no treachery.
+ We're traitors unto love, not hate,--to trust,
+ Not doubt and slander such as Athens poured
+ Upon me guiltless.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Crossing to him_] So you've found a way
+ To save both life and honor!
+
+ _Bia._ May a worm
+ Not creep to cleaner dust? Pyrrha, be kind.
+ Spare me the trampling foot.
+
+ _Pyrr._ We've lost an hour.
+ You'll send to Phernes?
+
+ _Bia._ First we'll signal him.
+ He may be setting off. We must despatch,
+ For if he saw no sign he meant to draw
+ His fleet from doubtful waters and give aid
+ To neither side. [_Taking up a light_] Three cressets--that was true.
+ When once these lights have spoken, he'll receive
+ Your envoy as myself. Then Hieron
+ May bear confirming word to him, and bring
+ Assurance back.
+
+ _Hie._ [_To Pyrrha_] You do not doubt?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Doubt now?
+ Nay, Hieron. I'll trust him with his _life_.
+
+ _Hie._ But----
+
+ _Bia._ [_Trembling_] O, ye gazing gods, must it be done?
+ In Athens' living heart set up the torch
+ That leaves her a charred blotch where she lay white
+ 'Neath heaven and smiled up to sister stars!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Come, Biades!
+
+ _Bia._ Shall not the earth be lost
+ To God's own eye when Athens, quenched, no more
+ Marks where we wander? I can not do it!
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Taking the cresset_] Too late,
+ My lord!
+
+ [Fixes light in the open embrasure, then places two others. Biades
+ falls back, mantling his face]
+
+ _Hie._ To Phernes now! We must not boggle this!
+
+ _Pyrr._ If you've a doubt, sir, look on that. [_Points to Biades_]
+
+ _Hie._ I'll hasten back to you.
+
+ _Bia._ But note our light.
+ The galley rowers may return ere you,
+ And move us to the east.
+
+ _Hie._ I shall not lose you.
+
+ _Bia._ What escort will you take? A noble one
+ Will best please Phernes.
+
+ _Hie._ Mirador and Agis
+ Shall go with me. Meanthes shall remain
+ To be your watch.
+
+ _Bia._ You'll tell them nothing?
+
+ _Hie._ Sir,
+ I've sworn. I shall say naught but this. That Athens
+ Proffered you pardon, and you hold to Sparta.
+
+ [_Exit Hieron. Pyrrha watches from the door until the boats put off.
+ The sea is now dark. Biades takes up a harp and strums it_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Turning_] You can do that? And I--I held my heart
+ At halt, there at the door, nor turned my head
+ Lest pity should emburn my eyes to tears. [_Crosses to him_]
+ Dost know that all the juniper in the world,
+ Burnt in thy house of honor, would not cleanse
+ Its doors of stench? [_Throws the harp aside_] And you can use that air
+ For breath of song!
+
+ _Bia._ Those are the bitterest words
+ That ever dropped me gall, but I can find
+ A crushèd balsam in them,--for they say
+ You might have loved me, Pyrrha.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I might.
+
+ _Bia._ You did.
+ The moment that I cast my Spartan mask
+ And showed me true to Athens, you were mine.
+ That instant there was joy-fall on your heart
+ That swept its icy sentinels with fire,
+ And they were down. Oh, had I then proved staunch,
+ Ta'en helmet off to death and bade him strike,
+ You would have closed my eyes with kisses warm
+ As rose-drift on a tomb----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Nay, I'd have kept
+ Those eyes to be my light on earth, not star
+ Elysian skies. Had fought for you against
+ My mother Sparta. Fought as woman fights
+ For her one love,--with wit and armèd tongue,
+ And cunning that throws puzzle on the gods.
+ Fought till subduèd Death had knelt to Fate
+ And prayed your life for me!
+
+ _Bia._ Have I lost that?
+
+ _Pyrr._ You yielded--sank--unlustred even your soul
+ For a poor pinch of time----
+
+ _Bia._ But if some touch
+ Of heaven could make me true again----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Look on
+ Those lights, that you with single breath could turn
+ To weeping smoke,--they've lit a quenchless wreck
+ That all your sighs blow vain against,--a flame
+ Ungovernable to remorse. Not furrowing winds
+ That split the watery fields to Thetis' bed,
+ And make a foamy Ural of her shore,
+ Can sweep it out. Ay, groan and shake,
+ And draw your mantle up! Behind a cover
+ Thick as Taygetus' sides, I'd see you limned
+ In shame!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Springing up_] What's shame to love? To love fire-sprung
+ From instant meeting of fore-strangered eyes?
+ And such was ours, there in that Athens' grove.
+ Imperial of itself, it asks no loan
+ Of subject virtue's smock to drape it royal.
+ As fen-born vapors seem to nest the stars,
+ Yet far below them do but thatch the world
+ When they look down, the vassal qualities
+ May lift no touch to love, that yet must wear,
+ To earth's unvantaged eyes, their reek and hue.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Aerial love is but an earthling still,
+ It must come down for food or mortal die,
+ And what but virtues feed it?
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, you speak
+ Of a fair, lesser thing,--a grace not lit
+ From thurible in uncreated Hand,
+ But coaxed from clay to a persuaded life.
+ Garbed as the days,--patched, plastered, hung with dear
+ Possessive vanities, it serves to make
+ Contentment's bed, and cook a patient meal
+ On comfort's hearth,--even snuggles in the void
+ That else might ache, sings low, and makes
+ Companioned feet tread bravely to the grave.
+ It has a thousand names, but never one
+ Is love. Be thine that white, ungendered spark,
+ And naught can feed it, naught can make it less.
+ Virtue and vice, nobility and shame,
+ Are rags that drop away, while you sweep on,
+ Stripped as a flame, with arms about your star.
+
+ [_Pyrrha is silent. Both start at sound of a noise on the water_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ What sound is that?
+
+ _Bia._ The rowers are returning.
+
+ _Pyrr._ So quietly?
+
+ _Bia._ [_Goes to door and closes it_] The world shall not come in
+ On me and you. Be mine this broken hour,
+ And Hieron may flute through after-time
+ At secret doors where you lock up your favors.
+ For you will go with him.
+
+ _Pyrr._ A prophet too?
+
+ _Bia._ You'll make his home, but I shall come and go
+ The unseen master there.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Now for the vision!
+
+ _Bia._ You'll watch your door,--the unheard step is mine,--
+ And rock the babe born of a dream of me.
+ And I, far-wandered, lost unto myself,
+ Shall never lose you, Pyrrha. As the light
+ Wrapping the wave reveals its silver dance,
+ My being shall exult through shade and wear
+ The chlamys of your gleam. Your voice behind
+ The wind shall draw me lover-lipped to meet
+ Adventure's breath. You'll lie upon the hush
+ That girdles evening,--be the thrill within
+ The throstle's note, and silence when
+ His song is done.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Nay, it will speak of Phania,
+ Of Sybaris.----
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, and a hundred more
+ In whom I've sought for thee, my Pyrrha, always thee!
+ 'Twill speak of them as statues speak of shards
+ About their feet,--the sculptor's broken dreams
+ That made the perfect one.
+ [_The ship rocks_]
+ _Pyrr._ We're moving!
+
+ _Bia._ Yes,
+ You know,--to safer waters. Listen, Pyrrha,
+ To me--to _me_!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Those sounds----
+
+ _Bia._ [_Kneels_] Hear _me_! My head
+ I'll votive lay till you may set your feet
+ Like tangled roses in my curls----
+
+ [_Pyrrha springs toward the door, but Biades is before her. The noises
+ increase. Groans, blows, shouts_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Aside!
+ I'll pass!
+
+ _Bia._ O, save our bones. I am the stronger.
+ You know 't.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You! I'll wind you like a thread!
+
+ _Bia._ You didn't.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Didn't....
+
+ _Bia._ When we wrestled.
+
+ _Pyrr._ When....
+ Oh, _then_! My arm was lame. Come, I will pass!
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, 'twas your heart that spared me!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ay, like this!
+
+ [_Throws him aside. He staggers against the wall for support. She
+ opens door. Two soldiers in armor silently oppose spears to her
+ passage. She slowly closes the door_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Where are we going?
+
+ _Bia._ You love me. What an arm!
+ 'Twas never lame!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Come! Tell me what's our port,
+ Then I shall know one place we do _not_ go.
+
+ _Bia._ Tut, love! Pry into men's affairs? Be calm----
+
+ _Pyrr._ What does this mean? [_Advancing_] I'll know!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Retreating_] You shall! It means
+ "The last lie wins." We go to harbor.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ah!...
+ Those rowers....
+
+ _Bia._ Faithful and fleet as ever bore
+ An Athenian general home. They came upon
+ Your signal----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Mine?
+
+ _Bia._ They lay at watch, not Phernes.
+ Look on those lights! O, trinal star, set high
+ By my beloved! My honor's flaming hedge----
+
+ _Pyrr._ You fly,
+ But in a net! The Spartans heard those shouts.
+ They are in chase--you'll see----
+
+ _Bia._ They're unprepared.
+ The captains off their ships, the guards in doubt,
+ And oarsmen half asleep. But let them come
+ Far as they dare, and if they dare too far
+ From Persia's shelter, the Athenian fleet
+ Will close like jaws about them.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Sits, with sudden hopelessness_] You have won,
+ My lord.
+
+ _Bia._ I have.
+
+ _Pyrr._ What will you do with me?
+
+ _Bia._ I'll wed thee, sweet.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'll not----
+
+ _Bia._ Yes, love, you will.
+ There is a dagger hangs in Phelas' shop,
+ Shall be your bridal gift. A prizèd blade
+ Of coppered gold, hued like a battle morning.
+ Smooth-cheeked as Artemis, although inlaid
+ With pictured tale. A captured Amazon,
+ Wrought palely in alloy,--a silvered fear
+ On th' bronzen flush of courage,--bows before
+ Her conqueror, a knight who gently bends
+ As I do now----
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Thrusting him off_] No! Never! I'll not trust
+ Your dolphin nature! Long as fish have fins
+ You'll sport in every sea! Go--go to Phania!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Turns angrily from her_] Ay, by my gods that I have found again,
+ I shall wed none but an Athenian maid!
+ [_Pyrrha swoons. He rushes to her_]
+ Her heart is still. O, curse my double-tongue!
+ She's dead--she's dead! She takes the Spartan way--
+ To die, not yield! Oh, Pyrrha, Pyrrha, Pyrrha!
+ [_Rushes about distractedly_]
+ I will not live! I'll leap into the sea!
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_On her elbow, as he reaches door_] You might catch cold.
+ [_He stares at her. She sits up_]
+ Is this your grace in love?
+ Your pictured ease, with no dissuasive line?
+
+ _Bia._ O, Pyrrha, peace! Let us be done with cheat
+ And mockery!
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Rising_] My heart on that, my lord!
+
+ _Bia._ Own thou art mine! My world when sunsets die!
+ My breath of meadows lying past the moon!
+ Compassionate this earth, and in my soul
+ Fix thee its centre. Say thou'lt come!
+
+ _Pyrr._ My lord,
+ Could I be sure....
+
+ _Bia._ Ah, Pyrrha, there's no light
+ Falls from thine eye that does not sway me like
+ A bee in rose wind-shaken. I am thine.
+ There'll be no battle, but a nuptial feast
+ With three great armies for our brothered guests.
+ Your land and mine are one. Give me your hand.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I will. For Sparta's sake.
+
+ _Bia._ And love's!
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Giving her hand_] And love's.
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT V
+
+
+SCENE: _The garden of Pelagon, as in first act. Enter youths and maidens
+dancing about Pyrrha and Biades. They sing:_
+
+
+ Hymen, god of bended knees,
+ Who would gain to thee must lose!
+ Take from us thy merry fees,
+ Though our fairest thou dost choose,--
+ Pyrrha and our Biades!
+
+ Fling the garland and the wreath!
+ Roses, roses consecrate,
+ That upgive their happy breath
+ In an ardor 'neath our feet,
+ Kissing fortune in their death!
+
+ Sparta's won, and Athens' wed!
+ Shyest hours of midnight, bring
+ Charm and blessing for the bed
+ Whence a fairer Greece shall spring
+ And her golden peace be bred!
+
+ [_They dance off, lower right, as Pelagon and Stesilaus enter middle
+ left_]
+
+ _Pel._ Ha, neatly sung! By Hermes, they have made
+ A tickling in my sandals.
+
+ _Ste._ Frivol!
+
+ _Pel._ Eh?
+ Nay, youth must wind his horn----
+
+ _Ste._ Not in my ears!
+
+ _Pel._ Though he never come to the hunt. But Biades
+ Has run the chase, and's bravely home again,
+ The game in pack.
+
+ _Ste._ Too noble game for him!
+ My girl! That I should ever play the sire
+ To a fop of Athens!
+
+ _Pel._ If the burn's so raw,
+ You've secret salve for it.
+
+ _Ste._ Yes. 'Tis not my blood
+ That so forgets its source!
+
+ _Pel._ Sh! Stesilaus!
+ A little butter on the tongue, my friend,
+ Does no man harm.
+
+ _Ste._ Butter a hackle, not
+ My tongue! If I'm so rubbed, I'll rasp the winds
+ Till they sprout ears. Don't "sh" me, Pelagon.
+ I'll muffle in no corners.
+
+ _Pel._ Hist, I say----
+
+ _Ste._ Don't zizz into my beard! We are not curs
+ To nose and smell in council!
+
+ _Pel._ Ruin's on us!
+ You will be heard----
+
+ [_Enter Menas, upper right_]
+
+ _Menas._ Joy to the noble fathers!
+ Sweet saviors of our city!
+
+ _Ste._ Sweet!
+
+ _Menas._ What says
+ Our Stesilaus?
+
+ _Pel._ Ahem! The Spartan joy
+ Is ever dumb. But see him stirred to heart
+ That by a gift from out his very life,
+ His dearest daughter, peace is home in Athens,
+ And's forced no more to camp and cadge and beg
+ At our shut gates. Yet it goes hard to part
+ Wi' the fairest branch on's tree.
+
+ _Menas._ In Biades
+ He finds a treasured son.
+
+ _Ste._ By a mermaid's shoes,
+ A precious son!
+
+ _Menas._ How, sir?
+
+ _Pel._ Indeed, indeed,
+ A jewel of a son! Will you, friend Menas,
+ Float with the senators, and bring to shore
+ Report of how they drift,--what currents favor
+ And what now counter us?
+
+ _Menas._ I'll go, my lords,
+ To hear the latest honor they conclude
+ Best caps your fame, and bring it in a word. [_Exit Menas_]
+
+ _Ste._ I had two minds to throw the truth in 's face
+ And see him strangle on it.
+
+ _Pel._ Friend, wouldst make
+ My old knees creak to earth? I sue to you
+ Be soft as prudence. Shall we now be false
+ To our dearly tended hope--united Greece?
+ Now when the fact is on us, and our dream
+ Walks in the day? I beg you clear your heart
+ Of selfish fire that eats the very pattern
+ Of love's new world. It is ungraced, perverse
+ As altar flame that would devour the shrine
+ 'Twas lit to honor.
+
+ _Ste._ Think of Greece? What's Greece,
+ When my own daughter pairs with----
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, but mine.
+ When you are bitterest set, say to yourself
+ She's of my loins, and when more softly taken,
+ Then call her yours. But openly be constant
+ To a father's right in her, and proudly sire
+ Her honors. And 's for Biades, he's but
+ A brocket yet, his antlers barely bossed.
+ My oath upon it, your reshaping hand
+ Firm-cupped about his overweening spring,
+ Will be a second cradle where he'll grow
+ Fair to your fashion. Think on that.
+
+ _Ste._ I will.
+ There's comfort. Ay, so, so. The terms of peace
+ Make him a Spartan. Pyrrha stood with me
+ Stout-willed on that.
+
+ _Pel._ Then whist! You trust your wife?
+
+ _Ste._ You speak to Stesilaus.
+
+ _Pel._ Eh, I know
+ You've her in hand. My Sachinessa now-- [_Sighs_]
+ But she loves Phania best. That locks her tongue.
+ And, friend, do you not see the high all-ruling Will
+ Has moved behind our own?
+
+ _Ste._ I think it so.
+ Our aim achieves its heaven, though we smart
+ Beneath it. To the outer glozing fame
+ That now attires us splendent, we may add
+ Inmost applause. When we exchanged our babes,
+ 'Twas for this end and day, and had we held
+ To our first intent and taken our own again,
+ Our hope had died unfruitive. 'Twas there
+ That deity came in and shifted us
+ To th' true sybillic course.
+
+ _Pel._ Who dares say else?
+ We'll wear the issue as a sacred robe
+ Fallen on us from Olympus.
+
+ _Ste._ Which our wisdom
+ Fits comely to us. Forget it not, such gift
+ Had been withheld from minds too poor to be
+ The heirs of Zeus.
+
+ _Pel._ But if the clay-eyed mob,
+ Whose pottage traffic up Olympian paths
+ Blocks commerce godly and invisible----
+
+ _Ste._ Tush, cut the string, if you have aught in bag.
+
+ _Pel._ Why, I would say if some of grosser sight
+ Than our two selves, should fumble on our secret
+ That Pyrrha is Athens born----
+
+ _Ste._ Nay, put your fears
+ In pocket. It shall not be known.
+
+ [_Enter Biades_]
+
+ _Bia._ Ha, nunky!
+ Where is my happy father? [_Sees Stesilaus_] A suit, my lord!
+ I've Pyrrha's leave to make our home in Athens
+ If thou wilt bless our dwelling. Crave thy grace
+ For sake of her in whom thy pride best flowers!
+ Here she'll o'erlay all Spartan crudity
+ With suavest bloom, and take e'en native place
+ Where Athens' love would set her.
+
+ _Ste._ Never, sir! [_Exit, middle left_]
+
+ _Bia._ The gray fox snaps. Ho, but I'll draw his teeth,
+ And he shall yelp for 't too!
+
+ _Pel._ Shame, sir! Not give
+ The road to him? The father of your bride?
+
+ _Bia._ I will when she's his daughter.
+
+ _Pel._ What! What, boy?
+
+ _Bia._ I say when she's his daughter. Let that in
+ At your good ear, and in the t'other one
+ I'll call _you_ father.
+
+ _Pel._ Ruin! It's come!
+
+ _Bia._ Who thinks
+ I'd make that Spartan grunt my father, knows
+ Not me! What? Set that boding beard at head
+ Of my Athenian house? Or go to Sparta
+ To hut me where I would not ask a stall
+ For a borrowed horse?
+
+ _Pel._ But----
+
+ _Bia._ Scratch my helpless throat
+ With bread a pig would stick at? Swallow brew
+ Of salt and soot? And chafe my pumiced skin
+ With itching linsey?--or an untanned hide,
+ As man were still the beast that wore it?
+
+ _Pel._ Peace,
+ My son----
+
+ _Bia._ Say grace for leeks and goose-foot?
+
+ _Pel._ But----
+
+ _Bia._ Though Eros pinned me head and foot with shafts,
+ I've saved my eyes, bless my united wits,
+ And know the high-road! I'll not lose me on
+ A pig-trail to a sty.
+
+ _Pel._ But if these Spartans hear
+ They'll sack the city! Zeus deliver us!
+ We're lost! we're lost! Oh, Biades!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Calm_] Talk in a muff, good father Pelagon,
+ Or we indeed are lost.
+
+ _Pel._ You'll keep the secret?
+
+ _Bia._ A time. I've plans in seed will make all Sparta
+ A garden for my Athens, where her fame
+ Shall browse to its tallest. Trust me, Pelagon.
+ I'm still a general!
+
+ [_Enter, lower right, young men who surround Biades, and press him off,
+ singing_]
+
+ Gander now must keep with goose!
+ Biades, O, Biades,
+ Thou shalt ne'er the cord unloose,
+ For the mighty god decrees
+ He shall hang who dares the noose!
+
+ [_Re-enter Stesilaus_]
+
+ _Ste._ He's gone? I took
+ My anger off where it might safely blow.
+ This path brushed clear by Heaven must not be closed
+ By our stumbling selves. The widgeon! He would fly
+ Above the eagle, but I'll snip his feathers,
+ Give me good time! He'd live in Athens, ha!
+ And swore on Hera's altar he would be
+ A son of Sparta!
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, I noted, sir,
+ That Sparta was not named in 's oath.
+
+ _Ste._ What now?
+
+ _Pel._ Naught, naught, my friend! Yet he but swore to make
+ The land of Pyrrha his.
+
+ _Ste._ And what meant that
+ But Sparta? If his warm wooer's oath must cool,
+ We've winters that will do it.
+
+ _Pel._ Caution's best.
+ Slow-mare will get you home.
+
+ _Ste._ A year or two
+ Of good black bread, and free winds on his skin
+ Will take the maiden from his cheeks and set
+ A true man's beard there. Tush! I thought that Fate,
+ Granting my main desire, gave me this plague,
+ Which, with the rest, now proves my life has pleased
+ High arbiters. You're silent, Pelagon.
+
+ _Pel._ No, no! Yes, yes! I think so. 'Tis indeed!
+
+ _Ste._ Come, come, my friend! We will go forth and meet
+ The occasion as a guest, bethinking us
+ We walk between mankind and deity.
+
+ [_They start out and are met by Alcanor and Phania who fall before
+ them_]
+
+ _Pha._ [_Kneeling to Stesilaus_] Your blessing, father!
+
+ _Alc._ [_At Pelagon's feet_] Blessing, dearest father!
+
+ _Pel._ What, what!
+
+ _Pha._ [_To Stesilaus_] Forgive your child!
+
+ _Alc._ The priest----
+
+ _Ste._ My child?
+
+ _Alc._ The priest has made us one.
+
+ _Pel._ What priest? Who dared
+ Defile the altar with such rite?
+
+ _Alc._ [_Rising_] Defile?
+ Though you're my Phania's father, you shall cast
+ No stain upon that holy ceremony
+ Whose odor yet is round us. Sir, the priest
+ Has blessed us. Do you as you please. Come, Phania!
+ Come, sweet! We'll smile at this. Though a father's curse
+ Bethorn our way, a gentler heaven will drop
+ Its soft approval where thy feet must pass. [_Going_]
+
+ _Pel._ Speak, Stesilaus! Stop your wretched son!
+
+ _Alc._ Not wretched, sir, while Phania is my own.
+ We shall be blest when you, too late, beseech
+ Unhearing gods forgive you this!
+
+ _Pel._ Stay, sir!
+ O, miserable boy!
+
+ _Pha._ No, father, no!
+ He's happy in my love as leaf in air,
+ As the sea-crystalled fish, as lotos in
+ Its pool,--and I--O, sir, my joy has wings,
+ And tho' I love you dear and daughterly,--
+ Who gave me life,--your anger has no weight
+ To keep my feet on earth. Like twirling lark
+ Too high for storm to reach, I dance above
+ Displeasure's cloud. [_Trips off with Alcanor_]
+
+ _Pel._ Sweet wretches! Here's a turn!
+ My little Phania! Friend, what shall we do?
+
+ _Ste._ Again the finger of the gods.
+
+ _Pel._ The gods
+ To limbo! I will save my daughter!
+
+ _Ste._ Yours?
+
+ _Pel._ Yea, by each hour of prattle at my knee!
+ By all my care that's been her constant nurse,
+ And every joy that from devotion sprang
+ To meet me like a flower as she grew,
+ She's mine, mine, mine! Oh, Stesilaus, oh,
+ Whosever she may be, I love the chick,
+ And she shall not be damned!
+
+ [_Enter, upper left, Sachinessa and Archippe_]
+
+ _Ste._ Here's a reproach
+ Comes with a dual mouth. If we show doubt,
+ They'll put us under pestle. Rally, sir!
+
+ _Sac._ [_To Archippe_] Are you all lump? Pick up your courage. Why!
+ The gods are gods by their audacity.
+ I'll bring it off. Now, Pelagon?
+
+ _Pel._ [_Who has turned to flee_] What, you,
+ My love?
+
+ _Sac._ Such heavy news! Enough to make
+ The gods no more co-venture with a world
+ Augmented so!
+
+ _Pel._ What, Sachinessa, what?
+
+ _Sac._ Our Phania's married to Alcanor.
+
+ _Pel._ Eh?
+
+ _Sac._ Now are you pleased? Now is your cruelty
+ Full-fed, or must it glut again?
+
+ _Pel._ My sweet----
+
+ _Sac._ You'll meddle with high Zeus! Have you enough?
+
+ _Pel._ Oh, Sachinessa!
+
+ _Sac._ Brother and sister bound
+ In an abhorrent union that will drive
+ Their shades forever from Elysian ground!
+ Nay, even Hades will make fast her gates
+ 'Gainst such offenders, innocently vile!
+ Archippe, speak to that unbending man,
+ Half author of this shame! I'd thin his beard
+ If Heaven had mocked me with his long, smug face
+ For husband! Ugh! The whiskered horse!
+
+ _Arc._ Dumb, sir?
+ You've no defence?--no master argument
+ To prove your wisdom's never off the road
+ To Zeus' gate? Not once in all your life,
+ Although your daughter's to her brother wedded?
+
+ _Ste._ 'Tis well. I can not doubt the gods.
+
+ [_They stare at him_]
+
+ _Arc._ Her brother born?
+ So foul a hap?
+
+ _Ste._ A thing too dread in thought,
+ And in the act unutterable if Zeus
+ Be unconcerned in it. Therefore believe
+ His hand here moves, and holy majesty
+ O'errules the mortal scruple, so dividing
+ This horror from its kind. May it not be
+ The blood of Stesilaus hath in 'ts flow
+ A heavenly tinct that makes it not a sin,
+ But rather virtue, to keep pure the stream
+ From baser founts? They've done no more than kings
+ And gods before them.
+
+ _Sac._ Pelagon, _your_ croak!
+
+ _Pel._ I take a lower ground, my dearest dove.
+ All Athens knows me modest----
+
+ _Sac._ Ay to that!
+ Can blush as deep as any crow that flies!
+
+ _Pel._ Now, now! From first to last I've held it truth
+ That breeding scantles birth, and on that count
+ Make Phania our daughter.
+
+ _Sac._ Oh, you do?
+
+ _Pel._ I stand on this, that training is the man.
+ Or woman, let us say, and not the blood
+ We buried with our fathers. So these two
+ Mate not ancestrally, but in their lives
+ That distantly upbred have not between them
+ A structural thread to bind them of one house.
+
+ _Sac._ What men are these?
+
+ _Arc._ I am no more afraid
+ Of him I thought was Stesilaus.
+
+ _Ste._ Listen,
+ You women. Though we are thus righted----
+
+ _Sac._ Humph!
+
+ _Ste._ In man's and Heaven's eye, we yet will bow
+ To your own wish in this. As once we gave
+ Your sighs the right of way, we now will ease
+ This second woe by taking swiftest means
+ To part this clucking pair.
+
+ _Sac._ You'll yield to _us_?
+
+ _Arc._ How like you, Sachinessa, this high place
+ Above the gods?
+
+ _Sac._ They shall be parted?
+
+ _Ste._ Ay,
+ We do consent.
+
+ _Sac._ Nay, you shall please yourselves.
+ For my own part, I will not break their bonds
+ And set their hearts a-bleeding.
+
+ _Arc._ No, nor I.
+
+ _Ste._ How now, vapidity?
+
+ _Arc._ I mean, my lord,
+ You have convinced me, and this marriage bond
+ Shall be as Zeus has made it.
+
+ _Sac._ Pelagon,
+ Your reason captures mine, and I repent
+ My mockery. This strange event's no more
+ Uncouth, now you have pried the way for me
+ To wisdom's bed of truth. I clearly see
+ Thai man and woman of one mother born
+ May be no kin. The marriage shall stand.
+
+ _Pel._ In name of Zeus!
+
+ _Arc._ Yes, in his name.
+
+ _Ste._ Nay, wife,
+ We know your simple heart, and read its horror
+ Through this pretence so suddenly clapped on.
+ We shall reject a forced and sad submission----
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, ay, we shall! I'll act at once, and stop
+ Their kisses, riveting a bond unblessed----
+
+ _Sac._ Unblessed?
+
+ _Pel._ My golden joy, I speak your thought
+ Not mine.
+
+ [_A clamor in street_]
+
+ _Ste._ They come for us.
+
+ _Pel._ I hear my name.
+ We'll out and greet them.
+
+ _Ste._ No, my friend.
+ Let them come in unnoted.
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, we'll sit
+ Withdrawn, in gentle argument. Here's shade.
+
+ [_They go aside. Enter Lysander, Agis, Creon, Menas, and a score of
+ Spartans and Athenians_]
+
+ _Lys._ Is Stesilaus here? We must be heard.
+
+ _Arc._ He's here.
+
+ _Menas._ And Pelagon! Where's Pelagon?
+
+ _Sac._ His good ear's toward, sir.
+
+ _Pel._ [_Unable to keep aside_] Did I not hear
+ My name?
+
+ _Sac._ Why, so I said.
+
+ _Agis._ [_Advancing to Stesilaus_] My lord, we come----
+
+ _Ste._ What haste, good Agis? Goes the world so fast?
+
+ _Agis._ As fast as Fate can drive it, and you, my lord,
+ Are under foot.
+
+ _Pel._ [_Who has been listening to Menas_] You hear it, Stesilaus!
+ Athens is ashes! We're betrayed, betrayed!
+
+ [_Biades, Pyrrha, Phania, Alcanor, and their companions
+ swarm in, lower right_]
+
+ _Ste._ Silence, and let us hear! Now, Agis, speak.
+
+ _Agis._ And grieve that 'tis my part. The Spartans know
+ Your treachery----
+
+ _Ste._ Who dares to give such a name
+ To deed of mine?
+
+ _Agis._ Denial comes too far
+ Behind the proof, my lord.
+
+ _Ste._ The proof? What proof?
+
+ _Lys._ 'Tis known to all. The very curb cries out
+ That Pyrrha is Athenian born, the child
+ Of Pelagon.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Oh, Zeus!
+
+ _Bia._ Bear up, my Pyrrha!
+
+ _Agis._ Ay, Athens weds with Athens, and on that
+ You build the peace of Sparta! A bold deceit
+ Of yours and Pelagon's, whereby we're sold
+ To a foeman's pleasure!
+
+ _A Spartan._ Though the heart of Athens
+ Be in the knot that binds your traitorous bargain,
+ We'll cut it through!
+
+ _Agis._ Will you deny you changed
+ Your babes in cradle?
+
+ [_Silence_]
+
+ _Bia._ Pray you, who revealed
+ This ancient secret?
+
+ _Menas._ Creon came----
+
+ _Bia._ Ah, Creon!
+
+ _Menas._ Before the senate, then in seat to unfold
+ From rivalrous invention, topless honors
+ For these two lords, whose guilt had long devoured
+ Such labor's root and reason.
+
+ _Bia._ Creon came?
+
+ _Menas._ And bared the tale, made his by accident,
+ And swore you knew it too,--that Pyrrha there
+ Is Pelagon's daughter, and Phania is the child
+ Of Spartan Stesilaus.
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, oh, oh!
+
+ _Alc._ A rope for me then!
+
+ _Cre._ [_To Biades_] Sir, I did not speak,
+ But trusted all to you, until the secret
+ Laid night on Phania's innocence and grew
+ Too foul to keep.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You knew this, Biades?
+
+ _Bia._ And knew you would forgive!
+
+ _Pyrr._ This was the spring
+ Of all your oaths! In my espousèd hand
+ You'd lay my country's peace, knowing her name
+ Was Attica! This was your proof of love.
+ The oilèd wedge that let you in my heart!
+ False in the trothal moment that should make
+ The foulest for an instant pure!
+
+ _Bia._ But hear----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Oh, in that hour which women wrap in rose
+ And hide where thoughts like guardian doves may go,
+ You set a cautel touching it with death
+ That leaves me treasureless!
+
+ _Bia._ My Pyrrha,----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Not yours!
+
+ _Bia._ Howe'er 'twas done, I won you!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Won a Spartan!
+ Now keep the shadow. As an Athenian maid
+ I do renounce you! [_Escapes him_]
+
+ _Bia._ Ah! Zeus loves the dice.
+ He's always at the game. But who'd have thought
+ This throw would be against me? Hear me, sweet!
+ [_To Stesilaus_]
+ Dear father, speak to her. She'll heed your voice,
+ Your judgment ripe, and words set out like cups
+ With wisdom's honey.
+
+ _Pel._ [_Awake to fathership_] Ay, my son, I will!
+
+ _Bia._ Not you, in name of hope! [_Follows Pyrrha_]
+
+ _Alc._ Monsters of fatherhood, how dare you show
+ Your faces in this sun? Go seek some cave
+ Whose darkest den will not betray a shame
+ Of its own hue! No, Phania, do not cling
+ To my unwilling breast that now must be
+ A hedge of swords to your bird bosom. [_Holds her tightly_]
+
+ _Pha._ Oh!
+
+ _Cre._ Withdraw your hand, proud Spartan!
+
+ _Alc._ I will protect
+ My sister, sir, from any lord of Athens!
+
+ _Sac._ Look, Pelagon,--and Stesilaus,--here!
+ Look on this warbling joy hatched tenderly
+ In nest of your conceit, which you've kept warm
+ Forgetting you had hearts where love bechid
+ Sat in unfeathered cold. If you are fathers,
+ Drink of their ecstasy till every vein
+ Applauds it!
+
+ _Lys._ Pray you, peace! The Senators!
+
+ [_Enter Amentor and other Senators_]
+
+ _Ste._ What's your demand?
+
+ _Amen._ Your life, Lord Stesilaus.
+ And that of Pelagon, in Athens' name.
+
+ _Pel._ My life?
+
+ _Amen._ Not less will still this wind and save
+ Our homes from undefended sack. They've seized
+ The citadel----
+
+ _Bia._ Then on my armor! Wife
+ May whistle when the bugle calls!
+
+ _Amen._ Stay, sir!
+ The Spartans are in power, and any check
+ Means slaughter. There's no help. The Persian fleet
+ Has sailed. The Athenians drop their useless arms
+ And follow at command, knowing no way
+ To win but by a bloodless yielding.
+
+ _Bia._ Yield!
+
+ _Amen._ Sir, we must grant the Spartans these two lives,
+ Whereon they'll strike no further. So they swear.
+
+ _Sac._ [_To Pelagon_] This is your downy Peace wooed from the clouds
+ To hover over Athens! Save the name!
+ She's from a briar-patch, not Heaven! Her wings
+ Are full of burrs!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Holding Pelagon_] Stand to! A scuttled ship
+ Has no choice deck. There's nothing to be saved
+ But dignity.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, that's for Stesilaus! [_Breaking away_]
+ My life, my life!
+
+ [_Noise mounts without. The wall is broken through, rear, and the
+ breach reveals the street filled with angry Spartans_]
+
+ _Amen._ Peace!
+
+ _Gir._ Give us Stesilaus!
+
+ _Voices._ And Pelagon! The traitors! Give them up!
+
+ _Amen._ You see them. There they stand.
+ [_Misses Pelagon_]
+ Where's Pelagon?
+
+ _Voices._ We have him here! Bring Stesilaus!
+
+ _Arc._ Hold!
+ I am Archippe. Let me speak.
+
+ _Voices._ No mercy!
+
+ _Arc._ I ask none, friends. The wife of Stesilaus
+ Is not so much in 's debt she owes him aught
+ On mercy's score.
+
+ _Gir._ Then speak.
+
+ _Arc._ Is Philon here?
+ The reverend priest?
+
+ _Voices._ He comes! Make way! He's here!
+
+ [_Philon comes out_]
+
+ _Philon._ Speak first, Archippe. I'll follow you.
+
+ _Arc._ My friends,
+ I'm such a one as you do most contemn,--
+ A woman disobedient to her lord.
+ But if you judgment give upon that point,
+ Remember that my lord is Stesilaus.
+ When this my daughter here,--yes, Pyrrha, she,--
+ Child of my nurturing blood,----
+
+ _Voices._ What? What? Your child?
+
+ _Amen._ Silence! Speak on, Archippe.
+
+ _Arc._ When she lay
+ A morsel cradled, two months' breath in her,
+ Came he, the father, swearing she must go
+ To Sachinessa's breast, and I must take
+ Her Phania to my own,--thereby to serve
+ In some occulted way the future good
+ Of Greece. And all the mercy won from him
+ Was leave to journey with my child to Athens----
+
+ _Sac._ But I was not so meek! By Pallas, no!
+ What--who--was Pelagon, to rob my bosom
+ Of Hera's gift? Who made him greater than
+ The gods? 'Tis but a girl, he said, to me,
+ A mother! I went to Philon then, the priest
+ Whom Athens honors, and by holy counsel,
+ We did not change our babes, but let our deed
+ Wear face that pleased them, with a heart our own,
+ And home Archippe went with Pyrrha safe,
+ While I in Athens held my Phania close.
+ And they, fond sires, who knew no difference
+ Between a _girl_ and _girl_, hugged their deep plan
+ And built the phantom of united Greece
+ Upon it.
+
+ _Arc._ If those ghostly towers, now fallen,
+ May rise again, it is our act, my lords,
+ Provides them nature's base, and not a dream's.
+ Condemn us, if you will, as erring wives,
+ But as true mothers give us softer justice.
+ And if there's scale or balance that can hold
+ Such torturous weight, lay on it all the pain
+ Of lonely years that saw me turn my face
+ From my loved daughter, lest this man of rock
+ Should know her mine and his.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Your own, your own,
+ My mother!
+
+ _Ste._ So you slip me, dame,
+ And Pyrrha goes with you. But Biades
+ Is under thumb by this same turn. He now
+ Must know himself a Spartan, and shall keep
+ My terms.
+
+ _Arc._ Make them full easy. You shall lay
+ No marring hand upon our children's joy
+ As fell on mine.
+
+ _Bia._ O, sue for me, Archippe!
+ Give me my bride! Whatever be her race,
+ Her home is in my arms!
+
+ _Arc._ Forgive him, Pyrrha.
+ Not for his pleading, but for love I know
+ You bear him.
+
+ [_Pyrrha permits Biades to embrace her_]
+
+ _Alc._ [_To Phania_] Sweet, we know our heaven by
+ Those moments in a hell.
+
+ _Amen._ Here's feast enough!
+
+ _Bia._ But poor old Creon in this rain of porridge
+ Starves for a spoon.
+
+ _Cre._ And you, perforce, take one
+ Of Spartan make.
+
+ _Bia._ I'm caught. But in love's lap.
+ I'll swallow Sparta for so dear a bed.
+
+ _Menas._ And you need fear no distaff tyranny,
+ My lord. There you are safe. Although your bride
+ Be Hera-limbed, you've proved yourself her Zeus
+ In open match.
+
+ _Cre._ How if her movèd heart
+ Crept to her arm and slipped the victory
+ Unwon to love?
+
+ [_Biades is suddenly embarrassed_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_With a caress of assurance_] If that were so, my lords,
+ My pride would harbor his, and none should know
+ My secret.
+
+ _Ste._ Senators, and men of Athens,
+ Art dumb when justice waits on you for voice?
+ What censure have you for these rebel wives,
+ And this unsainted priest?
+
+ _Amen._ [_To Philon_] You counselled them
+ To their deceit?
+
+ _Philon._ I did.
+
+ _Amen._ You've no defence?
+
+ _Philon._ I need none.
+
+ _Ste._ Ha!
+
+ _Philon._ Whoso reveres the gods
+ Draws of their strength in every mortal inch,
+ And in this act I did them reverence,
+ Standing between their wish and meddling wits
+ Of these presumptive men. But pardon them.
+ For it is shame enough to've thought to make
+ A frislet of their own shake like the locks
+ Of cloud-haired Zeus. For me, my hand is on
+ My altar, and I fear no fall.
+
+ _Amen._ No more,
+ Good Philon.
+
+ _Philon._ Ay, a word, This morning, sir,
+ I blessed the couple here, knowing them free
+ Of kindred blood,--Alcanor and his Phania.
+ The strands are doubly woven that now bind
+ Sparta and Athens. Pyrrha and Biades
+ Were first to link them one, and now this pair
+ Unites them o'er.
+
+ _Amen._ You hear, my Spartan friends.
+ What say you? Is it peace?
+
+ _Spartans._ Peace be to Athens!
+
+ _Amen._ And peace to Sparta! Hearts and altars guard it!
+ Go, citizens! See that the chariots
+ Glow with new garlands for this double bridal.
+ And let the noble wives of these proud lords
+ Co-queen festivity. All shall rejoice
+ Save this convicted pair,--you, Pelagon,
+ And Stesilaus. You we prison here,
+ Your own sole company, nor shall you speak
+ Save in a rhyme now dim with little use,
+ But shall be better known from this day forth
+ With polish you shall give it. Hear it, sirs:
+
+ _The man who would his own pie bake_
+ _Must from his wife ten fingers take._
+
+ [_Curtain falls and rises. Pelagon and Stesilaus are discovered,
+ their backs to each other, the only occupants of the garden.
+ Through the breach in the wall the festal procession is seen
+ passing. Curtain_]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+KIDMIR
+
+A PLAY IN FOUR ACTS
+
+
+
+
+_CHARACTERS_
+
+
+ OSWALD, _Earl of Clyffe_
+ BERTRAND, _sometime_ VAIRDELAN, _his son_
+ CHARILUS, _a Greek_
+ ARDIA, _his daughter_
+ BIONDEL _and_ VIGARD, _sons of Charilus_
+ BANISSAT, _Prince of Avesta_
+ PRINCE FREDERICK
+ BERENICE, _his daughter_
+ GAINA, _serving-woman to Ardia_
+ BARCA, _servant to Charilus_
+ RAMUNIN, _a headsman_
+ SEVEN MAIDENS, _friends of Ardia_
+
+ _Followers of Banissat, soldiers of Oswald, nobles, wedding-guests,
+ dancers, guards, &c._
+
+ Time: _During the later Crusades_
+ Place: _The southern coast of Asia Minor_
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+
+SCENE: _A hall in the castle of Charilus on the heights of Kidmir. The
+open rear, through which is seen a sunset sky, leads to a parapet
+overlooking the city of Avesta and the coast of Suli. Entrances right
+and left of parapet. Midway down, right, the door to a chamber._
+
+_Charilus stands on parapet and looks down toward Avesta. Barca waits
+within the hall._
+
+
+ _Char._ O, sea-washed city, must the hail of fire
+ Crimson thy milky walls, and salt winds strive
+ In vain to sweeten ditches dark with blood
+ From thy tapped heart? Come, Barca, be my eyes,
+ Who climbs the heights?
+
+ [_Barca advances and looks over_]
+
+ _Barca._ Lords Vigard and Biondel
+ Are on the pass.
+
+ _Char._ My sons so soon returned!
+ No other?
+
+ _Barca._ Farther down, my lord, I see
+ The knight, Sir Vairdelan.
+
+ _Char._ Then we shall hear
+ His sunset song.
+
+ _Barca._ The stairway through the cliff
+ Is closed. Shall I give signal, sir, to hoist
+ The upper gate?
+
+ _Char._ That is my charge henceforth. [_Going left_]
+ They will be hungered. [_Turns to Barca_]
+ Scant the board in nothing. [_Exit left_]
+
+ [_Gaina enters, right, rear, carrying a tray piled with candles_]
+
+ _Gaina._ Thank goodness, Barca, you're where you're wanted for once!
+ Help me with these winkers. [_Giving him candles_] My mistress kept me
+ out on the cliffs when I ought to 'a' been inside an hour ago doing my
+ honest work. I got her in at last, but I had to be round with her, poor
+ soul! I told her what!
+
+ _Barca._ [_Placing candles_] She was watching for her brothers?
+
+ _Gaina._ [_Puts tray down_] Brothers! It was a sight of that singing
+ knight she wanted. He went down the pass this morning and she has gone
+ about all day like a bird with a sore throat.
+
+ _Barca._ God gave her eyes, and Sir Vairdelan is good to see. When I
+ look at him I feel somehow as if the sun were just up and everybody had
+ another chance.
+
+ _Gaina._ A man who lets his sword rust at home while he goes about
+ tootle-de-rooling on a flute! And she could be the princess of Avesta
+ if she'd look in the right place. Well, if she had _my_ eyes!
+
+ _Barca._ What! You would have your mistress marry Banissat? An
+ unbeliever?
+
+ _Gaina._ A prince is a prince,--and I'd say the same if my mistress
+ were my own daughter.
+
+ _Barca._ And you a Christian!
+
+ _Gaina._ A Christian of Corinth, I'd have you know. There are Christians
+ and Christians, please you! And for my mistress, dear heart, it would
+ take more than marrying a prince to send her to--to----
+
+ _Barca._ Let it out.
+
+ _Gaina._ Hell, then,--if you want to bite ginger. And who but Banissat
+ can stand between her father and that English Oswald--who is just plain
+ devil and not an Englishman at all----
+
+ _Barca._ Devil? A knight of the Cross leading the army of the Lord to
+ Jerusalem.
+
+ _Gaina._ Nobody but the devil, I tell you! And I wouldn't speak to him
+ if I met him walking with Saint Peter, unless he showed me his bare feet
+ with ten good toes on 'em. It might be all right for Peter, but a woman
+ can't be too careful, and the master took me out of a good family in
+ Corinth. And this Vairdelan who is no more a knight than I'm a lady--the
+ next time he goes down the pass he will lose his way up again, or my
+ head's a goose-egg, that's all!
+
+ _Barca._ Gently, Gaina. You were young once.
+
+ _Gaina._ Once? I've more hairs than wrinkles yet, which some can't say
+ and tell the truth!
+
+ _Barca._ Tongue in! Here's the master. [_Moves right_]
+
+ _Gaina._ My candles!
+
+ [_Seizes tray and goes out, right, as Charilus re-enters left_]
+
+ _Char._ [_To Barca_] Look to the supper.
+ [_Exit Barca, right. Charilus crosses to parapet and looks down_]
+ Doubt-blown city, rest.
+ Sleep on my heart. You shall not bleed for me.
+
+ [_Enter Ardia from chamber midway right_]
+
+ _Ard._ Alone, my father?
+
+ _Char._ Never alone, and yet
+ My wish was calling thee. [_Sits, and draws her beside him_]
+
+ _Ard._ Ah, not one guard
+ About thee?
+
+ _Char._ The only guard is always near,--
+ A fearless heart.
+
+ _Ard._ Then I have none. My heart
+ Is made of fears.
+
+ _Char._ No charm but love will lift
+ Our gates of rock.
+
+ _Ard._ But who knows love from hate
+ In days like these? Some foe with friendship's eyes,
+ Some secret knife of Oswald's----
+
+ _Char._ None may tread
+ The guarded pass save our knight Vairdelan
+ And your two brothers.
+
+ _Ard._ Vairdelan is late.
+ Why went he down?
+
+ _Char._ Knights true as he, my girl,
+ Are never questioned.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Starting_] Who are at the gates?
+
+ _Char._ Your brothers come.
+
+ _Ard._ So soon? That means good news
+ From Banissat. He'll be your strength against
+ This mighty Oswald.
+
+ _Char._ Fair his word may be,
+ But I go down the pass.
+
+ _Ard._ Go down? To meet
+ That fiend?
+
+ _Char._ The man who calls himself my foe,
+ But named of God my brother.
+
+ _Ard._ O, too much
+ Thou lovest love! A fiend, I say!
+
+ _Char._ That name
+ Give unto me when I consent to piece
+ This spun-out life with breath of babes and gasp
+ Of dying mothers. Would you feed these veins,
+ Gelid and old, all golden venture done,
+ With the warm waste of youth whose savèd stream
+ Might bear mankind unto the port of gods?
+
+ _Ard._ But you--you are my father!
+
+ _Char._ It is such cries
+ Unsettle justice till her shaken scales
+ Weigh nations 'gainst a heart.
+
+ _Ard._ Must I not love you?
+
+ _Char._ My Ardia, fair as though thou wert not mine,
+ Or wert all hers who made gray Corinth young,
+ The love that feeds behind a sheltered door
+ Must be unroofed and take its bread of stars
+ Ere it may answer to its holy name.
+ The heart must build no walls----
+
+ _Ard._ I build them not,
+ But find them risen about me. You are here,
+ Guardful and best, fending my eyes,--there stands
+ My Biondel,--there Vigard brave,--and there....
+
+ _Char._ And there, my daughter?
+
+ _Ard._ Hark! 'Tis Vairdelan's voice!
+
+ [_Singing heard below_]
+
+ O fires that build upon the sea
+ Till wave and foam of ye are part,
+ And burn in mated ecstasy,
+ Ye build again within my heart.
+
+ O clouds that breathe in flame and run
+ In linkèd dreams along the sky
+ In me the fire is never done,
+ Though Eve's gray hand soon puts ye by.
+
+ Christ be my Hand of Eve upon
+ The flame that tireless, fadeless leaps!
+ Haste holily, O Mary's moon,
+ With dew for fire that never sleeps!
+
+ [_Ardia keeps a listening attitude, not heeding the entrance of her
+ brothers who come on left_]
+
+ _Char._ Well, sons?
+
+ _Bion._ Ay, well! That is the word we bring.
+ Avesta's prince, the gracious Banissat,
+ Is now your sworn defender.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Turning_] And asks no price?
+
+ _Bion._ No more than your fair self, my sister.
+
+ _Vig._ [_As Ardia stands silent_] You doubt?
+ 'Tis true. He'll make you princess!
+
+ _Ard._ He is old....
+
+ _Bion._ What call you old? He's in the fairest top
+ Of manhood.
+
+ _Vig._ Old!
+
+ _Ard._ And cannot sing....
+
+ _Vig._ Not sing!
+
+ _Ard._ What need have we of him? Can Oswald scale
+ These rock-barred heights?
+
+ _Vig._ Starvation can.
+
+ _Ard._ We've food
+ Will last three harvest moons.
+
+ _Bion._ And Oswald camps
+ Where plain and sea will feed ten thousand men
+ As many years.
+
+ _Vig._ While here our skeletons
+ With bleachèd grin may watch the feast below!
+
+ _Ard._ To starve ... is that so terrible? 'Tis but
+ One way of dying.
+
+ _Vig._ Dying?
+
+ _Char._ Say no more.
+ The morrow's dawn shall light my way to Oswald.
+
+ _Bion._ You'll go to him? Then death!
+
+ _Vig._ [_To Ardia_] See what you do?
+
+ _Ard._ Forgive me. [_Runs to her father and clings to him_]
+ Now! Bind me to Banissat.
+
+ _Char._ Nay, thou art free.
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Ardia_] Our lives shall thank you.
+
+ _Vig._ Thanks?
+ You speak her part.
+
+ [_Ardia leaves her father and moves to edge of parapet_]
+
+ _Bion._ [_Following her_] Dost know a better way?
+
+ _Ard._ I pray you, leave me.
+
+ _Vig._ Princess of Avesta!
+
+ _Ard._ Your supper waits.
+
+ _Vig._ [_Starting right_] Come, brother!
+
+ _Char._ Though I've supped,
+ I'll sit with you, my sons. Discourse is ever
+ The best dish at the board.
+
+ _Bion._ We thank you, sir.
+
+ [_Exeunt Biondel, Vigard, Charilus, right_]
+
+ _Ard._ And am I wooed and won? Dreams of a dream,
+ Where are ye now?... A lover with no song.
+ No carols stealing sweetness from the moon;
+ No trembling hand to drop a morning rose
+ Where I may walk.
+ [_Takes a rose from her bosom and casts it away_]
+ No rose.... no Vairdelan!
+
+ [_Re-enter Gaina_]
+
+ _Gaina._ Here, mistress? Dearie dear, a-weeping?
+
+ _Ard._ No.
+
+ _Gaina._ Say you were, 'twere a better sight than this fetching of dry
+ sighs. They 'most take the skin of a woe that a little tear-water would
+ bring up easy enough.
+
+ _Ard._ O, Gaina, Gaina, did you see my mother buried?
+
+ _Gaina._ Ay, 'twas a sweet grave we laid her in over in Corinth. You'll
+ never make as pretty a corpse, my dear.
+
+ _Ard._ Was I there?
+
+ _Gaina._ Troth, you were, and trouble enough you gave me. You wanted to
+ climb into the coffin and go to sleep too, you said.
+
+ _Ard._ O, had you buried me with her I should not have seen this day!
+
+ _Gaina._ Most like you wouldn't. Come, honey dove, come to your room and
+ brighten yourself a bit. There's the new veil just begging to be looked
+ at. I'll put it on you, and----
+
+ _Ard._ No, I don't want you. [_Going, right_]
+
+ _Gaina._ O, ho, I can read his name you do want, and not kill a bird for
+ it either.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Turning_] Who, magpie? Who?
+
+ _Gaina._ Your eyes may save my tongue if they squint sou'west.
+
+ _Ard._ Is he coming?
+
+ _Gaina._ Who, my cuckoo? Who?
+
+ [_Bertrand enters left. Ardia starts off right_]
+
+ _Ber._ Ardia!
+
+ _Ard._ [_Weakly, pausing at her door_] Vairdelan....
+
+ _Ber._ Will not you stay?
+
+ _Ard._ I will return. [_Exit_]
+
+ _Ber._ Your mistress is not well?
+
+ _Gaina._ You've eyes, sir.
+
+ _Ber._ This fear of Oswald----
+
+ _Gaina._ Her trouble's nearer home, sir.
+
+ _Ber._ Her father----
+
+ _Gaina._ Nay, it wears no beard, though it may in time.
+
+ _Ber._ What troubles her, dear Gaina?
+
+ _Gaina._ A man, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ A man!
+
+ _Gaina._ There, don't feel for your sword, for that's at home, and I
+ never heard yet of spitting a man with a flute, though it may e'en go
+ to the heart of a woman if she be young and soft like my mistress.
+
+ _Ber._ The truth, Gaina!
+
+ _Gaina._ I can spare it, sir. My master's daughter is so in love with
+ you----
+
+ _Ber._ Angels do not love!
+
+ _Gaina._ That may be. I'm speaking of my mistress, "Magpie!" Not meaning
+ you, sir.
+
+ _Ber._ She can not love me!
+
+ _Gaina._ That's what I said--at first. A roaming creature with only his
+ cloak for shelter, though it's a good gentleman's weave, I'll allow, and
+ I know you'll go away before her poor heart gets too heavy for carrying.
+ It's nigh that now, and before you came it was so light she was tripping
+ and chirping till I could 'a' sworn she had no heart at all--just toes
+ and wings. And now, dear soul,--but you'll go, sir? You know you'd have
+ to hunt the door soon enough if her brothers got a breath of what's
+ between you.
+
+ _Ber._ There's nothing between us!
+
+ _Gaina._ A bat could see it by daylight. It's been in your eyes all the
+ time.
+
+ _Ber._ I never meant it!
+
+ _Gaina._ Shame to you then. You'll go, sir?
+
+ _Ber._ Yes, yes, yes!
+
+ _Gaina._ Here's my lady. Now don't tell her you're going. Just go.
+
+ _Ber._ Just ... go.
+
+ _Gaina._ [_At right_] Ay, you've got it.
+
+ [_Exit Gaina as Ardia re-enters_]
+
+ _Ard._ My brothers are at supper. Will you join them,
+ Or do you fast?
+
+ _Ber._ I fast.
+
+ _Ard._ A stern religion
+ Is yours, my friend.
+
+ _Ber._ I've chosen it. Ardia,
+ You know me for a knight.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Softly_] Who wears no sword.
+
+ _Ber._ But in the English isle where I was born,
+ I was a monk ... and true. True am I now,
+ Save that my cell is what men call the world.
+
+ _Ard._ Spare speech and me. I know the rest.
+
+ _Ber._ Your prayers
+ Then be my bond that Christ may search my heart
+ And find no part not his.
+
+ _Ard._ No prayer of mine
+ Shall fetter youth to bloodless vows. And you
+ Look not as one faith-leeched of life. Your cheek
+ Is sudden gray, not changeless pale. 'Tis hued
+ Like rebel morning pushing back a dawn
+ Too eager for its peace. A monk. Our ways
+ Part as our souls. Know you I am to wed
+ Prince Banissat? So dumb?
+ My father comes!
+ [_Meets Charilus re-entering and leads him to a seat_]
+ Our guest was telling me of English days.
+ Now you change tongue with him and speak the tale
+ You promised yester night. Why does this Oswald,
+ This war-mad lord of England, on his way
+ To free the holy tomb, forget his path
+ And turn his army's strength against a man
+ No greater than thyself?
+
+ _Char._ Yes, you shall know.
+
+ _Ard._ At last!
+
+ _Char._ For morning parts us.
+
+ _Ard._ Oh! Not that!
+
+ _Ber._ Shall I go in, my lord?
+
+ _Char._ Nay, Vairdelan.
+ I'd have thee hear. Thou thinkest me a man
+ Of holy heart.
+
+ _Ard._ Ah, who does not?
+
+ _Char._ There's one
+ Has cause for doubt. 'Twas I who slew in rage
+ Earl Oswald's father.
+
+ _Ard._ You? These hands?
+
+ _Char._ These hands.
+
+ _Ber._ I've heard 'twas so.
+
+ _Ard._ You've heard?
+
+ _Char._ 'Tis thirty years
+ Since Oswald, with his father, John of Clyffe,
+ Marched in Red Giles' crusade. You know of that?
+
+ _Ber._ My grandsire captained there.
+
+ _Char._ I served not Christ,
+ At least as they, with pillage, fire and rape.
+ But there were some among the English youths
+ Who took my heart, and Oswald was my choice
+ Of all who camped before the holy gates.
+
+ _Ard._ That man!
+
+ _Char._ I, too, was young ... and I was wed.
+ Not to my Ardia's mother, but to her
+ Whose heart yet boldly beats in my two sons.
+ In her strange beauty John of Clyffe found death.
+ He sought her, and I slew him. When his blood
+ Ran at my feet, I fled,--not from the swords
+ Hot on my path, but from that stream of blood.
+
+ _Ard._ Dear, dear my father! 'Twas a world ago!
+
+ _Char._ I was not of the many who can kill
+ And laugh again, nor yet of hermit-heart.
+ But for myself had made a gentle god
+ Whom my soul served.
+
+ _Ber._ I know, my lord, that sweet
+ Idolatry, and dream what thou didst suffer
+ So shaken from it.
+
+ _Char._ Far as man knows the world
+ I fled the scarlet stream that followed me,
+ And on the skyward slope of Himalay,
+ Between the white of snows and blue of heaven,
+ Saw it no more.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Kissing his hands_] O, white, forgiven hands!
+
+ _Char._ There, near to God as man may come nor lose
+ The body's mould, I saw in solvent thought
+ That knows not time, a sinless star,--this earth
+ That shall be. Back unto my world I came,
+ And that my dream might live I lived my dream,
+ Servant to love even where the slaves of hate
+ Whet sword and knife.
+
+ _Ard._ O, true!
+
+ _Ber._ 'Tis sung of thee!
+
+ _Char._ Now am I old, but love does not deny me
+ One service more. To-morrow I shall go
+ To die at Oswald's feet----
+
+ _Ber._ [_Eagerly_] You will go down?
+
+ _Ard._ No, no! He shall not go! Prince Banissat
+ Will save him! He has promised!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Gazing at Ardia_] Banissat?
+ So 'twas a bargain. Thou'rt fair goods to be
+ On th' vender's table. [_Turns to Charilus_] You choose well, my lord.
+
+ _Ard._ What words!
+
+ _Ber._ I bring a message from th' earl.
+
+ _Ard._ From Oswald? [_Shrinking_] You know him?
+
+ _Ber._ If any man
+ May know him,--but I better know his son.
+
+ _Ard._ The vicious Bertrand?
+
+ _Ber._ Vicious?
+
+ _Ard._ O, so foul
+ He shuns the day, and walks on moonless nights
+ Most like his soul!
+
+ _Ber._ You speak of Bertrand?
+
+ _Ard._ Ay!
+ More wolfish than his father,--beast whose sword
+ Should be his body's part as tigers wear
+ Their claws from birth!
+
+ _Ber._ A bold delusion this!
+
+ _Char._ She speaks untempered rumor. Slander, sir,
+ Is out of breath with sporting Bertrand's name,
+ And giveth way to winds that blow it past
+ Belief's last border.
+
+ _Ard._ Slander?
+
+ _Ber._ What will shake
+ These fancies from your heart?
+
+ _Ard._ A miracle.
+ Naught less.
+
+ _Ber._ Hard terms. [_Turns to Charilus_] I know this Bertrand well.
+ If any happy merit in myself
+ Has won your love, bestow the same on him.
+ What I may share is his.
+
+ _Char._ Here's living hope!
+
+ _Ber._ He, like myself, was cloister-bred, and passed
+ Peaceful, uncounted days until the death
+ Of his three brothers, slain in one mad hour.
+ Earl Oswald then bethought him of the son
+ So early given to Christ. "I have no heir,"
+ He said, "but God lacks not for monks." And straight
+ With power and gold bought full release for Bertrand,
+ Save that release his soul and God might give.
+
+ _Char._ You make me love his story.
+
+ _Ber._ True to peace
+ Even in the camp of war, he lives withdrawn,
+ And so gives Rumor sweep for what she would,
+ While in her swollen report the earl conceals
+ His monkish son's true nature.
+
+ _Char._ I'll know this youth!
+
+ _Ber._ He keeps his tent by day, and steals at night
+ To forest glens, his armor but a cloak,
+ His sword a flute----
+
+ _Ard._ O, light from Heaven!
+
+ _Ber._ Sometimes
+ He farther goes, even far as Kidmir heights,
+ And at the feet of Charilus he learns
+ A love more true than fane and cloister taught,--
+ The love that made the houseless, barefoot Christ,
+ With open breast to all unbrothered woe,--
+ And now he kneels and of that gentlest love
+ Asks pardon.
+
+ _Char._ Bertrand, son of Oswald, rise.
+ There's no forgiving in the sinless star.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Rising, to Ardia_] And you?
+
+ _Ard._ Ah ... when I've breath!
+
+ _Ber._ What I have said,
+ My lord, makes way for what is yet to say.
+ To-day I waited by Avesta's gate
+ For this [_taking out paper_] my father's word, response to mine
+ Sent days ago to him. Here, sir, he says: [_Reads_]
+
+ "Son of my hope, your words are not more strange to me than these I
+ write with my own hand. If Charilus will come to Suli Castle, the which
+ my swords have taken while you sang and slept, my door shall open to him
+ as Kidmir gates have opened unto you. By Christ, I swear the treatment
+ that he gave my blood he shall have again from me. But if he come not
+ down, then shall I reach him through Avesta's heart, and the love he now
+ spurns will be cold in my sword. Despatch this, I pray you, for I would
+ hasten to Jerusalem, leaving you my conquered princedom, whose head is
+ Ilon and whose foot is the city of Ramoor. Thine as thy heart speaks,
+ Oswald."
+
+ _Char._ Your father's hand?
+
+ _Ber._ Doubt flies from it, although
+ The vein is alien, sir. It is his hand.
+ And, I do think, his heart, wherein, my lord,
+ Your gentleness to me, like creeping rain,
+ Has moistened love's dry root, whose pent-up bloom
+ Is by that nurture freed, and magical
+ Now glows before us.
+
+ _Char._ This I would believe. [_Starts off right_]
+ Vigard and Biondel must have this news
+ From my slow lips, lest with the sudden truth
+ They strike ablaze. They have their mother's fire.
+ Albanian Gartha was not one to die
+ And leave her sons no part in her wild race. [_Exit_]
+
+ _Ber._ You are not Gartha's daughter?
+
+ _Ard._ No, my lord.
+ Claris of Corinth bore me, and my flame
+ Is joy, not anger. O, this miracle
+ You've wrought for me!
+
+ _Ber._ I wrought?
+
+ _Ard._ 'Tis no less strange
+ When God through his bare tool reveals his hand,
+ Than when invisible his power stirs
+ And makes a chasm in sense. So when you stood
+ Before me, Bertrand's self, with yet the voice,
+ The eyes, the heart of Vairdelan, I knew
+ That was my miracle. O Heaven-sign
+ At which my world grew blithe and shook May-boughs
+ With birds in every branch!
+
+ _Ber._ You've no more fear
+ For Charilus?
+
+ _Ard._ None, none.
+ Nor for myself.
+
+ _Ber._ Yourself?
+
+ _Ard._ O, seems no soul need trouble now
+ In this vast world!
+
+ [_Re-enter Charilus and sons_]
+
+ _Bion._ You are not Vairdelan?
+
+ _Vig._ You're Bertrand, Oswald's son?
+
+ _Ber._ 'Tis true.
+
+ _Vig._ That truth
+ Should cut your throat, and I could lend my sword
+ For such a matter.
+
+ _Bion._ Come! What knightly plea
+ Coats this deceit with honor?
+
+ _Ber._ None, my lord.
+ If I've made trespass deeper than your love
+ Will bear me out, my hope is in your pardon.
+
+ _Bion._ A lie made you our guest, and guest you are
+ Until we meet on Suli plain.
+
+ _Char._ My son!
+
+ _Ard._ Call you that pardon, Biondel?
+
+ _Bion._ I speak
+ No pardon.
+
+ _Ard._ But you shall--you must. O, say it!
+ You know our father goes to Oswald.
+
+ _Vig._ Know
+ That fools and women talk! The gates are sealed.
+
+ _Bion._ I'll guard the pass against my father's self
+ If so much rudeness may make stand between
+ His death and life.
+
+ _Char._ My sons, I thank your love,
+ But I go down. The guards, the gates are mine,
+ And to my will they open.
+
+ _Vig._ 'Tis that girl,
+ That silvery Greek----
+
+ _Char._ If your quick blood must stir,
+ Let manners grace it.
+
+ _Ard._ O, my dearest brothers,
+ Do you not love me?
+
+ _Bion._ Better than you know.
+ We love you, serve you, though yourself obstruct
+ The way to safety.
+
+ _Vig._ You would trust the man
+ Who wrapped him in a lie to enter here?
+ Sat at our father's board and brake his bread
+ To feed an enemy?
+
+ _Ber._ The bread I brake
+ Fed friendship's heart in me, and made this roof
+ A temple. Do you not know me, Vigard?
+
+ _Vig._ Nay,
+ I knew a Vairdelan--you are not he.
+
+ _Bion._ If Oswald means no harm to Charilus,
+ Let him pass on. Jerusalem awaits
+ His savage sword.
+
+ _Char._ My son, that Oswald thus
+ Compels me to him is to me but proof
+ That hearts may greet above long years of hate.
+ In this I see Love beckoning Man across
+ The wastrel lands of war to fields unwet
+ With blood, to days----
+
+ _Vig._ Unhearted cowards then!
+ Praise Allah, we yet live where rapiers thresh
+ The fields of men and leave the bravest standing!
+ Is 't not the Prophet's word that Paradise
+ Lies 'neath the shade of swords?
+
+ _Char._ Allah be yours!
+ But I would walk beneath unrisen stars,
+ Beyond hate's eyeless clouds----
+
+ _Bion._ O, spare us, sir!
+ Each day brings its own sun, and by that light,
+ No other, men must walk. If this our time
+ Be dark to you, 'tis in your vision, not
+ In the lit heavens, from whose shoreless depth
+ No hook of prayer or prophecy may draw
+ One star before its hour. Pray you be done
+ With this moon madness. Banissat will meet
+ The force of Oswald. With the morn he comes
+ To seal his troth with Ardia----
+
+ _Char._ By no word
+ Of mine. If you have given him pledge, your honor
+ Shall dip to dust and drudge your forfeit out,
+ Ere virgin bondage pay it. Hark, Biondel,
+ And hear me, Vigard! I alone shall meet
+ Earl Oswald. If the blood I shed yet cries
+ For blood, here are the veins shall make it dumb.
+
+ _Bion._ But, sir,----
+
+ _Char._ No more. Your sister stays with you.
+ Regard her will, nor ope these doors unbidden
+ To Banissat.
+
+ _Ard._ I stay? O, never think
+ I shall not go with thee!
+
+ _Char._ You go?
+
+ _Ard._ I'm safe
+ With thee, my father. Here....
+
+ _Vig._ Here you have brothers!
+
+ _Ard._ I mean no slight upon you, but my fate
+ Keeps with my father.
+
+ _Char._ I should doubt the God
+ Who bids me go if I denied you this.
+ Thyself art Peace, and where thou goest moves
+ Her radiance. Make you ready. And good-night, all!
+ Sir Bertrand, know the sleep that fits the heart
+ For journeying. [_Exit right, rear_]
+
+ _Vig._ [_To Ardia_] There's one will stop your way--
+ Prince Banissat!
+
+ _Bion._ We'll send him word this hour,
+ For while the edge be on his sudden love
+ He'll thank us to be swift.
+
+ _Ber._ You loved me once,
+ My lords.
+
+ _Bion._ True, son of Oswald.
+
+ _Ber._ Though you used
+ Some bitter words, I know your inmost heart
+ Holds me a man undoubted. There I'm stamped
+ In honor's verity; and when I vow,
+ By my soul's faith, that Charilus is safe,
+ You know 'tis truth.
+
+ _Bion._ Be you our father's hostage,
+ If this mad thing must be. Stay you with us,
+ And we are silent.
+
+ _Ard._ Stay? You ask too much.
+
+ _Vig._ No fear, soft sister. Mark him. We're refused.
+ He'll stuff the air with words, not clear it with
+ One pinch of proof.
+
+ _Ber._ My lords, were I to stay,
+ 'Twould make an act of faith lose point and purpose,
+ And blazon doubt before my father's face.
+
+ _Vig._ You mark?
+
+ _Ber._ 'Twould louder cry of war; uproot
+ Love's seedling in its tenderest hour, and make
+ Once more the bane and night-weed spring. But hear
+ An oath of mine. If Charilus meet harm
+ In Oswald's camp, I shall return and ask
+ The same stroke from your hands.
+
+ _Ard._ O, do not swear!
+
+ _Ber._ By every hope I have to enter Heaven,
+ By the right hand of God, by this white cross
+ That knew my mother's last, death-holy kiss,
+ By every sacred thing I know and love,
+ If Charilus comes up these heights no more,
+ Here shall I lay my life beneath your sword.
+
+ [_Barca re-enters right_]
+
+ _Barca._ [_To Bertrand_] The master asks a word with you, my lord.
+
+ [_Exit Bertrand with Barca_]
+
+ _Ard._ Will you accept his oath?
+
+ _Vig._ Go to your room.
+
+ _Bion._ We'll talk alone.
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, hear me first. You think
+ To force me to the arms of Banissat.
+ Give over that wild thought.
+
+ _Bion._ 'Twas not so wild
+ An hour ago.
+
+ _Ard._ Fate lifts the hand that laid
+ Compulsion on me. I am free. O, free!
+ No strait of life or death can make me less
+ Than mistress of myself.
+
+ _Bion._ Our destiny
+ Is bound with Banissat. Make him our foe,
+ And where shall we find peace? Not on these peaks.
+
+ _Ard._ Is he our jailer then? This Banissat?
+ Our prison his good favor? Nay, the world
+ Has many roads, and courage even yet
+ May blaze a new one.
+
+ _Bion._ Rooted life is best.
+ I am not one to make my bed on winds,
+ Or stroll the earth for fortune's grudgèd scraps
+ Snatched from a rapier's point.
+
+ _Ard._ Know this. My hand
+ Shall never lie in Banissat's. Give up
+ A hope so barren. There's better pasturage
+ For wits so bold as yours. Now Oswald holds
+ The breadth of Suli plain, the heights of Tor,
+ Winged by the sea from Ilon to Ramoor--
+ A principality whose circuit leaves
+ Avesta as a fly pinned to a wall.
+
+ _Vig._ What's Oswald's fief to us? We are no sons of his.
+
+ _Ard._ Lord Bertrand holds the princedom here
+ While Oswald goes to wars in Palestine.
+
+ _Bion._ He told you this?
+
+ _Ard._ Did you not read as much
+ In Oswald's letter? There 'twas plainly said.
+
+ _Bion._ Still is our surest hope with Banissat.
+
+ _Ard._ When Bertram! is your friend? O, more than friend!
+ A brother!
+
+ _Bion._ Ah ... do you say "brother"?
+
+ _Ard._ True
+ As though he had been born our father's son!
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Vigard_] You hear?
+
+ _Vig._ With more than ears.
+
+ _Bion._ We have been blind.
+
+ _Vig._ A brother!
+
+ _Bion._ All is clear enough, now that
+ We've eyes for it. Your pardon, sister.
+
+ _Ard._ Pardon?
+
+ _Bion._ Pray you! We thought your scorn of Banissat
+ Marked you of creeping spirit, when your aim
+ Shot o'er our lowered eyes.
+
+ _Vig._ Ay, she has sped
+ Before our boldest care of her, and left
+ Our duty lurching.
+
+ _Ard._ These are drunken words.
+
+ _Vig._ If you would wed Lord Bertrand,----
+
+ _Ard._ O, you think....
+
+ _Bion._ Your hope has shown its wing. Best bid it fly.
+
+ _Vig._ Speak without fear. This changes all.
+
+ _Ard._ You mean
+ You'll not delay us? You will let us go?
+
+ _Vig._ And speed you too! High stroke, this anxious hour
+ To journey in his care!
+
+ _Bion._ Yet shielded by
+ Our father's dignity.
+
+ _Ard._ How you mistake!
+ He does not woo me!
+
+ _Vig._ Now the modest foot!
+ But we have seen the other. Trust us, sister.
+
+ _Bion._ Mistake? I now recall his looks, his sighs,
+ As from a love immured,--his songs, too warm
+ For piety's cool breath,--and more that tends
+ To happy proof.
+
+ _Vig._ How dare he woo thee when
+ Mere Vairdelan? This blade had stood between!
+
+ _Bion._ Such beggar suit would then have cheapened thee
+ Beneath a prince's wearing. [_Leading her to door, right_]
+ No drooping now!
+ The way lies clear.
+
+ _Ard._ O, brother----
+
+ _Bion._ Get you in.
+
+ _Ard._ Will you not listen?
+
+ _Bion._ Leave your hope with us,
+ Your secret is our own. [_Closes door upon her_]
+
+ _Vig._ Here's change of sky.
+ You trust Lord Bertrand?
+
+ _Bion._ That is now our course.
+ Our father will go down.
+
+ _Vig._ What's in your heart?
+ I'll open mine.
+
+ _Bion._ I beg you do.
+
+ _Vig._ Ramoor
+ And Ilon now are crownless. Suli's prince
+ Must have new governors.
+
+ _Bion._ But Christian ones.
+ That bars our way.
+
+ _Vig._ The Prophet's cloak fits well
+ With any fortune.
+
+ _Bion._ Ah....
+
+ _Vig._ We've but to change
+ The color, not the cut.
+
+ _Bion._ [_Listening_] He comes!
+
+ _Vig._ We'll speak.
+
+ _Bion._ Not yet, my Vigard. Let this fruiting hope
+ Swell to a golden fall. Wait with the sun.
+ No green and forward plucking.
+
+ [_Re-enter Ardia_]
+
+ _Ard._ Hear me, brothers----
+
+ _Bion._ Not now. The prince!
+
+ [_Re-enter Bertrand, right_]
+
+ _Ber._ I pray your answer, friends.
+ Let us go down unhindered, and my oath
+ I leave with you, a hostage sure as though
+ With iron bonds you held my breathing form:
+ For in that oath I leave no treasure less
+ Than honor, knighthood, and what in me moves
+ Deathless to God.
+
+ _Bion._ It is enough. Our guest
+ Is free.
+
+ _Ber._ Once more my brothers!
+
+ _Bion._ Know us ever
+ By that dear name.
+
+ _Vig._ And this deep oath you take
+ For Charilus' sake, is sworn too for our sister?
+
+ _Ber._ For Ardia? No, my lord.
+
+ _Vig._ Do you say no?
+
+ _Ber._ I must so answer you. For the fell harm
+ That touches her would of myself make end.
+ My honor so impeached would cease to breathe
+ The air itself made foul. I could not come
+ Having no life to bring me.
+
+ _Bion._ We believe you.
+ Go with our father. Take our sister too.
+ And we upon these heights shall pray, as you
+ On Suli plain, that Charilus may see
+ His sons again.
+
+ _Ber._ Come, let him know! This wished
+ Obedience will give him sleep.
+
+ [_Exeunt Bertrand, Vigard, and Biondel, right rear_]
+
+ _Ard._ Is 't best
+ That Truth be dumb? I'll watch this weaving Fate,
+ And feed her web with silence.... Oh, with hope!
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT II
+
+
+SCENE 1. _A hall in the castle of Suli. Heavy doors open left, half-way
+up. Large window with iron grating, rear. Couches, chairs, scattered.
+Tables from which servants are removing the remnants of a feast. They
+are quarrelling, chaffing, singing, as the curtain risen._
+
+
+ _First Ser._ Shifty, there!
+
+ _Second Ser._ What, can't a soldier eat?
+
+ _First Ser._ You a soldier, lickspoon?
+
+ _Second Ser._ I've drawn a sword, sir!
+
+ _First Ser._ Ay, and cut a cheese.
+
+ _Third Ser._ [_Lifting flask_] Here's to----
+
+ _Fourth Ser._ [_Seizing flask_] No man shall guzzle my master's wine
+ before me. [_Drains vessel_]
+
+ _Third Ser._ [_Sadly, turning up empty flask_] Not after you, either.
+
+ _Fifth Ser._ Well, well, and two moons back we were saying grace over
+ ditch-water!
+
+ _Sixth Ser._ Ay, we were good Christians then. A full stomach makes lean
+ prayers. Now we've such a plenty we can spare the devil a fillip, and
+ never a grace for it.
+
+ _First Ser._ [_Tugging at table_] Take a leg there! This is no
+ grasshopper. [_Others help him move table to wall, right_] Look about
+ you! The maskers will be in here.
+
+ _Second Ser._ Here? They'll be everywhere to-night. Such a jig-making
+ over the new prince!
+
+ _Second Ser._ Not a corner to drop into and sleep off a good supper with
+ a clear conscience!
+
+ _Sixth Ser._ Sleep? What have we to do with sleep? We fight, we eat, we
+ dance. That's my soldier!
+
+ _Second Ser._ We kill, we cut, we caper! [_Sings_]
+ The soldier rides on Fortune's wheel,
+
+ _All._ Round we go,
+ Round we go!
+
+ _Second Ser._ Now up the head and now the heel,
+
+ _All._ Round we go,
+ Round----
+
+ [_Enter seventh servant_]
+
+ _Seventh Ser._ Quiet, you devils! The master's coming.
+
+ _Second Ser._ What, can't a soldier sing? Haven't we fought like true
+ men? When did we give quarter? When did we show mercy? And now can't we
+ be happy? Can't we take breath?
+
+ _Seventh Ser._ Sh! and I'll tell you what I've seen. I've seen the
+ daughter of Old Wisdom.
+
+ _Sixth Ser._ He get a daughter!
+
+ _Seventh Ser._ The maid of Kidmir. Ardia of the Stars they call her, but
+ if the sun could shine in the middle of a dark night she would be like
+ that.
+
+ _First Ser._ Foh, the Lady Berenice will put out her candle.
+
+ _Seventh Ser._ The Lady Berenice is as like her as the back of my hand
+ to Juno's cheek!
+
+ _First Ser._ A heathen comparison! There's a Christian blow for it!
+
+ [_They scuffle. Enter Oswald in talk with Bertrand. Servants finish
+ their work quietly and go out_]
+
+ _Osw._ My heart is whole again, now you've escaped
+ The claws of Kidmir.
+
+ _Ber._ Say the arms that closed
+ Like God's around me!
+
+ _Osw._ Fox, and lion too.
+ That's Charilus. I knew him young,--when blood
+ Tells nature's truth,--ere he had sucked
+ Philosophy's pale milk and made his truce
+ With prudence and long life. The heart then his
+ He carries now----
+
+ _Ber._ Then, sir, you must have known
+ The Maker's marvel,--youth that outstripped age
+ And grayest saints in virtue.
+
+ _Osw._ Tut! No matter.
+ You're safe. And he is here ... within these walls.
+
+ _Ber._ A guest of faith who holds your honor bound
+ High hostage for his life.
+
+ _Osw._ My honor? Trust me!
+ I'll care for that. No more I'll blush to lift
+ My shield i' the sun. The spot of thirty years
+ Shall be wiped out.
+
+ _Ber._ With love, my father?
+
+ _Osw._ [_After a pause_] Ay,
+ 'Tis love shall do it.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Lifting his father's hand to his lips_] You bind my heart to you.
+
+ _Osw._ Too soft, my warrior. Keep such woman's play
+ For Berenice. She will thank you for it.
+ I'm rough and old, and need the soldier clap
+ To start the singing blood. [_Clapping Bertrand_] A blow with good
+ Red heart in 't!
+
+ _Ber._ Berenice?
+
+ _Osw._ Ah, that takes you!
+ She's here at last. Prince Frederick arrived
+ Three days ago, and with him his fair daughter,
+ Too dear of value to be left behind,
+ The prey of quarrelling kings. You'll dance with her
+ To-night.
+
+ _Ber._ You'll pardon me. I shall not dance.
+
+ _Osw._ Faugh, there's the monk again! Why, boy, we'll pray
+ The better for a little tripping,--fight
+ The better too. One dance with Berenice!
+ A beauty, sir, who makes me hate the years
+ That lie 'tween youth and me. She was to wed
+ A son of mine by vow above her cradle,
+ And I have buried every son save you.
+
+ _Ber._ May I not keep one vow?
+
+ _Osw._ The pope long since
+ Released you. Now----
+
+ _Ber._ My compact was with Christ.
+
+ _Osw._ Why cling to one when all the rest are broken?
+
+ _Ber._ It is the one lies wholly in my choice.
+
+ _Osw._ You left your cell.
+
+ _Ber._ Do you forget 'twas you
+ Who shook to ground my cloister walls, and locked
+ All holy doors against me?
+
+ _Osw._ True, I did it.
+ And with good warrant. Broadest Christendom
+ Upheld my right and gave me back my heir.
+ Small gain if you refuse to wed. My need
+ Is not for sons but grandsons now. My boy,
+ You'll let me see your children at my knee?
+ Ho, hide your face? Then there's a heart in you.
+ Why should I toil through blood and groans and fire
+ To make a name my shroud will wrap with me?
+
+ _Ber._ Toil then to give this land to God, and live
+ So long as love shall live in men.
+
+ _Osw._ Pale fame!
+ Have you no blood of mine? How could my fire
+ Father this sluggish monk? There was a maid
+ On Kidmir, Charilus' daughter, who has come
+ In wag of him, which speaks a fearless wench,--
+ She taught you nothing in those moons you passed
+ Upon her peaks?
+
+ _Ber._ Sir?
+
+ _Osw._ When I saw her face
+ Flash from her veil, I could have sworn
+ Your vow was drowned in her lake-eyes, and that
+ Her captured softness had made easy way
+ For royal Berenice. Now you talk
+ Out of your cowl----
+
+ _Ber._ Not so! I am a knight!
+ Your words have made me one! Now could I draw
+ This sword that knows not blood----
+
+ _Osw._ I'll bout with thee
+ For any woman. Come! Thou'lt be a man
+ Ere long. Come, sir!
+
+ _Ber._ You've set a foot most foul
+ Upon the flower of time!
+
+ _Osw._ It seems I've hit
+ The mark i' the very eye.
+
+ _Ber._ The whitest thought
+ That holds her first must shrive itself!
+
+ _Osw._ So, so!
+ Come, end the song. She's yours. 'Tis not the moon
+ You cry for, take an old man's word.
+
+ _Ber._ The moon
+ Were nearer to me!
+
+ _Osw._ Trrr-rrr-rr!
+
+ _Ber._ My lord?
+
+ _Osw._ A woman. Ask and have. I'll send her here.
+ This is the hour to bait you, and I'd not lose it
+ For half of Suli.
+
+ _Ber._ Stay! I will not see her.
+ I dare not look upon her lest I lose
+ Christ and myself.
+
+ _Osw._ Are you so tuned? We'll have
+ A wedding yet.
+
+ _Ber._ Forget that word, and I
+ Forgive you for it.
+
+ _Osw._ A wedding, prince of Suli.
+ This plain shall ring to Antioch.
+
+ _Ber._ Nay, father,--
+ And yet I thank you that your heart would make
+ So fair a maid my bride.
+
+ _Osw._ Fair? That's no word.
+ She's glory's darling pearl,--the morning's eye
+ That makes the night forgot! When you have seen her----
+
+ _Ber._ When I have seen her?
+
+ _Osw._ Ay,----
+
+ _Ber._ Do you not speak
+ Of Ardia?
+
+ _Osw._ Ardia! Gods! Wed Kidmir's trull?
+ Make me a doting grandsire to the heir
+ Of Charilus? Hear it, stars! Am I the fool
+ O' the earth? Give up my English forests, bare
+ My purse for troops, and foot by foot fight way
+ To Suli sands,--all this that I may set
+ A droning dotard's line upon a throne,
+ And be the ass of chronicle? O, poison!
+ Well, well, I'm done. The girl is fair enough.
+ And you shall have her if she pleases you.
+ But Berenice--there's your bride, my boy!
+
+ _Ber._ Wed Berenice? With that name you save me.
+ By that I see the darkness coiling deep
+ Along my bridal way. 'Twas Ardia's name
+ That lit the path till I dared let my eyes,
+ Though not my will, go venturing on 't.
+
+ _Osw._ My son,----
+
+ _Ber._ Never again, my father, speak to me
+ In this night's strain. Till morning I shall pray.
+ And then I fast. Good-night.
+
+ _Osw._ One moment. One!
+ The sunrise feast? Will you not be with us?
+ I drink with Charilus the cup of peace.
+
+ _Ber._ And love that breaks no peace?
+
+ _Osw._ [_Assenting_] See how you bend me?
+ All that you ask I give, but you to me
+ Yield nothing.
+
+ _Ber._ Sir, this sword, my knightly suit,
+ And princely title, make denial for me.
+
+ _Osw._ Your pardon. I forget you count it much
+ To give a crust and cell for this broad kingdom.
+ I who have paid my heart out for a crown
+ Must thank you now to wear it.
+
+ _Ber._ Good-night.
+
+ _Osw._ O, son,
+ Have you no patience with a man grown old
+ In many battles? Now feel I my age,
+ Knowing the dearest blows of my long life
+ Have bought me but this shadow. In you is drained
+ Ambition's heart,--my every burning aim
+ Fails here in you, and cools unforged, unshapen.
+ Yet do you turn from me as though 'twere I
+ Not you who gave the wound that parts us.
+
+ _Ber._ I?
+
+ _Osw._ Of all my sons I loved you best. You think
+ I gave you to the friars with no twinge
+ Here at my heart? Your mother said "One son
+ We must return to God," and I said "Yea,
+ So it be not my Bertrand." But her will
+ Ran 'gainst me. When she had her way, I longed
+ Through many a day to have you at my side,
+ While you were happy with your songs and saints,
+ Your father quite forgot.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Stirred_] Nay, not forgot.
+ And I am with you now.
+
+ _Osw._ O, let me feel
+ My son is mine! I'll yield you anything.
+ Ay, even Ardia! She shall be my daughter----
+
+ _Ber._ By heaven that keeps me true, I will not hear
+ That name again! There's maddest music in it.
+ I see her when I hear it. [_Covering his eyes_]
+
+ _Osw._ [_Aside_] I see the lime
+ Will catch you.
+
+ _Ber._ Again, good-night.
+
+ _Osw._ One favor, son.
+ And slight too, by 'r lady!
+
+ _Ber._ Speak it, sir.
+
+ _Osw._ I gave my word you'd wait on Berenice.
+ I' faith, I know not what excuse to make
+ To Frederick. 'Tis barest courtesy
+ To give her greeting.
+
+ _Ber._ I will welcome her,
+ Our guest.
+
+ _Osw._ Enough! [_Going_] You'll wait us here?
+
+ _Ber._ I'll wait.
+
+ [_Exit Oswald. Bertrand sits with head bowed and does not heed maskers
+ who enter and dance about him. They cover him with their garlands
+ as they go off. A song is heard within_]
+
+ What save winds shall kiss his bones
+ Bleaching on the desert stones?
+ What but waves o'er him shall sigh
+ Who doth drownèd sea-deep lie?
+ What save worms to him shall come
+ Locked in earth, bound, keyless, dumb?
+
+ Wild the wind and cold the wave,
+ Sharp the tooth within the grave!
+ Be such kisses for my ghost,
+ Heart, my Heart, when thou art lost!
+ Love me, Love, an hour and we
+ Mock the cold eternity!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Taking up a flower_] Eternity in this?
+
+ [_Ardia enters. He does not see her until she speaks_]
+
+ _Ard._ Prince Bertrand?
+
+ _Ber._ [_Rising_] You?
+ Not Berenice!
+
+ _Ard._ Ah ... you wait for her?
+
+ _Ber._ Who brought you here?
+
+ _Ard._ The earl. Your father.
+
+ _Ber._ He!
+ What said he?
+
+ _Ard._ That you prayed to see me, sir.
+
+ _Ber._ O, faithless! He deceived you.
+
+ _Ard._ I will go.
+
+ _Ber._ Stay--tell me--how you fare.
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, you await
+ The princess.
+
+ _Ber._ You've all comfort? No least lack?
+
+ _Ard._ I've food and bed, but little company.
+
+ _Ber._ My father's plans press hard, and I'm a part
+ Of them. Each hour he calls me.
+
+ _Ard._ I know, my lord,
+ This is not Kidmir. I've my father too.
+ You've yours ... and Berenice.
+
+ _Ber._ Nay, it seems
+ Fate hath her changelings. You have come, not she.
+
+ _Ard._ I sought no meeting, sir, but being here,
+ I'll ask you of my father. Is he safe?
+ Earl Oswald means no treachery to his guest?
+
+ _Ber._ At sunrise he will drink the cup of peace.
+
+ _Ard._ That's hours away! He knows your life is pledged
+ For Charilus' safety?
+
+ _Ber._ No. I will not wake
+ A doubt against his honor.
+
+ _Ard._ He should know.
+ I've seen his eyes. Good hap, you have your mother's.
+
+ _Ber._ If he be vile as you so fear he is,
+ My pledge would be no leash to his hold will.
+ He'd chain me here till he destroyed your brothers.
+ Let him know naught, I'm free to keep my oath.
+ But this should not be spoken. We do wrong
+ To talk of things that have no being save
+ In our own midnight fears.
+
+ _Ard._ Well, I shall sleep.
+ Good-night, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ Am I not Vairdelan?
+
+ _Ard._ Ay, when you smile so.
+ [_Holds out her hands, and drops them untouched_]
+ Far, O far from Kidmir!
+
+ _Ber._ Yea, an eternal journey my lost soul
+ May find it. Ardia, counsel me. Two ways
+ Stretch long before me, and I faint
+ In daring either. Give me of your strength.
+
+ _Ard._ My strength? I have none.
+
+ _Ber._ You have God's.
+ Men, proud in valor, stray and lose his hand;
+ The woman holds it ever, walking floods
+ And trampling fire where men go down.
+
+ _Ard._ Tell me!
+ How may I help you?
+
+ _Ber._ Sit then. I will speak.
+ [_She sits; He stands near her_]
+ I have agreed to be the sovereign
+ Of sword-won Suli.
+
+ _Ard._ None will better serve
+ Where he is master. O, this spear-torn land
+ Shall flower to heaven and mate her bloom with stars!
+
+ _Ber._ A bloom that dies with me?
+
+ _Ard._ Death cannot make
+ The spirit barren.
+
+ _Ber._ [_At distance_] Through me my father hopes
+ To found a princely house o'er-topping Asia
+ With Christ-lit towers.
+
+ _Ard._ Oh!... Then you will wed.
+
+ _Ber._ [_His eyes down_] My bride is chosen.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Rising_] Chosen? [_Sits again_]
+ Nay.... I know....
+
+ _Ber._ [_Returning_] Your hidden eyes hide not the loathing there
+ For me forsworn. Why have I troubled you?
+ Look on me, Ardia. I am not yet fallen.
+ I take your answer. You have chosen my way,
+ And I set forth upon it--_not_ forsworn.
+
+ _Ard._ That word is naught. I do not think of it.
+
+ _Ber._ Must man not keep his pledge?
+
+ _Ard._ To mortals, yes.
+ For so our lives are knit, and part to part
+ Keep sound and whole. But pledges unto God
+ Man cannot make or keep till he may bind
+ The Will that journeys with the launchèd world.
+ So might His rivers say "Here will we rest,
+ And worship thee," nor run into the sea,
+ And God must be content though all his fields
+ Burn waterless. So might the winds vow Him
+ Unbroken calm, and God who needs his storms
+ Must still his own desire while his dear earth
+ Goes pestilent.
+
+ _Ber._ Unsentient things! He shares
+ His will with man.
+
+ _Ard._ But not to enslave his own.
+ Christ seals no bond the lips lay on the soul
+ That is each instant new as life, as change,
+ As the importuning world. Ah, he who sells
+ To one hour's narrow need the zenith light
+ Of unborn days would snuff out time and know
+ No rising sun. Himself would be a slavedom
+ Where never Christ would walk.
+
+ _Ber._ Is 't Ardia speaks?
+
+ _Ard._ Truth speaks, not I. If man must vow,
+ Let it not be to love no woman,--wear
+ The vest of fire, and in a sunless cell
+ Chain Heaven-arteried life,--then peering out,
+ Cling to the nested eaves transfixed to see
+ His fled desires wear the horizon flame.
+ But let him vow his Christ shall shrink no vein
+ Of broad and pauseless being; ay,--shall keep
+ Sweet surgence with his blood, climb with his spirit
+ Time's lifting hills, and hold in watch with him
+ The unshrouding pinnacles where love puts off
+ The old clouds for the dawn. Forsworn? O, heart
+ Cell-bound, thy very vows deny thy Christ.
+ Who serve him wear no chains.
+
+ _Ber._ You think me true?
+ And yet I felt your wounded, doubting eyes
+ Raining me scorn. Why was it, Ardia?
+
+ _Ard._ Scorn?
+ I have forgot why 'twas--or shall forget.
+
+ _Ber._ And there was pity too, that dropped your lids.
+ And would have sheltered me. Is that forgot?
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, that.... I'll tell you that. I thought of Love,
+ Man's angel, and the heart-lone way of him
+ Who missed and found her not. Never to take
+ More courage from the fall of her sure feet
+ On heights that wind between death and the stars;
+ Or where his road burns through the shadeless sands,
+ Reach for the hand with fountains in its touch
+ And feel the palm-breath round him. Not to know
+ Her eyes when night is come, and there's no star;
+ Her breast, that pillowing the darkened waste,
+ Keeps warm the bitten earth and gives him dream
+ To meet and match the dawn. So wept my thoughts,
+ Forgetting that you are no wanderer,
+ But kingly housed will rule a tamèd realm.
+ Or should a harvest come of spears, not grain,
+ Yet is your princess brave and beautiful,
+ And bears, may be, a mating heart. Love then
+ Will come to you----
+
+ _Ber._ My princess?
+
+ _Ard._ Berenice.
+ Your father's choice ... and yours.
+
+ _Ber._ My Ardia! Mine!
+ Could such a lie creep to your soul and find
+ No lances at the door? [_Kneels, kissing her hands_]
+ My love, my love, my love!
+ Let honors fail, and stars forget my name,
+ 'Tis thou shalt walk beside me, thou my chosen!
+ I'll hear thy footfall on the winter steep,
+ And take thy hand where desert noons are white,
+ But close thy breast shall lie upon my heart,
+ Nor pillow the bitten waste, my own, my own!
+ [_She moves from him. He rises_]
+ Why are you silent, pale, and heaven-still?
+
+ _Ard._ I must be still. I've mourned my heart-walls thin.
+ This joy will break them. Joy to hear your voice
+ With love's mate-music in it cry to me.
+ My joy! I'll drink it all, nor lose one drop,
+ For I shall have no more.
+
+ _Ber._ No more? No less
+ Than life can hold!
+
+ _Ard._ Hear me, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ You love me!
+
+ _Ard._ I shall not be your wife.
+
+ _Ber._ You're mine--all mine!
+
+ _Ard._ You hold your vow yet sacred, breaking it
+ By the sole might of love. You do not feel
+ The vision round you in whose light that vow
+ Falls like a grave-cloth from an angel's limbs.
+ Ah, Christ would be no bridal guest of ours,
+ Shut out by your heart's fear.
+ [_He stands as if stricken_]
+ You see 'tis true.
+ You listen for his sanction, and you hear
+ The ring of your own vow.
+ [_He sits bowed_]
+ You hear it now
+ Above your passion's chime. 'Twill fill the air
+ When love's mad bells grow quiet, and your soul
+ Asks the old question. Let me then be far
+ From thee, nor stay to be a claspèd fire
+ Eating thy side.
+
+ _Ber._ You'll heal me of my fear.
+ [_Reaching his hands to her_]
+ My fountain and my palm!
+
+ _Ard._ Your doubt would stir
+ Beneath your tenderest deep. My nearing step
+ Would as a trumpet start its buried storm
+ To sweep our meeting eyes.
+
+ _Ber._ If Christ would give
+ A sign,--leave me no choice,--no other way
+
+ _Ard._ The torch of Fate but blinds us when the heart
+ Beareth no light.
+
+ _Ber._ Not Fate, but Heaven--there
+ I'd read my sign.
+
+ _Ard._ Hope not, my lord, that Heaven
+ Will drive me to your arms. Farewell.
+
+ _Ber._ No, no!
+ To keep you I'll dare hell----
+
+ _Ard._ Dare hell? My love
+ Walks not that fiery verge, but waits thine own
+ In regions nearer God. There we shall meet,
+ And there will be no hell.
+ [_Turns to go, but is drawn back by his grief_]
+ Thou art a prince
+ Of Christ. Arise and rule this land for him.
+ There is no sin in you. You've kissed my hands,
+ And they are bright as stars!
+
+ _Ber._ O, can you go?
+ You do not love me. In your breast are wings--
+ No heart, but wings that seek the mountain sky.
+ Go perch above me, leave me dying here.
+ And cool your bosom with a virgin song
+ To mateless heaven!
+
+ _Ard._ Who is cruel now?
+ You have the world to feed on, need not eat
+ Your heart as I must--I, the woman. Dear,
+ Where Kidmir cliffs climb highest to the sky
+ I'll keep my watch, but thou shall rise above me
+ In thought of men. O'er all discerning shall
+ Thy purpose wing, perhaps be drunk of clouds,
+ But light shall follow where thine aim has sped,
+ And leading upward with your comrade world,
+ My Kidmir shall seem lowly, where I walk
+ With stintless ache beneath the cedar boughs
+ On pain's moon nights. And oh, the Springs to pass,
+ When each bride-bud shall be a wound to me,
+ When grasses young, and softly pushing moss,
+ Shall urge my feet like fire, and I must stand
+ Quite still ... quite still ... with all my unborn babes
+ Dead in my heart.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Motionless_] You dare not leave me now.
+ You dare not, Ardia.
+
+ _Ard._ I dare not stay.
+
+ [_As she nears the great doors they rumble shut and are noisily barred
+ without_]
+
+ _Ard._ Ho! Open, open, open! I pray you, open!
+ [_Beats on door, then leans to the silence_]
+ Shut in ... shut in! So Oswald's treachery
+ Begins with me. My father, we are lost.
+ You are to die, and I--to-morrow, oh,
+ My honor will go wasting on the fields
+ With every soldier's breath! You hear, my lord?
+ We are shut in....
+
+ _Ber._ The miracle!
+
+ _Ard._ Together....
+
+ _Ber._ The sign! the sign!
+
+ _Ard._ For all the night....
+
+ _Ber._ For all
+ Eternity! There is no other way.
+ I take you as from Christ. My bride, my bride!
+
+ [Curtain]
+
+
+SCENE 2. _The same. Gray of morning seen through grating of window,
+rear, where Bertrand stands looking out and upward. Ardia is sleeping
+on a couch. The dawn-light wakes her and she starts up._
+
+
+ _Ard._ 'Tis morning. Bertrand! You have watched all night?
+
+ _Ber._ O, there has been no night.
+
+ _Ard._ I slept it through.
+
+ _Ber._ Thy body slept, but thou hast been with me
+ O'er all the world, and farther than the world,
+ Out where the life begins.
+
+ _Ard._ That may be true,
+ For I had wondrous dreams.
+
+ _Ber._ You speak of dreams?
+ A magic touched me, and I woke from dream
+ Knowing my life. What ways we went! All things
+ Seemed new, warm with the Maker's hand, as young
+ As our own eyes, but 'twas eternity
+ That kept them sweet, unaging.
+
+ _Ard._ It was Love
+ Who gave thee eyes to see the world immortal
+ Even in our own.
+
+ _Ber._ Do all Love's votaries
+ Walk with such magic sight?
+
+ _Ard._ In truth! I've seen
+ A beggar woman tread the road-side dust
+ As it were showered gold, because she had
+ Love's eyes. And we--what joys our joy shall find!
+ The pearling skies with rose-breath drinking ours
+ 'Tween sea and dawn! The leaves that turn i' the wind
+ And tremble in our hearts--the brook-song that
+ Began beyond the stars--the woodland nests,
+ Breast-warm----
+
+ _Ber._ And one is ours.
+
+ _Ard._ The lark that leaves
+ His meadow-mate and reels at the sun's door
+ Dropping his song of fire and clover-dew
+ Down to her heart.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Kissing her_] As this in thine!
+
+ _Ard._ And all
+ Life's dearer-veinèd joys,--the way-side hands
+ That pluck to camp-fire glow,--the smile of age,
+ Gift-sweet and wise beside the garner door----
+
+ _Ber._ Ay, dear are these ... but when we came again
+ From that far, holy place....
+
+ _Ard._ Ah, in your dream.
+
+ _Ber._ Where no words go or come....
+
+ _Ard._ When we came back?
+
+ _Ber._ Walking the light between the parted stars,
+ And met the days that knew us ... naught could hide
+ The eternal joy within it. Twas a world
+ Whose beauty lay allwheres. O, not alone
+ In morning skies and mated larks a-wing!
+ Each rag-hung thing was dipped in chosen time
+ And wore its royal hour.
+
+ _Ard._ If that could be!
+
+ _Ber._ What seers, what eyes of light, outshone the pain
+ That gave them being! Tears that silvered graves
+ Globed in their pearl the immortal hope of men,
+ And seemed as beautiful as prophecy
+ Burning in its own truth. Ay, where a man
+ Fell murdered, crying "I forgive," the ground
+ Sprang as a garden----
+
+ _Ard._ Murdered? O, not that!
+ How could you say it? I had forgot, forgot!
+ Love in your dream looked you quite through the soul
+ Of Time on things to be? What saw you then?
+ Ah, tell me!
+
+ _Ber._ Then?... Then came this dimmer light
+ Which you called morning, and I saw no more.
+
+ _Ard._ I would I knew!
+
+ _Ber._ You fear even now?
+
+ _Ard._ O, me!
+
+ _Ber._ Sweet, leave these shadows--dreams of ancient night
+ That cling too late upon a day-warm world.
+ Must I persuade you still that Oswald means
+ Our happiness?
+
+ _Ard._ Hark you! They come, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ The sunrise feast. Fit place and time to break
+ The fast of love.
+
+ _Ard._ O, hear! So many feet!
+
+ _Ber._ Dear trembler, do not fear.
+
+ _Ard._ They're here, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ Welcome the world. It has no eye can make
+ Our own seek earth.
+
+ [_Doors open. Enter Frederick, Oswald, Charilus, Berenice, with lords
+ and ladies attending. Servants follow bearing trays, and lay the
+ table. Ardia hastens to her father and they talk apart. Oswald
+ advances to Bertrand, right, the others lingering left_]
+
+ _Osw._ I am forgiven?
+
+ _Ber._ Forgiven!
+ Ask God and Love! I'll thank you all my life
+ That you did force me take my only way
+ To Heaven.
+
+ _Osw._ Hmm! And I spent a bitter night
+ Fearing your morning face.
+
+ _Ber._ It was my soul's
+ Birth-night.
+
+ _Osw._ God bless me, you are grateful, sir.
+ But you've good reason. [_Looks at Ardia_] I had no such mate
+ To make the dark hours fly.
+
+ _Ber._ Pray speak to her.
+
+ _Osw._ In my good time.
+
+ _Ber._ Nay, now!
+
+ _Osw._ The day is long.
+ I shall be gentle, for I owe her much
+ Who gives me back my son. Come to our guests.
+
+ _Ber._ Does Frederick----
+
+ _Osw._ Ay, he knows all, and bears
+ No grudge.
+
+ _Ber._ Knows all?
+
+ _Osw._ He clapped my plot as though
+ His own thick noll had hatched it.
+
+ _Ber._ And the princess----
+
+ _Osw._ You see her smile? There's answer for you. Come!
+ No blush! Put on a face. Your bridal news
+ Shall sauce our banquet.
+
+ [_They move to guests_]
+
+ _Fred._ [_To Bertrand_] Greet you, sir! But why
+ So pale, my lord? I fear me you have spent
+ A sleepless night.
+
+ _Ber._ Ay, as the stars.
+
+ _A Lord._ The stars?
+ He winked then, by the rood!
+
+ _Ber._ What do you say?
+
+ _Lord._ I say the stars do wink, most gracious prince.
+
+ _Osw._ Come, find your seats, my friends! Yet two of us,
+ Lord Charilus and my unworthy self
+ Must keep our feet till we have drunk the wine
+ Made sacrosanct by one night's rest upon
+ The Virgin's altar.
+ [_Bertrand places Ardia's seat by her father, who stands at the left
+ of Oswald_]
+ You, fair Berenice,
+ Sit at my right, and on your other side
+ The graceless prince of Suli begs for room.
+
+ _Bere._ He beg, my lord? I have not heard his tongue,
+ And for his eyes, I fear no leek of Wales
+ Could pull a beggar's tear from them to oil
+ This suit. But he is welcome.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Taking seat by her_] Thank you, lady.
+
+ [_When all are seated save Charilus and Oswald a priest enters bearing
+ a chalice of wine which he places on table before Oswald_]
+
+ _Osw._ This is the cup by angels visited
+ In night's deep hours. Herein they dropped the peace
+ Of Heaven, which Charilus and I shall take
+ Into our hearts. I know in truth it holds
+ Sweet peace for me--the peace that thirty years
+ My veins have ached for. Charilus, what say you?
+
+ _Char._ My heart can hold no more of peace than now
+ Doth fill it, but I drink with you, my lord.
+
+ [_Drinks from goblet which Oswald has filled from chalice, and Oswald
+ drinks from goblet filled by Charilus_]
+
+ _Osw._ [_Dropping his glass_] Is peace a fire?
+ I' faith, this kindles me!
+ Thou smileless priest, take off the Virgin's cup!
+ You think it needs another blessing, sir,
+ Since my bold hand has touched it? Out with you!
+ [_Exit priest with chalice_]
+ That pinch-face has seen hell and fasts to keep
+ The ghost down. I'll not fast. Set to, my friends.
+ Fill up your bowls, for I've a health for you.
+ We drink to Berenice, bride to be
+ Of Bertrand, prince of Suli and my son!
+
+ _A Lord._ [_As all lift their glasses_]
+ We pledge the bride of Bertrand--Berenice!
+
+ _Ber._ Drink not, my lords, till you have changed that name
+ To Ardia, daughter of our noble guest,
+ Lord Charilus!
+
+ _Fred._ [_Rising_] If this be sport, Earl Oswald,
+ A world of groans shall pay for 't!
+
+ _Bere._ [_In mock swoon_] Oh.... I faint....
+
+ [_Her ladies help her_]
+
+ _Osw._ You bawling ass! You thousand times a fool!
+
+ _Ber._ [_To Oswald_] You've woven a maze about me, and I'm blind
+ With 't, yet I see to pluck one truth,--my bride
+ Is Ardia. No other under Heaven! My lords,
+ It is the wine----
+
+ _Osw._ Would then 'twere in your throat!
+ Is this the riddle of your morning smile?
+ Your fair compliance, soft submission? Sir,
+ By my heart's blood, I'll give you to the sword
+ Ere you shall make me father to a drab--
+ The spoil of your own lust, the--What, you draw?
+ Ay, strike me down! Let me be first to fall
+ Beneath your mighty sword! The rust has lain
+ A lifetime on it, and a father's blood
+ May cleanse it bright as Heaven!
+
+ _Ber._ O, my Christ!
+
+ _Osw._ Yea, call on him, and he will hear thee too,
+ Who honorest so thy father!
+ [_Bertrand stands speechless_]
+ Now, my lords,
+ Since he no longer brays, I have a tale
+ To tell you. I, too, had a father, though
+ The world has long forgot him.
+
+ _Fred._ No, my friend.
+ Well do I bear in mind his fair, proud face,
+ And glory of his arms.
+
+ _Osw._ He was struck down
+ Because a minion, straying from the hearth,
+ Looked on his beauty with her nestling eyes.
+
+ _Fred._ For no more cause?
+
+ _Osw._ I swear it. Friends, if death
+ Were the cold price for kissing of a jade,
+ Who here would be alive? For so slight sin
+ Was my brave father murdered. Charilus, speak!
+ Was not the princely heart of John of Clyffe
+ Ripped with a hate-keen sword,--the sword of him
+ Who claimed the lordship of those rebel lips
+ That chose my father liege?
+
+ _Char._ It is too true.
+
+ _Osw._ Who better knows? Say that a wilding flies
+ The builded bower, hearing a lordlier song
+ Pass on the wind than her dull mate can tune,
+ Must then the singer die, who scarcely knows
+ His song is heard, or that a bold wing follows?
+
+ _Char._ Whether the earl of Clyffe sang then to woo,
+ As I believe, or for the love of song,
+ As you do say, my lord,--his death was sin,
+ And he who wrought that woe shed tears enough
+ To clear his stain, if tears may whiten souls.
+
+ _Osw._ A murderer's tears! But what of mine, the son's?
+
+ _Ber._ Your oath--your honor, sir! Where is the love
+ You swore should cleanse your shield?
+
+ _Osw._ Safe in my heart.
+ And burning for my father.
+
+ _Ber._ God of pity!
+
+ _Osw._ That was the love I spoke of.
+
+ _Ber._ All be deaf
+ But hell!
+
+ _Osw._ Hear the full tale, my friends. I swear
+ The earl of Clyffe died for no more offence
+ Than I have here set out,--and I, his only son,
+ Kissed his red wounds and from his breast unbound
+ This bloody scarf--[_taking scarf from his bosom_] that then was
+ crimson, now
+ In age-grown black bemourns my step that comes
+ So sluggish to revenge. For thirty years
+ Had passed ere I beheld his murderer,
+ Then face to face we stood ... and face to face
+ We stand ... for this is he, this Charilus
+ Of Kidmir--peace-lipped Cain--gray hypocrite,
+ Whose blood is honey in his veins, whose eyes
+ Stare on the world as he were some bland god
+ Who made it and said "good."
+
+ _Char._ Sir, I would send
+ My daughter to her brothers. Grant me this.
+ And I am ready for what death you please.
+
+ _Ard._ I will not go. One sword shall strike us both.
+ [_Turns to Oswald_]
+ But first a word to you. When Charilus falls,
+ Say farewell to your son. He pledged his life
+ To my two brothers for our father's safety,
+ And you, who know him least, yet know he'll keep
+ That pledge.
+
+ _Osw._ What, creature, will you lie?
+
+ _Ard._ I speak
+ The truth. Strike, if you can, this gray old man,
+ Silvered in service to the one high God,
+ Sinless as sunlight, fair in sweetened age,--
+ Let forth his sainted blood, and Bertrand lives
+ No longer than the shortest time between
+ Suli and Kidmir.
+
+ _Osw._ That's a lifetime then!
+ He shall not step! I'll have him hung with chains
+ Till he is fast as rooted oaks in earth!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Stunned_] A guest betrayed....
+
+ _Osw._ Betrayed? I promised him
+ Such treatment as he gave my blood. And he
+ Shall have it--death!
+
+ _Char._ Peace be my heir!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Takes stand by Charilus_] Death, sir?
+ First break this sword! Thy sin must be unnamed
+ Until the angel who doth write thee damned
+ Gives it foul christening. I break my pledge.
+ I will not go to Kidmir. Here I'll give
+ My life for Charilus.
+
+ _Char._ No blow for me!
+ O, may I unavengèd lie forgot,
+ And my forgiving blood make barren ground
+ Alive with asphodel----
+
+ _Ber._ Nay, I will strike,
+ Though a father's sword meet mine!
+
+ [_Charilus trembles, and supports himself by Ardia's arm_]
+
+ _Osw._ Commend me, stars!
+ You counselled well. [_To Bertrand_] Fool, do not draw. There's none
+ Will run against you. Charilus is dead,
+ And by a way more sure. His holy goblet
+ Held one rich drop the angels put not there
+ Nor Virgin blessed. See how he pales--and stares--
+ And cannot get his voice? So are we spared
+ A swan-song homily trickling through his beard.
+ Be off, old pray-lip--off, and take with you
+ Your cat-foot peace and milky piety!
+ I serve a vengeful God who armeth men
+ For his own wars!
+
+ _Ber._ Heaven, draw thy clouds about thee!
+
+ [_Charilus dies in Ardia's arms_]
+
+ _Osw._ He's dead! The air of earth is sweet again.
+ I have no enemy!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Looking up from the body_] You have no son.
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT III
+
+
+SCENE: _On Kidmir Pass. Moonlight paling to dawn. Ardia alone,
+struggling up the Pass._
+
+
+ _Ard._ [_Looking back_] They do not follow. I am safe from that.
+ [_Sits on a rock_]
+ Why should I climb? There is no rest up there.
+ But there is death, mayhap,--and that is worth
+ The sorest climbing. O, my father dear,
+ Is 't thy dead self so heavy on my heart?
+ Thou shouldst be light upon thy spirit wings,
+ And give me of thy freedom.
+ [_Gaina enters from above_]
+ Gaina, hast found
+ The spring?
+
+ _Gaina._ 'Tis farther up.
+
+ _Ard._ More steps.
+
+ _Gaina._ Wait here.
+ Barca will bring you drink. Nay, sit you still.
+
+ _Ard._ I must. How this weak body masters us,
+ Cooling the bravest will that in strong limbs
+ Might dance to any goal! Yet do we say
+ The will is lord, whose flush is in the blood
+ And fades wi' the paling body. By that lie
+ We cling to Heaven and immortality.
+ ... O, I am lost so deep I need not fear
+ The farthest bolt of God! Out, out the pale
+ Of his concern!
+
+ _Gaina._ Why now, honey dear!
+ A sip of fine spring water and you'll be
+ A lark o' the morning! All's not bad, I say.
+ There's Banissat would marry you to-morrow!
+ What pretty words he spoke, and took us in
+ Like a good father--but I saw him look!
+ And he were shaved he'd have a merry eye.
+ Such meal and honey! _I've_ a thankful tooth!
+ Come now, what say you? Run from such a fortune,
+ And stumbling is no matter. Ay, a trip
+ Or two were well enough.
+
+ _Ard._ Yes, foolish 'twas
+ To fly from Banissat.
+
+ _Gaina._ You know it? Well, well,
+ If it's your own right mind you've run to, dearie,
+ There's no harm done past mending.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Taking a small dagger from her dress_] This had saved
+ My feet these weary steps.
+
+ _Gaina._ Sweet Mary, save us!
+ Wouldst slay a prince for loving thee?
+
+ _Ard._ No, wretch.
+ I could not take another's life though 'twere
+ Of all the world the foulest.
+
+ _Gaina._ Bless the lass!
+
+ _Ard._ But out of pity I could take my own.
+ Why should my heart beat on and labor so
+ For merest leave to beat again?
+
+ _Gaina._ Now, now!
+ [_Enter Barca_]
+ Here's Barca, praise the saints! Now you'll take heart!
+
+ [_Ardia takes gourd from Barca and drinks_]
+
+ _Ard._ Thanks, Barca. But there's misery in the draught
+ That makes me keen again. I fear me I'll
+ Yet hope.
+
+ _Barca._ Will you walk on?
+
+ _Ard._ Yes, come.
+
+ _Barca._ [_Listening_] What's that?
+ A noise below!
+
+ _Ard._ Some one from Banissat!
+ I'll not be taken!
+
+ _Barca._ Come aside, my lady.
+ Here is good hiding.
+
+ [_They go behind a great rock half hidden by cedars. Bertrand enters
+ below. Ardia steps out and stands before him. He kneels_]
+
+ _Ber._ Spirit, hast come for me? I'll join thee, love,
+ When I have climbed this peak and met the sword
+ That sets my honor free.
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, rise, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Rising_] Thy living self? Here in the night alone?
+
+ _Ard._ Barca is here, and Gaina.
+
+ _Ber._ Sweet, the moon
+ Makes thee so fair.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Smiling_] Was I not always fair?
+
+ _Ber._ [_Embracing her_] My living love! Sit here,--and now thy story.
+
+ _Ard._ I'll shorten it to get to thine.
+
+ _Ber._ You had
+ The dagger that I sent you? [_She shows it to him_] My sole gift
+ To love.
+
+ _Ard._ O, it was dear as death then seemed
+ To me!
+
+ _Ber._ Cast it away.
+
+ _Ard._ No, for love's sake
+ I'll keep it, and it shall do no work save God's.
+ Listen ... it prophesies.... I'll need it yet.
+
+ _Ber._ O, I was mad to send it! Would you wreck
+ This tent set fair upon the soul's long road,
+ By pain-craft wrought of every whiter dream,
+ Where God may sit with us and map the winds
+ That forward blow and back, the paths laid free
+ To His far end, and those where blind walls rise
+ Breast-piled with thwarted dust? Dear soul of me,
+ Would we know Heaven we must listen here,
+ And one word lost may mean a path all dark
+ When we fare outward. This is not for you,
+ This fear-born blade. Away with it!
+ [_She clasps it closer_]
+ Is not
+ Your danger past?
+
+ _Ard._ Not while Avesta loves.
+
+ _Ber._ O God! But tell me now the full, foul story,--
+ Yet not all foul, since you are here alive.
+
+ _Ard._ Your father----
+
+ _Ber._ I've no father!
+
+ _Ard._ --sent me forth
+ With my two servants. When we reached Avesta,
+ The prince met us with welcome, much too warm
+ Methought, so in the night we stole away
+ And reached the pass--all with some wit and care,
+ As you shall know hereafter. Now your word.
+
+ _Ber._ I was imprisoned.
+
+ _Ard._ Yes, I know.
+
+ _Ber._ A guard
+ Gave me his sword. I fought the others.
+
+ _Ard._ Fought?
+
+ _Ber._ And killed. Look on this blade. A brother's blood.
+
+ _Ard._ My love!
+
+ _Ber._ At last I am Earl Oswald's son!
+
+ _Ard._ My Bertrand! [_Drawing aside his cloak_]
+ You are wounded! Vairdelan!
+
+ _Ber._ That name is no more mine.
+
+ _Ard._ How did you pass
+ Avesta?
+
+ _Ber._ The guards were friends of Vairdelan.
+ I used the stainless name that I had lost.
+ O, I have lied to keep my word, and slew
+ That I might die!
+
+ _Ard._ Might die? You mean ... my brothers.
+ They must be merciful.
+
+ _Ber._ With Charilus slain?
+
+ _Ard._ O, me! I too shall die. And that is best,
+ If anything we do be worst or best.
+ I've read within my father's secret script
+ That earth shall lose its heart of fire, and lie
+ Dead-cold and dark with no green thing upon it.
+ Then this black crust shall bear no form of man,
+ Nor trace of him. Why then such ceaseless pain
+ To look a little longer on the sun,
+ When he who seals his eyes this day with dust
+ But leagues with time to reach the journey's end
+ Without the journey's ache?
+
+ _Ber._ Hast lost thy faith?
+ My heart, say earth must be its own still grave,
+ Our destiny lies farther. But were life
+ A march to naught, I'd choose it for the sake
+ Of one bright wonder by the way--your love,
+ My Ardia.
+
+ _Ard._ You love me, yet would die. Thou'rt mine!
+ And I will hold thee, yea, on this warm earth,
+ Not in some strange and tearless world!
+
+ [_While they speak Barca moves up the pass and listens_]
+
+ _Barca._ My lord?
+
+ _Ber._ Ay, Barca?
+
+ _Barca._ Men are on the pass.
+
+ _Ard._ Above?
+ My brothers! Oh!
+
+ _Ber._ I go to meet them.
+
+ _Ard._ Stay!
+
+ _Ber._ They shall not come to me. I go to them.
+ My honor, love, my honor!
+
+ _Ard._ O, men, men!
+ You build a shrine to love and ask us fling
+ Our lives, our souls into it. Once within,
+ The door forever shut, there sits a god,
+ A monster-god, your honor, and we must sue
+ For barest room to stand or crouch or kneel
+ Where by your oaths we should be sovereign.
+
+ _Ber._ The shrine itself is honor, dear, my heart.
+ That gone, we have indeed no holy place
+ To shelter love. Was 't not yourself who said
+ That man to man must keep his pledge?
+
+ _Ard._ Ah me,
+ That shining night! That night of golden wings!
+ And now comes this. Can such two nights be born
+ In the same world, and but one sun between?
+ [_Bertrand staggers_]
+ You're bleeding still!
+
+ _Ber._ Fast, fast.
+
+ _Ard._ My veil----
+ I'll wrap you with it! [_Binds wound_]
+
+ _Ber._ Thanks, for I would live
+ To die upon their swords.
+
+ _Ard._ Wait, wait, my lord!
+ O, do not meet them in their first deep rage----
+
+ _Ber._ Farewell!
+
+ _Ard._ You shall not see them till my prayers
+ Have turned their hearts from blood.
+
+ _Ber._ Part thou with hope
+ And pain will leave thee too. That is the wrench,
+ Not death.
+
+ _Ard._ Stay, stay! Are there not miracles yet?
+ I'll hide you yonder till----
+
+ _Ber._ They come!
+
+ [_Hurries up pass, staggers and falls_]
+
+ _Ard._ He faints!
+ The miracle begins! Here, Barca, Gaina,
+ Bear him aside. He swift! Then come to me.
+ O, gently, Barca! Haste!
+ [_Barca draws Bertrand behind the rocks_]
+ He shall be saved!
+ Thou'lt not deny me, Heaven! O, forget
+ That ever I blasphemed Thee!
+
+ [_Enter, above, Biondel and Vigard_]
+
+ _Vig._ Who is here?
+
+ _Ard._ My brothers!
+
+ _Vig._ Ardia, by my life!
+
+ _Bion._ 'Tis she.
+ What do you here?
+
+ _Ard._ I go to you. Where else
+ Shall I find shelter in a world now bare
+ Save where your hearts make gentle room for me?
+
+ _Bion._ What do you mean? Where is our father? Speak!
+
+ _Ard._ You have not heard? Why then do you go down?
+
+ _Bion._ For word of Charilus. No messenger
+ Has come. All night we watched. What can you say
+ More than this fearful meeting tells? No word?
+ Are you the ghost you look? Is Charilus safe?
+
+ _Ard._ Safe as yon Heaven would have him. He is dead.
+ [_Silence_]
+ You loved him, though you went another way
+ To find your God.
+
+ _Bion._ Our father dead? O, sister,
+ Not cold, not still, not silent to his sons.
+ Who loved his voice even when they most forsook it!
+
+ _Ard._ Oswald betrayed us.
+
+ _Vig._ O, my sword, 'tis thou
+ Shalt split his heart, though every spear in Suli
+ Then pierce my own! [_Going_]
+
+ _Bion._ Stay, Vigard!
+
+ _Vig._ Earth is fire!
+ Can you be still upon it? Where is Bertrand
+ With his deep oaths? O, coward! I will seek him----
+
+ _Ard._ No need. He'll come to you.
+
+ _Bion._ He'll keep his oath,
+ You think?
+
+ _Ard._ I know he will.
+
+ _Vig._ So knew you too
+ That Charilus was safe. Call him to life,
+ And we'll believe you yet!
+
+ _Bion._ How died our father?
+ [_Ardia weeps_]
+ No matter now. And Oswald cast you out?
+ Afoot?
+
+ _Gaina._ Ay, so he did! I'll answer that!
+
+ _Ard._ He sent us under guard.
+
+ _Gaina._ Ay, but afoot!
+ And 'twas a trudge to Avesta. O, the day!
+
+ _Bion._ Prince Banissat gave you no help?
+
+ _Gaina._ No help?
+ Who said so? There's a prince! He drew his sword,
+ And swore he'd drive Earl Oswald to the sea,
+ And said "Avesta's yours,"--that to my mistress,
+ She then bedraggled and so full of tears
+ She had no words to thank him. I did that!
+ Then we had sup and bed, and when my bones
+ Were sweet with sleep, why we must up again
+ And tug it to the peak.
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Ardia_] He sheltered you!
+ Then there was hope, which you have trampled down
+ By this mad flight.
+
+ _Ard._ I dared not think the prince
+ Would make my bitter fortunes his. In you
+ Lay my defence, and to your love I came.
+ You must make peace with Oswald. Yes, my brothers,
+ Although you write it with our father's blood.
+ He is all powerful. When Bertrand comes----
+
+ _Vig._ Ha, when he comes!
+
+ _Bion._ What then?
+
+ _Ard._ You may demand
+ Whate'er you will of Oswald, if you spare
+ The dear life of his son.
+
+ _Vig._ I'll have that life
+ And Oswald's too!
+
+ _Ard._ He'll make you any terms----
+
+ _Vig._ Ay, any terms, and keep none, once his son
+ Is safe.
+
+ _Bion._ [_Looking down the pass_] Who comes?--with gleaming lances? Ah....
+ The prince!
+
+ _Vig._ By Allah, he!
+
+ [_It is now dawn. Ardia steps back into shadow as Banissat and followers
+ enter. His retainers wait at entrance below while he advances_]
+
+ _Ban._ Good-morrow, friends.
+
+ _Bion._ Hail to you, Banissat!
+
+ _Ban._ I seek a dove
+ That fled my hand last night. Has 't flown your way?
+
+ _Bion._ Our sister is with us.
+
+ _Ban._ Then search ends here.
+
+ _Bion._ Her flight meant no ingratitude, my lord.
+ Her father's arms grown cold, she came to ours
+ By the shortest way, bringing her honor home
+ Where none might question it.
+
+ _Ban._ We love her more
+ For watchful care of what to us is precious
+ As to herself. Heaven-pure must be the bride
+ Of Banissat, and tainted Heaven will put
+ The earth to blush ere she will bring us shame.
+ I offer her my princedom.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Stepping out_] One whose veil
+ Is lost? Whose face is common to the eyes
+ Of beggars by the road?
+
+ _Ban._ O, bald and bitter!
+ But did not one, our Lady of Paradise,
+ Walk with bare brow among our counsellors?
+ And you are pure as she. Who dares to soil
+ The chosen of Banissat with whisper that
+ He saw you on this journey, forfeits eyes
+ And tongue. So silence shall give burial deep
+ To every slander.
+
+ _Ard._ You will not forget.
+
+ _Ban._ Yourself shall be my dear oblivion.
+ For Beauty keeps no records, has no past;
+ Her arms engird love's moment, and there is
+ No other time.
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, Beauty's history
+ Is writ beneath her bloom, and when that goes
+ The deep, uncovered scars are hated more
+ Because of love that kissed them unaware.
+ I dare not wed you, but say that I dared,
+ Wouldst grasp my broken fortunes when you need
+ Strong Antioch's staff and sceptre to make good
+ Your gates 'gainst Oswald? And I've heard, my lord,
+ That Antioch's daughter is a prize you seek.
+
+ _Ban._ Be not o'er-jealous, Ardia of the Stars,
+ For Antioch shall serve thee. There my suit
+ Is but a fair appearance,--there I woo
+ To make thy state secure, and thou shalt be
+ Bride of my heart unrivalled.
+
+ _Ard._ Hear me then!
+ I am betrothed to Bertrand. He is sworn
+ To me as I to him.
+
+ _Vig._ Death to your tongue!
+ You'd wed your father's slayer?
+
+ _Ard._ I would wed
+ Lord Bertrand. [_Kneels to Biondel_] Brother!
+
+ _Vig._ Give no ear to her!
+
+ _Ard._ If you would save Avesta and yourselves,
+ Make peace with Oswald. Trust not Antioch.
+ When Bertrand comes----
+
+ _Vig._ He will not come! He's not
+ A fool as thou!
+
+ _Ard._ He comes!
+
+ _Vig._ [_Lifting his sword_] Then here's his welcome!
+
+ [_Bertrand comes out and walks slowly to the group. Vigard, amazed,
+ lowers his sword_]
+
+ _Ber._ My friends, well met. You cut my journey short.
+
+ [_Gives his sword to Biondel_]
+
+ _Bion._ You have come back ... to death?
+
+ _Ber._ The blow, my lord.
+ Your work is wellnigh done. An easy stroke
+ Will finish it.
+
+ _Vig._ And whose is that?
+
+ _Bion._ Not mine.
+ I do condemn him, but can lift no hand
+ To seal mine order.
+
+ _Vig._ I am not so weak.
+ This blow for Charilus!
+
+ _Ard._ [_Staying him_] If Bertrand dies
+ My honor goes unto a grave so deep
+ No shoot of green will ever from it spring
+ For the world's eye to light on.
+
+ _Bion._ You make much
+ Of broken troth. There's many a maid has lived
+ In wedded honor with a second choice.
+
+ _Ard._ But I may not.
+
+ _Bion._ Peace, sister.
+
+ _Ard._ Let him live,
+ And Suli's glory will enwrap my name
+ Stainless and safe.
+
+ _Ban._ 'Tis safe with me. Ay, safer.
+ Let Antioch enlist with me, and I
+ Shall wear the name of Suli with my own.
+
+ _Ard._ You've yet to hear ... you do not know, my lord....
+
+ _Ber._ Sweet, plead no more. Let me go on to Heaven
+ If 't be God wills his gates shall ope to me.
+
+ _Vig._ You'll stop in hell a thousand years or so!
+
+ _Ard._ Wait! I will tell----
+
+ _Vig._ You've said too much!
+
+ _Bion._ Speak, Ardia.
+
+ _Ard._ In Suli castle where I was betrothed
+ To Bertrand, just one sun agone--but one--
+ He spent the night with me.
+
+ _Vig._ She lies!
+
+ _Ard._ Say now
+ If Banissat, or any lord save Bertrand,
+ Will make me wife.
+
+ _Bion._ Must I believe you?
+
+ _Ban._ No.
+ A woman's trick.
+
+ _Ard._ There's proof. Ask whom you will
+ Of Oswald's train--the lords who saw me cast
+ From Suli's door, too vile for word or touch.
+ Ask any trooper, jesting by the way,
+ And hear my name made foul. The army rings
+ With it. Ask any gossip of the tents----
+
+ _Ban._ O, stop her tongue! It thunders on me! All
+ The air is storm! Peace, or I'll strike her down!
+
+ _Bion._ This seals your death, Lord Bertrand. Now my hand
+ Is hot and willing.
+
+ [_Enter a messenger below. He gives a packet to Banissat_]
+
+ _Messenger._ Antioch sends this,
+ O, prince!
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Bertrand_] I had your word above all oaths
+ That you would guard our sister. When the priest
+ Strips bare the shrine, not outraged God or man
+ Shall show him mercy.
+
+ _Ard._ He is innocent!
+ 'Twas Oswald's plot to cast me in the dust--
+ And there I lie where all the world may see--
+ But Bertrand's soul is guiltless----
+
+ _Vig._ Guiltless! Tush!
+ Your puzzle's clear. [_To Biondel_] She dies with him.
+
+ _Ard._ I die
+ If Bertrand dies. But, oh my brothers, we
+ Are young--we love--will you not let us live?
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Vigard_] 'Tis best she dies.
+
+ _Ber._ You will not dare----
+
+ _Bion._ The prince
+ Shall be her judge.
+
+ _Ban._ First let us speak aside,
+ For Antioch fails us, and we've more to weigh
+ Than the quick death of this too-guilty pair.
+
+ [_Banissat, Biondel, and Vigard go off above_]
+
+ _Ber._ I have brought death upon you.
+
+ _Ard._ Life, 'tis life
+ Now beating in the dawn! What music! Hear it!
+ O, we shall live, my lord, and live together!
+
+ _Ber._ In Heaven, love.
+
+ _Ard._ True, for this planet too,
+ Ay, even this earth, is set in Heaven as deep
+ As any star. 'Tis we are heaven to eyes
+ In other worlds, and would be to our own
+ Could we believe. O, hope with me, my Bertrand!
+ No, no, not hope, whose other half is doubt,
+ And to its dark and fearful double owes
+ Its very radiance, too, too unlike
+ Belief's transmuting sun!
+
+ _Ber._ Ah, love, no man ere broke
+ Undrained his cup, or brewed again those drops
+ To his desire----
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, every man is new
+ In destiny, his star his own, and foots
+ Unmeasured paths.
+
+ _Ber._ On mortal feet.
+
+ _Ard._ Be 't so,
+ Each birth is a high venture of the soul
+ Feeling an untried way for deity's dream,
+ And none may know where th' deep and twilight trail
+ Shall flash with God-rift, and the dawn be his.
+
+ _Ber._ O, bravest, bow thy head----
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, nay, my lord!
+ Lock up your spirit, let mine rule this hour,
+ Or be with me the flame of faith that leaps
+ To deed in God. For we do help him, dear.
+ Our parcelled strength is whole and new in His,
+ A power born that touches us again,
+ Breeding our greater self that yet gives back
+ His own increase, until the way is strewn
+ Even with his miracles and ours. So works
+ The unending drama out, where every act
+ Begets an act yet greater than itself.
+
+ _Ber._ Let me but kiss thy hands.
+
+ _Ard._ You will not help?
+ You'll not believe? Is it so strange
+ That you should live?
+
+ _Ber._ That hate should let me live.
+
+ _Ard._ Is it more strange that halo should grow love-still,
+ Than that the wind should cease, as now it does,
+ To strip the bloom from yonder bough, and lie
+ Unfelt within its silent place? More strange
+ That life should keep its flow in your warm veins
+ Than that the sun now creeping on the peaks
+ Should wander down and on and lay in gold
+ The valleys of the world, moved by no hand
+ We see or name, but know, but know!
+
+ [_Biondel, Vigard, and Banissat re-enter_]
+
+ _Ard._ He lives!
+
+ _Bion._ He lives. Speak the conditions, prince.
+
+ _Ban._ [_To Bertrand_] Your life
+ Is spared that she whose name is lost
+ May wear your own. You shall remain on Kidmir peak,
+ And make her yours by every priestly rite
+ With open, fair observance. Then Earl Oswald
+ Must greet as daughter one he vilely mocked
+ From his proud door, and far and wide acclaim her
+ Princess of Suli. Will his love for you
+ So bow his heart?
+
+ _Ber._ I may not speak for him.
+
+ _Ard._ He will consent.
+
+ _Ban._ And, further, he shall give
+ To Biondel the governorship of Ilon.
+ And grant Ramoor to Vigard.
+
+ _Ber._ Not for price
+ Of my poor life will Oswald yield these towns
+ To any save a Christian.
+
+ _Ban._ So we think.
+ And therefore will these lords forswear
+ The Prophet for your Christ.
+
+ _Ber._ Such sudden change----
+
+ _Vig._ Not sudden, sir. We've long debated it
+ In secret talk, but loved too well our prince
+ To so forsake his banner.
+
+ _Bion._ Now the day
+ Is here when as his true and Christian friends
+ We may best serve him, and yet keep the peace
+ For which our father died.
+
+ _Ber._ He is alive again
+ If you be true. Though wonder is in the hour
+ I will not stare or question.
+
+ _Ard._ Question nothing.
+ Do you not live?
+
+ _Bion._ The prince will summon Oswald
+ To earliest parley, and make our offer known.
+
+ _Ban._ Nor lose an instant. Here begins my journey.
+
+ [_Signs to retainers who start down the pass_]
+
+ _Bion._ We need not give you thanks when you've our hearts
+ That hold them.
+
+ _Ban._ By the sunset hour the earl
+ Shall give me answer. Meet me in Avesta
+ 'Tween dark and light.
+
+ _Bion._ We will, my lord.
+
+ [_Exit Banissat_]
+
+ _Ber._ O, strange!
+ Will he keep faith?
+
+ _Bion._ If you must doubt his heart,
+ Trust his affliction. Antioch lost to him,
+ What can he do but smile on Christian Oswald?
+ By that same argument I am condemned,
+ But beg a respite till this pushing peace,
+ Upsprung in haste, may bear you buds of proof.
+
+ _Ber._ What world is this?
+
+ _Vig._ Climb you no farther, sir.
+ Your wounds forbid. Our servants shall be sent
+ To bear you up.
+
+ _Bion._ Ay, wait you here, my lord.
+
+ [_Exeunt Biondel and Vigard above_]
+
+ _Ber._ Love, see the sun!
+
+ _Ard._ It is my heart, my heart!
+
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT IV
+
+
+SCENE: _Same as first act. An altar near wall, left. Seven maidens
+putting fresh garlands about the hall._
+
+
+ _Mylitta._ She must be dressed by this. Come, let us sing!
+
+ _Mirimond._ No, wait! Our part is yet undone. Here hangs
+ A withered garland.
+
+ _Alenia._ Here another. See!
+ And there! Well, we are slack.
+
+ _Eudora._ Who would not be?
+ We've cause for sleepy wits and fingers too,
+ With seven days and nights of revelling.
+
+ _Garla._ And Charilus warm in 's grave.
+
+ _Myrana._ He'll be no colder
+ Let come a hundred months. Ten years, ten days,
+ 'Tis all the same i' the ground.
+
+ _Daphne._ And yet, I think
+ The daughter smiles too soon.
+
+ _Mylitta._ Troth, I would smile
+ For such a lord if all the world beside
+ Were wrapped in shroud.
+
+ _Mirimond._ I would the English knights
+ Were come! Full fifty, Barca said, would ride
+ From Suli.
+
+ _Mylitta._ I know you, chit. Your eyes will find
+ Their way.
+
+ _Mirimond._ Mayhap not all of us will take
+ The homeward ship for Corinth. Did we think
+ When we set sail we'd come in time to see
+ Our Ardia married?
+
+ _Mylitta._ You will dream.
+
+ _Garla._ If dreams
+ Were men, what maid would go unwed? Not you,
+ Mylitta.
+
+ _Myrana._ Come, our song! 'Tis time!
+
+ _Eudora._ Come, all!
+
+ [_They sing by Ardia's door_]
+
+ Mornings seven have we been
+ Wardens at thy door;
+ Now thy lord shall enter in,
+ And we come no more.
+
+ Mornings seven have we strewn
+ Lilies at thy door;
+ Now the virgin watch is done.
+ And we come no more.
+
+ Mornings seven have we sung
+ At thy maiden door;
+ Now the seventh morn is rung,
+ And we come no more.
+
+ [_Door opens and Ardia comes out. Gaina follows_]
+
+ _Ard._ A kiss to all! Who's happier here than I
+ Shall have my place.
+
+ _Mirimond._ We'll ask Lord Bertrand that.
+ Thou'rt no more mistress of your yeas and nays.
+
+ _Ard._ O, but I am! I have a votary now
+ Who'll make my words his wishes and himself
+ Bring them to pass.
+
+ _Mylitta._ No doubt. You'll cough
+ In oracles. He'll puzzle o'er your sneeze
+ That he may do its meaning. I have heard
+ Such husbands do inhabit a green moon,
+ And one may come to earth.
+
+ _Ard._ Kiss me, Mylitta!
+ Naught else will stop your mouth. O, dearest girls,
+ No father's here to give me to my lord,
+ And yet I smile, I wed. For why?--his love
+ Is not in earth with his dear body. No!
+ 'Tis all about me here, bathing my heart,
+ Now on my brow, now whispers at my ear,
+ Now runs before my eyes to make a light
+ Where they would rest. He loves this day as I do!
+ Yet I had stayed this busking marriage
+ Had not my brothers pressed me to such haste
+ And peace not waited on it. Think, dear maidens,
+ Peace everywhere! Avesta safe and free,
+ And Oswald's sword in sheath--
+ What is that chanting?
+
+ _Gaina._ [_Looking from parapet_] A train comes up the heights.
+
+ _Mylitta._ The English Lords!
+
+ [_Enter Barca, left_]
+
+ _Ard._ Barca, who comes?
+
+ _Barca._ Prince Banissat, my lady,
+ With all his court attending.
+
+ _Mirimond._ Banissat!
+ This is a Christian wedding.
+
+ _Ard._ We are at peace.
+
+ _Barca._ He brings you gifts. Your brothers go to meet him.
+
+ _Ard._ Where is Lord Bertrand?
+
+ _Barca._ Near at hand. He comes
+ This way.
+
+ [_Exit Barca, left_]
+
+ _Ard._ My girls, wouldst see what dainties lie
+ In yonder chamber?
+
+ _Mylitta._ Nay, we'll wait.
+
+ _Ard._ Moonstones
+ For golden hair--crescents and amber stars
+ For tresses dark----
+
+ _Girls._ O! O!
+
+ _Ard._ Veils of spun silver----
+
+ [_Maidens buzz through door right_]
+
+ _Ard._ Go, give them all!
+
+ _Gaina._ All, mistress? Not----
+
+ _Ard._ Go, go!
+
+ [_Exit Gaina. Bertrand enters, left. He is in princely costume_]
+
+ _Ber._ Art found, my heaven?
+
+ _Ard._ Thou'st not a fear thy Heaven
+ Is lost in me?
+
+ _Ber._ A doubt were my soul's shame.
+ [_Points up the heights_]
+ Does not yon giant cross arise to say
+ Christ reigns on Kidmir? Far as Suli plain
+ Men see the sun upon its silver sides
+ And hands upborne in prayer forget the sword
+ That sleeps unwakened.
+
+ _Ard._ Will it sleep for long?
+
+ _Ber._ Ay, else your father's death were devils' sport,
+ Not Heaven's will.
+
+ _Ard._ What word to-day from Oswald?
+
+ _Ber._ You name him?
+
+ _Ard._ Is he not our father?
+
+ _Ber._ O,
+ God's angel thou, not mine!
+
+ _Ard._ Does Biondel
+ Now wear the crown of Ilon?
+
+ _Ber._ That's confirmed.
+ And Vigard has Ramoor.
+
+ _Ard._ They profit much
+ By their new faith.
+
+ _Ber._ Do they not spare my life?
+ So Oswald gives these crowns. You think he pays
+ Too dear?
+
+ _Ard._ O, barest alms! I'd have the earth.
+ No less,--then want the sun,--ay, circling heaven,
+ And yet be beggared losing thee! But they
+ Must wear their purple o'er a Christian heart.
+ I would not doubt ... and yet....
+
+ _Ber._ They are the sons
+ Of Charilus.
+
+ _Ard._ And Banissat?
+
+ _Ber._ He vows
+ An endless peace with Suli.
+
+ _Ard._ And you are Suli.
+ Why am I fearful, knowing doubt is death?
+
+ _Ber._ Come, love, look down--nay, farther, toward the sea.
+ That sprawling mass that darkens now the plain,
+ Seeming to hugely breathe and cloud-like move,
+ Is Oswald's army making feast to-day,
+ For I, the prince, go wiving. Now I seem
+ To hear our names joined high in Heaven's air.
+ And Christ, too, listens smiling, knowing one land,
+ One throne is his forever. Sweet, 'twas he
+ Drew me from sheltered cell and flowered garth
+ To be his sovereign servant. He it was
+ Who called through you, who cried in Charilus' death
+ To wake my soul that shall not sleep again
+ Till Love has garnered all these eastern lands.
+
+ _Ard._ Amen, my husband-knight! I am content
+ To be your love next Christ. Within your heart.
+ 'Twill be sweet, gleaning where he walks before.
+
+ _Ber._ These words be your sole dower, for they hold
+ More sun for me than shining gold!
+
+ _Ard._ The guests!
+ Do you not hear them? Leave me now, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ Thank patience and my stars, we reach the end
+ Of these stale ceremonies! Seven days
+ Of long, superfluous rites to make you mine
+ When our first kiss did wed us!
+
+ _Ard._ [_Mocking_] So ungentle
+ To your proud honors, sir? Nay, it is fit
+ Your wedding be as famous as your name,
+ O, Prince of Suli!
+ [_Voices heard, left_]
+ Go, to come again!
+
+ [_Exit Bertrand, right. Ardia turns to enter her room and faces Vigard
+ who comes on left. She draws her veil_]
+
+ _Vig._ Stay, sister.
+
+ _Ard._ Would you have me seen?
+
+ _Vig._ [_Throws back her veil_] Art fair
+ Again? As Kidmir skies!
+
+ _Ard._ It is my joy.
+
+ [_Enter left, Biondel, Banissat, and lords. Banissat pauses. The others
+ pass off, right_]
+
+ _Vig._ [_Taking Ardia'a hand to detain her_]
+ We have surprised our sister.
+
+ _Ban._ Blest the hour!
+ Now may I lay this gift within her hand--
+ Poor gift, that has no worth until that hand
+ Caresses it to splendor.
+
+ [_Kneels, offering her a small packet_]
+
+ _Ard._ [_Taking packet_] Courteous prince,
+ My thanks. And more than thanks that you should climb
+ Kidmir's uneasy steep to dearly grace
+ This day--for smiles of friends, more than fair gifts,
+ Do best adorn my bridal. [_Draws her veil and moves right_]
+
+ _Ban._ Night is come.
+ And through her mist the stars! [_Exit Ardia_]
+
+ _Vig._ Her bloom is washed
+ Somewhat with tears for Charilus, but she
+ Will flower again.
+
+ _Ban._ Now by the Prophet's soul
+ He who has kissed her lips had better've kissed
+ A flame of hell than so have touched
+ What shall be mine!
+
+ _Vig._ As thou dost love revenge,
+ Be patient.
+
+ _Ban._ Patience to the ox, to beasts
+ That dream 'twixt cud and whip! Am I not man?
+
+ _Vig._ You have endured, by truth.
+
+ _Ban._ Endured!
+
+ _Vig._ And now
+ Revenge! Ere night yon braggart cross shall bear
+ A burden that will start Earl Oswald's eyes
+ When he looks up from Suli plain.
+
+ _Ban._ This day
+ Shall see it! Come, once more let us look down.
+ See where the hosts of Allah charge upon
+ The sottish infidel! All yet is well.
+ The banner o'er Avesta signals still
+ The Prophet wins!
+
+ _Vig._ And when the tower of Suli
+ Gleams with the hoisted crescent, we shall know
+ Oswald is taken.
+
+ _Ban._ Ha! There's no way out!
+ The powers of Ilon, Avesta, and Ramoor,
+ Pen him in bloody triangle. Old rat,
+ You're in the trap! I should be there, not here,--
+ There at his throat----
+
+ _Vig._ Nay, here, my lord, you'll have
+ Your dearest triumph. Please you now, go in.
+ I'll watch here for the sign.
+
+ _Ban._ Your watch be short.
+
+ [_Exit, right. Re-enter Ardia_]
+
+ _Ard._ [_Holding out a flaming ornament_] Brother, see this!
+ The jewel of the house
+ Of Banissat. 'Tis sacred to his name.
+ I cannot take it, and he dare not give it.
+
+ _Vig._ It seems he dared.
+
+ _Ard._ What does he mean, dear Vigard?
+
+ _Vig._ To honor Suli's princess as most fit.
+
+ _Ard._ I tremble still from his deep look of fire,
+ And when I saw this burn methought his eye
+ Was yet upon me.
+
+ _Vig._ Fool, go to your maidens!
+
+ [_Enter Barca, left, with Ramunin_]
+
+ _Vig._ You're late, my man.
+
+ _Ram._ And yet in season, sir. [_Points up the heights_]
+ The cross is bare.
+
+ _Vig._ Get you within.
+ [_Exeunt Barca and Ramunin, left_]
+ Now, sister--
+ What, do you faint?
+
+ _Ard._ That face! Ramunin's face.
+ I saw it once, and shuddered many a day
+ Remembering it. The public crucifier,
+ Who serves the bloody prince of Antioch.
+ The same. What does he here upon this day
+ Of all the days of time?
+
+ _Vig._ 'Tis by your wish
+ That Kidmir gates are open.
+
+ _Ard._ And by yours.
+
+ _Vig._ Ay, let the world be witness you are made
+ The honored bride of Suli.
+
+ _Ard._ But Ramunin?
+ He said the cross was bare. Why such a jest
+ As horrid as his life? [_Looking out_] And all the knights
+ That were to come from Oswald--where are they?
+
+ _Vig._ They drank too deep last night for journeying
+ Up Kidmir road--or else they dare not cross
+ This outraged portal.
+
+ _Ard._ Have we not forgiven?
+ Ah, what is there? Look, Vigard, do you see?
+ A floating crescent!
+
+ _Vig._ Where?
+
+ _Ard._ O'er Suli tower.
+ O, this is Oswald's greeting to our house,
+ Better than any band of armèd knights!
+ He lifts the Prophet's banner to his towers,
+ Even as you set the Savior's crucifix
+ On Kidmir! Now the one eternal God
+ Lives in his sign when cross and crescent smile
+ Love-set in the same heaven!
+
+ _Vig._ Allah be praised!
+
+ _Ard._ And Christ--forget not Christ!
+
+ _Vig._ We'll make an end now.
+ [_Exit, right_]
+
+ _Ard._ An end? Am I a bride--or sacrifice?
+
+ [_Goes in, right, at sound of approaching music. Enter, left, young
+ musicians playing flutes and harps. They pause before altar,
+ cross to right and seat themselves about Ardia's door. Guests
+ enter, filling rear of hall, and parapet. A maiden comes on,
+ dancing the grain-dance and scattering sesame. At the close of
+ dance, Ardia's maidens enter, each bearing a lighted candle
+ which she places on the altar. A Greek chant is heard as priest
+ approaches left. All wait his entrance, and the curtain falls,
+ rising again on the close of the ceremony. Bertrand and Ardia
+ stand centre. An aged priest at altar. Biondel and Banissat
+ conspicuous among the guests. Vigard not seen_]
+
+ _Bion._ Is all now done?
+
+ _Priest._ All's done. The spouse of Suli
+ May bow herself unto her master's feet,
+ Bespeaking so the love that has no wish
+ But service, no desire save her lord's will.
+
+ [_As Ardia would kneel, Bertrand prevents her_]
+
+ _Ber._ You shall not kneel.
+
+ _Ard._ 'Tis custom, dear my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ Then here it dies.
+
+ _Ard._ My mother did so much
+ For him who made her wife.
+
+ _Ber._ Thy knees shall bend
+ To God, and to none less. Reign at my side,
+ Princess of Suli, not my feet.
+
+ _Bion._ We hail
+ The bride of Suli!
+
+ _Guests._ Bride of Suli, hail!
+
+ _Vig._ [_Unseen_] Ho! Seize the traitor! Ho!
+
+ [_Enter Ramunin, right, and armed guards_]
+
+ _Ber._ Who speaks? And who
+ Is traitor here?
+
+ _Vig._ Thou, foulest murderer!
+
+ _Ber._ Who speaks?
+
+ _Vig._ Dead Charilus.
+
+ _Ard._ 'Tis Vigard's voice.
+ [_Vigard steps forth_]
+ What, Vigard, art thou mad? Wouldst shatter the globe
+ Of Heaven?
+
+ _Vig._ Nay, it was broken that same hour
+ When died our father.
+
+ _Ber._ Son of Charilus, speak
+ Your will. If you demand my life, 'tis yours.
+ I hold it by your gentle lease and love.
+ But while I ask not one poor breath for me,
+ I beg you pause, nor cast the innocent
+ To feed the vengeful and life-reaping fire
+ Oswald will kindle for his hapless son.
+
+ _Vig._ You think no fires will burn but of his kindling?
+
+ _Ard._ O shame! The crescent over Suli greets
+ The cross on Kidmir!
+
+ _Vig._ Ay, the crescent flies
+ From Suli, thanks to faithful Moslem hands
+ That set it there.
+
+ _Ard._ Ah.... Moslem hands?
+
+ _Vig._ You fool,
+ To think that Oswald fluttered compliments,
+ When he was dreaming how he'd bid you drink
+ Of that same cup he gave to Charilus!
+
+ _Ban._ Now, dearest lady, you are safe. To-day
+ The Faithful battled with the infidel,
+ And that bright crescent is the silent sign
+ We have the victory. Ramoor and Ilon
+ With pointed sword bore down on either side
+ The glutted, drunken army, while in front
+ Avesta like a whirlwind swept----
+
+ _Ard._ O, traitor!
+ You vowed unbroken peace with Suli!
+
+ _Ban._ Yea,
+ Will keep it too, for I am Suli now.
+
+ _Ard._ [_To her brothers_] Were you not sworn to Christ?
+
+ _Bion._ We are the Prophet's.
+
+ _Ard._ O, Heaven, hear not this! And Oswald's knights?
+
+ _Vig._ Sleep in Avesta's dungeons.
+
+ _Bion._ Banissat,
+ Avesta's golden prince, speak you the doom
+ Of Bertrand----
+
+ _Ard._ Doom? O----
+
+ _Ber._ Do not waste the breath
+ A kiss may save. A thousand times, your lips!
+
+ _Ard._ [_To Biondel_] Let him not die!
+
+ _Vig._ You'll pray soon that he may!
+ Speak, noble prince.
+
+ _Ban._ I, lord of conquered Suli,
+ Condemn the son of Oswald unto death
+ By crucifixion. Be his body nailed
+ Upon the cross now raised on Kidmir peak,
+ That Oswald may behold his groaning son,
+ And every Christian dog look up and see
+ How dies the Prophet's enemy.
+ [_To Ramunin_] Away!
+ Prick him with delicate tortures that yet leave
+ Him heart to heave his agony. Hear you!
+ If he live not three days upon the cross
+ Yourself shall hang beside him.
+
+ _Ram._ I've a hand
+ Has had some practice, sir.
+
+ _Ban._ We know it, fellow,
+ And therefore we employ you.
+
+ _Ram._ I put the nails
+ In young Deobus, he who hung five days
+ 'Twixt heaven and earth, and to the fifth eve groaned
+ As he would pull his heart up. I've a medal
+ Struck by the city for it.
+
+ _Ban._ I will match it,
+ If you match me the service.
+
+ _Ram._ That I'll do.
+ These English have strong hearts--will suck at pain
+ As life were in her dugs.
+
+ [_Exit Ramunin, guards, and Bertrand. Priest and guests follow. The
+ maidens huddle at door, right_]
+
+ _Bion._ Sister, you stare
+ Too hardly on this grief. It is a woe
+ That Heaven smiles on, and the cure now waits
+ In Banissat's fair mercy. You shall be
+ His royal wife, and Suli's princess still.
+
+ _Vig._ Speak to the prince.
+
+ _Ban._ Nay, let her hear my vow.
+ O, star of Kidmir, dear and beautiful,
+ I'll set thee in a bosom that shall be
+ A tender heaven round thee. Beat to earth
+ Is murmurous suspicion, and again
+ You shine unto the world, swept free of taint
+ By noble marriage with most careful rites----
+
+ _Ard._ I doubt, I doubt! One part, one point, one rite,
+ Broken in act, left gaping and divided,
+ One half performed, one half left all undone,
+ Leaves me dishonored still. She is not widowed
+ Who was not wife----
+
+ _Vig._ All's done! What more canst wish?
+
+ _Ard._ To lay my forehead on my husband's feet,
+ Which by the ancient custom of our house
+ Is maidhood's closing act, as 'tis the first
+ Of wifehood true. This thou wilt grant----
+
+ _Vig._ You're bound
+ By rites enough!
+
+ _Bion._ Canst stand uncertain on
+ So slight a matter?
+
+ _Ard._ Slight? Ah, you know naught
+ Of woman! Teach him, prince, that not a nick,
+ Or turn, or shade of custom would she spare
+ From this most holy ceremony. Wanting but
+ The smallest portion that gives leave to say
+ The measure lacks, she all her life will grieve,
+ Shed secret tears, and wear a blanchen face
+ When none knows why.
+
+ _Bion._ You shall not move us. Peace!
+
+ _Vig._ A brawling fancy!
+
+ _Ard._ Avesta's prince, thou who
+ Shalt be my lord, if any lord of earth
+ Be mine again, wouldst have my love, or hate?
+
+ _Ban._ Thy love, fair Ardia.
+
+ _Ard._ Then I pray you, sir,
+ Move thy forbearance yet one farther step
+ And pluck this boon for me. 'Tis near thy hand,
+ And O, how small a thing for you to give,
+ But as the sun of all my days to me!
+ Without it I may die----
+
+ _Ban._ Speak not of death. So sweet
+ I'll shelter thee, Death's self must bloom
+ If he creep near thy bower.
+
+ _Ard._ May I, my lord,
+ Keep honored place by thee when memory mocks
+ That place and honor? Grant me this, but this,
+ And here I swear if any act of man
+ May move a widowed heart, mine shall grow warm
+ To thee!
+
+ _Ban._ Do you speak truth?
+
+ _Ard._ Believe me, sir,
+ So dear a thing is this for which I sue,
+ That he who gives it must grow dear thereby;
+ And if he lift to him my prostrate life,
+ This gentle moment shall immortal be
+ And sweeten every hour we pass together.
+ Remembering this, my captive breast shall be
+ His free dominion, and my lips on his,
+ If they know warmth, shall take it from this cause,
+ This first dear tenderness.
+
+ _Ban._ We'll please you, mistress.
+ Bring in the man again.
+
+ [_Exit a guard_]
+
+ _Vig._ I beg you, prince----
+
+ _Ban._ By Allah, she shall have her beggar wish,
+ For no more reason than she wishes it!
+
+ _Vig._ It is her sickish humor, sir, to look
+ On him again. All this wild pother means
+ No more than that.
+
+ _Ban._ No more? We'll please her then
+ For our good peace to come.
+
+ _Bion._ A princely kindness.
+
+ [_They talk together. Ardia crosses to altar_]
+
+ _Ard._ Now one more miracle! God live in me,
+ And Christ direct my hand!
+
+ _Bion._ What do you say,
+ My sister?
+
+ _Ard._ But a word to mine own heart.
+
+ _Ban._ Nay, mine now, is it not?
+
+ _Ard._ So much of it
+ As dearest lenience may buy, my lord.
+
+ [_Bertrand is brought in guarded_]
+
+ _Bion._ The man is here. Now have your foolish will.
+
+ [_Ardia turns and looks at Bertrand. He is stripped of his rich dress
+ and wears only a girdled tunic falling to his knees. Arms and
+ feet are bare_]
+
+ _Ban._ [_To Bertrand_] Sir, we permit the lady of our soul
+ To end as her heart wills the rite that makes
+ Her wife and widow. Touch her not, nor speak.
+
+ [_Bertrand crosses to altar_]
+
+ _Ard._ Why should we touch, when souls inhabit eyes
+ And journey on a look? My heaven-lord,
+ Here is no priest to bless this act of mine,
+ But God will know his altar and the gift
+ I lay upon it. The life we thought to live--
+ That might have failed, and killed the dream now safe
+ From tarnish of the days. Earth has enough
+ Of blind and baffled lives, but great her need
+ Of dreams. And ours we leave with her, unworn,
+ Unpaled, warm round the love-seed she shall nurse
+ To million-budded life.
+
+ _Bion._ Come, make an end!
+
+ _Ard._ An end of love? The God of all the worlds
+ Cannot do that. Love born this darkest day
+ Shall be in flower on man's millennial path
+ And touch his step with Heaven.
+
+ _Vig._ Peace! Be done!
+
+ _Ard._ Ay ... done. My lord, think thou art in the world
+ Celestial, and from there smile on me--now--
+ [_Draws dagger from her bosom and stabs him. He falls_]
+ High God, as thou art Love, I struck for thee!
+ [_Bends over body_]
+ True aim. Full in the heart. I know the place,
+ For there my home is--there I live--and now
+ My house is down, I, too, must fall----
+
+ _Ban._ I'll pay thee!
+ What hast thou done?
+
+ _Ard._ What done? A miracle!
+ Who now can harm my love?
+
+ _Ban._ Your promises!
+ Your oaths!
+
+ _Ard._ I'd keep them, sir--ay, every one,
+ If grief would let me live to be your wife.
+ But I am weary, and my heavy stars
+ Have left their skies to hang upon me here.
+ My veins are empty, all their strength is out.
+ Does 't take so much to lift this little blade
+ And let it fall again?
+ [_Biondel takes the dagger from her_]
+ Think you I need
+ So poor a thing? Nay, God has struck for me,
+ As I for Him. I go with Vairdelan. [_Kneels by body_]
+ Look on this brow, if shame will let ye look.
+ An angel shaped it. Ye've unfashioned here
+ The work of Heaven. Sweet lips, no roses left?
+ Your hand, my lord, and now the sinless star. [_Dies_]
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mortal Gods and Other Plays, by
+Olive Tilford Dargan
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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Mortal Gods and Other Plays, by Olive Tilford Dargan.
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Mortal Gods and Other Plays, by Olive Tilford Dargan
+
+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/license
+
+
+Title: The Mortal Gods and Other Plays
+
+Author: Olive Tilford Dargan
+
+Release Date: May 16, 2012 [EBook #39708]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MORTAL GODS AND OTHER PLAYS ***
+
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+
+Produced by David Garcia and the Online Distributed
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+
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center1"><big>BOOKS &nbsp; BY &nbsp; OLIVE &nbsp; TILFORD &nbsp; DARGAN</big><br />
+
+<span class="smcap">Published &nbsp; By</span> &nbsp; CHARLES &nbsp; SCRIBNER'S &nbsp; SONS
+
+<br /><br /></p>
+
+
+<div class='pblockquot'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'>THE MORTAL GODS and Other Plays.</td><td align='right'>12mo, <em>net.</em> $1.50</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>LORDS AND LOVERS and Other Dramas.</td><td align='right'>12mo, <em>net.</em>&nbsp; 1.50</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>SEMIRAMIS and Other Plays.</td><td align='right'>12mo, <em>net.</em>&nbsp; 1.00</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2><small>THE MORTAL GODS<br />
+AND OTHER PLAYS</small></h2>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<h2>THE MORTAL GODS<br /><br />
+<small>AND</small><br /><br />
+OTHER PLAYS</h2>
+
+<h3>BY<br /><br />
+OLIVE TILFORD DARGAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><b>NEW YORK<br />
+CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SON'S<br />
+1912</b></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+
+<p class="center1"><em>Copyright, 1912, by Charles Scribner's Sons</em><br />
+<em>All rights reserved</em><br />
+
+<br />
+<em>Published November, 1912</em><br />
+<br /></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_MORTAL_GODS">THE MORTAL GODS</a></td><td align='right'>1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#A_SON_OF_HERMES">A SON OF HERMES</a></td><td align='right'>107</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#KIDMIR">KIDMIR</a></td><td align='right'>221</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_MORTAL_GODS" id="THE_MORTAL_GODS"></a>THE MORTAL GODS
+<br /><br />
+<small>A PLAY IN FOUR ACTS</small></h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3><em>CHARACTERS OF THE PLAY</em></h3>
+
+
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'>HUDIBRAND, <em>King of Assaria</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'>HERNDA, <em>his daughter</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'>CHARTRIEN, <em>a Prince of Assaria</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'>BORDUC, <em>Prime Minister</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'>COUNT DORKINSKI, <em>Court Chamberlain</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'>CORDIAZ, <em>King of Goldusan</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'>MEGARIO, <em>Governor of Peonia, a province of Goldusan</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'>REJAN L<small>E</small>VAL, <em>a revolutionist</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'>SE&Ntilde;ORA ZIRALAY, <em>his sister</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>ZIRALAY</td><td class="bt br"></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>RUBIREZ</td><td class="br"></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>GOLIFET</td><td class="br"></td><td><em>nobles of Goldusan</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>MAZARAN</td><td class="br"></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>GUILDAMOUR</td><td class="br bb"></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>MASIO</td><td class="bt br"></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>GARZA</td><td class="br"></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>GONZALO</td><td class="br"></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>YSOBEL</td><td class="br"></td><td><em>of Megario's hacienda</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>GRIJA</td><td class="br"></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>COQURIEZ</td><td class="br"></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>IPARRO</td><td class="br bb"></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center' colspan='3'><em>Guests, officers, musicians, peons, &amp;c.</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center' colspan='3'><span class="smcap">Time:</span> <em>Begins February, 1911</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center' colspan='3'><span class="smcap">Place:</span> <em>Assaria; Goldusan</em></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT I</h3>
+
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>A vast room in the palace of Hudibrand. As the curtain rises the
+place is in darkness save for a circlet of gold apparently suspended in
+mid-air near the centre of the room. As the light increases, the outline
+of a man's figure becomes distinguishable, and the circlet is seen to be
+resting on his head. Gradually the rim of gold fades to invisibility,
+while the figure of the man and the contents of the room become clear to
+the eye. The man might be mistaken for an American citizen in customary
+evening dress. He is Hudibrand.</em></p>
+
+<p class="negidt"><em>At the left are two entrances, upper and lower. Rear, left, large
+windows. The wall rear makes a right angle about centre, the apex of
+which is cut off by a window. Right of centre the room seems to extend
+endlessly rearward, and is arranged to suggest an upland grove in the
+delicate, venturing days of spring. The ground, rising a little toward
+right, is covered with winter moss and tufts of short silvered grass.
+The trees are young birch, slight maples in coral leaf, cornel in
+flower, and an occasional dark foil of cedar. A brooklet ripples down
+the slope and off rear. Birds chirp and flit, and now and then a breeze
+stirs the grove as if it were one tender body. The lights are arranged
+to give the effect of night or day as one wishes.</em></p>
+
+<p class="negidt"><em>It is winter without, the climate of Assaria's capital city being
+similar to that of New York.</em></p>
+
+<p class="negidt"><em>Double doors lower right, through which Count Dorkinski enters to
+Hudibrand.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><em>Dor.</em> Your majesty, Sir Borduc has arrived.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hudi.</em> Hot-shod. We'll let him cool.</p>
+
+<p><em>Dor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Where shall he wait,</span><br />
+My lord?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> His usual corner. Keep him off<br />
+My Delhi rug.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>Exit Dorkinski</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Poor Bordy's fuming ripe.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter the Count</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Dor.</em> His Excellency calls, your majesty.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Which Excellency? They are thick as hops.</p>
+
+<p><em>Dor.</em> The Governor of Peonia.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 9em;">In time and tune.</span><br />
+We'll see him here.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>Exit Dorkinski</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">A pawn of mine who'd push</span><br />
+Beyond his square, and I must humor him<br />
+'Neath meditative thumb.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Megario</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Welcome, Megario.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I've travelled far</span><br />
+To press your hand.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">We made appointment here,</span><br />
+Knowing your visit to Assaria touched<br />
+Nothing of state or office.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>Accepting his cue</em>] Nothing, sir. [<em>Looks about him</em>]<br />
+I thought I left the springtide in my rear,<br />
+Three thousand miles or so, but here it greets me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> A gimcrack of my daughter's. She would freak<br />
+With sun and time. My toyshop has no walls.<br />
+I juggle too with seasons, climates, zones,<br />
+But in the open where there's warrior room,<br />
+And startled Fate may spring against my will,<br />
+Giving an edge to mastery when I wrest<br />
+The whip from Nature, turn it on herself,<br />
+And set her elemental slaves to filch<br />
+Her gold for me. That, friend, is play.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">For gods</span><br />
+And not as thief, but as divinity,<br />
+You take from crouching Nature.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Men have said</span><br />
+I pile up gold because its glitter soothes<br />
+A fever in my eyes. The clacking fools!<br />
+I am no Cheops making warts on earth.<br />
+No mummy brain! God built my pyramids,<br />
+Slaving through dark and chaos till there rose<br />
+My iron-hearted hills, and mountains locked<br />
+On ago-unyielded treasure waiting me.<br />
+There slept my gems till longing became fire<br />
+And broke the grip of stone,&mdash;there lay my gold,<br />
+Re-purged each thousand years till baited Time<br />
+Gave up the master's hour.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Hernda has come from the grove and moves up to his side</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Adoringly</em>] And you the master!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Daughter, you owe my lord Megario<br />
+Some pretty thanks.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I give them, sir.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">No, no!</span><br />
+I pray your Highness, no! My thanks to earth<br />
+That bears the flower of you, and to the light<br />
+That makes my eyes your beauty's treasurer.<br />
+But thanks from you to me, as jewels hung<br />
+Upon a beggar's neck, would set my rags<br />
+Unkindly in the sun.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Then I am not</span><br />
+Your debtor?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mine the debt, that mounts too fast</span><br />
+For feeble payment from thin purse of words.<br />
+Ah, every moment adds a suitor hope<br />
+To th' bankrupts in my heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I fear, my lord,</span><br />
+Your coiner's name is Fancy, and I like<br />
+Truth's mintage best. [<em>To her father</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What is this debt of mine,</span><br />
+So languished that a word of thanks may be<br />
+Its slender cover?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">A word, if beauty speak it,</span><br />
+May mantle a bare world.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">His Excellency</span><br />
+Is Governor of Peonia&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">In Goldusan!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> And smoothed my road there&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Nay, your majesty,</span><br />
+My aid was but a garnish on the might<br />
+That moves with your own name.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Between us then,</span><br />
+We saved my holdings through a bluster there.<br />
+And what they brought me I've tossed here to make<br />
+This smile on winter.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">What? You gave her all?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> How, sir? One word of mine would robe a world.<br />
+And my whole self not worth a little spot<br />
+Twitched from Spring's garment?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Oh, I'd grind the stars</span><br />
+To imperial dust that you might trample them,&mdash;<br />
+But this&mdash;this was a <em>fortune</em>!<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">[<em>To Hudibrand</em>] Sir, 'tis true</span><br />
+You care not for the gold.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I care for it</span><br />
+As men of hero times held dear the sword<br />
+That made them lords of battle.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">You are lord</span><br />
+Of Peace!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Write that upon the clouds, that eyes<br />
+Of men and angels may contending claim<br />
+The truth for earth and heaven!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Tush, sir, tush!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Can I forget how at your kingly touch<br />
+My fair Peonia, paling in treason's grip,<br />
+Thrilled from her deathward droop, renewed her heart<br />
+Through safe, ease-lidded nights, and woke once more<br />
+The rose of fortune?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">There's no rumble now</span><br />
+Of riot?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Not a sound comes to our ears<br />
+But from the toiling strokes that steadily<br />
+Uproll Peonia's wealth.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Yet those who led</span><br />
+The last revolt are free.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Not all, your Highness.</span><br />
+A few crossed to Assaria, but expedition<br />
+Warms on their trail. Rejan LeVal is tracked<br />
+To your own capital.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Nay, mend that, sir.</span><br />
+We're safe here from such ruck.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">The startled eel</span><br />
+Will make for muddy waters,&mdash;and 'tis sure<br />
+LeVal found murky welcome here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">My city!</span><br />
+What mutinous bolt turns here for him?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 11em;">His friends</span><br />
+Are friends of power. How else could he elude<br />
+The thousand eyes in search?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> [<em>Musing</em>] <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Treason at court?...</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> We'll mouse LeVal to 's cranny, do not doubt.<br />
+Then we shall ask Assaria's great seal<br />
+For his delivery to Goldusan.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> That is assured you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">But your minister,</span><br />
+Sir Borduc, warns&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ha! Warns?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">He urges that</span><br />
+The extraditing power is at pause,<br />
+Blocked by the people's will.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I've given my word,&mdash;</span><br />
+A word that mobbish din ne'er added to,<br />
+Nor yet stripped of one letter that I chose<br />
+Should spell authority. You ask for more?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Pardon, your majesty! It is enough,<br />
+Beyond all stretch of need.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I call to mind</span><br />
+That Borduc waits,&mdash;and primed for tongue-work too.<br />
+The princess will content your Excellency?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>With obeisance to Hernda</em>] 'Tis Heaven's honor!
+I have left the earth!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> You waste your art. She's in the milk-maid humor.<br />
+Would marry Hob. [<em>Exit, lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> The Se&ntilde;or Hob? He says<br />
+You'll marry him? [<em>Hernda laughs</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You care not if I die!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You'll live, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> You'll marry Hob. I die!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> He is not Hob. That is my father's mock<br />
+Because he's poor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>In hope</em>] Ah, poor?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">A beggarly</span><br />
+Ten millions,&mdash;not a penny more.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Ten millions!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> But that's my joy. I would not wed for gold.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> O, pity me! I love you, se&ntilde;orita!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> No, no! I must not hear that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Then I'll pray</span><br />
+Silence to be my friend and speak my dumb<br />
+Unuttered heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You must not love me, sir.</span><br />
+But you may love&mdash;my father. When you praised him,<br />
+You too seemed fair to me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I'll sing him till</span><br />
+The stars lie at our feet, if you will listen!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> He gave your country peace?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">His royal name</span><br />
+Is dear as Cordiaz' in the grateful heart<br />
+Of Goldusan. That proud land lay unkept.<br />
+Her ores intombed, her vales without a plough,<br />
+Her rivers wasting down to shipless seas,<br />
+Her people starving, while her nobles strove<br />
+For shreds of power,&mdash;the clouted thing we called<br />
+A government. Then on our factions fell,<br />
+Strong as a god's, the hand of Hudibrand;<br />
+And now, compact, we stand by Cordiaz,<br />
+While every mountain groans with golden birth.<br />
+And every river turns its thousand wheels,<br />
+And every valley buried is in bloom.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> My dearest father! But I knew 'twas so!<br />
+And they who starved are fed and happy now?<br />
+They reap the bloom and share the golden flood?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> All will be well when once we've scourged the land<br />
+Of rebels that drip poison from their tongues,<br />
+Stirring the meek and unambitious poor,&mdash;<br />
+Who sought no life but saintly, noble toil,&mdash;<br />
+With strangest rage, till maddened they would bite<br />
+The fostering hand of God.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We've prisons where</span><br />
+We put such troublers. Has your land no jails?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em>'Tis full of them! I mean&mdash;ah, we have jails,<br />
+But foes like these are wary, slip all watch,&mdash;<br />
+Flee and dart back, our weariness their charter<br />
+To tread with havoc's hoof. If I could find<br />
+Rejan LeVal, then might I rest from guard,<br />
+But not while he&mdash;unlassoed warrigal!&mdash;<br />
+May canter from his thicket and paw up<br />
+Peonia's fields!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">I'll lend an adjutant.</span><br />
+Ask Chartrien, who knows each foggy nook<br />
+And smirch&egrave;d corner of the capital,&mdash;<br />
+Having once made his pastime serve a quest<br />
+For such drab knowledge,&mdash;ask him help you find<br />
+This traitor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Chartrien! Nay, the fox is safe<br />
+When th' hound too wears a brush.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">You mean the prince?</span><br />
+Speak, sir! Who hints me calumny,<br />
+Shall make the drum his chorus. I'll hear all.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> A rumor drifts through Goldusan....</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Is that</span><br />
+An oddity? Here rumors are too thick<br />
+For ears to gather them.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> But this&mdash;O, princess....<br />
+Fairest of earth, forgive me that I speak!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You do not speak. And that I'll not forgive.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Ah, then,&mdash;but first,&mdash;is Chartrien near the king?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> No nearer than his heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I do offend.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Offence now lies in silence. Speak, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> When I left Goldusan, 'twas said&mdash;and with<br />
+No muffled hesitance&mdash;Prince Chartrien aids<br />
+The rebels there, and lays a train to rend<br />
+The State apart, that Cordiaz may drop<br />
+Into the gap,&mdash;then he with plausive cleat<br />
+Will make the fissure stanch, and seat himself<br />
+In unoppugn&egrave;d power.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Why <em>he is Hob</em>! [<em>Silence. They both rise</em>]</span><br />
+A mad and sorry tale, you see.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I see.</span><br />
+He's in the capital?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Beneath this roof.</span><br />
+The palace is his home. My father holds<br />
+His meagre millions guarded, nursing them<br />
+To a prince's portion.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">We shall meet?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">To-night.</span><br />
+He's with a friend&mdash;a Spanish gentleman,&mdash;<br />
+But <em>not</em> from Goldusan.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I made no guess.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Deny that with your eyes. Your tongue's exempt.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> And may I meet the Spanish gentleman?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> That's as he chooses. I may not command him.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Count Dorkinski</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Dor.</em> His Highness, sir, is pleased to bid you join him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> His pleasure is his marshal. [<em>To Hernda, softly</em>] I've your leave<br />
+To love your father. That I go from you<br />
+To him, is Heaven's proof I do.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit Megario and the Count</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em><span style="margin-left: 9em;">The proof</span><br />
+I seek, and would not find, is locked in Hell,<br />
+Not Heaven. Megario lied. Oh, Chartrien!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Retreats slowly into grove and pauses out of sight, rear.
+Enter, upper left, Chartrien and LeVal</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> No,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Prudence, dear LeVal!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">I shall go mad</span><br />
+Shut in this gilded den,&mdash;this stifling hold<br />
+Of banditry.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Peace, friend!</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I'd rather crouch</span><br />
+With brats of grime upon an unswept hearth<br />
+And claw my bread from cinders, than draw breath<br />
+In this gold-raftered house of blood!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Come, come!</span><br />
+Your wits fly naked, stripped of every caution,<br />
+And beat suspicion up that else might keep<br />
+Untroubled bed. Whist! We must move rose-shod<br />
+Through these next hours, not clack in passion's clogs.</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> I'll out of this! There's surge in me no fear<br />
+Can put in bonds.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Nay, here and here alone</span><br />
+Your life is safe. The hounds of Goldusan<br />
+Sniff through the cellars. They'll not scent you in<br />
+The royal shadow. That's more brilliancy<br />
+Than ever lit a rush in houndom. This<br />
+My home, I share with you, for mine it is<br />
+Till I've secured my gold from Hudibrand.</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> Ay, but Megario! While he's here these walls<br />
+Pen me in fire.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 2em;">His visit is too brief</span><br />
+To be a danger.</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Danger! To me, or him?</span><br />
+If we should meet, his fate as mine would be<br />
+In that encounter. These are hands would see to 't!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> LeVal, forget&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Forget C&eacute;leste? My wife?</span><br />
+Forget she died of blows while he stood by<br />
+And smiled, because <em>she was my wife</em>!<br />
+Oh, God! Breathe air with him while this arm hangs<br />
+A limp discretion!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Peace! This mood unpent</span><br />
+Will wreck us. Keep your room if it must swell.<br />
+The princess gazes yonder, and your face<br />
+Is badged exposal. Go. I'll meet her question.<br />
+'Twill not fash honor if a lie or two<br />
+Must be our guard.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit LeVal upper left. Hernda emerges from grove.
+Chartrien waits for her as she comes circuitously, lightly
+hovering and hesitating</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>At his side</em>] What lover's this?&mdash;dreams still<br />
+When love is by. Were he an olden knight<br />
+He'd ride to tourney and forget his spurs!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> He would forget the world and fame and God<br />
+To see your eyes like this!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You tremble, Chartrien.</span><br />
+Love so much?&mdash;yet stood here just&mdash;a stump&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> That felt you coming, coming like a bird,<br />
+And watched and waited, envying every bough<br />
+Where you paused doubting, till you fluttering lit,<br />
+Down in the old stump's heart&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">There, I've forgot!</span><br />
+This is my lover ere that lure crept up<br />
+From Goldusan. Since you came back, I've felt<br />
+The shadow of a difference, and I've heard<br />
+The maids of Goldusan can draw men's souls<br />
+Out of their bodies for a dance in hell.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> My love!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">O, Chartrien, are you mine? I feel</span><br />
+A question in your worship. When your eyes<br />
+Are warmest, love lies on them like<br />
+The shallow moon-gleam on a deep, dark sea<br />
+That is not kin with it. A sea that once<br />
+Was mine, and I could go, with circling arms,<br />
+Love-lanterned to its depth. But now the dark<br />
+Is round me fathomless&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">My own!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">I try to rise,</span><br />
+To find my wings&mdash;and feel the air again<br />
+Without your drowning touch upon me&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Hernda!</span><br />
+Have I so nearly lost you? Come, beloved,<br />
+Sit here, and let me vow me yours again<br />
+Till in each word you feel my beating heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> My stars shall hear these vows.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Changes the light to pale, evening glow. Rear, right, are
+glimpses of sky with frail, moving clouds, faint stars
+and a new moon</em>]</p>
+
+<p> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">And see, my moon.</span><br />
+Intent and virginal.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>She sits, and Chartrien lies on the ground, his breast covering
+her feet</em>]</p>
+
+<p> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Now, now my heart</span><br />
+Holds not another thing but love and you!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> No thought of those dread wings?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">None, none! And you?</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 16em;">[<em>Bends over him</em>]</span><br />
+
+All mine. I hold you now, fast in my world.<br />
+Sometimes you enter, come within my door.<br />
+And then I can not shut it for a wind<br />
+That clings about you from a farther sky.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Rises and takes her face between his hands</em>]<br />
+There's but one sky!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">A shuddering breath,</span><br />
+As from a planet strange, where you have walked<br />
+And I shall never go.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">O, shut me in,</span><br />
+Rose of a heart! I'll not go out though Life<br />
+Beat at the door, and call her giant storms<br />
+To knock upon 't.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Is this not life? And this<br />
+The only world?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">The only world. My habitat</span><br />
+One perfect hour.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">One hour? Forever, love.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> O, vow it for me, sweet,&mdash;again, again!<br />
+Till I believe once more in Arcadies<br />
+Born of a silken purse. In sunsets caught<br />
+In tinted tapestries, with jacinth heart<br />
+Gold-bleeding through the woven breath of dream.<br />
+In soft moon-hours that drop from painted skies,<br />
+In fairy woodlands aye unwintering,<br />
+In love's elf-ring no boding star may cross,<br />
+And you, my Hernda, sceptred in joy's name,<br />
+Tossing the apple planets in your hands&mdash;<br />
+These little, sovereign hands&mdash;as God might do,<br />
+Had he, poor God, your power.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Love, you hurt.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Ah, tears in Arcady?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Oh, what is this</span><br />
+Has come between us?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">What? The universe.</span><br />
+I can not reach you even when my lips<br />
+Are on your heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">May I not come to you?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> From this moon-world? No hope of that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">See then,</span><br />
+The day! [<em>Changes the light to sunrise</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Now may I come?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Forever playing!</span><br />
+The way lies here.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Steps to window and opens it. A snowy blast rushes in</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Stop, Chartrien! Shut it! Oh,</span><br />
+You've killed my Spring!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You will not come?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">You're mad.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Struggles with the window until she closes it, Chartrien
+watching her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> You do not like that road. But it is mine.<br />
+And children walk it. I have met them there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Oh, I am frozen! See!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>With sudden contrition, pressing her to his breast</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 11em;">No, you are fire.</span><br />
+A fire that I will clasp, though it should burn<br />
+My holiest temple and betray my soul<br />
+To ashes!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; O, my love, what secret curbs<br />
+Your nature to this chafe? It rubs even through<br />
+Your ardor.&mdash;stabs me on your breast.<br />
+May I not know it? Is not confidence<br />
+Dear blood and life of love? Without it, ours<br />
+Must pale, ghost-cold, a chill between locked arms.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Is trust not love's prerogative<br />
+More royal sweet than any burdened share<br />
+Of secrecy?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Not to the strong!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Smiling</em>] <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You strong?</span><br />
+By what brave test dost know it?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">And by what</span><br />
+Dost know me weak?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">The proof awaits. But now,&mdash;</span><br />
+Emilio needs me,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Go!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Sweet, friendship too<br />
+Has bonds. Not all are love's.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">He's ill,&mdash;your friend?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> As plague-bit life,&mdash;no worse.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">You'll wait upon</span><br />
+My father? Bid him but good-night?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">No, Hernda.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You shun him, Chartrien. I have watched you keep<br />
+A curious distance,&mdash;ay, as though your heart<br />
+Removed itself while your unwarm&egrave;d eyes<br />
+Made invoice of its treasure. Once you rushed<br />
+Unto his counsel as security<br />
+Hived in his word, and you, denied, were lost.<br />
+Are those hours gone? If you have grown too large<br />
+For his shrunk wisdom, bind you to his need.<br />
+Age unsuspected crowns him, and you take<br />
+Your young arm out of his.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">He wants no staff.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You'll go no more to Goldusan?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">I must.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> And soon?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> When Hudibrand is pleased to free<br />
+My fortune from his ward.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You want it all?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Yes, all.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">For Goldusan?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">My greatest need</span><br />
+Is there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> What is that need?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You question me?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> May love not ask?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">If love could understand.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Have I grown dull? I do not know you, Chartrien.<br />
+You're so unfeatured by that Spanish cloud,<br />
+You're lowering friend. <em>He</em> is the universe<br />
+Between our hearts. Ill? No. I saw him here,&mdash;<br />
+A tropic threat. 'Twas rage broke his suave guard,<br />
+Not illness.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Hernda!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">The Lord Megario</span><br />
+Has asked to compliment a brother guest.<br />
+May he be seen? Does his unmannered storm<br />
+Spare one amenity?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Megario knows?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Knows what?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Oh!&mdash;nothing.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">So much more than naught</span><br />
+Your cheek is pale with it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">No matter, Hernda.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> An ashen matter truly, yet not light<br />
+As nothing. But your answer. May our guests<br />
+Exchange the roof-tree greeting?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">No.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Why not?</span><br />
+That "no" trails consequence. It can not be<br />
+Your period.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> They are enemies.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I knew!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Megario dealt my friend a bitter wrong,&mdash;<br />
+The foulest wrong that man may put on man.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> He's loyal to my father. I know that<br />
+Of him,&mdash;and of Emilio&mdash;nothing.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Sweet,</span><br />
+I beg one day!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">One day? What's hatching here</span><br />
+That's one day short its time?</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter, lower right, Hudibrand, Megario, and Borduc</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Drawing Hernda aside</em>] To-morrow, love!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> To-night!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">You've won your suit, Megario.</span><br />
+If by our presence in your Goldusan<br />
+We can advance that sister country's peace.<br />
+The journey's naught. We'll count it done.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">My lord,</span><br />
+All revolution will dispel as air<br />
+Before your eye. Our Cordiaz is great,<br />
+But his familiar subjects are too near<br />
+To take his height, while you they know to be<br />
+Of giant measure; and when once they see<br />
+Your majesties are brothered, Cordiaz<br />
+Will grow your twin in stature.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You've our word.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> I treasure it,&mdash;and lest repeated thanks<br />
+Stale their sincerity. I beg to say<br />
+Good-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> You have our leave. Good-night, my lord.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Megario bows impressively to Hudibrand, slightly to Borduc,
+and is passing out when Hernda, who has crossed
+right, intercepts him</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You leave us early, Lord Megario.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> I do not leave, your Highness. I am driven.<br />
+I go to drudgery with my secretaries,<br />
+Foregoing even the sleep that might have brought<br />
+Your dream&egrave;d face to me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Is 't still your wish</span><br />
+To meet our Spanish guest?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">He grants me that?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> He has refused a meeting.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Ah!... Refused.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> But there's a way, my lord. When you have passed<br />
+The second door without, turn to the left.<br />
+You'll find a vaulted passage,&mdash;at the end<br />
+An entrance to my wood. Come in, and wait.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> You grace me so?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">It is not grace that breaks</span><br />
+The covenant of salt. But who keeps faith<br />
+With traitors? He is one, by every sign.<br />
+An evil thing blown to our royal hearth<br />
+Through Chartrien's open love that lets all winds<br />
+Pour in. And I'll have proof of it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>Over her hand</em>]&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; You shall. [<em>Exit, lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Crossing to Hernda</em>] A long-spun courtesy, and with one merit,&mdash;<br />
+It ended in good-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Gayly</em>] Unruly yet?<br />
+A truce until to-morrow!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You believe me?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I would not doubt you for a world compact<br />
+Of virtues only, but it's no unreason<br />
+To fear you are deceived.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Dear Hernda&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Come!</span><br />
+I love you, Chartrien. Let us have an hour<br />
+As light as joy, as sweet as peace, and call<br />
+Your friend to share it. He shall smile for me.<br />
+I vow it, by his most ungentle frown!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> 'Twill take your deepest magic, for his heart<br />
+Holds naught that smiles are made of.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Bring him here.</span><br />
+I'll make that heart my wizard bowl and mix<br />
+Such sweet and merry potions in 't, his griefs<br />
+Must doff their gray for motley. You shall see!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Art such a witch? [<em>Exit, upper left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What's this I do? My soul</span><br />
+Leans shameward, but I'll trounce it up. The man,<br />
+If innocent, keeps so, untouched and clear.<br />
+If he aims darkly, creeps a weaponed hate<br />
+Upon my noble father, do I worse<br />
+Than cancel so the unwrought half of 's crime,<br />
+And make him less a villain?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">May I speak</span><br />
+Against this southward jaunt?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Loud as you please,</span><br />
+My Bordy, but I go.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Your Highness makes</span><br />
+Assaria bow too low.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">The State shall have</span><br />
+No name in this. I go as Cordiaz' friend,<br />
+Not as Assaria's king. I've interests there<br />
+That sort with quiet venture. Give it out<br />
+This move in part concerns my health.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 11em;">That much</span><br />
+I welcome. You should rest, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Ha? Rest?</span><br />
+The twin of death! I'll rest when I am dust.<br />
+Nay, then I hope that storm and hurricane<br />
+Will keep me whirling. No,&mdash;I'll not go lame<br />
+Even in report. Say that this move concerns<br />
+My pleasure solely,&mdash;solely, Borduc.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Father,</span><br />
+I have a suit. May I not go with you?<br />
+I long to make that land where you are loved,<br />
+More vivid than the dream that now it is.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> And find what lodestar there draws Chartrien<br />
+From constancy? Well, you shall go.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Tut, tut!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Dear father!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> This will give domestic screen<br />
+And color to our tack.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">A gadding throne&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Good Borduc, we will leave the throne at home.<br />
+Do not <em>you</em> stay?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> I've some authority,<br />
+You'll not dispute, my lord. Much as may go<br />
+With broad election. My investiture<br />
+Lies in the people's choice.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Ay, you're their bark<br />
+Of freedom, where their pride may hoist full sail,<br />
+But who wots better, Bordy, that 'tis puffed<br />
+With winds that know my port?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> They think their choice<br />
+Is free. Sincere in that, they give my post<br />
+A dignity not even your majesty<br />
+May mock me out of.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Fools are noted most</span><br />
+For their sincerity,&mdash;a virtue that<br />
+Must stand a cipher if uncertified<br />
+By wit or wisdom.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sir, Assarians</span><br />
+Are not the fools you think them. They are men<br />
+Who have the patriot's heart, and on their flag<br />
+Where you write "power" their love reads "liberty."</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> It does, praise be! And they may keep their flag<br />
+To wear around their eyes long as they will.<br />
+For then I dance my measure, while they bump<br />
+In hither-whither hoodman blind and pay<br />
+My fiddler too!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">And what's my part in this?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> The fiddler's, Borduc.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Sir?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">And your next tune</span><br />
+Is Goldusan. Come, let's rehearse.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">My lord,&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exeunt, lower right, as Chartrien and LeVal enter left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You've come, dear Se&ntilde;or! Was it savagery<br />
+To wrest the hour from you?</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Too kindly done</span><br />
+For such a name,&mdash;though I was deep in bond<br />
+To sober thoughts, your Highness.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Be so still.</span><br />
+We would not force our humor on your heart,<br />
+But share your own.</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> [<em>Smiling</em>] Can you be sad?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 10em;">As rains</span><br />
+That drench October. As the gray<br />
+That fringes twilight on the dark of moons.<br />
+As seas that sob above a swallowed ship,<br />
+Repenting storm. [<em>Leads to seat, right</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Come, sir,&mdash;and I'll be sad</span><br />
+In what degree you choose, though I could wish it<br />
+Nearer a smile than rheum, and not so heavy<br />
+But that its sigh may float upon a song,<br />
+A gentle song that might be sorrow's garland<br />
+When moan wears down. Wilt hear one now, my lord?<br />
+I have a music-maker yon whose lute<br />
+Was nectared in a poet's tears the hour<br />
+He lost his dream. Say you will hear him! Nay,<br />
+That courtier "yes" can not o'ertake the "no"<br />
+Sped from your eyes. We'll have no music. Yet<br />
+The soul must love it ere one can be sad<br />
+To th' very sweet of sadness. O, I know!</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> I love it, but not here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 8em;">What here forbids?</span><br />
+My bower! The eye translates its tenderness<br />
+To fairy sound, nor need of pipe or strings.</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> I can not hear the bells of fairydom<br />
+When life is making thunder's music 'gainst<br />
+This bauble house of play&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Sir, you forget&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> Nay, I remember!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What do you remember?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> Ah!... Pardon, princess!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">May I mend this peace?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Sitting again by LeVal</em>] It is not broken yet.</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> <span style="margin-left: 17em;">Your gentleness</span><br />
+Has saved it, not my manners.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Oh, my lord,</span><br />
+Would I had grace to cover sorrow's breach<br />
+As smoothly as a gap in courtesy!<br />
+Then you should smile!</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I have a happiness</span><br />
+That makes it thievery in me to take<br />
+Your pity. You've a sadder need.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">I'll yield</span><br />
+No jocund vantage to that brow of yours.<br />
+You hear this sombre braggart, Chartrien?<br />
+Speaks as I were Despair's own fosterling!</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> You are. As I am Hope's. Do you not gaze<br />
+On earth's foul spots and cry "A sad world this!"<br />
+"We must endure!" "The dear God wills it so!"<br />
+And such and such like seed of misery<br />
+Till hopelessness sprouts chronic?&mdash;building then<br />
+Your house of life amid its smelling weeds,<br />
+Where you may dance&mdash;or pray&mdash;till you forget<br />
+Your creed keeps earth in tears?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 9em;">And yours, my lord?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> Gives her a singing and forefeeling heart<br />
+Whose courage cleaves renunciation's cloud<br />
+That swathes her splendor and would sighing keep<br />
+Her livid 'mong the stars!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You would divide</span><br />
+Omnipotence with God, and arrogant,<br />
+Assume the bigger half. But there are woes<br />
+That even your hope, though it go winged and armored,<br />
+Must fall before.</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Not one that I'll not face</span><br />
+Until its features mould me destiny.<br />
+The shape of radiance it shall wear for man<br />
+'Neath an unslandered Heaven! I could not live<br />
+If in the life about me I saw not<br />
+The world within this world, and sped my hope<br />
+The way that it shall take.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Is not that way</span><br />
+Called Peace, Emilio?</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Not the peace that spills</span><br />
+More blood than war, builds bigger jails, and leaves<br />
+More waifs to suck the stunting, poisonous breast<br />
+Of Charity! Peace as white ashes spread<br />
+Upon injustice' fly-blown wrack&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Leaving him</em>] &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You are</span><br />
+A revolutionist!</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">And black to you,</span><br />
+For revolution leads into the horizon,<br />
+And must be figured dark to rearward eyes<br />
+Though God beyond gives welcome.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Coming gently back</em>] <span style="margin-left: 2em;">May we not</span><br />
+Be patient even as Christ, who found this world<br />
+The home of poverty and left it so?<br />
+Did he not say the poor are ever with us?</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> You too must tap that last and golden nail<br />
+In th' pauper's coffin!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">It is the nail of truth,</span><br />
+If Christ spoke true.</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Words uttered to his day,</span><br />
+Not to all time. Not as a deathless brand<br />
+Burning his own millennium. Not meant<br />
+To take from man his goal, condemning him<br />
+To hug an ulcer to the sick world's end,<br />
+Which even your bosom must take to whitest bed<br />
+Although your festrous partner be not guessed<br />
+Nor visible. But if he did mean that&mdash;&mdash;<br />
+That vicious thing&mdash;then he is false as hell,<br />
+Denying man's bright destiny,&mdash;and I,<br />
+Who vouch the triumph of an angel race,<br />
+Am more a god than he!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You dare blaspheme&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> Because it once was said to men, whom worms<br />
+Made dust of twice ten hundred years ago,<br />
+"The poor are always with you," such as you<br />
+Shall not forever pick your way to ease<br />
+O'er broken bodies, lifting up white brows<br />
+And hiding crimson feet! Daring to make<br />
+The Christ your sheltering sanction while you feed<br />
+On others' lives, and keep injustice sleek<br />
+Even as you cosset that dim thing, your soul,<br />
+And preen the wings you think bear you aloft<br />
+The puddled world!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You lie! You do not know</span><br />
+Our gentle hearts, our&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Gentle? O, you're nice,</span><br />
+You later cannibals, and will not eat<br />
+Of babes at table, but you'll pipe their blood<br />
+From unoffending distance, while you pray<br />
+Your conscience numb and swear the source is clean.<br />
+Some dare to name that fount the Love of God,<br />
+And kneel him thanks!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Oh, mad and impious!</span><br />
+Who is this, Chartrien, you've dared call your friend?</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Megario steps from the grove</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> He's dumb as prudence, but my tongue is free.<br />
+This is Rejan LeVal, the man who hates<br />
+Your father,&mdash;and my country's enemy.</p>
+
+<p><em>LeV.</em> [<em>Plunging toward Megario</em>] Murderer!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Grasping LeVal</em>] Come! At once!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Your pardon, prince.</span><br />
+I must delay you. I feared your sympathy<br />
+Would gird itself 'gainst justice, and took care<br />
+To balk escape. [<em>To officer who appears behind him</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Be off with him. You know</span><br />
+Your road. No stop this side Peonia's border.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Outlawry this! Stop, sir! You will not dare<br />
+Kidnap him on this soil!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>Laughs</em>] &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Where Hudibrand<br />
+Is king?</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit officer with LeVal, lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> This strains your privilege, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> His privilege? My God! Did you....</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">I did.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> No third voice here is cordant. I will leave you.<br />
+My thousand times most gracious lady, thanks!<br />
+Again I bid you happiest good-night! [<em>Exit</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I am no adder, though your bitter eyes<br />
+Give me that name.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Not bitter. In my heart,</span><br />
+That wrapped you as the South its dearest bud,<br />
+There's nothing left to warm the thought of you<br />
+Even with my hate. You are the crown, the peak,<br />
+The unmeaning top of all to which I'm most<br />
+Indifferent. [<em>Turns away</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; Look at me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I look, and know</span><br />
+My eyes till now were cankered, look and see<br />
+The whole fair lie you are.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Nay, Chartrien!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> The book is open. There the brow yet shines<br />
+As God o'erlilied it,&mdash;an altar urn<br />
+Stuffed with profane decay. Those are the eyes<br />
+Like springs within a wood where no road leads<br />
+With murking pilgrim dust, yet Innocence<br />
+There paused looks up no more. That is the hand<br />
+That as a comrade angel's took my friend's,&mdash;<br />
+Reached out as though it parted Heaven's veil<br />
+To draw his grief within, then clapped him down<br />
+To Hell.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> The place for traitors. Let him go.<br />
+This moment is for us. 'Tis true your eyes<br />
+Were cankered, and I thought by surgeon means<br />
+To give them health, but deeper than the eyes<br />
+This trouble's seat. Deep as your chang&egrave;d soul,<br />
+That forfeits its divinity to link<br />
+With an infection. Here you stood and heard<br />
+Those poured-out profanations with no move<br />
+Or sound of protest. That was left for me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> What truth may pierce such ignorance, fatuous, thick!<br />
+That man,&mdash;Megario,&mdash;with whom you've struck<br />
+Alliant palm, twisted a lawless law<br />
+To his deformed desire, and took the lands&mdash;<br />
+The priceless valley lands of Cana Ru&mdash;<br />
+From gentle dwellers there, whose titles bore<br />
+The rooted claim of dear ancestral graves<br />
+Nine generations deep,&mdash;and when they stood<br />
+The guardians of their doors, faced them with guns,<br />
+Dragged them to his bribed courts, weighed them with fines,<br />
+And sent them to his burning maguey fields<br />
+To slave and rot.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">No&mdash;don't&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">The lands were sold</span><br />
+To Hudibrand&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">It can not be!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Not be?</span><br />
+That cry is stale as ignorance, as old<br />
+As wrong. I've heard it till my ears refuse<br />
+To register its emptiness. LeVal,<br />
+It was, rose first against Megario,&mdash;<br />
+Stood up and urged men to be Man,&mdash;and this,<br />
+That makes archangels in the ranks of Heaven,<br />
+Was treason upon earth. He lived&mdash;escaped&mdash;<br />
+But not his wife. Anointed woman, such<br />
+As centuries with conjoined virtues breed<br />
+Once and no more! She was condemned, enslaved,<br />
+And toiling in the steaming fields, fell down,<br />
+Was flogged, and died.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> No! no! no! no!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">So she</span><br />
+Is free. But now LeVal goes back. My friend!<br />
+O, giant heart! I see you stagger, drop,<br />
+As feverous as the smitten earth&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Who could</span><br />
+Believe such things? You're wrong! You must&mdash;you shall<br />
+Be wrong! He was a traitor, bitter-souled.<br />
+Undoing my father's work!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Farewell!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Oh, Chartrien,</span><br />
+I did it for the best!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">The woman's cry.</span><br />
+She'd wreck a world, and from that earthquake piled<br />
+Look up to say she did it for the best.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You will not go? You loved me one hour past.<br />
+I am not changed. I'm Hernda still.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">The same.</span><br />
+And yet I loved you. But no blush need burn<br />
+The soul escaped enchantment. 'Twas a charm<br />
+Enringed me with its bale till helpless there,<br />
+And feeble as a babe in bassinet,<br />
+I cooed away my manhood,&mdash;emptied time<br />
+With infant fingering toward your protean hair!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You <em>loved</em> me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">More than ever could be laid</span><br />
+To madness' charge, or god that passion whelms<br />
+With mortal longing till his skies become<br />
+His prison, and dark earth Elysian ground<br />
+Beneath the feet he loves!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>With arms beseeching</em>] Here, Chartrien, here!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Even when my eyes&mdash;so late&mdash;were wide to wrong<br />
+That binds the race to pain's dread Caucasus,<br />
+My mad imagination laid the gift<br />
+Of seership on you, dreamed that you would go<br />
+To meet the gleam of the delivering days,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> With you!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sail any sea of venture, beat</span><br />
+Through any storm to make the prophet's port,&mdash;<br />
+White priestess vassal to the truth that leads<br />
+The planet into light!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Together, Chartrien!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> That was my dream. Then coming to your side.<br />
+There was no life but yours,&mdash;no world that bled<br />
+And felt the vulture feeding. Groans of men<br />
+Grew still, or like the unavailing hum<br />
+Of far-off, aimless bees, scarce reached my ears<br />
+That heard, more near, as music from new earth,<br />
+Your children call me father. Ay, 'twas but<br />
+The storming undersea of passioning sex<br />
+That breaking to the sky o'erlaid my stars<br />
+And wore the mask of Heaven! That ebbless power,<br />
+That spawning tide of Nature, by whose might<br />
+She took primordial forts and made Life hers!<br />
+Still does it tear belated, unassuaged,<br />
+In wreck about the Mind's aspiring fanes.<br />
+And shakes the nesting Spirit from her towers,<br />
+Her heavenly brood unfledged!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Oh! Oh!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Here&mdash;now&mdash;</span><br />
+I beat it back, and go my way unmated<br />
+Till beauty fair as yours has bred a soul<br />
+And signals me! [<em>Exit</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Stay, Chartrien! Oh, my love!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />[<em>Falls. Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT II</h3>
+
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>A grove in the outskirts of a town in Goldusan. Semi-tropical
+verdure. Rocks, shrubbery, trees, at convenience. A hidden cascade
+mumbles upper right, not loud enough to disturb conversation. At upper
+left, the pillared and vine-wreathed entrance to a mansion. A wall,
+rear, partly hidden by foliage. Paths lead off, right and left, lower,
+under trees. It is evening, and the grove is lit for revel. Gay flocks
+of people pass, then Hernda and Megario enter lower right.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Unsoft as winter! Thou hast brought thy north,<br />
+With thee, a frigid shade, here where the hours<br />
+Are poppy-fingered, and their dreaming breasts<br />
+Unshuttered as the summer!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Is it true,</span><br />
+This joy, that smiles as though its fountained heart<br />
+Could not be emptied?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">True as that I love you.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> But if it is no mask, why should revolt<br />
+O'ercloud your borders?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">There's no just revolt.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> But Chartrien said&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Are you yet poison-tinct</span><br />
+With that old rebel tale his credulous heart<br />
+Dressed new in his while honor till both grew<br />
+One sooty treason?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Where is Chartrien now?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Wherever he may hatch a discontent<br />
+And cluck us trouble. But of late he spurs<br />
+His heart of venture, and dartles to our towns<br />
+To stir the scum there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Scum? You've such a thing</span><br />
+In Cordiaz' happy land? I'll see that scum.<br />
+It breathes, does 't not? Has eyes, and tongue?<br />
+Can answer if one speaks?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You're merry, princess.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> As graves at night. All is not open here.<br />
+I shall go farther,&mdash;knock at doors where Truth<br />
+Keeps honest house, not gowned for holiday.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> One want we have,&mdash;that you will stay with us<br />
+And be the fairy soul of Goldusan.<br />
+Then must our land, so measureless endeared,<br />
+Be cherished as the darling care of Heaven,<br />
+Where storm may breathe but as a twittering bird<br />
+That fears to shake its nest.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You've only words!</span><br />
+Words like these thousand-thousand smiles that seem<br />
+Half real and half painted,&mdash;teasing, strange,&mdash;<br />
+All feeding one illusion round my way<br />
+Till even the ground unqualifies beneath me<br />
+And makes each step a question.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">'Tis the doubt</span><br />
+You look through that transforms our face<br />
+Of truth and paints us vaguely hued.<br />
+O, for our many smiles, wilt not give one?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Nay, there's a darkness fringing on this grove.<br />
+It creeps above the walls, it touches me,<br />
+And makes me shudder winding at my feet!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> You've sipped of fancy at a witch's knee! [<em>Plucks a flower</em>]<br />
+
+But see,&mdash;your serpent shadows nurture this.<br />
+Confess to its perfection, and be shriven<br />
+Of any thought less fair.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Oh, if I might!</span><br />
+No, keep it. Let us find our friends.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>Drops the flower</em>] <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">My hand</span><br />
+Defiles it for you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Nay&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Where is the fan</span><br />
+I carried yester-night?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">'Tis&mdash;lost.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">'Tis burnt!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> What wind's your gossip?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Truth paused at my ear.</span><br />
+But, princess, if there's any charm will draw<br />
+Your eyes to me unburdened of their hate,<br />
+I'll find it though it lie beneath the ruin<br />
+Of every other hope!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I'll leave you, sir.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Forgive me! Love will speak,&mdash;ay, storm its need.<br />
+Though each vain word pile up the barricade<br />
+That fends the heart desired.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">My lord, no hate</span><br />
+Is in that barrier. I'm free of that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Thanks for that little much. Your highness speaks<br />
+Of journeying. What can I say to gild<br />
+My own Peonia till it distant gleams<br />
+The gem of pilgrimage? There you will see<br />
+How earth is dressed when the devoted sun<br />
+Is pledged to her adorning. Trees that mass<br />
+Their bloom in forest heavens, giving her<br />
+A nearer sky. Unthwarted vines that scarf<br />
+Her mountain shoulders with their pendent clouds.<br />
+Lakes where a dreamer's bark may drift unoared<br />
+And chance no port save beauty. Everywhere<br />
+The dart and wave of color that would beckon<br />
+A neighbor planet looking once this way.<br />
+Come, be my guest. One day! I'll ask no more.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I do not know. Se&ntilde;ora Ziralay<br />
+Will be my guide. I go with her.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">With her?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> What is 't? I touch the shadow. You are not<br />
+Her friend?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; She hates in secret, while her smile<br />
+Levies the world for love.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I'll hate where she does,</span><br />
+And know my soul is safe.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Her husband holds</span><br />
+By love and purse to Cordiaz, but she<br />
+Is a LeVal.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> LeVal? And kin to&mdash;<em>him</em>?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Rejan? His sister. And I know her nature<br />
+Is tinted as her blood, whatever hue<br />
+It wears at court.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">A sister to the man</span><br />
+That I gave up to death. And I have dared<br />
+To love her&mdash;take her kiss&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>Cautioning</em>] <span style="margin-left: 4em;">She's here.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter, lower right, Se&ntilde;ora Ziralay and Guildamour</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Se&ntilde;ora!</span><br />
+We spoke of you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> And with such gloom?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">No, no!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> It lingers yet, my lord. Do I in absence cast<br />
+Such knitted shadows?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Safely asked of us,</span><br />
+Who know your bright philosophy. How fares<br />
+That magic broom with which you'd sweep the earth<br />
+Of every ill? Is 't still invincible?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> Much worn of late, my lord, as you should know,<br />
+Who give it work.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You'd leave us not one grief</span><br />
+To keep us praying and rebuilding Heaven?<br />
+Abolish Death perhaps?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">True mock! I would</span><br />
+Except the death that's like a waiting bed<br />
+When not another turn may mend the day;<br />
+When sleep is sweeter than the thumb&egrave;d book,<br />
+And hearth-near voices drowse like waves that lap<br />
+Shores unconcerned. Now we are murdered, all.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> No, no. Se&ntilde;ora!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ay! Do we not vaunt,</span><br />
+And set it rarely down, a thing to note,<br />
+If age unmoor the life-disus&egrave;d raft,<br />
+For th' chartless cruise?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Now we go hurried out,</span><br />
+With half our dreams unpacked, and earth made poor<br />
+With a few grains of dust where should have risen<br />
+Our wisest years in flower.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Fate, fate, Se&ntilde;ora!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> What's fate but ignorance? And not always that<br />
+Comes hobbling with excuse. Sometimes a man,<br />
+Whose eyes fling lances at the foes of Life,<br />
+Is knouted from the world&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">No more, I pray!</span><br />
+This is a festal night. Reserve your sermon<br />
+For our next fast.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>A musical group plays softly under trees left. Enter
+lower right, Hudibrand, Cordiaz, Rubirez, Vardas, Ziralay
+and others</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Here, daughter? You've been sought.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> The search was mine, your highness. I would beg<br />
+A grace of you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You grant one as you beg,<br />
+Your majesty. I'll not do less than give<br />
+Your own again. But pray you name it, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> This garden where our amity has borne<br />
+Its fairest blossom shall be called henceforth<br />
+The Grove of Peace, and we would beg your highness<br />
+To queen our christening.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">A queenly part,</span><br />
+And royally I thank you, but I'll play it<br />
+With humblest prayer that Heaven may keep unbroken<br />
+These new-sworn bonds between my land and yours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> So pray we all.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Is this our scene?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Not here.</span><br />
+Come you this way, my friends. We'll cast the wine<br />
+To yon cascade, and let the waters bear it<br />
+Down to my capital.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>All go off upper right, except two officers, who remain
+centre, and a guard who walks to and fro by wall rear,
+sometimes visible, sometimes hidden by the wood and rocks</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">This peace will prove</span><br />
+As stout as any spider's thread that swings<br />
+In a blowing rain. Fah!</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Climb what hill you please,</span><br />
+You see the rebels' smoke.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">But where in name</span><br />
+Of magic does Bolderez get his gold?<br />
+The rebels we pick up have lost no meals.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> Enough he gets it. Goldusan sleeps well.<br />
+Bolderez is so near that if his men<br />
+Were eagles they could pick out Cordiaz' eyes<br />
+And he'd not wake to miss 'em.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Cordiaz</span><br />
+Is not asleep, but so bedimmed and fooled<br />
+By a thievish Cabinet that what he sees<br />
+Takes any name they give it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">He is old.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> Ah, there you hit it. Warriors should die young.<br />
+When age unsoldiers them their field-worn hearts<br />
+Have no defence against a crafty peace,<br />
+And falling power will seize on any prop<br />
+Be 't foul or fair, to keep on legs.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">My faith!</span><br />
+His crutches are so villanous, a fall<br />
+Were better than his gait.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Ziralay, lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> Well, Ziralay,<br />
+What news?</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Where's Cordiaz?</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">He comes.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter group from the cascade</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> [<em>To Cordiaz</em>] &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 8em;">My lord,</span><br />
+The Assarian prince is captured, and is held<br />
+Within the town.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> What? Chartrien?</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Yes, my lord.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> Fit period to this dedicated day!<br />
+Our gentle bonds are now forged whole. The man<br />
+Who was Bolderez' hope, most luminous<br />
+Of all who drew rebellion to him, now<br />
+Is darkly fallen.</p>
+
+<p><em>Rub.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">This golden aid cut off,</span><br />
+Bolderez stands so bare his nakedness<br />
+Will sprint to nearest cover.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I'll see his face.</span><br />
+Bring here the prisoner.</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I'll speed the order,</span><br />
+Your majesty. [<em>Exit</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Rub.</em> Shall he be shot, my lord?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> Shot? No. But kept close prisoned.</p>
+
+<p><em>Rub.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">That is mercy</span><br />
+You have denied the blood of Goldusan.<br />
+Why grant it to Assaria?</p>
+
+<p><em>Var.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">In him swells</span><br />
+A strength was never in LeVal. I urge<br />
+His instant death.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">No, friends. He is a son</span><br />
+Of our great neighbor, and his death would wound<br />
+The courtesy of nations that is kept<br />
+By lenience unabraded.</p>
+
+<p><em>Var.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Breath so bold</span><br />
+Will from a prison fan the treachery<br />
+Whose flame would die without it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Father, speak!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> We'll hear our friend, Assaria's majesty,<br />
+If he have word for us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I pray your highness</span><br />
+To let no ghostly and unfounded fear<br />
+Of my Assaria&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Fear, my lord?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I mean</span><br />
+No more than ask you to be just, nor let<br />
+My presence here enforce your chivalry<br />
+To do your country wrong. Think of your people,<br />
+Not the approval of a gazing land<br />
+Whose distant nod is given in ignorance<br />
+Of your stern cause.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Here's not my father! So</span><br />
+The clock runs backward, and time ends.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>To Cordiaz</em>] &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Your highness,</span><br />
+My voice is not so loud as others here,<br />
+But could I send it far as sound may go,<br />
+It should take mercy's part in this debate.</p>
+
+<p><em>Var.</em> You need no trump, my lord. A limpet's whistle<br />
+Would tell us where you stand.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I stand with Cordiaz,</span><br />
+His majesty of Goldusan!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">This matter</span><br />
+Is not for open market. Come, my friends,<br />
+Let us go in. Please you to walk before.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Rubirez, Ziralay, Vardas, and Megario enter the house,
+upper left. Their majesties linger at entrance. Guildamour
+retreats on path, upper right. Officers go off,
+lower left. Hernda and Se&ntilde;ora Ziralay wait unnoticed, right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> Is 't kindly done, my lord, to pose your station<br />
+In public against mine?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">My neutral words</span><br />
+You've packed with import all your own. I strive<br />
+To bend not right or left, but keep my way<br />
+As even as Justice.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>To Se&ntilde;ora</em>] Justice! There's a stone<br />
+That was my father.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Yet, my lord, this prince</span><br />
+Is of your house.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Is it for Cordiaz</span><br />
+To teach me mercy?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">By my soul!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">I know</span><br />
+Whence starts this softness. Mercy has no fane<br />
+Where you leave offering.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I know you too!</span><br />
+By holy Heaven, your head was never bared<br />
+In Justice' temple! You now seek my fall,<br />
+Because I've turned at last to check the hand<br />
+That rifles Goldusan. Is 't not enough<br />
+That I've unjewelled all her treasured hills<br />
+To alien avarice&mdash;that her forests bleed<br />
+The priceless sap of all primeval Springs<br />
+Into your golden stream? But I must lay<br />
+My people under bond,&mdash;sell them as slaves<br />
+To buy your stolen railways!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Stolen, sir?</span><br />
+I've paid&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> I know what you have paid! You've sent<br />
+Your henchmen creeping in the night, to buy<br />
+At beggar's price our toil-built roads, and where<br />
+You could not buy, you bribed and thieved, till all<br />
+Was yours!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; What of <em>my</em> toil, that built the lines<br />
+Through half your provinces?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You paid yourself!</span><br />
+Took from my governors, half gulls, half thieves<br />
+Of your own breed, a hundred times the worth<br />
+Of every graded foot, in lands and mines<br />
+And water-power that holds the prisoned light<br />
+Of robbed futurity! Now we must buy<br />
+Once more those tracks, long over-bought,&mdash;pay you<br />
+A value centuple for every mile,&mdash;<br />
+Pay you in bonds&mdash;bonds in hell's verity&mdash;<br />
+Whose interest will outrun each reckoned year<br />
+The summed returns from our fool's purchase! No!<br />
+That is my word while I am Goldusan!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> You wake too late. I'll tell you so, my lord,<br />
+Since this imprudent burst thrusts courtesy<br />
+From court. Your ministers have given assent&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> Have <em>given</em>! You'll over-steal enough<br />
+To quit their boldest price!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I'll not defend</span><br />
+Your chosen servants, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <em>My</em> servants! Oh,<br />
+What State is free from scuttling greed that bores<br />
+For treasure through the stanchest hold?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> This moral chant comes late from you, my lord,<br />
+Who've fingered heavily in many a pie<br />
+Spiced in the devil's kitchen.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">But to sell</span><br />
+My people! Pay you this devouring price<br />
+For stock that hardy yields the groaning third<br />
+Of interest on your bonds! What shall we do<br />
+To pay it? Rob our treasury, and ask<br />
+Our worn-out slaves to fill it up again?<br />
+Not ask, but goad and lash,&mdash;for you must have<br />
+Your own&mdash;you honest mortgagees of babes<br />
+Unborn&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Is all the scarlet on our hands?<br />
+What of that mountain province, sold entire<br />
+To foreign pockets, and the dwellers there<br />
+Torn up like shrieking roots and cast abroad<br />
+To fasten where they could?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">And where was that</span><br />
+But in your hell-mouthed mines? You wanted slaves<br />
+And got them.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I shall die, Se&ntilde;ora!</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Listen!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> The tyrant Cordiaz grown pitiful?<br />
+Then stones are butter, alabaster is<br />
+Uncrumpled down. You should have wept before<br />
+The Pueblo strike, then fewer corpses had<br />
+Gone out to sea.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> Don't name that thing to me!<br />
+Don't speak of it! I will not bear that curse!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Mine aged convert, lies it in your will,<br />
+Or juster Heaven's?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">'Twas your property</span><br />
+My troops defended&mdash;and Rubirez lied.<br />
+Swore that the men foamed mad as tusk&egrave;d beasts,<br />
+And must be trashed to place,&mdash;men who had asked<br />
+No more than bread when you shut up your doors&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Not I, my friend.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Your tool then. One of all</span><br />
+Your million hook&egrave;d hands fast in the heart<br />
+Of my poor country, shut your doors, thereby<br />
+To starve the wretches till they crawled to you<br />
+And begged their chains again. But they&mdash;their veins<br />
+Were not all tapped&mdash;they'd blood left, and arose<br />
+From their dumb prayers to <em>fight</em> for life&mdash;and then....</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> You sent the troops.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Because Rubirez lied!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Because you knew there'd be no after-sale<br />
+For your high favors, once let titles drift<br />
+Unguaranteed. And when your work was done&mdash;<br />
+<em>Your</em> work, my tear-washed saint, why weary patience<br />
+Could not take further time to count the dead,<br />
+Or dig so many graves. They were piled up<br />
+And carted to the sea&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Oh, every tide</span><br />
+Brings back their faces&mdash;staring, staring up!<br />
+Will God not answer them? I dare not shut<br />
+My eyes....</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> And this is why you weep so late?<br />
+Come, Cordiaz, you're broken. Leave a throne<br />
+Your own fears shake. You know that I must win.<br />
+Own you are mastered&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Mastered! While I've breath</span><br />
+I am a king. If I win peace of God,<br />
+And his white angel let my dark soul out,<br />
+'Twill be for this&mdash;the last throe of my strength<br />
+Was spent against you!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Madly you've uncased</span><br />
+Your madness, and I know my weapons.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">So!</span><br />
+I too, my lord, know how to sleep and wake<br />
+With hand on steel.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Then is there more to say?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cor.</em> All's said. We're waited for. Assaria,<br />
+Will 't please you enter?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I thank you, Goldusan. [<em>They go in</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Don't comfort me, Se&ntilde;ora. Not a breath.<br />
+I'll not disfigure shame with comfort's patch,<br />
+But droop as low as leprous dust, and take<br />
+Some pride in that. 'Tis dark here, dark. Pray God<br />
+I am asleep!</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dear princess!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Men do well</span><br />
+To keep the women blind. If once they knew,<br />
+They'd breed no more, but let a bairnless world<br />
+Escheat to God. Yet you, Se&ntilde;ora, knew,<br />
+And you have children. By your motherhood<br />
+You've bound you Life's accomplice,&mdash;given it heart<br />
+And veins and an accepting soul!</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">I have!</span><br />
+Deny our hearts these babes, and we deny<br />
+The future that we fight for. Ah, defeat<br />
+May be endured by those who hold in lap<br />
+The victors of to-morrow!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Oh, my father!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> This truth was edged and swift. You should have had<br />
+Love's lips to teach you&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I've been taught, my friend,</span><br />
+But would not learn. [<em>Rising</em>] Se&ntilde;ora, it was I<br />
+Betrayed your brother!</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Yes.... I know.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">To death!</span><br />
+You do not understand. I killed him!</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">No.</span><br />
+There, love,&mdash;forget a little. I've a hope<br />
+He is not dead.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Not dead? What gives you hope?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> Perhaps the nameless mentor in the heart<br />
+That tells us when our loved shrines are lit<br />
+And when they're out forever. But there's more.<br />
+Whenever Lord Megario's eye meets mine<br />
+There's something couched there speaks me living wrong,<br />
+Not wrong that's ended&mdash;locked within a grave<br />
+No prayer may open. He is burning yet<br />
+With uncompleted vengeance&mdash;and its shame.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Se&ntilde;ora, you've a plan!</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">'Twill take much gold.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Ah, I have that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And courage.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Well!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Such as,</span><br />
+We're told, no woman has.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Here is my life,</span><br />
+And any Fate may have it that will make<br />
+Your brother live. Will you forgive me then?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> [<em>Kissing her</em>] Ah, dear, you could not know....</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">How did you hear?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> From Chartrien.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You are friends?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">So true he seems</span><br />
+Not friend but friendship to my soul. And I<br />
+Talk here, while yonder he&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">They dare not! No!</span><br />
+My father would.... My father? Oh, Se&ntilde;ora! [<em>Sobs hopelessly</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> We'll find a door to this.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Would Ziralay</span><br />
+Not help?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> Had he the wit, he would not dare.<br />
+While I'm his wife he must keep double guard<br />
+Against suspicion.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Oh!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">If there's one true,</span><br />
+'Tis Guildamour. I'll go to him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">At once!</span><br />
+He took that path.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I know what shade he seeks</span><br />
+When he would brood.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit Se&ntilde;ora, upper right. Hernda waits drooping, as if
+too weary for thought. A group of ladies and gentlemen
+enter, lower right, among them Guildamour</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Starting up</em>] Oh!&mdash;Guildamour!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Your highness!</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Leaves his party chattering lower left, and crosses to Hernda</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Se&ntilde;ora seeks you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Ah, about the prince?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> We have a hope, my lord, your hand may turn<br />
+Some stone of rescue.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Mine are powerless hands,</span><br />
+Pinned to inaction's cross. My eyes may turn<br />
+No way that is not watched. To lift my lids<br />
+May raise a cry of "Treason!"</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">There's no help?</span><br />
+In all this land no help?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Megario,</span><br />
+Could he be softened to it, is the man<br />
+Who might with safety slip a secret bolt<br />
+For Chartrien.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> He!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; His name is set above<br />
+The nick of treason by his stern dispatch<br />
+Of poor LeVal,&mdash;and, that struck off, he yet<br />
+Is chronicled so dark that none would lay<br />
+A fair deed at his door.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Megario!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> I would not name him, but I know he loves you,<br />
+And there's no soul that love may not endue<br />
+With tinge of Heaven.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Se&ntilde;ora</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Se&ntilde;ora!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> [<em>Panting</em>] I have seen him!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> The prince?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Not Chartrien?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Yes!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Escaped?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 17em;">The guards</span><br />
+Were of our heart&mdash;they let him make the wood&mdash;<br />
+I've hidden him&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Oh, where?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Within the cave</span><br />
+Veiled by the waterfall. But safety there<br />
+Is minute-frail.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> What way? He'll climb the wall?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> And drop into the river.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Yes. What guard</span><br />
+Walks there? I see. 'Tis Miguel. And I know<br />
+Somewhat of him,&mdash;more than he'd tell the winds.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> Thank Heaven for a sinner! When he's next<br />
+Behind the rocks, then to him, Guildamour,<br />
+And be his palsying conscience. Peg his feet<br />
+To the earth!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> Trust me, Se&ntilde;ora!</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I'll lead off</span><br />
+Those babblers. Princess, you're the watch,&mdash;you'll give<br />
+The signal.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; Ah! What is 't?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Two pebbles dashed</span><br />
+Into the water is our sign.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">The guard!</span><br />
+He's gone!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> It is our time. [<em>Exit into wood, rear</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>As the talkative group move up</em>] Take them away,<br />
+Se&ntilde;ora! It would kill me now to meet<br />
+A painted smile.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">I'll go. And you&mdash;be swift.</span><br />
+Don't stop&mdash;don't think. [<em>Joins group</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I know where lordings three</span><br />
+Wait for as many maids.</p>
+
+<p><em>A young lady.</em> You saw them pass?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> Disconsolate.</p>
+
+<p><em>Young Lady.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">O, to the river!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Another.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Come!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>They go off with Se&ntilde;ora, lower left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Now! [<em>Takes up two stones. Ziralay and Megario
+come out of the house</em>]<br />
+Oh! [<em>She drops the stones. They cross to her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">You wait?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I read the sentence.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Death.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> And when?</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">To-night. They've given Vardas charge</span><br />
+Of 't. He's an eager butcher,&mdash;does not know<br />
+Delay.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You wished his death.</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I voted no.</span><br />
+Megario laid my doubts.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Did he do that?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> He countered to their teeth.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>To Megario</em>] So merciful<br />
+Is hate?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> The prince's death would mean the fall<br />
+Of Cordiaz, and our houses rock with his.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Be clearer, pray you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Vardas wants the throne,<br />
+And we've a sour and guilty faction here<br />
+Who'd see him on it, but they dare not move<br />
+Against a king yet rich in arms and friends.<br />
+And Hudibrand is not so absolute<br />
+That he may turn the army of Assaria<br />
+On the sole pivot of his word. For that,<br />
+Even he must knock the sleeping nation up<br />
+And ask good leave.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You'd say, sir, Hudibrand</span><br />
+Would favor Vardas?</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Short and plain, he does.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> What then?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">The Assarians are proud, and where</span><br />
+They think their honor's pricked, their pride out-tops<br />
+Their judgment. Chartrien's death, whose ugly weight<br />
+Must lie with Cordiaz, will inflame their hearts<br />
+Till Hudibrand may send an army on us,<br />
+His people clapping to 't. In open day<br />
+They'll choose the road his cunning cut by night,<br />
+And pray him take it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Ay, and where are we,</span><br />
+With Vardas crowned in Goldusan?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I see.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> He'd like my million acres in Peonia<br />
+Sliced for his foreign hounds!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter an officer</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">What trouble now?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> Prince Chartrien has escaped.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">And you in charge?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> I sent him with good men, or so I thought,<br />
+Being pressed to another way&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">His guards,&mdash;what name?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> Vinaldo, and a sergeant, who&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Vinaldo!</span><br />
+He's on the blue list, turning fast to black.<br />
+Did you not know it?</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">I held him, sir, the pick</span><br />
+Of loyalty.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Well,&mdash;on. What else?</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">They reached</span><br />
+The grove, passed in, and after prudent time,<br />
+The guards came out, smug as all right, and now<br />
+They're gone,&mdash;clear foot,&mdash;will doff you from the hills.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> A tale for Vardas! You may save your beard,<br />
+But not your neck.</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">I'll not shake yet. The prince</span><br />
+Is in the grove. We'll soon uncover him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> The walls are picketed?</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">A double watch</span><br />
+Is on.</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> That's well enough.</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">On chance he makes</span><br />
+The wall, I've reinforced the river guard.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Both sides?</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">A close patrol, both east and west.</span><br />
+Though he had fishes' gills and dived the stream,<br />
+He'd not get by. That way is fast against him<br />
+As Belam's iron door.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>To Hernda</em>] You're ill?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">No, no!</span><br />
+I'm well&mdash;quite well.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">The lily in your cheek</span><br />
+Lies not so bravely.</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> [<em>To Ziralay</em>] If he gets out of this,<br />
+He'll steer around the moon. We'll find him, sir.<br />
+But he's most darkly hid. Has made a coat<br />
+Of leaves and plays the grouse trick on us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Zir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">Come!</span><br />
+His majesty must know. [<em>Ziralay and officer go into house</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> How may I help you? Let the service be<br />
+Of such poor nature as your dog might give,<br />
+And pride will whistle to it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">O, my lord,</span><br />
+I half believe you. When our angels fall,<br />
+Then devils are not black. And I have lost<br />
+My father.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Devils! You've a tongue.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Forgive</span><br />
+A heart unmantled, and too wild to choose<br />
+What word may veil it. I would say, my lord,<br />
+In this discolored world I now begin<br />
+To find you fair,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">O, heavenly retraction!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> And if I ask a service it will be<br />
+No paltry one, but such as makes the king<br />
+Bow to the knight.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I'll prove this grace</span><br />
+Is native in me, and not solely lent<br />
+Of your new bounty!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Would you save the life</span><br />
+Of Chartrien?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> I would. Though a treasonous tool<br />
+Of rebelry, he should be held by me<br />
+A prisoner of knightliest war.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">A prisoner!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> You can not ask his freedom! That would give<br />
+My foes clear argument to pluck me bare,<br />
+And set me outlawed on the rebel side<br />
+Of this deplored division.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Oh, not free!</span><br />
+And in your power!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">To hold him prisoner,&mdash;that</span><br />
+I'd undertake, and make the action good<br />
+Even to this bloody council.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">You'd dare that?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> My policy is open, and I'd dare<br />
+To put it into deed that must commend me<br />
+To their unwilling justice. To do more<br />
+Would disarray all sense,&mdash;be fullest like<br />
+The idiot's gesture that disrobes the wretch<br />
+Of his last sanity.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Megario....</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> What secret is so dear these costly sighs,<br />
+Like gentle pickets ever reinforced,<br />
+Let it not pass?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">A secret? No!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">But yes.</span><br />
+I push me by its fragile guardians,<br />
+And hear it beating in its citadel.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> What says it then?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You've seen the prince.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 16em;">My lord!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> You know what shadow hides him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">No, no, no!</span><br />
+My oath, sir, I've not seen him!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I would trust</span><br />
+One negative, not three. Give him to me,<br />
+And you will know he lives. Let him be found<br />
+By Vardas' men, and when you wake to-morrow<br />
+The earth will be without him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">No, not you!</span><br />
+I'll go to Cordiaz. He'll save the prince<br />
+As he would save his throne. You've taught me that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> He'd lose it so. Should Cordiaz to-night<br />
+Set Chartrien free, he'd rise without a lord<br />
+To bid him one good-morrow.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Ziralay....</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Ask him? An ass whose ears if visible</span><br />
+Would signal Mars! Say he had courage for you,<br />
+He'd blunder with the prince to Vardas' arms.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Ah, <em>you</em> could do it,&mdash;set him free!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Nay&mdash;don't&mdash;</span><br />
+Don't ask it, if you've mercy! Your highness knows<br />
+I could not grant so much though lips I love<br />
+Above my soul should beg that treason of me.<br />
+Though they should take again those dearest words<br />
+That knighted me, and now lie in my heart<br />
+Like swelling seed of fortune! Let me shield<br />
+His life. In saintliest trust&mdash;&mdash; [<em>She shudders from him</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 11em;">You fear me so?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I do! I do! You took away LeVal,<br />
+And he no longer lives.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">He does! My oath,</span><br />
+He does!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You spared him?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">By my soul, he lives!</span><br />
+But let the word sleep in your vestal ear,<br />
+Until these smouldering troubles die to dust<br />
+And feed the grass above them. For the State<br />
+Believes LeVal is dead, nor taints me with<br />
+Such treacherous clemency. See how I lay<br />
+My safety and my honor in your hands?<br />
+I give them, hostages for Chartrien!<br />
+Ah, you should know how I will guard your trust,<br />
+For when I say to you he does not live,<br />
+Your eyes will slay the single, nurturing hope<br />
+Of my own life!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Battling</em>] I can not! I'm not Fate<br />
+To do her awesome work.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We aid her most</span><br />
+With passive hand, as Chartrien's ghost will come<br />
+On mourning nights to tell you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Oh, I'll speak!...</span><br />
+No, no! Ah, never, never!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>Resolute, giving up his suit</em>] I must join<br />
+The hunt. There's but one place&mdash;the cave&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">The cave!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Those guards are fools&mdash;or shy of water.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 16em;">Sir,</span><br />
+What cave?</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> He's there. Your cold, uncandid calm<br />
+Has babbled it. The frost is crafty that<br />
+Puts out such anxious fire.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">My lord, if I</span><br />
+Should tell you....</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Quickly then! How canst debate</span><br />
+So fatally, knowing delay but robs him<br />
+Of venture's favor? Every moment steals<br />
+A bud of chance.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">How will you take him out?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> I'll pass the gates unchallenged. Close without,<br />
+My car stands by,&mdash;a racer never spent,<br />
+And begs no pause. Know he is safe, and sleep.<br />
+Night will be secret, and we'll greet the sun<br />
+In my Peonia&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Ah, Peonia's far!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> And Vardas near.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Take these two stones, my lord.</span><br />
+Cast them into the falls&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">So! I was right!</span><br />
+But you must summon him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">So soon a tyrant?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> I'll take him from your hands,&mdash;no other way.<br />
+Your trust to me! And with my life I'll guard it!<br />
+For that you love him is my means to you.<br />
+Once in your heart, I'll win the throned place<br />
+Though all his saints defend it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">True, my friend,</span><br />
+We shall be nearer, for anxiety<br />
+Will draw me to you with a longing like<br />
+The aching letch for morning in the eyes<br />
+Pain keeps astare. You then will be the goal<br />
+Of fondest question,&mdash;and from that&mdash;who knows?<br />
+Out of unbroken faith, and kindly shafts<br />
+'Tween hearts disponent, bridges have been built<br />
+For love's plenipotence to cross.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">You bid</span><br />
+Me hope?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I do not say despair. Sometimes<br />
+A presto-worker sits within the soul<br />
+Of gratitude, and love that must give thanks<br />
+In name of one beloved, has then been known<br />
+To pass from the liege object to the heart<br />
+Whose compass held them both in selfless bounds<br />
+Of chivalry. And yet&mdash;I promise nothing!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> I ask no promise but the one I find<br />
+In words that so deny it. Now the thought<br />
+Is born, I'll make the naked infant grow<br />
+Heir of my princely opportunity.<br />
+Go now. An instant may defeat us. Haste!<br />
+My purse must buy a guard.<br />
+
+&nbsp; &nbsp; [<em>Hernda goes off, upper right. Megario walks left and calls</em>]<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Benito! Ho!</span><br />
+You and your fellow!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">[<em>Enter two guards</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I have work for you.</span><br />
+You've seen my gold before. Here's more of it.<br />
+Stand for my word.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Hernda returns with Chartrien</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Gods give me time for one</span><br />
+Wild kiss! O, Heaven! To find and lose you in<br />
+One whirling breath!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>His pistol at aim</em>] You are my prisoner.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Se&ntilde;ora rushes on left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> Oh, princess! Oh!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>To guards</em>] Move on with him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Wait&mdash;wait&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> No time.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> But I must tell&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Let fiends be dumb.</span><br />
+You damned and double traitress, this my hand<br />
+Could lay you dead!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>To Hernda, who seems dazed</em>] My goddess, I'll be true!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Kisses her, and goes off, lower right, with Chartrien and guards</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> You let him kiss you!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Who?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Megario.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I did not know it. I am dead, I think.</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT III</h3>
+
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>A yard, walled and spiked, of Megario's hacienda. A long, low
+hut, the men's sleeping-quarters, at right. In upper centre, a smaller
+hut which serves for kitchen and also as sleeping-room for several
+women. On left, the yard continues, showing other huts used by families.
+The entrance gate is off stage, left. An unused gate, locked and barred
+in wall, right.</em></p>
+
+<p class="negidt"><em>Hernda, in the guise of a young Maya woman known as Famette, stirs a
+pan of food which is heating on some coals in front of kitchen. Lissa
+stands in door of hut watching her.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> [<em>Stepping out</em>] You mend, Famette. But when you came&mdash;all thumbs.<br />
+A woman grown and couldn't spoon up fish!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> It was the smell. How can they eat it, Lissa?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> You'll eat it too.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">That? Never!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Another week</span><br />
+Will starve you to it.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Ysobel comes out of kitchen bearing apron full of cups
+and spoons which she places on ground</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Yso.</em> [<em>Looking left</em>] Here's Masio in. [<em>Enters hut</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> He's always first.<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">[<em>Masio comes up left</em>] How did my boy get on?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> I wasn't near him in the field.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">He did</span><br />
+His stint?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> I never heard.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">No eyes, no ears,&mdash;</span><br />
+All belly, you!</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> [<em>Taking up spoon and cup from the pile</em>]<br />
+Fish! fish!</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Beans first. You know</span><br />
+The rules.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> I've teeth can break 'em. Fish, Famette!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>Famette puts fish into his cup</em>]</span><br />
+
+There'll be a blessed cleaning-up to-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> More beating? Has the master come?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> [<em>Nods</em>] <span style="margin-left: 11em;">And on</span><br />
+The rounds. He'll clear the yards. News from the north<br />
+Has turned him red and black.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> A flogging? Oh,<br />
+If you were men you'd fight with your bare hands<br />
+Till you were free!</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Free as the dead. Our blood</span><br />
+Would soak the earth and make more hennequin,&mdash;<br />
+That's all.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Then run away.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">How far? The swamps?</span><br />
+To sleep with snakes&mdash;a week or less?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">Across</span><br />
+The ridges.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Where the sun would lap you dry<br />
+As crackling cat-guts? Thirst would draw you in<br />
+To th' next hacienda well. The masters own<br />
+The water, and in this land, that's life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">No chance?</span><br />
+They never get away?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Sometimes a man</span><br />
+Makes Quito, but he soon comes back.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Comes back?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> What else? In Quito there's no work. He starves.<br />
+And here&mdash;there's beans. So he gives up, and then<br />
+They send him back.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> And he is flogged?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Ay, till</span><br />
+His bones crack.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Oh! He bears it?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Like a man,</span><br />
+My dear.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> The coward!</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">So&mdash;back to the field,</span><br />
+Mute as a snail, and poorer too, for then<br />
+The dream is gone of any life but this.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> They have no spirit&mdash;none!</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Much as you'll have</span><br />
+This time next year.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Next year? I shall be gone.</span><br />
+My debt was just ten pesos.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> [<em>Incredulous</em>] <span style="margin-left: 2em;">You were sold</span><br />
+For that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> I'll work it out.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Be 't ten or hundreds,</span><br />
+Who comes here stays. You'll soon know that, my bird,<br />
+And limber your fine neck.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>As they talk, men and women enter in groups of scores
+and dozens until there are several hundred in the yard.
+They are mostly of mixed blood, their color ranging
+from the full brown of the Maya to the pale olive of
+the Peonian aristocrat. At a spout, upper left, they
+wash their hands, then drop about wearily. One man
+sits near Famette, his head sunk on his chest. She
+lays her hand on his shoulder</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What, Garza, you?</span><br />
+Who were so blithe this morning, on your way<br />
+To freedom?</p>
+
+<p><em>Garza.</em> [<em>Rocking</em>] Mother of God! Oh, Mother of God!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> What is it, Garza?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">There you have it! You see</span><br />
+Who comes here stays.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">But he was free! His friend</span><br />
+Brought twenty pesos to pay off his debt.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gonzalo.</em> And when he went to pay it, on the books<br />
+There stood two hundred pesos against Garza.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> Two hundred&mdash;twenty,&mdash;you see, Famette,<br />
+How much a little "o" can do.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">They dare</span><br />
+Do that? I'll see the magistrate! [<em>The men stare at her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> [<em>Patting her shoulder</em>] Poor girl!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> I will! Why not? What is he for?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gon.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">What for?</span><br />
+To see we are well beaten when we ask<br />
+For justice. He must serve who pays him,&mdash;that's<br />
+The master.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Oh, you worse than slaves!</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">No names,</span><br />
+My proudling. Wait a year, then what you please.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>The men have been eating. Ysobel stands in door of hut
+holding a great bowl of beans from which the peons fill
+their cups. Lissa gives out the fish. Her boy, Iduso,
+crouches by her skirts</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> [<em>To boy</em>] Not eat? Now you're a man? Twelve years to-day!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> [<em>Bending over Iduso</em>] Is 't fever, Lissa?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> [<em>With sullen jealousy</em>] Let him be, Famette.<br />
+What do you know? You've got no children.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">I've</span><br />
+A little brother.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Brother! Nothing that.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> He's just Iduso's age.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> [<em>Softened</em>] <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">And has to take</span><br />
+A man's work on him?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">N-o&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I said it now.</span><br />
+What do you know? Look at your hands&mdash;not stumps<br />
+Like mine.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> Who hugs the post to-night?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gon.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I heard</span><br />
+Of seven warned.</p>
+
+<p><em>Yso.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">My man! He hasn't come!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> God's mercy, give us peace! It was his turn<br />
+To put away the knives.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Ysobel leans against hut. Famette takes bowl from her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">There's seven, you say?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ben.</em> None from this yard. Famette, you haven't seen<br />
+A flogging yet?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> And never will, you beast!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ben.</em> Your never's short,&mdash;less than an hour.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> What do you mean?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ben.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">The whip draws blood to-night,</span><br />
+And we must all look on, for our soul's good.<br />
+It is the master's order.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">I'll not go!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> Why, God looks on, Famette, and so may we.<br />
+All Heaven sees it, and I'll pledge my&mdash;fish&mdash;<br />
+That not an angel blanches.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gon.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You should see</span><br />
+The master!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <em>He</em> is there? Does <em>he</em> look on?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> O, not quite that. To eye the work<br />
+Would show too grossly, but you'll see him there,&mdash;<br />
+Somewhat aside, leaning against a yew,<br />
+Most carefully at ease. Then he will light<br />
+A delicate cigar that fills the grove<br />
+With a fantastic odor, like, we'll say,<br />
+Faint musk that creeps on burning pine.<br />
+You will approve the quality, Famette.<br />
+That is his signal.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Oh!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Long as he puffs,</span><br />
+And soft, white rings twirl upward to the leaves,<br />
+The lashes fall. And when, grown gently weary,<br />
+As 'twere half accident, from his high thoughts<br />
+Remote, he clears the cindered tip&mdash;like this&mdash;<br />
+The whip is still.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Where, where am I?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">In hell,</span><br />
+Sweetheart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Who are you, Masio? You are not<br />
+As these that suffer speechless.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Pinch the difference!</span><br />
+A little learning, and a few opinions<br />
+That brought me here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> [<em>Moving aside with him</em>] What did you do?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 17em;">I spoke</span><br />
+The truth too near the ear of Cordiaz,<br />
+And there's no greater crime.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You are a prisoner?</span><br />
+But you're not guarded.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> No, they leave me free,<br />
+In hope I'll run. Then they will shoot me down.<br />
+And you&mdash;what brought you here? Ten pesos<br />
+Could never buy you&mdash;nor a hundred either.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> I mean to lead these men to join Bolderez:</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> What! Lead them out?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">And you will help me do it.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> Well, when I want to die. You're mad.<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 18em;">We're all</span><br />
+Sprats in a net. <em>You'll</em> not get out, once let<br />
+The master see you. Better hide those eyes&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Yso.</em> [<em>Running and catching Masio by the shoulder</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You lied to me! You lied! They've got my Grija!</span><br />
+Down in the lower yard!</p>
+
+<p><em>Grija.</em> [<em>Entering and making his way to her</em>] No! Here I am.<br />
+Safe in, old tear-box.</p>
+
+<p><em>Yso.</em> Holy Mary!
+[<em>Tells her beads rapidly as he leads her aside</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> [<em>Aroused</em>] Men!<br />
+If Osa looked from yonder mountain scarp,<br />
+Would she descend to lead such currish hearts<br />
+To liberty?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gon.</em> We are not dogs.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Then shame</span><br />
+To bear the life of dogs!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ben.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">What do you know</span><br />
+Of Osa?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Know? Does she not guard the shrine<br />
+Cherished ten centuries in your secret hills?<br />
+Priestess and princess, daughter of your kings,&mdash;<br />
+The ancient poet kings who ruled and sang<br />
+In palaces where now your huddled huts<br />
+Give you a slave's foul shelter!</p>
+
+<p><em>A Voice.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Will she come?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> To such as you? With heads hung down, and backs<br />
+Bared for the whip? The moment that you hold<br />
+Your manhood dearer than your life, she'll stand<br />
+Before you. Then you'll see&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">For God's sake, hush!</span><br />
+The master!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ben.</em> [<em>As all look left</em>] No, it's Coquriez.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gon.</em> With his Gringo.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Coquriez enters with Chartrien. They cross right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Leave me alone.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">My soul, am I not sick</span><br />
+Of your dumb lordship? Now the master's here,<br />
+I hope, by Jesu, that our ways will part.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Turns and joins the men, leaving Chartrien seated on the
+stone step of one of the doors to the long hut, right.
+Megario enters unseen and stands watching, left. They
+gradually become aware of his presence, and all are silent</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Coquriez!</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> [<em>Crossing left</em>] Here, sir!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>The tension relaxes slightly. Lissa and Ysobel quietly
+distribute food and the men eat in silence. Famette
+keeps in shadow, a shawl over her head, and vainly
+tries to hear what Megario and Coquriez are saying.
+They talk in low tones at left, then more centre, front</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Shoot the Gringo, sir?</span><br />
+I thought he was to live.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">It must be done</span><br />
+To-morrow.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">I'll do it.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Take him on the road,</span><br />
+And don't come back with him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">To-morrow, sir?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> At day-break. Drop him cold. I was a fool<br />
+To let him live a day!<br />
+
+&nbsp; &nbsp; [<em>Famette has advanced too far and Megario sees her</em>]<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Who's that?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">There? Oh!</span><br />
+I bought her in last week.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">The day I left?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> I think 'twas then.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">An old one,&mdash;so you said.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> About the Gringo, sir,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">What is her name?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> Famette.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Famette goes back to the women</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">A figure too.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">It's not so easy</span><br />
+To drop a white-skin&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Come, Famette! Come here.</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">[<em>She turns and comes slowly</em>]</span><br />
+
+Old? By the gods! Why did you lie to me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> My lord ... you like none past fourteen.<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">She's that</span><br />
+Half over.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Brazen devil! Come, Famette.<br />
+I like your name. I like your face too, girl.<br />
+Don't be afraid. Show me your eyes. You won't?<br />
+Where have I seen you?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I'm a stranger, sir.</span><br />
+My home was in the north.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">That fester-spot!</span><br />
+A stranger? Then we must be good to you.<br />
+Where do you sleep?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">There, in the hut.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">You'll have</span><br />
+A better soon. Next time I'll see your eyes. [<em>Going</em>]<br />
+Mind, Coquriez, to-morrow! Do that well,<br />
+I'll pardon this. [<em>Exit</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">What is 't you do to-morrow?</span><br />
+And why do you need pardon? You who serve<br />
+So well?</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> My pretty bird, I've been too slow.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Too slow?</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">I've limped, and lost.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">Ah, Coquriez!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> You're not afraid of <em>me</em>. You look at me,<br />
+And turned from him. That's honey on his curse!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> He curses you? And you do all for him!<br />
+All that he asks you,&mdash;things he dares not do<br />
+With his own hand.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You care for that?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">You risk</span><br />
+Your soul, perhaps,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">'Tis certain. Pray for me,</span><br />
+Chiquita.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> When?</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">To-morrow I must leave</span><br />
+The Gringo in the marshes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Oh, 'twas that!</span><br />
+And paid with curses&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> [<em>Calls, as a new batch of men come in</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Come, Famette! Here's work!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> We'll talk again. [<em>Hurries to Lissa</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>A man.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">The beans are cold.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Another.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Soured too!</span><br />
+Gray Moses, here's a life!</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Do you complain,</span><br />
+O, comrades? Now your hour is come? The pearl<br />
+O' the long ungarnished day? The holy hour<br />
+Of&mdash;beans? Why, think! What do we live for, men?<br />
+For sweaty moments battling 'gainst the sun<br />
+To strip the thorny hennequin? For nights<br />
+Of bitten sleep in unwashed pens? Not so.<br />
+Lift up your cups! Here is the crown of toil!<br />
+Each day we reach our life's supremest dome,<br />
+And know we're there! Can man ask more? Even kings,<br />
+Though the gold frontal of munificence<br />
+Is bowed before them, yet must fretting guess<br />
+The morrow's store. But we, my friends, we know!<br />
+Then let each separate and distinct legume,<br />
+Dear as the Egyptian treasure lost in wine,<br />
+Delay as preciously&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> [<em>Cutting him across shoulders</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Come down from that!</span><br />
+There's more for you, my friend, i' the lower yard.<br />
+I'll tie you up.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">O, Coquriez, let him go.</span><br />
+<em>You</em> should not care. His tongue was born with him,<br />
+And God may mend it. Let the fool alone.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> Hmm, if you ask me&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Thank you, Coquriez.</span><br />
+I'll stand for him he'll not offend again.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> My tongue is glue. 'Twill stick to its place.</p>
+
+<p><em>A man.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">Fish! fish!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Another.</em> He's had his share.</p>
+
+<p><em>The man.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Not half a cup!</span><br />
+O, Jesu, I am starved. I did my stint,<br />
+And helped the boy, Famette. Can I do that<br />
+On half a cup?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">No, Berto, here is more.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Yso.</em> The Gringo does not eat.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I'll take him this.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Fills cup from bowl of beans and goes to Chartrien, who is
+still seated on the step, listless and observing nothing</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Se&ntilde;or?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Who spoke? O, you, Famette? No, thanks.<br />
+I can not eat. [<em>Turns from her</em>] That's twice I've heard the voice<br />
+Of Hernda. Madness creeps, but surely comes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> [<em>Over his shoulder</em>] You must escape to-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Facing her</em>] Escape? To-night?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Here, hold the cup, and eat. Do, sir! We're watched.<br />
+To-morrow Coquriez leads you to the woods,<br />
+Comes back alone&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">At last I know my hour.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> But you shall live. Last night I worked till day<br />
+At that locked gate. 'Tis open. None suspects.<br />
+Outside there's water in a flask, and bread,&mdash;<br />
+Beneath the cactus at the left&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">But how</span><br />
+Get out? I am locked in at night, and watched<br />
+At other hours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Eat, eat, and listen, Se&ntilde;or!</span><br />
+To-night a flogging in the lower yard<br />
+Will empty this. You'll go with Coquriez.<br />
+Urge him to bring you back. Say you are ill,&mdash;<br />
+For that you are,&mdash;and come. Here I shall hide,<br />
+And as you pass, will suddenly step out<br />
+And speak to Coquriez. You fall behind,<br />
+In shadow of my hut, move round it, wait<br />
+This side, then see what's next to do.</p>
+
+<p><em>A man.</em> [<em>Calling</em>] Famette?<br />
+Where is Famette? She doesn't count the beans.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Famette goes back to the men</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> It is a lure. If I attempt escape,<br />
+Then Coquriez shoots me dead, his soul just clear<br />
+Of murder.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> [<em>To Famette</em>] Our Gringo's learned to eat, I see.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Now do they change confederate nods, and gaze<br />
+Their mated thoughts. Down, down to dust, my heart!<br />
+The struggle's off. I'll fight no more. Yon stars<br />
+Have rest for me. Is 't so? Vain footing there.<br />
+What rest have they, that share with man the surge<br />
+From life to life? There Jupiters unfound<br />
+Whirl cooling till their straining sides may bear<br />
+Ocean and land and clinging bride of green;<br />
+And Saturns, nameless yet, cast travailing<br />
+Their ringed refulgence. Not the frozen moons<br />
+May fix in stillness, but sweep captive back<br />
+To flaming centres when their planets call.<br />
+There old, dead suns, that think their work is done,<br />
+Meet crashing, ground to cloudy fire whose worlds,<br />
+Far driven, traverse time and know men's days.<br />
+Ay, one may go beyond the ether's breath,<br />
+Farthest of all, to be another First,<br />
+Undreaming this our God. And I must shift<br />
+Eternal and unresting as those suns.<br />
+Then let Death hasten. He shall be as one<br />
+Who timely strips a wrestler of his cloak,<br />
+And, kindly freed, I shall uncumbered leap<br />
+To other battle, finding armor where<br />
+I find my cause.</p>
+
+<p><em>A man.</em> [<em>To Famette</em>] My turn. Here, give me that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> The Gringo's had no fish.</p>
+
+<p><em>The man.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Then give me his.</span><br />
+He doesn't care. Has run already from<br />
+The smell.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> I'll give you half. The rest<br />
+I'll take to him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">He'll come for what he wants.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> No, he is sick, poor devil! [<em>Goes to Chartrien</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Humph!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> [<em>To Chartrien</em>] <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You'll take</span><br />
+The chance? There is no other.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">It's a trap.</span><br />
+You risk your life for me, a Gringo? No.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> You must believe me! Oh, what can I say!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Say nothing. Go.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">I love you, love you, Se&ntilde;or!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> You would persuade me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Sir, the wine you found</span><br />
+Behind your prison door,&mdash;and good, clean bread,&mdash;<br />
+I put them there!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">'Twas you, Famette? I thought</span><br />
+That Coquriez did it,&mdash;feared I'd die before<br />
+The master came.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Not his brute heart! And then</span><br />
+That night, of fever&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Yes! What then?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">I lay</span><br />
+Outside your jail, my head against the wall,<br />
+That I might hear if once you groaned, or know<br />
+If sleep had come.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Can such love be for me?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> You must&mdash;you <em>must</em> believe me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">God, your eyes!</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">[<em>She lowers her head</em>]</span><br />
+
+... 'Tis madness, bred of these sun-poisoned days,<br />
+And nights without a hope.... Look up, Famette.<br />
+I do believe you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> [<em>Kissing her rosary</em>] Mother, adored and blessed!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Wilt be a beggar soldier's bride, Famette?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> You do not love me, Se&ntilde;or.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">But I love</span><br />
+Your gentle heart that warms mine empty,&mdash;love<br />
+Your eyes, like memories burning,&mdash;and your voice<br />
+That's linked to an old wound in me,&mdash;but most<br />
+I love your soul that is as great as truth<br />
+And strong as sacrifice. You'll come to me<br />
+In Quito, if I make escape? I'll find<br />
+A way to bring you out&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You're mine?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">Till death.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> And after that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I'll give you truth for truth.</span><br />
+Beyond this world I hope to meet a soul<br />
+Who did not walk in this, but ought to have,<br />
+For here her body dwelt. This side of death,<br />
+My life&mdash;a bitter one, that only you<br />
+Have sweetened&mdash;is your own, if you will have<br />
+So mean a gift.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Ipparro has entered the yard and becomes a centre of altercation.
+He starts out taking Lissa's boy, Iduso.
+There is a shriek from Lissa, and Famette hurries to her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">My boy! My little one!</span><br />
+God strike you dead, Ipparro!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You'll not flog</span><br />
+The boy?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ipp.</em> He didn't do his stint by half.<br />
+You know the master's rules. He's twelve years old.<br />
+Must cut three thousand leaves.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">A man's full work.</span><br />
+And he's so small.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">And sick he is. Two days</span><br />
+He couldn't eat.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ipp.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">You women!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Let him go.</span><br />
+A little child, Ipparro.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ipp.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Let him go?</span><br />
+Am I the master of the hacienda?<br />
+He'll tie <em>me</em> up to-morrow!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">It will kill</span><br />
+Iduso.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lis.</em> Such a little one, he is!<br />
+A baby yesterday,&mdash;to-day a man,&mdash;<br />
+How can that be?</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>An overseer enters left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Overseer.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; What's up? Come on with you!<br />
+The master waits,&mdash;burns like perdition! Come!<br />
+Come, all of you! The women too! Clear out!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Drives them out. Famette slips into her hut. Chartrien
+joins the men and follows last with Coquriez. They
+stop left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> Won't see the show?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I'll not go on.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">Come then.</span><br />
+I'll lock you up. [<em>They turn back</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">We'll have an early march</span><br />
+To-morrow, mate. Must hit the brush by dawn.<br />
+There's little sleep for me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Shall I have more</span><br />
+In that hot pen?</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> [<em>Laughs</em>] You'll make it up, I guess.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> I understand. You'll murder me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">My soul!</span><br />
+Let's keep our manners, though we sit in hell,<br />
+My occupation's decent, nothing said.<br />
+The silent deed is clean, but mouth it once,<br />
+The hands will smell. Pah!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">[<em>Famette steps out of hut</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Here's my kitten!</span><br />
+A kiss, my honey-pot!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I've better for you.</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">[<em>Gives him a bottle of wine</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> My ducky! From the master's cellar!<br />
+. . . . . . . . . . How&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> No matter. It is good.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Thief of my soul,</span><br />
+A kiss!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>As he attempts to embrace her she springs back, pointing left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Look, look! He's gone! The Gringo flies!<br />
+O, Coquriez, you'll be shot!</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> [<em>Stunned for a moment, springs off shouting</em>]<br />
+Help! Stop him! Help! [<em>Exit left, firing his pistol</em>]<br />
+The Gringo! Stop him!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Famette runs to gate right, where Chartrien is removing bar</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Come! Fly with me! Now!</span><br />
+I can not leave you here!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Go! Do not stop,</span><br />
+However weary, till you're safe in Quito.<br />
+The wounded hare, remember, takes no nap.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Come, come!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">No, I am safe. And there's more work</span><br />
+For me. They'll come back here to search. Nay, go!<br />
+Another moment and we both shall die!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Kissing her</em>] I'll wait in Quito,&mdash;then a husband's kiss!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Goes. Famette puts up bar, then returns to her hut and
+sinks at door</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> If I could pray! If I could pray! How far<br />
+Seems that old God I knew! A playhouse God<br />
+Who never saw the world! [<em>Leaps up</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">They're coming back!</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Sits again, abjectly, her shawl over her head. Megario,
+Coquriez, and peons, enter</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Where is the woman?</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">There she sits,&mdash;the witch!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Stand up! Take off that shawl!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Famette stands up. A man snatches the shawl from her head</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Famette! Not you?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> [<em>Cowering</em>] I, master.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>To men</em>] <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Search the yard. Turn every leaf</span><br />
+And stone.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>The men scatter</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> I'll give that gate a look. [<em>Crosses to gate right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">This was</span><br />
+Your drooping modesty! [<em>Turns on Coquriez</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 9em;"> &nbsp; You fool!&mdash;to let</span><br />
+The man escape! By Heaven, you might have burnt<br />
+The hacienda down and not have made<br />
+My blood so hot!</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">It was the woman, sir.</span><br />
+She jumped before me, smiling like a devil,<br />
+And when I tried to pass she caught my knees<br />
+And held this thing up, saying 'twas for me.<br />
+I kicked her off&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">No doubt!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">And when I turned</span><br />
+The prisoner was gone.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>To Famette</em>] You saw him go?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Yes, master. Through the gate, like wings. And then<br />
+I gave the warning. Coquriez knows I did.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> What did she say?</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">She cried "The Gringo flies!"</span><br />
+And pointed there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> [<em>Returning</em>] The upper gate is fast.<br />
+He went that way. [<em>Nods left</em>] Beneath the cypresses<br />
+Into the maguey fields.</p>
+
+<p><em>A man.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">He'll not get far.</span><br />
+He has no water.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">He will die in th' brush,</span><br />
+And I shall never know it. Alive or dead,<br />
+He must be found. I'll flog a man a day,<br />
+Until I see his bones.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gon.</em> [<em>Coming up</em>] He is not here.<br />
+We've looked in all the huts.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ipparro?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ipp.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Sir!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Send men abroad, for fifty miles about,<br />
+To put the haciendas on the watch.<br />
+He must come in for water. Choose good men,<br />
+Who <em>ride</em>, and see no wenches by the way.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> My lord, I've served you long&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Too long, you hound!</span><br />
+Where is your lady's token?</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">This, my lord.</span><br />
+She thrust it in my hand.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And left it too!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> I knew 'twas yours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>To Famette</em>] A thief too, are you?</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Famette crouches, drawing shawl over her head</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">True,</span><br />
+Coquriez, you have served me long. I'll add<br />
+You've served me well until to-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">O, pardon!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> I trusted you. And held your hand as mine,<br />
+To make my wishes deeds.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;"> &nbsp; 'Tis sworn your own!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Then prove it. Take this whip. Come, take it, man!<br />
+Now flog that witch.</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Famette! A woman, sir?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> The devil's second name is woman. Do it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> A heavy hand I've laid on men, my lord,<br />
+But never yet&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Her smile struck deep to make<br />
+Such putty of your heart.<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>Coquriez drops whip</em>] Pick up that whip!</span><br />
+<em>You</em> want its kisses, do you? Pick it up,<br />
+Or you shall feel them to your traitor bones!<br />
+I'll have you flogged together!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Coquriez slowly picks up whip. Famette rises, throwing
+off her shawl</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Hear me, men!</span><br />
+For men you are,&mdash;not beasts. Your hands are strong<br />
+In ceaseless toil. Day after day you pile<br />
+Your master's wealth more high. Day after day<br />
+You sweat your way a little nearer death,<br />
+That he may kick your bodies from his path<br />
+And set your graves in hennequin. But know<br />
+Who toils may fight! The hand that lifts a spade<br />
+May bear a sword. The strength you give to him,<br />
+Use for yourselves. Your master is one man,<br />
+You are five hundred&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Gods! I'll stop your mouth!</span><br />
+You men there&mdash;go&mdash;you dozen at the gate&mdash;<br />
+Go to the dry-yard&mdash;load your backs with fibre&mdash;<br />
+And bring it here!<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>Men go out</em>]</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">I'll teach you now, you slaves!</span><br />
+You are five hundred&mdash;yes&mdash;and I am one,<br />
+But in me is the might of Goldusan!<br />
+The power of Cordiaz is in my whip,<br />
+And back of that is iron Hudibrand!<br />
+Kill me to-night, to-morrow you shall die,<br />
+Each dog of you,&mdash;you know it!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>Men come in with fibre</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Throw the stuff</span><br />
+Against the hut. There, pile it up. More, more!<br />
+Now, Coquriez, the gentle, you've refused<br />
+To ruffle your fond dove,&mdash;here's sweeter work,<br />
+And for no hand but yours. Put her within,<br />
+Then fire the hut. [<em>Utter silence</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;"> &nbsp; What terror's on you, beasts?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Coq.</em> In God's name, sir, you dare not!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">In the name</span><br />
+Of all who know how power is kept, I dare!<br />
+Move there, you dog!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>Coquriez stands motionless</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Do you refuse again?</span><br />
+Then ... in your heart. [<em>Shoots. Coquriez falls dead</em>]<br />
+Who'll be the next to stand on feet of lead<br />
+When I say "Do?" Gonzalo! Garza! Out!<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">[<em>The men do not move. Megario lifts his pistol</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Spare them, Megario. I'll go in.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;"> &nbsp; [<em>Enters hut, closing door</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>Trembling</em>] <span style="margin-left: 7em;">That voice!</span><br />
+Who is this woman? Speak! Who knows? I've heard....<br />
+Bah! I'm a fool!... Take up that lantern there,<br />
+Gonzalo. Break it on the fibre. Move!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>He stands with his weapon drawn. The door of the hut
+in thrown open and Famette appears. She wears a rich
+robe, gleaming white, with blue and gold cabalistic broidery.
+In her hand is a sceptre, on her head a crown with
+a single star. The men, with cries of "Osa! Osa!"
+fall upon their knees, foreheads to ground, then leap up,
+changed, and glaring. They seem ready to spring upon Megario</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Shoot now, Megario! [<em>Silence</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You dare not do it!</span><br />
+Kill me,&mdash;kill one of them,&mdash;shoot till your weapon<br />
+Pants its last murder, and a hundred hands<br />
+Will tear you limb from limb and bone from bone,<br />
+Till every separate shred of you be cast<br />
+To its own devil! Shoot, Megario!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>His hand falls. Famette steps into the yard</em>]</span><br />
+
+Where are the masters who can help you now?<br />
+The mighty ones who know how power is kept?<br />
+Look on these men. Their blood sings as it sang<br />
+Through centuries gone,&mdash;with courage that was theirs<br />
+Ere ships came up like night on this doomed coast<br />
+Unloading hell!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">&nbsp; Who are you, woman? Who?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> The spirit of these people, absent long,<br />
+But come at last to be their hearts' old fire.<br />
+Four hundred years you've trampled on their bodies,<br />
+But see&mdash;look in their eyes&mdash;you have not slain<br />
+Their God.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> Your name! Who are you?</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Riven hills</span><br />
+May hide the shrine of long unsceptred kings,<br />
+And keep their royal secret year by year.</p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> Hail, Osa! Osa, queen!</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">What do you want?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Three things, Megario.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">What are they?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">First,&mdash;</span><br />
+That I may pass from here, free as I came,<br />
+With every soul that will go out with me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> The way is open. Go.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">And you with us.</span><br />
+Far as the coast, where willing transport waits<br />
+To bear us northward. Then you may go free.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 14em;">[<em>Turns to the people</em>]</span><br />
+
+There brothers wait you, men,&mdash;there freedom's tongue<br />
+Is beacon fire. The whole of northland sings,<br />
+A canticle of flame. You'll go with me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> [<em>Loudly</em>] We'll follow Osa!</p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Osa! Osa! On!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> Gonzalo, choose you men, a thrifty score,<br />
+To fill the water-jars and get us food<br />
+From the hacienda stores.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">[<em>Gonzales passes out, men following at his signal</em>]</span><br />
+
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">The third demand,</span><br />
+Megario, is this. That key you belt<br />
+So close&mdash;<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">[<em>Megario claps hand on key</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Yes, that,&mdash;it must be mine, to unlock</span><br />
+A dungeon here and free a prisoner<br />
+Whom you for love of torture keep alive.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> No, that's a lie.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Deny it to the stars</span><br />
+That saw you yesternight steal up like crime<br />
+To a dark grating, saw you gloat, and fling<br />
+The crumbs that will not let your victim die,<br />
+Though scarce they give him life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> [<em>Gasping</em>] <span style="margin-left: 5em;">A lie!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">The key,</span><br />
+Megario.</p>
+
+<p><em>Meg.</em> I will not&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Fam.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">In my hand!</span><br />
+
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; [<em>Megario takes key from his belt and hands it to her</em>]<br />
+
+I thank thee, God, my hand may turn the key<br />
+That frees Rejan LeVal! Now forward, men!<br />
+O, glorious to be men! Ipparro, walk<br />
+Beside our prisoner. Garza, be his aid.<br />
+Two days of marching, then the friendly sea.<br />
+And if you toil again amid these fields,<br />
+You'll take the fruit. On!</p>
+
+<p><em>Men.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Osa! To the sea!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT IV</h3>
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>The Grove of Peace, as in second act. Late afternoon. Two
+officers meet as curtain rises.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> So Cordiaz is fallen.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Joggled down</span><br />
+At last, poor man!</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; When all the ghosts he made<br />
+Come back to weep his fall, I'll swell the flood<br />
+With half a tear, no more.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Then you're for Vardas?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> By glory, no! He'll open Goldusan<br />
+To every thief that knocks.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Trust Hudibrand</span><br />
+To guard the door. Till he has plucked the goose,&mdash;<br />
+Then they may shave it for their part.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">So, friend?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> Phut! Goldusan's his box of snuff&mdash;held so&mdash;<br />
+And as he pleases, tchew!&mdash;'tis empty.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Come,</span><br />
+I'll walk your way. [<em>They move, right</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What of this truce? Goes 't deep?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> As flattery may plough. It is our croon<br />
+Of compliment to our new-seated king.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> Nay, president. We're a republic now.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> Spell 't king or president, it means the same.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> But with Bolderez ours, the truce should last.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> Why, 't may, till night. Bolderez, friend,<br />
+Is not the revolution.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">He's the heft of 't,</span><br />
+And's made a full surrender.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Made his terms!</span><br />
+His officers are guardians of the State,<br />
+And he&mdash;he's stallion of the court, submits<br />
+To curb and comb that he may prouder prance<br />
+And keep the herd at stare. Surrender? Lord!<br />
+I think it!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Third Officer, from left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Third Off.</em> What's stirring, friends?</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Sleep-walkers.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Third Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">Ay,</span><br />
+This amnesty makes idlers.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">So to-day,</span><br />
+But work brews for to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p><em>Third Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You've a secret,</span><br />
+And I've a guess that picks the lock to 't.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Come!</span><br />
+These leaves are listeners.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They go off, lower right. Enter by path upper right,
+Se&ntilde;ora Ziralay and Guildamour</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">To find you here</span><br />
+Makes my best hope a sluggard, far outgone<br />
+By th' dear event.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I came five days ago,</span><br />
+The princess with me, here to wait return<br />
+Of Hudibrand. That you have come with him,<br />
+Makes sober welcome blithe.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">He's slack in health.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> That's written plain.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">What iron's in the man</span><br />
+That he yet lives?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">He's been in conclave?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Yes.</span><br />
+Five nights he routed sleep from th' drowsy synod,<br />
+And hung upon us turning every flank,<br />
+Till Protest paled and Patience bled at heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> And at the end?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">He held our seal&egrave;d bonds,</span><br />
+And Vardas sat secure.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">The bonds? We own</span><br />
+Our railways now?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">We do. And Hudibrand</span><br />
+Owns us,&mdash;that is, the bonds. A good, stout noose<br />
+For a nation's neck.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">And all these days he's been</span><br />
+In th' capital?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">In closest session, though</span><br />
+A stage-fed rumor held that he was gone<br />
+From Goldusan. The harried people fear<br />
+Assarian power, and on the jealous watch,<br />
+Keep Hudibrand in burrow.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">He's gay-blown</span><br />
+With confidence. I hear from Ziralay<br />
+He made a careless peace with all the friends<br />
+Of tottering Cordiaz.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">That carelessness</span><br />
+Was sea-deep cunning. Favors will go high,<br />
+They'll find. Megario gave full half his lands<br />
+For place in th' Cabinet.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Megario moved</span><br />
+In blaze of censure, and did well to escape<br />
+Singed of but half his goods. Two prisoners lost&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> Ah, Chartrien and....</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Rejan!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Be guarded here.</span><br />
+Fate rustles at that name.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">O, Guildamour,</span><br />
+Fear is the silent warder that divides<br />
+Our secret hearts. Give it the tongue of daring,<br />
+And like a blest interpreter 'twill bring<br />
+Our hopes together.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gui.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">There is stir within.</span><br />
+Come from these walls, Se&ntilde;ora. And if your hope<br />
+Is on the road with mine, I've news will make<br />
+The wayside sing. Winds gather here and yon<br />
+That may out-swagger even Hudibrand.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They go back along cascade path, as Hudibrand, Diraz,
+Mazaran, and Golifet come out of house</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> [<em>Holding up letter</em>] Nay, fearless majesty might take more note<br />
+Of this despatch.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">That beggar's mewl?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">There's power</span><br />
+In every word. LeVal must harbor strength<br />
+We do not know of.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Tush! That is the vaunt</span><br />
+Of weakness, not of power.</p>
+
+<p><em>Maz.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">What is 't he says?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> Avers him free of this impos&egrave;d truce,<br />
+And gives a fair foe's warning he'll attack<br />
+Whene'er and how he can.</p>
+
+<p><em>Maz.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Well bragged.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Dir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">His guns,</span><br />
+No doubt, are cooler than his pen.</p>
+
+<p><em>Maz.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">What more?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> Repudiates Bolderez, and declares<br />
+Himself the head of the Insurrectionists,<br />
+Sole authorized to speak and treat for them.<br />
+My lord, what shall I answer?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Answer? Humph!</span><br />
+Treat with a rag-pole? We'll not sag to that.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter, right, Se&ntilde;ora and Guildamour</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> My dear Se&ntilde;ora, is our freakish daughter<br />
+In hiding from us? We've not had her greeting.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> She knew you close engaged, my lord, and left<br />
+The hour to you. I'll tell her of your pleasure.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> My steps are yours. [<em>To his companions</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Each where he would, my friends.</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 14em;">[<em>Goes in with Se&ntilde;ora</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Dir.</em> I'm for a swim.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">And I.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Maz.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">The river? With you!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> [<em>Leading left</em>] Bolderez' men are gathering opposite,<br />
+Behind the river woods.</p>
+
+<p><em>Maz.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">The pick of camps.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> They know it too. There's water, and the trees<br />
+Are cool and friendly.</p>
+
+<p><em>Dir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Was it not resolved</span><br />
+Bolderez' men should join the Federal Guards?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> They do, in th' main. This is a straggling wing<br />
+Left in the hills, that we have given leave<br />
+To station here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Dir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">That's prudence too.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Maz.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Why so?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Dir.</em> I'm windward of a whisper.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">About LeVal?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Dir.</em> He's circling in. Let Hudibrand laugh low<br />
+Or the enemy will hear him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">This LeVal</span><br />
+Was dead and buried,&mdash;three months out of life,&mdash;<br />
+Shook from remembrance as the stalest clutter,&mdash;<br />
+Now, save our eyes, he's jumped alive and rides<br />
+Our foremost thought! Enough to send a man<br />
+Back to his marrows. I shall pray to-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Maz.</em> A plunge for resolution! That will cool it.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exeunt lower left. Se&ntilde;ora comes out of house and crosses
+to seat, right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> 'Tis five o'clock. No sign! But he will come.<br />
+He comes!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter Chartrien, lower right. They meet silently and
+clasp hands</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> My friend! I thought you far from here.<br />
+Safe in the capital. But nothing's strange<br />
+To those who've moved mid miracles. You've seen<br />
+LeVal?</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> I have.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; I long to greet him. O,<br />
+Such walking of the dead renews the earth<br />
+And makes it habitable! I have heard<br />
+It was Famette who saved him,&mdash;added that<br />
+To array of deeds that must unlaurel all<br />
+The heroines of time.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">There'll be an hour</span><br />
+To talk of that. Now you must see the princess.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Hernda is with you? <em>Here!</em></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">And Hudibrand.</span><br />
+No danger there. He wants you now, and says<br />
+You'll find good grass if you will leap the stile.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Answering her smile</em>] So blind as that? Poor mole,
+he's been in th' ground<br />
+Too long. Will never get his eyes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Ay, he'll</span><br />
+Deny the sun till 't bakes him in his burrow.<br />
+But Hernda,&mdash;O, what welcome waits you, friend!<br />
+The ivory-crusted temple, shut and sealed<br />
+To eternal airs, is now a fane of rose,<br />
+Whose cloistral stairs, that wound so futilely,<br />
+Will now through fragrant twilight lead you up<br />
+To windowed Heaven. Come! Come, take your own!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> No! Wait....</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">A lover speaks that word?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">Se&ntilde;ora,&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> That wound she gave you here is open yet?<br />
+But you were wrong, and with your wretched doubts<br />
+Assailed her in the hour she lay on rack<br />
+To save you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> On rack for me? She gave me up.<br />
+Gave me to him,&mdash;Megario,&mdash;knowing that<br />
+Meant death.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And yet you live.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I&mdash;?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Live. Do you not know</span><br />
+You were to die that night?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">I've heard.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Those hours</span><br />
+She gained for you meant life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">She gained for me?</span><br />
+I saw his lips on hers.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You did. And I&mdash;</span><br />
+I saw her face. The dead are warmer. She<br />
+Could bear that touch for your sake, and on that<br />
+Bore too your curse.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">For me? I'll hear no more,</span><br />
+Se&ntilde;ora.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> You will see her now?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Not now,</span><br />
+Nor ever. I am here by pledge, to meet&mdash;<br />
+A friend.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Masio enters lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> Is this&mdash;the man?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">No, but I know him.</span><br />
+He's seeking me, I think.</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">I'll leave you then.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Seizing her hands</em>] Nothing to Hernda!</p>
+
+<p><em>Se&ntilde;.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;"> &nbsp; Nothing. You and she</span><br />
+For what may come. [<em>Goes in</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You, Masio? From Famette?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> No, from the camp.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">The camp! But she is there?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> That's guessing, sir. There's fernseed on her wings.<br />
+She flits invisible, then bat your eyes<br />
+You see her.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> I've her word she'd meet me here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> Queer place. You come from Quito?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Yes. 'Twas there</span><br />
+I had her letter making this strange tryst.<br />
+I've travelled from that hour. Famette has left<br />
+Her name upon the air, and all the way<br />
+I heard it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> She's the bird of courage, dares<br />
+Go far as our LeVal himself. But here's<br />
+What brought me, sir. [<em>Gives Chartrien a letter</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">'Tis from LeVal.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">His hand!</span><br />
+His living hand! [<em>Reads, pales, and stands silent</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Bad, sir?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">No, good. 'Tis good.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> Then I'll be off. My head's no show variety,<br />
+But I'd not trust it long in th' grove of Peace.<br />
+We'll see you soon in camp?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">To-night, I hope.</span><br />
+Famette holds key to that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">The first star bring you! [<em>Exit</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p class="bblockquot"><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Reads letter</em>] <em>When you see the princess Hernda,
+kiss for me the hand that gave me freedom. It was she
+unlocked my dungeon and nursed my bones to life. What
+I am is hers, and therefore yours. Le Val.</em></p>
+
+<p class="noidt">Hast grown so spent, O Fortune, that one stroke<br />
+Must deal both death and life?&mdash;with hand that parts<br />
+The night, show too my rainbow loss?.... All, all<br />
+My future sold to the gray usurer Grief,<br />
+Who gathers up as sapped and withered leaves<br />
+Time's unimagined buds! No eve, no dawn<br />
+With Hernda! No brief night that makes<br />
+The sun unwelcome as he golds desire,<br />
+The warm mist-flower where we lie its heart!<br />
+Unbrace thee here, my courage! Valiancy,<br />
+First god and last in man, unbuckle here!<br />
+... How meet Famette? Smile on her smiles? Deceive<br />
+Her love? She'll lay her head upon my heart<br />
+And hear it crying "Hernda!".... Hernda lost!<br />
+I must not dream here open to the risk<br />
+Of her unanswered eyes. Their lure would make<br />
+Dishonor, that on wreck feeds rampant, spring<br />
+Unshamed in me. I would forsake Famette.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Goes right, upper path. Hernda comes from house and
+crosses rapidly to him</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Chartrien! Come! [<em>He turns slowly and meets her</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">You take my hand, here where</span><br />
+You wished me dead?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">That you have offered it</span><br />
+Proves me forgiven.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><em>You</em> forgiven? Ah,</span><br />
+Has my atonement swollen above my fault<br />
+Till I may nod a pardon where I thought<br />
+To kneel for one?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">LeVal has written me. [<em>Kisses her hand</em>]</span><br />
+This kiss is his salute, and that 'tis his,<br />
+Not mine, makes my lips bold to leave it here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Forgiven! Dawn is on my sky, that hung<br />
+Unutterably black! Yes, it is true<br />
+I saved LeVal. From Fate's own arms I snatched<br />
+My treachery's sequence, though his meantime pain<br />
+Is ever writ against me. Yet I too<br />
+Knew misery that might be mate of his.<br />
+And for that other wrong&mdash;here where we stand&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> My wrong to you! Nay, don't forgive me that.<br />
+Leave me a wound to keep me ever paying<br />
+The debt of pain that solely eases guilt.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I had to choose,&mdash;Oh, agony of choice!&mdash;<br />
+Between your death as certain as the night<br />
+And your surrender to Megario,<br />
+That seemed but death postponed, yet held a hope<br />
+Worth any hazard. That you live is proof<br />
+My choice was God's. My reasonless despair<br />
+Held Heaven's sanity. Ah, that you live<br />
+Is substance of reward, joy's permanent<br />
+Sweet soil, but there's a flower to spring from that,<br />
+A nodding ecstasy that I may pluck<br />
+For my own bosom,&mdash;is there not?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Don't&mdash;don't&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You turn away? You've still a doubt of me?<br />
+Then modesty may save her frigid self.<br />
+I'll speak for love, the one best thing this side<br />
+Of Heaven. You've taken my hand, and now my heart,<br />
+And all myself would follow it. My heart,<br />
+My body, and my risen soul. Yes, risen!<br />
+My past of clay is quickened with a breath<br />
+That waits not death to know itself immortal,<br />
+And this is all my pride, that by that breath<br />
+I'm rich enough to give myself to you.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">[<em>She waits for him to speak. He makes no answer</em>]</span><br />
+
+I am rejected, having but my shame<br />
+To cover naked love. Yet vanity<br />
+Finds me this scanted shroud. Seeing you here,<br />
+My hunger guessed at yours. I felt you came<br />
+To seek me, else my heart, timid with fault,<br />
+Had kept its silence, though my tongue had given<br />
+As now a friend's good welcome.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">I have come,</span><br />
+But not to you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">For why then? I've an ear</span><br />
+Of caution. Let my veins, at too swift flood,<br />
+Grow slow as prudence in what work you will.<br />
+Now that our aims are near as once our hearts,<br />
+You'll let me help? I swear by both our souls,<br />
+And yours the dearer one, that our desires<br />
+Are one bent bow, and if our arrows speed<br />
+They'll kiss at the same mark.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I'm fathoms deep,</span><br />
+But in a sea as sweet as ever closed<br />
+O'er drowned felicity!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Why are you here?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> To keep an oath!&mdash;that kept is our division,<br />
+Yet forfeited would so untreasure me<br />
+That being's god would blush dishallowed way<br />
+Quite out such husk of man!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">An oath?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">Oh, first</span><br />
+In made self-curses I'll unload some part<br />
+Of this stuffed loathing for the wretch I am!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Nay, I'll not listen.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Star that was a maiden,</span><br />
+Do not believe I loved you when my days<br />
+Ran tribute at your feet,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Say anything</span><br />
+But that. Those days were mine, and true.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">False, false!</span><br />
+For love is generous as the heart of bounty,<br />
+Giving defect perfection. Narrowed hours,<br />
+Beseamed and flawed, take from its seer-lit eyes<br />
+The unstinted, dear proportion secret yet<br />
+In Time's full dream.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">'Twas I who failed&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Not you!</span><br />
+That midnight moment held the dawn of this,<br />
+All this that now you are, and love had seen<br />
+The folded glory of yourself had love<br />
+Been there to see. But I cast dust upon<br />
+Your sleeping wings, and did not know your heart<br />
+Till wounds had laid it bare.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">How could you know</span><br />
+More than its native bosom where it dwelt<br />
+Strange and unguessed?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">If I had loved,</span><br />
+Such soul of fragrance had not hid from me<br />
+This unbound blossoming.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We must forget</span><br />
+Love's morning miracles forever missed.<br />
+His fair, warm day is left us,&mdash;sunset's gold,<br />
+And evening with the stars. That is enough<br />
+For me and you&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">My pledge! I'm here to meet</span><br />
+Famette!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Famette! I know her.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Know her! You?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> And know she loves. Then it is you she waits?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> She saved my life. But that unvalued thing<br />
+Is debt's mere rubble. 'Tis her love makes up<br />
+The sum unpaid and out of reckoning.<br />
+And I&mdash;how can I tell you?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">If you loved,</span><br />
+Look up. No shame can be where love has been.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> I've no defence,&mdash;yet say that you were lost<br />
+In midmost desert sands, and suddenly<br />
+A flower at your feet breathed of the woods<br />
+And darkling velvet shade where rest might be....</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> But that's a miracle.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">So was her love</span><br />
+To me. Or say that flam and falsity<br />
+Ensnarled your every way till no true thing<br />
+Seemed left on earth, and then in lifted flash<br />
+Truth's priestess eyes looked from a human face<br />
+And you were loved,&mdash;what startled warmth would say<br />
+Your heart yet lived? Would you keep back your life<br />
+In barren hug? Deny its sunless gray<br />
+To gentle eyes that asked but leave to lay<br />
+Their radiance there?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I understand. She gave,<br />
+And I demanded. So the gods decree<br />
+Her boughs shall bloom and mine go bare.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Oh, Heaven!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You love her, Chartrien?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Silence be on that.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I'll know it,&mdash;hear you say it. Is your heart<br />
+Mine, or Famette's?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> My life is hers.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Your heart!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Is yours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Ah! Then&mdash;I give you to Famette.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>He kneels to kiss her hand. Hudibrand appears in door
+of house, left. Smiles, and crosses to them</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Up to her lip, you rogue! A humble suitor<br />
+Gets humble favors.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] You, my lord?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Your hand,</span><br />
+My boy.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> It was my head you wanted, sir,<br />
+When last we met.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Not so. I meant to save you,</span><br />
+But Hernda spiked my train. To have you die<br />
+Quite safely in a rumor was the sum<br />
+Of my intent against you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You're not well,</span><br />
+My lord?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Most well!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">He's lost some sleep.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Tut, tut!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> You stay full long in Goldusan. I thought<br />
+You nearer home.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I'm cruising in the gulf,</span><br />
+By th' morning papers,&mdash;the <em>reliable</em> ones.<br />
+The gutter rags have guessed me,&mdash;but no matter.<br />
+I've seen the play through, and I go to-morrow.<br />
+Pouf! It has been a game!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You speak as 'twere</span><br />
+At end.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> It ends to-day. [<em>Looks at watch</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">'Tis just the hour.</span><br />
+Now Vardas is proclaimed the president<br />
+Of a liberated people.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">What of that?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> He's bowing now. "I thank you, gracious friends,<br />
+Most loyal citizens&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">What's that to do</span><br />
+With freedom's war?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">It merely ends it.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">What?</span><br />
+You think we fought for that? A change of caps<br />
+Upon two brigands' heads?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Tut, you've won more.</span><br />
+You with some justice warred on Cordiaz,<br />
+But Vardas is of heart so liberal<br />
+His people shall be rich in privileges<br />
+As many and as fair as in Assaria.<br />
+Myself will vouch it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">I will vouch it too.</span><br />
+As many pits fed with the souls of men,<br />
+As many images of God deformed<br />
+In lawless fray to hold the peaks of greed<br />
+And at the top sit on their goblin gold<br />
+Content with bestial purr, who might have touched<br />
+The heavens with song.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Is that for me, my boy?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> As many lives tramped out in hunger's scramble,<br />
+As many factories where driven wives<br />
+Forget the altar dream of babes and home.<br />
+As many sweating traps where flames may feed<br />
+On flesh of maidens, leaving still, charred bones<br />
+Whose only fortune is to ache no more.<br />
+As many brazen mills that noise their thrift<br />
+Above the ceaseless shuttle of small feet,<br />
+While you, the great arch-master, think none hears<br />
+That drown&egrave;d pattering. As many marts<br />
+Where, in law's shadow, girl-eyed slaves are sold<br />
+To blows and lust. As many cripples thrown<br />
+Upon the dump-heap of a soulless Peace,<br />
+Each season piled to moaning wreck more high<br />
+Than ever War made in its darkest year.<br />
+As many holes where life must lie with death<br />
+For privilege of sleep. Oh, I could give<br />
+Black instances till yonder sun be set<br />
+Nor end your loathsome list!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">A rare, hot sermon,</span><br />
+But I'm not Providence, that from my hand<br />
+Must pour unfailing bounty.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Humble, sir?</span><br />
+I thought you claimed a power that gave the world<br />
+The shape you chose.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">But I must use the stuff</span><br />
+I find here. That I can't remake or change.<br />
+So must my world show flaws and ugly spots<br />
+Due to its substance, not to my good pattern.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> That stuff, sir, is the same that lifted us<br />
+From four feet up to two! The elements<br />
+That played like death upon it but aroused<br />
+Their conqueror. In the embrace of winds<br />
+It made us ships and gave us wings. From dust,<br />
+The very dust that choked it, grew the dream<br />
+That lifts it deathless, an eternized God.<br />
+And surely as your grip makes it a slave,<br />
+You teach it freedom. In your clutch 'twill find<br />
+Once more the need creative, and upswell<br />
+With power that shall leave you by the way<br />
+As heaving seas leave straws upon the sand.<br />
+You shall be <em>nothing</em>. As a dream that dies<br />
+With waking&mdash;lost so utterly<br />
+The sleeper knows not that it was&mdash;so you<br />
+Shall be a vanished thing that man born free<br />
+Can not reclothe in guess!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Peonia's sun</span><br />
+Has touched your wits. You still think of revolt?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> I think of victory.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Your comedy</span><br />
+Is past its hour. Come, Chartrien, give it up.<br />
+Confess the war is done.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Bolderez' guns</span><br />
+Will make confession of another sort.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> O, ho! I see a light. You have not heard<br />
+The morning news. Bolderez has come in.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Come in? Your couriers flatter you. He holds<br />
+The heights of Gila with five thousand men.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> That's yesterday. To-day those brave five thousand<br />
+Are soldiers of united Goldusan.<br />
+Bolderez is adviser to the State,<br />
+A tinker in high place, who solders fast<br />
+The civic split&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> You dream! This is not true!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Yes, Chartrien, it is true. We've lost Bolderez.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> He&mdash;has&mdash;deserted?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">No, he proves him loyal</span><br />
+To me, his master.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">He served me always.</span><br />
+You fool, this was <em>my</em> revolution.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Yours?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Bolderez led my troops. It was for me<br />
+You fed his bony beggars. Ha! For me<br />
+You stuffed their hungry pockets with your gold!<br />
+I loosed your fortune when I know 'twould save<br />
+My own a gouge. But I've not dodged the score.<br />
+Those guns and horses for the Gazza scare<br />
+Cost me some paper&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You? My God! <em>Your</em> war?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> I knew the storm would sweep out Cordiaz,<br />
+So strode its back that I might hold the bit<br />
+When came my hour. My boy, you fought for <em>me</em>.<br />
+I made you do it&mdash;I, whom you have said<br />
+Shall be as nothing. Where's the mighty sea<br />
+Shall toss me as a straw&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">O, father, peace!</span><br />
+You see he dies!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Don't waste your tears. He'll live.</span><br />
+I've made good oxen out of wilder bulls.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> He cannot live! The pain of it, the pain!<br />
+When aspirations have returned as wounds,<br />
+Then even the soul must die!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">They all get up.</span><br />
+Stout workers too,&mdash;quiet, serviceable,<br />
+Pestered no more with dreams. Here, give him this.
+[<em>Offers a flask</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Rousing, pushing flask aside</em>] Ay, no more dreams.<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">[<em>Springs up</em>] But action! Keep Bolderez.</span><br />
+We have LeVal, whose undiscouraged heart<br />
+Bears on its tide the conquering desire<br />
+Of twenty thousand men!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Humph! Where are these</span><br />
+Invisible veterans?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Some gather now</span><br />
+About his banner,&mdash;some wait in the hills<br />
+Till they are sure it is his voice that calls,&mdash;<br />
+Some in your favor wrapped go to and fro<br />
+In your own camp, feeding a fire your gold<br />
+Can never light,&mdash;some dream till we have oped<br />
+Their prison doors,&mdash;in every part and corner<br />
+Of Goldusan, there's courage on the leap<br />
+To reach his side.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">What dribble!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Rein this storm?</span><br />
+No human hand, nor Heaven's now, may leash it.<br />
+It is the throe when travailing Life is shaken<br />
+In absolute birth that makes undream&egrave;d news<br />
+Even in the ear of God.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Fanatic! Fool!</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Have I not tried to teach you&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Teach yourself!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Come, come!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">I mean the words. The race has learned</span><br />
+Its lesson while you've played with sand. At last<br />
+The dumb, trod way has spoken 'neath man's feet,<br />
+And by that word uncovered he has learned<br />
+What he shall <em>not</em> be,&mdash;knows what heights of sun<br />
+Are his, and seeing takes his road,&mdash;no more<br />
+Battering in wild and bruis&egrave;d ignorance<br />
+A destiny of stone. Ay, consciousness<br />
+Has wakened in itself the unknown god<br />
+That gives the race its eyes. You, you a king?<br />
+Who do not know that every man is heir<br />
+To kingship that must leave such thrones as yours<br />
+Outcoursed and little recked as the strewn toys<br />
+Of childhood!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Mud-sill dynasties. You know<br />
+That I am master.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Master? You believe</span><br />
+That man, at top of conquest, who has made<br />
+Nature his weariless serf, and set the yoke<br />
+From his own neck on her divinities,<br />
+Will seal to you&mdash;weak, myriadth part of him&mdash;<br />
+Those wizard captives bending to the dream<br />
+Of his new world? Gird you with fortune that<br />
+He wrenched from stony ages?&mdash;let you gorge<br />
+The magic fruit snatched by his perilled being<br />
+In starward battle up the abysmal steep?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> I am a fact,&mdash;not words.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">You can believe it?</span><br />
+At last on dawn-browed heights, with victor foot<br />
+On mysteries bound the genii of his wish,<br />
+He'll trail his hopes to kennel? Let you pluck<br />
+His universe unflowered, and shrink life<br />
+To growling brevity 'tween lash and bone?<br />
+A slave to <em>you</em>? Obstructive clod,<br />
+Who could not stir with one life-budding dream<br />
+Though holy imagination tipped with fire<br />
+Should score her script upon you!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>A physical pain overcomes Hudibrand. Hernda runs to
+his side. He regains composure, his manner forbidding
+solicitude</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">I am patient.</span><br />
+One word of mine would send you manacled<br />
+To prison. If you are here to lay down arms&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> I'm not.</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">O, father! The amnesty!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">That shelter</span><br />
+Is not for him!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> Then speak your word, and learn<br />
+You fight not men but man. Wide as the world<br />
+His spirit blows against you, and little part<br />
+You'll cage in this one shackled body.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">One?</span><br />
+We'll drag the earth, or net the pack of you!<br />
+LeVal, marauding ghost, we'll prick his blood<br />
+Beneath his spectral mask. And that mad trull,<br />
+Famette, your holy maid&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">She's safe from you!</span><br />
+God is about her as she walks among<br />
+Your hope-lorn slaves and touches their dead hearts<br />
+To life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> To folly they are sick of! Ah,<br />
+Once more I've news. Your swarthy Joan has fled,<br />
+And all her magic warriors of a day<br />
+Again are beggars.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Fled?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">To her cactus lair.</span><br />
+But she'll trapse back between two bayonets,<br />
+Stripped of her phantom wings.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">She is not gone.</span><br />
+That heart of truth! When she deserts LeVal<br />
+There'll be a breach in Heaven, and fiends may claim<br />
+The day for hell and you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">'Tis mine without</span><br />
+Such warm avouch. Your chaparral cock and hen<br />
+Have parted company. Her followers now,<br />
+Cursing and naked, straggle to our camps&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Your pardon, sir! You are deceived.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Ho, ho!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> They're with LeVal. Not one stout heart is lost.<br />
+Famette but lends her captaincy to his<br />
+In needful absence&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You are much too wise.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I know Famette.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You&mdash;what? Know <em>her</em>?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 16em;">I do.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> This is the fruit of that mad jaunt,<br />
+Through Goldusan! Where have you seen her?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">Here.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Not here? That woman? Are you mad, my girl?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> I love Famette. If we were one, I'd be<br />
+But cinders in her saintly fire.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Here, miss?</span><br />
+You've had her with you? Sniffed and cheeped together,<br />
+And drowned my kingdom in a gossip cup?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> If men, the bravest, are but flies upon<br />
+Your monarch ermine, that with careless shake<br />
+You scatter, can you fear a woman?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">What?</span><br />
+Mocked by a chit? I fear? You mannerless filly,<br />
+I've let you plunge and ramp o'er all my fields,<br />
+But I'll not have you whinnying at the fence<br />
+Till roadside jades break through! She has been <em>here</em>?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> She has. Dined at my board, slept in my bed,<br />
+And so shall do again.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I'll welcome her!</span><br />
+And send you trucking home! You shall not wait<br />
+For any whimsy this or that!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">But, sir,&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> No trumpery packing,&mdash;no unready whine!<br />
+This hour! That you should moil your royalty<br />
+Touching such scum!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Nay, I was scum until she gave me substance.<br />
+I had no soul until she made hers mine,<br />
+No cleanliness of heart till I knew hers,<br />
+No knowledge till I looked through her clear eyes,<br />
+No riches till I wrapped me in her rags&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> You're raving!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">No. Ah, father, father, I'm</span><br />
+Famette,&mdash;your daughter! I've not been in Cana,<br />
+But in the pits your greed has dug,&mdash;down, down<br />
+Where misery is so vile its own abyss<br />
+Shudders to hold it. Chartrien, now you know<br />
+My tale untold. I see your mind runs back<br />
+To light a way it travelled in the dark.<br />
+O, you were blind! I'd know you near though masked<br />
+In utter change.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> I'm folded now in sun<br />
+That makes me blind again. Are you Famette?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Showing her bared arm</em>] See this brown circlet
+left that you might find<br />
+A trace of her? I've crossed the universe&mdash;&mdash;<br />
+Through hell&mdash;and reached you, have I not?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> [<em>Embracing her</em>] <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">All sweet</span><br />
+Forfending stars now heap their fortunes one<br />
+And drop it on my heart that borrows heaven<br />
+To hold the imponderable gift!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Ah, poor Famette!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em>'Twas you&mdash;in that foul hacienda pen?<br />
+And would not speak?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I meant to save you, sir.</span><br />
+And had I told you then, would you have set<br />
+So blithely off to Quito?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And left you there!</span><br />
+How can you think it?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Do I, sir? Nay, love,</span><br />
+Nor ever did. I knew you'd ruin all<br />
+With your big "won'ts" and "don'ts."</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">O, sagest heart!</span><br />
+But here you kept my joy-gates shut so long.<br />
+Why such slow mercy, golden one?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">You'll hear it?</span><br />
+There is a teasing devil in me, Chartrien,<br />
+That must have play.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Ah, no!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ay, and an ounce</span><br />
+Or so of cruelty, that would not let<br />
+Your frailty go unpinched.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Nay, 'tis not so!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> You'd rather think I put to royal test<br />
+Your godship? Wooed with lips so near your own,<br />
+And found you stanch to honor? That may be,<br />
+But I've a shameless reason dearer still.<br />
+I wanted all your love for Hernda,&mdash;all.<br />
+And had I said too soon that we were one,<br />
+Then on your breast my heart had never known<br />
+Which maid you clasped.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">You ever, sweet!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">Yet she</span><br />
+Is dear. My joy could never be content<br />
+Within your heart beside unfaith to her.<br />
+She must have room there, not in name of love,<br />
+But truth. So you shall hold us both.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">Like this?</span><br />
+Grow to my heart, O garland of myself!<br />
+Be breath of me, till, like a double tree,<br />
+Root, sap, and bloom are one,<br />
+And in our noble fruiting Time forgets<br />
+To mourn Hesperides!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Heaven hold thy wish</span><br />
+The prayer thou meanest it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">One bliss is man's</span><br />
+The perfect angels know not. In the arms,<br />
+Warm, rhythmic, round his battling soul, to feel<br />
+Spur of his noblest blood, and know his dreams<br />
+Are mated,&mdash;find in lightest winds that stir<br />
+Love's tremulous hair, the brave wing of his hope<br />
+That needs go farthest,&mdash;and when seasons fail,<br />
+And weary spirit turns from waste to waste,<br />
+Know lips that he may touch and touching kiss<br />
+The fallow world to harvest. Thus, and thus!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Hudibrand, forgotten by the lovers, has fought through
+another moment of agony, and advances, taking hold
+of Hernda</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Are you my daughter?</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I am, but I've known hours</span><br />
+When shame, a cleansing fire, searched through my blood<br />
+For any drop that owned you father.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">In!</span><br />
+Go in! [<em>To Chartrien</em>] And you&mdash;I'll rid the earth of you,<br />
+And take its thanks! [<em>Staggers with a return of pain</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> [<em>Her arms about him</em>] O, father, let us help!<br />
+What is it, father?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Nothing. Keep away!<br />
+Away!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Throws her off. Enter, lower right, an officer attended</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> Your majesty, there's sure report<br />
+LeVal makes ready to oppose his guns<br />
+To our weak garrison.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> [<em>Ironic</em>] <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The spectre's near?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> Across the stream,&mdash;the east and wooded bank.<br />
+A hundred times our force could not dislodge<br />
+His guns from such a vantage.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Guns? LeVal?</span><br />
+He has no guns!</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">You'll hear them soon. I beg</span><br />
+Your highness' pardon, but your dignity<br />
+Would not be touched if you should hasten out.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter, lower left, Golifet, Diraz, Mazaran</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> My lord!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> What is this tale? You, Golifet?<br />
+You are in charge!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">'Tis treachery, sir! I warned</span><br />
+Your majesty&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Come, what's the story?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">This.</span><br />
+Bolderez' officers whom we gave leave<br />
+To station near us, thus to put more guard<br />
+Between the town and rebels that might creep<br />
+Down from the hostile hills&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">This egg's all shell.</span><br />
+Come, sir, the meat!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">They were in secret yoked</span><br />
+Most traitorously with LeVal, and all their men<br />
+Were coupled to his cause. They gave him cover<br />
+To lead his army up&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">His army, sir?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> His followers&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">There may be treachery</span><br />
+Uncapped among us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">'Twas by your advice</span><br />
+We gave them leave to camp&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">I trusted fools!</span><br />
+Or traitors! You've a choice of names.</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">I beg</span><br />
+Your majesty to come with us. They'll fire<br />
+At any moment.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Fire? Then we shall know</span><br />
+At last where we may find LeVal. You've wired<br />
+To Vardas, Golifet? He must despatch<br />
+The Federal Guards&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">It is too late.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Too late?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Maz.</em> We can not save the town.</p>
+
+<p><em>Off.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">The citizens</span><br />
+Are fleeing. Do not delay, your majesty!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Fire of guns is heard</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Cowards! Before you fly, arrest that man.<br />
+Look to it, Golifet. You'll answer for him.<br />
+Let him be trebly guarded.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Is not this</span><br />
+The missing lord, Prince Chartrien?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Ay, that traitor!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> At this hot juncture, prudence must forbid<br />
+A needless insult to the enemy<br />
+That may too soon be master.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Insult!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Come,</span><br />
+My lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> By every god that was or is&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Guns again heard</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Gol.</em> Please you, retire, your majesty!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Men gather excitedly from different parts of the grove.
+Guests and servants desert the house</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Maz.</em> Come, come!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>A shell breaches the wall, rear. Stones fly among the
+trees. The house is battered and portico torn away</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> Grant me this favor. Let me be the last<br />
+To leave the Grove of Peace. Ha, ha! The last!</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Come, father!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Go! I've asked a favor, friends.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They turn from him and pass slowly out. Hernda and
+Chartrien remain</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Her.</em> Now you will come?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">When <em>you</em> have gone! Go, go!</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>More shells. Chartrien carries Hernda away, lower left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hud.</em> [<em>Alone, racked with pain</em>] My foe is nearer than those feeble guns.<br />
+Bah! I could crush them! Here I am fordone.<br />
+No, no! I'll not surrender. I will live!<br />
+I'll keep my world. I fought for it, and won.<br />
+'Tis mine! I will not leave it to these mice<br />
+To scramble over. [<em>The agony seizes him</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">A coward foe, that gives</span><br />
+No even chance. Strikes from the dark, with blade<br />
+Tempered secure in undiscovered fire.<br />
+... Shall then the world go on and I not here?<br />
+I shall be here,&mdash;a pile of dust, no more,&mdash;&mdash;<br />
+That is the hell of hells,&mdash;while other dead,<br />
+Who made them souls here out of faith and clay,<br />
+Race on unflagging,&mdash;on and leave me still,&mdash;<br />
+The everlasting mute!... Souls? That's a lie.<br />
+A ranting, tom-tom lie, to ease us on<br />
+The wheel. I'll none of that. The sick mind's pap!<br />
+Imagination's vent, lest misery<br />
+O'er-rack the world! Protective fume<br />
+Enclouding man's last grapple till none see<br />
+If he or Death be victor, and on the doubt<br />
+He rides to Heaven!...<br />
+... Was 't truth that Chartrien spoke?<br />
+The race has found its eyes? Man is no more<br />
+A blind and hopeless struggler cornered fast<br />
+By ills unconquerable?&mdash;his lusting wars,<br />
+Diseases, hungers, Hudibrands? Then what<br />
+A chance was there, my heart? If I had fought<br />
+Upon his side!... <em>That</em> battle would have made<br />
+Red Fate throw down her bludgeon,&mdash;won us place<br />
+To vanward of the gods!... If I had fought<br />
+With him.... Obstructive<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">clod!... My God! <em>My</em> God?</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>He dies. Sunset has passed, and the darkness grows rapidly
+until nothing is seen but the gleam of a fallen crown.
+Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<h2><a name="A_SON_OF_HERMES" id="A_SON_OF_HERMES"></a>A SON OF HERMES
+<br /><br />
+<small>A COMEDY IN FIVE ACTS</small></h2>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3><em>CHARACTERS</em></h3>
+
+
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'>BIADES, <em>a young Athenian</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>PELAGON, <em>his uncle</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>SACHINESSA, <em>wife of Pelagon</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>PHANIA, <em>their daughter</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>SYBARIS, <em>a neighbor's daughter</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>CREON, <em>friend of Biades</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>AMENTOR, <em>a senator</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>MENAS, <em>friend of Pelagon</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>CLEARCHUS, <em>an Athenian youth disguised as a dancer</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>PHILON, <em>a priest</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>STESILAUS, <em>a lord of Sparta</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>PYRRHA, <em>his daughter</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>ARCHIPPE, <em>his wife</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>ALCANOR, <em>his son</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>LYSANDER, <em>friend of Stesilaus</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>HIERON, <em>a young Spartan</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>AGIS, LENON, GIRARDAS, <em>his friends</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>DIANESSA, MYRTA, THEONIS, NACIA, ARTANTE, <em>Spartan maidens</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>THE EPHORS</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><em>Senators, citizens, soldiers, dancers, etc.</em></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT I</h3>
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>Pelagon's garden, Athens. Wall, rear, shutting off street. Upper
+right, path to street gate. Upper and middle left, entrances to
+Pelagon's house. Lower left, path to a neighbor's dwelling. Lower right,
+path leading deeper into garden.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter, upper left, Pelagon, Stesilaus and Lysander</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> A gracious senate! If such welcome keys<br />
+The tune to come, then our ambassadry<br />
+Is concord's instrument, and we may bear<br />
+Fair music back to Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Tut, the smiles</span><br />
+Of Athens are as flying leaves, divorced<br />
+From the tree's heart, as apt to light<br />
+On vagrancy as merit.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Stesilaus</span><br />
+Bears hard as truth. Yet I was warmed to note<br />
+The council's greeting.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ever Sparta's friend!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> And friend of peace. The age no more can bear<br />
+The locked alarum of our rivalling States.<br />
+We must the groaning tussle bring to end,<br />
+Or ends the world.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">'Twas wisdom's cue you gave us,&mdash;</span><br />
+To say we had our Sparta's sovereign word<br />
+For Athens' terms.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Ay, hold your embassage</span><br />
+Unstrictured, friends. In that lies flattery<br />
+Each lord will take to himself and thereon feed<br />
+A grace which will, in sort, come back to you.<br />
+What hour was fixed for answer? I lost that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> The last hour of the sun.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">The crier stood</span><br />
+Wrong side of my good ear, and I'll not twist<br />
+To set the gossips nudging me to th' grave,<br />
+Robbed in a shrug of twenty grizzled years. [<em>Looks about the garden</em>]<br />
+Where's Biades? He's always trailing here,<br />
+Save in the tick of need. I'd have him bid<br />
+The ambassadors lie at my house. Lysander,<br />
+You'll be my suitor to your comrades? Say<br />
+We've heart and room for all.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">For all, my lord?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> And more!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit Lysander</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">My Sparta thanks you, Pelagon.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Nay, such an honor shall not pass me, sir.<br />
+Now where is Biades?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Your nephew, friend?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Ay, Stesilaus. Bar my blood in him,<br />
+He'll fasten on your heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Report has been</span><br />
+Too dear his friend. What buzz about a youth<br />
+Of twenty-five! Sir, Attica is mad<br />
+To give him captainship. In Sparta now,<br />
+The spurring callant would be kept in ranks,<br />
+And yoked with Prudence till he learned her jog.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> In ranks! I see him! Well, just in your ear,<br />
+He sweeps a pretty curvet. With my wife<br />
+His slave, and Phania neck-deep in love,<br />
+He rides the very comb of my poor house.<br />
+If you would say to him, hold here or there,<br />
+I'd take it not amiss. But I do love him.<br />
+And now a bout with th' cook. The pest sends word<br />
+A double score of sudden guests are all<br />
+He'll have at table. Mine own table, sir!<br />
+Ha, there is Biades! He'll wait upon you.<br />
+Pray touch him as I've hinted. But no word<br />
+About our daughters, friend. We'll let that lie.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit upper left. Enter Biades upper right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Most noble Stesilaus, my heart greets you!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Greeting to Biades, whom Athens makes<br />
+Her general!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Would, my lord, this dignity<br />
+Were laid on senior years. Your Sparta's way<br />
+Is best,&mdash;to keep the cool, meridian bays<br />
+From youth-flushed brows. My moist and charm&egrave;d eyes<br />
+Spoke inward to my soul when they beheld<br />
+The ambassadors before the council, each<br />
+With staff unneeded, and gray locks that seemed<br />
+As wisdom's holy place.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You sat with us?</span><br />
+I did not mark you there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I kept in modest shadow,</span><br />
+Which is youth's fairest mantle,&mdash;though my rank<br />
+Moves back for none. But, sir, the Spartan elders!<br />
+Ah, might I see more men in Athens who<br />
+Thus honor age, and age that honors men!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Breathe that into your shrines.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">The gods who smile</span><br />
+On folly young, must weep when reverend years<br />
+And wisdom part. Mayhap you've noticed, sir,<br />
+In my good uncle here ... a falling off.<br />
+I would not speak but that I know your eyes<br />
+Can not keep curtain when the blabbing sun<br />
+Makes it no secret.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Somewhat I have seen.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Somewhat will grow to much ere you take leave.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> I fear it, Biades.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And yet, my lord,</span><br />
+Time has not carried him ahead of you<br />
+More years than half a score.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Tis t'other way.</span><br />
+I'm elder by that much.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Not you, my lord?</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">[<em>Muses flatteringly</em>]</span><br />
+
+The Spartan way is best. Was 't Pelagon<br />
+Led you to say you had full power to treat<br />
+With Athens?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> It was he.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I thought it. [<em>Sighs</em>] Sir,</span><br />
+In the Athenian mind there dwells a child<br />
+No length of days can age. We do not grow<br />
+As Spartans. But our vanity's no dwarf.<br />
+Tops with the highest, you've some cause to know.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> What of 't? Unlatch! unlatch!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">The people, sir,</span><br />
+Always our rearward urge, knowing you've power<br />
+To assent to all they ask, will ask for more<br />
+Than all.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Think'st that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">In your brave time you've met</span><br />
+Athenians of the best. Didst ever know<br />
+One modest?&mdash;slow to ask for what he thought<br />
+His own?&mdash;or what he might by mere demand<br />
+Make his?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> They are well stomached,&mdash;true. No doubt<br />
+They'll press us far.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">They will. And if refused,&mdash;</span><br />
+Well, they are children,&mdash;and must bite and scratch.<br />
+With strutting rage, may pelt you out of Athens.<br />
+But why not say you are in part empowered.<br />
+And must return to Sparta with the terms<br />
+Before a vowed conclusion?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Late for that,</span><br />
+Young sir. The tongue we used to the Council<br />
+Must serve in the Assembly. We have said<br />
+We have full power.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">To treat, not to assent.</span><br />
+That was your word.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Hmm! Now the cloud is off</span><br />
+The dunce's script, and I read clear why you<br />
+At twenty-five have Athens' voice to sail<br />
+'Gainst Syracuse.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Pelagon</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> No word unto my uncle!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> My brain will serve.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">They've come,&mdash;your comrades,&mdash;all!</span><br />
+If honor now were substance, my poor walls<br />
+Would groaningly unroof and beg the sky<br />
+For room to embrace it! Go you, Biades.<br />
+Repeat my welcome, with increase of grace<br />
+Your tongue is rich in.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">[<em>Exit Biades, upper left</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Now the full time comes.</span><br />
+We'll speak of that that's centre of our hearts,&mdash;<br />
+Our daughters, friend. This is the hour that ends<br />
+A watch of twenty years.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">A patient score.</span><br />
+So long your daughter has been mine, so long<br />
+Has mine been yours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Like flower upon a stalk</span><br />
+Long nursed and tended, comes the end upon<br />
+This day of budding peace. You've had no whiff,<br />
+No hint untoward, that what we did had best<br />
+Been left undone?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sir, what I do, I do!</span><br />
+When we changed babes not past their cradle sleep,<br />
+My mind then glossed the act with comment fair<br />
+As our unfructured hope. So does it still.<br />
+By Nestor, though I'm thitherward of prime,<br />
+There's none will say that with accreted years<br />
+I moult sagacity!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Eh, so! 'Twas well.</span><br />
+I've never doubted it. Here have I reared<br />
+Your Phania, Spartan-thewed, who now shall home<br />
+With Athens' gentle nurture in her veins<br />
+To hither yearn in blood of every son<br />
+She bears to Sparta. And you my Pyrrha bring<br />
+Back to her land to live a Spartan dame<br />
+Among Athenian mothers. So we feed<br />
+The unity we dream on,&mdash;quicken time,<br />
+Foresued, to give our tousing, touchy States<br />
+One civic heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Has Sachinessa kept</span><br />
+A secret tongue?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">A nut not closer sits</span><br />
+About its kernel. And your wife, my friend?<br />
+What of Archippe? Did she hold for long<br />
+Against the exchange?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">She did. Nor ever learned</span><br />
+To love your Pyrrha. For that cause,&mdash;and that<br />
+Our even trust might move with even faith,<br />
+Nor odds of grace to you,&mdash;I've stood her guard,<br />
+And made her comrade where a son might claim<br />
+The dearest post.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Good thanks, my Stesilaus.</span><br />
+From your wife's audit I'd not brush a doit,<br />
+But to the credit of my dame can set<br />
+A fairer sum. &AElig;neas' curl&egrave;d lad<br />
+Lay not more dearly in his Dido's lap<br />
+Than your sweet Phania in the swaddling love<br />
+Of Sachinessa. Ay, she'll swear me now<br />
+That not to gain her own will she give up<br />
+Her foster darling.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Humph!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">The little duck!</span><br />
+She has so chucked herself into my heart<br />
+'Twill put me sad about to oust her.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">Duck!</span><br />
+When I lose Pyrrha, sir, that hour I lose<br />
+This good right arm!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> [<em>Meditative</em>] Hmm! So!... Come, my friend.<br />
+The dinner's toward, and the host astray.<br />
+The love's deep-vouched that puts such duty off<br />
+For one more word. [<em>Pauses as they move left</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">We'll give no open voice</span><br />
+To our most dear concern till we have met<br />
+Our daughters.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> [<em>Gloomy</em>] Met our daughters! Have it so.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exeunt upper left. Enter, middle left, Phania and Biades</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Come, Phania! The old cocks are off.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">They're gone?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Good flitting too! I feared they'd perch till night,<br />
+Crowing the deeds of Stesilaus the Great<br />
+And Pelagon the Wise.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">These Spartans! If</span><br />
+They'd rest their clubs without the door, our shins<br />
+Would give them thanks. Why are we so besieged?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Why, Phania, why? Because your father dotes<br />
+On dull and sodden peace that never was<br />
+Save in an old man's dream. We dine our foes!<br />
+The city must throw ope her gates, forsooth,<br />
+Lest the dear enemy should take some hurt<br />
+Scaling the walls! They'd bleed us as we sleep,<br />
+And Pelagon would vow the sword at 's throat<br />
+Were Sachinessa's dozing kiss.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Ho, hear</span><br />
+The captain speak! You go to Syracuse,<br />
+And not content? 'Tis well there's one cries peace.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> What's Syracuse? To conquer Sparta,&mdash;that<br />
+Were warrior's work! Your father robs me of it,<br />
+Bringing the water where I set my fires.<br />
+But come! I've not made love to a soul to-day<br />
+Save ancient Sparta. Ha! it is an art<br />
+That should be spared such sweat. The Heavens mean<br />
+That I shall pull to yoke these two days left,<br />
+And love take beggar's chance.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Ah, but two days!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Come to our myrtle nook&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Nay, Sybaris</span><br />
+Might turn me out. That is her royal seat<br />
+When you'll play consort.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What, my Phania? Dour?</span><br />
+Does Creon keep away?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">I'm not for him.</span><br />
+You know it, Biades.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">But he does not.</span><br />
+Too oft I find him here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And Sybaris</span><br />
+Comes out of count, knowing you like this spot.<br />
+Yon path is worn of every blade.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Her feet</span><br />
+Can be so cruel?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">You love her still!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Nay, sweet.</span><br />
+Not for three days. Believe me, cousin!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;"><em>Cousin!</em></span><br />
+Athene save us! See her now,&mdash;the plague!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> By gentle Eros, Phania, we'll be kind.<br />
+I loved her once.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">How tall she is!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Ay, moves</span><br />
+A very sylph!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Sybaris comes on, lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> A fair day's greeting, friends!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> We double it for thee.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">My dearest Syb!</span><br />
+Do you turn snail, you keep your house so long?<br />
+Why, <em>hours</em>, I think!</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Indeed!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Where lovers watch</span><br />
+The dial, that's an age.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Oh, so!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>To Phania</em>] <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Do I</span><br />
+Not know?</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> An age? Ay, love grows old and fades in 't.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> A thousand moons in journey o'er my love<br />
+Would leave 't no withered hour! By the fair soul<br />
+Of one who knows me true!</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">That is no woman.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> A pretty oath!</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">But not a new one, dear.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Plead, Phania, dove! Let her not chide<br />
+Poor penitence on knee. In two days' time<br />
+I sail to war, yet stony Sybaris<br />
+Would break love's wings with doubt&mdash;put me aboard<br />
+With sighs to sink my ship&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Nay, Sybaris!</span><br />
+I'll vow him constant now.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Inconstancy</span><br />
+Once stopped for breath, and fools came with a chair.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> No thaw in thee? Plead, Phania, sweet! Your lips<br />
+Are unimpeached where mine too oft have worn<br />
+Conviction's droop.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Forgive, dear Sybaris!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Ay, be my tongue! Tell her that as the bee<br />
+Betrays the honey-buds yet hiveward flies,<br />
+I've left all by-roads for the true home-path.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> Then you have trailed all others stale. There's none<br />
+Left new but that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Tell her when I have sailed</span><br />
+From Athens' eyes into the sun that eve<br />
+May skirt with blood&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">No, no!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">&mdash;to walk with you</span><br />
+The haven's brim, watching the waves that throw<br />
+The sea-heart there, and know that from my ship<br />
+Pulses a heart to love's dream-sandalled feet<br />
+As constant as the sea to Athens' shore.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Sybaris moves relentingly nearer. Biades behind Phania,
+who sits on bench, leans to talk into her ear, but keeps
+his eyes tenderly on Sybaris</em>]</p>
+
+<p class="noidt">Ah, tell her, Phania, sleep is slow to come<br />
+Where warriors bed, and unforgiven hours<br />
+Are thorny comrades for an age-long night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> Then here's my hand. Pray Pallas 'tis no fool's!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Yours too, my Phania! In one breath I seal<br />
+Judge and defender mine! [<em>Kissing their hands</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Now with my ship</span><br />
+Will prayers go tendant, mending every sail<br />
+That storm may batter. Typhon, whirl the sea<br />
+To insurrection,&mdash;send her meekest wave<br />
+To crinkle round the sun, and hiss from Heaven<br />
+The mariner's port-star,&mdash;I shall be safe<br />
+While I have implorators fair as ye<br />
+To melt the gods!</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Ah, Biades, thou must</span><br />
+Be loved or die. Is 't heart or vanity,<br />
+That's so insatiate?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Nay, you have forgiven!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> But will not coo yet. Is that Creon comes?<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">[<em>Looking to upper right</em>]</span><br />
+
+You'll meet him, Phania?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">He knows his way.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Has news!</span><br />
+I'll pick the pigeon. [<em>Goes up right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">O, my Sybaris,</span><br />
+Thanks for this generous peace! But who could long<br />
+Be harsh to Biades?</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Such steel's not in me.</span><br />
+I but stood off, a shadow of resolve,<br />
+To hear him woo me back. His coldest words<br />
+Are ta'en from music, but when warm in suit,<br />
+Then music sues to him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Woo <em>you</em>? Didst say</span><br />
+<em>Woo you</em>? Couldst think&mdash;couldst dream&mdash;couldst let blind sense<br />
+So flatter?</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> Blind? Well, you've no eye to lend.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> His words were all for me, and through my heart<br />
+Were sifted to your ears.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">For you, my dear?</span><br />
+Now what a gosling 'tis!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Oh! Ask him then!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> You'll beat that bush. I have no doubt in cover.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Biades returns with Creon</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> You'll not go out?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">No, friend.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I warn you, sir!</span><br />
+It is your reputation left i' the street<br />
+That knocks for you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">'Twill care for itself.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">Nay, come!</span><br />
+Soon every ear in Athens will be crammed<br />
+Wi' the tale.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">What tale?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">'Tis said that Biades</span><br />
+Was cap and spur to riot that defaced<br />
+The Herm&aelig; yesternight.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Denosed, you mean.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> O, do not jest! I tremble, Biades!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> You must o'ertake the lie, my lord, ere winds<br />
+Be up with 't.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Let it fly, my Creon. When<br />
+Its wings are worn 'twill down for any heel<br />
+To trample.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> Not this feather. It broods on the air,<br />
+And its dark issue makes eclipse your sun<br />
+Can push no beam through.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Sinon's pate has hatched</span><br />
+The ebon chick.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">You're not far out. He wants</span><br />
+The generalship.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Hippargus, upper right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Here comes a tongue to market.</span><br />
+Most purchasable, tho' neither cut nor dried.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> The senate's messenger!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Greeting, Hippargus.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hip.</em> Greeting, my lord,&mdash;and I must lay command<br />
+On that, for you are charged on the instant to appear<br />
+Before the Council.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">The instant? Cramped to that?</span><br />
+And what to do there, sir?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hip.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Give proof you touched</span><br />
+With no profaning and injurious hand<br />
+Our threshold gods.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Go gently back, Hippargus,</span><br />
+And tell the senators I pardon them,<br />
+Knowing they do mistake. They would not lay<br />
+So dull an antic on me, and this charge<br />
+Is meant for Bico, my fat monkey here,<br />
+Whom they may have for trial.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hip.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Spare such jest,</span><br />
+My worthy lord. A hundred tongues have sworn<br />
+You said in open street, nor cared who heard,<br />
+The guardian Herm&aelig; might be nipped of ears,<br />
+And noses too, yet serve our pious turn,<br />
+Since they smell out no faults and citizens<br />
+Confess none.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Ah! Do they make wit a crime,</span><br />
+Who have no taint of its color? Say 'twere red<br />
+The senators would never be mistook<br />
+For woodpeckers. Gods! When they prate, I know<br />
+Athene's owl is stuffed, and her wise serpent<br />
+An old-year slough! Off now! Your pannier's full.<br />
+Trot and unpack.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit Hippargus</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Out! Follow, and deny</span><br />
+This answer! Dare you, standing on the top<br />
+And slippery point of fortune, throw your cap<br />
+In Heaven's face?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Dare I do less? No, friend.<br />
+The Council fears me, and would see me down.<br />
+My power is in the people, who for gold<br />
+And merry flattery give me their love.<br />
+But now they're on the quibble how to turn,<br />
+To me or Sinon. I'll not let them see<br />
+My office brought to question, and myself<br />
+Outfaced by perjurers in Sinon's keep.<br />
+Nay, when they find I'm not the senate's groom,<br />
+But know myself, their pride will know me too,<br />
+And I shall go to bed as I rose up,<br />
+The Athenian general.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">The street will bellow.</span><br />
+I'll listen to it, and pick interpretation<br />
+From 'ts roar. You'll come with me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Though oracles,</span><br />
+On every curb and step, begged audience,<br />
+I'd not go out.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit Creon</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oh, me!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Why so? I'm not a hare</span><br />
+To jump because a leaf falls. Wag the hour,<br />
+And Pleasure wait on us! If she fill not<br />
+My cup to-day, I fear it must go empty<br />
+A good twelvemonth. There are fair maids<br />
+In Syracuse, but they'll peer on me through<br />
+A crimson lattice.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">You'll not see them, sir!</span><br />
+Or break a thousand oaths! So oft you've sworn<br />
+No beauty out of Athens could persuade<br />
+Your eyes to worship.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Then the Spartan maid</span><br />
+Lodged here will let him sleep.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">What maid is this?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Why, Pyrrha,&mdash;Stesilaus' daughter.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Here?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Ay, everybody's here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">I saw her leave</span><br />
+The chariot. Such clothes!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;"><em>No</em> clothes, you mean!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> [<em>In shocked aside</em>] Just to the knees!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">And open to the hips!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> You say it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">And manners, none. I took her nuts</span><br />
+And sugared poppy seeds. She said she kept<br />
+No parrot.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> Here's a guest!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And when I said</span><br />
+I <em>lived</em> on them&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">My dainty!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">&mdash;then she asked</span><br />
+If that made me so little!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Ay, they feed</span><br />
+To grow in Sparta. Breed but monsters there.<br />
+No arts, no grace, no soft and tendrilled speech<br />
+That creeps to ends of being and looks back<br />
+Exultant and afraid. They are not men,<br />
+But, wearing human port, would force on us<br />
+A beastly comradeship. Set me to woo<br />
+A toad bred in a ditch of Attica,<br />
+But not a maid of Sparta! Were she fair<br />
+As was Persephone when she drew the god<br />
+From nether earth, yet sprung from that hard soil,<br />
+I'd let her beauty pass.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Hist, Biades!</span><br />
+She's yonder.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>They look middle left, where Pyrrha appears</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> I like the garden best when 't wears<br />
+Pale Cybele's gown. Apollo makes it harsh<br />
+In black and gold&mdash;Ah, Pyrrha! You have found<br />
+Our blossomy corner. Welcome to it, and know<br />
+My neighbor, Sybaris,&mdash;and Biades.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> I greet you, friends of Athens.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">Will you sit?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Who has not removed his gaze from her since her entrance</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">A walk! That was your wish.</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I'll show the paths.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> Nay, here's a seat.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">There's Artystone's rose,</span><br />
+Brought from the Mysian stream&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">She'll stay with us.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> The ivory cup of Isis, where each night<br />
+Her one tear falls,&mdash;and flowers whose sisters blow<br />
+In walled Ecbatana.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Come, sit by me,</span><br />
+Dear Pyrrha.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> I would see the garden.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Would?</span><br />
+We'll guide you then.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Ay, who would dawdle here?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> But rest a moment, Pyrrha. I mind me now,<br />
+That from this spot the eye may best o'ersweep<br />
+The full design. Yon mass of planes&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">I'll walk</span><br />
+Alone. [<em>Moves off, lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> Well!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Said I not?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Does nothing that</span><br />
+She's asked! And stares as though a woman's eyes<br />
+Were made to see with, when their chiefest use<br />
+Is not to see!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Crude as her Spartan rocks!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I'll follow.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Nay, she'd <em>walk alone</em>!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">She's Athens' guest.</span><br />
+I'll not be rude, whatever lack in her<br />
+Provokes me to it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Nor shall I, by all</span><br />
+The grace in th' world!</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">You shame us, Biades.</span><br />
+We'll go with you.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Each taken an arm of Biades as he goes right. Pelagon
+enters, upper left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Daughter, this way!</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Phania returns reluctantly. The others pass off, right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">My chick,&mdash;</span><br />
+Nay, I'll be brief. I know young feet would flock.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> O, father dear, I'd please you first! [<em>Kissing him</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">Well, well!...</span><br />
+You've seen Lord Stesilaus?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Just a peek.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Nay, he's no bear.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">He'll bite though. I know that.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Now, Phania, now! I have a reason, miss,<br />
+A most dear reason you should win the love<br />
+Of Stesilaus.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Love!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">I mean, my duck,</span><br />
+A father's gentle love.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">But, daddy, he's&mdash;&mdash;</span><br />
+So tall!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> He has a heart, my daughter.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Fum!</span><br />
+Are you so sure?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Find it the shortest way.</span><br />
+Remember he's your&mdash;hmm!&mdash;remember&mdash;hmm!&mdash;<br />
+That he's a man&mdash;as I am&mdash;and his pride<br />
+But April frost. Be as he were myself&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> As you? Oh, dear! [<em>Under his arm</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">And must I cuddle so?</span><br />
+Nay, that's for my own fa-fa!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Little Phania!</span><br />
+I'll lose my pipit,&mdash;lose my bonny bird!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Lose me? O, never, daddy, never! I'm<br />
+Your pipsey, wipsey, umpsey, ownty own!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> [<em>Resolutely</em>] Wait here. I'll send him by.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">But, father, why&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Nay, that's my secret. Not for little birds.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit upper left. Phania waits until he disappears, then
+turns flying, and vanishes lower right. Archippe and
+Sachinessa enter, middle left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Blest be Athene, there's nobody here!<br />
+The house is overrun, and Pelagon<br />
+Has twenty shadows, one at every door.<br />
+Out, in,&mdash;in, out,&mdash;with ears like aprons held<br />
+For every whisper! Here we're safe to talk.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> O, dearest Sachinessa, what's to do?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> We'll go to Philon. If he says confess&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> Confess? I'll never do it! I will take<br />
+What way he will but that, though 't be the one<br />
+Leads out of life. You do not know my lord!</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Your Stesilaus is no god, Archippe.<br />
+I'll tell you that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">If it should come to him</span><br />
+We never changed our daughters! If he learns<br />
+That twenty years I've made him wear the hood,<br />
+His roof no more would shade me. Nay! Confess?<br />
+Oh, Sachinessa, I should lose him quite!</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> That could be borne, I think.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">But lose my Pyrrha?</span><br />
+Be driven out from her? See her no more?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> There, friend, you stir me. Such a piece of man!<br />
+To strike like that because a woman's wit<br />
+Has clipped his own! He's not suspected you<br />
+In all these years?</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> Not once. I've watched myself<br />
+As I were my own jailer, fenced my heart,<br />
+And made my love a thief that gave my child<br />
+No open looks, but by her bed at night<br />
+Stole comfort as she slept.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Not I, Archippe!</span><br />
+I've laughed above the snores of Pelagon,<br />
+Knowing my darling near, whom he thought far<br />
+As Sparta. Come! You're taller by a head<br />
+Than I, yet die with quaking. And I thought<br />
+Each Laced&aelig;mon wife a lioness.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> Ah, but their lords are lions.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Well, they've mane</span><br />
+Enough, but they'd not shake it in my face.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> Will you confess?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Why, no. For Pelagon</span><br />
+Would play the spousal saint, sit on the clouds,<br />
+And with a piety intolerable<br />
+Forgive his perjured wife. What soul could bear it?<br />
+But I'll not part with Phania, know you that!</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> What then?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">We'll go to Philon. How to keep</span><br />
+Our secret and our daughters,&mdash;that's a nut<br />
+To break the oracle's teeth.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">If 't can be done!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> It must be done, Archippe. Come,&mdash;I hear<br />
+A chatter. This way out.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They leave, upper right. Biades, Pyrrha, Sybaris, and
+Phania enter lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">What of our garden,</span><br />
+Now all is seen?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Here gods should live, not men.</span><br />
+At every turn I seemed to lose the step<br />
+Of a departing deity.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">We are content</span><br />
+With our Athenian lords, and seek no charm<br />
+To turn them into gods.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Showing a locket</em>] I've here a charm<br />
+Does more than that. This jewel webbed<br />
+In mystic rings&mdash;and set&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">The Persian gem!</span><br />
+You promised me&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">It is a magic stone,</span><br />
+That gazed upon by a true-minded maid&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Securing the trinket</em>] I'll see it, sir!<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">I've heard you vow your bride</span><br />
+Should wear this locket.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>To Phania</em>] So she shall.<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">[<em>To Sybaris</em>] None else!</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">[<em>To Pyrrha</em>]</span><br />
+
+You hear my oath. Come, Sybaris, sit here<br />
+And, Phania,&mdash;come! You both shall peep at fate<br />
+Through a ruby portal, if your hearts be true.<br />
+Now fix your look&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">We'll see the same!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Not so.</span><br />
+Each fortune's connate with the gazer's star,<br />
+And tinted as she dreams. Direct your eyes<br />
+With flawless constancy, or you'll see naught.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Not lift them once?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Nay, fasten every thought</span><br />
+Deep in the jewel's fire, till I have said<br />
+The Persian chant of welcome to the spirit<br />
+Whose magic you shall see.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">A spirit? Oh!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> But she is fair,&mdash;framed as divinity<br />
+For adoration.</p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">She!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Lift not your eyes.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Stands behind Phania and Sybaris and makes the incantation
+an ardent address to Pyrrha</em>]</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Spirit of Fate, what mystical wooing</span>
+<span class="i2">May win thee to pause where we pray?</span>
+<span class="i0">Misers of Dream their locks are undoing,&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i2">Mistress of Keys, wilt thou stay?</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Priestess, thyself, O fairer than dreaming,</span>
+<span class="i2">Art deity's answer to prayer!</span>
+<span class="i0">Dusk in thine eyes is the seer-burthen gleaming,</span>
+<span class="i2">And moon-wands at rest in thy hair.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Far-foot Desire is lost in the winding</span>
+<span class="i2">Of valleys and gardens of thee!</span>
+<span class="i0">Hoop of white arms is circumferent binding</span>
+<span class="i2">The star-pastured world and me!</span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Sybaris throws the locket at his feet. He turns and sees
+that she and Phania have risen and are staring at him</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>After a silence</em>] I do not know this game. Will leave you to it.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">[<em>Exit, middle left</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Syb.</em> And I'll go home! [<em>Exit, lower left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And I'll go tell my father!</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">[<em>Exit, upper left</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> And I'll go stand in th' donkey mart and bray<br />
+Till a farmer buys me! Witched, and by a Spartan!<br />
+Mad as the fleeing ass of Thessaly! [<em>Exit, upper right</em>]</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />
+[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT II</h3>
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>The same as first act, a few minutes later. Phania in discovered
+in rear. Stesilaus walks frozenly back and forth, front, while she
+timidly advances and retreats.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Approaching</em>] I'm Phania, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> [<em>Looks at her incredulously, then walks left, leaving her centre</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">My blood and bone in that!</span><br />
+What dwarf-dish has she fed on? Ugh!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Crossing</em>] <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I've come</span><br />
+To walk with you. You like our garden, sir?<br />
+We've bulbuls in it,&mdash;and wee, visiting wings<br />
+From the unknown south. Can see them if you watch<br />
+A place I know. They dart like breathing bits<br />
+Of chrysoprase and sard o' the sun.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">Humph! You</span><br />
+Are Phania?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Braver</em>] Troth, I am! Wilt see a nest&mdash;<br />
+So small as&mdash;that! Could put it on your thumb.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 14em;">[<em>Takes his hand</em>]</span><br />
+
+I'll show you, sir. Don't you love <em>little</em> things?<br />
+They wiggle to the heart, my daddy says.<br />
+You love my <em>daddy</em>, don't you?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Ugh! Your&mdash;Ugh!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Defensive</em>] <em>I</em> love him,&mdash;yes, and all his friends. I do,<br />
+Though they're&mdash;so tall. I come just to your beard.<br />
+See now! [<em>Leans against him</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Get off! You squeaking pewit! Ugh!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Quiveringly</em>] Have I displeased you, sir?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 16em;">Displeased me? No.</span><br />
+You make contentment creep on honored bones<br />
+Far back as Laced&aelig;mon's earliest grave<br />
+That opened for my house. You turn my blood<br />
+That's not yet earthed, and hot as Sparta's pride,<br />
+To drops that mutiny 'gainst their own succession<br />
+And beg to be the end. Displeased? Oh, no!<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 15em;">[<em>Retires, rear</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Oh, sir&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Fails, and goes off weeping, lower right. Enter, upper
+right, Biades and Creon</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> But this confusion, many-throated,<br />
+Has single voice and warns articulate.<br />
+A treasonous tempest rises, and you stand<br />
+A god indifferent when you should bethink<br />
+Yourself most mortal. Vilest mouths puff bold<br />
+In Sinon's service. You must wax your way<br />
+To th' Council&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Nay, no bending there!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">But&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Peace!</span><br />
+Here's Stesilaus! He's most heavy shipped.<br />
+What is aboard? And now comes Pelagon,<br />
+With 's threshing-tongue a-ready. Chaff will fly.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Pelagon, upper left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> What thinkst of Phania? Is she not a chick?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> You've tricked me, Pelagon! What fubbery<br />
+Have you put on me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Sir? Now, now! Why, friend!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> That's not my daughter!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Drawing Creon back</em>] Whist!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">I'll see my own!</span><br />
+<em>My</em> Phania! Not that bib,&mdash;that mewling piece,<br />
+With th' milk still in her mouth!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Speak so of her?</span><br />
+A bud in th' dew! A cherry next its leaf!<br />
+A pippin on the limb!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Not mine, I say!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> If you repent you did beget her, sir,<br />
+I'll be your shift and own the curtained deed<br />
+'Fore man and Heaven.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">That my child?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">Yours, friend.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Would she had never left Archippe's lap<br />
+For Sachinessa's! Patience, cool my tongue!<br />
+But I've done better by your Pyrrha!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Soft,</span><br />
+Beseech you, Stesilaus! Here's no place<br />
+For trumpeting our secret. And brief time<br />
+Forbids it present voice. The hour is on<br />
+To hear the people's answer. Come, my lord.<br />
+Your comrades go before you. We're past late.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Friend Pelagon, though courtesy be pressed<br />
+To th' kibe, I'll urge you keep at home. 'Tis best<br />
+You be not seen in this. The lords, who know<br />
+You lean to Sparta,&mdash;and for that all thanks,&mdash;<br />
+Are pricked therewith to oppose us, when they else<br />
+Might voice us favor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Ay, they know me, friend.</span><br />
+My eye sets them at guard. They feel it, sir!<br />
+Puts them on screw. Well, so,&mdash;I'll stay behind.<br />
+But let me set you forth. [<em>Exeunt, upper right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Is 't trick, or truth?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Touch me! A needle's point</span><br />
+Could find no spot amazement hath not taken!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Didst hear it Creon? Pyrrha an Athenian!<br />
+O, words of miracle, if ye be true,&mdash;<br />
+Friend, friend, I'm in a whirl upon a way<br />
+To use this strange unearthment for the good<br />
+Of Athens. You'll be silent. Creon?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Nay,</span><br />
+I think&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> And now I've lost fair Phania!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Lost?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> With Mars i' the dusk of this debated time,<br />
+The Athenian general may not wive himself<br />
+With Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> True!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">I might give up command,</span><br />
+And be no more my country's armored watch....<br />
+Nay, Attica is first! That's sworn. I'll plunge<br />
+The sacrificial knife deep as my love.<br />
+And now 'tis done. Ah, Creon, tend thee well<br />
+My gentle loss.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> This sets thee o'er thyself!<br />
+O noblest bounty that in grace compeers<br />
+With emulous Heaven! What in me can pay&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> No more of 't now. But what a secret this!<br />
+If 't solely were my own&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">It is, my lord!</span><br />
+'Tis yours. I have no speech, no tongue for 't!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Thanks,</span><br />
+My Creon, thanks! And will you go once more<br />
+To th' street, where now it seems I have some need<br />
+Of loyal ears?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">I serve you, Biades. [<em>Exit, upper right</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Fast hooked, and feels no barb. If he'll lie dark<br />
+Till I would stir the waters.... Is it truth?<br />
+Pyrrha! Athenian born and Spartan bred!<br />
+By Mars and Eros! Here's a captain's bride!<br />
+There's flutter in me like a forest shook<br />
+With waking birds!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Phania, still weeping</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Why, Phania! Such a shower,<br />
+My kitkin!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Stesilaus sh-shook me so!<br />
+Called me a sque-e-aking pewit!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Ha! He did?</span><br />
+Well, listen to me, Phania. Come, look up.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15em;">[<em>Lifts her chin</em>]</span><br />
+
+A maid with little eyes should never weep.<br />
+Leave that to Juno orbs. They swim in sorrow<br />
+Like full moons in a lake, but beads like yours<br />
+Are only bright when dry. Shun grief as you<br />
+Shun mud. [<em>Exit, middle left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Gasping</em>] Why&mdash;Biades&mdash;he's gone!<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">He said&mdash;&mdash;</span><br />
+Oh, oh! If I could die&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Sobs with abandon. Enter Alcanor, upper left. He
+pauses before her. She looks up bewildered</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Ah, gentle star,</span><br />
+What shrouds thee in this rain? Yet thou'rt not hid.<br />
+Thy beauty shining on these clouds of pearl<br />
+Makes every drop that dies reflecting thee<br />
+A little, falling sun.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Oh, Biades said&mdash;&mdash;</span><br />
+He said&mdash;he said&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">If what he said so troubles,</span><br />
+Let me unsay it with a kiss that makes<br />
+Trouble forgot and dumb. [<em>Kisses her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>On his bosom</em>] I'm not&mdash;I'm not&mdash;<br />
+Not <em>ugly</em>, sir?</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">O, dove of Aphrodite!</span><br />
+Earth stores her beauty in this single face,<br />
+That she may show one jewel to the skies<br />
+When gods boast they have all!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Phania purrs comfortedly, then releases herself</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">How dare you, sir,</span><br />
+Attack me? Who are you?</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I do not know.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Not know?</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Nothing of self or where I am.</span><br />
+It may be those are trees on giant guard,<br />
+And these bright peeping things are flowers' eyes,<br />
+And this is happy grass we stand upon,<br />
+And that blue watcher is the faithful sky,<br />
+But I know naught except my soul is yours,<br />
+O, maid-magician, in whose snare I lie<br />
+Kissing the net that binds me! [<em>Kissing her fallen curls</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">But you know</span><br />
+Your name!</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> Not in this world a minute old<br />
+That now I find me in, but in time past<br />
+I was Alcanor, Stesilaus' son.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> O!&mdash;then&mdash;why&mdash;all is well! You're noble, sir!<br />
+My father will approve you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Hast a father?</span><br />
+And art not magic-born? Then I perceive<br />
+I must go back and find my earthly wits.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> Nay, he is Pelagon, your father's friend.</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> You're Phania, then!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Giving her hand</em>] I am.</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">No more than this?</span><br />
+No kiss?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Very shy</em>] You've had it, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">A phantom one!</span><br />
+'Twas in a dream, as two ghost-lovers meet<br />
+On an Elysian path. Too cold for earth!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Touching her cheek</em>] Nay, it is warm here yet.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>He takes her in his arms, and they withdraw lower right.
+Pelagon enters, upper right, in time to witness the embrace</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> [<em>Rousing from his horror</em>] Her brother! Gods!<br />
+Whip me all hagglers! We have stood so long<br />
+At door of our confession that this shame<br />
+Gets by us. Phania and Alcanor! Oh!<br />
+No shuffling now! When Stesilaus comes,<br />
+The tale must out!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter Pyrrha, middle left. She crosses, passing Pelagon,
+who retreats rear, unseen by her. She loiters right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Here's opportunity</span><br />
+At beck. I'll follow. [<em>Advances</em>] Ahem! My daughter,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 19em;">Sir?</span><br />
+You seek your daughter? I will look this way.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 16em;">[<em>Goes farther right</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> I must advance, and take her Spartan guard<br />
+With gentleness. My love, 'tis you I seek.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Stiffly</em>] You'd speak to me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">My little Pyrrha,&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 18.5em;">Little!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> I think of Phania. In my heart you both<br />
+Hold undivided place. Shall we not chat a bit,<br />
+My Pyrrha?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Kitchen maids do that, not men<br />
+Of State.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Nay, there's a time when one may cast<br />
+The civic garment and take household ease<br />
+In modest robe.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Aside</em>] A swaddling band would fit him!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> You will not hear me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I wait upon you, sir.</span><br />
+For if your hostship I forget, and leave<br />
+The fees of grace unpaid, I yet must know<br />
+You are my father's friend. Say what you will,<br />
+My lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> That word undears me! Let your tongue<br />
+Breach colder custom and give me a name<br />
+That brings me near in love as Stesilaus.<br />
+Wilt call me father, Pyrrha?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Retreating</em>] You, my lord?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> They've frozen her, poor child! Must blow more warm.<br />
+Indeed a father. Call me what I am,<br />
+For so I love you, Pyrrha.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Is it thus</span><br />
+The Athens sages talk?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ay, we're not cut</span><br />
+Of ice as Spartans are. Here your poor heart<br />
+Shall know what sun is, and the Springs you've lost,<br />
+Betrayed without a bloom in frigid Sparta,<br />
+In Athens shall blow fair. You are amazed,<br />
+My sweet, but by this kiss&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Giving him a blow</em>] You goose-eyed goat!<br />
+I strike not at your years, Lord Pelagon,<br />
+But at your mind which has not come of age<br />
+And gives me elder right.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit, middle left. While Pelagon is recovering, enter
+Stesilaus, upper right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> [<em>Welcoming the interruption</em>] You, Stesilaus?<br />
+So soon, friend, from the Assembly?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Late, sir, late!</span><br />
+More haste had been more prudence.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">Why, why, why!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Where is your buttery nephew, Biades?<br />
+Who slips to the seat of question and melts all<br />
+Into one potch of folly!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">But I'd know&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Why I am here, not there? A crater mouth<br />
+That calls itself a people hissed eruption<br />
+Into my face, and without bow I set<br />
+My back to 't, sir!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Blame me for all! I knew</span><br />
+I should not stay behind! The gods do know<br />
+I am the voice of Athens. 'Tis no pride<br />
+That speaks bare truth. I'll go&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Tuh, tuh!</span><br />
+A word with Biades&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">But not too sharp,</span><br />
+My friend. He is of weight&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">No sharper than</span><br />
+My stick! Then I set out for Sparta, where<br />
+The very ground knows Stesilaus walks!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> And Phania goes with you?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">Not if the chit</span><br />
+May corner in your kitchen! She's worth that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> You'll leave her here?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">It will content me. I'll</span><br />
+Surrender both.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> What? Both! Nay, your free heart<br />
+Shall not outdo my own.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">You'll give me Pyrrha?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Friend of my soul, I will!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> [<em>Moved</em>] <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Thanks, Pelagon.</span><br />
+She's dearer than my son. More like my blood.<br />
+Alcanor is too soft and woman-lipped.<br />
+Too much Archippe in him from his birth,<br />
+Nor blows could drive it out.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">And mine own eyes</span><br />
+Have seen a cooing match between himself<br />
+And Phania.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Zeus! His sister!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">While we speak,</span><br />
+The fated pair are yonder&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I'll get him home!</span><br />
+And leave the witch to you! Had I a doubt<br />
+To hold me back, this turn would be<br />
+Decision's point. She must stay here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">But how</span><br />
+Make answer to our wives? Our wisdom's nicked<br />
+Where it is tenderest if we confess.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> What's to confess? I know my will and do it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Ay, ay, you bear your wife in a sack, but mine<br />
+Is on her feet and goes her pace. Look yon!<br />
+They come together! A brace, and one of them<br />
+Would tie my tongue.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Tie water in a brook!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Archippe and Sachinessa enter upper right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> We do not come to shame you, noble lords<br />
+And husbands, though we've that to bear which put<br />
+To honest ballad would uncrest your pride<br />
+And clip a reef or two from the tall sail<br />
+Of dignity.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Why, madam, this approach?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> I walk, sir, in my garden when I please.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> We have a suit, my honored lords, which you<br />
+May think full strange, remembering our prayers<br />
+Of twenty years ago.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">What suit canst have?</span><br />
+If you must try the goose-step out of doors,<br />
+Go thank the gods for suiting you with me,<br />
+Who save you from all suit by hearing none.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Not hear us, sir? I'll catch you by the ears<br />
+And shake the pride-wool out, but you shall hear!<br />
+Suited with you! And then go thank the gods!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Why, Sachinessa, love! What you, duck?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> This, Pelagon. When in that sad year gone<br />
+You took my child from me&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">What? That again?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Not that, but this. I did not stay you then,<br />
+Being young in wedlock and my wit at cheep<br />
+In its first feathers. But this second time<br />
+When you lift up your hand to cut the bough<br />
+Whose root is in my heart, I'll speak so loud<br />
+That if your dull ear miss, I'll reach you yet<br />
+By way o' the stars that will cry back my wrong<br />
+When they so hear it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You would beg for Phania?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> I would. There is no source of love so great<br />
+As brooding care. That makes the mother, not<br />
+The childing pangs. Though she, from the first hour,<br />
+Will cherish what she must so dearly buy,<br />
+'Tis day by watchful day her swelling love<br />
+Is born. So I, as new days past, forgot<br />
+The child of my brief pain, and gave to one<br />
+That nestled in her place my care-born love.<br />
+Now you would strike again&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Sweet, by my soul,&mdash;</span><br />
+Nay, Sachinessa, dearest heart, be calm.<br />
+Your words have never in our mated life<br />
+Moved me as now. If Stesilaus yields,<br />
+And his stern will be broken by your plea,<br />
+I am content.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> I'm so far moved, my friend,<br />
+That I will hear Archippe speak her wish.<br />
+Her love for Pyrrha will not match with that<br />
+Your wife bestows on Phania.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Ay, my lord,</span><br />
+I've never loved the stranger as my own,<br />
+But she is dearer than my own grown strange.<br />
+I see in Phania all my tender loss,<br />
+But it is lost forever. Give me, Pyrrha.<br />
+I have no other daughter.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Keep her, dame.</span><br />
+But make this weakness not your heckling ground<br />
+Where you would spar for favors. No more suits!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> And, Sachinessa, hear the same from me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> You borrow feathers and I'll twitch 'em out!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> [<em>To Archippe</em>] Lest you should badger, footed safe on this,<br />
+Know that my judgment's not earwigged by you<br />
+To this repeal, but now configures pat<br />
+To the act itself, that keeps a constant step<br />
+With our first purpose. Our intent comes out<br />
+With even edges, though reversed in face.<br />
+An Athens' maid shall be a Spartan mother,<br />
+And here shall dwell a dame of Spartan blood.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> You hear it, Sachinessa. I'm not one<br />
+To throw my pack away in sight of home.<br />
+Come mud, come mire, I bear my judgment out,<br />
+As Athens knows.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I'll swear to it there's no man</span><br />
+I' the city better hides the sun with a sieve!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> And secondly, my dame, know that I've won<br />
+My high contention that the laws of Sparta<br />
+Are best for brooding earth a godlike race.<br />
+For here my proof enroots in warmest life<br />
+That they can aggrandize the chalky veins<br />
+Of pampered Attica to ducts that bear<br />
+The red, unconquered sap of Laced&aelig;mon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> So Pyrrha is your proof!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">No question there.</span><br />
+A weak, Athenian babe grows up the pride<br />
+Of Sparta, while a budling of her own,<br />
+Nursled by Athens' soft and careless shift,<br />
+Scarce grows to woman's level&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Why, you puffed&mdash;&mdash;</span><br />
+You pride-blown&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Come with me!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">But such a bladder!</span><br />
+He'd top a flood into the second world<br />
+And wet but half his skin!</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Nay, Sachinessa,</span><br />
+Our suit is won. No words! We'll haste once more<br />
+To Philon's shrine. For this dear joy I'll bend<br />
+A willing knee. Come, come!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">[<em>Draws her away, upper right</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> [<em>Capering</em>] Could reel it now<br />
+Like school-boy 'scaped a whipping!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Shame! Your years</span><br />
+Will blush. [<em>Goes left</em>] Now Biades, and then farewell!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Ah, there's my mourning cloak! I'll go at once<br />
+To th' Council, and&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Vain labor, Pelagon.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Nay, I will stir them!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit, upper right. Biades enters left. He is arrayed in
+a purple gown with long train held up by his monkey.
+A peacock fan swings from a girdle, and jewels dangle
+from his ears. He carries a scroll from which he reads
+as he walks, tittering over the matter. Stesilaus watches
+him curiously, then amazedly recognizes him</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Biades! Is 't he?</span><br />
+May eyes report it to a brain unshaken?<br />
+... Ho, sir,&mdash;or madam?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Did you speak, my lord?</span><br />
+Your pardon! I was buried here,&mdash;quite drowned<br />
+I' the honey of this tale. Sir, it suggests,&mdash;<br />
+But that's not it,&mdash;the style, so quaint, so pure,&mdash;<br />
+It plays with thoughts and leaves them bright as shells<br />
+The sea has polished to their curling edges.<br />
+You'll hear this line? 'Tis worth a pause. Eh, not?<br />
+You've never wooed the script? Ah, I forget.<br />
+War is the art of Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Are you man?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> What's that to an artist, sir? Life in me packs<br />
+The germinal grain of all, and what may come<br />
+To birth and bloom, I leave to nursing Fate.<br />
+But you seem ruffled,&mdash;warm. Pray have my fan.<br />
+Then take my parchment,&mdash;sit you in this nook<br />
+And read of Corys and his water-nymph<br />
+Until the charm of an unhurrying world<br />
+Steals wave-like round you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Olympus! Was 't this voice<br />
+That tripped my reason? Led my cautious years<br />
+To take instruction from a dizzened ape<br />
+And lose the cause they guarded? Was 't myself<br />
+So slubbered judgment&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ah, must I believe</span><br />
+You honored my good counsel?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Good!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">'Twas good</span><br />
+For Athens. Ha, you slipped into the noose<br />
+As easily as my finger takes this ring.<br />
+A wondrous sapphire here. You know the stone?<br />
+This is from Egypt,&mdash;has the desert fire<br />
+'Neath Nilus' liquid smile. Is 't not a treasure?<br />
+But I forget. Your Sparta has no gems.<br />
+By Hera's belt, your country goes too bare<br />
+For this adorn&egrave;d earth!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Come, Biades!</span><br />
+Throw off that gown, and with a captain's sword<br />
+Deny this folly!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Friend, 'tis not my hour</span><br />
+For exercise. Our moods, I see, would quarrel.<br />
+But here's my thornless world. You'll pardon me.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Resumes walking and reading as before. Pyrrha enters,
+middle left, and stands watching him. He looks up and
+is struck motionless to find her eyes upon him. She
+comes nearer for a detached scrutiny, then crosses right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Find me Alcanor, daughter. And this hour<br />
+We leave for Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I am ready, sir.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit, lower right. Stesilaus goes into house, upper left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> She has good eyes, and used them. Overshot,<br />
+By Hermes! I must follow,&mdash;'twixt this fool<br />
+And meditation's eye must interpose<br />
+My soldier self!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Tears off robe, under which he wears a simple, belted
+tunic, flings jewels from his ears, and drives out Bico.
+Goes off, lower right. Enter Pelagon, much ruffled,
+from street</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Where's Stesilaus? Stesilaus, ho!<br />
+Find Stesilaus!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">[<em>Stesilaus returns, upper left</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">O, my friend, they're mad,</span><br />
+And you must fly! I never was so battered!<br />
+The senators cry out you played with them<br />
+As though their stationed honors were a row<br />
+Of last year's weanlings,&mdash;first to say you bore<br />
+Full power to treat, then at their open answer<br />
+To cover and prefer the opposite,<br />
+Declaring that their noble terms must cool<br />
+On th' road to Sparta! As I speak your comrades<br />
+Are driven through the gates. You must not stay.<br />
+They'll have your life, they are so worked. Come, come!<br />
+I know a way&mdash;I'll get you through&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">I'll go</span><br />
+The way I came.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Nay, nay, I'll slip you out!</span><br />
+Leave here your wife and daughter. In gentler hour<br />
+I'll send them after, with your son,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I'll speak</span><br />
+To Pyrrha&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> No! This way! The world's at somersault!<br />
+The turtle's on his back, his claws to Heaven!<br />
+No one would hear me! <em>Me!</em> The voice of Athens!<br />
+And jeered me down, for I was Biades' kin,&mdash;<br />
+Though why the wind sits so I know not!<br />
+Come&mdash;come&mdash;I was so battered&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exeunt, upper left. Pyrrha and Biades enter, lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">But one word!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> I've let you shower words in hope to drain<br />
+Your breath of them, but they grow to a hail.<br />
+Pelt me no more, Athenian.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">O, that name</span><br />
+I held my pearl of honor is become<br />
+A wounding thorn! I'll wear 't no more.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">You'll be</span><br />
+A Spartan?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Ay, if you are one!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">So vows</span><br />
+An Athens' captain.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Nay, I have no place,</span><br />
+No rank, no office, duty or pursuit,<br />
+But this my gage is in. Nor rest till I have won!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Then you'll die weary, sir. So long 'twill take<br />
+To make me yours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">If you will love my shade</span><br />
+I'll on the instant make myself a ghost!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Love's burning deeds do ever lie before him.<br />
+He ne'er gets past to make them history.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> O, hear my oath! Thy birthland shall be mine!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Whist, Biades! The gods might hear you too.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I'll swear it in the ears of Zeus!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">By what</span><br />
+Irreverenced deity wilt break it?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Ah,</span><br />
+By none, fair Pyrrha! I'll stake my golden part<br />
+In love's eternity, no land's more dear<br />
+To my own heart than that which gave you birth.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Ay, for on Spartan soil the laurel grows<br />
+Which you would pluck from drenched defeat and set<br />
+Among your bays. So dear as that!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>A clamor is heard in street</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I'll woo</span><br />
+In better time. Till then let this pure gem<br />
+Speak for me on your breast. 'Tis like my love,<br />
+No sudden thing. For as this captive fire<br />
+Dreamed in the heart of earth and could not wake<br />
+Till beauty born in man sent down his kiss,<br />
+So lay my love in Life from her first breath,<br />
+Deep as unconsciousness, till at your step<br />
+It knew itself. You scorn the half-hour flame,<br />
+But in your coming like an instant dawn<br />
+Find all its brevity. Ay, Pyrrha, sweet!<br />
+And let my token lie, a patient prayer,<br />
+Upon your bosom. Heaven should have its sun!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Drops the locket into the folds of her dress. She casts it
+to the ground</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Athens is such a sun, and Sparta as my foot<br />
+Shall overcloud it! [<em>Exit, middle left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Had she crushed my gem</span><br />
+To bleeding dust, I'd pay it o'er to see<br />
+Such flame unsheathe. Bright Eos necklaced with<br />
+A darkling east could not more beauteously<br />
+Threat earth with storm. [<em>Takes up the locket</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You'll wear it yet, my terror,</span><br />
+Or I'll cut out the tongue that can not wag<br />
+To a woman's heart.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">[<em>Enter Creon from street</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">What, Creon? Dumb with news?</span><br />
+Which I will guess before your tongue's uncrimped.<br />
+We've lost our gentle guests? Our Spartan friends<br />
+Are off?</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> They're driven out. But that is old.<br />
+Atop that tale, like mountain on a hump,<br />
+Comes one will wake you, sir! The tumbling streams<br />
+That bore the Spartans out, rage back again,<br />
+A gathered flood against you,&mdash;you, my lord!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Ah!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Sinon's poison spreads till men<br />
+That yesterday lay down before you, now<br />
+Cry for your death. I warned you, friend!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">You did.</span><br />
+Be happy then. Your duty's done.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Oh, sir,</span><br />
+Your house is sacked, and all your golden plate,<br />
+Parcelled on robber backs, is carried out<br />
+And spots the city with a hundred suns!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> There's more i' the world. Let that not trouble you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> Your robes are in the street, and carters' wheels<br />
+Grow royal with them!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Well, there yet are looms.</span><br />
+While weavers know their art this is no loss.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> Your pictures&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What? If they've one finger laid</span><br />
+On those immortal treasures&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">All are riddled!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> All, Creon? Not my Zeuxis? No! The stones<br />
+Hurled at it would have paused as though a god<br />
+Were hidden there!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">All, friend.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Ay, these are tears.</span><br />
+But I will chide them and think on my sword.<br />
+Now I must bend me to the senators,&mdash;<br />
+Get leave to call my troops,&mdash;<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">[<em>Enter a body of senators, Amentor at their head</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Most noble lords,</span><br />
+I was about to seek you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Shifts your mood,</span><br />
+Proud Biades? The answer's not yet cold<br />
+That came so hot from you,&mdash;a two-edged shame<br />
+That struck into your honor as our own!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Nay, gentle senators, Athenian fathers!<br />
+That you could note so low, so foul a charge<br />
+As secret Sinon brought against my name,<br />
+Gave me the block, the bellows, and the fire<br />
+Wherewith I forged my answer,&mdash;one that kept<br />
+My honor whole, and if your own needs surgery,<br />
+Lay 't not to me, but let good sense mend all,<br />
+And give me leave to go against this mob<br />
+Now scarring Athens' beauty.</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Go alone.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I have an army.</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Ask Lord Sinon that.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> When fishes drown!</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Put out your single arm,</span><br />
+And feel your army in it. Athens' troops<br />
+Are now in Sinon's charge. You are no more<br />
+Her general. You are banished.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Is this so?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Senators.</em> It is.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Then I am dumb. Words on your heat</span><br />
+Would fall as snow,&mdash;and I am not a man<br />
+To let my scars speak, though my body bears<br />
+Enough to cry you shame.</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">We know your valor,</span><br />
+But with it goes a pride no State could bear<br />
+But that it must. Make your escape, my lord.<br />
+The people pressed us, and we save your life<br />
+By this decree.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> O, Athens that did love me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> And now repents that love, for know you, sir,<br />
+Though men may be irreverent as they choose,<br />
+They'll follow only who revere their gods.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exeunt senators</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> But you were meek!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">If I had let them know</span><br />
+I've yet a tongue, they might have had that too,<br />
+And in the courts where I must sue for love<br />
+'Twill be my royal member,&mdash;all my suite<br />
+And kingly plenitude.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">They will repent.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> On knees, sir! Banished! O, my heart could lend<br />
+Hot Sirius fire!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">&nbsp; You! Banished!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Nay, while sense</span><br />
+From wit and speech are undivorced, and courage<br />
+Knits them in purpose drinking up the seas<br />
+That distance me from Athens, who shall say<br />
+I'm banished? Bribe mankind and nature too,<br />
+Ye bleary senators! Suborn the winds!<br />
+Put me at end of farthest watery leagues!<br />
+While there's no rift between me and my gods,<br />
+I'll shake this night as from Apollo's brow<br />
+And show my day emergent!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Where wilt go?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> To Persia first, where I am dear to Phernes.<br />
+And then, perchance, with Persia at my back,<br />
+Sparta may find me fair, though now I'm black<br />
+As Pluto's poker. We'll not flag, my heart,<br />
+Till every fleet o' the world rides here and makes<br />
+This saucy harbor tremble! What an ague then<br />
+Shall shake thee, Athens, thinking on this hour!</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />
+[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT III</h3>
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>The assembly ground of the Spartans. Maidens discovered. A dance
+is ending.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> We limped through that. Apollo! Are there thorns<br />
+I' the grass? We'll better it. Come!</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">No time. I hear</span><br />
+The senators.</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> They wait beyond the bridge<br />
+For old Aristogeiton. Come, my maids!<br />
+You, Dianessa need to school your toes.<br />
+'Twas you played wild-foot&mdash;twice!</p>
+
+<p><em>Art.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Save her a slip</span><br />
+When Agis' eye is on her!</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Faith, she'd be</span><br />
+No bride this year!</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">&nbsp;What ache for that? His love</span><br />
+Is slight if 't hangs upon my toes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">My troth!</span><br />
+Less might catch more!</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You, Nacia, are not so lithe</span><br />
+As a ferret in a hoop. An Athens maid<br />
+Might labor so in all her skirts.</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">&nbsp;Ho, ho!</span><br />
+A little puff blow such a fire? The coals<br />
+Were hot then!</p>
+
+<p><em>Myr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Nay, my girls, we'll douse you both</span><br />
+I' the river yonder if you flame at naught.<br />
+How, Dianessa, dance the maids of Athens?<br />
+But surely not in skirts!</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">My father saw them,</span><br />
+And so he said.</p>
+
+<p><em>Myr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Why dance at all then? Grace</span><br />
+That cadent girdles the invisible waves<br />
+Of flute and harp is born of faining limbs,<br />
+And hide them who may see it?</p>
+
+<p><em>The.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">No doubt they bob</span><br />
+Like bears in blankets, and believe they dance.</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> Pyrrha could say. But since she came from Athens<br />
+Who hears her speak?</p>
+
+<p><em>Art.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">She keeps from all our games,</span><br />
+And scorns the wrestle, though our noblest youths<br />
+Have sent her challenge.</p>
+
+<p><em>The.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ay! Lets Dianessa wear</span><br />
+The vestal bays, nor cares if Hieron<br />
+Be there to see.</p>
+
+<p><em>Myr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Come, Pyrrha, tell us how</span><br />
+The Athenian maidens dance with shrouded feet.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> They wear their robes as Morning does the mist<br />
+That makes her beauty greater and her dream<br />
+Live on in men.</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Ah, maidens, here's a tale</span><br />
+For the other ear.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">The bare and brazen sun</span><br />
+That's up without a cloud, cheers to the hunt,<br />
+The fight, the bruited path,&mdash;makes careful dames<br />
+Send linen to the ford, and say "Zeus grant,<br />
+We'll air the beds!"</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Ay, wives must know their season.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> But let night-swimming Morn come up<br />
+In foamy veil, and her priest-hearted rose<br />
+Stays lusty feet and gives adventure's hour<br />
+To the achieving soul.</p>
+
+<p><em>Art.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">What kin is this</span><br />
+To th' matter?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Why, Artante, when we dance</span><br />
+Half naked as we do before the youths,<br />
+They say of us "A bed-mate there, and strong<br />
+To bear and breed brave warriors for my house."<br />
+But they in Athens who so watch the dance,<br />
+See sheatheless Being shine through form that would,<br />
+Not softened thus, first fill the ruder eye<br />
+And leave unseen the token of a grace<br />
+Earth may not shadow.</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Nay, you speak Athenian!</span><br />
+Let's have it in our tongue.</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What grace can be</span><br />
+So badgered in a gown?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ask flying doves,</span><br />
+That rhythm the air till it doth ache with loss<br />
+When they have passed. So have these maidens taught<br />
+The silken fold to be their wing&egrave;d part.</p>
+
+<p><em>Myr.</em> Ask her no more. Alack, our Pyrrha drank<br />
+Of charmed Ilissus,&mdash;must go back to Athens!</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> But come! Our dance! We yet are Spartan maids.</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> [<em>Taking wreath from her hair</em>] Our flowers are far<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">from morning. See, these buds</span><br />
+Are pale as they had never known the dew.<br />
+But I know where some fleecy clusters blow<br />
+And daintily edge the stream. Like tiny birds,<br />
+Green-necked and lily-winged, they are alight<br />
+A hundred to a stem. I'll have a wreath<br />
+Of them.</p>
+
+<p><em>Myr.</em> And I. These sad things are less bright<br />
+Than locks they should adorn.</p>
+
+<p><em>Art.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">New garlands, all!</span><br />
+Where grow these favors? Dianessa, lead!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They go off, rear left. Pyrrha waits a meditative moment,
+then turns to follow. A bough brushes her cheek.
+She puts up her hand and plucks a bunch of berries from it</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> 'Tis like his ruby. Nature loved them both<br />
+With the same kiss,&mdash;the berry and the stone.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 11em;">[<em>Fastens cluster to her bosom</em>]</span><br />
+
+"Heaven should have its sun." This sun will fade,<br />
+But that I threw away had ne'er lost hue<br />
+So near my heart, giving and taking fire.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">[<em>Something thrown from the bushes falls at her feet. She gazes</em></span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;"><em>at it, not taking it up</em>]</span><br />
+
+Ah! Biades' jewel! Who.... [<em>Looks about guardedly</em>]</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Biades comes from the woods. He is dressed as a Helot
+in a scant tunic of goat-skin, and wears a large cap</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Whose slave are you,</span><br />
+Bold Helot?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Kneeling</em>] Thine! [<em>Takes off cap, revealing his quantity of</em><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;"><em>dark curls</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Are you in love with death,</span><br />
+That you have come to Sparta?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Nay, I come</span><br />
+A banished man.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> I've heard how you were plucked.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> No feather left.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Life, sir, is yours, and you</span><br />
+Cast it away in Laced&aelig;mon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Nay,&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> You whose dark outrage made her honor bleed,<br />
+Think on her burning wound to set the foot<br />
+Of impudence and live?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I know the Spartans.</span><br />
+They will exalt my courage above death.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Courage that reckons so bates its own worth<br />
+Till a coward might disport it. You will meet<br />
+Death's mercy but no other.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">No, the virtue</span><br />
+Dearest in them they'll hold dear in myself.<br />
+But if not so,&mdash;blow out your candle, Fate,<br />
+I'll go to bed.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Why not have fled to Persia?<br />
+She's softer mannered,&mdash;has no aching pride<br />
+Your death would poultice.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Pyrrha lives in Sparta.</span><br />
+Howe'er I set my feet, love turned them here.<br />
+Which way I bent some ting&egrave;d thought of thee<br />
+Crept as a secret sun to every sense<br />
+And made the hidden threads of being blush<br />
+Like coral boughs when Aphrodite's foot<br />
+Is on the wave.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Athenian, what canst hope<br />
+From Stesilaus' daughter?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I ask naught.</span><br />
+But had a gem of hers that hourly cried<br />
+To clasp its mistress, and to bring it thus,<br />
+With Death a looker-on, I thought might make<br />
+The peasant service shine so sovranly<br />
+That even her royal and offended eyes<br />
+Might gently entertain it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Deck the bark</span><br />
+Of yon shag ilex and 'twill wear your trinket<br />
+With the same grace and thanks.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Thy grace is hers</span><br />
+Who walked unrobed from hands of the high gods<br />
+Grown jealous of the beauty they had made.<br />
+Not this, nor any jewel may adorn it,<br />
+Though swartest pebbles might grow ruby proud,<br />
+And rubies throb with breath to be so worn.<br />
+And for thy thanks, I have not come this way<br />
+To ask for them. Keep them for one so poor<br />
+He lets his heart for hire.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 9em;">[<em>Puts locket slowly under his tunic</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">And yet my ears</span><br />
+Fed on a sigh when I was hidden there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Who is so strong as never to have sighed?<br />
+That secret moment was my weakest too.<br />
+I'm now a Spartan, and my father's name<br />
+Is Stesilaus. You may know it, sir,<br />
+Who wert of Athens, but whose country now<br />
+Is so much ground as you may beg of foes,<br />
+And that, Zeus help, they'll measure without grudge.<br />
+You're not so tall your grave would scant a field,<br />
+Or make a garden less.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Sounds of approach across bridge, lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Does Fate come noisy-footed?</span><br />
+I thought she crept, and loved the jungle-leap.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Hide, sir! I'll be as secret as these shrubs,<br />
+And not reveal you sooner. With the night<br />
+You may steal out of Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I'll go out winged</span><br />
+With Spartan ships, and honor as a bride<br />
+Shall sail with me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Are you so mad? Then die!</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter ephors and senators, all old men, followed by
+warriors, then youths, wives, maidens, children, and
+attendant slaves. Biades draws his cap down and lies
+slouching on the grass. The ephors and senators take
+seats which the Helots have prepared for them</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> What! Must we wait? Where are these merry slips?</p>
+
+<p><em>First Senator.</em> The woods are dancing yonder. By that sign<br />
+They come.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Re-enter Dianessa, Myrta, and companions, who dance before
+the assembly, the figure symbolizing the capture of
+Persephone. They continue dancing, the youths joining,
+until every maid has won a partner.</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> [<em>To Archippe</em>] Our Pyrrha does not dance. Why's that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> No why at all. I'll rate her. Sulky chuff!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Ay, you'll be on her heels!</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">The younger maids</span><br />
+Are chosen. She'll be left. There's Hieron<br />
+With eyes like begging moons which way she goes,<br />
+But she draws off,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Well, well! She'll please herself.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> In Phania, I'd have had a daughter now&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> What, madam? Gabble here? Be done!</p>
+
+<p><em>Agis.</em> [<em>Among the young men</em>] <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">I thirst.</span><br />
+[<em>To Biades</em>] Up, slave! Fill me a cup. Come, move, you drone!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Biades slowly rises and goes to spring under trees, rear</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>A Young Lord.</em> What Helot's that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Another.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">Some dog o' the farms. A staff</span><br />
+On 's back might help his legs.</p>
+
+<p><em>Another.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">I'll put mine to 't.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Biades lazily returns with cup. In handing it to Agis
+he spills part of the contents</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Agis.</em> [<em>Emptying the cup in Biades' face</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">&nbsp;By Dis and Rhadamanthus! Sot! Whose man</span><br />
+Is this?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> My own, you Spartan whelp!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Gives Agis a blow, so unexpected that it knocks him down.
+His head strikes the root of a tree and he does not rise.
+A number of Spartans rush upon Biades. Others bear
+Agis off, left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">The dog!</span><br />
+Tread him to earth! Down! down!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Springing from them and taking off his cap</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">What, Greeks? You'd kill</span><br />
+A brother?</p>
+
+<p><em>A Voice.</em> Biades!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">My friends&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Ha, ha! His friends!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> What friending was 't you gave us on the day<br />
+You drove us out of Athens? Hoot and club<br />
+Then spoke how dear you loved us. We had not<br />
+Brought off our lives if your desire had dared<br />
+Blow full on Athens' heat.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Brought off our lives?</span><br />
+Where's Heracordus? Stoned at Athens' gate,<br />
+And dead upon the road.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Nay, brothers&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14.5em;">Ha!</span><br />
+If you're a brother, weep beside his grave.<br />
+I'll show it you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">And all the graves where lie</span><br />
+The dead we brought two bleeding years ago<br />
+From Decalea's wall, where you gave entry<br />
+Then broke the truce with charge!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">But hear, my lords&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gir.</em> Come, wail beside them till they wake and ask<br />
+What new calamity brews in your tears!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Lenon</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Len.</em> Agis yet swoons. That root was edged with death.<br />
+We fear he's gone.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"> For this alone, Athenian,</span><br />
+You should not live,&mdash;though all your else-wrought deeds<br />
+Were mercy's pawn for you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ye fathers, hear!</span><br />
+If ye know Justice,&mdash;and the world has said<br />
+Her lovers dwell in Sparta,&mdash;shall he cry<br />
+To scorn-shut ears, whose injuries taking voice<br />
+Should pass in thunder where your virtues sleep?<br />
+Hear one whose wrongs have bruised him to your coast,<br />
+And let it not be said that you from safe<br />
+Unshaken rocks met suppliant hands with spears!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Ye noble elders, there's a sort of mercy<br />
+On which dishonor feeds. As pasty, soft<br />
+As butter in the sun, it chokes the sluice<br />
+Of reason,&mdash;in marshy obliteration lays<br />
+The marks and bounds of justice,&mdash;nauseous spreads<br />
+Till mind is left no throne. Let it not come<br />
+Where sit the guards of honor!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I grant you so.</span><br />
+But what I ask is not thus natured, sir!<br />
+Sages of Laced&aelig;mon, there's a mercy<br />
+That veins the very rock of Justice' seat.<br />
+It is the agent of divinest mould<br />
+In all the world. By it the mind grows fair<br />
+With blossoms deity may gather. 'Tis<br />
+As precious to the soul as south-lipped winds<br />
+To the winter-aching earth. Go bare of it,<br />
+Though ye know Virtue ye wear not her pearl.<br />
+I beg my life that you in saving me<br />
+May save the heavenliest favor given to men,<br />
+Nor crush it out of Sparta, leaving her<br />
+The scarred and barren terror gods forsake.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ephor.</em> Shall hear his plea? He may have argument<br />
+Of worthy note.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Senator.</em> 'Tis not our way to judge<br />
+The dumb.</p>
+
+<p><em>Third Ephor.</em> [<em>Very old, creakingly</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Why, if a lion, boar, or pard,</span><br />
+Or any beast, should pause as we did burn<br />
+In chase, and beg us hear his cause, I think<br />
+Our ears would ope.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Ay, and the earth too, sir,</span><br />
+Bearing such wonder on it! Folly's self<br />
+Would be too wise to listen to this man,<br />
+Yet ye would hear him!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fourth Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">More than would. We will.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> This clemency shows like yourselves,&mdash;the gem<br />
+Of mind's adornment, as ye are the lustre<br />
+Of Sparta's matchless race!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Now he is off.</span><br />
+Will gallop with us to what ditch he choose.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Senator.</em> Speak, Biades.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Of Agis then, my lords,&mdash;</span><br />
+This newly raw offence,&mdash;be my first word.<br />
+And I'll not stay for garnish. Truth is bare,<br />
+And bravest so. Though 'twas my Helot guise<br />
+Drew Agis' insult on me, think you, sirs,<br />
+It fell upon a proud and free-born Greek,<br />
+And who is here that could with putting on<br />
+A slave's vile dress put on his nature too,<br />
+Drain off his ancient, high nobility,<br />
+And in one brutish instant lose the blood<br />
+That made his fathers heroes? Is there one?</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> We grant you, none.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Your hearts then struck my blow,</span><br />
+Therefore must pardon it. If Agis' death<br />
+Falls from it, 'tis but accident that sleeps<br />
+In every motion, and in mine awoke<br />
+Untimely. Who, so shorn of wisdom, thinks<br />
+That I, a suitor here for barest life,<br />
+Meant him a vital stroke that would o'ercry<br />
+My prayers and make a mock of suppliance?<br />
+I'll mourn with you, my lords, but ask you wring<br />
+The neck of Fate, and leave my head where 'tis<br />
+To praise the just of Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Third Senator.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">So we might</span><br />
+But for the heavier charges that engage<br />
+The sighs of mercy 'gainst you ere they blow<br />
+This deed a pardon. What of Decalea?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> That was a ruse the Spartans taught me, sir,<br />
+When at Eleusis they ensnared my troops<br />
+Within the gates, and naught passed out again<br />
+Save rivers of their blood. If I must die<br />
+For Decalea, die you with me, men,<br />
+For red Eleusis.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fourth Senator.</em> This is justice too.<br />
+I saw Eleusis. He is clear on that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> I warn you, senators! The fleetest wit<br />
+That pauses on his guile is honey-mired<br />
+And ne'er gets farther.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> We'll not keep his road<br />
+An inch past justice, but we'll go so far.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> So you resolve, but Hecate at his smile<br />
+Would plod beside him like a market lass,<br />
+Forgetting vengeance.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Honored Stesilaus:&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Honored? Ay, Biades! With gibe and jeer<br />
+That shook the walls of Athens! By my staff,<br />
+I'll&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Noble fathers, hear me for yourselves,<br />
+Who, loved of Pallas, in this council sit<br />
+Her earthly heirs and nature's demigods!<br />
+This rage of Stesilaus is itself<br />
+Sanction and seal for my adoption here,<br />
+A son of Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Ha! Now he would drive</span><br />
+The mares of Diomed!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">My lords,&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Prove this?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Why made you Stesilaus head and tongue<br />
+Of envoy unto Athens? For you thought<br />
+His mind, most apt, fluidic, politic,<br />
+More quick than danger, would take shape of need,<br />
+Repairing your defense fast as you found<br />
+Your safety cramped. If I o'ercame him then<br />
+With wit that watched with sleepless spear at door<br />
+Of Athens' hous&egrave;d trust, must you not crown in me<br />
+The quality held sovereign in him?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> You hear, you elders,&mdash;must!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Ay, must,&mdash;and must!</span><br />
+Or at the fontal spring of justice break<br />
+Your cups and thirst. No alien dripple may<br />
+Content you then.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Senator.</em> We listen, Biades.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> When swords of an uneven temper meet,<br />
+Who scorns the better proved? Nay, you do set<br />
+Your love upon it,&mdash;in your armory<br />
+Give it a burnished place. And I who crossed<br />
+With Stesilaus, for my triumph ask<br />
+To be of Sparta's armor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Our dead shall answer!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> They shall. For every heart my steel made cold,<br />
+Is proof how well I served my Athens,&mdash;proof<br />
+Of loyal heat with which I'll serve the State<br />
+That makes me hers! A true-bred Greek, outthrust<br />
+And homeless, seeks a foster-land, that he<br />
+May lift for her his sword, nor wasteful let<br />
+The chiefest virtue in him die unused<br />
+While his lost name no more climbs to the gods.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Senator.</em> Would you ally with us 'gainst Attica?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I'm yours for that. By th' mother of the sea,<br />
+Her tears shall wash your feet!</p>
+
+<p><em>Third Senator.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">What way wouldst take?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> The way to Phernes and the Persian fleet<br />
+Now boastful before Rhodes. Grant me a convoy,<br />
+I'll forge with Persia Laced&aelig;mon's sword,<br />
+And cut the crest from Athens.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fourth Senator.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">We have failed</span><br />
+With Phernes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> You'll not fail again. He's sworn<br />
+My friend.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Senator.</em> Our ships are few.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">But Corinth holds</span><br />
+Her sea-wings spread for any need of yours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Hear me, ye warriors! He will lead<br />
+Our force afar, then stir up neighbor foes<br />
+To scourge unarmored Sparta! Think that one,<br />
+Cradled in silk and fed on nectared drops&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> There, sir, I'm bold to say you're off the road<br />
+Of truth. My nurse was of your people, brought<br />
+From sterner Sparta for my orphan rearing,<br />
+By my good uncle Pelagon,&mdash;a man<br />
+Ye know your friend. From her wise hands I took<br />
+Your doughty-nurturing bread, and broth black-brewed,<br />
+That drives the shade of fear from veins of men.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> I've bread now in my wallet. Let us see<br />
+Your teeth in 't.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Takes out a piece of coarse, stale bread and offers it to Biades</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Pardon, sir! I do not hunger.</span><br />
+A Helot shared with me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">'Twill keep till you</span><br />
+Would sup. But, you must try our broth, sir. Pulse<br />
+Is seething yonder. Youths, bring here a bowl.<br />
+We have a guest who'd call his childhood up<br />
+In good black brew. Hark, Lenon!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">[<em>Whispers to Lenon, who goes off left</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Third Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">It is truth.</span><br />
+Amycla was your nurse. I know the year<br />
+That she was sent to Athens.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">On her lap</span><br />
+I learned a love for Sparta that returned<br />
+In warrior days to blunt my assaulting sword<br />
+And wound me from your side. She taught me too<br />
+The lyric wafture that dead hero-lips<br />
+Send on undying,&mdash;songs your young men sing,<br />
+And old men flush to hear,&mdash;and as a youth<br />
+I longed to make my civil Athens street<br />
+Echo to Sparta with a brother's call.</p>
+
+<p><em>Third Ephor.</em> But I am moved.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fourth Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And I.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Art grown so old</span><br />
+You'll feed on pap again? Come, Biades,<br />
+A song Amycla taught you! One will prove<br />
+Your love remembers Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Sir, I'm not</span><br />
+Your zany.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> But you'd make my country one,<br />
+To antic for you.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Lenon with bowl of broth</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Here's your portion, sir.<br />
+Amycla made no better. Will you drink?</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Gives bowl to Biades, who regards the black mixture
+dubiously. All are silent, watching him. He looks at Pyrrha</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>To Pyrrha</em>] Is 't poison?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Stolid</em>] <span style="margin-left: 6em;">It may be.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>To Senators</em>] <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Your will's in this?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>First Senator.</em> It is.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> If this be pledge that binds me yours,<br />
+Fellow of board and field, I drink long life<br />
+To our compact. But if death waits here,&mdash;to you,<br />
+O comrade shades, and our good fellowship!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13em;">[<em>Drinks. The Spartans applaud</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> You lean to him, and Sparta topples with you!</p>
+
+<p><em>A Young Man.</em> [<em>Entering</em>] Agis is up! He comes!<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">And bears no grudge</span><br />
+For a good Greek blow. Says you could give no less.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Agis</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> High Zeus, I thank thee! Agis, thou dost live<br />
+To take my pardon and to give me thine!<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 18em;">[<em>They take hands</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> So soft?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Better than blows.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Ha! Like disease</span><br />
+He'll spread the woman till our eyes drop tears<br />
+Instead of fire. When Spartan eagles moult,<br />
+They'll go no farther than Athenian owls.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> He's valiant.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">There's no braver tongue.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">And friend</span><br />
+To Phernes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> So he says.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Nay, that's well known.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> My captain comrades, and ye aged fathers,<br />
+If ye had seen him strut, a vanity<br />
+As brainless as the monkey at his heels,<br />
+With woman velvets making slut of wealth<br />
+Trailing foul dust,&mdash;a peacock fan at 's cheek<br />
+Where a soldier's beard should grow, and bangled ears<br />
+Whose swinging jewels tickled a white neck<br />
+Soft as a harlot's pillow,&mdash;this at time<br />
+His city laid such honor on his head<br />
+As would have kept a brave man on his knees<br />
+For wisdom to uphold it,&mdash;had ye looked on this,<br />
+Ye'd call the weakest maiden from her wheel<br />
+To lead our wars ere trust to Biades!</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> A picture this,&mdash;shakes faith.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">We trust too far.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Sirs, had ye seen what I but paint&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">My lords,</span><br />
+I'll wrestle with the stoutest Spartan youth<br />
+That makes your wars most dreaded, and these limbs,<br />
+Now shrunk with fasting, wasted and forsook<br />
+By Fortune that once fed them as her own,<br />
+Will prove my right to captain Sparta's host!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Our women could undo you, girl of Athens!<br />
+Meet his bold brag with this. One of our maids<br />
+Shall throw him! Ay! Then he'll betake his shame<br />
+To any shade will hide it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Sir, I sue</span><br />
+To lay this boast.</p>
+
+<p><em>Agis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">My prayer be first, my lords!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> A lot! A lot!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Nay, sons, a fall from you</span><br />
+Would give him hope to pick his honor up<br />
+And steal again to favor. He will plead<br />
+That you, full-fed, met him in famished hour,<br />
+When Fate hung him with bruises leeching strength,<br />
+And gave you victory. Let my offer hold.<br />
+A maiden to him, and we'll hear no more<br />
+Of valorous Biades.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> We are agreed.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ephor.</em> Who is our strongest maid?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14.5em;">We've six whose claims</span><br />
+Push equal. All in public game have won<br />
+The bow of Artemis.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; We'll choose from these.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Olympus, shower me woes! I will not cringe,<br />
+So they be man's. But save me from a mock<br />
+That makes misfortune past seem sweet as drops<br />
+From Hera's healing cup!</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">A mock? The gods</span><br />
+Have never honored you till now.</p>
+
+<p><em>Myr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">See these,</span><br />
+My bantling? Arms that made Kalides wear<br />
+A three months' bruise!</p>
+
+<p><em>The.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And these have locked the strength</span><br />
+Of Lenon in defeat!</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Ask Mirador</span><br />
+If he liked well the sandy bed I gave him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Nac.</em> Bethink you now how you'll outcrow disgrace,<br />
+For you'll be short of breath when you've gone through<br />
+The brash I'll give you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Then he'll show his reefed</span><br />
+And wattled skin, and say that want of bread<br />
+O'ercame him, not our valor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Art.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Look you, maids!</span><br />
+His hollow eyes do beg some pity of us.<br />
+We'll give him yet a chance, and mate him with<br />
+Our lame Coraina. She's near well again.<br />
+Will drop her crutch to be our champion.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Zeus,</span><br />
+Behold me patient! Furies, though I lack<br />
+Some vaunting flesh, the sharpest ill that on<br />
+My body ravins feeds a spirit that<br />
+Might meet with Heracles and give him need<br />
+Of both his arms!</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> Ha! Better! Maids, his tongue<br />
+Will fight yet!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Peace! The ephors choose</span><br />
+That Dianessa bear this honor off.<br />
+She threw strong Mirador, first of the youths,<br />
+Which puts her o'er the rest.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">We've else determined</span><br />
+That with the fall the Athenian forfeits life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> And if I win, my lords? Since life must pay<br />
+Defeat, should victory not solicit me<br />
+With counterpois&egrave;d prize?</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">We shall accept you</span><br />
+Leader and comrade, and give escort fair<br />
+To bear your suit to Phernes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">&nbsp;More! The maid</span><br />
+Shall be your bride, and bind you son and brother<br />
+To Sparta's love.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ephor.</em> You, Stesilaus, assent?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Since without risk you may pursue your folly,<br />
+I'll not oppose you.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dianessa, you</span><br />
+Abide our will?</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> And welcome it. 'Twill work<br />
+Like Mars in me, and make my arm<br />
+The gallows of his fame. The Athenian lady!<br />
+I'd choose a husband among men.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">And I,</span><br />
+My generous, dear lords, would woo and win<br />
+Some mute and humble maid. I would not force<br />
+The noble Dianessa bend her head<br />
+To one unworthied by a hostile Fate.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> Tut, sir! If Fortune's love returns with heat<br />
+That makes you conqueror, by that same sun<br />
+Her pride will melt, and you will find her meek<br />
+As gosling in your hand.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Tis settled so.</span><br />
+Wear what you win.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] Ye reverend men, and you,<br />
+My noble father, may my suit reveal<br />
+My love to Sparta and your love to me,<br />
+Which has not spoken in this act of yours<br />
+That overpeers me and gives up my due<br />
+To Dianessa.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> Ha?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Though Mirador</span><br />
+Was forced below her, never in a bout<br />
+Has she ta'en honors from me, while I oft<br />
+Have left her down.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ephor.</em> &nbsp; Speak'st truly?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Hear herself</span><br />
+Avouch it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Dia.</em> Ay, you overmate me, but<br />
+The gap between us will not cast the match<br />
+To Biades. And I was chosen.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fourth Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Nay,</span><br />
+You must give place.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I've other reason, sir.</span><br />
+It is my dear, war-honored father lays<br />
+This match on Sparta, and my pride of house<br />
+Would bear his counsel through the act that sets<br />
+The sage's seal upon it.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">A daughter, sir!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Bare duty might so speak.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">&nbsp;This gives me warmth</span><br />
+My maiden comrades lack. By every vein<br />
+My father gave me, his time-laurelled brow<br />
+Shall never wear a garland less!</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Well sworn!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> And for I saw&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Third Ephor.</em> More reasons?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">&mdash;the rude shame</span><br />
+The Athenian put upon the ambassadors,<br />
+And mine own eyes bore him in lowest semblance,<br />
+Demeaned from manhood, his dishonor wrapped<br />
+In purple cost that left it yet more naked.<br />
+I swear he shall not honored lead our wars!<br />
+If our gray heroes fail us, we have dames<br />
+To choose from,&mdash;need not go to Athens!</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> This speaks! The victory's won where courage makes<br />
+Such stout provision.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">If I fail, my lords,</span><br />
+Then gods are mongers and their favors sell,<br />
+Denying honest prayers.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Come, Biades.</span><br />
+Art ready?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Ay, long past!</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Your places then.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Delay you! Biades, with modesty<br />
+Unlooked for, but most fit, you gave up claim<br />
+To Dianessa.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Nay, 'twas but an offer<br />
+Whose bounty met refusal.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">I'll accept it</span><br />
+In Pyrrha's name.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">So prudent against loss?</span><br />
+This caution, sir, gives me a victor's heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Triumph is hers a certain thousand times,<br />
+And yours a dicer's once, slipped you between<br />
+Hiccough and snore of gods at shutting time.<br />
+But since that once will have a thousandth chance<br />
+To trouble me, I'll grant you free of Pyrrha.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Wait till 'tis begged. Lysander spoke with kind<br />
+And equal honor, which did soften me<br />
+To leave his daughter his. And others here<br />
+Have tendered me the gentle looks that breed<br />
+The answering benison till hearts of earth<br />
+Feel heaven's element. But you, whose hate<br />
+Should hiss from crawling shape, not upright man's,<br />
+Wake fires in me that eat through godly patience<br />
+And sweep to battle. I'll endure no further.<br />
+Back with your taunts! And if 'twill make you sore<br />
+Where pride is daintiest, I'll your daughter wed<br />
+Because she is your daughter!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Bark, you puppy,</span><br />
+But you'll not carry it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Were she featured foul</span><br />
+As snaked Medusa,&mdash;her brow a hanging night,&mdash;<br />
+Her figure hooped as age when chin and toes<br />
+Are neighbors,&mdash;and of speech so scaly, harsh<br />
+As Stesilaus,&mdash;I, with no more color<br />
+Or shade of reason than that you deny me,<br />
+Would make her bride. The ephors gave their word,<br />
+And what I win I'll wear!</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">We'll see you do.</span><br />
+Content you, Stesilaus. None will weep<br />
+To know your bluff soul matched. To place! To place!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They wrestle. Pyrrha loses. Silence, then applause for Biades</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>A Lord.</em> My heart upheld him, for I know him brave.</p>
+
+<p><em>Another.</em> I saw his dripping sword on Theban plain<br />
+Cut through the knotted fray and make two fields<br />
+O' the combat.</p>
+
+<p><em>Another.</em> He can pray too, Delphi knows!</p>
+
+<p><em>Another.</em> But when his gallant prayers their action find<br />
+The gods themselves rage in them.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> [<em>To Pyrrha</em>] Daughter, take<br />
+Fair thanks from us for brave support of Sparta,<br />
+And having lost, more thanks for giving her<br />
+Another soldier. Has defeat made soft<br />
+Your heart for swift espousal?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Let me woo</span><br />
+In slower way, good father. Tho' my boast<br />
+Rose high 'gainst Stesilaus' scorn, I'm not<br />
+Of heart so rash that I would lose her love<br />
+By taking it. With Sparta's aid now mine,<br />
+I'll ask her choose a noble guard and sail<br />
+With me, that I, by time and fortune graced,<br />
+May win a double suit, herself and Persia.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ephor.</em> We'll think of it. Our plans are still unthreshed.<br />
+Come with us, Biades.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Ephors, with senators and Biades, lead the way over
+bridge. All follow except Stesilaus and Pyrrha</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">How was 't he won?</span><br />
+And he was livid famine! Scurfed with weeks<br />
+Of beggary! While you&mdash;such arms had saved<br />
+Antiope from Theseus!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">[<em>Pyrrha droops silent</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Up, my daughter!</span><br />
+We'll make this fall our hope. You shall take sail<br />
+With Biades&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Gods hear me, no!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You will.</span><br />
+I know his aim. He will betray our force<br />
+To Athens,&mdash;pardon's price. Athenian ease<br />
+Is in his marrow like a siren sleep,<br />
+And all this hardy show is but to buy<br />
+His languors back. You'll watch within his ship,<br />
+With Hieron a second secret eye,<br />
+And when his treachery ripens, take command<br />
+And bring him bound to Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Be so near?</span><br />
+Sail in his ship?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Be near him as a wife.</span><br />
+Watch close. Lie in his thoughts, though not his bed.<br />
+And if he presses to the shrine of favor,<br />
+Here is my dagger. This will be your guard.<br />
+Let him meet death upon it,&mdash;and that death<br />
+Be honor's sanctuary. Come! My brow<br />
+Must smooth submissive to the senators.<br />
+Clear too your face with summer policy.<br />
+Thus openly we'll hide. The State's turned fool,<br />
+And naught between her and perdition save<br />
+An old man and a girl! [<em>Exit</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Gazing at dagger</em>] If this cold blade<br />
+Were seeking traitors 't might look in my heart.</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />
+[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT IV</h3>
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>On board a galley off Athens. An open door left of centre, rear,
+shows a moonlit sea. Cressets burning within. Pyrrha discovered, seated
+and fingering a dagger. A diminishing sound of dipping oars and rowers
+singing.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">God of the bold who ride</span>
+<span class="i2">With song o'er their dead</span>
+<span class="i0">Whose unsown graves wait wide,</span>
+<span class="i2">The singers' bed,&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i0">Poseidon, befriend, befriend,</span>
+<span class="i0">And the good wind send!</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The sirens are on their rocks;</span>
+<span class="i2">Like a pierc&egrave;d moon</span>
+<span class="i0">Weeping her gold, their locks</span>
+<span class="i2">To the waters run.</span>
+<span class="i0">Poseidon, befriend, befriend,</span>
+<span class="i0">And the good wind send!</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Fleet are the foam-toothed hounds</span>
+<span class="i2">That hunt unfed,</span>
+<span class="i0">With hunger that aches like wounds,</span>
+<span class="i2">And ships their bread.</span>
+<span class="i0">Poseidon, befriend, befriend,</span>
+<span class="i0">And the good wind send!</span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Lysander</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Lysander! You? Is 't battle?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">At dawn we move</span><br />
+Upon the Athenian ships.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">They've come from harbor?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> Nay, lurking still, fear-cabled to the land,<br />
+Like weanlings round a skirt.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">At last a battle!</span><br />
+And Biades is true. The watch is done.<br />
+I'm sick of spying, hanging on him like<br />
+A doubt with teeth. He leaves this galley then?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> Commands from the <em>Ino</em>, now so brave repaired<br />
+She sits her place as though the sea and air<br />
+Debated who should claim her, and she no more<br />
+Adorns both elements than herself's adorned<br />
+By our young admiral.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">He is gone? So soon?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> Went, but is here again, and here must stay<br />
+These next three hours or more.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Why so, Lysander?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> We sacrifice aboard Thrasyllus' ship,<br />
+Where now the captains gather, and the hand<br />
+Of one who leads the foe to his fathers' hearth<br />
+Would cloud the omen. He must keep apart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> You've told him that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">We have not dared.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 16em;">Not dared?</span><br />
+Way, Spartan lions, for the Athenian puppy!</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> He's tender with his honor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">His honor!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">Soft!</span><br />
+We shunt all danger if you mew him here<br />
+Unwitting of our hand.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I do not wear</span><br />
+Athene's &aelig;gis on my jerkin, friend.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> You can divinely drug his vanity<br />
+Without immortal aid. Attach him by 't,<br />
+For free he'll chafe. Drift with him in such wise<br />
+He'll not suspect our rudder.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Ay, more lies.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> Truth is no absolute virtue. 'Tis a vice<br />
+If 't takes a screw from safety.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">There is law</span><br />
+Higher than Sparta utters. If not so,<br />
+What mean our altars, and a kneeling world?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> Hmm! I delay the sacrifice. Dost know<br />
+I take my Dianessa? A virgin's hand<br />
+Must weave the victim's garland.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Ah, the moon</span><br />
+Of Artemis! A virgin's hand. They ask<br />
+Not mine?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; You are a bride in Sparta's eyes.<br />
+Would Truth might speak it too! For Biades<br />
+Has won all love but yours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I'll wed no traitor.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> What? He is false?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Ay, false to Athens.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14.5em;">Phut!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Hieron</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> How like you this, sir? Biades has stripped<br />
+The galley of its rowers,&mdash;sent them all<br />
+To his gilded <em>Ino</em>,&mdash;every boat in charter<br />
+To bear his trappings,&mdash;parchments, maps, and gifts<br />
+From Phernes,&mdash;curtains, instruments&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">The stuff</span><br />
+Goes with the admiral, and what other way<br />
+Than by the boats? Say naught of 't.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">This a time</span><br />
+To spend a feathering!</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Nay&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">And why send all?</span><br />
+A half&mdash;a third&mdash;had answered. There's not left<br />
+An oarsman on the galley save the men<br />
+Who brought you from the <em>Thetis</em>.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">You've the guard,&mdash;</span><br />
+Yourself its head. Give Biades his way<br />
+When prudence pays no cost. We've hedged and hemmed<br />
+His wrestling will until his pride is brashed<br />
+To the rebel quick&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Sst! He is here.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Biades stands in door</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Lysander,</span><br />
+They hail you from Thrasyllus' ship. You stay<br />
+The rites.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> [<em>Troubled</em>] But is it time&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Full time.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14.5em;">My boat&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Is waiting.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I&mdash;you, sir&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">You'll bear my grace</span><br />
+To our priestly captains?</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">You stay here?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">I shall,</span><br />
+If you'll not press me other. As you pray<br />
+For clearer omen and a morning battle,<br />
+Let only those whose land holds them untainted<br />
+Stand in the holy ring.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Above our prayers</span><br />
+This act will speak to Heaven in Sparta's name<br />
+And make her gods your own.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">If that might be,</span><br />
+Lysander! To have no altars is a fate<br />
+Man can not bear for long.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">The rowers, sir!</span><br />
+How soon do they return?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">They've leave to see</span><br />
+The midnight toward with their fellow crew<br />
+On the <em>Ino</em>.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Midnight!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Loyal beggars, all.</span><br />
+They're sad to lose their captain, and I pay<br />
+Their grieving flattery with this stinted lease<br />
+From duty here. They'll use 't in prayerful rite&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> Not prayer! The casks will drip too free for that.<br />
+If any prayers come from the heart to throat,<br />
+They'll downward wash again, not out and fly.<br />
+Say'st midnight, sir?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I do. They will return</span><br />
+In time to set the galley from the cast<br />
+Of morning danger.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Move again? The ship</span><br />
+Is now to rearward, by some rods.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">She is.</span><br />
+And shall go farther. Here's no fighting deck.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> Ay, these soft cabins, Corinth-modelled as<br />
+A prince, would make a floating holiday,<br />
+Put soldiers from their place.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">The ship must lie</span><br />
+Full east, on th' safest wave. We've treasure 'neath<br />
+These sails that make their weathered woof more dear<br />
+Than threaded gold of Hera's mantle.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11.5em;">Ah,</span><br />
+You mean the women.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">No,&mdash;a woman. Come,</span><br />
+Lysander.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; Sir, what time wilt take your place<br />
+Aboard the <em>Ino</em>?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Give me till the midnight,</span><br />
+I'll from that moment be your admiral.<br />
+But for these gentle hours that lie between,<br />
+I would as merest man use their light wings<br />
+To chase a hope through heaven.</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> [<em>With a glance at Pyrrha</em>] And bring it down,<br />
+My lord!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exeunt Lysander, Biades, and Hieron</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Now, Impudence, no more's to do!<br />
+Go up and take thy crown. Before my eyes<br />
+He teaches them he wooes me, and my pride<br />
+Mutely abets his guile. [<em>Holds up the dagger</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">My fine defence,</span><br />
+Thou'rt warder to a bosom unbesieged.<br />
+In Biades' contempt I have a guard<br />
+That saves thine office. Go, you glittering mock!<br />
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp; [<em>In a passion of resolution she throws the dagger through
+the door</em>]<br />
+
+That's done. No matter. He does not look at me,<br />
+Or looks as though his eyes begged pardon of him,<br />
+For their chance stop on nothing.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Biades, the dagger in his hand</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Here's a toy</span><br />
+Caught from the rigging. Yours, I think.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13em;">[<em>Offers it to her. She does not take it</em>]</span><br />
+
+It must be dear. I've seen you fondle it.<br />
+Is it not yours?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">It was.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Then is. And worth</span><br />
+Your keeping. A good blade, though Spartan plain.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> I'm weary of it. In Athens I shall find<br />
+Another pattern.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Testing blade</em>] Fine and strong. Will wear<br />
+A hundred years, then make a door for death.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 11em;">[<em>Turns it against his heart. She starts</em>]</span><br />
+
+You'll take it, Pyrrha. To throw it to the sea<br />
+Were waste for an Athenian.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Keep it then.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> You give this blade to me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">I care not. Keep</span><br />
+What you have praised.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Pressing it against his cheek</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">A gentle weapon,&mdash;but</span><br />
+I've somewhat 'gainst it.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>Goes to door and throws it far into the sea</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Kiss the waves, my friend!</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">[<em>Returns to Pyrrha and sits by her</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Softly</em>] I leave the ship to-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Uneasy</em>] <span style="margin-left: 8em;">And time you led</span><br />
+The fleet to battle. You've excused delay<br />
+Till palling breath became the shroud of action,<br />
+And yet refused it funeral.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I know</span><br />
+How you have doubted. O, this soul of Sparta,<br />
+That can not trust! It peeps from every eye,<br />
+Deepest where kindest. Tags each friendly word<br />
+With its unspoken dread,&mdash;and comradeship,<br />
+That strives to wrap it in a gala cloak,<br />
+Strains vainly round the huge, dun doubt, agape<br />
+In dreary revelation.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You are free</span><br />
+To leave us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Free? Five Spartan nobles watch<br />
+Beside me, move with every step, for so<br />
+The admiral must be honored! Hieron<br />
+Foregoes his place at sacrifice to serve<br />
+My dignity. Not for his gods he'll put<br />
+A furlong 'tween us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">He's the ship's good eye.</span><br />
+And all the men except the lords of guard<br />
+Are, by your grace, a-neighboring. Would you leave<br />
+The galley without watch?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">No, Pyrrha, sweet.</span><br />
+But I would woo you with no ear at the door.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] My lord!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Indifferent</em>] Nay, then. I can't oppose the sex<br />
+Of Aphrodite. My one frailty.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">One!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> What? I have more?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">The moments of your life</span><br />
+Are not so many!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Gods be thanked, I'm young!</span><br />
+How may I change to please a Spartan scold?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Be anything you're not.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">You have not heard</span><br />
+I am the admiral of the Spartan fleet,<br />
+With Persian Phernes yonder at my beck,<br />
+Broad-winged with all Phoenicia? You know not<br />
+I am a general?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">&nbsp;Oh, to be that name,</span><br />
+Not make 't thy bauble! What dost know<br />
+Of secret, sleepless hours, and delving thought<br />
+That nations may lie safe? By what grave right<br />
+Wear you the title? What deep sacrifice?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Leave sacrifice to fools and women! Ay,<br />
+More lies are huddled in that saintly word<br />
+Than ever smirked outside it. The strong soul<br />
+Low bowing there, lies to his god,&mdash;the weak<br />
+Lies to the world behind a holy shield<br />
+That turns the spear of justice. Pallas, hear!<br />
+A general makes himself a master, lest<br />
+The State make him a servant.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">True in <em>Athens</em>!</span><br />
+But you've another name. I've heard you called<br />
+The young philosopher. Play you at that.<br />
+'Twill tire naught but the tongue. Yours will go far.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Nay, spare me toil of spirit searching through<br />
+Earth, sea, and sky for phrases magical<br />
+To wrap creation in, as 'twere a babe<br />
+Each man might call his own could he but find<br />
+Some good-wife fancy to deliver it.<br />
+No other hope?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;"> &nbsp; They name you poet, too.</span><br />
+Build round your spirit an Elysian cheat<br />
+And buzz it through upon a golden wing.<br />
+Is that not idle enough?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You touch me now</span><br />
+With flattery's gold point. I wince and love<br />
+The pain. Yet I'd not be a frolic breath<br />
+At play with Spring and florets in the dew,<br />
+Or move in rhym&egrave;d courtesies before<br />
+The smile or frown of gods. Trick my dear soul<br />
+In May-day rags to catch a languid eye.<br />
+Babble of moods and minds, how some think this,<br />
+Some that, and some have never thought. Drone how<br />
+On such a day one struck another down,<br />
+Or led a fleet, or laid a city wall.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> What would you sing then, pray?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">I would not sing.</span><br />
+Was there not poetry before men spake?<br />
+I'd go behind the broidered veil we've wrought<br />
+Before the face of one that we loved much<br />
+And then forgot for beauty of the shroud.<br />
+The old lere's lost, the new but irks our dream.<br />
+We listen to ourselves, while round us ever<br />
+Are worlds that vainly pluck us to their doors,<br />
+Giving us sign in lightning, heat, and wave,<br />
+In flake of snow, flint-spark, and crystal rock,<br />
+In stones that make the iron creep, and color,<br />
+Fair flag and challenge to our shuttered minds.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Moving nearer</em>] Oh!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Seeming to forget her</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Round our lives is life whose destiny</span><br />
+Is that frontier no word of ours has crossed,<br />
+But man to come shall plant and harvest there,<br />
+Where his soul sets the plough.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Softly</em>] You know that too?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> That life shall warm his barest common way<br />
+Of in and out. In field and market-place,<br />
+He'll lay his cheek 'gainst its unbodied love<br />
+And flush translations of its silent touch.<br />
+Then will be poets! Thought that now must fail<br />
+In bird-wing flight, shall from a violet's eye<br />
+O'erlook the sun. Till then I will not sing.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Not fight, philosophize, or sing!<br />
+What's left for an Athenian?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Remembering her</em>] Love, fair Pyrrha!<br />
+You know the tale how Chaos once uncurled<br />
+Her laboring bulk from round a fire-leafed rose<br />
+And sent its petals drifting down to fields<br />
+Where mortals foot with chance? Whoso they touch<br />
+Are lovers always, and one came to me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Now here's ambition! And you live for that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Ay there's the charm contents me with dull earth,<br />
+And puts a rainbow in my listless hand.<br />
+The way is pleasant if the road be love's,<br />
+And I'd not shorten it by one maid's eye.<br />
+To be a lover,&mdash;that's the graceful thing.<br />
+Then one moves velvetly, forgets no curve,<br />
+And lives his picture, line and color true.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> That r&ocirc;le's struck from your play, you'll find, my lord.<br />
+Maidens will smile, but scorn will set the lip,<br />
+And women's eyes be warm, but hate their fire<br />
+For you, the traitor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Traitor?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>In the door</em>] See the gleam<br />
+On Athens, yours no more. The softest breast<br />
+Within her walls is steel when you are named.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> But there are maids in Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Not for you,</span><br />
+A traitor to the soil that gave you life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> That soil first cast me off.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">A mother strikes</span><br />
+Her child, but should the child return the blow<br />
+Gods would droop eyes and blush.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10.5em;">But were I true</span><br />
+To my own land, I should be false to yours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> A virtue that. A maid might love you then.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> A Spartan maid?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">A Spartan maid. But now</span><br />
+We hold you as no more than loath&egrave;d bait<br />
+To capture Athens. Used as a stuck fly<br />
+To hook a chub!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Hieron</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> What saucy fury sports<br />
+With Hieron? His even smile's unfixed<br />
+As the middle of two minds.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Sir, Phernes sends</span><br />
+Six maidens from his ship to dance before you.<br />
+The noble Persian chooses time most fit<br />
+For wantoning,&mdash;the hour of sacrifice<br />
+And battle prayer.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> You're justly kindled. What<br />
+Though it be royal custom in his East,&mdash;<br />
+A grace from king to king,&mdash;to garnish danger<br />
+With frillet of relief that makes death seem<br />
+The last-dropped toy, we'll dare to let him know<br />
+That we are Greeks, and walk the edge of graves<br />
+With eyes upon the gods. Go, pack them off!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> Why,&mdash;so I meant. The act struck rudely on<br />
+Our ritual hour. But if his Eastern mind<br />
+Paints it a courtesy&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">A sovereign honor.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> He is of haughty blood,&mdash;burns at rebuff&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Ay, like a hornet blind. A thousand times<br />
+I've eased his fret and run his humor's mould<br />
+Like summer wax, lest he should break from Sparta<br />
+That stood in rigid ruin. Now I leave it!<br />
+His anger can be put to gentlest sleep,<br />
+But 'tis no babe when stirred. Choose as you will.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> The honor is to you. Be yours the answer.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I'm worn with him. Three hours to-day I played<br />
+His vanity, while chance touched either side,<br />
+Waiting the word that should cut through suspense<br />
+And seal him ours for battle.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">To huff his pride</span><br />
+'Tween this and dawn would poorly soothe our own<br />
+At an uncertain cost. But let him leer<br />
+I' the oracles' face....</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">He has not sent Alissa?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> There's one so calls herself. Spoke out the name<br />
+As we should fall before it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">She's most free</span><br />
+In Phernes' heart. Knows all the honey-ways<br />
+To his secret soul, and what is said to her<br />
+He'll hear ere morn. As you love victory,<br />
+I hope you met her gently.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">If surprise</span><br />
+Made greeting harsh, I will undo that harm<br />
+With softer welcome. And beseech you, sir,<br />
+To suffer this mistimed civility<br />
+For Sparta's sake.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">I will, dear Hieron,</span><br />
+Since 'tis your suit.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Thanks, thanks, my lord.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Let them come in. I'll see their briefest dance,<br />
+And give Alissa one commending word,<br />
+Which straight as faithful bee she'll hive<br />
+In Phernes' ear.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>Exit Hieron</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">What think you of it, Pyrrha?</span><br />
+You do approve me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Approve your wits, my friend.<br />
+Had they been Spartan trained, you'd bring them off,<br />
+Untarnished still, from argument with Zeus.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> When Pallas praises, bow.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Poor Hieron</span><br />
+Is now the sweating agent of your will<br />
+To see these callets dance.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Unpitiful!</span><br />
+I'd touch my lips to Lethe, and you'd snatch<br />
+The oblivious drop from me! You know how dear<br />
+The bond that shall be cut with sword of dawn,&mdash;<br />
+So close no seer may tell which shall bleed most,<br />
+Athens or her lost son.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Art low at last?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Dun, dun, my Pyrrha, as a Barbary pigeon!<br />
+So low not all my pride can vaunt me up.<br />
+Then let me have my wine,&mdash;the draught of eyes,<br />
+Of music and of smiles, till I be drunk<br />
+And sleep.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter six Athenian youths, led by Clearchus, all disguised
+as Persian dancers. As they dance before Biades
+his pleasure quickens to abandonment</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Ah, Pyrrha, you've denied my heart<br />
+All noble love, but here's a pleasure left.<br />
+Soft eyes and gentle bosoms may be mine<br />
+Where scorn is taught to sleep and never sting.<br />
+... That is Alissa. We must honor her.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>He signals Clearchus, and the others pass out, leaving
+him to dance alone. As he ventures more flirtatiously
+about Biades, Pyrrha's disgust increases and she retreats.
+Clearchus, dancing mockingly, follows her to
+door, and when she has passed through audaciously
+closes it</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Now! Quick! In name of Zeus! The senators<br />
+Received my message?</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> [<em>Darting to Biades</em>] Ay, the answer's here!<br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">[<em>Gives him a parchment</em>]</span><br />
+
+Full pardon! Athens will lay down her walls<br />
+To make your entry proud! Her gates are small,<br />
+For honor she intends you!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Glances at parchment and sobs</em>]<br />
+My Athens! Mine! Though she should take my life,<br />
+And my bruised body fling unburied forth,<br />
+Yet would my shade drop kisses on her soil<br />
+And weep to leave it for Elysium! [<em>With sudden control</em>]<br />
+What of my plan?</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Adopted, in each item.</span><br />
+Soon as the dropping moon is in the sea,<br />
+The Athenian rowers, coming as your own,<br />
+Will board this galley and bear her a bird<br />
+To th' harbor nest.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">They've force to meet the guards?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> Thrice measured, sir. The <em>Theia</em>&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">My own ship!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> Your own&mdash;will meet you, every sailor true<br />
+As when he wept your banishment. And Phaon,<br />
+Critias, Pelagon, Antiganor,<br />
+With twenty senators and men of name,<br />
+Wait on her deck in welcome.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Back, ye tears!</span><br />
+The rowers know my signal?</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Yes, my lord.</span><br />
+Three cressets on the left,&mdash;set here in this<br />
+Embrasure. They will watch, near as they dare,<br />
+And instantly as darts your triple gleam<br />
+Their oars will sweep you answer.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>A commotion without</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Hist! What's wrong?</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter Hieron and Pyrrha. Hieron goes to Clearchus and
+tears off his veil and head-dress</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> O, pardon! I'll confess!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">'Tis you, my lord,</span><br />
+I now unmask, not this bought wretch.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">What, sir?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> Your Persian dancers are Athenian boys,<br />
+All slim as lizards. We o'er-eyed their steps,<br />
+And on suspicion gave them such a pinch<br />
+The truth flew out.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Their guilt does not prove mine.</span><br />
+Is it my crime that Athens touched me near<br />
+With bribe of pardon?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Hear the boy. You are<br />
+Clearchus? And of Athens?</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I am.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You brought</span><br />
+His pardon. Did he welcome it?</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">He did.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> He lies! The coward lies!</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">He did agree</span><br />
+That Phernes should draw off his fleet and join<br />
+With Athens.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Oh! Where are the Olympian thunders<br />
+That they now let you live?</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Draw off his fleet</span><br />
+To-night?</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> Ere dawn.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 4em;">That such an atom&mdash;such</span><br />
+A trifle of a body could enclose<br />
+So great a lie!</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; The Persian is at watch,<br />
+Waiting the signal&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Toad!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">If pardon came,</span><br />
+Two cressets set&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I'll shred him!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">At the left&mdash;&mdash;</span><br />
+Just here, my lord, would start the Persian ships<br />
+For Athens.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Oh!</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">But if three cressets burnt,</span><br />
+Then he would hold to Sparta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Three?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Three, sir.</span><br />
+Look in his bosom if you'd read the proof.<br />
+His pardon's there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> By the altars I have lost,<br />
+By Sparta's yet unwon, I swear he lies!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Pyrrha snatches the parchment from his bosom</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> You bat&mdash;you mole&mdash;you cur-born flea&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Clea.</em> [<em>To Hieron</em>] <span style="margin-left: 12em;">O, sir,</span><br />
+Your mercy! Save me from him!</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Wait without.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Full pardon! Bring the irons! We are sold!<br />
+Irons for Biades!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Accepting defeat</em>] Ay, let me wear<br />
+My honor's livery. Every foe-locked gyve<br />
+Will be my country's kiss, and make my blood<br />
+Flow proud beneath it. Irons! Load me down,<br />
+Now that you know me man, and not the thrall<br />
+Of vilest fear that buys suspected breath<br />
+With a mother-city's doom.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I'll grant you, sir,</span><br />
+That by this act you do no longer lie<br />
+In the unconsidered trash of estimation,<br />
+But have crept up in my surpris&egrave;d mind<br />
+To where I keep my jewels of regard.<br />
+That is soon said,&mdash;but for the rest, you die.<br />
+And more than die, for we shall hurl your name<br />
+A palsy over Athens.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You'll not fight</span><br />
+Athens and Persia!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Persia is not lost.</span><br />
+Your signal is unlit.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">But we'll light ours!</span><br />
+Three cressets&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Stopping him</em>] Wait! The event's too great<br />
+To helve with such slight word. That snivelling blab<br />
+May've lied, or crossed the signals, for the young<br />
+Are easiest dyed in craft, and take its hue<br />
+As natively as innocence doth wear<br />
+Its smile in sleep.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> What then?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You'll go to Phernes.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> There are no boats.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Tut, take the boats that brought</span><br />
+Those purfled cymlings here. Their rowers too.<br />
+Ah, Biades, you'll serve us still. And thought<br />
+To trap all Sparta with this tip-toe bait!<br />
+We have a saying. "Wit against the world,&mdash;"<br />
+And there's another too, "The last lie wins."<br />
+Hast heard it, Biades? We'll bear your word<br />
+To Phernes that with dawn you move with him<br />
+Upon the Athenian sails.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">He'll hear no word</span><br />
+From Spartan mouth. So 'twas agreed between us,<br />
+To annul such move as this if chance should strip<br />
+My bent of cover. I alone may reach<br />
+His ear with Sparta's prayer.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">We'll cast for proof</span><br />
+Of that. If true, we shall remember, sir,<br />
+That Sparta has won cities with no aid<br />
+From Persia.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> You'll not go alone to meet<br />
+The strength of Athens?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Your far-wing&egrave;d name</span><br />
+And sea-born battle-skill shall go with us.<br />
+Your single arm's no loss, but in your fame,<br />
+Yet ours to use, the Spartan strength<br />
+Is doubled. Ha! They call us landmen,&mdash;say<br />
+We must have feet on ground ere we can fight.<br />
+But you they fear, bred to the wave, and first<br />
+Of their commanders.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Let me die, but leave</span><br />
+My name unmurdered.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">It shall be outflung</span><br />
+In challenge to the Athenians. They know well<br />
+The sailor rabble loves you, and will oppose<br />
+But half a heart to Biades. Some too,<br />
+Of higher place, believe you wronged, and fear<br />
+The angered gods will station on your side.<br />
+By spearman Ares, you shall keep the oath<br />
+Great-sworn on Sparta's ground, to set her lance<br />
+Through Athens' triple shield! Ay, though you lie<br />
+In irons waiting death.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">The sunken souls</span><br />
+Of deepest, damn&egrave;d Dis have never borne<br />
+So vile a sting! You can not mean it, Pyrrha.<br />
+Cast on my soul what Pluto would disbar<br />
+From his fire-vaulted hell? I'll proudly die<br />
+For treachery to you, but clear my name<br />
+To Athens. Take not life and honor too!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> One you may save,&mdash;your life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">What do you say?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Draw Phernes back to us, and you shall live.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> You offer me but death, knowing I could not live<br />
+A traitor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> You choose to die as one?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Oh, Zeus,</span><br />
+All-giver, hear!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">What gain is death to you</span><br />
+If reputation dies eternally<br />
+In Athens' hate? Sparta will do as much<br />
+As spare your life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Nay&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">She shall nothing know</span><br />
+Of this hour's lapse&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">O, bitter stars! O, Death</span><br />
+Past fatal!&mdash;reaching o'er thy charnel bound<br />
+To usurp the immortal garden! Die a traitor!<br />
+Never will dew from a forgiving eye<br />
+Fall on my grave!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Nor will the upbraiding gaze<br />
+Of Heaven be more tender. For you chose<br />
+To risk your country's life on turn of chance,<br />
+Having no surety that drawn to danger<br />
+You then could pluck her out. Ah, made her fate<br />
+Your stake at dice, because, escaped the hazard,<br />
+You'd toss with her to fortune! And your guilt<br />
+Is heavy in her fall as though your hand<br />
+Bore down her last defence and fierce untrussed<br />
+Her heart to th' wolvish air.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Oh, Pyrrha, Pyrrha!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Then why haste on to death? The noblest shades<br />
+Will make no room for you where'er they walk.<br />
+Why rush through the first gate to meet their cold<br />
+Immortal scorn?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">But life with honor gone!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> If death could buy it, then 'twere wise<br />
+To buy so goldenly. But that's too late.<br />
+Choose life,&mdash;with honor such as Sparta lays<br />
+On those who serve but her. This treachery<br />
+That we've by hap unbagged in 'ts eanling hour<br />
+Shall be safe snugged again. And cherished too!<br />
+For in my eyes it is the one brave flower<br />
+Of your most barren being. None shall know it,<br />
+And Sparta, as she will, may laurels weave<br />
+About your faith.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> But Hieron?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>To Hieron</em>] You'll swear with me? [<em>He hesitates</em>]<br />
+In Sparta's name? [<em>Takes his hand</em>] And mine?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">No, no!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> I'll swear.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Oh, not that price! No, till the end</span><br />
+O' the world!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Life, Biades, life!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I will not do it!</span><br />
+Athens may singly conquer!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Then you die</span><br />
+By Sparta's hand, and Athens holds your name<br />
+Accursed through time. The irons, Hieron.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Biades hunches despairingly, his face hidden</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Apart</em>] Gods! He will yield!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Looking up</em>] I'll do it,&mdash;dare to live,&mdash;<br />
+And Attica may call me what she will.<br />
+A traitor breathes, and feels the blessed sun.<br />
+He's ne'er so poor but can his housing find<br />
+In alms-lapped Nature. Her unchoosing airs<br />
+Ask not his name before they touch his brow<br />
+And tell him when 'tis spring. He yet may dream<br />
+In unrebuking shades, and birds will sing<br />
+As liquidly as though he were not by.<br />
+Food is yet food, and wine is ever wine.<br />
+I will not die. [<em>Rises</em>] By Maia's son, I'll live!<br />
+What is my country but the bit of earth<br />
+Where chance did spawn me? 'Tis no treachery.<br />
+We're traitors unto love, not hate,&mdash;to trust,<br />
+Not doubt and slander such as Athens poured<br />
+Upon me guiltless.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Crossing to him</em>] So you've found a way<br />
+To save both life and honor!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">May a worm</span><br />
+Not creep to cleaner dust? Pyrrha, be kind.<br />
+Spare me the trampling foot.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We've lost an hour.</span><br />
+You'll send to Phernes?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">First we'll signal him.</span><br />
+He may be setting off. We must despatch,<br />
+For if he saw no sign he meant to draw<br />
+His fleet from doubtful waters and give aid<br />
+To neither side. [<em>Taking up a light</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Three cressets&mdash;that was true.</span><br />
+When once these lights have spoken, he'll receive<br />
+Your envoy as myself. Then Hieron<br />
+May bear confirming word to him, and bring<br />
+Assurance back.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> [<em>To Pyrrha</em>] You do not doubt?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Doubt now?</span><br />
+Nay, Hieron. I'll trust him with his <em>life</em>.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> But&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Trembling</em>] O, ye gazing gods, must it be done?<br />
+In Athens' living heart set up the torch<br />
+That leaves her a charred blotch where she lay white<br />
+'Neath heaven and smiled up to sister stars!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Come, Biades!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Shall not the earth be lost</span><br />
+To God's own eye when Athens, quenched, no more<br />
+Marks where we wander? I can not do it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Taking the cresset</em>] Too late,<br />
+My lord!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Fixes light in the open embrasure, then places two others.
+Biades falls back, mantling his face</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> To Phernes now! We must not boggle this!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> If you've a doubt, sir, look on that. [<em>Points to Biades</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> I'll hasten back to you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">But note our light.</span><br />
+The galley rowers may return ere you,<br />
+And move us to the east.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I shall not lose you.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> What escort will you take? A noble one<br />
+Will best please Phernes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Mirador and Agis</span><br />
+Shall go with me. Meanthes shall remain<br />
+To be your watch.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You'll tell them nothing?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Hie.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Sir,</span><br />
+I've sworn. I shall say naught but this. That Athens<br />
+Proffered you pardon, and you hold to Sparta.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit Hieron. Pyrrha watches from the door until the
+boats put off. The sea is now dark. Biades takes up
+a harp and strums it</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Turning</em>] You can do that? And I&mdash;I held my heart<br />
+At halt, there at the door, nor turned my head<br />
+Lest pity should emburn my eyes to tears. [<em>Crosses to him</em>]<br />
+Dost know that all the juniper in the world,<br />
+Burnt in thy house of honor, would not cleanse<br />
+Its doors of stench? [<em>Throws the harp aside</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">And you can use that air</span><br />
+For breath of song!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Those are the bitterest words<br />
+That ever dropped me gall, but I can find<br />
+A crush&egrave;d balsam in them,&mdash;for they say<br />
+You might have loved me, Pyrrha.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">I might.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">You did.</span><br />
+The moment that I cast my Spartan mask<br />
+And showed me true to Athens, you were mine.<br />
+That instant there was joy-fall on your heart<br />
+That swept its icy sentinels with fire,<br />
+And they were down. Oh, had I then proved staunch,<br />
+Ta'en helmet off to death and bade him strike,<br />
+You would have closed my eyes with kisses warm<br />
+As rose-drift on a tomb&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Nay, I'd have kept</span><br />
+Those eyes to be my light on earth, not star<br />
+Elysian skies. Had fought for you against<br />
+My mother Sparta. Fought as woman fights<br />
+For her one love,&mdash;with wit and arm&egrave;d tongue,<br />
+And cunning that throws puzzle on the gods.<br />
+Fought till subdu&egrave;d Death had knelt to Fate<br />
+And prayed your life for me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Have I lost that?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> You yielded&mdash;sank&mdash;unlustred even your soul<br />
+For a poor pinch of time&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">But if some touch</span><br />
+Of heaven could make me true again&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Look on</span><br />
+Those lights, that you with single breath could turn<br />
+To weeping smoke,&mdash;they've lit a quenchless wreck<br />
+That all your sighs blow vain against,&mdash;a flame<br />
+Ungovernable to remorse. Not furrowing winds<br />
+That split the watery fields to Thetis' bed,<br />
+And make a foamy Ural of her shore,<br />
+Can sweep it out. Ay, groan and shake,<br />
+And draw your mantle up! Behind a cover<br />
+Thick as Taygetus' sides, I'd see you limned<br />
+In shame!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Springing up</em>] What's shame to love? To love fire-sprung<br />
+From instant meeting of fore-strangered eyes?<br />
+And such was ours, there in that Athens' grove.<br />
+Imperial of itself, it asks no loan<br />
+Of subject virtue's smock to drape it royal.<br />
+As fen-born vapors seem to nest the stars,<br />
+Yet far below them do but thatch the world<br />
+When they look down, the vassal qualities<br />
+May lift no touch to love, that yet must wear,<br />
+To earth's unvantaged eyes, their reek and hue.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Aerial love is but an earthling still,<br />
+It must come down for food or mortal die,<br />
+And what but virtues feed it?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Nay, you speak</span><br />
+Of a fair, lesser thing,&mdash;a grace not lit<br />
+From thurible in uncreated Hand,<br />
+But coaxed from clay to a persuaded life.<br />
+Garbed as the days,&mdash;patched, plastered, hung with dear<br />
+Possessive vanities, it serves to make<br />
+Contentment's bed, and cook a patient meal<br />
+On comfort's hearth,&mdash;even snuggles in the void<br />
+That else might ache, sings low, and makes<br />
+Companioned feet tread bravely to the grave.<br />
+It has a thousand names, but never one<br />
+Is love. Be thine that white, ungendered spark,<br />
+And naught can feed it, naught can make it less.<br />
+Virtue and vice, nobility and shame,<br />
+Are rags that drop away, while you sweep on,<br />
+Stripped as a flame, with arms about your star.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Pyrrha is silent. Both start at sound of a noise on the water</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> What sound is that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">The rowers are returning.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> So quietly?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Goes to door and closes it</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">The world shall not come in</span><br />
+On me and you. Be mine this broken hour,<br />
+And Hieron may flute through after-time<br />
+At secret doors where you lock up your favors.<br />
+For you will go with him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">A prophet too?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> You'll make his home, but I shall come and go<br />
+The unseen master there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Now for the vision!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> You'll watch your door,&mdash;the unheard step is mine,&mdash;<br />
+And rock the babe born of a dream of me.<br />
+And I, far-wandered, lost unto myself,<br />
+Shall never lose you, Pyrrha. As the light<br />
+Wrapping the wave reveals its silver dance,<br />
+My being shall exult through shade and wear<br />
+The chlamys of your gleam. Your voice behind<br />
+The wind shall draw me lover-lipped to meet<br />
+Adventure's breath. You'll lie upon the hush<br />
+That girdles evening,&mdash;be the thrill within<br />
+The throstle's note, and silence when<br />
+His song is done.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Nay, it will speak of Phania,</span><br />
+Of Sybaris.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Ay, and a hundred more<br />
+In whom I've sought for thee, my Pyrrha, always thee!<br />
+'Twill speak of them as statues speak of shards<br />
+About their feet,&mdash;the sculptor's broken dreams<br />
+That made the perfect one.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>The ship rocks</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We're moving!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Yes,</span><br />
+You know,&mdash;to safer waters. Listen, Pyrrha,<br />
+To me&mdash;to <em>me</em>!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Those sounds&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Kneels</em>] Hear <em>me</em>! My head<br />
+I'll votive lay till you may set your feet<br />
+Like tangled roses in my curls&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Pyrrha springs toward the door, but Biades is before her.
+The noises increase. Groans, blows, shouts</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Aside!</span><br />
+I'll pass!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> O, save our bones. I am the stronger.<br />
+You know 't.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> You! I'll wind you like a thread!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> You didn't.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Didn't....</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">When we wrestled.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">When....</span><br />
+Oh, <em>then</em>! My arm was lame. Come, I will pass!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Nay, 'twas your heart that spared me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Ay, like this!</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Throws him aside. He staggers against the wall for support.
+She opens door. Two soldiers in armor silently
+oppose spears to her passage. She slowly closes the door</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Where are we going?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">You love me. What an arm!</span><br />
+'Twas never lame!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Come! Tell me what's our port,<br />
+Then I shall know one place we do <em>not</em> go.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Tut, love! Pry into men's affairs?<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Be calm&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> What does this mean? [<em>Advancing</em>] I'll know!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Retreating</em>] You shall! It means<br />
+"The last lie wins." We go to harbor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Ah!...</span><br />
+Those rowers....</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Faithful and fleet as ever bore</span><br />
+An Athenian general home. They came upon<br />
+Your signal&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Mine?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> They lay at watch, not Phernes.<br />
+Look on those lights! O, trinal star, set high<br />
+By my beloved! My honor's flaming hedge&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">You fly,</span><br />
+But in a net! The Spartans heard those shouts.<br />
+They are in chase&mdash;you'll see&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">They're unprepared.</span><br />
+The captains off their ships, the guards in doubt,<br />
+And oarsmen half asleep. But let them come<br />
+Far as they dare, and if they dare too far<br />
+From Persia's shelter, the Athenian fleet<br />
+Will close like jaws about them.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Sits, with sudden hopelessness</em>] You have won,<br />
+My lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I have.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">What will you do with me?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I'll wed thee, sweet.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I'll not&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yes, love, you will.</span><br />
+There is a dagger hangs in Phelas' shop,<br />
+Shall be your bridal gift. A priz&egrave;d blade<br />
+Of coppered gold, hued like a battle morning.<br />
+Smooth-cheeked as Artemis, although inlaid<br />
+With pictured tale. A captured Amazon,<br />
+Wrought palely in alloy,&mdash;a silvered fear<br />
+On th' bronzen flush of courage,&mdash;bows before<br />
+Her conqueror, a knight who gently bends<br />
+As I do now&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Thrusting him off</em>] No! Never! I'll not trust<br />
+Your dolphin nature! Long as fish have fins<br />
+You'll sport in every sea! Go&mdash;go to Phania!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Turns angrily from her</em>] Ay, by my gods that I have found again,<br />
+I shall wed none but an Athenian maid!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>Pyrrha swoons. He rushes to her</em>]</span><br />
+
+Her heart is still. O, curse my double-tongue!<br />
+She's dead&mdash;she's dead! She takes the Spartan way&mdash;<br />
+To die, not yield! Oh, Pyrrha, Pyrrha, Pyrrha! [<em>Rushes about distractedly</em>]<br />
+I will not live! I'll leap into the sea!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>On her elbow, as he reaches door</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You might catch cold. [<em>He stares at her. She sits up</em>]</span><br />
+
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Is this your grace in love?</span><br />
+Your pictured ease, with no dissuasive line?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> O, Pyrrha, peace! Let us be done with cheat<br />
+And mockery!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] My heart on that, my lord!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Own thou art mine! My world when sunsets die!<br />
+My breath of meadows lying past the moon!<br />
+Compassionate this earth, and in my soul<br />
+Fix thee its centre. Say thou'lt come!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">My lord,</span><br />
+Could I be sure....</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Ah, Pyrrha, there's no light</span><br />
+Falls from thine eye that does not sway me like<br />
+A bee in rose wind-shaken. I am thine.<br />
+There'll be no battle, but a nuptial feast<br />
+With three great armies for our brothered guests.<br />
+Your land and mine are one. Give me your hand.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> I will. For Sparta's sake.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">And love's!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>Giving her hand</em>] And love's.</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />
+[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT V</h3>
+
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>The garden of Pelagon, as in first act. Enter youths and maidens
+dancing about Pyrrha and Biades. They sing:</em></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Hymen, god of bended knees,</span>
+<span class="i2">Who would gain to thee must lose!</span>
+<span class="i0">Take from us thy merry fees,</span>
+<span class="i2">Though our fairest thou dost choose,&mdash;</span>
+<span class="i0">Pyrrha and our Biades!</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Fling the garland and the wreath!</span>
+<span class="i2">Roses, roses consecrate,</span>
+<span class="i0">That upgive their happy breath</span>
+<span class="i2">In an ardor 'neath our feet,</span>
+<span class="i0">Kissing fortune in their death!</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Sparta's won, and Athens' wed!</span>
+<span class="i2">Shyest hours of midnight, bring</span>
+<span class="i0">Charm and blessing for the bed</span>
+<span class="i2">Whence a fairer Greece shall spring</span>
+<span class="i0">And her golden peace be bred!</span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They dance off, lower right, as Pelagon and Stesilaus
+enter middle left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Ha, neatly sung! By Hermes, they have made<br />
+A tickling in my sandals.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Frivol!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Eh?</span><br />
+Nay, youth must wind his horn&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Not in my ears!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Though he never come to the hunt. But Biades<br />
+Has run the chase, and's bravely home again,<br />
+The game in pack.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Too noble game for him!<br />
+My girl! That I should ever play the sire<br />
+To a fop of Athens!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">If the burn's so raw,</span><br />
+You've secret salve for it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Yes. 'Tis not my blood</span><br />
+That so forgets its source!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Sh! Stesilaus!</span><br />
+A little butter on the tongue, my friend,<br />
+Does no man harm.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Butter a hackle, not</span><br />
+My tongue! If I'm so rubbed, I'll rasp the winds<br />
+Till they sprout ears. Don't "sh" me, Pelagon.<br />
+I'll muffle in no corners.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Hist, I say&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Don't zizz into my beard! We are not curs<br />
+To nose and smell in council!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ruin's on us!</span><br />
+You will be heard&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Menas, upper right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Joy to the noble fathers!</span><br />
+Sweet saviors of our city!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Sweet!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">What says</span><br />
+Our Stesilaus?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Ahem! The Spartan joy<br />
+Is ever dumb. But see him stirred to heart<br />
+That by a gift from out his very life,<br />
+His dearest daughter, peace is home in Athens,<br />
+And's forced no more to camp and cadge and beg<br />
+At our shut gates. Yet it goes hard to part<br />
+Wi' the fairest branch on's tree.</p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">In Biades</span><br />
+He finds a treasured son.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">By a mermaid's shoes,</span><br />
+A precious son!</p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">How, sir?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Indeed, indeed,</span><br />
+A jewel of a son! Will you, friend Menas,<br />
+Float with the senators, and bring to shore<br />
+Report of how they drift,&mdash;what currents favor<br />
+And what now counter us?</p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I'll go, my lords,</span><br />
+To hear the latest honor they conclude<br />
+Best caps your fame, and bring it in a word. [<em>Exit Menas</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> I had two minds to throw the truth in 's face<br />
+And see him strangle on it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Friend, wouldst make</span><br />
+My old knees creak to earth? I sue to you<br />
+Be soft as prudence. Shall we now be false<br />
+To our dearly tended hope&mdash;united Greece?<br />
+Now when the fact is on us, and our dream<br />
+Walks in the day? I beg you clear your heart<br />
+Of selfish fire that eats the very pattern<br />
+Of love's new world. It is ungraced, perverse<br />
+As altar flame that would devour the shrine<br />
+'Twas lit to honor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Think of Greece? What's Greece,<br />
+When my own daughter pairs with&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Nay, but mine.</span><br />
+When you are bitterest set, say to yourself<br />
+She's of my loins, and when more softly taken,<br />
+Then call her yours. But openly be constant<br />
+To a father's right in her, and proudly sire<br />
+Her honors. And 's for Biades, he's but<br />
+A brocket yet, his antlers barely bossed.<br />
+My oath upon it, your reshaping hand<br />
+Firm-cupped about his overweening spring,<br />
+Will be a second cradle where he'll grow<br />
+Fair to your fashion. Think on that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">I will.</span><br />
+There's comfort. Ay, so, so. The terms of peace<br />
+Make him a Spartan. Pyrrha stood with me<br />
+Stout-willed on that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Then whist! You trust your wife?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> You speak to Stesilaus.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Eh, I know</span><br />
+You've her in hand. My Sachinessa now&mdash; [<em>Sighs</em>]<br />
+But she loves Phania best. That locks her tongue.<br />
+And, friend, do you not see the high all-ruling Will<br />
+Has moved behind our own?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I think it so.</span><br />
+Our aim achieves its heaven, though we smart<br />
+Beneath it. To the outer glozing fame<br />
+That now attires us splendent, we may add<br />
+Inmost applause. When we exchanged our babes,<br />
+'Twas for this end and day, and had we held<br />
+To our first intent and taken our own again,<br />
+Our hope had died unfruitive. 'Twas there<br />
+That deity came in and shifted us<br />
+To th' true sybillic course.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Who dares say else?</span><br />
+We'll wear the issue as a sacred robe<br />
+Fallen on us from Olympus.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Which our wisdom</span><br />
+Fits comely to us. Forget it not, such gift<br />
+Had been withheld from minds too poor to be<br />
+The heirs of Zeus.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> But if the clay-eyed mob,<br />
+Whose pottage traffic up Olympian paths<br />
+Blocks commerce godly and invisible&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Tush, cut the string, if you have aught in bag.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Why, I would say if some of grosser sight<br />
+Than our two selves, should fumble on our secret<br />
+That Pyrrha is Athens born&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Nay, put your fears</span><br />
+In pocket. It shall not be known.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Biades</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Ha, nunky!</span><br />
+Where is my happy father? [<em>Sees Stesilaus</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">A suit, my lord!</span><br />
+I've Pyrrha's leave to make our home in Athens<br />
+If thou wilt bless our dwelling. Crave thy grace<br />
+For sake of her in whom thy pride best flowers!<br />
+Here she'll o'erlay all Spartan crudity<br />
+With suavest bloom, and take e'en native place<br />
+Where Athens' love would set her.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Never, sir! [<em>Exit, middle left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> The gray fox snaps. Ho, but I'll draw his teeth,<br />
+And he shall yelp for 't too!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Shame, sir! Not give</span><br />
+The road to him? The father of your bride?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I will when she's his daughter.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">What! What, boy?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I say when she's his daughter. Let that in<br />
+At your good ear, and in the t'other one<br />
+I'll call <em>you</em> father.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Ruin! It's come!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Who thinks</span><br />
+I'd make that Spartan grunt my father, knows<br />
+Not me! What? Set that boding beard at head<br />
+Of my Athenian house? Or go to Sparta<br />
+To hut me where I would not ask a stall<br />
+For a borrowed horse?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">But&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Scratch my helpless throat</span><br />
+With bread a pig would stick at? Swallow brew<br />
+Of salt and soot? And chafe my pumiced skin<br />
+With itching linsey?&mdash;or an untanned hide,<br />
+As man were still the beast that wore it?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Peace,</span><br />
+My son&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Say grace for leeks and goose-foot?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">But&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Though Eros pinned me head and foot with shafts,<br />
+I've saved my eyes, bless my united wits,<br />
+And know the high-road! I'll not lose me on<br />
+A pig-trail to a sty.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">But if these Spartans hear</span><br />
+They'll sack the city! Zeus deliver us!<br />
+We're lost! we're lost! Oh, Biades!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Calm</em>] Talk in a muff, good father Pelagon,<br />
+Or we indeed are lost.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You'll keep the secret?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> A time. I've plans in seed will make all Sparta<br />
+A garden for my Athens, where her fame<br />
+Shall browse to its tallest. Trust me, Pelagon.<br />
+I'm still a general!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter, lower right, young men who surround Biades, and
+press him off, singing</em>]</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Gander now must keep with goose!</span>
+<span class="i2">Biades, O, Biades,</span>
+<span class="i0">Thou shalt ne'er the cord unloose,</span>
+<span class="i2">For the mighty god decrees</span>
+<span class="i0">He shall hang who dares the noose!</span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Stesilaus</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> He's gone? I took<br />
+My anger off where it might safely blow.<br />
+This path brushed clear by Heaven must not be closed<br />
+By our stumbling selves. The widgeon! He would fly<br />
+Above the eagle, but I'll snip his feathers,<br />
+Give me good time! He'd live in Athens, ha!<br />
+And swore on Hera's altar he would be<br />
+A son of Sparta!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Nay, I noted, sir,</span><br />
+That Sparta was not named in 's oath.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">What now?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Naught, naught, my friend! Yet he but swore to make<br />
+The land of Pyrrha his.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And what meant that</span><br />
+But Sparta? If his warm wooer's oath must cool,<br />
+We've winters that will do it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Caution's best.</span><br />
+Slow-mare will get you home.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">A year or two</span><br />
+Of good black bread, and free winds on his skin<br />
+Will take the maiden from his cheeks and set<br />
+A true man's beard there. Tush! I thought that Fate,<br />
+Granting my main desire, gave me this plague,<br />
+Which, with the rest, now proves my life has pleased<br />
+High arbiters. You're silent, Pelagon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> No, no! Yes, yes! I think so. 'Tis indeed!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Come, come, my friend! We will go forth and meet<br />
+The occasion as a guest, bethinking us<br />
+We walk between mankind and deity.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They start out and are met by Alcanor and Phania who
+fall before them</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>Kneeling to Stesilaus</em>] Your blessing, father!</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> [<em>At Pelagon's feet</em>] Blessing, dearest father!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> What, what!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> [<em>To Stesilaus</em>] Forgive your child!</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">The priest&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 16em;">My child?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> The priest has made us one.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 10em;">What priest? Who dared</span><br />
+Defile the altar with such rite?</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Defile?</span><br />
+Though you're my Phania's father, you shall cast<br />
+No stain upon that holy ceremony<br />
+Whose odor yet is round us. Sir, the priest<br />
+Has blessed us. Do you as you please. Come, Phania!<br />
+Come, sweet! We'll smile at this. Though a father's curse<br />
+Bethorn our way, a gentler heaven will drop<br />
+Its soft approval where thy feet must pass. [<em>Going</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Speak, Stesilaus! Stop your wretched son!</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> Not wretched, sir, while Phania is my own.<br />
+We shall be blest when you, too late, beseech<br />
+Unhearing gods forgive you this!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Stay, sir!</span><br />
+O, miserable boy!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">No, father, no!</span><br />
+He's happy in my love as leaf in air,<br />
+As the sea-crystalled fish, as lotos in<br />
+Its pool,&mdash;and I&mdash;O, sir, my joy has wings,<br />
+And tho' I love you dear and daughterly,&mdash;<br />
+Who gave me life,&mdash;your anger has no weight<br />
+To keep my feet on earth. Like twirling lark<br />
+Too high for storm to reach, I dance above<br />
+Displeasure's cloud. [<em>Trips off with Alcanor</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Sweet wretches! Here's a turn!<br />
+My little Phania! Friend, what shall we do?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Again the finger of the gods.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 10em;">The gods</span><br />
+To limbo! I will save my daughter!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Yours?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Yea, by each hour of prattle at my knee!<br />
+By all my care that's been her constant nurse,<br />
+And every joy that from devotion sprang<br />
+To meet me like a flower as she grew,<br />
+She's mine, mine, mine! Oh, Stesilaus, oh,<br />
+Whosever she may be, I love the chick,<br />
+And she shall not be damned!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter, upper left, Sachinessa and Archippe</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Here's a reproach</span><br />
+Comes with a dual mouth. If we show doubt,<br />
+They'll put us under pestle. Rally, sir!</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> [<em>To Archippe</em>] Are you all lump?<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Pick up your courage. Why!</span><br />
+The gods are gods by their audacity.<br />
+I'll bring it off. Now, Pelagon?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> [<em>Who has turned to flee</em>] What, you,<br />
+My love?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Such heavy news! Enough to make<br />
+The gods no more co-venture with a world<br />
+Augmented so!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> What, Sachinessa, what?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Our Phania's married to Alcanor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Eh?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Now are you pleased? Now is your cruelty<br />
+Full-fed, or must it glut again?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">My sweet&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> You'll meddle with high Zeus! Have you enough?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Oh, Sachinessa!</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Brother and sister bound</span><br />
+In an abhorrent union that will drive<br />
+Their shades forever from Elysian ground!<br />
+Nay, even Hades will make fast her gates<br />
+'Gainst such offenders, innocently vile!<br />
+Archippe, speak to that unbending man,<br />
+Half author of this shame! I'd thin his beard<br />
+If Heaven had mocked me with his long, smug face<br />
+For husband! Ugh! The whiskered horse!</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Dumb, sir?</span><br />
+You've no defence?&mdash;no master argument<br />
+To prove your wisdom's never off the road<br />
+To Zeus' gate? Not once in all your life,<br />
+Although your daughter's to her brother wedded?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> 'Tis well. I can not doubt the gods.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>They stare at him</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Her brother born?</span><br />
+So foul a hap?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> A thing too dread in thought,<br />
+And in the act unutterable if Zeus<br />
+Be unconcerned in it. Therefore believe<br />
+His hand here moves, and holy majesty<br />
+O'errules the mortal scruple, so dividing<br />
+This horror from its kind. May it not be<br />
+The blood of Stesilaus hath in 'ts flow<br />
+A heavenly tinct that makes it not a sin,<br />
+But rather virtue, to keep pure the stream<br />
+From baser founts? They've done no more than kings<br />
+And gods before them.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Pelagon, <em>your</em> croak!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> I take a lower ground, my dearest dove.<br />
+All Athens knows me modest&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Ay to that!</span><br />
+Can blush as deep as any crow that flies!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Now, now! From first to last I've held it truth<br />
+That breeding scantles birth, and on that count<br />
+Make Phania our daughter.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Oh, you do?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> I stand on this, that training is the man.<br />
+Or woman, let us say, and not the blood<br />
+We buried with our fathers. So these two<br />
+Mate not ancestrally, but in their lives<br />
+That distantly upbred have not between them<br />
+A structural thread to bind them of one house.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> What men are these?</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I am no more afraid</span><br />
+Of him I thought was Stesilaus.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Listen,</span><br />
+You women. Though we are thus righted&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Humph!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> In man's and Heaven's eye, we yet will bow<br />
+To your own wish in this. As once we gave<br />
+Your sighs the right of way, we now will ease<br />
+This second woe by taking swiftest means<br />
+To part this clucking pair.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You'll yield to <em>us</em>?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> How like you, Sachinessa, this high place<br />
+Above the gods?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> They shall be parted?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ay,</span><br />
+We do consent.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Nay, you shall please yourselves.<br />
+For my own part, I will not break their bonds<br />
+And set their hearts a-bleeding.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">No, nor I.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> How now, vapidity?</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I mean, my lord,</span><br />
+You have convinced me, and this marriage bond<br />
+Shall be as Zeus has made it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Pelagon,</span><br />
+Your reason captures mine, and I repent<br />
+My mockery. This strange event's no more<br />
+Uncouth, now you have pried the way for me<br />
+To wisdom's bed of truth. I clearly see<br />
+Thai man and woman of one mother born<br />
+May be no kin. The marriage shall stand.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> In name of Zeus!</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Yes, in his name.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Nay, wife,</span><br />
+We know your simple heart, and read its horror<br />
+Through this pretence so suddenly clapped on.<br />
+We shall reject a forced and sad submission&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Ay, ay, we shall! I'll act at once, and stop<br />
+Their kisses, riveting a bond unblessed&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Unblessed?</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">My golden joy, I speak your thought</span><br />
+Not mine.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>A clamor in street</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> They come for us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">I hear my name.</span><br />
+We'll out and greet them.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">No, my friend.</span><br />
+Let them come in unnoted.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Ay, we'll sit</span><br />
+Withdrawn, in gentle argument. Here's shade.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They go aside. Enter Lysander, Agis, Creon, Menas, and
+a score of Spartans and Athenians</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> Is Stesilaus here? We must be heard.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> He's here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> And Pelagon! Where's Pelagon?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> His good ear's toward, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> [<em>Unable to keep aside</em>] Did I not hear<br />
+My name?</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Why, so I said.</p>
+
+<p><em>Agis.</em> [<em>Advancing to Stesilaus</em>] My lord, we come&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> What haste, good Agis? Goes the world so fast?</p>
+
+<p><em>Agis.</em> As fast as Fate can drive it, and you, my lord,<br />
+Are under foot.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> [<em>Who has been listening to Menas</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You hear it, Stesilaus!</span><br />
+Athens is ashes! We're betrayed, betrayed!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Biades, Pyrrha, Phania, Alcanor, and their companions
+swarm in, lower right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Silence, and let us hear! Now, Agis, speak.</p>
+
+<p><em>Agis.</em> And grieve that 'tis my part. The Spartans know<br />
+Your treachery&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Who dares to give such a name</span><br />
+To deed of mine?</p>
+
+<p><em>Agis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Denial comes too far</span><br />
+Behind the proof, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">The proof? What proof?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> 'Tis known to all. The very curb cries out<br />
+That Pyrrha is Athenian born, the child<br />
+Of Pelagon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Oh, Zeus!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Bear up, my Pyrrha!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Agis.</em> Ay, Athens weds with Athens, and on that<br />
+You build the peace of Sparta! A bold deceit<br />
+Of yours and Pelagon's, whereby we're sold<br />
+To a foeman's pleasure!</p>
+
+<p><em>A Spartan.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Though the heart of Athens</span><br />
+Be in the knot that binds your traitorous bargain,<br />
+We'll cut it through!</p>
+
+<p><em>Agis.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Will you deny you changed</span><br />
+Your babes in cradle?</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Silence</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Pray you, who revealed</span><br />
+This ancient secret?</p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Creon came&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Ah, Creon!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> Before the senate, then in seat to unfold<br />
+From rivalrous invention, topless honors<br />
+For these two lords, whose guilt had long devoured<br />
+Such labor's root and reason.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Creon came?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> And bared the tale, made his by accident,<br />
+And swore you knew it too,&mdash;that Pyrrha there<br />
+Is Pelagon's daughter, and Phania is the child<br />
+Of Spartan Stesilaus.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Oh, oh, oh!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> A rope for me then!</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> [<em>To Biades</em>] <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Sir, I did not speak,</span><br />
+But trusted all to you, until the secret<br />
+Laid night on Phania's innocence and grew<br />
+Too foul to keep.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You knew this, Biades?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> And knew you would forgive!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">This was the spring</span><br />
+Of all your oaths! In my espous&egrave;d hand<br />
+You'd lay my country's peace, knowing her name<br />
+Was Attica! This was your proof of love.<br />
+The oil&egrave;d wedge that let you in my heart!<br />
+False in the trothal moment that should make<br />
+The foulest for an instant pure!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">But hear&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> Oh, in that hour which women wrap in rose<br />
+And hide where thoughts like guardian doves may go,<br />
+You set a cautel touching it with death<br />
+That leaves me treasureless!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">My Pyrrha,&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">Not yours!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Howe'er 'twas done, I won you!</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Won a Spartan!</span><br />
+Now keep the shadow. As an Athenian maid<br />
+I do renounce you! [<em>Escapes him</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Ah! Zeus loves the dice.</span><br />
+He's always at the game. But who'd have thought<br />
+This throw would be against me? Hear me, sweet!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 16em;">[<em>To Stesilaus</em>]</span><br />
+
+Dear father, speak to her. She'll heed your voice,<br />
+Your judgment ripe, and words set out like cups<br />
+With wisdom's honey.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> [<em>Awake to fathership</em>] Ay, my son, I will!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> Not you, in name of hope! [<em>Follows Pyrrha</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> Monsters of fatherhood, how dare you show<br />
+Your faces in this sun? Go seek some cave<br />
+Whose darkest den will not betray a shame<br />
+Of its own hue! No, Phania, do not cling<br />
+To my unwilling breast that now must be<br />
+A hedge of swords to your bird bosom. [<em>Holds her tightly</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pha.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Oh!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> Withdraw your hand, proud Spartan!</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">I will protect</span><br />
+My sister, sir, from any lord of Athens!</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> Look, Pelagon,&mdash;and Stesilaus,&mdash;here!<br />
+Look on this warbling joy hatched tenderly<br />
+In nest of your conceit, which you've kept warm<br />
+Forgetting you had hearts where love bechid<br />
+Sat in unfeathered cold. If you are fathers,<br />
+Drink of their ecstasy till every vein<br />
+Applauds it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Lys.</em> Pray you, peace! The Senators!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Amentor and other Senators</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> What's your demand?</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Your life, Lord Stesilaus.</span><br />
+And that of Pelagon, in Athens' name.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> My life?</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> Not less will still this wind and save<br />
+Our homes from undefended sack. They've seized<br />
+The citadel&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Then on my armor! Wife</span><br />
+May whistle when the bugle calls!</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Stay, sir!</span><br />
+The Spartans are in power, and any check<br />
+Means slaughter. There's no help. The Persian fleet<br />
+Has sailed. The Athenians drop their useless arms<br />
+And follow at command, knowing no way<br />
+To win but by a bloodless yielding.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Yield!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> Sir, we must grant the Spartans these two lives,<br />
+Whereon they'll strike no further. So they swear.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> [<em>To Pelagon</em>] This is your downy Peace wooed from the clouds<br />
+To hover over Athens! Save the name!<br />
+She's from a briar-patch, not Heaven! Her wings<br />
+Are full of burrs!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> [<em>Holding Pelagon</em>] Stand to! A scuttled ship<br />
+Has no choice deck. There's nothing to be saved<br />
+But dignity.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pel.</em> Nay, that's for Stesilaus! [<em>Breaking away</em>]<br />
+My life, my life!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Noise mounts without. The wall is broken through, rear,
+and the breach reveals the street filled with angry Spartans</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Peace!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Give us Stesilaus!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> And Pelagon! The traitors! Give them up!</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> You see them. There they stand.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>Misses Pelagon</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 16em;">Where's Pelagon?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> We have him here! Bring Stesilaus!</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">Hold!</span><br />
+I am Archippe. Let me speak.</p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">No mercy!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> I ask none, friends. The wife of Stesilaus<br />
+Is not so much in 's debt she owes him aught<br />
+On mercy's score.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gir.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Then speak.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Is Philon here?</span><br />
+The reverend priest?</p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> He comes! Make way! He's here!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Philon comes out</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Philon.</em> Speak first, Archippe. I'll follow you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">My friends,</span><br />
+I'm such a one as you do most contemn,&mdash;<br />
+A woman disobedient to her lord.<br />
+But if you judgment give upon that point,<br />
+Remember that my lord is Stesilaus.<br />
+When this my daughter here,&mdash;yes, Pyrrha, she,&mdash;<br />
+Child of my nurturing blood,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Voices.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">What? What? Your child?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> Silence! Speak on, Archippe.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">When she lay</span><br />
+A morsel cradled, two months' breath in her,<br />
+Came he, the father, swearing she must go<br />
+To Sachinessa's breast, and I must take<br />
+Her Phania to my own,&mdash;thereby to serve<br />
+In some occulted way the future good<br />
+Of Greece. And all the mercy won from him<br />
+Was leave to journey with my child to Athens&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Sac.</em> But I was not so meek! By Pallas, no!<br />
+What&mdash;who&mdash;was Pelagon, to rob my bosom<br />
+Of Hera's gift? Who made him greater than<br />
+The gods? 'Tis but a girl, he said, to me,<br />
+A mother! I went to Philon then, the priest<br />
+Whom Athens honors, and by holy counsel,<br />
+We did not change our babes, but let our deed<br />
+Wear face that pleased them, with a heart our own,<br />
+And home Archippe went with Pyrrha safe,<br />
+While I in Athens held my Phania close.<br />
+And they, fond sires, who knew no difference<br />
+Between a <em>girl</em> and <em>girl</em>, hugged their deep plan<br />
+And built the phantom of united Greece<br />
+Upon it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> If those ghostly towers, now fallen,<br />
+May rise again, it is our act, my lords,<br />
+Provides them nature's base, and not a dream's.<br />
+Condemn us, if you will, as erring wives,<br />
+But as true mothers give us softer justice.<br />
+And if there's scale or balance that can hold<br />
+Such torturous weight, lay on it all the pain<br />
+Of lonely years that saw me turn my face<br />
+From my loved daughter, lest this man of rock<br />
+Should know her mine and his.</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Your own, your own,</span><br />
+My mother!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">So you slip me, dame,</span><br />
+And Pyrrha goes with you. But Biades<br />
+Is under thumb by this same turn. He now<br />
+Must know himself a Spartan, and shall keep<br />
+My terms.</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> Make them full easy. You shall lay<br />
+No marring hand upon our children's joy<br />
+As fell on mine.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">O, sue for me, Archippe!</span><br />
+Give me my bride! Whatever be her race,<br />
+Her home is in my arms!</p>
+
+<p><em>Arc.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Forgive him, Pyrrha.</span><br />
+Not for his pleading, but for love I know<br />
+You bear him.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Pyrrha permits Biades to embrace her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Alc.</em> [<em>To Phania</em>] Sweet, we know our heaven by<br />
+Those moments in a hell.</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Here's feast enough!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> But poor old Creon in this rain of porridge<br />
+Starves for a spoon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">And you, perforce, take one</span><br />
+Of Spartan make.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bia.</em> I'm caught. But in love's lap.<br />
+I'll swallow Sparta for so dear a bed.</p>
+
+<p><em>Menas.</em> And you need fear no distaff tyranny,<br />
+My lord. There you are safe. Although your bride<br />
+Be Hera-limbed, you've proved yourself her Zeus<br />
+In open match.</p>
+
+<p><em>Cre.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">How if her mov&egrave;d heart</span><br />
+Crept to her arm and slipped the victory<br />
+Unwon to love?</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Biades is suddenly embarrassed</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Pyrr.</em> [<em>With a caress of assurance</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">If that were so, my lords,</span><br />
+My pride would harbor his, and none should know<br />
+My secret.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> Senators, and men of Athens,<br />
+Art dumb when justice waits on you for voice?<br />
+What censure have you for these rebel wives,<br />
+And this unsainted priest?</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> [<em>To Philon</em>] You counselled them<br />
+To their deceit?</p>
+
+<p><em>Philon.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">I did.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You've no defence?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Philon.</em> I need none.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ste.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ha!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Philon.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Whoso reveres the gods</span><br />
+Draws of their strength in every mortal inch,<br />
+And in this act I did them reverence,<br />
+Standing between their wish and meddling wits<br />
+Of these presumptive men. But pardon them.<br />
+For it is shame enough to've thought to make<br />
+A frislet of their own shake like the locks<br />
+Of cloud-haired Zeus. For me, my hand is on<br />
+My altar, and I fear no fall.</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">No more,</span><br />
+Good Philon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Philon.</em> Ay, a word, This morning, sir,<br />
+I blessed the couple here, knowing them free<br />
+Of kindred blood,&mdash;Alcanor and his Phania.<br />
+The strands are doubly woven that now bind<br />
+Sparta and Athens. Pyrrha and Biades<br />
+Were first to link them one, and now this pair<br />
+Unites them o'er.</p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You hear, my Spartan friends.</span><br />
+What say you? Is it peace?</p>
+
+<p><em>Spartans.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Peace be to Athens!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Amen.</em> And peace to Sparta! Hearts and altars guard it!<br />
+Go, citizens! See that the chariots<br />
+Glow with new garlands for this double bridal.<br />
+And let the noble wives of these proud lords<br />
+Co-queen festivity. All shall rejoice<br />
+Save this convicted pair,&mdash;you, Pelagon,<br />
+And Stesilaus. You we prison here,<br />
+Your own sole company, nor shall you speak<br />
+Save in a rhyme now dim with little use,<br />
+But shall be better known from this day forth<br />
+With polish you shall give it. Hear it, sirs:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<p class="noidt"><em>The man who would his own pie bake</em><br />
+<em>Must from his wife ten fingers take.</em></p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Curtain falls and rises. Pelagon and Stesilaus are discovered,
+their backs to each other, the only occupants of
+the garden. Through the breach in the wall the festal
+procession is seen passing. Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<h2><a name="KIDMIR" id="KIDMIR"></a>KIDMIR
+<br /><br />
+<small>A PLAY IN FOUR ACTS</small></h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+
+<h3><em>CHARACTERS</em></h3>
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'>OSWALD, <em>Earl of Clyffe</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>BERTRAND, <em>sometime</em> VAIRDELAN, <em>his son</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>CHARILUS, <em>a Greek</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>ARDIA, <em>his daughter</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>BIONDEL <em>and</em> VIGARD, <em>sons of Charilus</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>BANISSAT, <em>Prince of Avesta</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>PRINCE FREDERICK</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>BERENICE, <em>his daughter</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>GAINA, <em>serving-woman to Ardia</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>BARCA, <em>servant to Charilus</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>RAMUNIN, <em>a headsman</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>SEVEN MAIDENS, <em>friends of Ardia</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><em>Followers of Banissat, soldiers of Oswald, nobles, wedding-guests,<br />
+dancers, guards, &amp;c.</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><span class="smcap">Time:</span> <em>During the later Crusades</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><span class="smcap">Place:</span> <em>The southern coast of Asia Minor</em></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT I</h3>
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>A hall in the castle of Charilus on the heights of Kidmir. The
+open rear, through which is seen a sunset sky, leads to a parapet
+overlooking the city of Avesta and the coast of Suli. Entrances right
+and left of parapet. Midway down, right, the door to a chamber.</em></p>
+
+<p class="negidt"><em>Charilus stands on parapet and looks down toward Avesta. Barca waits
+within the hall.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> O, sea-washed city, must the hail of fire<br />
+Crimson thy milky walls, and salt winds strive<br />
+In vain to sweeten ditches dark with blood<br />
+From thy tapped heart? Come, Barca, be my eyes,<br />
+Who climbs the heights?</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Barca advances and looks over</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> Lords Vigard and Biondel<br />
+Are on the pass.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">My sons so soon returned!</span><br />
+No other?</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> Farther down, my lord, I see<br />
+The knight, Sir Vairdelan.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Then we shall hear</span><br />
+His sunset song.</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> The stairway through the cliff<br />
+Is closed. Shall I give signal, sir, to hoist<br />
+The upper gate?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">That is my charge henceforth. [<em>Going left</em>]</span><br />
+They will be hungered. [<em>Turns to Barca</em>]<br />
+&nbsp;<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Scant the board in nothing. [<em>Exit left</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Gaina enters, right, rear, carrying a tray piled with candles</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Thank goodness, Barca, you're where you're
+wanted for once! Help me with these winkers. [<em>Giving
+him candles</em>] My mistress kept me out on the cliffs when
+I ought to 'a' been inside an hour ago doing my honest
+work. I got her in at last, but I had to be round with
+her, poor soul! I told her what!</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> [<em>Placing candles</em>] She was watching for her
+brothers?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> [<em>Puts tray down</em>] Brothers! It was a sight of
+that singing knight she wanted. He went down the pass
+this morning and she has gone about all day like a bird
+with a sore throat.</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> God gave her eyes, and Sir Vairdelan is good to
+see. When I look at him I feel somehow as if the sun
+were just up and everybody had another chance.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> A man who lets his sword rust at home while
+he goes about tootle-de-rooling on a flute! And she could
+be the princess of Avesta if she'd look in the right place.
+Well, if she had <em>my</em> eyes!</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> What! You would have your mistress marry
+Banissat? An unbeliever?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> A prince is a prince,&mdash;and I'd say the same if
+my mistress were my own daughter.</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> And you a Christian!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> A Christian of Corinth, I'd have you know.
+There are Christians and Christians, please you! And
+for my mistress, dear heart, it would take more than
+marrying a prince to send her to&mdash;to&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> Let it out.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Hell, then,&mdash;if you want to bite ginger. And
+who but Banissat can stand between her father and that
+English Oswald&mdash;who is just plain devil and not an Englishman
+at all&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> Devil? A knight of the Cross leading the army
+of the Lord to Jerusalem.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Nobody but the devil, I tell you! And I
+wouldn't speak to him if I met him walking with Saint
+Peter, unless he showed me his bare feet with ten good
+toes on 'em. It might be all right for Peter, but a woman
+can't be too careful, and the master took me out of a good
+family in Corinth. And this Vairdelan who is no more a
+knight than I'm a lady&mdash;the next time he goes down the
+pass he will lose his way up again, or my head's a goose-egg,
+that's all!</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> Gently, Gaina. You were young once.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Once? I've more hairs than wrinkles yet, which
+some can't say and tell the truth!</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> Tongue in! Here's the master. [<em>Moves right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> My candles!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Seizes tray and goes out, right, as Charilus re-enters left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> [<em>To Barca</em>] Look to the supper.<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; [<em>Exit Barca, right. Charilus crosses to parapet and looks down</em>]<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 13em;">Doubt-blown city, rest.</span><br />
+Sleep on my heart. You shall not bleed for me.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Ardia from chamber midway right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Alone, my father?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Never alone, and yet</span><br />
+My wish was calling thee. [<em>Sits, and draws her beside him</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ah, not one guard</span><br />
+About thee?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> The only guard is always near,&mdash;<br />
+A fearless heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Then I have none. My heart</span><br />
+Is made of fears.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">No charm but love will lift</span><br />
+Our gates of rock.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">But who knows love from hate</span><br />
+In days like these? Some foe with friendship's eyes,<br />
+Some secret knife of Oswald's&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">None may tread</span><br />
+The guarded pass save our knight Vairdelan<br />
+And your two brothers.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Vairdelan is late.</span><br />
+Why went he down?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> Knights true as he, my girl,<br />
+Are never questioned.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Starting</em>] Who are at the gates?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> Your brothers come.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">So soon? That means good news</span><br />
+From Banissat. He'll be your strength against<br />
+This mighty Oswald.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Fair his word may be,</span><br />
+But I go down the pass.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Go down? To meet</span><br />
+That fiend?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> The man who calls himself my foe,<br />
+But named of God my brother.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">O, too much</span><br />
+Thou lovest love! A fiend, I say!</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">That name</span><br />
+Give unto me when I consent to piece<br />
+This spun-out life with breath of babes and gasp<br />
+Of dying mothers. Would you feed these veins,<br />
+Gelid and old, all golden venture done,<br />
+With the warm waste of youth whose sav&egrave;d stream<br />
+Might bear mankind unto the port of gods?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> But you&mdash;you are my father!</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">It is such cries</span><br />
+Unsettle justice till her shaken scales<br />
+Weigh nations 'gainst a heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Must I not love you?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> My Ardia, fair as though thou wert not mine,<br />
+Or wert all hers who made gray Corinth young,<br />
+The love that feeds behind a sheltered door<br />
+Must be unroofed and take its bread of stars<br />
+Ere it may answer to its holy name.<br />
+The heart must build no walls&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">I build them not,</span><br />
+But find them risen about me. You are here,<br />
+Guardful and best, fending my eyes,&mdash;there stands<br />
+My Biondel,&mdash;there Vigard brave,&mdash;and there....</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> And there, my daughter?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Hark! 'Tis Vairdelan's voice!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Singing heard below</em>]</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O fires that build upon the sea</span>
+<span class="i2">Till wave and foam of ye are part,</span>
+<span class="i0">And burn in mated ecstasy,</span>
+<span class="i2">Ye build again within my heart.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O clouds that breathe in flame and run</span>
+<span class="i2">In link&egrave;d dreams along the sky</span>
+<span class="i0">In me the fire is never done,</span>
+<span class="i2">Though Eve's gray hand soon puts ye by.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Christ be my Hand of Eve upon</span>
+<span class="i2">The flame that tireless, fadeless leaps!</span>
+<span class="i0">Haste holily, O Mary's moon,</span>
+<span class="i2">With dew for fire that never sleeps!</span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Ardia keeps a listening attitude, not heeding the entrance
+of her brothers who come on left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> Well, sons?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Ay, well! That is the word we bring.<br />
+Avesta's prince, the gracious Banissat,<br />
+Is now your sworn defender.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Turning</em>] <span style="margin-left: 4em;">And asks no price?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> No more than your fair self, my sister.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> [<em>As Ardia stands silent</em>] <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You doubt?</span><br />
+'Tis true. He'll make you princess!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">He is old....</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> What call you old? He's in the fairest top<br />
+Of manhood.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Old!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; And cannot sing....</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Not sing!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> What need have we of him? Can Oswald scale<br />
+These rock-barred heights?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Starvation can.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">We've food</span><br />
+Will last three harvest moons.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">And Oswald camps</span><br />
+Where plain and sea will feed ten thousand men<br />
+As many years.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> While here our skeletons<br />
+With bleach&egrave;d grin may watch the feast below!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> To starve ... is that so terrible? 'Tis but<br />
+One way of dying.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Dying?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Say no more.</span><br />
+The morrow's dawn shall light my way to Oswald.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> You'll go to him? Then death!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> [<em>To Ardia</em>] <span style="margin-left: 7em;">See what you do?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Forgive me. [<em>Runs to her father and clings to him</em>]<br />
+ &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Now! Bind me to Banissat.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> Nay, thou art free.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> [<em>To Ardia</em>] <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Our lives shall thank you.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 17em;">Thanks?</span><br />
+You speak her part.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Ardia leaves her father and moves to edge of parapet</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> [<em>Following her</em>] Dost know a better way?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I pray you, leave me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Princess of Avesta!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Your supper waits.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> [<em>Starting right</em>] Come, brother!</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Though I've supped,</span><br />
+I'll sit with you, my sons. Discourse is ever<br />
+The best dish at the board.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We thank you, sir.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exeunt Biondel, Vigard, Charilus, right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> And am I wooed and won? Dreams of a dream,<br />
+Where are ye now?... A lover with no song.<br />
+No carols stealing sweetness from the moon;<br />
+No trembling hand to drop a morning rose<br />
+Where I may walk.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>Takes a rose from her bosom and casts it away</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">No rose.... no Vairdelan!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Gaina</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Here, mistress? Dearie dear, a-weeping?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> No.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Say you were, 'twere a better sight than this
+fetching of dry sighs. They 'most take the skin of a woe
+that a little tear-water would bring up easy enough.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> O, Gaina, Gaina, did you see my mother buried?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Ay, 'twas a sweet grave we laid her in over in
+Corinth. You'll never make as pretty a corpse, my dear.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Was I there?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Troth, you were, and trouble enough you gave
+me. You wanted to climb into the coffin and go to sleep
+too, you said.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> O, had you buried me with her I should not have
+seen this day!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Most like you wouldn't. Come, honey dove,
+come to your room and brighten yourself a bit. There's
+the new veil just begging to be looked at. I'll put it on
+you, and&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> No, I don't want you. [<em>Going, right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> O, ho, I can read his name you do want, and
+not kill a bird for it either.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Turning</em>] Who, magpie? Who?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Your eyes may save my tongue if they squint sou'west.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Is he coming?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Who, my cuckoo? Who?</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Bertrand enters left. Ardia starts off right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Ardia!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Weakly, pausing at her door</em>] Vairdelan....</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Will not you stay?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I will return. [<em>Exit</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Your mistress is not well?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> You've eyes, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> This fear of Oswald&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Her trouble's nearer home, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Her father&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Nay, it wears no beard, though it may in time.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> What troubles her, dear Gaina?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> A man, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> A man!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> There, don't feel for your sword, for that's at
+home, and I never heard yet of spitting a man with a
+flute, though it may e'en go to the heart of a woman if
+she be young and soft like my mistress.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> The truth, Gaina!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> I can spare it, sir. My master's daughter is so
+in love with you&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Angels do not love!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> That may be. I'm speaking of my mistress,
+"Magpie!" Not meaning you, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> She can not love me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> That's what I said&mdash;at first. A roaming creature
+with only his cloak for shelter, though it's a good
+gentleman's weave, I'll allow, and I know you'll go away
+before her poor heart gets too heavy for carrying. It's
+nigh that now, and before you came it was so light she
+was tripping and chirping till I could 'a' sworn she had no
+heart at all&mdash;just toes and wings. And now, dear soul,&mdash;but
+you'll go, sir? You know you'd have to hunt the
+door soon enough if her brothers got a breath of what's
+between you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> There's nothing between us!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> A bat could see it by daylight. It's been in
+your eyes all the time.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> I never meant it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Shame to you then. You'll go, sir?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Yes, yes, yes!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Here's my lady. Now don't tell her you're
+going. Just go.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Just ... go.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> [<em>At right</em>] Ay, you've got it.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit Gaina as Ardia re-enters</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> My brothers are at supper. Will you join them,<br />
+Or do you fast?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">I fast.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">A stern religion</span><br />
+Is yours, my friend.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I've chosen it. Ardia,</span><br />
+You know me for a knight.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Softly</em>] Who wears no sword.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> But in the English isle where I was born,<br />
+I was a monk ... and true. True am I now,<br />
+Save that my cell is what men call the world.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Spare speech and me. I know the rest.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">Your prayers</span><br />
+Then be my bond that Christ may search my heart<br />
+And find no part not his.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">No prayer of mine</span><br />
+Shall fetter youth to bloodless vows. And you<br />
+Look not as one faith-leeched of life. Your cheek<br />
+Is sudden gray, not changeless pale. 'Tis hued<br />
+Like rebel morning pushing back a dawn<br />
+Too eager for its peace. A monk. Our ways<br />
+Part as our souls. Know you I am to wed<br />
+Prince Banissat? So dumb?<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">My father comes!</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">[<em>Meets Charilus re-entering and leads him to a seat</em>]</span><br />
+
+Our guest was telling me of English days.<br />
+Now you change tongue with him and speak the tale<br />
+You promised yester night. Why does this Oswald,<br />
+This war-mad lord of England, on his way<br />
+To free the holy tomb, forget his path<br />
+And turn his army's strength against a man<br />
+No greater than thyself?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Yes, you shall know.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> At last!</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">For morning parts us.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Oh! Not that!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Shall I go in, my lord?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Nay, Vairdelan.</span><br />
+I'd have thee hear. Thou thinkest me a man<br />
+Of holy heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Ah, who does not?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">There's one</span><br />
+Has cause for doubt. 'Twas I who slew in rage<br />
+Earl Oswald's father.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You? These hands?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">These hands.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> I've heard 'twas so.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You've heard?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">'Tis thirty years</span><br />
+Since Oswald, with his father, John of Clyffe,<br />
+Marched in Red Giles' crusade. You know of that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> My grandsire captained there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I served not Christ,</span><br />
+At least as they, with pillage, fire and rape.<br />
+But there were some among the English youths<br />
+Who took my heart, and Oswald was my choice<br />
+Of all who camped before the holy gates.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> That man!</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">I, too, was young ... and I was wed.</span><br />
+Not to my Ardia's mother, but to her<br />
+Whose heart yet boldly beats in my two sons.<br />
+In her strange beauty John of Clyffe found death.<br />
+He sought her, and I slew him. When his blood<br />
+Ran at my feet, I fled,&mdash;not from the swords<br />
+Hot on my path, but from that stream of blood.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Dear, dear my father! 'Twas a world ago!</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> I was not of the many who can kill<br />
+And laugh again, nor yet of hermit-heart.<br />
+But for myself had made a gentle god<br />
+Whom my soul served.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I know, my lord, that sweet</span><br />
+Idolatry, and dream what thou didst suffer<br />
+So shaken from it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Far as man knows the world</span><br />
+I fled the scarlet stream that followed me,<br />
+And on the skyward slope of Himalay,<br />
+Between the white of snows and blue of heaven,<br />
+Saw it no more.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Kissing his hands</em>] O, white, forgiven hands!</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> There, near to God as man may come nor lose<br />
+The body's mould, I saw in solvent thought<br />
+That knows not time, a sinless star,&mdash;this earth<br />
+That shall be. Back unto my world I came,<br />
+And that my dream might live I lived my dream,<br />
+Servant to love even where the slaves of hate<br />
+Whet sword and knife.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">O, true!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">'Tis sung of thee!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> Now am I old, but love does not deny me<br />
+One service more. To-morrow I shall go<br />
+To die at Oswald's feet&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Eagerly</em>] <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You will go down?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> No, no! He shall not go! Prince Banissat<br />
+Will save him! He has promised!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Gazing at Ardia</em>] Banissat?<br />
+So 'twas a bargain. Thou'rt fair goods to be<br />
+On th' vender's table. [<em>Turns to Charilus</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You choose well, my lord.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> What words!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I bring a message from th' earl.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> From Oswald? [<em>Shrinking</em>] You know him?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 16em;">If any man</span><br />
+May know him,&mdash;but I better know his son.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> The vicious Bertrand?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Vicious?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">O, so foul</span><br />
+He shuns the day, and walks on moonless nights<br />
+Most like his soul!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You speak of Bertrand?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Ay!</span><br />
+More wolfish than his father,&mdash;beast whose sword<br />
+Should be his body's part as tigers wear<br />
+Their claws from birth!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">A bold delusion this!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> She speaks untempered rumor. Slander, sir,<br />
+Is out of breath with sporting Bertrand's name,<br />
+And giveth way to winds that blow it past<br />
+Belief's last border.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Slander?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">What will shake</span><br />
+These fancies from your heart?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">A miracle.</span><br />
+Naught less.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Hard terms. [<em>Turns to Charilus</em>]<br />
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">I know this Bertrand well.</span><br />
+If any happy merit in myself<br />
+Has won your love, bestow the same on him.<br />
+What I may share is his.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Here's living hope!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> He, like myself, was cloister-bred, and passed<br />
+Peaceful, uncounted days until the death<br />
+Of his three brothers, slain in one mad hour.<br />
+Earl Oswald then bethought him of the son<br />
+So early given to Christ. "I have no heir,"<br />
+He said, "but God lacks not for monks." And straight<br />
+With power and gold bought full release for Bertrand,<br />
+Save that release his soul and God might give.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> You make me love his story.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">True to peace</span><br />
+Even in the camp of war, he lives withdrawn,<br />
+And so gives Rumor sweep for what she would,<br />
+While in her swollen report the earl conceals<br />
+His monkish son's true nature.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I'll know this youth!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> He keeps his tent by day, and steals at night<br />
+To forest glens, his armor but a cloak,<br />
+His sword a flute&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">O, light from Heaven!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Sometimes</span><br />
+He farther goes, even far as Kidmir heights,<br />
+And at the feet of Charilus he learns<br />
+A love more true than fane and cloister taught,&mdash;<br />
+The love that made the houseless, barefoot Christ,<br />
+With open breast to all unbrothered woe,&mdash;<br />
+And now he kneels and of that gentlest love<br />
+Asks pardon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> Bertrand, son of Oswald, rise.<br />
+There's no forgiving in the sinless star.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Rising, to Ardia</em>] And you?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Ah ... when I've breath!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">What I have said,</span><br />
+My lord, makes way for what is yet to say.<br />
+To-day I waited by Avesta's gate<br />
+For this [<em>taking out paper</em>] my father's word, response to mine<br />
+Sent days ago to him. Here, sir, he says: [<em>Reads</em>]</p>
+
+<p>"Son of my hope, your words are not more strange to me than these I
+write with my own hand. If Charilus will come to Suli Castle, the which
+my swords have taken while you sang and slept, my door shall open to him
+as Kidmir gates have opened unto you. By Christ, I swear the treatment
+that he gave my blood he shall have again from me. But if he come not
+down, then shall I reach him through Avesta's heart, and the love he now
+spurns will be cold in my sword. Despatch this, I pray you, for I would
+hasten to Jerusalem, leaving you my conquered princedom, whose head is
+Ilon and whose foot is the city of Ramoor. Thine as thy heart speaks,
+Oswald."</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> Your father's hand?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Doubt flies from it, although</span><br />
+The vein is alien, sir. It is his hand.<br />
+And, I do think, his heart, wherein, my lord,<br />
+Your gentleness to me, like creeping rain,<br />
+Has moistened love's dry root, whose pent-up bloom<br />
+Is by that nurture freed, and magical<br />
+Now glows before us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">This I would believe. [<em>Starts off right</em>]</span><br />
+Vigard and Biondel must have this news<br />
+From my slow lips, lest with the sudden truth<br />
+They strike ablaze. They have their mother's fire.<br />
+Albanian Gartha was not one to die<br />
+And leave her sons no part in her wild race. [<em>Exit</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> You are not Gartha's daughter?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">No, my lord.</span><br />
+Claris of Corinth bore me, and my flame<br />
+Is joy, not anger. O, this miracle<br />
+You've wrought for me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I wrought?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">'Tis no less strange</span><br />
+When God through his bare tool reveals his hand,<br />
+Than when invisible his power stirs<br />
+And makes a chasm in sense. So when you stood<br />
+Before me, Bertrand's self, with yet the voice,<br />
+The eyes, the heart of Vairdelan, I knew<br />
+That was my miracle. O Heaven-sign<br />
+At which my world grew blithe and shook May-boughs<br />
+With birds in every branch!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">You've no more fear</span><br />
+For Charilus?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> None, none.<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Nor for myself.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Yourself?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">O, seems no soul need trouble now</span><br />
+In this vast world!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Charilus and sons</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> You are not Vairdelan?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> You're Bertrand, Oswald's son?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">'Tis true.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">That truth</span><br />
+Should cut your throat, and I could lend my sword<br />
+For such a matter.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Come! What knightly plea</span><br />
+Coats this deceit with honor?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">None, my lord.</span><br />
+If I've made trespass deeper than your love<br />
+Will bear me out, my hope is in your pardon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> A lie made you our guest, and guest you are<br />
+Until we meet on Suli plain.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">My son!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Call you that pardon, Biondel?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I speak</span><br />
+No pardon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> But you shall&mdash;you must. O, say it!<br />
+You know our father goes to Oswald.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Know</span><br />
+That fools and women talk! The gates are sealed.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> I'll guard the pass against my father's self<br />
+If so much rudeness may make stand between<br />
+His death and life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> My sons, I thank your love,<br />
+But I go down. The guards, the gates are mine,<br />
+And to my will they open.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">'Tis that girl,</span><br />
+That silvery Greek&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">If your quick blood must stir,</span><br />
+Let manners grace it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">O, my dearest brothers,</span><br />
+Do you not love me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Better than you know.</span><br />
+We love you, serve you, though yourself obstruct<br />
+The way to safety.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You would trust the man</span><br />
+Who wrapped him in a lie to enter here?<br />
+Sat at our father's board and brake his bread<br />
+To feed an enemy?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">The bread I brake</span><br />
+Fed friendship's heart in me, and made this roof<br />
+A temple. Do you not know me, Vigard?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Nay,</span><br />
+I knew a Vairdelan&mdash;you are not he.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> If Oswald means no harm to Charilus,<br />
+Let him pass on. Jerusalem awaits<br />
+His savage sword.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> My son, that Oswald thus<br />
+Compels me to him is to me but proof<br />
+That hearts may greet above long years of hate.<br />
+In this I see Love beckoning Man across<br />
+The wastrel lands of war to fields unwet<br />
+With blood, to days&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Unhearted cowards then!<br />
+Praise Allah, we yet live where rapiers thresh<br />
+The fields of men and leave the bravest standing!<br />
+Is 't not the Prophet's word that Paradise<br />
+Lies 'neath the shade of swords?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Allah be yours!</span><br />
+But I would walk beneath unrisen stars,<br />
+Beyond hate's eyeless clouds&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">O, spare us, sir!</span><br />
+Each day brings its own sun, and by that light,<br />
+No other, men must walk. If this our time<br />
+Be dark to you, 'tis in your vision, not<br />
+In the lit heavens, from whose shoreless depth<br />
+No hook of prayer or prophecy may draw<br />
+One star before its hour. Pray you be done<br />
+With this moon madness. Banissat will meet<br />
+The force of Oswald. With the morn he comes<br />
+To seal his troth with Ardia&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">By no word</span><br />
+Of mine. If you have given him pledge, your honor<br />
+Shall dip to dust and drudge your forfeit out,<br />
+Ere virgin bondage pay it. Hark, Biondel,<br />
+And hear me, Vigard! I alone shall meet<br />
+Earl Oswald. If the blood I shed yet cries<br />
+For blood, here are the veins shall make it dumb.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> But, sir,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">No more. Your sister stays with you.</span><br />
+Regard her will, nor ope these doors unbidden<br />
+To Banissat.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I stay? O, never think<br />
+I shall not go with thee!</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You go?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I'm safe</span><br />
+With thee, my father. Here....</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Here you have brothers!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I mean no slight upon you, but my fate<br />
+Keeps with my father.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I should doubt the God</span><br />
+Who bids me go if I denied you this.<br />
+Thyself art Peace, and where thou goest moves<br />
+Her radiance. Make you ready. And good-night, all!<br />
+Sir Bertrand, know the sleep that fits the heart<br />
+For journeying. [<em>Exit right, rear</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> [<em>To Ardia</em>] There's one will stop your way&mdash;<br />
+Prince Banissat!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> We'll send him word this hour,<br />
+For while the edge be on his sudden love<br />
+He'll thank us to be swift.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You loved me once,</span><br />
+My lords.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> True, son of Oswald.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Though you used</span><br />
+Some bitter words, I know your inmost heart<br />
+Holds me a man undoubted. There I'm stamped<br />
+In honor's verity; and when I vow,<br />
+By my soul's faith, that Charilus is safe,<br />
+You know 'tis truth.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Be you our father's hostage,</span><br />
+If this mad thing must be. Stay you with us,<br />
+And we are silent.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Stay? You ask too much.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> No fear, soft sister. Mark him. We're refused.<br />
+He'll stuff the air with words, not clear it with<br />
+One pinch of proof.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 4em;">My lords, were I to stay,</span><br />
+'Twould make an act of faith lose point and purpose,<br />
+And blazon doubt before my father's face.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> You mark?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;"> 'Twould louder cry of war; uproot</span><br />
+Love's seedling in its tenderest hour, and make<br />
+Once more the bane and night-weed spring. But hear<br />
+An oath of mine. If Charilus meet harm<br />
+In Oswald's camp, I shall return and ask<br />
+The same stroke from your hands.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">O, do not swear!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> By every hope I have to enter Heaven,<br />
+By the right hand of God, by this white cross<br />
+That knew my mother's last, death-holy kiss,<br />
+By every sacred thing I know and love,<br />
+If Charilus comes up these heights no more,<br />
+Here shall I lay my life beneath your sword.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Barca re-enters right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> [<em>To Bertrand</em>] The master asks a word with you, my lord.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit Bertrand with Barca</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Will you accept his oath?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Go to your room.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> We'll talk alone.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Nay, hear me first. You think</span><br />
+To force me to the arms of Banissat.<br />
+Give over that wild thought.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">'Twas not so wild</span><br />
+An hour ago.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fate lifts the hand that laid</span><br />
+Compulsion on me. I am free. O, free!<br />
+No strait of life or death can make me less<br />
+Than mistress of myself.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Our destiny</span><br />
+Is bound with Banissat. Make him our foe,<br />
+And where shall we find peace? Not on these peaks.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Is he our jailer then? This Banissat?<br />
+Our prison his good favor? Nay, the world<br />
+Has many roads, and courage even yet<br />
+May blaze a new one.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Rooted life is best.</span><br />
+I am not one to make my bed on winds,<br />
+Or stroll the earth for fortune's grudg&egrave;d scraps<br />
+Snatched from a rapier's point.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Know this. My hand</span><br />
+Shall never lie in Banissat's. Give up<br />
+A hope so barren. There's better pasturage<br />
+For wits so bold as yours. Now Oswald holds<br />
+The breadth of Suli plain, the heights of Tor,<br />
+Winged by the sea from Ilon to Ramoor&mdash;<br />
+A principality whose circuit leaves<br />
+Avesta as a fly pinned to a wall.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> What's Oswald's fief to us? We are no sons of his.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Lord Bertrand holds the princedom here<br />
+While Oswald goes to wars in Palestine.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> He told you this?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Did you not read as much</span><br />
+In Oswald's letter? There 'twas plainly said.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Still is our surest hope with Banissat.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> When Bertram! is your friend? O, more than friend!<br />
+A brother!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Ah ... do you say "brother"?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">True</span><br />
+As though he had been born our father's son!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> [<em>To Vigard</em>] You hear?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">With more than ears.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">We have been blind.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> A brother!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">All is clear enough, now that</span><br />
+We've eyes for it. Your pardon, sister.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Pardon?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Pray you! We thought your scorn of Banissat<br />
+Marked you of creeping spirit, when your aim<br />
+Shot o'er our lowered eyes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ay, she has sped</span><br />
+Before our boldest care of her, and left<br />
+Our duty lurching.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">These are drunken words.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> If you would wed Lord Bertrand,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 11em;">O, you think....</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Your hope has shown its wing. Best bid it fly.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Speak without fear. This changes all.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">You mean</span><br />
+You'll not delay us? You will let us go?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> And speed you too! High stroke, this anxious hour<br />
+To journey in his care!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Yet shielded by</span><br />
+Our father's dignity.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">How you mistake!</span><br />
+He does not woo me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Now the modest foot!</span><br />
+But we have seen the other. Trust us, sister.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Mistake? I now recall his looks, his sighs,<br />
+As from a love immured,&mdash;his songs, too warm<br />
+For piety's cool breath,&mdash;and more that tends<br />
+To happy proof.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">How dare he woo thee when</span><br />
+Mere Vairdelan? This blade had stood between!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Such beggar suit would then have cheapened thee<br />
+Beneath a prince's wearing. [<em>Leading her to door, right</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">No drooping now!</span><br />
+The way lies clear.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">O, brother&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Get you in.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Will you not listen?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Leave your hope with us,</span><br />
+Your secret is our own. [<em>Closes door upon her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Here's change of sky.</span><br />
+You trust Lord Bertrand?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">That is now our course.</span><br />
+Our father will go down.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">What's in your heart?</span><br />
+I'll open mine.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> I beg you do.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ramoor</span><br />
+And Ilon now are crownless. Suli's prince<br />
+Must have new governors.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">But Christian ones.</span><br />
+That bars our way.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">The Prophet's cloak fits well</span><br />
+With any fortune.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Ah....</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">We've but to change</span><br />
+The color, not the cut.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> [<em>Listening</em>] He comes!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">We'll speak.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Not yet, my Vigard. Let this fruiting hope<br />
+Swell to a golden fall. Wait with the sun.<br />
+No green and forward plucking.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Ardia</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Hear me, brothers&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Not now. The prince!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Re-enter Bertrand, right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I pray your answer, friends.</span><br />
+Let us go down unhindered, and my oath<br />
+I leave with you, a hostage sure as though<br />
+With iron bonds you held my breathing form:<br />
+For in that oath I leave no treasure less<br />
+Than honor, knighthood, and what in me moves<br />
+Deathless to God.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">It is enough. Our guest</span><br />
+Is free.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Once more my brothers!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Know us ever</span><br />
+By that dear name.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">And this deep oath you take</span><br />
+For Charilus' sake, is sworn too for our sister?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> For Ardia? No, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Do you say no?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> I must so answer you. For the fell harm<br />
+That touches her would of myself make end.<br />
+My honor so impeached would cease to breathe<br />
+The air itself made foul. I could not come<br />
+Having no life to bring me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">We believe you.</span><br />
+Go with our father. Take our sister too.<br />
+And we upon these heights shall pray, as you<br />
+On Suli plain, that Charilus may see<br />
+His sons again.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Come, let him know! This wished<br />
+Obedience will give him sleep.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exeunt Bertrand, Vigard, and Biondel, right rear</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Is 't best</span><br />
+That Truth be dumb? I'll watch this weaving Fate,<br />
+And feed her web with silence.... Oh, with hope!</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />
+[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT II</h3>
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene 1.</span> <em>A hall in the castle of Suli. Heavy doors open left, half-way
+up. Large window with iron grating, rear. Couches, chairs, scattered.
+Tables from which servants are removing the remnants of a feast. They
+are quarrelling, chaffing, singing, as the curtain risen.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ser.</em> Shifty, there!</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ser.</em> What, can't a soldier eat?</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ser.</em> You a soldier, lickspoon?</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ser.</em> I've drawn a sword, sir!</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ser.</em> Ay, and cut a cheese.</p>
+
+<p><em>Third Ser.</em> [<em>Lifting flask</em>] Here's to&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Fourth Ser.</em> [<em>Seizing flask</em>] No man shall guzzle my master's
+wine before me. [<em>Drains vessel</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Third Ser.</em> [<em>Sadly, turning up empty flask</em>] Not after you,
+either.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fifth Ser.</em> Well, well, and two moons back we were
+saying grace over ditch-water!</p>
+
+<p><em>Sixth Ser.</em> Ay, we were good Christians then. A full
+stomach makes lean prayers. Now we've such a plenty
+we can spare the devil a fillip, and never a grace for it.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ser.</em> [<em>Tugging at table</em>] Take a leg there! This is
+no grasshopper. [<em>Others help him move table to wall, right</em>]
+Look about you! The maskers will be in here.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ser.</em> Here? They'll be everywhere to-night.
+Such a jig-making over the new prince!</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ser.</em> Not a corner to drop into and sleep off a
+good supper with a clear conscience!</p>
+
+<p><em>Sixth Ser.</em> Sleep? What have we to do with sleep? We
+fight, we eat, we dance. That's my soldier!</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ser.</em> We kill, we cut, we caper! [<em>Sings</em>]<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">The soldier rides on Fortune's wheel,</span></p>
+
+<p><em>All.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Round we go,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Round we go!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ser.</em> Now up the head and now the heel,</p>
+
+<p><em>All.</em>&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Round we go,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Round&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter seventh servant</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Seventh Ser.</em> Quiet, you devils! The master's coming.</p>
+
+<p><em>Second Ser.</em> What, can't a soldier sing? Haven't we
+fought like true men? When did we give quarter? When
+did we show mercy? And now can't we be happy? Can't
+we take breath?</p>
+
+<p><em>Seventh Ser.</em> Sh! and I'll tell you what I've seen. I've
+seen the daughter of Old Wisdom.</p>
+
+<p><em>Sixth Ser.</em> He get a daughter!</p>
+
+<p><em>Seventh Ser.</em> The maid of Kidmir. Ardia of the Stars
+they call her, but if the sun could shine in the middle of
+a dark night she would be like that.</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ser.</em> Foh, the Lady Berenice will put out her candle.</p>
+
+<p><em>Seventh Ser.</em> The Lady Berenice is as like her as the
+back of my hand to Juno's cheek!</p>
+
+<p><em>First Ser.</em> A heathen comparison! There's a Christian
+blow for it!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They scuffle. Enter Oswald in talk with Bertrand. Servants
+finish their work quietly and go out</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> My heart is whole again, now you've escaped<br />
+The claws of Kidmir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Say the arms that closed</span><br />
+Like God's around me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Fox, and lion too.</span><br />
+That's Charilus. I knew him young,&mdash;when blood<br />
+Tells nature's truth,&mdash;ere he had sucked<br />
+Philosophy's pale milk and made his truce<br />
+With prudence and long life. The heart then his<br />
+He carries now&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Then, sir, you must have known</span><br />
+The Maker's marvel,&mdash;youth that outstripped age<br />
+And grayest saints in virtue.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Tut! No matter.</span><br />
+You're safe. And he is here ... within these walls.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> A guest of faith who holds your honor bound<br />
+High hostage for his life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">My honor? Trust me!</span><br />
+I'll care for that. No more I'll blush to lift<br />
+My shield i' the sun. The spot of thirty years<br />
+Shall be wiped out.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">With love, my father?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> [<em>After a pause</em>] <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Ay,</span><br />
+'Tis love shall do it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Lifting his father's hand to his lips</em>]<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">You bind my heart to you.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Too soft, my warrior. Keep such woman's play<br />
+For Berenice. She will thank you for it.<br />
+I'm rough and old, and need the soldier clap<br />
+To start the singing blood. [<em>Clapping Bertrand</em>]<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">A blow with good</span><br />
+Red heart in 't!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Berenice?</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Ah, that takes you!</span><br />
+She's here at last. Prince Frederick arrived<br />
+Three days ago, and with him his fair daughter,<br />
+Too dear of value to be left behind,<br />
+The prey of quarrelling kings. You'll dance with her<br />
+To-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> You'll pardon me. I shall not dance.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Faugh, there's the monk again! Why, boy, we'll pray<br />
+The better for a little tripping,&mdash;fight<br />
+The better too. One dance with Berenice!<br />
+A beauty, sir, who makes me hate the years<br />
+That lie 'tween youth and me. She was to wed<br />
+A son of mine by vow above her cradle,<br />
+And I have buried every son save you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> May I not keep one vow?</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">The pope long since</span><br />
+Released you. Now&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">My compact was with Christ.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Why cling to one when all the rest are broken?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> It is the one lies wholly in my choice.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> You left your cell.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Do you forget 'twas you</span><br />
+Who shook to ground my cloister walls, and locked<br />
+All holy doors against me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">True, I did it.</span><br />
+And with good warrant. Broadest Christendom<br />
+Upheld my right and gave me back my heir.<br />
+Small gain if you refuse to wed. My need<br />
+Is not for sons but grandsons now. My boy,<br />
+You'll let me see your children at my knee?<br />
+Ho, hide your face? Then there's a heart in you.<br />
+Why should I toil through blood and groans and fire<br />
+To make a name my shroud will wrap with me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Toil then to give this land to God, and live<br />
+So long as love shall live in men.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Pale fame!</span><br />
+Have you no blood of mine? How could my fire<br />
+Father this sluggish monk? There was a maid<br />
+On Kidmir, Charilus' daughter, who has come<br />
+In wag of him, which speaks a fearless wench,&mdash;<br />
+She taught you nothing in those moons you passed<br />
+Upon her peaks?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sir?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">When I saw her face</span><br />
+Flash from her veil, I could have sworn<br />
+Your vow was drowned in her lake-eyes, and that<br />
+Her captured softness had made easy way<br />
+For royal Berenice. Now you talk<br />
+Out of your cowl&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Not so! I am a knight!<br />
+Your words have made me one! Now could I draw<br />
+This sword that knows not blood&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I'll bout with thee</span><br />
+For any woman. Come! Thou'lt be a man<br />
+Ere long. Come, sir!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">You've set a foot most foul</span><br />
+Upon the flower of time!</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">It seems I've hit</span><br />
+The mark i' the very eye.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">The whitest thought</span><br />
+That holds her first must shrive itself!</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">So, so!</span><br />
+Come, end the song. She's yours. 'Tis not the moon<br />
+You cry for, take an old man's word.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">The moon</span><br />
+Were nearer to me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Trrr-rrr-rr!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">My lord?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> A woman. Ask and have. I'll send her here.<br />
+This is the hour to bait you, and I'd not lose it<br />
+For half of Suli.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Stay! I will not see her.</span><br />
+I dare not look upon her lest I lose<br />
+Christ and myself.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Are you so tuned? We'll have</span><br />
+A wedding yet.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Forget that word, and I<br />
+Forgive you for it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">A wedding, prince of Suli.</span><br />
+This plain shall ring to Antioch.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Nay, father,&mdash;</span><br />
+And yet I thank you that your heart would make<br />
+So fair a maid my bride.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Fair? That's no word.</span><br />
+She's glory's darling pearl,&mdash;the morning's eye<br />
+That makes the night forgot! When you have seen her&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> When I have seen her?</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ay,&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Do you not speak</span><br />
+Of Ardia?</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Ardia! Gods! Wed Kidmir's trull?<br />
+Make me a doting grandsire to the heir<br />
+Of Charilus? Hear it, stars! Am I the fool<br />
+O' the earth? Give up my English forests, bare<br />
+My purse for troops, and foot by foot fight way<br />
+To Suli sands,&mdash;all this that I may set<br />
+A droning dotard's line upon a throne,<br />
+And be the ass of chronicle? O, poison!<br />
+Well, well, I'm done. The girl is fair enough.<br />
+And you shall have her if she pleases you.<br />
+But Berenice&mdash;there's your bride, my boy!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Wed Berenice? With that name you save me.<br />
+By that I see the darkness coiling deep<br />
+Along my bridal way. 'Twas Ardia's name<br />
+That lit the path till I dared let my eyes,<br />
+Though not my will, go venturing on 't.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">My son,&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Never again, my father, speak to me<br />
+In this night's strain. Till morning I shall pray.<br />
+And then I fast. Good-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">One moment. One!</span><br />
+The sunrise feast? Will you not be with us?<br />
+I drink with Charilus the cup of peace.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> And love that breaks no peace?</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> [<em>Assenting</em>] See how you bend me?<br />
+All that you ask I give, but you to me<br />
+Yield nothing.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Sir, this sword, my knightly suit,<br />
+And princely title, make denial for me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Your pardon. I forget you count it much<br />
+To give a crust and cell for this broad kingdom.<br />
+I who have paid my heart out for a crown<br />
+Must thank you now to wear it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Good-night.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">O, son,</span><br />
+Have you no patience with a man grown old<br />
+In many battles? Now feel I my age,<br />
+Knowing the dearest blows of my long life<br />
+Have bought me but this shadow. In you is drained<br />
+Ambition's heart,&mdash;my every burning aim<br />
+Fails here in you, and cools unforged, unshapen.<br />
+Yet do you turn from me as though 'twere I<br />
+Not you who gave the wound that parts us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">I?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Of all my sons I loved you best. You think<br />
+I gave you to the friars with no twinge<br />
+Here at my heart? Your mother said "One son<br />
+We must return to God," and I said "Yea,<br />
+So it be not my Bertrand." But her will<br />
+Ran 'gainst me. When she had her way, I longed<br />
+Through many a day to have you at my side,<br />
+While you were happy with your songs and saints,<br />
+Your father quite forgot.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Stirred</em>] Nay, not forgot.<br />
+And I am with you now.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">O, let me feel</span><br />
+My son is mine! I'll yield you anything.<br />
+Ay, even Ardia! She shall be my daughter&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> By heaven that keeps me true, I will not hear<br />
+That name again! There's maddest music in it.<br />
+I see her when I hear it. [<em>Covering his eyes</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> [<em>Aside</em>] <span style="margin-left: 2em;">I see the lime</span><br />
+Will catch you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Again, good-night.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">One favor, son.</span><br />
+And slight too, by 'r lady!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Speak it, sir.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> I gave my word you'd wait on Berenice.<br />
+I' faith, I know not what excuse to make<br />
+To Frederick. 'Tis barest courtesy<br />
+To give her greeting.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I will welcome her,</span><br />
+Our guest.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Enough! [<em>Going</em>] You'll wait us here?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">I'll wait.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit Oswald. Bertrand sits with head bowed and does
+not heed maskers who enter and dance about him.
+They cover him with their garlands as they go off. A
+song is heard within</em>]</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<p class="noidt">
+What save winds shall kiss his bones<br />
+Bleaching on the desert stones?<br />
+What but waves o'er him shall sigh<br />
+Who doth drown&egrave;d sea-deep lie?<br />
+What save worms to him shall come<br />
+Locked in earth, bound, keyless, dumb?<br />
+<br />
+Wild the wind and cold the wave,<br />
+Sharp the tooth within the grave!<br />
+Be such kisses for my ghost,<br />
+Heart, my Heart, when thou art lost!<br />
+Love me, Love, an hour and we<br />
+Mock the cold eternity!
+</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Taking up a flower</em>] Eternity in this?</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Ardia enters. He does not see her until she speaks</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Prince Bertrand?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You?</span><br />
+Not Berenice!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Ah ... you wait for her?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Who brought you here?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">The earl. Your father.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">He!</span><br />
+What said he?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> That you prayed to see me, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> O, faithless! He deceived you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I will go.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Stay&mdash;tell me&mdash;how you fare.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Nay, you await</span><br />
+The princess.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> You've all comfort? No least lack?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I've food and bed, but little company.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> My father's plans press hard, and I'm a part<br />
+Of them. Each hour he calls me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I know, my lord,</span><br />
+This is not Kidmir. I've my father too.<br />
+You've yours ... and Berenice.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Nay, it seems</span><br />
+Fate hath her changelings. You have come, not she.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I sought no meeting, sir, but being here,<br />
+I'll ask you of my father. Is he safe?<br />
+Earl Oswald means no treachery to his guest?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> At sunrise he will drink the cup of peace.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> That's hours away! He knows your life is pledged<br />
+For Charilus' safety?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">No. I will not wake</span><br />
+A doubt against his honor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">He should know.</span><br />
+I've seen his eyes. Good hap, you have your mother's.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> If he be vile as you so fear he is,<br />
+My pledge would be no leash to his hold will.<br />
+He'd chain me here till he destroyed your brothers.<br />
+Let him know naught, I'm free to keep my oath.<br />
+But this should not be spoken. We do wrong<br />
+To talk of things that have no being save<br />
+In our own midnight fears.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Well, I shall sleep.</span><br />
+Good-night, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Am I not Vairdelan?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Ay, when you smile so.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">[<em>Holds out her hands, and drops them untouched</em>]</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Far, O far from Kidmir!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Yea, an eternal journey my lost soul<br />
+May find it. Ardia, counsel me. Two ways<br />
+Stretch long before me, and I faint<br />
+In daring either. Give me of your strength.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> My strength? I have none.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">You have God's.</span><br />
+Men, proud in valor, stray and lose his hand;<br />
+The woman holds it ever, walking floods<br />
+And trampling fire where men go down.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Tell me!</span><br />
+How may I help you?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Sit then. I will speak.</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>She sits; He stands near her</em>]</span><br />
+I have agreed to be the sovereign<br />
+Of sword-won Suli.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">None will better serve</span><br />
+Where he is master. O, this spear-torn land<br />
+Shall flower to heaven and mate her bloom with stars!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> A bloom that dies with me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Death cannot make</span><br />
+The spirit barren.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>At distance</em>] Through me my father hopes<br />
+To found a princely house o'er-topping Asia<br />
+With Christ-lit towers.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Oh!... Then you will wed.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>His eyes down</em>] My bride is chosen.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Chosen? [<em>Sits again</em>]</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Nay.... I know....</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Returning</em>] Your hidden eyes hide not the loathing there<br />
+For me forsworn. Why have I troubled you?<br />
+Look on me, Ardia. I am not yet fallen.<br />
+I take your answer. You have chosen my way,<br />
+And I set forth upon it&mdash;<em>not</em> forsworn.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> That word is naught. I do not think of it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Must man not keep his pledge?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">To mortals, yes.</span><br />
+For so our lives are knit, and part to part<br />
+Keep sound and whole. But pledges unto God<br />
+Man cannot make or keep till he may bind<br />
+The Will that journeys with the launch&egrave;d world.<br />
+So might His rivers say "Here will we rest,<br />
+And worship thee," nor run into the sea,<br />
+And God must be content though all his fields<br />
+Burn waterless. So might the winds vow Him<br />
+Unbroken calm, and God who needs his storms<br />
+Must still his own desire while his dear earth<br />
+Goes pestilent.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Unsentient things! He shares<br />
+His will with man.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> But not to enslave his own.<br />
+Christ seals no bond the lips lay on the soul<br />
+That is each instant new as life, as change,<br />
+As the importuning world. Ah, he who sells<br />
+To one hour's narrow need the zenith light<br />
+Of unborn days would snuff out time and know<br />
+No rising sun. Himself would be a slavedom<br />
+Where never Christ would walk.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Is 't Ardia speaks?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Truth speaks, not I. If man must vow,<br />
+Let it not be to love no woman,&mdash;wear<br />
+The vest of fire, and in a sunless cell<br />
+Chain Heaven-arteried life,&mdash;then peering out,<br />
+Cling to the nested eaves transfixed to see<br />
+His fled desires wear the horizon flame.<br />
+But let him vow his Christ shall shrink no vein<br />
+Of broad and pauseless being; ay,&mdash;shall keep<br />
+Sweet surgence with his blood, climb with his spirit<br />
+Time's lifting hills, and hold in watch with him<br />
+The unshrouding pinnacles where love puts off<br />
+The old clouds for the dawn. Forsworn? O, heart<br />
+Cell-bound, thy very vows deny thy Christ.<br />
+Who serve him wear no chains.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">You think me true?</span><br />
+And yet I felt your wounded, doubting eyes<br />
+Raining me scorn. Why was it, Ardia?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Scorn?</span><br />
+I have forgot why 'twas&mdash;or shall forget.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> And there was pity too, that dropped your lids.<br />
+And would have sheltered me. Is that forgot?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Nay, that.... I'll tell you that. I thought of Love,<br />
+Man's angel, and the heart-lone way of him<br />
+Who missed and found her not. Never to take<br />
+More courage from the fall of her sure feet<br />
+On heights that wind between death and the stars;<br />
+Or where his road burns through the shadeless sands,<br />
+Reach for the hand with fountains in its touch<br />
+And feel the palm-breath round him. Not to know<br />
+Her eyes when night is come, and there's no star;<br />
+Her breast, that pillowing the darkened waste,<br />
+Keeps warm the bitten earth and gives him dream<br />
+To meet and match the dawn. So wept my thoughts,<br />
+Forgetting that you are no wanderer,<br />
+But kingly housed will rule a tam&egrave;d realm.<br />
+Or should a harvest come of spears, not grain,<br />
+Yet is your princess brave and beautiful,<br />
+And bears, may be, a mating heart. Love then<br />
+Will come to you&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">My princess?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Berenice.</span><br />
+Your father's choice ... and yours.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">My Ardia! Mine!</span><br />
+Could such a lie creep to your soul and find<br />
+No lances at the door? [<em>Kneels, kissing her hands</em>]<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">My love, my love, my love!</span><br />
+Let honors fail, and stars forget my name,<br />
+'Tis thou shalt walk beside me, thou my chosen!<br />
+I'll hear thy footfall on the winter steep,<br />
+And take thy hand where desert noons are white,<br />
+But close thy breast shall lie upon my heart,<br />
+Nor pillow the bitten waste, my own, my own!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>She moves from him. He rises</em>]</span><br />
+Why are you silent, pale, and heaven-still?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I must be still. I've mourned my heart-walls thin.<br />
+This joy will break them. Joy to hear your voice<br />
+With love's mate-music in it cry to me.<br />
+My joy! I'll drink it all, nor lose one drop,<br />
+For I shall have no more.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">No more? No less</span><br />
+Than life can hold!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Hear me, my lord.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">You love me!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I shall not be your wife.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">You're mine&mdash;all mine!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> You hold your vow yet sacred, breaking it<br />
+By the sole might of love. You do not feel<br />
+The vision round you in whose light that vow<br />
+Falls like a grave-cloth from an angel's limbs.<br />
+Ah, Christ would be no bridal guest of ours,<br />
+Shut out by your heart's fear.<br />
+
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">[<em>He stands as if stricken</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You see 'tis true.</span><br />
+You listen for his sanction, and you hear<br />
+The ring of your own vow.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>He sits bowed</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You hear it now</span><br />
+Above your passion's chime. 'Twill fill the air<br />
+When love's mad bells grow quiet, and your soul<br />
+Asks the old question. Let me then be far<br />
+From thee, nor stay to be a clasp&egrave;d fire<br />
+Eating thy side.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You'll heal me of my fear.</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 11em;">[<em>Reaching his hands to her</em>]</span><br />
+
+My fountain and my palm!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Your doubt would stir</span><br />
+Beneath your tenderest deep. My nearing step<br />
+Would as a trumpet start its buried storm<br />
+To sweep our meeting eyes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">If Christ would give</span><br />
+A sign,&mdash;leave me no choice,&mdash;no other way</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> The torch of Fate but blinds us when the heart<br />
+Beareth no light.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Not Fate, but Heaven&mdash;there</span><br />
+I'd read my sign.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Hope not, my lord, that Heaven</span><br />
+Will drive me to your arms. Farewell.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">No, no!</span><br />
+To keep you I'll dare hell&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Dare hell? My love</span><br />
+Walks not that fiery verge, but waits thine own<br />
+In regions nearer God. There we shall meet,<br />
+And there will be no hell.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">[<em>Turns to go, but is drawn back by his grief</em>]</span><br />
+
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Thou art a prince</span><br />
+Of Christ. Arise and rule this land for him.<br />
+There is no sin in you. You've kissed my hands,<br />
+And they are bright as stars!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">O, can you go?</span><br />
+You do not love me. In your breast are wings&mdash;<br />
+No heart, but wings that seek the mountain sky.<br />
+Go perch above me, leave me dying here.<br />
+And cool your bosom with a virgin song<br />
+To mateless heaven!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Who is cruel now?</span><br />
+You have the world to feed on, need not eat<br />
+Your heart as I must&mdash;I, the woman. Dear,<br />
+Where Kidmir cliffs climb highest to the sky<br />
+I'll keep my watch, but thou shall rise above me<br />
+In thought of men. O'er all discerning shall<br />
+Thy purpose wing, perhaps be drunk of clouds,<br />
+But light shall follow where thine aim has sped,<br />
+And leading upward with your comrade world,<br />
+My Kidmir shall seem lowly, where I walk<br />
+With stintless ache beneath the cedar boughs<br />
+On pain's moon nights. And oh, the Springs to pass,<br />
+When each bride-bud shall be a wound to me,<br />
+When grasses young, and softly pushing moss,<br />
+Shall urge my feet like fire, and I must stand<br />
+Quite still ... quite still ... with all my unborn babes<br />
+Dead in my heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Motionless</em>] You dare not leave me now.<br />
+You dare not, Ardia.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I dare not stay.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>As she nears the great doors they rumble shut and are
+noisily barred without</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Ho! Open, open, open! I pray you, open!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">[<em>Beats on door, then leans to the silence</em>]</span><br />
+
+Shut in ... shut in! So Oswald's treachery<br />
+Begins with me. My father, we are lost.<br />
+You are to die, and I&mdash;to-morrow, oh,<br />
+My honor will go wasting on the fields<br />
+With every soldier's breath! You hear, my lord?<br />
+We are shut in....</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">The miracle!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Together....</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> The sign! the sign!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">For all the night....</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">For all</span><br />
+Eternity! There is no other way.<br />
+I take you as from Christ. My bride, my bride!</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />
+[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene 2.</span> <em>The same. Gray of morning seen through grating of window,
+rear, where Bertrand stands looking out and upward. Ardia is sleeping on
+a couch. The dawn-light wakes her and she starts up.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> 'Tis morning. Bertrand! You have watched all night?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> O, there has been no night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">I slept it through.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Thy body slept, but thou hast been with me<br />
+O'er all the world, and farther than the world,<br />
+Out where the life begins.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">That may be true,</span><br />
+For I had wondrous dreams.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You speak of dreams?</span><br />
+A magic touched me, and I woke from dream<br />
+Knowing my life. What ways we went! All things<br />
+Seemed new, warm with the Maker's hand, as young<br />
+As our own eyes, but 'twas eternity<br />
+That kept them sweet, unaging.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">It was Love</span><br />
+Who gave thee eyes to see the world immortal<br />
+Even in our own.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Do all Love's votaries</span><br />
+Walk with such magic sight?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">In truth! I've seen</span><br />
+A beggar woman tread the road-side dust<br />
+As it were showered gold, because she had<br />
+Love's eyes. And we&mdash;what joys our joy shall find!<br />
+The pearling skies with rose-breath drinking ours<br />
+'Tween sea and dawn! The leaves that turn i' the wind<br />
+And tremble in our hearts&mdash;the brook-song that<br />
+Began beyond the stars&mdash;the woodland nests,<br />
+Breast-warm&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">And one is ours.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">The lark that leaves</span><br />
+His meadow-mate and reels at the sun's door<br />
+Dropping his song of fire and clover-dew<br />
+Down to her heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Kissing her</em>] As this in thine!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">And all</span><br />
+Life's dearer-vein&egrave;d joys,&mdash;the way-side hands<br />
+That pluck to camp-fire glow,&mdash;the smile of age,<br />
+Gift-sweet and wise beside the garner door&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Ay, dear are these ... but when we came again<br />
+From that far, holy place....</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Ah, in your dream.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Where no words go or come....</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">When we came back?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Walking the light between the parted stars,<br />
+And met the days that knew us ... naught could hide<br />
+The eternal joy within it. Twas a world<br />
+Whose beauty lay allwheres. O, not alone<br />
+In morning skies and mated larks a-wing!<br />
+Each rag-hung thing was dipped in chosen time<br />
+And wore its royal hour.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">If that could be!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> What seers, what eyes of light, outshone the pain<br />
+That gave them being! Tears that silvered graves<br />
+Globed in their pearl the immortal hope of men,<br />
+And seemed as beautiful as prophecy<br />
+Burning in its own truth. Ay, where a man<br />
+Fell murdered, crying "I forgive," the ground<br />
+Sprang as a garden&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Murdered? O, not that!<br />
+How could you say it? I had forgot, forgot!<br />
+Love in your dream looked you quite through the soul<br />
+Of Time on things to be? What saw you then?<br />
+Ah, tell me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Then?... Then came this dimmer light<br />
+Which you called morning, and I saw no more.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I would I knew!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You fear even now?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">O, me!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Sweet, leave these shadows&mdash;dreams of ancient night<br />
+That cling too late upon a day-warm world.<br />
+Must I persuade you still that Oswald means<br />
+Our happiness?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Hark you! They come, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> The sunrise feast. Fit place and time to break<br />
+The fast of love.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">O, hear! So many feet!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Dear trembler, do not fear.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">They're here, my lord.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Welcome the world. It has no eye can make<br />
+Our own seek earth.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Doors open. Enter Frederick, Oswald, Charilus, Berenice,
+with lords and ladies attending. Servants follow
+bearing trays, and lay the table. Ardia hastens to her
+father and they talk apart. Oswald advances to Bertrand,
+right, the others lingering left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I am forgiven?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Forgiven!</span><br />
+Ask God and Love! I'll thank you all my life<br />
+That you did force me take my only way<br />
+To Heaven.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Hmm! And I spent a bitter night<br />
+Fearing your morning face.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">It was my soul's</span><br />
+Birth-night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> God bless me, you are grateful, sir.<br />
+But you've good reason. [<em>Looks at Ardia</em>] I had no such mate<br />
+To make the dark hours fly.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Pray speak to her.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> In my good time.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Nay, now!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">The day is long.</span><br />
+I shall be gentle, for I owe her much<br />
+Who gives me back my son. Come to our guests.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Does Frederick&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ay, he knows all, and bears</span><br />
+No grudge.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Knows all?</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">He clapped my plot as though</span><br />
+His own thick noll had hatched it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">And the princess&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> You see her smile? There's answer for you.<br />
+ &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Come!</span><br />
+No blush! Put on a face. Your bridal news<br />
+Shall sauce our banquet.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>They move to guests</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Fred.</em> [<em>To Bertrand</em>] Greet you, sir! But why<br />
+So pale, my lord? I fear me you have spent<br />
+A sleepless night.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Ay, as the stars.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>A Lord.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">The stars?</span><br />
+He winked then, by the rood!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">What do you say?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Lord.</em> I say the stars do wink, most gracious prince.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Come, find your seats, my friends! Yet two of us,<br />
+Lord Charilus and my unworthy self<br />
+Must keep our feet till we have drunk the wine<br />
+Made sacrosanct by one night's rest upon<br />
+The Virgin's altar.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Bertrand places Ardia's seat by her father, who stands at
+the left of Oswald</em>]</p>
+
+<p><span style="margin-left: 6em;">You, fair Berenice,</span><br />
+Sit at my right, and on your other side<br />
+The graceless prince of Suli begs for room.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bere.</em> He beg, my lord? I have not heard his tongue,<br />
+And for his eyes, I fear no leek of Wales<br />
+Could pull a beggar's tear from them to oil<br />
+This suit. But he is welcome.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Taking seat by her</em>] Thank you, lady.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>When all are seated save Charilus and Oswald a priest
+enters bearing a chalice of wine which he places on table
+before Oswald</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> This is the cup by angels visited<br />
+In night's deep hours. Herein they dropped the peace<br />
+Of Heaven, which Charilus and I shall take<br />
+Into our hearts. I know in truth it holds<br />
+Sweet peace for me&mdash;the peace that thirty years<br />
+My veins have ached for. Charilus, what say you?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> My heart can hold no more of peace than now<br />
+Doth fill it, but I drink with you, my lord.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Drinks from goblet which Oswald has filled from chalice,
+and Oswald drinks from goblet filled by Charilus</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> [<em>Dropping his glass</em>] Is peace a fire?<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I' faith, this kindles me!</span><br />
+Thou smileless priest, take off the Virgin's cup!<br />
+You think it needs another blessing, sir,<br />
+Since my bold hand has touched it? Out with you!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">[<em>Exit priest with chalice</em>]</span><br />
+
+That pinch-face has seen hell and fasts to keep<br />
+The ghost down. I'll not fast. Set to, my friends.<br />
+Fill up your bowls, for I've a health for you.<br />
+We drink to Berenice, bride to be<br />
+Of Bertrand, prince of Suli and my son!</p>
+
+<p><em>A Lord.</em> [<em>As all lift their glasses</em>]<br />
+We pledge the bride of Bertrand&mdash;Berenice!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Drink not, my lords, till you have changed that name<br />
+To Ardia, daughter of our noble guest,<br />
+Lord Charilus!</p>
+
+<p><em>Fred.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] If this be sport, Earl Oswald,<br />
+A world of groans shall pay for 't!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bere.</em> [<em>In mock swoon</em>] Oh.... I faint....</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Her ladies help her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> You bawling ass! You thousand times a fool!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>To Oswald</em>] You've woven a maze about me, and I'm blind<br />
+With 't, yet I see to pluck one truth,&mdash;my bride<br />
+Is Ardia. No other under Heaven! My lords,<br />
+It is the wine&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Would then 'twere in your throat!</span><br />
+Is this the riddle of your morning smile?<br />
+Your fair compliance, soft submission? Sir,<br />
+By my heart's blood, I'll give you to the sword<br />
+Ere you shall make me father to a drab&mdash;<br />
+The spoil of your own lust, the&mdash;What, you draw?<br />
+Ay, strike me down! Let me be first to fall<br />
+Beneath your mighty sword! The rust has lain<br />
+A lifetime on it, and a father's blood<br />
+May cleanse it bright as Heaven!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">O, my Christ!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Yea, call on him, and he will hear thee too,<br />
+Who honorest so thy father!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">[<em>Bertrand stands speechless</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Now, my lords,</span><br />
+Since he no longer brays, I have a tale<br />
+To tell you. I, too, had a father, though<br />
+The world has long forgot him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fred.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">No, my friend.</span><br />
+Well do I bear in mind his fair, proud face,<br />
+And glory of his arms.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">He was struck down</span><br />
+Because a minion, straying from the hearth,<br />
+Looked on his beauty with her nestling eyes.</p>
+
+<p><em>Fred.</em> For no more cause?</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I swear it. Friends, if death</span><br />
+Were the cold price for kissing of a jade,<br />
+Who here would be alive? For so slight sin<br />
+Was my brave father murdered. Charilus, speak!<br />
+Was not the princely heart of John of Clyffe<br />
+Ripped with a hate-keen sword,&mdash;the sword of him<br />
+Who claimed the lordship of those rebel lips<br />
+That chose my father liege?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">It is too true.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Who better knows? Say that a wilding flies<br />
+The builded bower, hearing a lordlier song<br />
+Pass on the wind than her dull mate can tune,<br />
+Must then the singer die, who scarcely knows<br />
+His song is heard, or that a bold wing follows?</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> Whether the earl of Clyffe sang then to woo,<br />
+As I believe, or for the love of song,<br />
+As you do say, my lord,&mdash;his death was sin,<br />
+And he who wrought that woe shed tears enough<br />
+To clear his stain, if tears may whiten souls.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> A murderer's tears! But what of mine, the son's?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Your oath&mdash;your honor, sir! Where is the love<br />
+You swore should cleanse your shield?</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Safe in my heart.</span><br />
+And burning for my father.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">God of pity!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> That was the love I spoke of.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">All be deaf</span><br />
+But hell!</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> Hear the full tale, my friends. I swear<br />
+The earl of Clyffe died for no more offence<br />
+Than I have here set out,&mdash;and I, his only son,<br />
+Kissed his red wounds and from his breast unbound<br />
+This bloody scarf&mdash; [<em>taking scarf from his bosom</em>] that then was crimson, now<br />
+In age-grown black bemourns my step that comes<br />
+So sluggish to revenge. For thirty years<br />
+Had passed ere I beheld his murderer,<br />
+Then face to face we stood ... and face to face<br />
+We stand ... for this is he, this Charilus<br />
+Of Kidmir&mdash;peace-lipped Cain&mdash;gray hypocrite,<br />
+Whose blood is honey in his veins, whose eyes<br />
+Stare on the world as he were some bland god<br />
+Who made it and said "good."</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Sir, I would send</span><br />
+My daughter to her brothers. Grant me this.<br />
+And I am ready for what death you please.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I will not go. One sword shall strike us both.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15em;">[<em>Turns to Oswald</em>]</span><br />
+
+But first a word to you. When Charilus falls,<br />
+Say farewell to your son. He pledged his life<br />
+To my two brothers for our father's safety,<br />
+And you, who know him least, yet know he'll keep<br />
+That pledge.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> What, creature, will you lie?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">I speak</span><br />
+The truth. Strike, if you can, this gray old man,<br />
+Silvered in service to the one high God,<br />
+Sinless as sunlight, fair in sweetened age,&mdash;<br />
+Let forth his sainted blood, and Bertrand lives<br />
+No longer than the shortest time between<br />
+Suli and Kidmir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">That's a lifetime then!</span><br />
+He shall not step! I'll have him hung with chains<br />
+Till he is fast as rooted oaks in earth!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Stunned</em>] A guest betrayed....</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Betrayed? I promised him</span><br />
+Such treatment as he gave my blood. And he<br />
+Shall have it&mdash;death!</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> Peace be my heir!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Takes stand by Charilus</em>] Death, sir?<br />
+First break this sword! Thy sin must be unnamed<br />
+Until the angel who doth write thee damned<br />
+Gives it foul christening. I break my pledge.<br />
+I will not go to Kidmir. Here I'll give<br />
+My life for Charilus.</p>
+
+<p><em>Char.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">No blow for me!</span><br />
+O, may I unaveng&egrave;d lie forgot,<br />
+And my forgiving blood make barren ground<br />
+Alive with asphodel&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Nay, I will strike,</span><br />
+Though a father's sword meet mine!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Charilus trembles, and supports himself by Ardia's arm</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Commend me, stars!</span><br />
+You counselled well. [<em>To Bertrand</em>] Fool, do not draw. There's none<br />
+Will run against you. Charilus is dead,<br />
+And by a way more sure. His holy goblet<br />
+Held one rich drop the angels put not there<br />
+Nor Virgin blessed. See how he pales&mdash;and stares&mdash;<br />
+And cannot get his voice? So are we spared<br />
+A swan-song homily trickling through his beard.<br />
+Be off, old pray-lip&mdash;off, and take with you<br />
+Your cat-foot peace and milky piety!<br />
+I serve a vengeful God who armeth men<br />
+For his own wars!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Heaven, draw thy clouds about thee!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Charilus dies in Ardia's arms</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Osw.</em> He's dead! The air of earth is sweet again.<br />
+I have no enemy!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Looking up from the body</em>] You have no son.</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />
+[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT III</h3>
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>On Kidmir Pass. Moonlight paling to dawn. Ardia alone,
+struggling up the Pass.</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Looking back</em>] They do not follow. I am safe from that. [<em>Sits on a rock</em>]<br />
+
+Why should I climb? There is no rest up there.<br />
+But there is death, mayhap,&mdash;and that is worth<br />
+The sorest climbing. O, my father dear,<br />
+Is 't thy dead self so heavy on my heart?<br />
+Thou shouldst be light upon thy spirit wings,<br />
+And give me of thy freedom.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em;">[<em>Gaina enters from above</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Gaina, hast found</span><br />
+The spring?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> &nbsp; 'Tis farther up.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">More steps.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Wait here.</span><br />
+Barca will bring you drink. Nay, sit you still.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I must. How this weak body masters us,<br />
+Cooling the bravest will that in strong limbs<br />
+Might dance to any goal! Yet do we say<br />
+The will is lord, whose flush is in the blood<br />
+And fades wi' the paling body. By that lie<br />
+We cling to Heaven and immortality.<br />
+... O, I am lost so deep I need not fear<br />
+The farthest bolt of God! Out, out the pale<br />
+Of his concern!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Why now, honey dear!<br />
+A sip of fine spring water and you'll be<br />
+A lark o' the morning! All's not bad, I say.<br />
+There's Banissat would marry you to-morrow!<br />
+What pretty words he spoke, and took us in<br />
+Like a good father&mdash;but I saw him look!<br />
+And he were shaved he'd have a merry eye.<br />
+Such meal and honey! <em>I've</em> a thankful tooth!<br />
+Come now, what say you? Run from such a fortune,<br />
+And stumbling is no matter. Ay, a trip<br />
+Or two were well enough.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Yes, foolish 'twas</span><br />
+To fly from Banissat.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">You know it? Well, well,</span><br />
+If it's your own right mind you've run to, dearie,<br />
+There's no harm done past mending.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Taking a small dagger from her dress</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 16em;">This had saved</span><br />
+My feet these weary steps.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Sweet Mary, save us!</span><br />
+Wouldst slay a prince for loving thee?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">No, wretch.</span><br />
+I could not take another's life though 'twere<br />
+Of all the world the foulest.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Bless the lass!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> But out of pity I could take my own.<br />
+Why should my heart beat on and labor so<br />
+For merest leave to beat again?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Now, now!</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>Enter Barca</em>]</span><br />
+
+Here's Barca, praise the saints! Now you'll take heart!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Ardia takes gourd from Barca and drinks</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Thanks, Barca. But there's misery in the draught<br />
+That makes me keen again. I fear me I'll<br />
+Yet hope.</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> Will you walk on?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Yes, come.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> [<em>Listening</em>] What's that?<br />
+A noise below!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Some one from Banissat!</span><br />
+I'll not be taken!</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Come aside, my lady.<br />
+Here is good hiding.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>They go behind a great rock half hidden by cedars. Bertrand
+enters below. Ardia steps out and stands before
+him. He kneels</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Spirit, hast come for me? I'll join thee, love,<br />
+When I have climbed this peak and met the sword<br />
+That sets my honor free.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Nay, rise, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Rising</em>] Thy living self? Here in the night alone?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Barca is here, and Gaina.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Sweet, the moon</span><br />
+Makes thee so fair.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Smiling</em>] Was I not always fair?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> [<em>Embracing her</em>] My living love! Sit here,&mdash;and now thy story.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I'll shorten it to get to thine.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">You had</span><br />
+The dagger that I sent you? [<em>She shows it to him</em>]<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">My sole gift</span><br />
+To love.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> O, it was dear as death then seemed<br />
+To me!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Cast it away.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">No, for love's sake</span><br />
+I'll keep it, and it shall do no work save God's.<br />
+Listen ... it prophesies.... I'll need it yet.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> O, I was mad to send it! Would you wreck<br />
+This tent set fair upon the soul's long road,<br />
+By pain-craft wrought of every whiter dream,<br />
+Where God may sit with us and map the winds<br />
+That forward blow and back, the paths laid free<br />
+To His far end, and those where blind walls rise<br />
+Breast-piled with thwarted dust? Dear soul of me,<br />
+Would we know Heaven we must listen here,<br />
+And one word lost may mean a path all dark<br />
+When we fare outward. This is not for you,<br />
+This fear-born blade. Away with it!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em;">[<em>She clasps it closer</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Is not</span><br />
+Your danger past?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Not while Avesta loves.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> O God! But tell me now the full, foul story,&mdash;<br />
+Yet not all foul, since you are here alive.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Your father&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I've no father!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;"> &mdash;sent me forth</span><br />
+With my two servants. When we reached Avesta,<br />
+The prince met us with welcome, much too warm<br />
+Methought, so in the night we stole away<br />
+And reached the pass&mdash;all with some wit and care,<br />
+As you shall know hereafter. Now your word.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> I was imprisoned.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Yes, I know.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">A guard</span><br />
+Gave me his sword. I fought the others.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Fought?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> And killed. Look on this blade.<br />
+ &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">A brother's blood.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> My love!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">At last I am Earl Oswald's son!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> My Bertrand! [<em>Drawing aside his cloak</em>]<br />
+ &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You are wounded! Vairdelan!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> That name is no more mine.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">How did you pass</span><br />
+Avesta?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> The guards were friends of Vairdelan.<br />
+I used the stainless name that I had lost.<br />
+O, I have lied to keep my word, and slew<br />
+That I might die!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Might die? You mean ... my brothers.<br />
+They must be merciful.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">With Charilus slain?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> O, me! I too shall die. And that is best,<br />
+If anything we do be worst or best.<br />
+I've read within my father's secret script<br />
+That earth shall lose its heart of fire, and lie<br />
+Dead-cold and dark with no green thing upon it.<br />
+Then this black crust shall bear no form of man,<br />
+Nor trace of him. Why then such ceaseless pain<br />
+To look a little longer on the sun,<br />
+When he who seals his eyes this day with dust<br />
+But leagues with time to reach the journey's end<br />
+Without the journey's ache?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Hast lost thy faith?</span><br />
+My heart, say earth must be its own still grave,<br />
+Our destiny lies farther. But were life<br />
+A march to naught, I'd choose it for the sake<br />
+Of one bright wonder by the way&mdash;your love,<br />
+My Ardia.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; You love me, yet would die. Thou'rt mine!<br />
+And I will hold thee, yea, on this warm earth,<br />
+Not in some strange and tearless world!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>While they speak Barca moves up the pass and listens</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">My lord?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Ay, Barca?</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Men are on the pass.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Above?</span><br />
+My brothers! Oh!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I go to meet them.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Stay!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> They shall not come to me. I go to them.<br />
+My honor, love, my honor!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">O, men, men!</span><br />
+You build a shrine to love and ask us fling<br />
+Our lives, our souls into it. Once within,<br />
+The door forever shut, there sits a god,<br />
+A monster-god, your honor, and we must sue<br />
+For barest room to stand or crouch or kneel<br />
+Where by your oaths we should be sovereign.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> The shrine itself is honor, dear, my heart.<br />
+That gone, we have indeed no holy place<br />
+To shelter love. Was 't not yourself who said<br />
+That man to man must keep his pledge?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Ah me,</span><br />
+That shining night! That night of golden wings!<br />
+And now comes this. Can such two nights be born<br />
+In the same world, and but one sun between?<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">[<em>Bertrand staggers</em>]</span><br />
+
+You're bleeding still!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Fast, fast.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">My veil&mdash;&mdash;</span><br />
+I'll wrap you with it! [<em>Binds wound</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Thanks, for I would live<br />
+To die upon their swords.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Wait, wait, my lord!</span><br />
+O, do not meet them in their first deep rage&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Farewell!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> You shall not see them till my prayers<br />
+Have turned their hearts from blood.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Part thou with hope</span><br />
+And pain will leave thee too. That is the wrench,<br />
+Not death.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Stay, stay! Are there not miracles yet?<br />
+I'll hide you yonder till&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">They come!</span></p>
+
+<p> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>Hurries up pass, staggers and falls</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">He faints!</span><br />
+The miracle begins! Here, Barca, Gaina,<br />
+Bear him aside. He swift! Then come to me.<br />
+O, gently, Barca! Haste!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">[<em>Barca draws Bertrand behind the rocks</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">He shall be saved!</span><br />
+Thou'lt not deny me, Heaven! O, forget<br />
+That ever I blasphemed Thee!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter, above, Biondel and Vigard</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Who is here?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> My brothers!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Ardia, by my life!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">'Tis she.</span><br />
+What do you here?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I go to you. Where else</span><br />
+Shall I find shelter in a world now bare<br />
+Save where your hearts make gentle room for me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> What do you mean? Where is our father?<br />
+ &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Speak!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> You have not heard? Why then do you go down?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> For word of Charilus. No messenger<br />
+Has come. All night we watched. What can you say<br />
+More than this fearful meeting tells? No word?<br />
+Are you the ghost you look? Is Charilus safe?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Safe as yon Heaven would have him. He is dead.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 9em;">[<em>Silence</em>]</span><br />
+
+You loved him, though you went another way<br />
+To find your God.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Our father dead? O, sister,<br />
+Not cold, not still, not silent to his sons.<br />
+Who loved his voice even when they most forsook it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Oswald betrayed us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">O, my sword, 'tis thou</span><br />
+Shalt split his heart, though every spear in Suli<br />
+Then pierce my own! [<em>Going</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Stay, Vigard!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Earth is fire!</span><br />
+Can you be still upon it? Where is Bertrand<br />
+With his deep oaths? O, coward! I will seek him&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> No need. He'll come to you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 10em;">He'll keep his oath,</span><br />
+You think?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I know he will.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 5em;">So knew you too</span><br />
+That Charilus was safe. Call him to life,<br />
+And we'll believe you yet!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 6em;">How died our father?</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 9em;">[<em>Ardia weeps</em>]</span><br />
+
+No matter now. And Oswald cast you out?<br />
+Afoot?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> Ay, so he did! I'll answer that!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> He sent us under guard.</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Ay, but afoot!</span><br />
+And 'twas a trudge to Avesta. O, the day!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Prince Banissat gave you no help?</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">No help?</span><br />
+Who said so? There's a prince! He drew his sword,<br />
+And swore he'd drive Earl Oswald to the sea,<br />
+And said "Avesta's yours,"&mdash;that to my mistress,<br />
+She then bedraggled and so full of tears<br />
+She had no words to thank him. I did that!<br />
+Then we had sup and bed, and when my bones<br />
+Were sweet with sleep, why we must up again<br />
+And tug it to the peak.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> [<em>To Ardia</em>] &nbsp; He sheltered you!<br />
+Then there was hope, which you have trampled down<br />
+By this mad flight.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I dared not think the prince</span><br />
+Would make my bitter fortunes his. In you<br />
+Lay my defence, and to your love I came.<br />
+You must make peace with Oswald. Yes, my brothers,<br />
+Although you write it with our father's blood.<br />
+He is all powerful. When Bertrand comes&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Ha, when he comes!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">What then?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">You may demand</span><br />
+Whate'er you will of Oswald, if you spare<br />
+The dear life of his son.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I'll have that life</span><br />
+And Oswald's too!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">He'll make you any terms&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Ay, any terms, and keep none, once his son<br />
+Is safe.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> [<em>Looking down the pass</em>] Who comes?&mdash;with gleaming lances? Ah....<br />
+The prince!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> By Allah, he!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>It is now dawn. Ardia steps back into shadow as Banissat
+and followers enter. His retainers wait at entrance
+below while he advances</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Good-morrow, friends.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Hail to you, Banissat!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I seek a dove</span><br />
+That fled my hand last night. Has 't flown your way?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Our sister is with us.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Then search ends here.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Her flight meant no ingratitude, my lord.<br />
+Her father's arms grown cold, she came to ours<br />
+By the shortest way, bringing her honor home<br />
+Where none might question it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">We love her more</span><br />
+For watchful care of what to us is precious<br />
+As to herself. Heaven-pure must be the bride<br />
+Of Banissat, and tainted Heaven will put<br />
+The earth to blush ere she will bring us shame.<br />
+I offer her my princedom.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Stepping out</em>] One whose veil<br />
+Is lost? Whose face is common to the eyes<br />
+Of beggars by the road?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">O, bald and bitter!</span><br />
+But did not one, our Lady of Paradise,<br />
+Walk with bare brow among our counsellors?<br />
+And you are pure as she. Who dares to soil<br />
+The chosen of Banissat with whisper that<br />
+He saw you on this journey, forfeits eyes<br />
+And tongue. So silence shall give burial deep<br />
+To every slander.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You will not forget.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> Yourself shall be my dear oblivion.<br />
+For Beauty keeps no records, has no past;<br />
+Her arms engird love's moment, and there is<br />
+No other time.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nay, Beauty's history</span><br />
+Is writ beneath her bloom, and when that goes<br />
+The deep, uncovered scars are hated more<br />
+Because of love that kissed them unaware.<br />
+I dare not wed you, but say that I dared,<br />
+Wouldst grasp my broken fortunes when you need<br />
+Strong Antioch's staff and sceptre to make good<br />
+Your gates 'gainst Oswald? And I've heard, my lord,<br />
+That Antioch's daughter is a prize you seek.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> Be not o'er-jealous, Ardia of the Stars,<br />
+For Antioch shall serve thee. There my suit<br />
+Is but a fair appearance,&mdash;there I woo<br />
+To make thy state secure, and thou shalt be<br />
+Bride of my heart unrivalled.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Hear me then!</span><br />
+I am betrothed to Bertrand. He is sworn<br />
+To me as I to him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Death to your tongue!</span><br />
+You'd wed your father's slayer?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">I would wed</span><br />
+Lord Bertrand. [<em>Kneels to Biondel</em>] Brother!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Give no ear to her!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> If you would save Avesta and yourselves,<br />
+Make peace with Oswald. Trust not Antioch.<br />
+When Bertrand comes&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> He will not come! He's not<br />
+A fool as thou!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> He comes!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> [<em>Lifting his sword</em>] Then here's his welcome!</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Bertrand comes out and walks slowly to the group.
+Vigard, amazed, lowers his sword</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> My friends, well met. You cut my journey short.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Gives his sword to Biondel</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> You have come back ... to death?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">The blow, my lord.</span><br />
+Your work is wellnigh done. An easy stroke<br />
+Will finish it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; And whose is that?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Not mine.</span><br />
+I do condemn him, but can lift no hand<br />
+To seal mine order.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I am not so weak.</span><br />
+This blow for Charilus!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Staying him</em>] If Bertrand dies<br />
+My honor goes unto a grave so deep<br />
+No shoot of green will ever from it spring<br />
+For the world's eye to light on.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You make much</span><br />
+Of broken troth. There's many a maid has lived<br />
+In wedded honor with a second choice.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> But I may not.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Peace, sister.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Let him live,</span><br />
+And Suli's glory will enwrap my name<br />
+Stainless and safe.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 3em;">'Tis safe with me. Ay, safer.</span><br />
+Let Antioch enlist with me, and I<br />
+Shall wear the name of Suli with my own.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> You've yet to hear ... you do not know, my lord....</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Sweet, plead no more. Let me go on to Heaven<br />
+If 't be God wills his gates shall ope to me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> You'll stop in hell a thousand years or so!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Wait! I will tell&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">You've said too much!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">Speak, Ardia.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> In Suli castle where I was betrothed<br />
+To Bertrand, just one sun agone&mdash;but one&mdash;<br />
+He spent the night with me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 7em;">She lies!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Say now</span><br />
+If Banissat, or any lord save Bertrand,<br />
+Will make me wife.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Must I believe you?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">No.</span><br />
+A woman's trick.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> There's proof. Ask whom you will<br />
+Of Oswald's train&mdash;the lords who saw me cast<br />
+From Suli's door, too vile for word or touch.<br />
+Ask any trooper, jesting by the way,<br />
+And hear my name made foul. The army rings<br />
+With it. Ask any gossip of the tents&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> O, stop her tongue! It thunders on me! All<br />
+The air is storm! Peace, or I'll strike her down!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> This seals your death, Lord Bertrand. Now my hand<br />
+Is hot and willing.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter a messenger below. He gives a packet to Banissat</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Messenger.</em> Antioch sends this,<br />
+O, prince!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> [<em>To Bertrand</em>] I had your word above all oaths<br />
+That you would guard our sister. When the priest<br />
+Strips bare the shrine, not outraged God or man<br />
+Shall show him mercy.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">He is innocent!</span><br />
+'Twas Oswald's plot to cast me in the dust&mdash;<br />
+And there I lie where all the world may see&mdash;<br />
+But Bertrand's soul is guiltless&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Guiltless! Tush!</span><br />
+Your puzzle's clear. [<em>To Biondel</em>] She dies with him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 17em;">I die</span><br />
+If Bertrand dies. But, oh my brothers, we<br />
+Are young&mdash;we love&mdash;will you not let us live?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> [<em>To Vigard</em>] 'Tis best she dies.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">You will not dare&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 16em;">The prince</span><br />
+Shall be her judge.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">First let us speak aside,</span><br />
+For Antioch fails us, and we've more to weigh<br />
+Than the quick death of this too-guilty pair.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Banissat, Biondel, and Vigard go off above</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> I have brought death upon you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Life, 'tis life</span><br />
+Now beating in the dawn! What music! Hear it!<br />
+O, we shall live, my lord, and live together!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> In Heaven, love.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">True, for this planet too,</span><br />
+Ay, even this earth, is set in Heaven as deep<br />
+As any star. 'Tis we are heaven to eyes<br />
+In other worlds, and would be to our own<br />
+Could we believe. O, hope with me, my Bertrand!<br />
+No, no, not hope, whose other half is doubt,<br />
+And to its dark and fearful double owes<br />
+Its very radiance, too, too unlike<br />
+Belief's transmuting sun!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ah, love, no man ere broke</span><br />
+Undrained his cup, or brewed again those drops<br />
+To his desire&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Nay, every man is new</span><br />
+In destiny, his star his own, and foots<br />
+Unmeasured paths.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">On mortal feet.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Be 't so,</span><br />
+Each birth is a high venture of the soul<br />
+Feeling an untried way for deity's dream,<br />
+And none may know where th' deep and twilight trail<br />
+Shall flash with God-rift, and the dawn be his.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> O, bravest, bow thy head&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">Nay, nay, my lord!</span><br />
+Lock up your spirit, let mine rule this hour,<br />
+Or be with me the flame of faith that leaps<br />
+To deed in God. For we do help him, dear.<br />
+Our parcelled strength is whole and new in His,<br />
+A power born that touches us again,<br />
+Breeding our greater self that yet gives back<br />
+His own increase, until the way is strewn<br />
+Even with his miracles and ours. So works<br />
+The unending drama out, where every act<br />
+Begets an act yet greater than itself.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Let me but kiss thy hands.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">You will not help?</span><br />
+You'll not believe? Is it so strange<br />
+That you should live?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">That hate should let me live.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Is it more strange that halo should grow love-still,<br />
+Than that the wind should cease, as now it does,<br />
+To strip the bloom from yonder bough, and lie<br />
+Unfelt within its silent place? More strange<br />
+That life should keep its flow in your warm veins<br />
+Than that the sun now creeping on the peaks<br />
+Should wander down and on and lay in gold<br />
+The valleys of the world, moved by no hand<br />
+We see or name, but know, but know!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Biondel, Vigard, and Banissat re-enter</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">He lives!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> He lives. Speak the conditions, prince.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> [<em>To Bertrand</em>] <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Your life</span><br />
+Is spared that she whose name is lost<br />
+May wear your own. You shall remain on Kidmir peak,<br />
+And make her yours by every priestly rite<br />
+With open, fair observance. Then Earl Oswald<br />
+Must greet as daughter one he vilely mocked<br />
+From his proud door, and far and wide acclaim her<br />
+Princess of Suli. Will his love for you<br />
+So bow his heart?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I may not speak for him.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> He will consent.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And, further, he shall give</span><br />
+To Biondel the governorship of Ilon.<br />
+And grant Ramoor to Vigard.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Not for price</span><br />
+Of my poor life will Oswald yield these towns<br />
+To any save a Christian.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">So we think.</span><br />
+And therefore will these lords forswear<br />
+The Prophet for your Christ.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Such sudden change&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Not sudden, sir. We've long debated it<br />
+In secret talk, but loved too well our prince<br />
+To so forsake his banner.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Now the day</span><br />
+Is here when as his true and Christian friends<br />
+We may best serve him, and yet keep the peace<br />
+For which our father died.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">He is alive again</span><br />
+If you be true. Though wonder is in the hour<br />
+I will not stare or question.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Question nothing.</span><br />
+Do you not live?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">The prince will summon Oswald</span><br />
+To earliest parley, and make our offer known.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> Nor lose an instant. Here begins my journey.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">[<em>Signs to retainers who start down the pass</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> We need not give you thanks when you've our hearts<br />
+That hold them.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">By the sunset hour the earl</span><br />
+Shall give me answer. Meet me in Avesta<br />
+'Tween dark and light.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">We will, my lord.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit Banissat</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">O, strange!</span><br />
+Will he keep faith?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">If you must doubt his heart,</span><br />
+Trust his affliction. Antioch lost to him,<br />
+What can he do but smile on Christian Oswald?<br />
+By that same argument I am condemned,<br />
+But beg a respite till this pushing peace,<br />
+Upsprung in haste, may bear you buds of proof.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> What world is this?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Climb you no farther, sir.</span><br />
+Your wounds forbid. Our servants shall be sent<br />
+To bear you up.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Ay, wait you here, my lord.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exeunt Biondel and Vigard above</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Love, see the sun!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">It is my heart, my heart!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />
+[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>ACT IV</h3>
+
+
+<p class="negidt"><span class="smcap">Scene:</span> <em>Same as first act. An altar near wall, left. Seven maidens
+putting fresh garlands about the hall.</em></p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p><em>Mylitta.</em> She must be dressed by this. Come, let us sing!</p>
+
+<p><em>Mirimond.</em> No, wait! Our part is yet undone.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Here hangs</span><br />
+A withered garland.</p>
+
+<p><em>Alenia.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Here another. See!</span><br />
+And there! Well, we are slack.</p>
+
+<p><em>Eudora.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Who would not be?</span><br />
+We've cause for sleepy wits and fingers too,<br />
+With seven days and nights of revelling.</p>
+
+<p><em>Garla.</em> And Charilus warm in 's grave.</p>
+
+<p><em>Myrana.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">He'll be no colder</span><br />
+Let come a hundred months. Ten years, ten days,<br />
+'Tis all the same i' the ground.</p>
+
+<p><em>Daphne.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">And yet, I think</span><br />
+The daughter smiles too soon.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mylitta.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Troth, I would smile</span><br />
+For such a lord if all the world beside<br />
+Were wrapped in shroud.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mirimond.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">I would the English knights</span><br />
+Were come! Full fifty, Barca said, would ride<br />
+From Suli.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mylitta.</em> I know you, chit. Your eyes will find<br />
+Their way.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mirimond.</em> Mayhap not all of us will take<br />
+The homeward ship for Corinth. Did we think<br />
+When we set sail we'd come in time to see<br />
+Our Ardia married?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mylitta.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">You will dream.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Garla.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">If dreams</span><br />
+Were men, what maid would go unwed? Not you,<br />
+Mylitta.</p>
+
+<p><em>Myrana.</em> Come, our song! 'Tis time!</p>
+
+<p><em>Eudora.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Come, all!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>They sing by Ardia's door</em>]</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Mornings seven have we been</span>
+<span class="i2">Wardens at thy door;</span>
+<span class="i0">Now thy lord shall enter in,</span>
+<span class="i2">And we come no more.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Mornings seven have we strewn</span>
+<span class="i2">Lilies at thy door;</span>
+<span class="i0">Now the virgin watch is done,</span>
+<span class="i2">And we come no more.</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Mornings seven have we sung</span>
+<span class="i2">At thy maiden door;</span>
+<span class="i0">Now the seventh morn is rung,</span>
+<span class="i2">And we come no more.</span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Door opens and Ardia comes out. Gaina follows</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> A kiss to all! Who's happier here than I<br />
+Shall have my place.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mirimond.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">We'll ask Lord Bertrand that.</span><br />
+Thou'rt no more mistress of your yeas and nays.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> O, but I am! I have a votary now<br />
+Who'll make my words his wishes and himself<br />
+Bring them to pass.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mylitta.</em> No doubt. You'll cough<br />
+In oracles. He'll puzzle o'er your sneeze<br />
+That he may do its meaning. I have heard<br />
+Such husbands do inhabit a green moon,<br />
+And one may come to earth.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Kiss me, Mylitta!</span><br />
+Naught else will stop your mouth. O, dearest girls,<br />
+No father's here to give me to my lord,<br />
+And yet I smile, I wed. For why?&mdash;his love<br />
+Is not in earth with his dear body. No!<br />
+'Tis all about me here, bathing my heart,<br />
+Now on my brow, now whispers at my ear,<br />
+Now runs before my eyes to make a light<br />
+Where they would rest. He loves this day as I do!<br />
+Yet I had stayed this busking marriage<br />
+Had not my brothers pressed me to such haste<br />
+And peace not waited on it. Think, dear maidens,<br />
+Peace everywhere! Avesta safe and free,<br />
+And Oswald's sword in sheath&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">What is that chanting?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> [<em>Looking from parapet</em>] A train comes up the heights.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mylitta.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">The English Lords!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Barca, left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Barca, who comes?</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Prince Banissat, my lady,</span><br />
+With all his court attending.</p>
+
+<p><em>Mirimond.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Banissat!</span><br />
+This is a Christian wedding.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We are at peace.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> He brings you gifts. Your brothers go to meet him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Where is Lord Bertrand?</p>
+
+<p><em>Barca.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Near at hand. He comes</span><br />
+This way. [<em>Exit Barca, left</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; My girls, wouldst see what dainties lie<br />
+In yonder chamber?</p>
+
+<p><em>Mylitta.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Nay, we'll wait.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Moonstones</span><br />
+For golden hair&mdash;crescents and amber stars<br />
+For tresses dark&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Girls.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">O! O!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Veils of spun silver&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Maidens buzz through door right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Go, give them all!</p>
+
+<p><em>Gaina.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">All, mistress? Not&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 16em;">Go, go!</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit Gaina. Bertrand enters, left. He is in princely costume</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Art found, my heaven?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Thou'st not a fear thy Heaven</span><br />
+Is lost in me?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A doubt were my soul's shame.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 14em;">[<em>Points up the heights</em>]</span><br />
+Does not yon giant cross arise to say<br />
+Christ reigns on Kidmir? Far as Suli plain<br />
+Men see the sun upon its silver sides<br />
+And hands upborne in prayer forget the sword<br />
+That sleeps unwakened.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Will it sleep for long?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Ay, else your father's death were devils' sport,<br />
+Not Heaven's will.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">What word to-day from Oswald?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> You name him?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Is he not our father?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 14em;">O,</span><br />
+God's angel thou, not mine!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Does Biondel</span><br />
+Now wear the crown of Ilon?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">That's confirmed.</span><br />
+And Vigard has Ramoor.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">They profit much</span><br />
+By their new faith.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Do they not spare my life?</span><br />
+So Oswald gives these crowns. You think he pays<br />
+Too dear?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; O, barest alms! I'd have the earth.<br />
+No less,&mdash;then want the sun,&mdash;ay, circling heaven,<br />
+And yet be beggared losing thee! But they<br />
+Must wear their purple o'er a Christian heart.<br />
+I would not doubt ... and yet....</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">They are the sons</span><br />
+Of Charilus.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; And Banissat?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">He vows</span><br />
+An endless peace with Suli.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">And you are Suli.</span><br />
+Why am I fearful, knowing doubt is death?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Come, love, look down&mdash;nay, farther, toward the sea.<br />
+That sprawling mass that darkens now the plain,<br />
+Seeming to hugely breathe and cloud-like move,<br />
+Is Oswald's army making feast to-day,<br />
+For I, the prince, go wiving. Now I seem<br />
+To hear our names joined high in Heaven's air.<br />
+And Christ, too, listens smiling, knowing one land,<br />
+One throne is his forever. Sweet, 'twas he<br />
+Drew me from sheltered cell and flowered garth<br />
+To be his sovereign servant. He it was<br />
+Who called through you, who cried in Charilus' death<br />
+To wake my soul that shall not sleep again<br />
+Till Love has garnered all these eastern lands.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Amen, my husband-knight! I am content<br />
+To be your love next Christ. Within your heart.<br />
+'Twill be sweet, gleaning where he walks before.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> These words be your sole dower, for they hold<br />
+More sun for me than shining gold!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">The guests!</span><br />
+Do you not hear them? Leave me now, my lord.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Thank patience and my stars, we reach the end<br />
+Of these stale ceremonies! Seven days<br />
+Of long, superfluous rites to make you mine<br />
+When our first kiss did wed us!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Mocking</em>] <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">So ungentle</span><br />
+To your proud honors, sir? Nay, it is fit<br />
+Your wedding be as famous as your name,<br />
+O, Prince of Suli!<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 9em;">[<em>Voices heard, left</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Go, to come again!</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit Bertrand, right. Ardia turns to enter her room and
+faces Vigard who comes on left. She draws her veil</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Stay, sister.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">Would you have me seen?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> [<em>Throws back her veil</em>] <span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">Art fair</span><br />
+Again? As Kidmir skies!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">It is my joy.</span></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Enter left, Biondel, Banissat, and lords. Banissat pauses.
+The others pass off, right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> [<em>Taking Ardia'a hand to detain her</em>] We have surprised<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">our sister.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Blest the hour!</span><br />
+Now may I lay this gift within her hand&mdash;<br />
+Poor gift, that has no worth until that hand<br />
+Caresses it to splendor.<br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">[<em>Kneels, offering her a small packet</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Taking packet</em>] Courteous prince,<br />
+My thanks. And more than thanks that you should climb<br />
+Kidmir's uneasy steep to dearly grace<br />
+This day&mdash;for smiles of friends, more than fair gifts,<br />
+Do best adorn my bridal. [<em>Draws her veil and moves right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">Night is come.</span><br />
+And through her mist the stars! [<em>Exit Ardia</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">Her bloom is washed</span><br />
+Somewhat with tears for Charilus, but she<br />
+Will flower again.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Now by the Prophet's soul</span><br />
+He who has kissed her lips had better've kissed<br />
+A flame of hell than so have touched<br />
+What shall be mine!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">As thou dost love revenge,</span><br />
+Be patient.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; Patience to the ox, to beasts<br />
+That dream 'twixt cud and whip! Am I not man?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> You have endured, by truth.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Endured!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 15em;">And now</span><br />
+Revenge! Ere night yon braggart cross shall bear<br />
+A burden that will start Earl Oswald's eyes<br />
+When he looks up from Suli plain.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">This day</span><br />
+Shall see it! Come, once more let us look down.<br />
+See where the hosts of Allah charge upon<br />
+The sottish infidel! All yet is well.<br />
+The banner o'er Avesta signals still<br />
+The Prophet wins!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">And when the tower of Suli</span><br />
+Gleams with the hoisted crescent, we shall know<br />
+Oswald is taken.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Ha! There's no way out!</span><br />
+The powers of Ilon, Avesta, and Ramoor,<br />
+Pen him in bloody triangle. Old rat,<br />
+You're in the trap! I should be there, not here,&mdash;<br />
+There at his throat&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Nay, here, my lord, you'll have</span><br />
+Your dearest triumph. Please you now, go in.<br />
+I'll watch here for the sign.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Your watch be short.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit, right. Re-enter Ardia</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>Holding out a flaming ornament</em>] Brother, see this!<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em;">The jewel of the house</span><br />
+Of Banissat. 'Tis sacred to his name.<br />
+I cannot take it, and he dare not give it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> It seems he dared.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What does he mean, dear Vigard?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> To honor Suli's princess as most fit.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I tremble still from his deep look of fire,<br />
+And when I saw this burn methought his eye<br />
+Was yet upon me.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Fool, go to your maidens!</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Barca, left, with Ramunin</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> You're late, my man.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ram.</em> And yet in season, sir. [<em>Points up the heights</em>]<br />
+The cross is bare.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Get you within.</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">[<em>Exeunt Barca and Ramunin, left</em>]</span><br />
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">Now, sister&mdash;</span><br />
+What, do you faint?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">That face! Ramunin's face.</span><br />
+I saw it once, and shuddered many a day<br />
+Remembering it. The public crucifier,<br />
+Who serves the bloody prince of Antioch.<br />
+The same. What does he here upon this day<br />
+Of all the days of time?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">'Tis by your wish</span><br />
+That Kidmir gates are open.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">And by yours.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Ay, let the world be witness you are made<br />
+The honored bride of Suli.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">But Ramunin?</span><br />
+He said the cross was bare. Why such a jest<br />
+As horrid as his life? [<em>Looking out</em>] And all the knights<br />
+That were to come from Oswald&mdash;where are they?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> They drank too deep last night for journeying<br />
+Up Kidmir road&mdash;or else they dare not cross<br />
+This outraged portal.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Have we not forgiven?</span><br />
+Ah, what is there? Look, Vigard, do you see?<br />
+A floating crescent!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Where?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">O'er Suli tower.</span><br />
+O, this is Oswald's greeting to our house,<br />
+Better than any band of arm&egrave;d knights!<br />
+He lifts the Prophet's banner to his towers,<br />
+Even as you set the Savior's crucifix<br />
+On Kidmir! Now the one eternal God<br />
+Lives in his sign when cross and crescent smile<br />
+Love-set in the same heaven!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Allah be praised!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> And Christ&mdash;forget not Christ!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">We'll make an end now.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 19em;">[<em>Exit, right</em>]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> An end? Am I a bride&mdash;or sacrifice?</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Goes in, right, at sound of approaching music. Enter,
+left, young musicians playing flutes and harps. They
+pause before altar, cross to right and seat themselves
+about Ardia's door. Guests enter, filling rear of hall,
+and parapet. A maiden comes on, dancing the grain-dance
+and scattering sesame. At the close of dance, Ardia's
+maidens enter, each bearing a lighted candle which
+she places on the altar. A Greek chant is heard as
+priest approaches left. All wait his entrance, and the
+curtain falls, rising again on the close of the ceremony.
+Bertrand and Ardia stand centre. An aged priest at
+altar. Biondel and Banissat conspicuous among the
+guests. Vigard not seen</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> Is all now done?</p>
+
+<p><em>Priest.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">All's done. The spouse of Suli</span><br />
+May bow herself unto her master's feet,<br />
+Bespeaking so the love that has no wish<br />
+But service, no desire save her lord's will.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>As Ardia would kneel, Bertrand prevents her</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> You shall not kneel.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">'Tis custom, dear my lord.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Then here it dies.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">My mother did so much</span><br />
+For him who made her wife.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Thy knees shall bend</span><br />
+To God, and to none less. Reign at my side,<br />
+Princess of Suli, not my feet.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We hail</span><br />
+The bride of Suli!</p>
+
+<p><em>Guests.</em> <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Bride of Suli, hail!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> [<em>Unseen</em>] Ho! Seize the traitor! Ho!</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Enter Ramunin, right, and armed guards</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Who speaks? And who</span><br />
+Is traitor here?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Thou, foulest murderer!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> Who speaks?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Dead Charilus.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">'Tis Vigard's voice.</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;">[<em>Vigard steps forth</em>]</span><br />
+What, Vigard, art thou mad? Wouldst shatter the globe<br />
+Of Heaven?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Nay, it was broken that same hour<br />
+When died our father.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Son of Charilus, speak</span><br />
+Your will. If you demand my life, 'tis yours.<br />
+I hold it by your gentle lease and love.<br />
+But while I ask not one poor breath for me,<br />
+I beg you pause, nor cast the innocent<br />
+To feed the vengeful and life-reaping fire<br />
+Oswald will kindle for his hapless son.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> You think no fires will burn but of his kindling?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> O shame! The crescent over Suli greets<br />
+The cross on Kidmir!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Ay, the crescent flies</span><br />
+From Suli, thanks to faithful Moslem hands<br />
+That set it there.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Ah.... Moslem hands?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">You fool,</span><br />
+To think that Oswald fluttered compliments,<br />
+When he was dreaming how he'd bid you drink<br />
+Of that same cup he gave to Charilus!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> Now, dearest lady, you are safe. To-day<br />
+The Faithful battled with the infidel,<br />
+And that bright crescent is the silent sign<br />
+We have the victory. Ramoor and Ilon<br />
+With pointed sword bore down on either side<br />
+The glutted, drunken army, while in front<br />
+Avesta like a whirlwind swept&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">O, traitor!</span><br />
+You vowed unbroken peace with Suli!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 11em;">Yea,</span><br />
+Will keep it too, for I am Suli now.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>To her brothers</em>] Were you not sworn to Christ?</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">We are the Prophet's.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> O, Heaven, hear not this! And Oswald's knights?</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Sleep in Avesta's dungeons.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Banissat,</span><br />
+Avesta's golden prince, speak you the doom<br />
+Of Bertrand&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Doom? O&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ber.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">Do not waste the breath</span><br />
+A kiss may save. A thousand times, your lips!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> [<em>To Biondel</em>] Let him not die!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> You'll pray soon that he may!<br />
+Speak, noble prince.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">I, lord of conquered Suli,</span><br />
+Condemn the son of Oswald unto death<br />
+By crucifixion. Be his body nailed<br />
+Upon the cross now raised on Kidmir peak,<br />
+That Oswald may behold his groaning son,<br />
+And every Christian dog look up and see<br />
+How dies the Prophet's enemy.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">[<em>To Ramunin</em>] Away!</span><br />
+Prick him with delicate tortures that yet leave<br />
+Him heart to heave his agony. Hear you!<br />
+If he live not three days upon the cross<br />
+Yourself shall hang beside him.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ram.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I've a hand</span><br />
+Has had some practice, sir.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We know it, fellow,</span><br />
+And therefore we employ you.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ram.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">I put the nails</span><br />
+In young Deobus, he who hung five days<br />
+'Twixt heaven and earth, and to the fifth eve groaned<br />
+As he would pull his heart up. I've a medal<br />
+Struck by the city for it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I will match it,</span><br />
+If you match me the service.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ram.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">That I'll do.</span><br />
+These English have strong hearts&mdash;will suck at pain<br />
+As life were in her dugs.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Exit Ramunin, guards, and Bertrand. Priest and guests
+follow. The maidens huddle at door, right</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">Sister, you stare</span><br />
+Too hardly on this grief. It is a woe<br />
+That Heaven smiles on, and the cure now waits<br />
+In Banissat's fair mercy. You shall be<br />
+His royal wife, and Suli's princess still.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> Speak to the prince.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Nay, let her hear my vow.</span><br />
+O, star of Kidmir, dear and beautiful,<br />
+I'll set thee in a bosom that shall be<br />
+A tender heaven round thee. Beat to earth<br />
+Is murmurous suspicion, and again<br />
+You shine unto the world, swept free of taint<br />
+By noble marriage with most careful rites&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> I doubt, I doubt! One part, one point, one rite,<br />
+Broken in act, left gaping and divided,<br />
+One half performed, one half left all undone,<br />
+Leaves me dishonored still. She is not widowed<br />
+Who was not wife&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">All's done! What more canst wish?</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> To lay my forehead on my husband's feet,<br />
+Which by the ancient custom of our house<br />
+Is maidhood's closing act, as 'tis the first<br />
+Of wifehood true. This thou wilt grant&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 13em;">You're bound</span><br />
+By rites enough!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Canst stand uncertain on</span><br />
+So slight a matter?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 4em;">Slight? Ah, you know naught</span><br />
+Of woman! Teach him, prince, that not a nick,<br />
+Or turn, or shade of custom would she spare<br />
+From this most holy ceremony. Wanting but<br />
+The smallest portion that gives leave to say<br />
+The measure lacks, she all her life will grieve,<br />
+Shed secret tears, and wear a blanchen face<br />
+When none knows why.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">You shall not move us. Peace!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> A brawling fancy!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Avesta's prince, thou who</span><br />
+Shalt be my lord, if any lord of earth<br />
+Be mine again, wouldst have my love, or hate?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> Thy love, fair Ardia.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Then I pray you, sir,</span><br />
+Move thy forbearance yet one farther step<br />
+And pluck this boon for me. 'Tis near thy hand,<br />
+And O, how small a thing for you to give,<br />
+But as the sun of all my days to me!<br />
+Without it I may die&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">Speak not of death. So sweet</span><br />
+I'll shelter thee, Death's self must bloom<br />
+If he creep near thy bower.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">May I, my lord,</span><br />
+Keep honored place by thee when memory mocks<br />
+That place and honor? Grant me this, but this,<br />
+And here I swear if any act of man<br />
+May move a widowed heart, mine shall grow warm<br />
+To thee!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> Do you speak truth?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Believe me, sir,</span><br />
+So dear a thing is this for which I sue,<br />
+That he who gives it must grow dear thereby;<br />
+And if he lift to him my prostrate life,<br />
+This gentle moment shall immortal be<br />
+And sweeten every hour we pass together.<br />
+Remembering this, my captive breast shall be<br />
+His free dominion, and my lips on his,<br />
+If they know warmth, shall take it from this cause,<br />
+This first dear tenderness.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">We'll please you, mistress.</span><br />
+Bring in the man again.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Exit a guard</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 6em;">I beg you, prince&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> By Allah, she shall have her beggar wish,<br />
+For no more reason than she wishes it!</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> It is her sickish humor, sir, to look<br />
+On him again. All this wild pother means<br />
+No more than that.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> No more? We'll please her then<br />
+For our good peace to come.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">A princely kindness.</span></p>
+
+<p> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; [<em>They talk together. Ardia crosses to altar</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Now one more miracle! God live in me,<br />
+And Christ direct my hand!</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 7em;">What do you say,</span><br />
+My sister?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> But a word to mine own heart.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> Nay, mine now, is it not?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> <span style="margin-left: 10em;">So much of it</span><br />
+As dearest lenience may buy, my lord.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Bertrand is brought in guarded</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> The man is here. Now have your foolish will.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">[<em>Ardia turns and looks at Bertrand. He is stripped of his
+rich dress and wears only a girdled tunic falling to his
+knees. Arms and feet are bare</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> [<em>To Bertrand</em>] Sir, we permit the lady of our soul<br />
+To end as her heart wills the rite that makes<br />
+Her wife and widow. Touch her not, nor speak.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Bertrand crosses to altar</em>]</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Why should we touch, when souls inhabit eyes<br />
+And journey on a look? My heaven-lord,<br />
+Here is no priest to bless this act of mine,<br />
+But God will know his altar and the gift<br />
+I lay upon it. The life we thought to live&mdash;<br />
+That might have failed, and killed the dream now safe<br />
+From tarnish of the days. Earth has enough<br />
+Of blind and baffled lives, but great her need<br />
+Of dreams. And ours we leave with her, unworn,<br />
+Unpaled, warm round the love-seed she shall nurse<br />
+To million-budded life.</p>
+
+<p><em>Bion.</em> <span style="margin-left: 5em;">Come, make an end!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> An end of love? The God of all the worlds<br />
+Cannot do that. Love born this darkest day<br />
+Shall be in flower on man's millennial path<br />
+And touch his step with Heaven.</p>
+
+<p><em>Vig.</em> <span style="margin-left: 9em;">Peace! Be done!</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> Ay ... done. My lord, think thou art in the world<br />
+Celestial, and from there smile on me&mdash;now&mdash;<br />
+
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; [<em>Draws dagger from her bosom and stabs him. He falls</em>]<br />
+
+High God, as thou art Love, I struck for thee!<br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 16em;">[<em>Bends over body</em>]</span><br />
+
+True aim. Full in the heart. I know the place,<br />
+For there my home is&mdash;there I live&mdash;and now<br />
+My house is down, I, too, must fall&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 12em;">I'll pay thee!</span><br />
+What hast thou done?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> What done? A miracle!<br />
+Who now can harm my love?</p>
+
+<p><em>Ban.</em> <span style="margin-left: 8em;">Your promises!</span><br />
+Your oaths!</p>
+
+<p><em>Ard.</em> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; I'd keep them, sir&mdash;ay, every one,<br />
+If grief would let me live to be your wife.<br />
+But I am weary, and my heavy stars<br />
+Have left their skies to hang upon me here.<br />
+My veins are empty, all their strength is out.<br />
+Does 't take so much to lift this little blade<br />
+And let it fall again?<br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">[<em>Biondel takes the dagger from her</em>]</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">Think you I need</span><br />
+So poor a thing? Nay, God has struck for me,<br />
+As I for Him. I go with Vairdelan. [<em>Kneels by body</em>]<br />
+Look on this brow, if shame will let ye look.<br />
+An angel shaped it. Ye've unfashioned here<br />
+The work of Heaven. Sweet lips, no roses left?<br />
+Your hand, my lord, and now the sinless star. [<em>Dies</em>]</p>
+
+<p class="center1"><br />
+[<em>Curtain</em>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mortal Gods and Other Plays, by
+Olive Tilford Dargan
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg's The Mortal Gods and Other Plays, by Olive Tilford Dargan
+
+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/license
+
+
+Title: The Mortal Gods and Other Plays
+
+Author: Olive Tilford Dargan
+
+Release Date: May 16, 2012 [EBook #39708]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MORTAL GODS AND OTHER PLAYS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Kentuckiana Digital Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ BOOKS BY OLIVE TILFORD DARGAN
+
+ PUBLISHED BY CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+
+ THE MORTAL GODS and Other Plays. 12mo, _net._ $1.50
+ LORDS AND LOVERS and Other Dramas. 12mo, _net._ 1.50
+ SEMIRAMIS and Other Plays. 12mo, _net._ 1.00
+
+
+
+
+ THE MORTAL GODS
+ AND OTHER PLAYS
+
+
+
+
+ THE MORTAL GODS
+ AND
+ OTHER PLAYS
+
+ BY
+ OLIVE TILFORD DARGAN
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SON'S
+ 1912
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1912, by Charles Scribner's Sons_
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+ _Published November, 1912_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ THE MORTAL GODS 1
+ A SON OF HERMES 107
+ KIDMIR 221
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE MORTAL GODS
+
+A PLAY IN FOUR ACTS
+
+
+
+
+_CHARACTERS OF THE PLAY_
+
+
+ HUDIBRAND, _King of Assaria_
+ HERNDA, _his daughter_
+ CHARTRIEN, _a Prince of Assaria_
+ BORDUC, _Prime Minister_
+ COUNT DORKINSKI, _Court Chamberlain_
+
+ CORDIAZ, _King of Goldusan_
+ MEGARIO, _Governor of Peonia, a province of Goldusan_
+ REJAN LEVAL, _a revolutionist_
+ SENORA ZIRALAY, _his sister_
+ ZIRALAY }
+ RUBIREZ }
+ GOLIFET } _nobles of Goldusan_
+ MAZARAN }
+ GUILDAMOUR }
+
+ MASIO }
+ GARZA }
+ GONZALO }
+ YSOBEL } _of Megario's hacienda_
+ GRIJA }
+ COQURIEZ }
+ IPARRO }
+
+ _Guests, officers, musicians, peons, &c._
+
+ Time: _Begins February, 1911_
+ Place: _Assaria; Goldusan_
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+
+SCENE: _A vast room in the palace of Hudibrand. As the curtain rises the
+place is in darkness save for a circlet of gold apparently suspended in
+mid-air near the centre of the room. As the light increases, the outline
+of a man's figure becomes distinguishable, and the circlet is seen to be
+resting on his head. Gradually the rim of gold fades to invisibility,
+while the figure of the man and the contents of the room become clear to
+the eye. The man might be mistaken for an American citizen in customary
+evening dress. He is Hudibrand._
+
+_At the left are two entrances, upper and lower. Rear, left, large
+windows. The wall rear makes a right angle about centre, the apex of
+which is cut off by a window. Right of centre the room seems to extend
+endlessly rearward, and is arranged to suggest an upland grove in the
+delicate, venturing days of spring. The ground, rising a little toward
+right, is covered with winter moss and tufts of short silvered grass.
+The trees are young birch, slight maples in coral leaf, cornel in
+flower, and an occasional dark foil of cedar. A brooklet ripples down
+the slope and off rear. Birds chirp and flit, and now and then a breeze
+stirs the grove as if it were one tender body. The lights are arranged
+to give the effect of night or day as one wishes._
+
+_It is winter without, the climate of Assaria's capital city being
+similar to that of New York._
+
+_Double doors lower right, through which Count Dorkinski enters to
+Hudibrand._
+
+
+ _Dor._ Your majesty, Sir Borduc has arrived.
+
+ _Hudi._ Hot-shod. We'll let him cool.
+
+ _Dor._ Where shall he wait,
+ My lord?
+
+ _Hud._ His usual corner. Keep him off
+ My Delhi rug.
+ [_Exit Dorkinski_]
+ Poor Bordy's fuming ripe.
+
+ [_Re-enter the Count_]
+
+ _Dor._ His Excellency calls, your majesty.
+
+ _Hud._ Which Excellency? They are thick as hops.
+
+ _Dor._ The Governor of Peonia.
+
+ _Hud._ In time and tune.
+ We'll see him here.
+ [_Exit Dorkinski_]
+ A pawn of mine who'd push
+ Beyond his square, and I must humor him
+ 'Neath meditative thumb.
+
+ [_Enter Megario_]
+
+ _Hud._ Welcome, Megario.
+
+ _Meg._ I've travelled far
+ To press your hand.
+
+ _Hud._ We made appointment here,
+ Knowing your visit to Assaria touched
+ Nothing of state or office.
+
+ _Meg._ [_Accepting his cue_] Nothing, sir. [_Looks about him_]
+ I thought I left the springtide in my rear,
+ Three thousand miles or so, but here it greets me.
+
+ _Hud._ A gimcrack of my daughter's. She would freak
+ With sun and time. My toyshop has no walls.
+ I juggle too with seasons, climates, zones,
+ But in the open where there's warrior room,
+ And startled Fate may spring against my will,
+ Giving an edge to mastery when I wrest
+ The whip from Nature, turn it on herself,
+ And set her elemental slaves to filch
+ Her gold for me. That, friend, is play.
+
+ _Meg._ For gods
+ And not as thief, but as divinity,
+ You take from crouching Nature.
+
+ _Hud._ Men have said
+ I pile up gold because its glitter soothes
+ A fever in my eyes. The clacking fools!
+ I am no Cheops making warts on earth.
+ No mummy brain! God built my pyramids,
+ Slaving through dark and chaos till there rose
+ My iron-hearted hills, and mountains locked
+ On ago-unyielded treasure waiting me.
+ There slept my gems till longing became fire
+ And broke the grip of stone,--there lay my gold,
+ Re-purged each thousand years till baited Time
+ Gave up the master's hour.
+
+ [_Hernda has come from the grove and moves up to his side_]
+
+ _Her._ [_Adoringly_] And you the master!
+
+ _Hud._ Daughter, you owe my lord Megario
+ Some pretty thanks.
+
+ _Her._ I give them, sir.
+
+ _Meg._ No, no!
+ I pray your Highness, no! My thanks to earth
+ That bears the flower of you, and to the light
+ That makes my eyes your beauty's treasurer.
+ But thanks from you to me, as jewels hung
+ Upon a beggar's neck, would set my rags
+ Unkindly in the sun.
+
+ _Her._ Then I am not
+ Your debtor?
+
+ _Meg._ Mine the debt, that mounts too fast
+ For feeble payment from thin purse of words.
+ Ah, every moment adds a suitor hope
+ To th' bankrupts in my heart.
+
+ _Her._ I fear, my lord,
+ Your coiner's name is Fancy, and I like
+ Truth's mintage best. [_To her father_]
+ What is this debt of mine,
+ So languished that a word of thanks may be
+ Its slender cover?
+
+ _Meg._ A word, if beauty speak it,
+ May mantle a bare world.
+
+ _Hud._ His Excellency
+ Is Governor of Peonia----
+
+ _Her._ In Goldusan!
+
+ _Hud._ And smoothed my road there----
+
+ _Meg._ Nay, your majesty,
+ My aid was but a garnish on the might
+ That moves with your own name.
+
+ _Hud._ Between us then,
+ We saved my holdings through a bluster there.
+ And what they brought me I've tossed here to make
+ This smile on winter.
+
+ _Meg._ What? You gave her all?
+
+ _Her._ How, sir? One word of mine would robe a world.
+ And my whole self not worth a little spot
+ Twitched from Spring's garment?
+
+ _Meg._ Oh, I'd grind the stars
+ To imperial dust that you might trample them,--
+ But this--this was a _fortune_!
+ [_To Hudibrand_] Sir, 'tis true
+ You care not for the gold.
+
+ _Hud._ I care for it
+ As men of hero times held dear the sword
+ That made them lords of battle.
+
+ _Her._ You are lord
+ Of Peace!
+
+ _Meg._ Write that upon the clouds, that eyes
+ Of men and angels may contending claim
+ The truth for earth and heaven!
+
+ _Hud._ Tush, sir, tush!
+
+ _Meg._ Can I forget how at your kingly touch
+ My fair Peonia, paling in treason's grip,
+ Thrilled from her deathward droop, renewed her heart
+ Through safe, ease-lidded nights, and woke once more
+ The rose of fortune?
+
+ _Hud._ There's no rumble now
+ Of riot?
+
+ _Meg._ Not a sound comes to our ears
+ But from the toiling strokes that steadily
+ Uproll Peonia's wealth.
+
+ _Hud._ Yet those who led
+ The last revolt are free.
+
+ _Meg._ Not all, your Highness.
+ A few crossed to Assaria, but expedition
+ Warms on their trail. Rejan LeVal is tracked
+ To your own capital.
+
+ _Hud._ Nay, mend that, sir.
+ We're safe here from such ruck.
+
+ _Meg._ The startled eel
+ Will make for muddy waters,--and 'tis sure
+ LeVal found murky welcome here.
+
+ _Hud._ My city!
+ What mutinous bolt turns here for him?
+
+ _Meg._ His friends
+ Are friends of power. How else could he elude
+ The thousand eyes in search?
+
+ _Hud._ [_Musing_] Treason at court?...
+
+ _Meg._ We'll mouse LeVal to 's cranny, do not doubt.
+ Then we shall ask Assaria's great seal
+ For his delivery to Goldusan.
+
+ _Hud._ That is assured you.
+
+ _Meg._ But your minister,
+ Sir Borduc, warns----
+
+ _Hud._ Ha! Warns?
+
+ _Meg._ He urges that
+ The extraditing power is at pause,
+ Blocked by the people's will.
+
+ _Hud._ I've given my word,--
+ A word that mobbish din ne'er added to,
+ Nor yet stripped of one letter that I chose
+ Should spell authority. You ask for more?
+
+ _Meg._ Pardon, your majesty! It is enough,
+ Beyond all stretch of need.
+
+ _Hud._ I call to mind
+ That Borduc waits,--and primed for tongue-work too.
+ The princess will content your Excellency?
+
+ _Meg._ [_With obeisance to Hernda_] 'Tis Heaven's honor!
+ I have left the earth!
+
+ _Hud._ You waste your art. She's in the milk-maid humor.
+ Would marry Hob. [_Exit, lower right_]
+
+ _Meg._ The Senor Hob? He says
+ You'll marry him? [_Hernda laughs_]
+ You care not if I die!
+
+ _Her._ You'll live, my lord.
+
+ _Meg._ You'll marry Hob. I die!
+
+ _Her._ He is not Hob. That is my father's mock
+ Because he's poor.
+
+ _Meg._ [_In hope_] Ah, poor?
+
+ _Her._ A beggarly
+ Ten millions,--not a penny more.
+
+ _Meg._ Ten millions!
+
+ _Her._ But that's my joy. I would not wed for gold.
+
+ _Meg._ O, pity me! I love you, senorita!
+
+ _Her._ No, no! I must not hear that.
+
+ _Meg._ Then I'll pray
+ Silence to be my friend and speak my dumb
+ Unuttered heart.
+
+ _Her._ You must not love me, sir.
+ But you may love--my father. When you praised him,
+ You too seemed fair to me.
+
+ _Meg._ I'll sing him till
+ The stars lie at our feet, if you will listen!
+
+ _Her._ He gave your country peace?
+
+ _Meg._ His royal name
+ Is dear as Cordiaz' in the grateful heart
+ Of Goldusan. That proud land lay unkept.
+ Her ores intombed, her vales without a plough,
+ Her rivers wasting down to shipless seas,
+ Her people starving, while her nobles strove
+ For shreds of power,--the clouted thing we called
+ A government. Then on our factions fell,
+ Strong as a god's, the hand of Hudibrand;
+ And now, compact, we stand by Cordiaz,
+ While every mountain groans with golden birth.
+ And every river turns its thousand wheels,
+ And every valley buried is in bloom.
+
+ _Her._ My dearest father! But I knew 'twas so!
+ And they who starved are fed and happy now?
+ They reap the bloom and share the golden flood?
+
+ _Meg._ All will be well when once we've scourged the land
+ Of rebels that drip poison from their tongues,
+ Stirring the meek and unambitious poor,--
+ Who sought no life but saintly, noble toil,--
+ With strangest rage, till maddened they would bite
+ The fostering hand of God.
+
+ _Her._ We've prisons where
+ We put such troublers. Has your land no jails?
+
+ _Meg._'Tis full of them! I mean--ah, we have jails,
+ But foes like these are wary, slip all watch,--
+ Flee and dart back, our weariness their charter
+ To tread with havoc's hoof. If I could find
+ Rejan LeVal, then might I rest from guard,
+ But not while he--unlassoed warrigal!--
+ May canter from his thicket and paw up
+ Peonia's fields!
+
+ _Her._ I'll lend an adjutant.
+ Ask Chartrien, who knows each foggy nook
+ And smirched corner of the capital,--
+ Having once made his pastime serve a quest
+ For such drab knowledge,--ask him help you find
+ This traitor.
+
+ _Meg._ Chartrien! Nay, the fox is safe
+ When th' hound too wears a brush.
+
+ _Her._ You mean the prince?
+ Speak, sir! Who hints me calumny,
+ Shall make the drum his chorus. I'll hear all.
+
+ _Meg._ A rumor drifts through Goldusan....
+
+ _Her._ Is that
+ An oddity? Here rumors are too thick
+ For ears to gather them.
+
+ _Meg._ But this--O, princess....
+ Fairest of earth, forgive me that I speak!
+
+ _Her._ You do not speak. And that I'll not forgive.
+
+ _Meg._ Ah, then,--but first,--is Chartrien near the king?
+
+ _Her._ No nearer than his heart.
+
+ _Meg._ I do offend.
+
+ _Her._ Offence now lies in silence. Speak, my lord.
+
+ _Meg._ When I left Goldusan, 'twas said--and with
+ No muffled hesitance--Prince Chartrien aids
+ The rebels there, and lays a train to rend
+ The State apart, that Cordiaz may drop
+ Into the gap,--then he with plausive cleat
+ Will make the fissure stanch, and seat himself
+ In unoppugned power.
+
+ _Her._ Why _he is Hob_! [_Silence. They both rise_]
+ A mad and sorry tale, you see.
+
+ _Meg._ I see.
+ He's in the capital?
+
+ _Her._ Beneath this roof.
+ The palace is his home. My father holds
+ His meagre millions guarded, nursing them
+ To a prince's portion.
+
+ _Meg._ We shall meet?
+
+ _Her._ To-night.
+ He's with a friend--a Spanish gentleman,--
+ But _not_ from Goldusan.
+
+ _Meg._ I made no guess.
+
+ _Her._ Deny that with your eyes. Your tongue's exempt.
+
+ _Meg._ And may I meet the Spanish gentleman?
+
+ _Her._ That's as he chooses. I may not command him.
+
+ [_Re-enter Count Dorkinski_]
+
+ _Dor._ His Highness, sir, is pleased to bid you join him.
+
+ _Meg._ His pleasure is his marshal. [_To Hernda, softly_] I've your leave
+ To love your father. That I go from you
+ To him, is Heaven's proof I do.
+
+ [_Exit Megario and the Count_]
+
+ _Her._ The proof
+ I seek, and would not find, is locked in Hell,
+ Not Heaven. Megario lied. Oh, Chartrien!
+
+ [_Retreats slowly into grove and pauses out of sight, rear. Enter,
+ upper left, Chartrien and LeVal_]
+
+ _LeV._ No,----
+
+ _Cha._ Prudence, dear LeVal!
+
+ _LeV._ I shall go mad
+ Shut in this gilded den,--this stifling hold
+ Of banditry.
+
+ _Cha._ Peace, friend!
+
+ _LeV._ I'd rather crouch
+ With brats of grime upon an unswept hearth
+ And claw my bread from cinders, than draw breath
+ In this gold-raftered house of blood!
+
+ _Cha._ Come, come!
+ Your wits fly naked, stripped of every caution,
+ And beat suspicion up that else might keep
+ Untroubled bed. Whist! We must move rose-shod
+ Through these next hours, not clack in passion's clogs.
+
+ _LeV._ I'll out of this! There's surge in me no fear
+ Can put in bonds.
+
+ _Cha._ Nay, here and here alone
+ Your life is safe. The hounds of Goldusan
+ Sniff through the cellars. They'll not scent you in
+ The royal shadow. That's more brilliancy
+ Than ever lit a rush in houndom. This
+ My home, I share with you, for mine it is
+ Till I've secured my gold from Hudibrand.
+
+ _LeV._ Ay, but Megario! While he's here these walls
+ Pen me in fire.
+
+ _Cha._ His visit is too brief
+ To be a danger.
+
+ _LeV._ Danger! To me, or him?
+ If we should meet, his fate as mine would be
+ In that encounter. These are hands would see to 't!
+
+ _Cha._ LeVal, forget----
+
+ _LeV._ Forget Celeste? My wife?
+ Forget she died of blows while he stood by
+ And smiled, because _she was my wife_!
+ Oh, God! Breathe air with him while this arm hangs
+ A limp discretion!
+
+ _Cha._ Peace! This mood unpent
+ Will wreck us. Keep your room if it must swell.
+ The princess gazes yonder, and your face
+ Is badged exposal. Go. I'll meet her question.
+ 'Twill not fash honor if a lie or two
+ Must be our guard.
+
+ [_Exit LeVal upper left. Hernda emerges from grove. Chartrien waits for
+ her as she comes circuitously, lightly hovering and hesitating_]
+
+ _Her._ [_At his side_] What lover's this?--dreams still
+ When love is by. Were he an olden knight
+ He'd ride to tourney and forget his spurs!
+
+ _Cha._ He would forget the world and fame and God
+ To see your eyes like this!
+
+ _Her._ You tremble, Chartrien.
+ Love so much?--yet stood here just--a stump--
+
+ _Cha._ That felt you coming, coming like a bird,
+ And watched and waited, envying every bough
+ Where you paused doubting, till you fluttering lit,
+ Down in the old stump's heart--
+
+ _Her._ There, I've forgot!
+ This is my lover ere that lure crept up
+ From Goldusan. Since you came back, I've felt
+ The shadow of a difference, and I've heard
+ The maids of Goldusan can draw men's souls
+ Out of their bodies for a dance in hell.
+
+ _Cha._ My love!
+
+ _Her._ O, Chartrien, are you mine? I feel
+ A question in your worship. When your eyes
+ Are warmest, love lies on them like
+ The shallow moon-gleam on a deep, dark sea
+ That is not kin with it. A sea that once
+ Was mine, and I could go, with circling arms,
+ Love-lanterned to its depth. But now the dark
+ Is round me fathomless----
+
+ _Cha._ My own!
+
+ _Her._ I try to rise,
+ To find my wings--and feel the air again
+ Without your drowning touch upon me----
+
+ _Cha._ Hernda!
+ Have I so nearly lost you? Come, beloved,
+ Sit here, and let me vow me yours again
+ Till in each word you feel my beating heart.
+
+ _Her._ My stars shall hear these vows.
+ [_Changes the light to pale, evening glow. Rear, right, are glimpses
+ of sky with frail, moving clouds, faint stars and a new moon_]
+ And see, my moon.
+ Intent and virginal.
+ [_She sits, and Chartrien lies on the ground, his breast covering
+ her feet_]
+ Now, now my heart
+ Holds not another thing but love and you!
+
+ _Cha._ No thought of those dread wings?
+
+ _Her._ None, none! And you?
+ [_Bends over him_]
+ All mine. I hold you now, fast in my world.
+ Sometimes you enter, come within my door.
+ And then I can not shut it for a wind
+ That clings about you from a farther sky.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Rises and takes her face between his hands_]
+ There's but one sky!
+
+ _Her._ A shuddering breath,
+ As from a planet strange, where you have walked
+ And I shall never go.
+
+ _Cha._ O, shut me in,
+ Rose of a heart! I'll not go out though Life
+ Beat at the door, and call her giant storms
+ To knock upon 't.
+
+ _Her._ Is this not life? And this
+ The only world?
+
+ _Cha._ The only world. My habitat
+ One perfect hour.
+
+ _Her._ One hour? Forever, love.
+
+ _Cha._ O, vow it for me, sweet,--again, again!
+ Till I believe once more in Arcadies
+ Born of a silken purse. In sunsets caught
+ In tinted tapestries, with jacinth heart
+ Gold-bleeding through the woven breath of dream.
+ In soft moon-hours that drop from painted skies,
+ In fairy woodlands aye unwintering,
+ In love's elf-ring no boding star may cross,
+ And you, my Hernda, sceptred in joy's name,
+ Tossing the apple planets in your hands--
+ These little, sovereign hands--as God might do,
+ Had he, poor God, your power.
+
+ _Her._ Love, you hurt.
+
+ _Cha._ Ah, tears in Arcady?
+
+ _Her._ Oh, what is this
+ Has come between us?
+
+ _Cha._ What? The universe.
+ I can not reach you even when my lips
+ Are on your heart.
+
+ _Her._ May I not come to you?
+
+ _Cha._ From this moon-world? No hope of that.
+
+ _Her._ See then,
+ The day! [_Changes the light to sunrise_]
+ Now may I come?
+
+ _Cha._ Forever playing!
+ The way lies here.
+
+ [_Steps to window and opens it. A snowy blast rushes in_]
+
+ _Her._ Stop, Chartrien! Shut it! Oh,
+ You've killed my Spring!
+
+ _Cha._ You will not come?
+
+ _Her._ You're mad.
+
+ [_Struggles with the window until she closes it, Chartrien watching
+ her_]
+
+ _Cha._ You do not like that road. But it is mine.
+ And children walk it. I have met them there.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, I am frozen! See!
+
+ _Cha._ [_With sudden contrition, pressing her to his breast_]
+ No, you are fire.
+ A fire that I will clasp, though it should burn
+ My holiest temple and betray my soul
+ To ashes!
+
+ _Her._ O, my love, what secret curbs
+ Your nature to this chafe? It rubs even through
+ Your ardor.--stabs me on your breast.
+ May I not know it? Is not confidence
+ Dear blood and life of love? Without it, ours
+ Must pale, ghost-cold, a chill between locked arms.
+
+ _Cha._ Is trust not love's prerogative
+ More royal sweet than any burdened share
+ Of secrecy?
+
+ _Her._ Not to the strong!
+
+ _Cha._ [_Smiling_] You strong?
+ By what brave test dost know it?
+
+ _Her._ And by what
+ Dost know me weak?
+
+ _Cha._ The proof awaits. But now,--
+ Emilio needs me,--
+
+ _Her._ Go!
+
+ _Cha._ Sweet, friendship too
+ Has bonds. Not all are love's.
+
+ _Her._ He's ill,--your friend?
+
+ _Cha._ As plague-bit life,--no worse.
+
+ _Her._ You'll wait upon
+ My father? Bid him but good-night?
+
+ _Cha._ No, Hernda.
+
+ _Her._ You shun him, Chartrien. I have watched you keep
+ A curious distance,--ay, as though your heart
+ Removed itself while your unwarmed eyes
+ Made invoice of its treasure. Once you rushed
+ Unto his counsel as security
+ Hived in his word, and you, denied, were lost.
+ Are those hours gone? If you have grown too large
+ For his shrunk wisdom, bind you to his need.
+ Age unsuspected crowns him, and you take
+ Your young arm out of his.
+
+ _Cha._ He wants no staff.
+
+ _Her._ You'll go no more to Goldusan?
+
+ _Cha._ I must.
+
+ _Her._ And soon?
+
+ _Cha._ When Hudibrand is pleased to free
+ My fortune from his ward.
+
+ _Her._ You want it all?
+
+ _Cha._ Yes, all.
+
+ _Her._ For Goldusan?
+
+ _Cha._ My greatest need
+ Is there.
+
+ _Her._ What is that need?
+
+ _Cha._ You question me?
+
+ _Her._ May love not ask?
+
+ _Cha._ If love could understand.
+
+ _Her._ Have I grown dull? I do not know you, Chartrien.
+ You're so unfeatured by that Spanish cloud,
+ You're lowering friend. _He_ is the universe
+ Between our hearts. Ill? No. I saw him here,--
+ A tropic threat. 'Twas rage broke his suave guard,
+ Not illness.
+
+ _Cha._ Hernda!
+
+ _Her._ The Lord Megario
+ Has asked to compliment a brother guest.
+ May he be seen? Does his unmannered storm
+ Spare one amenity?
+
+ _Cha._ Megario knows?
+
+ _Her._ Knows what?
+
+ _Cha._ Oh!--nothing.
+
+ _Her._ So much more than naught
+ Your cheek is pale with it.
+
+ _Cha._ No matter, Hernda.
+
+ _Her._ An ashen matter truly, yet not light
+ As nothing. But your answer. May our guests
+ Exchange the roof-tree greeting?
+
+ _Cha._ No.
+
+ _Her._ Why not?
+ That "no" trails consequence. It can not be
+ Your period.
+
+ _Cha._ They are enemies.
+
+ _Her._ I knew!
+
+ _Cha._ Megario dealt my friend a bitter wrong,--
+ The foulest wrong that man may put on man.
+
+ _Her._ He's loyal to my father. I know that
+ Of him,--and of Emilio--nothing.
+
+ _Cha._ Sweet,
+ I beg one day!
+
+ _Her._ One day? What's hatching here
+ That's one day short its time?
+
+ [_Enter, lower right, Hudibrand, Megario, and Borduc_]
+
+ _Cha._ [_Drawing Hernda aside_] To-morrow, love!
+
+ _Her._ To-night!
+
+ _Hud._ You've won your suit, Megario.
+ If by our presence in your Goldusan
+ We can advance that sister country's peace.
+ The journey's naught. We'll count it done.
+
+ _Meg._ My lord,
+ All revolution will dispel as air
+ Before your eye. Our Cordiaz is great,
+ But his familiar subjects are too near
+ To take his height, while you they know to be
+ Of giant measure; and when once they see
+ Your majesties are brothered, Cordiaz
+ Will grow your twin in stature.
+
+ _Hud._ You've our word.
+
+ _Meg._ I treasure it,--and lest repeated thanks
+ Stale their sincerity. I beg to say
+ Good-night.
+
+ _Hud._ You have our leave. Good-night, my lord.
+
+ [_Megario bows impressively to Hudibrand, slightly to Borduc, and is
+ passing out when Hernda, who has crossed right, intercepts him_]
+
+ _Her._ You leave us early, Lord Megario.
+
+ _Meg._ I do not leave, your Highness. I am driven.
+ I go to drudgery with my secretaries,
+ Foregoing even the sleep that might have brought
+ Your dreamed face to me.
+
+ _Her._ Is 't still your wish
+ To meet our Spanish guest?
+
+ _Meg._ He grants me that?
+
+ _Her._ He has refused a meeting.
+
+ _Meg._ Ah!... Refused.
+
+ _Her._ But there's a way, my lord. When you have passed
+ The second door without, turn to the left.
+ You'll find a vaulted passage,--at the end
+ An entrance to my wood. Come in, and wait.
+
+ _Meg._ You grace me so?
+
+ _Her._ It is not grace that breaks
+ The covenant of salt. But who keeps faith
+ With traitors? He is one, by every sign.
+ An evil thing blown to our royal hearth
+ Through Chartrien's open love that lets all winds
+ Pour in. And I'll have proof of it!
+
+ _Meg._ [_Over her hand_] You shall. [_Exit, lower right_]
+
+ _Cha._ [_Crossing to Hernda_] A long-spun courtesy, and with one merit,--
+ It ended in good-night.
+
+ _Her._ [_Gayly_] Unruly yet?
+ A truce until to-morrow!
+
+ _Cha._ You believe me?
+
+ _Her._ I would not doubt you for a world compact
+ Of virtues only, but it's no unreason
+ To fear you are deceived.
+
+ _Cha._ Dear Hernda----
+
+ _Her._ Come!
+ I love you, Chartrien. Let us have an hour
+ As light as joy, as sweet as peace, and call
+ Your friend to share it. He shall smile for me.
+ I vow it, by his most ungentle frown!
+
+ _Cha._ 'Twill take your deepest magic, for his heart
+ Holds naught that smiles are made of.
+
+ _Her._ Bring him here.
+ I'll make that heart my wizard bowl and mix
+ Such sweet and merry potions in 't, his griefs
+ Must doff their gray for motley. You shall see!
+
+ _Cha._ Art such a witch? [_Exit, upper left_]
+
+ _Her._ What's this I do? My soul
+ Leans shameward, but I'll trounce it up. The man,
+ If innocent, keeps so, untouched and clear.
+ If he aims darkly, creeps a weaponed hate
+ Upon my noble father, do I worse
+ Than cancel so the unwrought half of 's crime,
+ And make him less a villain?
+
+ _Bor._ May I speak
+ Against this southward jaunt?
+
+ _Hud._ Loud as you please,
+ My Bordy, but I go.
+
+ _Bor._ Your Highness makes
+ Assaria bow too low.
+
+ _Hud._ The State shall have
+ No name in this. I go as Cordiaz' friend,
+ Not as Assaria's king. I've interests there
+ That sort with quiet venture. Give it out
+ This move in part concerns my health.
+
+ _Bor._ That much
+ I welcome. You should rest, my lord.
+
+ _Hud._ Ha? Rest?
+ The twin of death! I'll rest when I am dust.
+ Nay, then I hope that storm and hurricane
+ Will keep me whirling. No,--I'll not go lame
+ Even in report. Say that this move concerns
+ My pleasure solely,--solely, Borduc.
+
+ _Her._ Father,
+ I have a suit. May I not go with you?
+ I long to make that land where you are loved,
+ More vivid than the dream that now it is.
+
+ _Hud._ And find what lodestar there draws Chartrien
+ From constancy? Well, you shall go.
+
+ _Bor._ Tut, tut!
+
+ _Her._ Dear father!
+
+ _Hud._ This will give domestic screen
+ And color to our tack.
+
+ _Bor._ A gadding throne--
+
+ _Hud._ Good Borduc, we will leave the throne at home.
+ Do not _you_ stay?
+
+ _Bor._ I've some authority,
+ You'll not dispute, my lord. Much as may go
+ With broad election. My investiture
+ Lies in the people's choice.
+
+ _Hud._ Ay, you're their bark
+ Of freedom, where their pride may hoist full sail,
+ But who wots better, Bordy, that 'tis puffed
+ With winds that know my port?
+
+ _Bor._ They think their choice
+ Is free. Sincere in that, they give my post
+ A dignity not even your majesty
+ May mock me out of.
+
+ _Hud._ Fools are noted most
+ For their sincerity,--a virtue that
+ Must stand a cipher if uncertified
+ By wit or wisdom.
+
+ _Bor._ Sir, Assarians
+ Are not the fools you think them. They are men
+ Who have the patriot's heart, and on their flag
+ Where you write "power" their love reads "liberty."
+
+ _Hud._ It does, praise be! And they may keep their flag
+ To wear around their eyes long as they will.
+ For then I dance my measure, while they bump
+ In hither-whither hoodman blind and pay
+ My fiddler too!
+
+ _Bor._ And what's my part in this?
+
+ _Hud._ The fiddler's, Borduc.
+
+ _Bor._ Sir?
+
+ _Hud._ And your next tune
+ Is Goldusan. Come, let's rehearse.
+
+ _Bor._ My lord,----
+
+ [_Exeunt, lower right, as Chartrien and LeVal enter left_]
+
+ _Her._ You've come, dear Senor! Was it savagery
+ To wrest the hour from you?
+
+ _LeV._ Too kindly done
+ For such a name,--though I was deep in bond
+ To sober thoughts, your Highness.
+
+ _Her._ Be so still.
+ We would not force our humor on your heart,
+ But share your own.
+
+ _LeV._ [_Smiling_] Can you be sad?
+
+ _Her._ As rains
+ That drench October. As the gray
+ That fringes twilight on the dark of moons.
+ As seas that sob above a swallowed ship,
+ Repenting storm. [_Leads to seat, right_]
+ Come, sir,--and I'll be sad
+ In what degree you choose, though I could wish it
+ Nearer a smile than rheum, and not so heavy
+ But that its sigh may float upon a song,
+ A gentle song that might be sorrow's garland
+ When moan wears down. Wilt hear one now, my lord?
+ I have a music-maker yon whose lute
+ Was nectared in a poet's tears the hour
+ He lost his dream. Say you will hear him! Nay,
+ That courtier "yes" can not o'ertake the "no"
+ Sped from your eyes. We'll have no music. Yet
+ The soul must love it ere one can be sad
+ To th' very sweet of sadness. O, I know!
+
+ _LeV._ I love it, but not here.
+
+ _Her._ What here forbids?
+ My bower! The eye translates its tenderness
+ To fairy sound, nor need of pipe or strings.
+
+ _LeV._ I can not hear the bells of fairydom
+ When life is making thunder's music 'gainst
+ This bauble house of play----
+
+ _Her._ [_Rising_] Sir, you forget----
+
+ _LeV._ Nay, I remember!
+
+ _Her._ What do you remember?
+
+ _LeV._ Ah!... Pardon, princess!
+
+ _Cha._ May I mend this peace?
+
+ _Her._ [_Sitting again by LeVal_] It is not broken yet.
+
+ _LeV._ Your gentleness
+ Has saved it, not my manners.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, my lord,
+ Would I had grace to cover sorrow's breach
+ As smoothly as a gap in courtesy!
+ Then you should smile!
+
+ _LeV._ I have a happiness
+ That makes it thievery in me to take
+ Your pity. You've a sadder need.
+
+ _Her._ I'll yield
+ No jocund vantage to that brow of yours.
+ You hear this sombre braggart, Chartrien?
+ Speaks as I were Despair's own fosterling!
+
+ _LeV._ You are. As I am Hope's. Do you not gaze
+ On earth's foul spots and cry "A sad world this!"
+ "We must endure!" "The dear God wills it so!"
+ And such and such like seed of misery
+ Till hopelessness sprouts chronic?--building then
+ Your house of life amid its smelling weeds,
+ Where you may dance--or pray--till you forget
+ Your creed keeps earth in tears?
+
+ _Her._ And yours, my lord?
+
+ _LeV._ Gives her a singing and forefeeling heart
+ Whose courage cleaves renunciation's cloud
+ That swathes her splendor and would sighing keep
+ Her livid 'mong the stars!
+
+ _Her._ You would divide
+ Omnipotence with God, and arrogant,
+ Assume the bigger half. But there are woes
+ That even your hope, though it go winged and armored,
+ Must fall before.
+
+ _LeV._ Not one that I'll not face
+ Until its features mould me destiny.
+ The shape of radiance it shall wear for man
+ 'Neath an unslandered Heaven! I could not live
+ If in the life about me I saw not
+ The world within this world, and sped my hope
+ The way that it shall take.
+
+ _Her._ Is not that way
+ Called Peace, Emilio?
+
+ _LeV._ Not the peace that spills
+ More blood than war, builds bigger jails, and leaves
+ More waifs to suck the stunting, poisonous breast
+ Of Charity! Peace as white ashes spread
+ Upon injustice' fly-blown wrack----
+
+ _Her._ [_Leaving him_] You are
+ A revolutionist!
+
+ _LeV._ And black to you,
+ For revolution leads into the horizon,
+ And must be figured dark to rearward eyes
+ Though God beyond gives welcome.
+
+ _Her._ [_Coming gently back_] May we not
+ Be patient even as Christ, who found this world
+ The home of poverty and left it so?
+ Did he not say the poor are ever with us?
+
+ _LeV._ You too must tap that last and golden nail
+ In th' pauper's coffin!
+
+ _Her._ It is the nail of truth,
+ If Christ spoke true.
+
+ _LeV._ Words uttered to his day,
+ Not to all time. Not as a deathless brand
+ Burning his own millennium. Not meant
+ To take from man his goal, condemning him
+ To hug an ulcer to the sick world's end,
+ Which even your bosom must take to whitest bed
+ Although your festrous partner be not guessed
+ Nor visible. But if he did mean that----
+ That vicious thing--then he is false as hell,
+ Denying man's bright destiny,--and I,
+ Who vouch the triumph of an angel race,
+ Am more a god than he!
+
+ _Her._ You dare blaspheme----
+
+ _LeV._ Because it once was said to men, whom worms
+ Made dust of twice ten hundred years ago,
+ "The poor are always with you," such as you
+ Shall not forever pick your way to ease
+ O'er broken bodies, lifting up white brows
+ And hiding crimson feet! Daring to make
+ The Christ your sheltering sanction while you feed
+ On others' lives, and keep injustice sleek
+ Even as you cosset that dim thing, your soul,
+ And preen the wings you think bear you aloft
+ The puddled world!
+
+ _Her._ You lie! You do not know
+ Our gentle hearts, our----
+
+ _LeV._ Gentle? O, you're nice,
+ You later cannibals, and will not eat
+ Of babes at table, but you'll pipe their blood
+ From unoffending distance, while you pray
+ Your conscience numb and swear the source is clean.
+ Some dare to name that fount the Love of God,
+ And kneel him thanks!
+
+ _Her._ Oh, mad and impious!
+ Who is this, Chartrien, you've dared call your friend?
+
+ [_Megario steps from the grove_]
+
+ _Meg._ He's dumb as prudence, but my tongue is free.
+ This is Rejan LeVal, the man who hates
+ Your father,--and my country's enemy.
+
+ _LeV._ [_Plunging toward Megario_] Murderer!
+
+ _Cha._ [_Grasping LeVal_] Come! At once!
+
+ _Meg._ Your pardon, prince.
+ I must delay you. I feared your sympathy
+ Would gird itself 'gainst justice, and took care
+ To balk escape. [_To officer who appears behind him_]
+ Be off with him. You know
+ Your road. No stop this side Peonia's border.
+
+ _Cha._ Outlawry this! Stop, sir! You will not dare
+ Kidnap him on this soil!
+
+ _Meg._ [_Laughs_] Where Hudibrand
+ Is king?
+
+ [_Exit officer with LeVal, lower right_]
+
+ _Her._ This strains your privilege, my lord.
+
+ _Cha._ His privilege? My God! Did you....
+
+ _Her._ I did.
+
+ _Meg._ No third voice here is cordant. I will leave you.
+ My thousand times most gracious lady, thanks!
+ Again I bid you happiest good-night! [_Exit_]
+
+ _Her._ I am no adder, though your bitter eyes
+ Give me that name.
+
+ _Cha._ Not bitter. In my heart,
+ That wrapped you as the South its dearest bud,
+ There's nothing left to warm the thought of you
+ Even with my hate. You are the crown, the peak,
+ The unmeaning top of all to which I'm most
+ Indifferent. [_Turns away_]
+
+ _Her._ Look at me!
+
+ _Cha._ I look, and know
+ My eyes till now were cankered, look and see
+ The whole fair lie you are.
+
+ _Her._ Nay, Chartrien!
+
+ _Cha._ The book is open. There the brow yet shines
+ As God o'erlilied it,--an altar urn
+ Stuffed with profane decay. Those are the eyes
+ Like springs within a wood where no road leads
+ With murking pilgrim dust, yet Innocence
+ There paused looks up no more. That is the hand
+ That as a comrade angel's took my friend's,--
+ Reached out as though it parted Heaven's veil
+ To draw his grief within, then clapped him down
+ To Hell.
+
+ _Her._ The place for traitors. Let him go.
+ This moment is for us. 'Tis true your eyes
+ Were cankered, and I thought by surgeon means
+ To give them health, but deeper than the eyes
+ This trouble's seat. Deep as your changed soul,
+ That forfeits its divinity to link
+ With an infection. Here you stood and heard
+ Those poured-out profanations with no move
+ Or sound of protest. That was left for me.
+
+ _Cha._ What truth may pierce such ignorance, fatuous, thick!
+ That man,--Megario,--with whom you've struck
+ Alliant palm, twisted a lawless law
+ To his deformed desire, and took the lands--
+ The priceless valley lands of Cana Ru--
+ From gentle dwellers there, whose titles bore
+ The rooted claim of dear ancestral graves
+ Nine generations deep,--and when they stood
+ The guardians of their doors, faced them with guns,
+ Dragged them to his bribed courts, weighed them with fines,
+ And sent them to his burning maguey fields
+ To slave and rot.
+
+ _Her._ No--don't----
+
+ _Cha._ The lands were sold
+ To Hudibrand----
+
+ _Her._ It can not be!
+
+ _Cha._ Not be?
+ That cry is stale as ignorance, as old
+ As wrong. I've heard it till my ears refuse
+ To register its emptiness. LeVal,
+ It was, rose first against Megario,--
+ Stood up and urged men to be Man,--and this,
+ That makes archangels in the ranks of Heaven,
+ Was treason upon earth. He lived--escaped--
+ But not his wife. Anointed woman, such
+ As centuries with conjoined virtues breed
+ Once and no more! She was condemned, enslaved,
+ And toiling in the steaming fields, fell down,
+ Was flogged, and died.
+
+ _Her._ No! no! no! no!
+
+ _Cha._ So she
+ Is free. But now LeVal goes back. My friend!
+ O, giant heart! I see you stagger, drop,
+ As feverous as the smitten earth----
+
+ _Her._ Who could
+ Believe such things? You're wrong! You must--you shall
+ Be wrong! He was a traitor, bitter-souled.
+ Undoing my father's work!
+
+ _Cha._ Farewell!
+
+ _Her._ Oh, Chartrien,
+ I did it for the best!
+
+ _Cha._ The woman's cry.
+ She'd wreck a world, and from that earthquake piled
+ Look up to say she did it for the best.
+
+ _Her._ You will not go? You loved me one hour past.
+ I am not changed. I'm Hernda still.
+
+ _Cha._ The same.
+ And yet I loved you. But no blush need burn
+ The soul escaped enchantment. 'Twas a charm
+ Enringed me with its bale till helpless there,
+ And feeble as a babe in bassinet,
+ I cooed away my manhood,--emptied time
+ With infant fingering toward your protean hair!
+
+ _Her._ You _loved_ me!
+
+ _Cha._ More than ever could be laid
+ To madness' charge, or god that passion whelms
+ With mortal longing till his skies become
+ His prison, and dark earth Elysian ground
+ Beneath the feet he loves!
+
+ _Her._ [_With arms beseeching_] Here, Chartrien, here!
+
+ _Cha._ Even when my eyes--so late--were wide to wrong
+ That binds the race to pain's dread Caucasus,
+ My mad imagination laid the gift
+ Of seership on you, dreamed that you would go
+ To meet the gleam of the delivering days,----
+
+ _Her._ With you!
+
+ _Cha._ Sail any sea of venture, beat
+ Through any storm to make the prophet's port,--
+ White priestess vassal to the truth that leads
+ The planet into light!
+
+ _Her._ Together, Chartrien!
+
+ _Cha._ That was my dream. Then coming to your side.
+ There was no life but yours,--no world that bled
+ And felt the vulture feeding. Groans of men
+ Grew still, or like the unavailing hum
+ Of far-off, aimless bees, scarce reached my ears
+ That heard, more near, as music from new earth,
+ Your children call me father. Ay, 'twas but
+ The storming undersea of passioning sex
+ That breaking to the sky o'erlaid my stars
+ And wore the mask of Heaven! That ebbless power,
+ That spawning tide of Nature, by whose might
+ She took primordial forts and made Life hers!
+ Still does it tear belated, unassuaged,
+ In wreck about the Mind's aspiring fanes.
+ And shakes the nesting Spirit from her towers,
+ Her heavenly brood unfledged!
+
+ _Her._ Oh! Oh!
+
+ _Cha._ Here--now--
+ I beat it back, and go my way unmated
+ Till beauty fair as yours has bred a soul
+ And signals me! [_Exit_]
+
+ _Her._ Stay, Chartrien! Oh, my love!
+
+ [_Falls. Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT II
+
+
+SCENE: _A grove in the outskirts of a town in Goldusan. Semi-tropical
+verdure. Rocks, shrubbery, trees, at convenience. A hidden cascade
+mumbles upper right, not loud enough to disturb conversation. At upper
+left, the pillared and vine-wreathed entrance to a mansion. A wall,
+rear, partly hidden by foliage. Paths lead off, right and left, lower,
+under trees. It is evening, and the grove is lit for revel. Gay flocks
+of people pass, then Hernda and Megario enter lower right._
+
+
+ _Meg._ Unsoft as winter! Thou hast brought thy north,
+ With thee, a frigid shade, here where the hours
+ Are poppy-fingered, and their dreaming breasts
+ Unshuttered as the summer!
+
+ _Her._ Is it true,
+ This joy, that smiles as though its fountained heart
+ Could not be emptied?
+
+ _Meg._ True as that I love you.
+
+ _Her._ But if it is no mask, why should revolt
+ O'ercloud your borders?
+
+ _Meg._ There's no just revolt.
+
+ _Her._ But Chartrien said----
+
+ _Meg._ Are you yet poison-tinct
+ With that old rebel tale his credulous heart
+ Dressed new in his while honor till both grew
+ One sooty treason?
+
+ _Her._ Where is Chartrien now?
+
+ _Meg._ Wherever he may hatch a discontent
+ And cluck us trouble. But of late he spurs
+ His heart of venture, and dartles to our towns
+ To stir the scum there.
+
+ _Her._ Scum? You've such a thing
+ In Cordiaz' happy land? I'll see that scum.
+ It breathes, does 't not? Has eyes, and tongue?
+ Can answer if one speaks?
+
+ _Meg._ You're merry, princess.
+
+ _Her._ As graves at night. All is not open here.
+ I shall go farther,--knock at doors where Truth
+ Keeps honest house, not gowned for holiday.
+
+ _Meg._ One want we have,--that you will stay with us
+ And be the fairy soul of Goldusan.
+ Then must our land, so measureless endeared,
+ Be cherished as the darling care of Heaven,
+ Where storm may breathe but as a twittering bird
+ That fears to shake its nest.
+
+ _Her._ You've only words!
+ Words like these thousand-thousand smiles that seem
+ Half real and half painted,--teasing, strange,--
+ All feeding one illusion round my way
+ Till even the ground unqualifies beneath me
+ And makes each step a question.
+
+ _Meg._ 'Tis the doubt
+ You look through that transforms our face
+ Of truth and paints us vaguely hued.
+ O, for our many smiles, wilt not give one?
+
+ _Her._ Nay, there's a darkness fringing on this grove.
+ It creeps above the walls, it touches me,
+ And makes me shudder winding at my feet!
+
+ _Meg._ You've sipped of fancy at a witch's knee! [_Plucks a flower_]
+ But see,--your serpent shadows nurture this.
+ Confess to its perfection, and be shriven
+ Of any thought less fair.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, if I might!
+ No, keep it. Let us find our friends.
+
+ _Meg._ [_Drops the flower_] My hand
+ Defiles it for you.
+
+ _Her._ Nay----
+
+ _Meg._ Where is the fan
+ I carried yester-night?
+
+ _Her._ 'Tis--lost.
+
+ _Meg._ 'Tis burnt!
+
+ _Her._ What wind's your gossip?
+
+ _Meg._ Truth paused at my ear.
+ But, princess, if there's any charm will draw
+ Your eyes to me unburdened of their hate,
+ I'll find it though it lie beneath the ruin
+ Of every other hope!
+
+ _Her._ I'll leave you, sir.
+
+ _Meg._ Forgive me! Love will speak,--ay, storm its need.
+ Though each vain word pile up the barricade
+ That fends the heart desired.
+
+ _Her._ My lord, no hate
+ Is in that barrier. I'm free of that.
+
+ _Meg._ Thanks for that little much. Your highness speaks
+ Of journeying. What can I say to gild
+ My own Peonia till it distant gleams
+ The gem of pilgrimage? There you will see
+ How earth is dressed when the devoted sun
+ Is pledged to her adorning. Trees that mass
+ Their bloom in forest heavens, giving her
+ A nearer sky. Unthwarted vines that scarf
+ Her mountain shoulders with their pendent clouds.
+ Lakes where a dreamer's bark may drift unoared
+ And chance no port save beauty. Everywhere
+ The dart and wave of color that would beckon
+ A neighbor planet looking once this way.
+ Come, be my guest. One day! I'll ask no more.
+
+ _Her._ I do not know. Senora Ziralay
+ Will be my guide. I go with her.
+
+ _Meg._ With her?
+
+ _Her._ What is 't? I touch the shadow. You are not
+ Her friend?
+
+ _Meg._ She hates in secret, while her smile
+ Levies the world for love.
+
+ _Her._ I'll hate where she does,
+ And know my soul is safe.
+
+ _Meg._ Her husband holds
+ By love and purse to Cordiaz, but she
+ Is a LeVal.
+
+ _Her._ LeVal? And kin to--_him_?
+
+ _Meg._ Rejan? His sister. And I know her nature
+ Is tinted as her blood, whatever hue
+ It wears at court.
+
+ _Her._ A sister to the man
+ That I gave up to death. And I have dared
+ To love her--take her kiss----
+
+ _Meg._ [_Cautioning_] She's here.
+
+ [_Enter, lower right, Senora Ziralay and Guildamour_]
+
+ _Her._ Senora!
+ We spoke of you.
+
+ _Sen._ And with such gloom?
+
+ _Meg._ No, no!
+
+ _Sen._ It lingers yet, my lord. Do I in absence cast
+ Such knitted shadows?
+
+ _Meg._ Safely asked of us,
+ Who know your bright philosophy. How fares
+ That magic broom with which you'd sweep the earth
+ Of every ill? Is 't still invincible?
+
+ _Sen._ Much worn of late, my lord, as you should know,
+ Who give it work.
+
+ _Meg._ You'd leave us not one grief
+ To keep us praying and rebuilding Heaven?
+ Abolish Death perhaps?
+
+ _Sen._ True mock! I would
+ Except the death that's like a waiting bed
+ When not another turn may mend the day;
+ When sleep is sweeter than the thumbed book,
+ And hearth-near voices drowse like waves that lap
+ Shores unconcerned. Now we are murdered, all.
+
+ _Meg._ No, no. Senora!
+
+ _Gui._ Ay! Do we not vaunt,
+ And set it rarely down, a thing to note,
+ If age unmoor the life-disused raft,
+ For th' chartless cruise?
+
+ _Sen._ Now we go hurried out,
+ With half our dreams unpacked, and earth made poor
+ With a few grains of dust where should have risen
+ Our wisest years in flower.
+
+ _Meg._ Fate, fate, Senora!
+
+ _Sen._ What's fate but ignorance? And not always that
+ Comes hobbling with excuse. Sometimes a man,
+ Whose eyes fling lances at the foes of Life,
+ Is knouted from the world----
+
+ _Meg._ No more, I pray!
+ This is a festal night. Reserve your sermon
+ For our next fast.
+
+ [_A musical group plays softly under trees left. Enter lower right,
+ Hudibrand, Cordiaz, Rubirez, Vardas, Ziralay and others_]
+
+ _Hud._ Here, daughter? You've been sought.
+
+ _Cor._ The search was mine, your highness. I would beg
+ A grace of you.
+
+ _Her._ You grant one as you beg,
+ Your majesty. I'll not do less than give
+ Your own again. But pray you name it, sir.
+
+ _Cor._ This garden where our amity has borne
+ Its fairest blossom shall be called henceforth
+ The Grove of Peace, and we would beg your highness
+ To queen our christening.
+
+ _Her._ A queenly part,
+ And royally I thank you, but I'll play it
+ With humblest prayer that Heaven may keep unbroken
+ These new-sworn bonds between my land and yours.
+
+ _Cor._ So pray we all.
+
+ _Her._ Is this our scene?
+
+ _Cor._ Not here.
+ Come you this way, my friends. We'll cast the wine
+ To yon cascade, and let the waters bear it
+ Down to my capital.
+
+ [_All go off upper right, except two officers, who remain centre, and
+ a guard who walks to and fro by wall rear, sometimes visible,
+ sometimes hidden by the wood and rocks_]
+
+ _First Off._ This peace will prove
+ As stout as any spider's thread that swings
+ In a blowing rain. Fah!
+
+ _Second Off._ Climb what hill you please,
+ You see the rebels' smoke.
+
+ _First Off._ But where in name
+ Of magic does Bolderez get his gold?
+ The rebels we pick up have lost no meals.
+
+ _Second Off._ Enough he gets it. Goldusan sleeps well.
+ Bolderez is so near that if his men
+ Were eagles they could pick out Cordiaz' eyes
+ And he'd not wake to miss 'em.
+
+ _First Off._ Cordiaz
+ Is not asleep, but so bedimmed and fooled
+ By a thievish Cabinet that what he sees
+ Takes any name they give it.
+
+ _Second Off._ He is old.
+
+ _First Off._ Ah, there you hit it. Warriors should die young.
+ When age unsoldiers them their field-worn hearts
+ Have no defence against a crafty peace,
+ And falling power will seize on any prop
+ Be 't foul or fair, to keep on legs.
+
+ _Second Off._ My faith!
+ His crutches are so villanous, a fall
+ Were better than his gait.
+
+ [_Enter Ziralay, lower right_]
+
+ _First Off._ Well, Ziralay,
+ What news?
+
+ _Zir._ Where's Cordiaz?
+
+ _Second Off._ He comes.
+
+ [_Re-enter group from the cascade_]
+
+ _Zir._ [_To Cordiaz_] My lord,
+ The Assarian prince is captured, and is held
+ Within the town.
+
+ _Cor._ What? Chartrien?
+
+ _Zir._ Yes, my lord.
+
+ _Cor._ Fit period to this dedicated day!
+ Our gentle bonds are now forged whole. The man
+ Who was Bolderez' hope, most luminous
+ Of all who drew rebellion to him, now
+ Is darkly fallen.
+
+ _Rub._ This golden aid cut off,
+ Bolderez stands so bare his nakedness
+ Will sprint to nearest cover.
+
+ _Cor._ I'll see his face.
+ Bring here the prisoner.
+
+ _Off._ I'll speed the order,
+ Your majesty. [_Exit_]
+
+ _Rub._ Shall he be shot, my lord?
+
+ _Cor._ Shot? No. But kept close prisoned.
+
+ _Rub._ That is mercy
+ You have denied the blood of Goldusan.
+ Why grant it to Assaria?
+
+ _Var._ In him swells
+ A strength was never in LeVal. I urge
+ His instant death.
+
+ _Cor._ No, friends. He is a son
+ Of our great neighbor, and his death would wound
+ The courtesy of nations that is kept
+ By lenience unabraded.
+
+ _Var._ Breath so bold
+ Will from a prison fan the treachery
+ Whose flame would die without it.
+
+ _Her._ Father, speak!
+
+ _Cor._ We'll hear our friend, Assaria's majesty,
+ If he have word for us.
+
+ _Hud._ I pray your highness
+ To let no ghostly and unfounded fear
+ Of my Assaria----
+
+ _Cor._ Fear, my lord?
+
+ _Hud._ I mean
+ No more than ask you to be just, nor let
+ My presence here enforce your chivalry
+ To do your country wrong. Think of your people,
+ Not the approval of a gazing land
+ Whose distant nod is given in ignorance
+ Of your stern cause.
+
+ _Her._ Here's not my father! So
+ The clock runs backward, and time ends.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Cordiaz_] Your highness,
+ My voice is not so loud as others here,
+ But could I send it far as sound may go,
+ It should take mercy's part in this debate.
+
+ _Var._ You need no trump, my lord. A limpet's whistle
+ Would tell us where you stand.
+
+ _Meg._ I stand with Cordiaz,
+ His majesty of Goldusan!
+
+ _Cor._ This matter
+ Is not for open market. Come, my friends,
+ Let us go in. Please you to walk before.
+
+ [_Rubirez, Ziralay, Vardas, and Megario enter the house, upper left.
+ Their majesties linger at entrance. Guildamour retreats on path,
+ upper right. Officers go off, lower left. Hernda and Senora
+ Ziralay wait unnoticed, right_]
+
+ _Cor._ Is 't kindly done, my lord, to pose your station
+ In public against mine?
+
+ _Hud._ My neutral words
+ You've packed with import all your own. I strive
+ To bend not right or left, but keep my way
+ As even as Justice.
+
+ _Her._ [_To Senora_] Justice! There's a stone
+ That was my father.
+
+ _Cor._ Yet, my lord, this prince
+ Is of your house.
+
+ _Hud._ Is it for Cordiaz
+ To teach me mercy?
+
+ _Cor._ By my soul!
+
+ _Hud._ I know
+ Whence starts this softness. Mercy has no fane
+ Where you leave offering.
+
+ _Cor._ I know you too!
+ By holy Heaven, your head was never bared
+ In Justice' temple! You now seek my fall,
+ Because I've turned at last to check the hand
+ That rifles Goldusan. Is 't not enough
+ That I've unjewelled all her treasured hills
+ To alien avarice--that her forests bleed
+ The priceless sap of all primeval Springs
+ Into your golden stream? But I must lay
+ My people under bond,--sell them as slaves
+ To buy your stolen railways!
+
+ _Hud._ Stolen, sir?
+ I've paid----
+
+ _Cor._ I know what you have paid! You've sent
+ Your henchmen creeping in the night, to buy
+ At beggar's price our toil-built roads, and where
+ You could not buy, you bribed and thieved, till all
+ Was yours!
+
+ _Hud._ What of _my_ toil, that built the lines
+ Through half your provinces?
+
+ _Cor._ You paid yourself!
+ Took from my governors, half gulls, half thieves
+ Of your own breed, a hundred times the worth
+ Of every graded foot, in lands and mines
+ And water-power that holds the prisoned light
+ Of robbed futurity! Now we must buy
+ Once more those tracks, long over-bought,--pay you
+ A value centuple for every mile,--
+ Pay you in bonds--bonds in hell's verity--
+ Whose interest will outrun each reckoned year
+ The summed returns from our fool's purchase! No!
+ That is my word while I am Goldusan!
+
+ _Hud._ You wake too late. I'll tell you so, my lord,
+ Since this imprudent burst thrusts courtesy
+ From court. Your ministers have given assent----
+
+ _Cor._ Have _given_! You'll over-steal enough
+ To quit their boldest price!
+
+ _Hud._ I'll not defend
+ Your chosen servants, sir.
+
+ _Cor._ _My_ servants! Oh,
+ What State is free from scuttling greed that bores
+ For treasure through the stanchest hold?
+
+ _Hud._ This moral chant comes late from you, my lord,
+ Who've fingered heavily in many a pie
+ Spiced in the devil's kitchen.
+
+ _Cor._ But to sell
+ My people! Pay you this devouring price
+ For stock that hardy yields the groaning third
+ Of interest on your bonds! What shall we do
+ To pay it? Rob our treasury, and ask
+ Our worn-out slaves to fill it up again?
+ Not ask, but goad and lash,--for you must have
+ Your own--you honest mortgagees of babes
+ Unborn----
+
+ _Hud._ Is all the scarlet on our hands?
+ What of that mountain province, sold entire
+ To foreign pockets, and the dwellers there
+ Torn up like shrieking roots and cast abroad
+ To fasten where they could?
+
+ _Cor._ And where was that
+ But in your hell-mouthed mines? You wanted slaves
+ And got them.
+
+ _Her._ I shall die, Senora!
+
+ _Sen._ Listen!
+
+ _Hud._ The tyrant Cordiaz grown pitiful?
+ Then stones are butter, alabaster is
+ Uncrumpled down. You should have wept before
+ The Pueblo strike, then fewer corpses had
+ Gone out to sea.
+
+ _Cor._ Don't name that thing to me!
+ Don't speak of it! I will not bear that curse!
+
+ _Hud._ Mine aged convert, lies it in your will,
+ Or juster Heaven's?
+
+ _Cor._ 'Twas your property
+ My troops defended--and Rubirez lied.
+ Swore that the men foamed mad as tusked beasts,
+ And must be trashed to place,--men who had asked
+ No more than bread when you shut up your doors----
+
+ _Hud._ Not I, my friend.
+
+ _Cor._ Your tool then. One of all
+ Your million hooked hands fast in the heart
+ Of my poor country, shut your doors, thereby
+ To starve the wretches till they crawled to you
+ And begged their chains again. But they--their veins
+ Were not all tapped--they'd blood left, and arose
+ From their dumb prayers to _fight_ for life--and then....
+
+ _Hud._ You sent the troops.
+
+ _Cor._ Because Rubirez lied!
+
+ _Hud._ Because you knew there'd be no after-sale
+ For your high favors, once let titles drift
+ Unguaranteed. And when your work was done--
+ _Your_ work, my tear-washed saint, why weary patience
+ Could not take further time to count the dead,
+ Or dig so many graves. They were piled up
+ And carted to the sea----
+
+ _Cor._ Oh, every tide
+ Brings back their faces--staring, staring up!
+ Will God not answer them? I dare not shut
+ My eyes....
+
+ _Hud._ And this is why you weep so late?
+ Come, Cordiaz, you're broken. Leave a throne
+ Your own fears shake. You know that I must win.
+ Own you are mastered----
+
+ _Cor._ Mastered! While I've breath
+ I am a king. If I win peace of God,
+ And his white angel let my dark soul out,
+ 'Twill be for this--the last throe of my strength
+ Was spent against you!
+
+ _Hud._ Madly you've uncased
+ Your madness, and I know my weapons.
+
+ _Cor._ So!
+ I too, my lord, know how to sleep and wake
+ With hand on steel.
+
+ _Hud._ Then is there more to say?
+
+ _Cor._ All's said. We're waited for. Assaria,
+ Will 't please you enter?
+
+ _Hud._ I thank you, Goldusan. [_They go in_]
+
+ _Her._ Don't comfort me, Senora. Not a breath.
+ I'll not disfigure shame with comfort's patch,
+ But droop as low as leprous dust, and take
+ Some pride in that. 'Tis dark here, dark. Pray God
+ I am asleep!
+
+ _Sen._ Dear princess!
+
+ _Her._ Men do well
+ To keep the women blind. If once they knew,
+ They'd breed no more, but let a bairnless world
+ Escheat to God. Yet you, Senora, knew,
+ And you have children. By your motherhood
+ You've bound you Life's accomplice,--given it heart
+ And veins and an accepting soul!
+
+ _Sen._ I have!
+ Deny our hearts these babes, and we deny
+ The future that we fight for. Ah, defeat
+ May be endured by those who hold in lap
+ The victors of to-morrow!
+
+ _Her._ Oh, my father!
+
+ _Sen._ This truth was edged and swift. You should have had
+ Love's lips to teach you----
+
+ _Her._ I've been taught, my friend,
+ But would not learn. [_Rising_] Senora, it was I
+ Betrayed your brother!
+
+ _Sen._ Yes.... I know.
+
+ _Her._ To death!
+ You do not understand. I killed him!
+
+ _Sen._ No.
+ There, love,--forget a little. I've a hope
+ He is not dead.
+
+ _Her._ Not dead? What gives you hope?
+
+ _Sen._ Perhaps the nameless mentor in the heart
+ That tells us when our loved shrines are lit
+ And when they're out forever. But there's more.
+ Whenever Lord Megario's eye meets mine
+ There's something couched there speaks me living wrong,
+ Not wrong that's ended--locked within a grave
+ No prayer may open. He is burning yet
+ With uncompleted vengeance--and its shame.
+
+ _Her._ Senora, you've a plan!
+
+ _Sen._ 'Twill take much gold.
+
+ _Her._ Ah, I have that.
+
+ _Sen._ And courage.
+
+ _Her._ Well!
+
+ _Sen._ Such as,
+ We're told, no woman has.
+
+ _Her._ Here is my life,
+ And any Fate may have it that will make
+ Your brother live. Will you forgive me then?
+
+ _Sen._ [_Kissing her_] Ah, dear, you could not know....
+
+ _Her._ How did you hear?
+
+ _Sen._ From Chartrien.
+
+ _Her._ You are friends?
+
+ _Sen._ So true he seems
+ Not friend but friendship to my soul. And I
+ Talk here, while yonder he----
+
+ _Her._ They dare not! No!
+ My father would.... My father? Oh, Senora! [_Sobs hopelessly_]
+
+ _Sen._ We'll find a door to this.
+
+ _Her._ Would Ziralay
+ Not help?
+
+ _Sen._ Had he the wit, he would not dare.
+ While I'm his wife he must keep double guard
+ Against suspicion.
+
+ _Her._ Oh!
+
+ _Sen._ If there's one true,
+ 'Tis Guildamour. I'll go to him.
+
+ _Her._ At once!
+ He took that path.
+
+ _Sen._ I know what shade he seeks
+ When he would brood.
+
+ [_Exit Senora, upper right. Hernda waits drooping, as if too weary for
+ thought. A group of ladies and gentlemen enter, lower right, among
+ them Guildamour_]
+
+ _Her._ [_Starting up_] Oh!--Guildamour!
+
+ _Gui._ Your highness!
+
+ [_Leaves his party chattering lower left, and crosses to Hernda_]
+
+ _Her._ Senora seeks you.
+
+ _Gui._ Ah, about the prince?
+
+ _Her._ We have a hope, my lord, your hand may turn
+ Some stone of rescue.
+
+ _Gui._ Mine are powerless hands,
+ Pinned to inaction's cross. My eyes may turn
+ No way that is not watched. To lift my lids
+ May raise a cry of "Treason!"
+
+ _Her._ There's no help?
+ In all this land no help?
+
+ _Gui._ Megario,
+ Could he be softened to it, is the man
+ Who might with safety slip a secret bolt
+ For Chartrien.
+
+ _Her._ He!
+
+ _Gui._ His name is set above
+ The nick of treason by his stern dispatch
+ Of poor LeVal,--and, that struck off, he yet
+ Is chronicled so dark that none would lay
+ A fair deed at his door.
+
+ _Her._ Megario!
+
+ _Gui._ I would not name him, but I know he loves you,
+ And there's no soul that love may not endue
+ With tinge of Heaven.
+
+ [_Re-enter Senora_]
+
+ _Her._ Senora!
+
+ _Sen._ [_Panting_] I have seen him!
+
+ _Gui._ The prince?
+
+ _Her._ Not Chartrien?
+
+ _Sen._ Yes!
+
+ _Gui._ Escaped?
+
+ _Sen._ The guards
+ Were of our heart--they let him make the wood--
+ I've hidden him----
+
+ _Her._ Oh, where?
+
+ _Sen._ Within the cave
+ Veiled by the waterfall. But safety there
+ Is minute-frail.
+
+ _Gui._ What way? He'll climb the wall?
+
+ _Sen._ And drop into the river.
+
+ _Gui._ Yes. What guard
+ Walks there? I see. 'Tis Miguel. And I know
+ Somewhat of him,--more than he'd tell the winds.
+
+ _Sen._ Thank Heaven for a sinner! When he's next
+ Behind the rocks, then to him, Guildamour,
+ And be his palsying conscience. Peg his feet
+ To the earth!
+
+ _Gui._ Trust me, Senora!
+
+ _Sen._ I'll lead off
+ Those babblers. Princess, you're the watch,--you'll give
+ The signal.
+
+ _Her._ Ah! What is 't?
+
+ _Sen._ Two pebbles dashed
+ Into the water is our sign.
+
+ _Her._ The guard!
+ He's gone!
+
+ _Gui._ It is our time. [_Exit into wood, rear_]
+
+ _Her._ [_As the talkative group move up_] Take them away,
+ Senora! It would kill me now to meet
+ A painted smile.
+
+ _Sen._ I'll go. And you--be swift.
+ Don't stop--don't think. [_Joins group_]
+ I know where lordings three
+ Wait for as many maids.
+
+ _A young lady._ You saw them pass?
+
+ _Sen._ Disconsolate.
+
+ _Young Lady._ O, to the river!
+
+ _Another._ Come!
+
+ [_They go off with Senora, lower left_]
+
+ _Her._ Now! [_Takes up two stones. Ziralay and Megario come out of
+ the house_] Oh! [_She drops the stones. They cross to her_]
+
+ _Meg._ You wait?
+
+ _Her._ I read the sentence.
+
+ _Zir._ Death.
+
+ _Her._ And when?
+
+ _Zir._ To-night. They've given Vardas charge
+ Of 't. He's an eager butcher,--does not know
+ Delay.
+
+ _Her._ You wished his death.
+
+ _Zir._ I voted no.
+ Megario laid my doubts.
+
+ _Her._ Did he do that?
+
+ _Zir._ He countered to their teeth.
+
+ _Her._ [_To Megario_] So merciful
+ Is hate?
+
+ _Meg._ The prince's death would mean the fall
+ Of Cordiaz, and our houses rock with his.
+
+ _Her._ Be clearer, pray you.
+
+ _Meg._ Vardas wants the throne,
+ And we've a sour and guilty faction here
+ Who'd see him on it, but they dare not move
+ Against a king yet rich in arms and friends.
+ And Hudibrand is not so absolute
+ That he may turn the army of Assaria
+ On the sole pivot of his word. For that,
+ Even he must knock the sleeping nation up
+ And ask good leave.
+
+ _Her._ You'd say, sir, Hudibrand
+ Would favor Vardas?
+
+ _Zir._ Short and plain, he does.
+
+ _Her._ What then?
+
+ _Meg._ The Assarians are proud, and where
+ They think their honor's pricked, their pride out-tops
+ Their judgment. Chartrien's death, whose ugly weight
+ Must lie with Cordiaz, will inflame their hearts
+ Till Hudibrand may send an army on us,
+ His people clapping to 't. In open day
+ They'll choose the road his cunning cut by night,
+ And pray him take it.
+
+ _Zir._ Ay, and where are we,
+ With Vardas crowned in Goldusan?
+
+ _Her._ I see.
+
+ _Meg._ He'd like my million acres in Peonia
+ Sliced for his foreign hounds!
+
+ [_Enter an officer_]
+
+ _Zir._ What trouble now?
+
+ _Off._ Prince Chartrien has escaped.
+
+ _Meg._ And you in charge?
+
+ _Off._ I sent him with good men, or so I thought,
+ Being pressed to another way----
+
+ _Meg._ His guards,--what name?
+
+ _Off._ Vinaldo, and a sergeant, who----
+
+ _Meg._ Vinaldo!
+ He's on the blue list, turning fast to black.
+ Did you not know it?
+
+ _Off._ I held him, sir, the pick
+ Of loyalty.
+
+ _Meg._ Well,--on. What else?
+
+ _Off._ They reached
+ The grove, passed in, and after prudent time,
+ The guards came out, smug as all right, and now
+ They're gone,--clear foot,--will doff you from the hills.
+
+ _Meg._ A tale for Vardas! You may save your beard,
+ But not your neck.
+
+ _Off._ I'll not shake yet. The prince
+ Is in the grove. We'll soon uncover him.
+
+ _Zir._ The walls are picketed?
+
+ _Off._ A double watch
+ Is on.
+
+ _Zir._ That's well enough.
+
+ _Off._ On chance he makes
+ The wall, I've reinforced the river guard.
+
+ _Meg._ Both sides?
+
+ _Off._ A close patrol, both east and west.
+ Though he had fishes' gills and dived the stream,
+ He'd not get by. That way is fast against him
+ As Belam's iron door.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Hernda_] You're ill?
+
+ _Her._ No, no!
+ I'm well--quite well.
+
+ _Meg._ The lily in your cheek
+ Lies not so bravely.
+
+ _Off._ [_To Ziralay_] If he gets out of this,
+ He'll steer around the moon. We'll find him, sir.
+ But he's most darkly hid. Has made a coat
+ Of leaves and plays the grouse trick on us.
+
+ _Zir._ Come!
+ His majesty must know. [_Ziralay and officer go into house_]
+
+ _Meg._ How may I help you? Let the service be
+ Of such poor nature as your dog might give,
+ And pride will whistle to it.
+
+ _Her._ O, my lord,
+ I half believe you. When our angels fall,
+ Then devils are not black. And I have lost
+ My father.
+
+ _Meg._ Devils! You've a tongue.
+
+ _Her._ Forgive
+ A heart unmantled, and too wild to choose
+ What word may veil it. I would say, my lord,
+ In this discolored world I now begin
+ To find you fair,----
+
+ _Meg._ O, heavenly retraction!
+
+ _Her._ And if I ask a service it will be
+ No paltry one, but such as makes the king
+ Bow to the knight.
+
+ _Meg._ I'll prove this grace
+ Is native in me, and not solely lent
+ Of your new bounty!
+
+ _Her._ Would you save the life
+ Of Chartrien?
+
+ _Meg._ I would. Though a treasonous tool
+ Of rebelry, he should be held by me
+ A prisoner of knightliest war.
+
+ _Her._ A prisoner!
+
+ _Meg._ You can not ask his freedom! That would give
+ My foes clear argument to pluck me bare,
+ And set me outlawed on the rebel side
+ Of this deplored division.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, not free!
+ And in your power!
+
+ _Meg._ To hold him prisoner,--that
+ I'd undertake, and make the action good
+ Even to this bloody council.
+
+ _Her._ You'd dare that?
+
+ _Meg._ My policy is open, and I'd dare
+ To put it into deed that must commend me
+ To their unwilling justice. To do more
+ Would disarray all sense,--be fullest like
+ The idiot's gesture that disrobes the wretch
+ Of his last sanity.
+
+ _Her._ Megario....
+
+ _Meg._ What secret is so dear these costly sighs,
+ Like gentle pickets ever reinforced,
+ Let it not pass?
+
+ _Her._ A secret? No!
+
+ _Meg._ But yes.
+ I push me by its fragile guardians,
+ And hear it beating in its citadel.
+
+ _Her._ What says it then?
+
+ _Meg._ You've seen the prince.
+
+ _Her._ My lord!
+
+ _Meg._ You know what shadow hides him.
+
+ _Her._ No, no, no!
+ My oath, sir, I've not seen him!
+
+ _Meg._ I would trust
+ One negative, not three. Give him to me,
+ And you will know he lives. Let him be found
+ By Vardas' men, and when you wake to-morrow
+ The earth will be without him.
+
+ _Her._ No, not you!
+ I'll go to Cordiaz. He'll save the prince
+ As he would save his throne. You've taught me that.
+
+ _Meg._ He'd lose it so. Should Cordiaz to-night
+ Set Chartrien free, he'd rise without a lord
+ To bid him one good-morrow.
+
+ _Her._ Ziralay....
+
+ _Meg._ Ask him? An ass whose ears if visible
+ Would signal Mars! Say he had courage for you,
+ He'd blunder with the prince to Vardas' arms.
+
+ _Her._ Ah, _you_ could do it,--set him free!
+
+ _Meg._ Nay--don't--
+ Don't ask it, if you've mercy! Your highness knows
+ I could not grant so much though lips I love
+ Above my soul should beg that treason of me.
+ Though they should take again those dearest words
+ That knighted me, and now lie in my heart
+ Like swelling seed of fortune! Let me shield
+ His life. In saintliest trust---- [_She shudders from him_]
+ You fear me so?
+
+ _Her._ I do! I do! You took away LeVal,
+ And he no longer lives.
+
+ _Meg._ He does! My oath,
+ He does!
+
+ _Her._ You spared him?
+
+ _Meg._ By my soul, he lives!
+ But let the word sleep in your vestal ear,
+ Until these smouldering troubles die to dust
+ And feed the grass above them. For the State
+ Believes LeVal is dead, nor taints me with
+ Such treacherous clemency. See how I lay
+ My safety and my honor in your hands?
+ I give them, hostages for Chartrien!
+ Ah, you should know how I will guard your trust,
+ For when I say to you he does not live,
+ Your eyes will slay the single, nurturing hope
+ Of my own life!
+
+ _Her._ [_Battling_] I can not! I'm not Fate
+ To do her awesome work.
+
+ _Meg._ We aid her most
+ With passive hand, as Chartrien's ghost will come
+ On mourning nights to tell you.
+
+ _Her._ Oh, I'll speak!...
+ No, no! Ah, never, never!
+
+ _Meg._ [_Resolute, giving up his suit_] I must join
+ The hunt. There's but one place--the cave----
+
+ _Her._ The cave!
+
+ _Meg._ Those guards are fools--or shy of water.
+
+ _Her._ Sir,
+ What cave?
+
+ _Meg._ He's there. Your cold, uncandid calm
+ Has babbled it. The frost is crafty that
+ Puts out such anxious fire.
+
+ _Her._ My lord, if I
+ Should tell you....
+
+ _Meg._ Quickly then! How canst debate
+ So fatally, knowing delay but robs him
+ Of venture's favor? Every moment steals
+ A bud of chance.
+
+ _Her._ How will you take him out?
+
+ _Meg._ I'll pass the gates unchallenged. Close without,
+ My car stands by,--a racer never spent,
+ And begs no pause. Know he is safe, and sleep.
+ Night will be secret, and we'll greet the sun
+ In my Peonia----
+
+ _Her._ Ah, Peonia's far!
+
+ _Meg._ And Vardas near.
+
+ _Her._ Take these two stones, my lord.
+ Cast them into the falls----
+
+ _Meg._ So! I was right!
+ But you must summon him.
+
+ _Her._ So soon a tyrant?
+
+ _Meg._ I'll take him from your hands,--no other way.
+ Your trust to me! And with my life I'll guard it!
+ For that you love him is my means to you.
+ Once in your heart, I'll win the throned place
+ Though all his saints defend it!
+
+ _Her._ True, my friend,
+ We shall be nearer, for anxiety
+ Will draw me to you with a longing like
+ The aching letch for morning in the eyes
+ Pain keeps astare. You then will be the goal
+ Of fondest question,--and from that--who knows?
+ Out of unbroken faith, and kindly shafts
+ 'Tween hearts disponent, bridges have been built
+ For love's plenipotence to cross.
+
+ _Meg._ You bid
+ Me hope?
+
+ _Her._ I do not say despair. Sometimes
+ A presto-worker sits within the soul
+ Of gratitude, and love that must give thanks
+ In name of one beloved, has then been known
+ To pass from the liege object to the heart
+ Whose compass held them both in selfless bounds
+ Of chivalry. And yet--I promise nothing!
+
+ _Meg._ I ask no promise but the one I find
+ In words that so deny it. Now the thought
+ Is born, I'll make the naked infant grow
+ Heir of my princely opportunity.
+ Go now. An instant may defeat us. Haste!
+ My purse must buy a guard.
+ [_Hernda goes off, upper right. Megario walks left and calls_]
+ Benito! Ho!
+ You and your fellow!
+ [_Enter two guards_]
+ I have work for you.
+ You've seen my gold before. Here's more of it.
+ Stand for my word.
+
+ [_Hernda returns with Chartrien_]
+
+ _Cha._ Gods give me time for one
+ Wild kiss! O, Heaven! To find and lose you in
+ One whirling breath!
+
+ _Meg._ [_His pistol at aim_] You are my prisoner.
+
+ [_Senora rushes on left_]
+
+ _Sen._ Oh, princess! Oh!
+
+ _Meg._ [_To guards_] Move on with him.
+
+ _Her._ Wait--wait----
+
+ _Meg._ No time.
+
+ _Her._ But I must tell----
+
+ _Cha._ Let fiends be dumb.
+ You damned and double traitress, this my hand
+ Could lay you dead!
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Hernda, who seems dazed_] My goddess, I'll be true!
+
+ [_Kisses her, and goes off, lower right, with Chartrien and
+ guards_]
+
+ _Sen._ You let him kiss you!
+
+ _Her._ Who?
+
+ _Sen._ Megario.
+
+ _Her._ I did not know it. I am dead, I think.
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT III
+
+
+SCENE: _A yard, walled and spiked, of Megario's hacienda. A long, low
+hut, the men's sleeping-quarters, at right. In upper centre, a smaller
+hut which serves for kitchen and also as sleeping-room for several
+women. On left, the yard continues, showing other huts used by families.
+The entrance gate is off stage, left. An unused gate, locked and barred
+in wall, right._
+
+_Hernda, in the guise of a young Maya woman known as Famette, stirs a
+pan of food which is heating on some coals in front of kitchen. Lissa
+stands in door of hut watching her._
+
+
+ _Lis._ [_Stepping out_] You mend, Famette. But when you came--all thumbs.
+ A woman grown and couldn't spoon up fish!
+
+ _Fam._ It was the smell. How can they eat it, Lissa?
+
+ _Lis._ You'll eat it too.
+
+ _Fam._ That? Never!
+
+ _Lis._ Another week
+ Will starve you to it.
+
+ [_Ysobel comes out of kitchen bearing apron full of cups and spoons
+ which she places on ground_]
+
+ _Yso._ [_Looking left_] Here's Masio in. [_Enters hut_]
+
+ _Lis._ He's always first.
+ [_Masio comes up left_] How did my boy get on?
+
+ _Mas._ I wasn't near him in the field.
+
+ _Lis._ He did
+ His stint?
+
+ _Mas._ I never heard.
+
+ _Lis._ No eyes, no ears,--
+ All belly, you!
+
+ _Mas._ [_Taking up spoon and cup from the pile_] Fish! fish!
+
+ _Lis._ Beans first. You know
+ The rules.
+
+ _Mas._ I've teeth can break 'em. Fish, Famette!
+ [_Famette puts fish into his cup_]
+ There'll be a blessed cleaning-up to-night.
+
+ _Lis._ More beating? Has the master come?
+
+ _Mas._ [_Nods_] And on
+ The rounds. He'll clear the yards. News from the north
+ Has turned him red and black.
+
+ _Fam._ A flogging? Oh,
+ If you were men you'd fight with your bare hands
+ Till you were free!
+
+ _Mas._ Free as the dead. Our blood
+ Would soak the earth and make more hennequin,--
+ That's all.
+
+ _Fam._ Then run away.
+
+ _Mas._ How far? The swamps?
+ To sleep with snakes--a week or less?
+
+ _Fam._ Across
+ The ridges.
+
+ _Mas._ Where the sun would lap you dry
+ As crackling cat-guts? Thirst would draw you in
+ To th' next hacienda well. The masters own
+ The water, and in this land, that's life.
+
+ _Fam._ No chance?
+ They never get away?
+
+ _Mas._ Sometimes a man
+ Makes Quito, but he soon comes back.
+
+ _Fam._ Comes back?
+
+ _Mas._ What else? In Quito there's no work. He starves.
+ And here--there's beans. So he gives up, and then
+ They send him back.
+
+ _Fam._ And he is flogged?
+
+ _Mas._ Ay, till
+ His bones crack.
+
+ _Fam._ Oh! He bears it?
+
+ _Mas._ Like a man,
+ My dear.
+
+ _Fam._ The coward!
+
+ _Mas._ So--back to the field,
+ Mute as a snail, and poorer too, for then
+ The dream is gone of any life but this.
+
+ _Fam._ They have no spirit--none!
+
+ _Mas._ Much as you'll have
+ This time next year.
+
+ _Fam._ Next year? I shall be gone.
+ My debt was just ten pesos.
+
+ _Mas._ [_Incredulous_] You were sold
+ For that?
+
+ _Fam._ I'll work it out.
+
+ _Mas._ Be 't ten or hundreds,
+ Who comes here stays. You'll soon know that, my bird,
+ And limber your fine neck.
+
+ [_As they talk, men and women enter in groups of scores and dozens
+ until there are several hundred in the yard. They are mostly of
+ mixed blood, their color ranging from the full brown of the Maya
+ to the pale olive of the Peonian aristocrat. At a spout, upper
+ left, they wash their hands, then drop about wearily. One man
+ sits near Famette, his head sunk on his chest. She lays her hand
+ on his shoulder_]
+
+ _Fam._ What, Garza, you?
+ Who were so blithe this morning, on your way
+ To freedom?
+
+ _Garza._ [_Rocking_] Mother of God! Oh, Mother of God!
+
+ _Fam._ What is it, Garza?
+
+ _Mas._ There you have it! You see
+ Who comes here stays.
+
+ _Fam._ But he was free! His friend
+ Brought twenty pesos to pay off his debt.
+
+ _Gonzalo._ And when he went to pay it, on the books
+ There stood two hundred pesos against Garza.
+
+ _Mas._ Two hundred--twenty,--you see, Famette,
+ How much a little "o" can do.
+
+ _Fam._ They dare
+ Do that? I'll see the magistrate! [_The men stare at her_]
+
+ _Mas._ [_Patting her shoulder_] Poor girl!
+
+ _Fam._ I will! Why not? What is he for?
+
+ _Gon._ What for?
+ To see we are well beaten when we ask
+ For justice. He must serve who pays him,--that's
+ The master.
+
+ _Fam._ Oh, you worse than slaves!
+
+ _Mas._ No names,
+ My proudling. Wait a year, then what you please.
+
+ [_The men have been eating. Ysobel stands in door of hut holding a
+ great bowl of beans from which the peons fill their cups. Lissa
+ gives out the fish. Her boy, Iduso, crouches by her skirts_]
+
+ _Lis._ [_To boy_] Not eat? Now you're a man? Twelve years to-day!
+
+ _Fam._ [_Bending over Iduso_] Is 't fever, Lissa?
+
+ _Lis._ [_With sullen jealousy_] Let him be, Famette.
+ What do you know? You've got no children.
+
+ _Fam._ I've
+ A little brother.
+
+ _Lis._ Brother! Nothing that.
+
+ _Fam._ He's just Iduso's age.
+
+ _Lis._ [_Softened_] And has to take
+ A man's work on him?
+
+ _Fam._ N-o----
+
+ _Lis._ I said it now.
+ What do you know? Look at your hands--not stumps
+ Like mine.
+
+ _Mas._ Who hugs the post to-night?
+
+ _Gon._ I heard
+ Of seven warned.
+
+ _Yso._ My man! He hasn't come!
+
+ _Mas._ God's mercy, give us peace! It was his turn
+ To put away the knives.
+
+ [_Ysobel leans against hut. Famette takes bowl from her_]
+
+ _Lis._ There's seven, you say?
+
+ _Ben._ None from this yard. Famette, you haven't seen
+ A flogging yet?
+
+ _Fam._ And never will, you beast!
+
+ _Ben._ Your never's short,--less than an hour.
+
+ _Fam._ What do you mean?
+
+ _Ben._ The whip draws blood to-night,
+ And we must all look on, for our soul's good.
+ It is the master's order.
+
+ _Fam._ I'll not go!
+
+ _Mas._ Why, God looks on, Famette, and so may we.
+ All Heaven sees it, and I'll pledge my--fish--
+ That not an angel blanches.
+
+ _Gon._ You should see
+ The master!
+
+ _Fam._ _He_ is there? Does _he_ look on?
+
+ _Mas._ O, not quite that. To eye the work
+ Would show too grossly, but you'll see him there,--
+ Somewhat aside, leaning against a yew,
+ Most carefully at ease. Then he will light
+ A delicate cigar that fills the grove
+ With a fantastic odor, like, we'll say,
+ Faint musk that creeps on burning pine.
+ You will approve the quality, Famette.
+ That is his signal.
+
+ _Fam._ Oh!
+
+ _Mas._ Long as he puffs,
+ And soft, white rings twirl upward to the leaves,
+ The lashes fall. And when, grown gently weary,
+ As 'twere half accident, from his high thoughts
+ Remote, he clears the cindered tip--like this--
+ The whip is still.
+
+ _Fam._ Where, where am I?
+
+ _Mas._ In hell,
+ Sweetheart.
+
+ _Fam._ Who are you, Masio? You are not
+ As these that suffer speechless.
+
+ _Mas._ Pinch the difference!
+ A little learning, and a few opinions
+ That brought me here.
+
+ _Fam._ [_Moving aside with him_] What did you do?
+
+ _Mas._ I spoke
+ The truth too near the ear of Cordiaz,
+ And there's no greater crime.
+
+ _Fam._ You are a prisoner?
+ But you're not guarded.
+
+ _Mas._ No, they leave me free,
+ In hope I'll run. Then they will shoot me down.
+ And you--what brought you here? Ten pesos
+ Could never buy you--nor a hundred either.
+
+ _Fam._ I mean to lead these men to join Bolderez:
+
+ _Mas._ What! Lead them out?
+
+ _Fam._ And you will help me do it.
+
+ _Mas._ Well, when I want to die. You're mad.
+ We're all
+ Sprats in a net. _You'll_ not get out, once let
+ The master see you. Better hide those eyes----
+
+ _Yso._ [_Running and catching Masio by the shoulder_]
+ You lied to me! You lied! They've got my Grija!
+ Down in the lower yard!
+
+ _Grija._ [_Entering and making his way to her_] No! Here I am.
+ Safe in, old tear-box.
+
+ _Yso._ Holy Mary!
+
+ [_Tells her beads rapidly as he leads her aside_]
+
+ _Fam._ [_Aroused_] Men!
+ If Osa looked from yonder mountain scarp,
+ Would she descend to lead such currish hearts
+ To liberty?
+
+ _Gon._ We are not dogs.
+
+ _Fam._ Then shame
+ To bear the life of dogs!
+
+ _Ben._ What do you know
+ Of Osa?
+
+ _Fam._ Know? Does she not guard the shrine
+ Cherished ten centuries in your secret hills?
+ Priestess and princess, daughter of your kings,--
+ The ancient poet kings who ruled and sang
+ In palaces where now your huddled huts
+ Give you a slave's foul shelter!
+
+ _A Voice._ Will she come?
+
+ _Fam._ To such as you? With heads hung down, and backs
+ Bared for the whip? The moment that you hold
+ Your manhood dearer than your life, she'll stand
+ Before you. Then you'll see----
+
+ _Mas._ For God's sake, hush!
+ The master!
+
+ _Ben._ [_As all look left_] No, it's Coquriez.
+
+ _Gon._ With his Gringo.
+
+ [_Coquriez enters with Chartrien. They cross right_]
+
+ _Cha._ Leave me alone.
+
+ _Coq._ My soul, am I not sick
+ Of your dumb lordship? Now the master's here,
+ I hope, by Jesu, that our ways will part.
+
+ [_Turns and joins the men, leaving Chartrien seated on the stone step
+ of one of the doors to the long hut, right. Megario enters unseen
+ and stands watching, left. They gradually become aware of his
+ presence, and all are silent_]
+
+ _Meg._ Coquriez!
+
+ _Coq._ [_Crossing left_] Here, sir!
+
+ [_The tension relaxes slightly. Lissa and Ysobel quietly distribute
+ food and the men eat in silence. Famette keeps in shadow, a shawl
+ over her head, and vainly tries to hear what Megario and Coquriez
+ are saying. They talk in low tones at left, then more centre,
+ front_]
+
+ _Coq._ Shoot the Gringo, sir?
+ I thought he was to live.
+
+ _Meg._ It must be done
+ To-morrow.
+
+ _Coq._ I'll do it.
+
+ _Meg._ Take him on the road,
+ And don't come back with him.
+
+ _Coq._ To-morrow, sir?
+
+ _Meg._ At day-break. Drop him cold. I was a fool
+ To let him live a day!
+ [_Famette has advanced too far and Megario sees her_]
+ Who's that?
+
+ _Coq._ There? Oh!
+ I bought her in last week.
+
+ _Meg._ The day I left?
+
+ _Coq._ I think 'twas then.
+
+ _Meg._ An old one,--so you said.
+
+ _Coq._ About the Gringo, sir,----
+
+ _Meg._ What is her name?
+
+ _Coq._ Famette.
+
+ [_Famette goes back to the women_]
+
+ _Meg._ A figure too.
+
+ _Coq._ It's not so easy
+ To drop a white-skin----
+
+ _Meg._ Come, Famette! Come here.
+ [_She turns and comes slowly_]
+ Old? By the gods! Why did you lie to me?
+
+ _Coq._ My lord ... you like none past fourteen.
+ She's that
+ Half over.
+
+ _Meg._ Brazen devil! Come, Famette.
+ I like your name. I like your face too, girl.
+ Don't be afraid. Show me your eyes. You won't?
+ Where have I seen you?
+
+ _Fam._ I'm a stranger, sir.
+ My home was in the north.
+
+ _Meg._ That fester-spot!
+ A stranger? Then we must be good to you.
+ Where do you sleep?
+
+ _Fam._ There, in the hut.
+
+ _Meg._ You'll have
+ A better soon. Next time I'll see your eyes. [_Going_]
+ Mind, Coquriez, to-morrow! Do that well,
+ I'll pardon this. [_Exit_]
+
+ _Fam._ What is 't you do to-morrow?
+ And why do you need pardon? You who serve
+ So well?
+
+ _Coq._ My pretty bird, I've been too slow.
+
+ _Fam._ Too slow?
+
+ _Coq._ I've limped, and lost.
+
+ _Fam._ Ah, Coquriez!
+
+ _Coq._ You're not afraid of _me_. You look at me,
+ And turned from him. That's honey on his curse!
+
+ _Fam._ He curses you? And you do all for him!
+ All that he asks you,--things he dares not do
+ With his own hand.
+
+ _Coq._ You care for that?
+
+ _Fam._ You risk
+ Your soul, perhaps,----
+
+ _Coq._ 'Tis certain. Pray for me,
+ Chiquita.
+
+ _Fam._ When?
+
+ _Coq._ To-morrow I must leave
+ The Gringo in the marshes.
+
+ _Fam._ Oh, 'twas that!
+ And paid with curses----
+
+ _Lis._ [_Calls, as a new batch of men come in_]
+ Come, Famette! Here's work!
+
+ _Fam._ We'll talk again. [_Hurries to Lissa_]
+
+ _A man._ The beans are cold.
+
+ _Another._ Soured too!
+ Gray Moses, here's a life!
+
+ _Mas._ Do you complain,
+ O, comrades? Now your hour is come? The pearl
+ O' the long ungarnished day? The holy hour
+ Of--beans? Why, think! What do we live for, men?
+ For sweaty moments battling 'gainst the sun
+ To strip the thorny hennequin? For nights
+ Of bitten sleep in unwashed pens? Not so.
+ Lift up your cups! Here is the crown of toil!
+ Each day we reach our life's supremest dome,
+ And know we're there! Can man ask more? Even kings,
+ Though the gold frontal of munificence
+ Is bowed before them, yet must fretting guess
+ The morrow's store. But we, my friends, we know!
+ Then let each separate and distinct legume,
+ Dear as the Egyptian treasure lost in wine,
+ Delay as preciously----
+
+ _Coq._ [_Cutting him across shoulders_]
+ Come down from that!
+ There's more for you, my friend, i' the lower yard.
+ I'll tie you up.
+
+ _Fam._ O, Coquriez, let him go.
+ _You_ should not care. His tongue was born with him,
+ And God may mend it. Let the fool alone.
+
+ _Coq._ Hmm, if you ask me----
+
+ _Fam._ Thank you, Coquriez.
+ I'll stand for him he'll not offend again.
+
+ _Mas._ My tongue is glue. 'Twill stick to its place.
+
+ _A man._ Fish! fish!
+
+ _Another._ He's had his share.
+
+ _The man._ Not half a cup!
+ O, Jesu, I am starved. I did my stint,
+ And helped the boy, Famette. Can I do that
+ On half a cup?
+
+ _Fam._ No, Berto, here is more.
+
+ _Yso._ The Gringo does not eat.
+
+ _Fam._ I'll take him this.
+
+ [_Fills cup from bowl of beans and goes to Chartrien, who is still
+ seated on the step, listless and observing nothing_]
+
+ _Fam._ Senor?
+
+ _Cha._ Who spoke? O, you, Famette? No, thanks.
+ I can not eat. [_Turns from her_] That's twice I've heard the voice
+ Of Hernda. Madness creeps, but surely comes.
+
+ _Fam._ [_Over his shoulder_] You must escape to-night.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Facing her_] Escape? To-night?
+
+ _Fam._ Here, hold the cup, and eat. Do, sir! We're watched.
+ To-morrow Coquriez leads you to the woods,
+ Comes back alone----
+
+ _Cha._ At last I know my hour.
+
+ _Fam._ But you shall live. Last night I worked till day
+ At that locked gate. 'Tis open. None suspects.
+ Outside there's water in a flask, and bread,--
+ Beneath the cactus at the left----
+
+ _Cha._ But how
+ Get out? I am locked in at night, and watched
+ At other hours.
+
+ _Fam._ Eat, eat, and listen, Senor!
+ To-night a flogging in the lower yard
+ Will empty this. You'll go with Coquriez.
+ Urge him to bring you back. Say you are ill,--
+ For that you are,--and come. Here I shall hide,
+ And as you pass, will suddenly step out
+ And speak to Coquriez. You fall behind,
+ In shadow of my hut, move round it, wait
+ This side, then see what's next to do.
+
+ _A man._ [_Calling_] Famette?
+ Where is Famette? She doesn't count the beans.
+
+ [_Famette goes back to the men_]
+
+ _Cha._ It is a lure. If I attempt escape,
+ Then Coquriez shoots me dead, his soul just clear
+ Of murder.
+
+ _Coq._ [_To Famette_] Our Gringo's learned to eat, I see.
+
+ _Cha._ Now do they change confederate nods, and gaze
+ Their mated thoughts. Down, down to dust, my heart!
+ The struggle's off. I'll fight no more. Yon stars
+ Have rest for me. Is 't so? Vain footing there.
+ What rest have they, that share with man the surge
+ From life to life? There Jupiters unfound
+ Whirl cooling till their straining sides may bear
+ Ocean and land and clinging bride of green;
+ And Saturns, nameless yet, cast travailing
+ Their ringed refulgence. Not the frozen moons
+ May fix in stillness, but sweep captive back
+ To flaming centres when their planets call.
+ There old, dead suns, that think their work is done,
+ Meet crashing, ground to cloudy fire whose worlds,
+ Far driven, traverse time and know men's days.
+ Ay, one may go beyond the ether's breath,
+ Farthest of all, to be another First,
+ Undreaming this our God. And I must shift
+ Eternal and unresting as those suns.
+ Then let Death hasten. He shall be as one
+ Who timely strips a wrestler of his cloak,
+ And, kindly freed, I shall uncumbered leap
+ To other battle, finding armor where
+ I find my cause.
+
+ _A man._ [_To Famette_] My turn. Here, give me that.
+
+ _Fam._ The Gringo's had no fish.
+
+ _The man._ Then give me his.
+ He doesn't care. Has run already from
+ The smell.
+
+ _Fam._ I'll give you half. The rest
+ I'll take to him.
+
+ _Coq._ He'll come for what he wants.
+
+ _Fam._ No, he is sick, poor devil! [_Goes to Chartrien_]
+
+ _Coq._ Humph!
+
+ _Fam._ [_To Chartrien_] You'll take
+ The chance? There is no other.
+
+ _Cha._ It's a trap.
+ You risk your life for me, a Gringo? No.
+
+ _Fam._ You must believe me! Oh, what can I say!
+
+ _Cha._ Say nothing. Go.
+
+ _Fam._ I love you, love you, Senor!
+
+ _Cha._ You would persuade me.
+
+ _Fam._ Sir, the wine you found
+ Behind your prison door,--and good, clean bread,--
+ I put them there!
+
+ _Cha._ 'Twas you, Famette? I thought
+ That Coquriez did it,--feared I'd die before
+ The master came.
+
+ _Fam._ Not his brute heart! And then
+ That night, of fever----
+
+ _Cha._ Yes! What then?
+
+ _Fam._ I lay
+ Outside your jail, my head against the wall,
+ That I might hear if once you groaned, or know
+ If sleep had come.
+
+ _Cha._ Can such love be for me?
+
+ _Fam._ You must--you _must_ believe me!
+
+ _Cha._ God, your eyes!
+ [_She lowers her head_]
+ ... 'Tis madness, bred of these sun-poisoned days,
+ And nights without a hope.... Look up, Famette.
+ I do believe you.
+
+ _Fam._ [_Kissing her rosary_] Mother, adored and blessed!
+
+ _Cha._ Wilt be a beggar soldier's bride, Famette?
+
+ _Fam._ You do not love me, Senor.
+
+ _Cha._ But I love
+ Your gentle heart that warms mine empty,--love
+ Your eyes, like memories burning,--and your voice
+ That's linked to an old wound in me,--but most
+ I love your soul that is as great as truth
+ And strong as sacrifice. You'll come to me
+ In Quito, if I make escape? I'll find
+ A way to bring you out----
+
+ _Fam._ You're mine?
+
+ _Cha._ Till death.
+
+ _Fam._ And after that?
+
+ _Cha._ I'll give you truth for truth.
+ Beyond this world I hope to meet a soul
+ Who did not walk in this, but ought to have,
+ For here her body dwelt. This side of death,
+ My life--a bitter one, that only you
+ Have sweetened--is your own, if you will have
+ So mean a gift.
+
+ [_Ipparro has entered the yard and becomes a centre of altercation.
+ He starts out taking Lissa's boy, Iduso. There is a shriek from
+ Lissa, and Famette hurries to her_]
+
+ _Lis._ My boy! My little one!
+ God strike you dead, Ipparro!
+
+ _Fam._ You'll not flog
+ The boy?
+
+ _Ipp._ He didn't do his stint by half.
+ You know the master's rules. He's twelve years old.
+ Must cut three thousand leaves.
+
+ _Fam._ A man's full work.
+ And he's so small.
+
+ _Lis._ And sick he is. Two days
+ He couldn't eat.
+
+ _Ipp._ You women!
+
+ _Fam._ Let him go.
+ A little child, Ipparro.
+
+ _Ipp._ Let him go?
+ Am I the master of the hacienda?
+ He'll tie _me_ up to-morrow!
+
+ _Fam._ It will kill
+ Iduso.
+
+ _Lis._ Such a little one, he is!
+ A baby yesterday,--to-day a man,--
+ How can that be?
+
+ [_An overseer enters left_]
+
+ _Overseer._ What's up? Come on with you!
+ The master waits,--burns like perdition! Come!
+ Come, all of you! The women too! Clear out!
+
+ [_Drives them out. Famette slips into her hut. Chartrien joins the men
+ and follows last with Coquriez. They stop left_]
+
+ _Coq._ Won't see the show?
+
+ _Cha._ I'll not go on.
+
+ _Coq._ Come then.
+ I'll lock you up. [_They turn back_]
+ We'll have an early march
+ To-morrow, mate. Must hit the brush by dawn.
+ There's little sleep for me.
+
+ _Cha._ Shall I have more
+ In that hot pen?
+
+ _Coq._ [_Laughs_] You'll make it up, I guess.
+
+ _Cha._ I understand. You'll murder me.
+
+ _Coq._ My soul!
+ Let's keep our manners, though we sit in hell,
+ My occupation's decent, nothing said.
+ The silent deed is clean, but mouth it once,
+ The hands will smell. Pah!
+ [_Famette steps out of hut_]
+ Here's my kitten!
+ A kiss, my honey-pot!
+
+ _Fam._ I've better for you.
+
+ [_Gives him a bottle of wine_]
+
+ _Coq._ My ducky! From the master's cellar!
+ ... How----
+
+ _Fam._ No matter. It is good.
+
+ _Coq._ Thief of my soul,
+ A kiss!
+
+ [_As he attempts to embrace her she springs back, pointing left_]
+
+ _Fam._ Look, look! He's gone! The Gringo flies!
+ O, Coquriez, you'll be shot!
+
+ _Coq._ [_Stunned for a moment, springs off shouting_]
+ Help! Stop him! Help! [_Exit left, firing his pistol_]
+ The Gringo! Stop him!
+
+ [_Famette runs to gate right, where Chartrien is removing bar_]
+
+ _Cha._ Come! Fly with me! Now!
+ I can not leave you here!
+
+ _Fam._ Go! Do not stop,
+ However weary, till you're safe in Quito.
+ The wounded hare, remember, takes no nap.
+
+ _Cha._ Come, come!
+
+ _Fam._ No, I am safe. And there's more work
+ For me. They'll come back here to search. Nay, go!
+ Another moment and we both shall die!
+
+ _Cha._ [_Kissing her_] I'll wait in Quito,--then a husband's kiss!
+
+ [_Goes. Famette puts up bar, then returns to her hut and sinks at
+ door_]
+
+ _Fam._ If I could pray! If I could pray! How far
+ Seems that old God I knew! A playhouse God
+ Who never saw the world! [_Leaps up_]
+ They're coming back!
+
+ [_Sits again, abjectly, her shawl over her head. Megario, Coquriez,
+ and peons, enter_]
+
+ _Meg._ Where is the woman?
+
+ _Coq._ There she sits,--the witch!
+
+ _Meg._ Stand up! Take off that shawl!
+
+ [_Famette stands up. A man snatches the shawl from her head_]
+
+ _Meg._ Famette! Not you?
+
+ _Fam._ [_Cowering_] I, master.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To men_] Search the yard. Turn every leaf
+ And stone.
+
+ [_The men scatter_]
+
+ _Mas._ I'll give that gate a look. [_Crosses to gate right_]
+
+ _Meg._ This was
+ Your drooping modesty! [_Turns on Coquriez_]
+ You fool!--to let
+ The man escape! By Heaven, you might have burnt
+ The hacienda down and not have made
+ My blood so hot!
+
+ _Coq._ It was the woman, sir.
+ She jumped before me, smiling like a devil,
+ And when I tried to pass she caught my knees
+ And held this thing up, saying 'twas for me.
+ I kicked her off----
+
+ _Meg._ No doubt!
+
+ _Coq._ And when I turned
+ The prisoner was gone.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Famette_] You saw him go?
+
+ _Fam._ Yes, master. Through the gate, like wings. And then
+ I gave the warning. Coquriez knows I did.
+
+ _Meg._ What did she say?
+
+ _Coq._ She cried "The Gringo flies!"
+ And pointed there.
+
+ _Mas._ [_Returning_] The upper gate is fast.
+ He went that way. [_Nods left_] Beneath the cypresses
+ Into the maguey fields.
+
+ _A man._ He'll not get far.
+ He has no water.
+
+ _Meg._ He will die in th' brush,
+ And I shall never know it. Alive or dead,
+ He must be found. I'll flog a man a day,
+ Until I see his bones.
+
+ _Gon._ [_Coming up_] He is not here.
+ We've looked in all the huts.
+
+ _Meg._ Ipparro?
+
+ _Ipp._ Sir!
+
+ _Meg._ Send men abroad, for fifty miles about,
+ To put the haciendas on the watch.
+ He must come in for water. Choose good men,
+ Who _ride_, and see no wenches by the way.
+
+ _Coq._ My lord, I've served you long----
+
+ _Meg._ Too long, you hound!
+ Where is your lady's token?
+
+ _Coq._ This, my lord.
+ She thrust it in my hand.
+
+ _Meg._ And left it too!
+
+ _Coq._ I knew 'twas yours.
+
+ _Meg._ [_To Famette_] A thief too, are you?
+
+ [_Famette crouches, drawing shawl over her head_]
+
+ _Meg._ True,
+ Coquriez, you have served me long. I'll add
+ You've served me well until to-night.
+
+ _Coq._ O, pardon!
+
+ _Meg._ I trusted you. And held your hand as mine,
+ To make my wishes deeds.
+
+ _Coq._ 'Tis sworn your own!
+
+ _Meg._ Then prove it. Take this whip. Come, take it, man!
+ Now flog that witch.
+
+ _Coq._ Famette! A woman, sir?
+
+ _Meg._ The devil's second name is woman. Do it!
+
+ _Coq._ A heavy hand I've laid on men, my lord,
+ But never yet----
+
+ _Meg._ Her smile struck deep to make
+ Such putty of your heart.
+ [_Coquriez drops whip_] Pick up that whip!
+ _You_ want its kisses, do you? Pick it up,
+ Or you shall feel them to your traitor bones!
+ I'll have you flogged together!
+
+ [_Coquriez slowly picks up whip. Famette rises, throwing off her
+ shawl_]
+
+ _Fam._ Hear me, men!
+ For men you are,--not beasts. Your hands are strong
+ In ceaseless toil. Day after day you pile
+ Your master's wealth more high. Day after day
+ You sweat your way a little nearer death,
+ That he may kick your bodies from his path
+ And set your graves in hennequin. But know
+ Who toils may fight! The hand that lifts a spade
+ May bear a sword. The strength you give to him,
+ Use for yourselves. Your master is one man,
+ You are five hundred----
+
+ _Meg._ Gods! I'll stop your mouth!
+ You men there--go--you dozen at the gate--
+ Go to the dry-yard--load your backs with fibre--
+ And bring it here!
+ [_Men go out_]
+ I'll teach you now, you slaves!
+ You are five hundred--yes--and I am one,
+ But in me is the might of Goldusan!
+ The power of Cordiaz is in my whip,
+ And back of that is iron Hudibrand!
+ Kill me to-night, to-morrow you shall die,
+ Each dog of you,--you know it!
+ [_Men come in with fibre_]
+ Throw the stuff
+ Against the hut. There, pile it up. More, more!
+ Now, Coquriez, the gentle, you've refused
+ To ruffle your fond dove,--here's sweeter work,
+ And for no hand but yours. Put her within,
+ Then fire the hut. [_Utter silence_]
+ What terror's on you, beasts?
+
+ _Coq._ In God's name, sir, you dare not!
+
+ _Meg._ In the name
+ Of all who know how power is kept, I dare!
+ Move there, you dog!
+ [_Coquriez stands motionless_]
+ Do you refuse again?
+ Then ... in your heart. [_Shoots. Coquriez falls dead_]
+ Who'll be the next to stand on feet of lead
+ When I say "Do?" Gonzalo! Garza! Out!
+
+ [_The men do not move. Megario lifts his pistol_]
+
+ _Fam._ Spare them, Megario. I'll go in.
+
+ [_Enters hut, closing door_]
+
+ _Meg._ [_Trembling_] That voice!
+ Who is this woman? Speak! Who knows? I've heard....
+ Bah! I'm a fool!... Take up that lantern there,
+ Gonzalo. Break it on the fibre. Move!
+
+ [_He stands with his weapon drawn. The door of the hut in thrown
+ open and Famette appears. She wears a rich robe, gleaming white,
+ with blue and gold cabalistic broidery. In her hand is a sceptre,
+ on her head a crown with a single star. The men, with cries of
+ "Osa! Osa!" fall upon their knees, foreheads to ground, then leap
+ up, changed, and glaring. They seem ready to spring upon Megario_]
+
+ _Fam._ Shoot now, Megario! [_Silence_]
+ You dare not do it!
+ Kill me,--kill one of them,--shoot till your weapon
+ Pants its last murder, and a hundred hands
+ Will tear you limb from limb and bone from bone,
+ Till every separate shred of you be cast
+ To its own devil! Shoot, Megario!
+ [_His hand falls. Famette steps into the yard_]
+ Where are the masters who can help you now?
+ The mighty ones who know how power is kept?
+ Look on these men. Their blood sings as it sang
+ Through centuries gone,--with courage that was theirs
+ Ere ships came up like night on this doomed coast
+ Unloading hell!
+
+ _Meg._ Who are you, woman? Who?
+
+ _Fam._ The spirit of these people, absent long,
+ But come at last to be their hearts' old fire.
+ Four hundred years you've trampled on their bodies,
+ But see--look in their eyes--you have not slain
+ Their God.
+
+ _Meg._ Your name! Who are you?
+
+ _Fam._ Riven hills
+ May hide the shrine of long unsceptred kings,
+ And keep their royal secret year by year.
+
+ _Voices._ Hail, Osa! Osa, queen!
+
+ _Meg._ What do you want?
+
+ _Fam._ Three things, Megario.
+
+ _Meg._ What are they?
+
+ _Fam._ First,--
+ That I may pass from here, free as I came,
+ With every soul that will go out with me.
+
+ _Meg._ The way is open. Go.
+
+ _Fam._ And you with us.
+ Far as the coast, where willing transport waits
+ To bear us northward. Then you may go free.
+ [_Turns to the people_]
+ There brothers wait you, men,--there freedom's tongue
+ Is beacon fire. The whole of northland sings,
+ A canticle of flame. You'll go with me?
+
+ _Mas._ [_Loudly_] We'll follow Osa!
+
+ _Voices._ Osa! Osa! On!
+
+ _Fam._ Gonzalo, choose you men, a thrifty score,
+ To fill the water-jars and get us food
+ From the hacienda stores.
+ [_Gonzales passes out, men following at his signal_]
+ The third demand,
+ Megario, is this. That key you belt
+ So close--
+ [_Megario claps hand on key_]
+ Yes, that,--it must be mine, to unlock
+ A dungeon here and free a prisoner
+ Whom you for love of torture keep alive.
+
+ _Meg._ No, that's a lie.
+
+ _Fam._ Deny it to the stars
+ That saw you yesternight steal up like crime
+ To a dark grating, saw you gloat, and fling
+ The crumbs that will not let your victim die,
+ Though scarce they give him life.
+
+ _Meg._ [_Gasping_] A lie!
+
+ _Fam._ The key,
+ Megario.
+
+ _Meg._ I will not----
+
+ _Fam._ In my hand!
+ [_Megario takes key from his belt and hands it to her_]
+ I thank thee, God, my hand may turn the key
+ That frees Rejan LeVal! Now forward, men!
+ O, glorious to be men! Ipparro, walk
+ Beside our prisoner. Garza, be his aid.
+ Two days of marching, then the friendly sea.
+ And if you toil again amid these fields,
+ You'll take the fruit. On!
+
+ _Men._ Osa! To the sea!
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT IV
+
+
+SCENE: _The Grove of Peace, as in second act. Late afternoon. Two
+officers meet as curtain rises._
+
+
+ _First Off._ So Cordiaz is fallen.
+
+ _Second Off._ Joggled down
+ At last, poor man!
+
+ _First Off._ When all the ghosts he made
+ Come back to weep his fall, I'll swell the flood
+ With half a tear, no more.
+
+ _Second Off._ Then you're for Vardas?
+
+ _First Off._ By glory, no! He'll open Goldusan
+ To every thief that knocks.
+
+ _Second Off._ Trust Hudibrand
+ To guard the door. Till he has plucked the goose,--
+ Then they may shave it for their part.
+
+ _First Off._ So, friend?
+
+ _Second Off._ Phut! Goldusan's his box of snuff--held so--
+ And as he pleases, tchew!--'tis empty.
+
+ _First Off._ Come,
+ I'll walk your way. [_They move, right_]
+ What of this truce? Goes 't deep?
+
+ _Second Off._ As flattery may plough. It is our croon
+ Of compliment to our new-seated king.
+
+ _First Off._ Nay, president. We're a republic now.
+
+ _Second Off._ Spell 't king or president, it means the same.
+
+ _First Off._ But with Bolderez ours, the truce should last.
+
+ _Second Off._ Why, 't may, till night. Bolderez, friend,
+ Is not the revolution.
+
+ _First Off._ He's the heft of 't,
+ And's made a full surrender.
+
+ _Second Off._ Made his terms!
+ His officers are guardians of the State,
+ And he--he's stallion of the court, submits
+ To curb and comb that he may prouder prance
+ And keep the herd at stare. Surrender? Lord!
+ I think it!
+
+ [_Enter Third Officer, from left_]
+
+ _Third Off._ What's stirring, friends?
+
+ _Second Off._ Sleep-walkers.
+
+ _Third Off._ Ay,
+ This amnesty makes idlers.
+
+ _Second Off._ So to-day,
+ But work brews for to-morrow.
+
+ _Third Off._ You've a secret,
+ And I've a guess that picks the lock to 't.
+
+ _Second Off._ Come!
+ These leaves are listeners.
+
+ [_They go off, lower right. Enter by path upper right, Senora Ziralay
+ and Guildamour_]
+
+ _Gui._ To find you here
+ Makes my best hope a sluggard, far outgone
+ By th' dear event.
+
+ _Sen._ I came five days ago,
+ The princess with me, here to wait return
+ Of Hudibrand. That you have come with him,
+ Makes sober welcome blithe.
+
+ _Gui._ He's slack in health.
+
+ _Sen._ That's written plain.
+
+ _Gui._ What iron's in the man
+ That he yet lives?
+
+ _Sen._ He's been in conclave?
+
+ _Gui._ Yes.
+ Five nights he routed sleep from th' drowsy synod,
+ And hung upon us turning every flank,
+ Till Protest paled and Patience bled at heart.
+
+ _Sen._ And at the end?
+
+ _Gui._ He held our sealed bonds,
+ And Vardas sat secure.
+
+ _Sen._ The bonds? We own
+ Our railways now?
+
+ _Gui._ We do. And Hudibrand
+ Owns us,--that is, the bonds. A good, stout noose
+ For a nation's neck.
+
+ _Sen._ And all these days he's been
+ In th' capital?
+
+ _Gui._ In closest session, though
+ A stage-fed rumor held that he was gone
+ From Goldusan. The harried people fear
+ Assarian power, and on the jealous watch,
+ Keep Hudibrand in burrow.
+
+ _Sen._ He's gay-blown
+ With confidence. I hear from Ziralay
+ He made a careless peace with all the friends
+ Of tottering Cordiaz.
+
+ _Gui._ That carelessness
+ Was sea-deep cunning. Favors will go high,
+ They'll find. Megario gave full half his lands
+ For place in th' Cabinet.
+
+ _Sen._ Megario moved
+ In blaze of censure, and did well to escape
+ Singed of but half his goods. Two prisoners lost----
+
+ _Gui._ Ah, Chartrien and....
+
+ _Sen._ Rejan!
+
+ _Gui._ Be guarded here.
+ Fate rustles at that name.
+
+ _Sen._ O, Guildamour,
+ Fear is the silent warder that divides
+ Our secret hearts. Give it the tongue of daring,
+ And like a blest interpreter 'twill bring
+ Our hopes together.
+
+ _Gui._ There is stir within.
+ Come from these walls, Senora. And if your hope
+ Is on the road with mine, I've news will make
+ The wayside sing. Winds gather here and yon
+ That may out-swagger even Hudibrand.
+
+ [_They go back along cascade path, as Hudibrand, Diraz, Mazaran, and
+ Golifet come out of house_]
+
+ _Gol._ [_Holding up letter_] Nay, fearless majesty might take more note
+ Of this despatch.
+
+ _Hud._ That beggar's mewl?
+
+ _Gol._ There's power
+ In every word. LeVal must harbor strength
+ We do not know of.
+
+ _Hud._ Tush! That is the vaunt
+ Of weakness, not of power.
+
+ _Maz._ What is 't he says?
+
+ _Gol._ Avers him free of this imposed truce,
+ And gives a fair foe's warning he'll attack
+ Whene'er and how he can.
+
+ _Maz._ Well bragged.
+
+ _Dir._ His guns,
+ No doubt, are cooler than his pen.
+
+ _Maz._ What more?
+
+ _Gol._ Repudiates Bolderez, and declares
+ Himself the head of the Insurrectionists,
+ Sole authorized to speak and treat for them.
+ My lord, what shall I answer?
+
+ _Hud._ Answer? Humph!
+ Treat with a rag-pole? We'll not sag to that.
+
+ [_Re-enter, right, Senora and Guildamour_]
+
+ _Hud._ My dear Senora, is our freakish daughter
+ In hiding from us? We've not had her greeting.
+
+ _Sen._ She knew you close engaged, my lord, and left
+ The hour to you. I'll tell her of your pleasure.
+
+ _Hud._ My steps are yours. [_To his companions_]
+ Each where he would, my friends.
+ [_Goes in with Senora_]
+
+ _Dir._ I'm for a swim.
+
+ _Gol._ And I.
+
+ _Maz._ The river? With you!
+
+ _Gol._ [_Leading left_] Bolderez' men are gathering opposite,
+ Behind the river woods.
+
+ _Maz._ The pick of camps.
+
+ _Gol._ They know it too. There's water, and the trees
+ Are cool and friendly.
+
+ _Dir._ Was it not resolved
+ Bolderez' men should join the Federal Guards?
+
+ _Gol._ They do, in th' main. This is a straggling wing
+ Left in the hills, that we have given leave
+ To station here.
+
+ _Dir._ That's prudence too.
+
+ _Maz._ Why so?
+
+ _Dir._ I'm windward of a whisper.
+
+ _Gol._ About LeVal?
+
+ _Dir._ He's circling in. Let Hudibrand laugh low
+ Or the enemy will hear him.
+
+ _Gol._ This LeVal
+ Was dead and buried,--three months out of life,--
+ Shook from remembrance as the stalest clutter,--
+ Now, save our eyes, he's jumped alive and rides
+ Our foremost thought! Enough to send a man
+ Back to his marrows. I shall pray to-night.
+
+ _Maz._ A plunge for resolution! That will cool it.
+
+ [_Exeunt lower left. Senora comes out of house and crosses to seat,
+ right_]
+
+ _Sen._ 'Tis five o'clock. No sign! But he will come.
+ He comes!
+
+ [_Enter Chartrien, lower right. They meet silently and clasp
+ hands_]
+
+ _Cha._ My friend! I thought you far from here.
+ Safe in the capital. But nothing's strange
+ To those who've moved mid miracles. You've seen
+ LeVal?
+
+ _Sen._ I have.
+
+ _Cha._ I long to greet him. O,
+ Such walking of the dead renews the earth
+ And makes it habitable! I have heard
+ It was Famette who saved him,--added that
+ To array of deeds that must unlaurel all
+ The heroines of time.
+
+ _Sen._ There'll be an hour
+ To talk of that. Now you must see the princess.
+
+ _Cha._ Hernda is with you? _Here!_
+
+ _Sen._ And Hudibrand.
+ No danger there. He wants you now, and says
+ You'll find good grass if you will leap the stile.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Answering her smile_] So blind as that? Poor mole,
+ he's been in th' ground
+ Too long. Will never get his eyes.
+
+ _Sen._ Ay, he'll
+ Deny the sun till 't bakes him in his burrow.
+ But Hernda,--O, what welcome waits you, friend!
+ The ivory-crusted temple, shut and sealed
+ To eternal airs, is now a fane of rose,
+ Whose cloistral stairs, that wound so futilely,
+ Will now through fragrant twilight lead you up
+ To windowed Heaven. Come! Come, take your own!
+
+ _Cha._ No! Wait....
+
+ _Sen._ A lover speaks that word?
+
+ _Cha._ Senora,----
+
+ _Sen._ That wound she gave you here is open yet?
+ But you were wrong, and with your wretched doubts
+ Assailed her in the hour she lay on rack
+ To save you.
+
+ _Cha._ On rack for me? She gave me up.
+ Gave me to him,--Megario,--knowing that
+ Meant death.
+
+ _Sen._ And yet you live.
+
+ _Cha._ I--?
+
+ _Sen._ Live. Do you not know
+ You were to die that night?
+
+ _Cha._ I've heard.
+
+ _Sen._ Those hours
+ She gained for you meant life.
+
+ _Cha._ She gained for me?
+ I saw his lips on hers.
+
+ _Sen._ You did. And I--
+ I saw her face. The dead are warmer. She
+ Could bear that touch for your sake, and on that
+ Bore too your curse.
+
+ _Cha._ For me? I'll hear no more,
+ Senora.
+
+ _Sen._ You will see her now?
+
+ _Cha._ Not now,
+ Nor ever. I am here by pledge, to meet--
+ A friend.
+
+ [_Masio enters lower right_]
+
+ _Sen._ Is this--the man?
+
+ _Cha._ No, but I know him.
+ He's seeking me, I think.
+
+ _Sen._ I'll leave you then.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Seizing her hands_] Nothing to Hernda!
+
+ _Sen._ Nothing. You and she
+ For what may come. [_Goes in_]
+
+ _Cha._ You, Masio? From Famette?
+
+ _Mas._ No, from the camp.
+
+ _Cha._ The camp! But she is there?
+
+ _Mas._ That's guessing, sir. There's fernseed on her wings.
+ She flits invisible, then bat your eyes
+ You see her.
+
+ _Cha._ I've her word she'd meet me here.
+
+ _Mas._ Queer place. You come from Quito?
+
+ _Cha._ Yes. 'Twas there
+ I had her letter making this strange tryst.
+ I've travelled from that hour. Famette has left
+ Her name upon the air, and all the way
+ I heard it.
+
+ _Mas._ She's the bird of courage, dares
+ Go far as our LeVal himself. But here's
+ What brought me, sir. [_Gives Chartrien a letter_]
+ 'Tis from LeVal.
+
+ _Cha._ His hand!
+ His living hand! [_Reads, pales, and stands silent_]
+
+ _Mas._ Bad, sir?
+
+ _Cha._ No, good. 'Tis good.
+
+ _Mas._ Then I'll be off. My head's no show variety,
+ But I'd not trust it long in th' grove of Peace.
+ We'll see you soon in camp?
+
+ _Cha._ To-night, I hope.
+ Famette holds key to that.
+
+ _Mas._ The first star bring you! [_Exit_]
+
+ _Cha._ [_Reads letter_] _When you see the princess Hernda, kiss for
+ me the hand that gave me freedom. It was she unlocked my dungeon and
+ nursed my bones to life. What I am is hers, and therefore yours._
+ _Le Val._
+
+ Hast grown so spent, O Fortune, that one stroke
+ Must deal both death and life?--with hand that parts
+ The night, show too my rainbow loss?.... All, all
+ My future sold to the gray usurer Grief,
+ Who gathers up as sapped and withered leaves
+ Time's unimagined buds! No eve, no dawn
+ With Hernda! No brief night that makes
+ The sun unwelcome as he golds desire,
+ The warm mist-flower where we lie its heart!
+ Unbrace thee here, my courage! Valiancy,
+ First god and last in man, unbuckle here!
+ ... How meet Famette? Smile on her smiles? Deceive
+ Her love? She'll lay her head upon my heart
+ And hear it crying "Hernda!".... Hernda lost!
+ I must not dream here open to the risk
+ Of her unanswered eyes. Their lure would make
+ Dishonor, that on wreck feeds rampant, spring
+ Unshamed in me. I would forsake Famette.
+
+ [_Goes right, upper path. Hernda comes from house and crosses rapidly
+ to him_]
+
+ _Her._ Chartrien! Come! [_He turns slowly and meets her_]
+ You take my hand, here where
+ You wished me dead?
+
+ _Cha._ That you have offered it
+ Proves me forgiven.
+
+ _Her._ _You_ forgiven? Ah,
+ Has my atonement swollen above my fault
+ Till I may nod a pardon where I thought
+ To kneel for one?
+
+ _Cha._ LeVal has written me. [_Kisses her hand_]
+ This kiss is his salute, and that 'tis his,
+ Not mine, makes my lips bold to leave it here.
+
+ _Her._ Forgiven! Dawn is on my sky, that hung
+ Unutterably black! Yes, it is true
+ I saved LeVal. From Fate's own arms I snatched
+ My treachery's sequence, though his meantime pain
+ Is ever writ against me. Yet I too
+ Knew misery that might be mate of his.
+ And for that other wrong--here where we stand----
+
+ _Cha._ My wrong to you! Nay, don't forgive me that.
+ Leave me a wound to keep me ever paying
+ The debt of pain that solely eases guilt.
+
+ _Her._ I had to choose,--Oh, agony of choice!--
+ Between your death as certain as the night
+ And your surrender to Megario,
+ That seemed but death postponed, yet held a hope
+ Worth any hazard. That you live is proof
+ My choice was God's. My reasonless despair
+ Held Heaven's sanity. Ah, that you live
+ Is substance of reward, joy's permanent
+ Sweet soil, but there's a flower to spring from that,
+ A nodding ecstasy that I may pluck
+ For my own bosom,--is there not?
+
+ _Cha._ Don't--don't----
+
+ _Her._ You turn away? You've still a doubt of me?
+ Then modesty may save her frigid self.
+ I'll speak for love, the one best thing this side
+ Of Heaven. You've taken my hand, and now my heart,
+ And all myself would follow it. My heart,
+ My body, and my risen soul. Yes, risen!
+ My past of clay is quickened with a breath
+ That waits not death to know itself immortal,
+ And this is all my pride, that by that breath
+ I'm rich enough to give myself to you.
+ [_She waits for him to speak. He makes no answer_]
+ I am rejected, having but my shame
+ To cover naked love. Yet vanity
+ Finds me this scanted shroud. Seeing you here,
+ My hunger guessed at yours. I felt you came
+ To seek me, else my heart, timid with fault,
+ Had kept its silence, though my tongue had given
+ As now a friend's good welcome.
+
+ _Cha._ I have come,
+ But not to you.
+
+ _Her._ For why then? I've an ear
+ Of caution. Let my veins, at too swift flood,
+ Grow slow as prudence in what work you will.
+ Now that our aims are near as once our hearts,
+ You'll let me help? I swear by both our souls,
+ And yours the dearer one, that our desires
+ Are one bent bow, and if our arrows speed
+ They'll kiss at the same mark.
+
+ _Cha._ I'm fathoms deep,
+ But in a sea as sweet as ever closed
+ O'er drowned felicity!
+
+ _Her._ Why are you here?
+
+ _Cha._ To keep an oath!--that kept is our division,
+ Yet forfeited would so untreasure me
+ That being's god would blush dishallowed way
+ Quite out such husk of man!
+
+ _Her._ An oath?
+
+ _Cha._ Oh, first
+ In made self-curses I'll unload some part
+ Of this stuffed loathing for the wretch I am!
+
+ _Her._ Nay, I'll not listen.
+
+ _Cha._ Star that was a maiden,
+ Do not believe I loved you when my days
+ Ran tribute at your feet,----
+
+ _Her._ Say anything
+ But that. Those days were mine, and true.
+
+ _Cha._ False, false!
+ For love is generous as the heart of bounty,
+ Giving defect perfection. Narrowed hours,
+ Beseamed and flawed, take from its seer-lit eyes
+ The unstinted, dear proportion secret yet
+ In Time's full dream.
+
+ _Her._ 'Twas I who failed----
+
+ _Cha._ Not you!
+ That midnight moment held the dawn of this,
+ All this that now you are, and love had seen
+ The folded glory of yourself had love
+ Been there to see. But I cast dust upon
+ Your sleeping wings, and did not know your heart
+ Till wounds had laid it bare.
+
+ _Her._ How could you know
+ More than its native bosom where it dwelt
+ Strange and unguessed?
+
+ _Cha._ If I had loved,
+ Such soul of fragrance had not hid from me
+ This unbound blossoming.
+
+ _Her._ We must forget
+ Love's morning miracles forever missed.
+ His fair, warm day is left us,--sunset's gold,
+ And evening with the stars. That is enough
+ For me and you----
+
+ _Cha._ My pledge! I'm here to meet
+ Famette!
+
+ _Her._ Famette! I know her.
+
+ _Cha._ Know her! You?
+
+ _Her._ And know she loves. Then it is you she waits?
+
+ _Cha._ She saved my life. But that unvalued thing
+ Is debt's mere rubble. 'Tis her love makes up
+ The sum unpaid and out of reckoning.
+ And I--how can I tell you?
+
+ _Her._ If you loved,
+ Look up. No shame can be where love has been.
+
+ _Cha._ I've no defence,--yet say that you were lost
+ In midmost desert sands, and suddenly
+ A flower at your feet breathed of the woods
+ And darkling velvet shade where rest might be....
+
+ _Her._ But that's a miracle.
+
+ _Cha._ So was her love
+ To me. Or say that flam and falsity
+ Ensnarled your every way till no true thing
+ Seemed left on earth, and then in lifted flash
+ Truth's priestess eyes looked from a human face
+ And you were loved,--what startled warmth would say
+ Your heart yet lived? Would you keep back your life
+ In barren hug? Deny its sunless gray
+ To gentle eyes that asked but leave to lay
+ Their radiance there?
+
+ _Her._ I understand. She gave,
+ And I demanded. So the gods decree
+ Her boughs shall bloom and mine go bare.
+
+ _Cha._ Oh, Heaven!
+
+ _Her._ You love her, Chartrien?
+
+ _Cha._ Silence be on that.
+
+ _Her._ I'll know it,--hear you say it. Is your heart
+ Mine, or Famette's?
+
+ _Cha._ My life is hers.
+
+ _Her._ Your heart!
+
+ _Cha._ Is yours.
+
+ _Her._ Ah! Then--I give you to Famette.
+
+ [_He kneels to kiss her hand. Hudibrand appears in door of house,
+ left. Smiles, and crosses to them_]
+
+ _Hud._ Up to her lip, you rogue! A humble suitor
+ Gets humble favors.
+
+ _Cha._ [_Rising_] You, my lord?
+
+ _Hud._ Your hand,
+ My boy.
+
+ _Cha._ It was my head you wanted, sir,
+ When last we met.
+
+ _Hud._ Not so. I meant to save you,
+ But Hernda spiked my train. To have you die
+ Quite safely in a rumor was the sum
+ Of my intent against you.
+
+ _Cha._ You're not well,
+ My lord?
+
+ _Hud._ Most well!
+
+ _Her._ He's lost some sleep.
+
+ _Hud._ Tut, tut!
+
+ _Cha._ You stay full long in Goldusan. I thought
+ You nearer home.
+
+ _Hud._ I'm cruising in the gulf,
+ By th' morning papers,--the _reliable_ ones.
+ The gutter rags have guessed me,--but no matter.
+ I've seen the play through, and I go to-morrow.
+ Pouf! It has been a game!
+
+ _Cha._ You speak as 'twere
+ At end.
+
+ _Hud._ It ends to-day. [_Looks at watch_]
+ 'Tis just the hour.
+ Now Vardas is proclaimed the president
+ Of a liberated people.
+
+ _Cha._ What of that?
+
+ _Hud._ He's bowing now. "I thank you, gracious friends,
+ Most loyal citizens----"
+
+ _Cha._ What's that to do
+ With freedom's war?
+
+ _Hud._ It merely ends it.
+
+ _Cha._ What?
+ You think we fought for that? A change of caps
+ Upon two brigands' heads?
+
+ _Hud._ Tut, you've won more.
+ You with some justice warred on Cordiaz,
+ But Vardas is of heart so liberal
+ His people shall be rich in privileges
+ As many and as fair as in Assaria.
+ Myself will vouch it.
+
+ _Cha._ I will vouch it too.
+ As many pits fed with the souls of men,
+ As many images of God deformed
+ In lawless fray to hold the peaks of greed
+ And at the top sit on their goblin gold
+ Content with bestial purr, who might have touched
+ The heavens with song.
+
+ _Hud._ Is that for me, my boy?
+
+ _Cha._ As many lives tramped out in hunger's scramble,
+ As many factories where driven wives
+ Forget the altar dream of babes and home.
+ As many sweating traps where flames may feed
+ On flesh of maidens, leaving still, charred bones
+ Whose only fortune is to ache no more.
+ As many brazen mills that noise their thrift
+ Above the ceaseless shuttle of small feet,
+ While you, the great arch-master, think none hears
+ That drowned pattering. As many marts
+ Where, in law's shadow, girl-eyed slaves are sold
+ To blows and lust. As many cripples thrown
+ Upon the dump-heap of a soulless Peace,
+ Each season piled to moaning wreck more high
+ Than ever War made in its darkest year.
+ As many holes where life must lie with death
+ For privilege of sleep. Oh, I could give
+ Black instances till yonder sun be set
+ Nor end your loathsome list!
+
+ _Hud._ A rare, hot sermon,
+ But I'm not Providence, that from my hand
+ Must pour unfailing bounty.
+
+ _Cha._ Humble, sir?
+ I thought you claimed a power that gave the world
+ The shape you chose.
+
+ _Hud._ But I must use the stuff
+ I find here. That I can't remake or change.
+ So must my world show flaws and ugly spots
+ Due to its substance, not to my good pattern.
+
+ _Cha._ That stuff, sir, is the same that lifted us
+ From four feet up to two! The elements
+ That played like death upon it but aroused
+ Their conqueror. In the embrace of winds
+ It made us ships and gave us wings. From dust,
+ The very dust that choked it, grew the dream
+ That lifts it deathless, an eternized God.
+ And surely as your grip makes it a slave,
+ You teach it freedom. In your clutch 'twill find
+ Once more the need creative, and upswell
+ With power that shall leave you by the way
+ As heaving seas leave straws upon the sand.
+ You shall be _nothing_. As a dream that dies
+ With waking--lost so utterly
+ The sleeper knows not that it was--so you
+ Shall be a vanished thing that man born free
+ Can not reclothe in guess!
+
+ _Hud._ Peonia's sun
+ Has touched your wits. You still think of revolt?
+
+ _Cha._ I think of victory.
+
+ _Hud._ Your comedy
+ Is past its hour. Come, Chartrien, give it up.
+ Confess the war is done.
+
+ _Cha._ Bolderez' guns
+ Will make confession of another sort.
+
+ _Hud._ O, ho! I see a light. You have not heard
+ The morning news. Bolderez has come in.
+
+ _Cha._ Come in? Your couriers flatter you. He holds
+ The heights of Gila with five thousand men.
+
+ _Hud._ That's yesterday. To-day those brave five thousand
+ Are soldiers of united Goldusan.
+ Bolderez is adviser to the State,
+ A tinker in high place, who solders fast
+ The civic split----
+
+ _Cha._ You dream! This is not true!
+
+ _Her._ Yes, Chartrien, it is true. We've lost Bolderez.
+
+ _Cha._ He--has--deserted?
+
+ _Hud._ No, he proves him loyal
+ To me, his master.
+
+ _Cha._ You?
+
+ _Hud._ He served me always.
+ You fool, this was _my_ revolution.
+
+ _Cha._ Yours?
+
+ _Hud._ Bolderez led my troops. It was for me
+ You fed his bony beggars. Ha! For me
+ You stuffed their hungry pockets with your gold!
+ I loosed your fortune when I know 'twould save
+ My own a gouge. But I've not dodged the score.
+ Those guns and horses for the Gazza scare
+ Cost me some paper----
+
+ _Cha._ You? My God! _Your_ war?
+
+ _Hud._ I knew the storm would sweep out Cordiaz,
+ So strode its back that I might hold the bit
+ When came my hour. My boy, you fought for _me_.
+ I made you do it--I, whom you have said
+ Shall be as nothing. Where's the mighty sea
+ Shall toss me as a straw----
+
+ _Her._ O, father, peace!
+ You see he dies!
+
+ _Hud._ Don't waste your tears. He'll live.
+ I've made good oxen out of wilder bulls.
+
+ _Her._ He cannot live! The pain of it, the pain!
+ When aspirations have returned as wounds,
+ Then even the soul must die!
+
+ _Hud._ They all get up.
+ Stout workers too,--quiet, serviceable,
+ Pestered no more with dreams. Here, give him this. [_Offers a flask_]
+
+ _Cha._ [_Rousing, pushing flask aside_] Ay, no more dreams.
+ [_Springs up_] But action! Keep Bolderez.
+ We have LeVal, whose undiscouraged heart
+ Bears on its tide the conquering desire
+ Of twenty thousand men!
+
+ _Hud._ Humph! Where are these
+ Invisible veterans?
+
+ _Cha._ Some gather now
+ About his banner,--some wait in the hills
+ Till they are sure it is his voice that calls,--
+ Some in your favor wrapped go to and fro
+ In your own camp, feeding a fire your gold
+ Can never light,--some dream till we have oped
+ Their prison doors,--in every part and corner
+ Of Goldusan, there's courage on the leap
+ To reach his side.
+
+ _Hud._ What dribble!
+
+ _Cha._ Rein this storm?
+ No human hand, nor Heaven's now, may leash it.
+ It is the throe when travailing Life is shaken
+ In absolute birth that makes undreamed news
+ Even in the ear of God.
+
+ _Hud._ Fanatic! Fool!
+ Have I not tried to teach you----
+
+ _Cha._ Teach yourself!
+
+ _Hud._ Come, come!
+
+ _Cha._ I mean the words. The race has learned
+ Its lesson while you've played with sand. At last
+ The dumb, trod way has spoken 'neath man's feet,
+ And by that word uncovered he has learned
+ What he shall _not_ be,--knows what heights of sun
+ Are his, and seeing takes his road,--no more
+ Battering in wild and bruised ignorance
+ A destiny of stone. Ay, consciousness
+ Has wakened in itself the unknown god
+ That gives the race its eyes. You, you a king?
+ Who do not know that every man is heir
+ To kingship that must leave such thrones as yours
+ Outcoursed and little recked as the strewn toys
+ Of childhood!
+
+ _Hud._ Mud-sill dynasties. You know
+ That I am master.
+
+ _Cha._ Master? You believe
+ That man, at top of conquest, who has made
+ Nature his weariless serf, and set the yoke
+ From his own neck on her divinities,
+ Will seal to you--weak, myriadth part of him--
+ Those wizard captives bending to the dream
+ Of his new world? Gird you with fortune that
+ He wrenched from stony ages?--let you gorge
+ The magic fruit snatched by his perilled being
+ In starward battle up the abysmal steep?
+
+ _Hud._ I am a fact,--not words.
+
+ _Cha._ You can believe it?
+ At last on dawn-browed heights, with victor foot
+ On mysteries bound the genii of his wish,
+ He'll trail his hopes to kennel? Let you pluck
+ His universe unflowered, and shrink life
+ To growling brevity 'tween lash and bone?
+ A slave to _you_? Obstructive clod,
+ Who could not stir with one life-budding dream
+ Though holy imagination tipped with fire
+ Should score her script upon you!
+
+ [_A physical pain overcomes Hudibrand. Hernda runs to his side. He
+ regains composure, his manner forbidding solicitude_]
+
+ _Hud._ I am patient.
+ One word of mine would send you manacled
+ To prison. If you are here to lay down arms----
+
+ _Cha._ I'm not.
+
+ _Her._ O, father! The amnesty!
+
+ _Hud._ That shelter
+ Is not for him!
+
+ _Cha._ Then speak your word, and learn
+ You fight not men but man. Wide as the world
+ His spirit blows against you, and little part
+ You'll cage in this one shackled body.
+
+ _Hud._ One?
+ We'll drag the earth, or net the pack of you!
+ LeVal, marauding ghost, we'll prick his blood
+ Beneath his spectral mask. And that mad trull,
+ Famette, your holy maid----
+
+ _Cha._ She's safe from you!
+ God is about her as she walks among
+ Your hope-lorn slaves and touches their dead hearts
+ To life.
+
+ _Hud._ To folly they are sick of! Ah,
+ Once more I've news. Your swarthy Joan has fled,
+ And all her magic warriors of a day
+ Again are beggars.
+
+ _Cha._ Fled?
+
+ _Hud._ To her cactus lair.
+ But she'll trapse back between two bayonets,
+ Stripped of her phantom wings.
+
+ _Cha._ She is not gone.
+ That heart of truth! When she deserts LeVal
+ There'll be a breach in Heaven, and fiends may claim
+ The day for hell and you.
+
+ _Hud._ 'Tis mine without
+ Such warm avouch. Your chaparral cock and hen
+ Have parted company. Her followers now,
+ Cursing and naked, straggle to our camps----
+
+ _Her._ Your pardon, sir! You are deceived.
+
+ _Hud._ Ho, ho!
+
+ _Her._ They're with LeVal. Not one stout heart is lost.
+ Famette but lends her captaincy to his
+ In needful absence----
+
+ _Hud._ You are much too wise.
+
+ _Her._ I know Famette.
+
+ _Hud._ You--what? Know _her_?
+
+ _Her._ I do.
+
+ _Hud._ This is the fruit of that mad jaunt,
+ Through Goldusan! Where have you seen her?
+
+ _Her._ Here.
+
+ _Hud._ Not here? That woman? Are you mad, my girl?
+
+ _Her._ I love Famette. If we were one, I'd be
+ But cinders in her saintly fire.
+
+ _Hud._ Here, miss?
+ You've had her with you? Sniffed and cheeped together,
+ And drowned my kingdom in a gossip cup?
+
+ _Her._ If men, the bravest, are but flies upon
+ Your monarch ermine, that with careless shake
+ You scatter, can you fear a woman?
+
+ _Hud._ What?
+ Mocked by a chit? I fear? You mannerless filly,
+ I've let you plunge and ramp o'er all my fields,
+ But I'll not have you whinnying at the fence
+ Till roadside jades break through! She has been _here_?
+
+ _Her._ She has. Dined at my board, slept in my bed,
+ And so shall do again.
+
+ _Hud._ I'll welcome her!
+ And send you trucking home! You shall not wait
+ For any whimsy this or that!
+
+ _Her._ But, sir,----
+
+ _Hud._ No trumpery packing,--no unready whine!
+ This hour! That you should moil your royalty
+ Touching such scum!
+
+ _Her._ Nay, I was scum until she gave me substance.
+ I had no soul until she made hers mine,
+ No cleanliness of heart till I knew hers,
+ No knowledge till I looked through her clear eyes,
+ No riches till I wrapped me in her rags----
+
+ _Hud._ You're raving!
+
+ _Her._ No. Ah, father, father, I'm
+ Famette,--your daughter! I've not been in Cana,
+ But in the pits your greed has dug,--down, down
+ Where misery is so vile its own abyss
+ Shudders to hold it. Chartrien, now you know
+ My tale untold. I see your mind runs back
+ To light a way it travelled in the dark.
+ O, you were blind! I'd know you near though masked
+ In utter change.
+
+ _Cha._ I'm folded now in sun
+ That makes me blind again. Are you Famette?
+
+ _Her._ [_Showing her bared arm_] See this brown circlet
+ left that you might find
+ A trace of her? I've crossed the universe----
+ Through hell--and reached you, have I not?
+
+ _Cha._ [_Embracing her_] All sweet
+ Forfending stars now heap their fortunes one
+ And drop it on my heart that borrows heaven
+ To hold the imponderable gift!
+
+ _Her._ Ah, poor Famette!
+
+ _Cha._'Twas you--in that foul hacienda pen?
+ And would not speak?
+
+ _Her._ I meant to save you, sir.
+ And had I told you then, would you have set
+ So blithely off to Quito?
+
+ _Cha._ And left you there!
+ How can you think it?
+
+ _Her._ Do I, sir? Nay, love,
+ Nor ever did. I knew you'd ruin all
+ With your big "won'ts" and "don'ts."
+
+ _Cha._ O, sagest heart!
+ But here you kept my joy-gates shut so long.
+ Why such slow mercy, golden one?
+
+ _Her._ You'll hear it?
+ There is a teasing devil in me, Chartrien,
+ That must have play.
+
+ _Cha._ Ah, no!
+
+ _Her._ Ay, and an ounce
+ Or so of cruelty, that would not let
+ Your frailty go unpinched.
+
+ _Cha._ Nay, 'tis not so!
+
+ _Her._ You'd rather think I put to royal test
+ Your godship? Wooed with lips so near your own,
+ And found you stanch to honor? That may be,
+ But I've a shameless reason dearer still.
+ I wanted all your love for Hernda,--all.
+ And had I said too soon that we were one,
+ Then on your breast my heart had never known
+ Which maid you clasped.
+
+ _Cha._ You ever, sweet!
+
+ _Her._ Yet she
+ Is dear. My joy could never be content
+ Within your heart beside unfaith to her.
+ She must have room there, not in name of love,
+ But truth. So you shall hold us both.
+
+ _Cha._ Like this?
+ Grow to my heart, O garland of myself!
+ Be breath of me, till, like a double tree,
+ Root, sap, and bloom are one,
+ And in our noble fruiting Time forgets
+ To mourn Hesperides!
+
+ _Her._ Heaven hold thy wish
+ The prayer thou meanest it!
+
+ _Cha._ One bliss is man's
+ The perfect angels know not. In the arms,
+ Warm, rhythmic, round his battling soul, to feel
+ Spur of his noblest blood, and know his dreams
+ Are mated,--find in lightest winds that stir
+ Love's tremulous hair, the brave wing of his hope
+ That needs go farthest,--and when seasons fail,
+ And weary spirit turns from waste to waste,
+ Know lips that he may touch and touching kiss
+ The fallow world to harvest. Thus, and thus!
+
+ [_Hudibrand, forgotten by the lovers, has fought through another moment
+ of agony, and advances, taking hold of Hernda_]
+
+ _Hud._ Are you my daughter?
+
+ _Her._ I am, but I've known hours
+ When shame, a cleansing fire, searched through my blood
+ For any drop that owned you father.
+
+ _Hud._ In!
+ Go in! [_To Chartrien_] And you--I'll rid the earth of you,
+ And take its thanks! [_Staggers with a return of pain_]
+
+ _Her._ [_Her arms about him_] O, father, let us help!
+ What is it, father?
+
+ _Hud._ Nothing. Keep away!
+ Away!
+
+ [_Throws her off. Enter, lower right, an officer attended_]
+
+ _Off._ Your majesty, there's sure report
+ LeVal makes ready to oppose his guns
+ To our weak garrison.
+
+ _Hud._ [_Ironic_] The spectre's near?
+
+ _Off._ Across the stream,--the east and wooded bank.
+ A hundred times our force could not dislodge
+ His guns from such a vantage.
+
+ _Hud._ Guns? LeVal?
+ He has no guns!
+
+ _Off._ You'll hear them soon. I beg
+ Your highness' pardon, but your dignity
+ Would not be touched if you should hasten out.
+
+ [_Enter, lower left, Golifet, Diraz, Mazaran_]
+
+ _Gol._ My lord!
+
+ _Hud._ What is this tale? You, Golifet?
+ You are in charge!
+
+ _Gol._ 'Tis treachery, sir! I warned
+ Your majesty----
+
+ _Hud._ Come, what's the story?
+
+ _Gol._ This.
+ Bolderez' officers whom we gave leave
+ To station near us, thus to put more guard
+ Between the town and rebels that might creep
+ Down from the hostile hills----
+
+ _Hud._ This egg's all shell.
+ Come, sir, the meat!
+
+ _Gol._ They were in secret yoked
+ Most traitorously with LeVal, and all their men
+ Were coupled to his cause. They gave him cover
+ To lead his army up----
+
+ _Hud._ His army, sir?
+
+ _Gol._ His followers----
+
+ _Hud._ There may be treachery
+ Uncapped among us.
+
+ _Gol._ 'Twas by your advice
+ We gave them leave to camp----
+
+ _Hud._ I trusted fools!
+ Or traitors! You've a choice of names.
+
+ _Off._ I beg
+ Your majesty to come with us. They'll fire
+ At any moment.
+
+ _Hud._ Fire? Then we shall know
+ At last where we may find LeVal. You've wired
+ To Vardas, Golifet? He must despatch
+ The Federal Guards----
+
+ _Gol._ It is too late.
+
+ _Hud._ Too late?
+
+ _Maz._ We can not save the town.
+
+ _Off._ The citizens
+ Are fleeing. Do not delay, your majesty!
+
+ [_Fire of guns is heard_]
+
+ _Hud._ Cowards! Before you fly, arrest that man.
+ Look to it, Golifet. You'll answer for him.
+ Let him be trebly guarded.
+
+ _Gol._ Is not this
+ The missing lord, Prince Chartrien?
+
+ _Hud._ Ay, that traitor!
+
+ _Gol._ At this hot juncture, prudence must forbid
+ A needless insult to the enemy
+ That may too soon be master.
+
+ _Hud._ Insult!
+
+ _Gol._ Come,
+ My lord.
+
+ _Hud._ By every god that was or is----
+
+ [_Guns again heard_]
+
+ _Gol._ Please you, retire, your majesty!
+
+ [_Men gather excitedly from different parts of the grove. Guests and
+ servants desert the house_]
+
+ _Maz._ Come, come!
+
+ [_A shell breaches the wall, rear. Stones fly among the trees. The
+ house is battered and portico torn away_]
+
+ _Hud._ Grant me this favor. Let me be the last
+ To leave the Grove of Peace. Ha, ha! The last!
+
+ _Her._ Come, father!
+
+ _Hud._ Go! I've asked a favor, friends.
+
+ [_They turn from him and pass slowly out. Hernda and Chartrien
+ remain_]
+
+ _Her._ Now you will come?
+
+ _Hud._ When _you_ have gone! Go, go!
+
+ [_More shells. Chartrien carries Hernda away, lower left_]
+
+ _Hud._ [_Alone, racked with pain_] My foe is nearer than those
+ feeble guns.
+ Bah! I could crush them! Here I am fordone.
+ No, no! I'll not surrender. I will live!
+ I'll keep my world. I fought for it, and won.
+ 'Tis mine! I will not leave it to these mice
+ To scramble over. [_The agony seizes him_]
+ A coward foe, that gives
+ No even chance. Strikes from the dark, with blade
+ Tempered secure in undiscovered fire.
+ ... Shall then the world go on and I not here?
+ I shall be here,--a pile of dust, no more,----
+ That is the hell of hells,--while other dead,
+ Who made them souls here out of faith and clay,
+ Race on unflagging,--on and leave me still,--
+ The everlasting mute!... Souls? That's a lie.
+ A ranting, tom-tom lie, to ease us on
+ The wheel. I'll none of that. The sick mind's pap!
+ Imagination's vent, lest misery
+ O'er-rack the world! Protective fume
+ Enclouding man's last grapple till none see
+ If he or Death be victor, and on the doubt
+ He rides to Heaven!...
+ ... Was 't truth that Chartrien spoke?
+ The race has found its eyes? Man is no more
+ A blind and hopeless struggler cornered fast
+ By ills unconquerable?--his lusting wars,
+ Diseases, hungers, Hudibrands? Then what
+ A chance was there, my heart? If I had fought
+ Upon his side!... _That_ battle would have made
+ Red Fate throw down her bludgeon,--won us place
+ To vanward of the gods!... If I had fought
+ With him.... Obstructive clod!... My God! _My_ God?
+
+ [_He dies. Sunset has passed, and the darkness grows rapidly
+ until nothing is seen but the gleam of a fallen crown.
+ Curtain_]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+A SON OF HERMES
+
+A COMEDY IN FIVE ACTS
+
+
+
+
+_CHARACTERS_
+
+
+ BIADES, _a young Athenian_
+ PELAGON, _his uncle_
+ SACHINESSA, _wife of Pelagon_
+ PHANIA, _their daughter_
+ SYBARIS, _a neighbor's daughter_
+ CREON, _friend of Biades_
+ AMENTOR, _a senator_
+ MENAS, _friend of Pelagon_
+ CLEARCHUS, _an Athenian youth disguised as a dancer_
+ PHILON, _a priest_
+ STESILAUS, _a lord of Sparta_
+ PYRRHA, _his daughter_
+ ARCHIPPE, _his wife_
+ ALCANOR, _his son_
+ LYSANDER, _friend of Stesilaus_
+ HIERON, _a young Spartan_
+ AGIS, LENON, GIRARDAS, _his friends_
+ DIANESSA, MYRTA, THEONIS, NACIA, ARTANTE, _Spartan maidens_
+ THE EPHORS
+ _Senators, citizens, soldiers, dancers, etc._
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+
+SCENE: _Pelagon's garden, Athens. Wall, rear, shutting off street.
+Upper right, path to street gate. Upper and middle left, entrances to
+Pelagon's house. Lower left, path to a neighbor's dwelling. Lower right,
+path leading deeper into garden._
+
+
+ [_Enter, upper left, Pelagon, Stesilaus and Lysander_]
+
+ _Lys._ A gracious senate! If such welcome keys
+ The tune to come, then our ambassadry
+ Is concord's instrument, and we may bear
+ Fair music back to Sparta.
+
+ _Ste._ Tut, the smiles
+ Of Athens are as flying leaves, divorced
+ From the tree's heart, as apt to light
+ On vagrancy as merit.
+
+ _Pel._ Stesilaus
+ Bears hard as truth. Yet I was warmed to note
+ The council's greeting.
+
+ _Ste._ Ever Sparta's friend!
+
+ _Pel._ And friend of peace. The age no more can bear
+ The locked alarum of our rivalling States.
+ We must the groaning tussle bring to end,
+ Or ends the world.
+
+ _Lys._ 'Twas wisdom's cue you gave us,--
+ To say we had our Sparta's sovereign word
+ For Athens' terms.
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, hold your embassage
+ Unstrictured, friends. In that lies flattery
+ Each lord will take to himself and thereon feed
+ A grace which will, in sort, come back to you.
+ What hour was fixed for answer? I lost that.
+
+ _Lys._ The last hour of the sun.
+
+ _Pel._ The crier stood
+ Wrong side of my good ear, and I'll not twist
+ To set the gossips nudging me to th' grave,
+ Robbed in a shrug of twenty grizzled years.
+ [_Looks about the garden_]
+ Where's Biades? He's always trailing here,
+ Save in the tick of need. I'd have him bid
+ The ambassadors lie at my house. Lysander,
+ You'll be my suitor to your comrades? Say
+ We've heart and room for all.
+
+ _Lys._ For all, my lord?
+
+ _Pel._ And more!
+
+ [_Exit Lysander_]
+
+ _Ste._ My Sparta thanks you, Pelagon.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, such an honor shall not pass me, sir.
+ Now where is Biades?
+
+ _Ste._ Your nephew, friend?
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, Stesilaus. Bar my blood in him,
+ He'll fasten on your heart.
+
+ _Ste._ Report has been
+ Too dear his friend. What buzz about a youth
+ Of twenty-five! Sir, Attica is mad
+ To give him captainship. In Sparta now,
+ The spurring callant would be kept in ranks,
+ And yoked with Prudence till he learned her jog.
+
+ _Pel._ In ranks! I see him! Well, just in your ear,
+ He sweeps a pretty curvet. With my wife
+ His slave, and Phania neck-deep in love,
+ He rides the very comb of my poor house.
+ If you would say to him, hold here or there,
+ I'd take it not amiss. But I do love him.
+ And now a bout with th' cook. The pest sends word
+ A double score of sudden guests are all
+ He'll have at table. Mine own table, sir!
+ Ha, there is Biades! He'll wait upon you.
+ Pray touch him as I've hinted. But no word
+ About our daughters, friend. We'll let that lie.
+
+ [_Exit upper left. Enter Biades upper right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Most noble Stesilaus, my heart greets you!
+
+ _Ste._ Greeting to Biades, whom Athens makes
+ Her general!
+
+ _Bia._ Would, my lord, this dignity
+ Were laid on senior years. Your Sparta's way
+ Is best,--to keep the cool, meridian bays
+ From youth-flushed brows. My moist and charmed eyes
+ Spoke inward to my soul when they beheld
+ The ambassadors before the council, each
+ With staff unneeded, and gray locks that seemed
+ As wisdom's holy place.
+
+ _Ste._ You sat with us?
+ I did not mark you there.
+
+ _Bia._ I kept in modest shadow,
+ Which is youth's fairest mantle,--though my rank
+ Moves back for none. But, sir, the Spartan elders!
+ Ah, might I see more men in Athens who
+ Thus honor age, and age that honors men!
+
+ _Ste._ Breathe that into your shrines.
+
+ _Bia._ The gods who smile
+ On folly young, must weep when reverend years
+ And wisdom part. Mayhap you've noticed, sir,
+ In my good uncle here ... a falling off.
+ I would not speak but that I know your eyes
+ Can not keep curtain when the blabbing sun
+ Makes it no secret.
+
+ _Ste._ Somewhat I have seen.
+
+ _Bia._ Somewhat will grow to much ere you take leave.
+
+ _Ste._ I fear it, Biades.
+
+ _Bia._ And yet, my lord,
+ Time has not carried him ahead of you
+ More years than half a score.
+
+ _Ste._ Tis t'other way.
+ I'm elder by that much.
+
+ _Bia._ Not you, my lord? [_Muses flatteringly_]
+ The Spartan way is best. Was 't Pelagon
+ Led you to say you had full power to treat
+ With Athens?
+
+ _Ste._ It was he.
+
+ _Bia._ I thought it. [_Sighs_] Sir,
+ In the Athenian mind there dwells a child
+ No length of days can age. We do not grow
+ As Spartans. But our vanity's no dwarf.
+ Tops with the highest, you've some cause to know.
+
+ _Ste._ What of 't? Unlatch! unlatch!
+
+ _Bia._ The people, sir,
+ Always our rearward urge, knowing you've power
+ To assent to all they ask, will ask for more
+ Than all.
+
+ _Ste._ Think'st that?
+
+ _Bia._ In your brave time you've met
+ Athenians of the best. Didst ever know
+ One modest?--slow to ask for what he thought
+ His own?--or what he might by mere demand
+ Make his?
+
+ _Ste._ They are well stomached,--true. No doubt
+ They'll press us far.
+
+ _Bia._ They will. And if refused,--
+ Well, they are children,--and must bite and scratch.
+ With strutting rage, may pelt you out of Athens.
+ But why not say you are in part empowered.
+ And must return to Sparta with the terms
+ Before a vowed conclusion?
+
+ _Ste._ Late for that,
+ Young sir. The tongue we used to the Council
+ Must serve in the Assembly. We have said
+ We have full power.
+
+ _Bia._ To treat, not to assent.
+ That was your word.
+
+ _Ste._ Hmm! Now the cloud is off
+ The dunce's script, and I read clear why you
+ At twenty-five have Athens' voice to sail
+ 'Gainst Syracuse.
+
+ [_Re-enter Pelagon_]
+
+ _Bia._ No word unto my uncle!
+
+ _Ste._ My brain will serve.
+
+ _Pel._ They've come,--your comrades,--all!
+ If honor now were substance, my poor walls
+ Would groaningly unroof and beg the sky
+ For room to embrace it! Go you, Biades.
+ Repeat my welcome, with increase of grace
+ Your tongue is rich in.
+ [_Exit Biades, upper left_]
+ Now the full time comes.
+ We'll speak of that that's centre of our hearts,--
+ Our daughters, friend. This is the hour that ends
+ A watch of twenty years.
+
+ _Ste._ A patient score.
+ So long your daughter has been mine, so long
+ Has mine been yours.
+
+ _Pel._ Like flower upon a stalk
+ Long nursed and tended, comes the end upon
+ This day of budding peace. You've had no whiff,
+ No hint untoward, that what we did had best
+ Been left undone?
+
+ _Ste._ Sir, what I do, I do!
+ When we changed babes not past their cradle sleep,
+ My mind then glossed the act with comment fair
+ As our unfructured hope. So does it still.
+ By Nestor, though I'm thitherward of prime,
+ There's none will say that with accreted years
+ I moult sagacity!
+
+ _Pel._ Eh, so! 'Twas well.
+ I've never doubted it. Here have I reared
+ Your Phania, Spartan-thewed, who now shall home
+ With Athens' gentle nurture in her veins
+ To hither yearn in blood of every son
+ She bears to Sparta. And you my Pyrrha bring
+ Back to her land to live a Spartan dame
+ Among Athenian mothers. So we feed
+ The unity we dream on,--quicken time,
+ Foresued, to give our tousing, touchy States
+ One civic heart.
+
+ _Ste._ Has Sachinessa kept
+ A secret tongue?
+
+ _Pel._ A nut not closer sits
+ About its kernel. And your wife, my friend?
+ What of Archippe? Did she hold for long
+ Against the exchange?
+
+ _Ste._ She did. Nor ever learned
+ To love your Pyrrha. For that cause,--and that
+ Our even trust might move with even faith,
+ Nor odds of grace to you,--I've stood her guard,
+ And made her comrade where a son might claim
+ The dearest post.
+
+ _Pel._ Good thanks, my Stesilaus.
+ From your wife's audit I'd not brush a doit,
+ But to the credit of my dame can set
+ A fairer sum. AEneas' curled lad
+ Lay not more dearly in his Dido's lap
+ Than your sweet Phania in the swaddling love
+ Of Sachinessa. Ay, she'll swear me now
+ That not to gain her own will she give up
+ Her foster darling.
+
+ _Ste._ Humph!
+
+ _Pel._ The little duck!
+ She has so chucked herself into my heart
+ 'Twill put me sad about to oust her.
+
+ _Ste._ Duck!
+ When I lose Pyrrha, sir, that hour I lose
+ This good right arm!
+
+ _Pel._ [_Meditative_] Hmm! So!... Come, my friend.
+ The dinner's toward, and the host astray.
+ The love's deep-vouched that puts such duty off
+ For one more word. [_Pauses as they move left_]
+ We'll give no open voice
+ To our most dear concern till we have met
+ Our daughters.
+
+ _Ste._ [_Gloomy_] Met our daughters! Have it so.
+
+ [_Exeunt upper left. Enter, middle left, Phania and Biades_]
+
+ _Bia._ Come, Phania! The old cocks are off.
+
+ _Pha._ They're gone?
+
+ _Bia._ Good flitting too! I feared they'd perch till night,
+ Crowing the deeds of Stesilaus the Great
+ And Pelagon the Wise.
+
+ _Pha._ These Spartans! If
+ They'd rest their clubs without the door, our shins
+ Would give them thanks. Why are we so besieged?
+
+ _Bia._ Why, Phania, why? Because your father dotes
+ On dull and sodden peace that never was
+ Save in an old man's dream. We dine our foes!
+ The city must throw ope her gates, forsooth,
+ Lest the dear enemy should take some hurt
+ Scaling the walls! They'd bleed us as we sleep,
+ And Pelagon would vow the sword at 's throat
+ Were Sachinessa's dozing kiss.
+
+ _Pha._ Ho, hear
+ The captain speak! You go to Syracuse,
+ And not content? 'Tis well there's one cries peace.
+
+ _Bia._ What's Syracuse? To conquer Sparta,--that
+ Were warrior's work! Your father robs me of it,
+ Bringing the water where I set my fires.
+ But come! I've not made love to a soul to-day
+ Save ancient Sparta. Ha! it is an art
+ That should be spared such sweat. The Heavens mean
+ That I shall pull to yoke these two days left,
+ And love take beggar's chance.
+
+ _Pha._ Ah, but two days!
+
+ _Bia._ Come to our myrtle nook----
+
+ _Pha._ Nay, Sybaris
+ Might turn me out. That is her royal seat
+ When you'll play consort.
+
+ _Bia._ What, my Phania? Dour?
+ Does Creon keep away?
+
+ _Pha._ I'm not for him.
+ You know it, Biades.
+
+ _Bia._ But he does not.
+ Too oft I find him here.
+
+ _Pha._ And Sybaris
+ Comes out of count, knowing you like this spot.
+ Yon path is worn of every blade.
+
+ _Bia._ Her feet
+ Can be so cruel?
+
+ _Pha._ You love her still!
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, sweet.
+ Not for three days. Believe me, cousin!
+
+ _Pha._ _Cousin!_
+ Athene save us! See her now,--the plague!
+
+ _Bia._ By gentle Eros, Phania, we'll be kind.
+ I loved her once.
+
+ _Pha._ How tall she is!
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, moves
+ A very sylph!
+
+ [_Sybaris comes on, lower right_]
+
+ _Syb._ A fair day's greeting, friends!
+
+ _Bia._ We double it for thee.
+
+ _Pha._ My dearest Syb!
+ Do you turn snail, you keep your house so long?
+ Why, _hours_, I think!
+
+ _Syb._ Indeed!
+
+ _Bia._ Where lovers watch
+ The dial, that's an age.
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, so!
+
+ _Bia._ [_To Phania_] Do I
+ Not know?
+
+ _Syb._ An age? Ay, love grows old and fades in 't.
+
+ _Bia._ A thousand moons in journey o'er my love
+ Would leave 't no withered hour! By the fair soul
+ Of one who knows me true!
+
+ _Syb._ That is no woman.
+
+ _Pha._ A pretty oath!
+
+ _Syb._ But not a new one, dear.
+
+ _Bia._ Plead, Phania, dove! Let her not chide
+ Poor penitence on knee. In two days' time
+ I sail to war, yet stony Sybaris
+ Would break love's wings with doubt--put me aboard
+ With sighs to sink my ship----
+
+ _Pha._ Nay, Sybaris!
+ I'll vow him constant now.
+
+ _Syb._ Inconstancy
+ Once stopped for breath, and fools came with a chair.
+
+ _Bia._ No thaw in thee? Plead, Phania, sweet! Your lips
+ Are unimpeached where mine too oft have worn
+ Conviction's droop.
+
+ _Pha._ Forgive, dear Sybaris!
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, be my tongue! Tell her that as the bee
+ Betrays the honey-buds yet hiveward flies,
+ I've left all by-roads for the true home-path.
+
+ _Syb._ Then you have trailed all others stale. There's none
+ Left new but that.
+
+ _Bia._ Tell her when I have sailed
+ From Athens' eyes into the sun that eve
+ May skirt with blood----
+
+ _Pha._ No, no!
+
+ _Bia._ --to walk with you
+ The haven's brim, watching the waves that throw
+ The sea-heart there, and know that from my ship
+ Pulses a heart to love's dream-sandalled feet
+ As constant as the sea to Athens' shore.
+ [_Sybaris moves relentingly nearer. Biades behind Phania, who sits on
+ bench, leans to talk into her ear, but keeps his eyes tenderly on
+ Sybaris_]
+ Ah, tell her, Phania, sleep is slow to come
+ Where warriors bed, and unforgiven hours
+ Are thorny comrades for an age-long night.
+
+ _Syb._ Then here's my hand. Pray Pallas 'tis no fool's!
+
+ _Bia._ Yours too, my Phania! In one breath I seal
+ Judge and defender mine! [_Kissing their hands_]
+ Now with my ship
+ Will prayers go tendant, mending every sail
+ That storm may batter. Typhon, whirl the sea
+ To insurrection,--send her meekest wave
+ To crinkle round the sun, and hiss from Heaven
+ The mariner's port-star,--I shall be safe
+ While I have implorators fair as ye
+ To melt the gods!
+
+ _Syb._ Ah, Biades, thou must
+ Be loved or die. Is 't heart or vanity,
+ That's so insatiate?
+
+ _Pha._ Nay, you have forgiven!
+
+ _Syb._ But will not coo yet. Is that Creon comes?
+ [_Looking to upper right_]
+ You'll meet him, Phania?
+
+ _Pha._ He knows his way.
+
+ _Bia._ Has news!
+ I'll pick the pigeon. [_Goes up right_]
+
+ _Pha._ O, my Sybaris,
+ Thanks for this generous peace! But who could long
+ Be harsh to Biades?
+
+ _Syb._ Such steel's not in me.
+ I but stood off, a shadow of resolve,
+ To hear him woo me back. His coldest words
+ Are ta'en from music, but when warm in suit,
+ Then music sues to him.
+
+ _Pha._ Woo _you_? Didst say
+ _Woo you_? Couldst think--couldst dream--couldst let blind sense
+ So flatter?
+
+ _Syb._ Blind? Well, you've no eye to lend.
+
+ _Pha._ His words were all for me, and through my heart
+ Were sifted to your ears.
+
+ _Syb._ For you, my dear?
+ Now what a gosling 'tis!
+
+ _Pha._ Oh! Ask him then!
+
+ _Syb._ You'll beat that bush. I have no doubt in cover.
+
+ [_Biades returns with Creon_]
+
+ _Cre._ You'll not go out?
+
+ _Bia._ No, friend.
+
+ _Cre._ I warn you, sir!
+ It is your reputation left i' the street
+ That knocks for you.
+
+ _Bia._ 'Twill care for itself.
+
+ _Cre._ Nay, come!
+ Soon every ear in Athens will be crammed
+ Wi' the tale.
+
+ _Syb._ What tale?
+
+ _Cre._ 'Tis said that Biades
+ Was cap and spur to riot that defaced
+ The Hermae yesternight.
+
+ _Bia._ Denosed, you mean.
+
+ _Pha._ O, do not jest! I tremble, Biades!
+
+ _Cre._ You must o'ertake the lie, my lord, ere winds
+ Be up with 't.
+
+ _Bia._ Let it fly, my Creon. When
+ Its wings are worn 'twill down for any heel
+ To trample.
+
+ _Cre._ Not this feather. It broods on the air,
+ And its dark issue makes eclipse your sun
+ Can push no beam through.
+
+ _Bia._ Sinon's pate has hatched
+ The ebon chick.
+
+ _Cre._ You're not far out. He wants
+ The generalship.
+
+ [_Enter Hippargus, upper right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Here comes a tongue to market.
+ Most purchasable, tho' neither cut nor dried.
+
+ _Cre._ The senate's messenger!
+
+ _Bia._ Greeting, Hippargus.
+
+ _Hip._ Greeting, my lord,--and I must lay command
+ On that, for you are charged on the instant to appear
+ Before the Council.
+
+ _Bia._ The instant? Cramped to that?
+ And what to do there, sir?
+
+ _Hip._ Give proof you touched
+ With no profaning and injurious hand
+ Our threshold gods.
+
+ _Bia._ Go gently back, Hippargus,
+ And tell the senators I pardon them,
+ Knowing they do mistake. They would not lay
+ So dull an antic on me, and this charge
+ Is meant for Bico, my fat monkey here,
+ Whom they may have for trial.
+
+ _Hip._ Spare such jest,
+ My worthy lord. A hundred tongues have sworn
+ You said in open street, nor cared who heard,
+ The guardian Hermae might be nipped of ears,
+ And noses too, yet serve our pious turn,
+ Since they smell out no faults and citizens
+ Confess none.
+
+ _Bia._ Ah! Do they make wit a crime,
+ Who have no taint of its color? Say 'twere red
+ The senators would never be mistook
+ For woodpeckers. Gods! When they prate, I know
+ Athene's owl is stuffed, and her wise serpent
+ An old-year slough! Off now! Your pannier's full.
+ Trot and unpack.
+
+ [_Exit Hippargus_]
+
+ _Cre._ Out! Follow, and deny
+ This answer! Dare you, standing on the top
+ And slippery point of fortune, throw your cap
+ In Heaven's face?
+
+ _Bia._ Dare I do less? No, friend.
+ The Council fears me, and would see me down.
+ My power is in the people, who for gold
+ And merry flattery give me their love.
+ But now they're on the quibble how to turn,
+ To me or Sinon. I'll not let them see
+ My office brought to question, and myself
+ Outfaced by perjurers in Sinon's keep.
+ Nay, when they find I'm not the senate's groom,
+ But know myself, their pride will know me too,
+ And I shall go to bed as I rose up,
+ The Athenian general.
+
+ _Cre._ The street will bellow.
+ I'll listen to it, and pick interpretation
+ From 'ts roar. You'll come with me?
+
+ _Bia._ Though oracles,
+ On every curb and step, begged audience,
+ I'd not go out.
+
+ [_Exit Creon_]
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, me!
+
+ _Bia._ Why so? I'm not a hare
+ To jump because a leaf falls. Wag the hour,
+ And Pleasure wait on us! If she fill not
+ My cup to-day, I fear it must go empty
+ A good twelvemonth. There are fair maids
+ In Syracuse, but they'll peer on me through
+ A crimson lattice.
+
+ _Pha._ You'll not see them, sir!
+ Or break a thousand oaths! So oft you've sworn
+ No beauty out of Athens could persuade
+ Your eyes to worship.
+
+ _Syb._ Then the Spartan maid
+ Lodged here will let him sleep.
+
+ _Bia._ What maid is this?
+
+ _Pha._ Why, Pyrrha,--Stesilaus' daughter.
+
+ _Bia._ Here?
+
+ _Pha._ Ay, everybody's here.
+
+ _Syb._ I saw her leave
+ The chariot. Such clothes!
+
+ _Pha._ _No_ clothes, you mean!
+
+ _Syb._ [_In shocked aside_] Just to the knees!
+
+ _Pha._ And open to the hips!
+
+ _Syb._ You say it!
+
+ _Pha._ And manners, none. I took her nuts
+ And sugared poppy seeds. She said she kept
+ No parrot.
+
+ _Syb._ Here's a guest!
+
+ _Pha._ And when I said
+ I _lived_ on them----
+
+ _Bia._ My dainty!
+
+ _Pha._ --then she asked
+ If that made me so little!
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, they feed
+ To grow in Sparta. Breed but monsters there.
+ No arts, no grace, no soft and tendrilled speech
+ That creeps to ends of being and looks back
+ Exultant and afraid. They are not men,
+ But, wearing human port, would force on us
+ A beastly comradeship. Set me to woo
+ A toad bred in a ditch of Attica,
+ But not a maid of Sparta! Were she fair
+ As was Persephone when she drew the god
+ From nether earth, yet sprung from that hard soil,
+ I'd let her beauty pass.
+
+ _Syb._ Hist, Biades!
+ She's yonder.
+
+ [_They look middle left, where Pyrrha appears_]
+
+ _Pha._ I like the garden best when 't wears
+ Pale Cybele's gown. Apollo makes it harsh
+ In black and gold--Ah, Pyrrha! You have found
+ Our blossomy corner. Welcome to it, and know
+ My neighbor, Sybaris,--and Biades.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I greet you, friends of Athens.
+
+ _Pha._ Will you sit?
+
+ _Bia._ [_Who has not removed his gaze from her since her entrance_]
+ A walk! That was your wish.
+ I'll show the paths.
+
+ _Syb._ Nay, here's a seat.
+
+ _Bia._ There's Artystone's rose,
+ Brought from the Mysian stream----
+
+ _Pha._ She'll stay with us.
+
+ _Bia._ The ivory cup of Isis, where each night
+ Her one tear falls,--and flowers whose sisters blow
+ In walled Ecbatana.
+
+ _Syb._ Come, sit by me,
+ Dear Pyrrha.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I would see the garden.
+
+ _Syb._ [_Rising_] Would?
+ We'll guide you then.
+
+ _Pha._ Ay, who would dawdle here?
+
+ _Bia._ But rest a moment, Pyrrha. I mind me now,
+ That from this spot the eye may best o'ersweep
+ The full design. Yon mass of planes----
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'll walk
+ Alone. [_Moves off, lower right_]
+
+ _Syb._ Well!
+
+ _Pha._ Said I not?
+
+ _Syb._ Does nothing that
+ She's asked! And stares as though a woman's eyes
+ Were made to see with, when their chiefest use
+ Is not to see!
+
+ _Pha._ Crude as her Spartan rocks!
+
+ _Bia._ I'll follow.
+
+ _Syb._ Nay, she'd _walk alone_!
+
+ _Bia._ She's Athens' guest.
+ I'll not be rude, whatever lack in her
+ Provokes me to it.
+
+ _Pha._ Nor shall I, by all
+ The grace in th' world!
+
+ _Syb._ You shame us, Biades.
+ We'll go with you.
+
+ [_Each taken an arm of Biades as he goes right. Pelagon enters, upper
+ left_]
+
+ _Pel._ Daughter, this way!
+
+ [_Phania returns reluctantly. The others pass off, right_]
+
+ _Pel._ My chick,--
+ Nay, I'll be brief. I know young feet would flock.
+
+ _Pha._ O, father dear, I'd please you first! [_Kissing him_]
+
+ _Pel._ Well, well!...
+ You've seen Lord Stesilaus?
+
+ _Pha._ Just a peek.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, he's no bear.
+
+ _Pha._ He'll bite though. I know that.
+
+ _Pel._ Now, Phania, now! I have a reason, miss,
+ A most dear reason you should win the love
+ Of Stesilaus.
+
+ _Pha._ Love!
+
+ _Pel._ I mean, my duck,
+ A father's gentle love.
+
+ _Pha._ But, daddy, he's----
+ So tall!
+
+ _Pel._ He has a heart, my daughter.
+
+ _Pha._ Fum!
+ Are you so sure?
+
+ _Pel._ Find it the shortest way.
+ Remember he's your--hmm!--remember--hmm!--
+ That he's a man--as I am--and his pride
+ But April frost. Be as he were myself----
+
+ _Pha._ As you? Oh, dear! [_Under his arm_]
+ And must I cuddle so?
+ Nay, that's for my own fa-fa!
+
+ _Pel._ Little Phania!
+ I'll lose my pipit,--lose my bonny bird!
+
+ _Pha._ Lose me? O, never, daddy, never! I'm
+ Your pipsey, wipsey, umpsey, ownty own!
+
+ _Pel._ [_Resolutely_] Wait here. I'll send him by.
+
+ _Pha._ But, father, why----
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, that's my secret. Not for little birds.
+
+ [_Exit upper left. Phania waits until he disappears, then turns
+ flying, and vanishes lower right. Archippe and Sachinessa
+ enter, middle left_]
+
+ _Sac._ Blest be Athene, there's nobody here!
+ The house is overrun, and Pelagon
+ Has twenty shadows, one at every door.
+ Out, in,--in, out,--with ears like aprons held
+ For every whisper! Here we're safe to talk.
+
+ _Arc._ O, dearest Sachinessa, what's to do?
+
+ _Sac._ We'll go to Philon. If he says confess----
+
+ _Arc._ Confess? I'll never do it! I will take
+ What way he will but that, though 't be the one
+ Leads out of life. You do not know my lord!
+
+ _Sac._ Your Stesilaus is no god, Archippe.
+ I'll tell you that.
+
+ _Arc._ If it should come to him
+ We never changed our daughters! If he learns
+ That twenty years I've made him wear the hood,
+ His roof no more would shade me. Nay! Confess?
+ Oh, Sachinessa, I should lose him quite!
+
+ _Sac._ That could be borne, I think.
+
+ _Arc._ But lose my Pyrrha?
+ Be driven out from her? See her no more?
+
+ _Sac._ There, friend, you stir me. Such a piece of man!
+ To strike like that because a woman's wit
+ Has clipped his own! He's not suspected you
+ In all these years?
+
+ _Arc._ Not once. I've watched myself
+ As I were my own jailer, fenced my heart,
+ And made my love a thief that gave my child
+ No open looks, but by her bed at night
+ Stole comfort as she slept.
+
+ _Sac._ Not I, Archippe!
+ I've laughed above the snores of Pelagon,
+ Knowing my darling near, whom he thought far
+ As Sparta. Come! You're taller by a head
+ Than I, yet die with quaking. And I thought
+ Each Lacedaemon wife a lioness.
+
+ _Arc._ Ah, but their lords are lions.
+
+ _Sac._ Well, they've mane
+ Enough, but they'd not shake it in my face.
+
+ _Arc._ Will you confess?
+
+ _Sac._ Why, no. For Pelagon
+ Would play the spousal saint, sit on the clouds,
+ And with a piety intolerable
+ Forgive his perjured wife. What soul could bear it?
+ But I'll not part with Phania, know you that!
+
+ _Arc._ What then?
+
+ _Sac._ We'll go to Philon. How to keep
+ Our secret and our daughters,--that's a nut
+ To break the oracle's teeth.
+
+ _Arc._ If 't can be done!
+
+ _Sac._ It must be done, Archippe. Come,--I hear
+ A chatter. This way out.
+
+ [_They leave, upper right. Biades, Pyrrha, Sybaris, and Phania enter
+ lower right_]
+
+ _Pha._ What of our garden,
+ Now all is seen?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Here gods should live, not men.
+ At every turn I seemed to lose the step
+ Of a departing deity.
+
+ _Syb._ We are content
+ With our Athenian lords, and seek no charm
+ To turn them into gods.
+
+ _Bia._ [_Showing a locket_] I've here a charm
+ Does more than that. This jewel webbed
+ In mystic rings--and set----
+
+ _Syb._ The Persian gem!
+ You promised me----
+
+ _Bia._ It is a magic stone,
+ That gazed upon by a true-minded maid----
+
+ _Pha._ [_Securing the trinket_] I'll see it, sir!
+ I've heard you vow your bride
+ Should wear this locket.
+
+ _Bia._ [_To Phania_] So she shall.
+ [_To Sybaris_] None else!
+ [_To Pyrrha_]
+ You hear my oath. Come, Sybaris, sit here
+ And, Phania,--come! You both shall peep at fate
+ Through a ruby portal, if your hearts be true.
+ Now fix your look----
+
+ _Pha._ We'll see the same!
+
+ _Bia._ Not so.
+ Each fortune's connate with the gazer's star,
+ And tinted as she dreams. Direct your eyes
+ With flawless constancy, or you'll see naught.
+
+ _Pha._ Not lift them once?
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, fasten every thought
+ Deep in the jewel's fire, till I have said
+ The Persian chant of welcome to the spirit
+ Whose magic you shall see.
+
+ _Pha._ A spirit? Oh!
+
+ _Bia._ But she is fair,--framed as divinity
+ For adoration.
+
+ _Syb._ She!
+
+ _Bia._ Lift not your eyes.
+
+ [_Stands behind Phania and Sybaris and makes the incantation an ardent
+ address to Pyrrha_]
+
+ Spirit of Fate, what mystical wooing
+ May win thee to pause where we pray?
+ Misers of Dream their locks are undoing,--
+ Mistress of Keys, wilt thou stay?
+
+ Priestess, thyself, O fairer than dreaming,
+ Art deity's answer to prayer!
+ Dusk in thine eyes is the seer-burthen gleaming,
+ And moon-wands at rest in thy hair.
+
+ Far-foot Desire is lost in the winding
+ Of valleys and gardens of thee!
+ Hoop of white arms is circumferent binding
+ The star-pastured world and me!
+
+ [_Sybaris throws the locket at his feet. He turns and sees that she
+ and Phania have risen and are staring at him_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_After a silence_] I do not know this game. Will leave you to it.
+ [_Exit, middle left_]
+
+ _Syb._ And I'll go home! [_Exit, lower left_]
+
+ _Pha._ And I'll go tell my father!
+ [_Exit, upper left_]
+
+ _Bia._ And I'll go stand in th' donkey mart and bray
+ Till a farmer buys me! Witched, and by a Spartan!
+ Mad as the fleeing ass of Thessaly! [_Exit, upper right_]
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT II
+
+
+SCENE: _The same as first act, a few minutes later. Phania in discovered
+in rear. Stesilaus walks frozenly back and forth, front, while she
+timidly advances and retreats._
+
+
+ _Pha._ [_Approaching_] I'm Phania, sir.
+
+ _Ste._ [_Looks at her incredulously, then walks left, leaving her centre_]
+ My blood and bone in that!
+ What dwarf-dish has she fed on? Ugh!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Crossing_] I've come
+ To walk with you. You like our garden, sir?
+ We've bulbuls in it,--and wee, visiting wings
+ From the unknown south. Can see them if you watch
+ A place I know. They dart like breathing bits
+ Of chrysoprase and sard o' the sun.
+
+ _Ste._ Humph! You
+ Are Phania?
+
+ _Pha._ [_Braver_] Troth, I am! Wilt see a nest--
+ So small as--that! Could put it on your thumb.
+ [_Takes his hand_]
+ I'll show you, sir. Don't you love _little_ things?
+ They wiggle to the heart, my daddy says.
+ You love my _daddy_, don't you?
+
+ _Ste._ Ugh! Your--Ugh!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Defensive_] _I_ love him,--yes, and all his friends. I do,
+ Though they're--so tall. I come just to your beard.
+ See now! [_Leans against him_]
+
+ _Ste._ Get off! You squeaking pewit! Ugh!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Quiveringly_] Have I displeased you, sir?
+
+ _Ste._ Displeased me? No.
+ You make contentment creep on honored bones
+ Far back as Lacedaemon's earliest grave
+ That opened for my house. You turn my blood
+ That's not yet earthed, and hot as Sparta's pride,
+ To drops that mutiny 'gainst their own succession
+ And beg to be the end. Displeased? Oh, no!
+ [_Retires, rear_]
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, sir----
+
+ [_Fails, and goes off weeping, lower right. Enter, upper right, Biades
+ and Creon_]
+
+ _Cre._ But this confusion, many-throated,
+ Has single voice and warns articulate.
+ A treasonous tempest rises, and you stand
+ A god indifferent when you should bethink
+ Yourself most mortal. Vilest mouths puff bold
+ In Sinon's service. You must wax your way
+ To th' Council----
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, no bending there!
+
+ _Cre._ But----
+
+ _Bia._ Peace!
+ Here's Stesilaus! He's most heavy shipped.
+ What is aboard? And now comes Pelagon,
+ With 's threshing-tongue a-ready. Chaff will fly.
+
+ [_Enter Pelagon, upper left_]
+
+ _Pel._ What thinkst of Phania? Is she not a chick?
+
+ _Ste._ You've tricked me, Pelagon! What fubbery
+ Have you put on me?
+
+ _Pel._ Sir? Now, now! Why, friend!
+
+ _Ste._ That's not my daughter!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Drawing Creon back_] Whist!
+
+ _Ste._ I'll see my own!
+ _My_ Phania! Not that bib,--that mewling piece,
+ With th' milk still in her mouth!
+
+ _Pel._ Speak so of her?
+ A bud in th' dew! A cherry next its leaf!
+ A pippin on the limb!
+
+ _Ste._ Not mine, I say!
+
+ _Pel._ If you repent you did beget her, sir,
+ I'll be your shift and own the curtained deed
+ 'Fore man and Heaven.
+
+ _Ste._ That my child?
+
+ _Pel._ Yours, friend.
+
+ _Ste._ Would she had never left Archippe's lap
+ For Sachinessa's! Patience, cool my tongue!
+ But I've done better by your Pyrrha!
+
+ _Pel._ Soft,
+ Beseech you, Stesilaus! Here's no place
+ For trumpeting our secret. And brief time
+ Forbids it present voice. The hour is on
+ To hear the people's answer. Come, my lord.
+ Your comrades go before you. We're past late.
+
+ _Ste._ Friend Pelagon, though courtesy be pressed
+ To th' kibe, I'll urge you keep at home. 'Tis best
+ You be not seen in this. The lords, who know
+ You lean to Sparta,--and for that all thanks,--
+ Are pricked therewith to oppose us, when they else
+ Might voice us favor.
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, they know me, friend.
+ My eye sets them at guard. They feel it, sir!
+ Puts them on screw. Well, so,--I'll stay behind.
+ But let me set you forth. [_Exeunt, upper right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Is 't trick, or truth?
+
+ _Cre._ Touch me! A needle's point
+ Could find no spot amazement hath not taken!
+
+ _Bia._ Didst hear it Creon? Pyrrha an Athenian!
+ O, words of miracle, if ye be true,--
+ Friend, friend, I'm in a whirl upon a way
+ To use this strange unearthment for the good
+ Of Athens. You'll be silent. Creon?
+
+ _Cre._ Nay,
+ I think----
+
+ _Bia._ And now I've lost fair Phania!
+
+ _Cre._ Lost?
+
+ _Bia._ With Mars i' the dusk of this debated time,
+ The Athenian general may not wive himself
+ With Sparta.
+
+ _Cre._ True!
+
+ _Bia._ I might give up command,
+ And be no more my country's armored watch....
+ Nay, Attica is first! That's sworn. I'll plunge
+ The sacrificial knife deep as my love.
+ And now 'tis done. Ah, Creon, tend thee well
+ My gentle loss.
+
+ _Cre._ This sets thee o'er thyself!
+ O noblest bounty that in grace compeers
+ With emulous Heaven! What in me can pay----
+
+ _Bia._ No more of 't now. But what a secret this!
+ If 't solely were my own--
+
+ _Cre._ It is, my lord!
+ 'Tis yours. I have no speech, no tongue for 't!
+
+ _Bia._ Thanks,
+ My Creon, thanks! And will you go once more
+ To th' street, where now it seems I have some need
+ Of loyal ears?
+
+ _Cre._ I serve you, Biades. [_Exit, upper right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Fast hooked, and feels no barb. If he'll lie dark
+ Till I would stir the waters.... Is it truth?
+ Pyrrha! Athenian born and Spartan bred!
+ By Mars and Eros! Here's a captain's bride!
+ There's flutter in me like a forest shook
+ With waking birds!
+
+ [_Re-enter Phania, still weeping_]
+
+ _Bia._ Why, Phania! Such a shower,
+ My kitkin!
+
+ _Pha._ Stesilaus sh-shook me so!
+ Called me a sque-e-aking pewit!
+
+ _Bia._ Ha! He did?
+ Well, listen to me, Phania. Come, look up.
+ [_Lifts her chin_]
+ A maid with little eyes should never weep.
+ Leave that to Juno orbs. They swim in sorrow
+ Like full moons in a lake, but beads like yours
+ Are only bright when dry. Shun grief as you
+ Shun mud. [_Exit, middle left_]
+
+ _Pha._ [_Gasping_] Why--Biades--he's gone!
+ He said----
+ Oh, oh! If I could die----
+
+ [_Sobs with abandon. Enter Alcanor, upper left. He pauses before
+ her. She looks up bewildered_]
+
+ _Alc._ Ah, gentle star,
+ What shrouds thee in this rain? Yet thou'rt not hid.
+ Thy beauty shining on these clouds of pearl
+ Makes every drop that dies reflecting thee
+ A little, falling sun.
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, Biades said----
+ He said--he said----
+
+ _Alc._ If what he said so troubles,
+ Let me unsay it with a kiss that makes
+ Trouble forgot and dumb. [_Kisses her_]
+
+ _Pha._ [_On his bosom_] I'm not--I'm not--
+ Not _ugly_, sir?
+
+ _Alc._ O, dove of Aphrodite!
+ Earth stores her beauty in this single face,
+ That she may show one jewel to the skies
+ When gods boast they have all!
+
+ [_Phania purrs comfortedly, then releases herself_]
+
+ _Pha._ How dare you, sir,
+ Attack me? Who are you?
+
+ _Alc._ I do not know.
+
+ _Pha._ Not know?
+
+ _Alc._ Nothing of self or where I am.
+ It may be those are trees on giant guard,
+ And these bright peeping things are flowers' eyes,
+ And this is happy grass we stand upon,
+ And that blue watcher is the faithful sky,
+ But I know naught except my soul is yours,
+ O, maid-magician, in whose snare I lie
+ Kissing the net that binds me! [_Kissing her fallen curls_]
+
+ _Pha._ But you know
+ Your name!
+
+ _Alc._ Not in this world a minute old
+ That now I find me in, but in time past
+ I was Alcanor, Stesilaus' son.
+
+ _Pha._ O!--then--why--all is well! You're noble, sir!
+ My father will approve you.
+
+ _Alc._ Hast a father?
+ And art not magic-born? Then I perceive
+ I must go back and find my earthly wits.
+
+ _Pha._ Nay, he is Pelagon, your father's friend.
+
+ _Alc._ You're Phania, then!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Giving her hand_] I am.
+
+ _Alc._ No more than this?
+ No kiss?
+
+ _Pha._ [_Very shy_] You've had it, sir.
+
+ _Alc._ A phantom one!
+ 'Twas in a dream, as two ghost-lovers meet
+ On an Elysian path. Too cold for earth!
+
+ _Pha._ [_Touching her cheek_] Nay, it is warm here yet.
+
+ [_He takes her in his arms, and they withdraw lower right. Pelagon
+ enters, upper right, in time to witness the embrace_]
+
+ _Pel._ [_Rousing from his horror_] Her brother! Gods!
+ Whip me all hagglers! We have stood so long
+ At door of our confession that this shame
+ Gets by us. Phania and Alcanor! Oh!
+ No shuffling now! When Stesilaus comes,
+ The tale must out!
+
+ [_Enter Pyrrha, middle left. She crosses, passing Pelagon, who retreats
+ rear, unseen by her. She loiters right_]
+
+ _Pel._ Here's opportunity
+ At beck. I'll follow. [_Advances_] Ahem! My daughter,----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Sir?
+ You seek your daughter? I will look this way.
+ [_Goes farther right_]
+
+ _Pel._ I must advance, and take her Spartan guard
+ With gentleness. My love, 'tis you I seek.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Stiffly_] You'd speak to me?
+
+ _Pel._ My little Pyrrha,----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Little!
+
+ _Pel._ I think of Phania. In my heart you both
+ Hold undivided place. Shall we not chat a bit,
+ My Pyrrha?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Kitchen maids do that, not men
+ Of State.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, there's a time when one may cast
+ The civic garment and take household ease
+ In modest robe.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Aside_] A swaddling band would fit him!
+
+ _Pel._ You will not hear me?
+
+ _Pyrr._ I wait upon you, sir.
+ For if your hostship I forget, and leave
+ The fees of grace unpaid, I yet must know
+ You are my father's friend. Say what you will,
+ My lord.
+
+ _Pel._ That word undears me! Let your tongue
+ Breach colder custom and give me a name
+ That brings me near in love as Stesilaus.
+ Wilt call me father, Pyrrha?
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Retreating_] You, my lord?
+
+ _Pel._ They've frozen her, poor child! Must blow more warm.
+ Indeed a father. Call me what I am,
+ For so I love you, Pyrrha.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Is it thus
+ The Athens sages talk?
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, we're not cut
+ Of ice as Spartans are. Here your poor heart
+ Shall know what sun is, and the Springs you've lost,
+ Betrayed without a bloom in frigid Sparta,
+ In Athens shall blow fair. You are amazed,
+ My sweet, but by this kiss----
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Giving him a blow_] You goose-eyed goat!
+ I strike not at your years, Lord Pelagon,
+ But at your mind which has not come of age
+ And gives me elder right.
+
+ [_Exit, middle left. While Pelagon is recovering, enter Stesilaus,
+ upper right_]
+
+ _Pel._ [_Welcoming the interruption_] You, Stesilaus?
+ So soon, friend, from the Assembly?
+
+ _Ste._ Late, sir, late!
+ More haste had been more prudence.
+
+ _Pel._ Why, why, why!
+
+ _Ste._ Where is your buttery nephew, Biades?
+ Who slips to the seat of question and melts all
+ Into one potch of folly!
+
+ _Pel._ But I'd know----
+
+ _Ste._ Why I am here, not there? A crater mouth
+ That calls itself a people hissed eruption
+ Into my face, and without bow I set
+ My back to 't, sir!
+
+ _Pel._ Blame me for all! I knew
+ I should not stay behind! The gods do know
+ I am the voice of Athens. 'Tis no pride
+ That speaks bare truth. I'll go----
+
+ _Ste._ Tuh, tuh!
+ A word with Biades----
+
+ _Pel._ But not too sharp,
+ My friend. He is of weight----
+
+ _Ste._ No sharper than
+ My stick! Then I set out for Sparta, where
+ The very ground knows Stesilaus walks!
+
+ _Pel._ And Phania goes with you?
+
+ _Ste._ Not if the chit
+ May corner in your kitchen! She's worth that.
+
+ _Pel._ You'll leave her here?
+
+ _Ste._ It will content me. I'll
+ Surrender both.
+
+ _Pel._ What? Both! Nay, your free heart
+ Shall not outdo my own.
+
+ _Ste._ You'll give me Pyrrha?
+
+ _Pel._ Friend of my soul, I will!
+
+ _Ste._ [_Moved_] Thanks, Pelagon.
+ She's dearer than my son. More like my blood.
+ Alcanor is too soft and woman-lipped.
+ Too much Archippe in him from his birth,
+ Nor blows could drive it out.
+
+ _Pel._ And mine own eyes
+ Have seen a cooing match between himself
+ And Phania.
+
+ _Ste._ Zeus! His sister!
+
+ _Pel._ While we speak,
+ The fated pair are yonder----
+
+ _Ste._ I'll get him home!
+ And leave the witch to you! Had I a doubt
+ To hold me back, this turn would be
+ Decision's point. She must stay here.
+
+ _Pel._ But how
+ Make answer to our wives? Our wisdom's nicked
+ Where it is tenderest if we confess.
+
+ _Ste._ What's to confess? I know my will and do it.
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, ay, you bear your wife in a sack, but mine
+ Is on her feet and goes her pace. Look yon!
+ They come together! A brace, and one of them
+ Would tie my tongue.
+
+ _Ste._ Tie water in a brook!
+
+ [_Archippe and Sachinessa enter upper right_]
+
+ _Sac._ We do not come to shame you, noble lords
+ And husbands, though we've that to bear which put
+ To honest ballad would uncrest your pride
+ And clip a reef or two from the tall sail
+ Of dignity.
+
+ _Ste._ Why, madam, this approach?
+
+ _Sac._ I walk, sir, in my garden when I please.
+
+ _Arc._ We have a suit, my honored lords, which you
+ May think full strange, remembering our prayers
+ Of twenty years ago.
+
+ _Ste._ What suit canst have?
+ If you must try the goose-step out of doors,
+ Go thank the gods for suiting you with me,
+ Who save you from all suit by hearing none.
+
+ _Sac._ Not hear us, sir? I'll catch you by the ears
+ And shake the pride-wool out, but you shall hear!
+ Suited with you! And then go thank the gods!
+
+ _Pel._ Why, Sachinessa, love! What you, duck?
+
+ _Sac._ This, Pelagon. When in that sad year gone
+ You took my child from me----
+
+ _Pel._ What? That again?
+
+ _Sac._ Not that, but this. I did not stay you then,
+ Being young in wedlock and my wit at cheep
+ In its first feathers. But this second time
+ When you lift up your hand to cut the bough
+ Whose root is in my heart, I'll speak so loud
+ That if your dull ear miss, I'll reach you yet
+ By way o' the stars that will cry back my wrong
+ When they so hear it.
+
+ _Pel._ You would beg for Phania?
+
+ _Sac._ I would. There is no source of love so great
+ As brooding care. That makes the mother, not
+ The childing pangs. Though she, from the first hour,
+ Will cherish what she must so dearly buy,
+ 'Tis day by watchful day her swelling love
+ Is born. So I, as new days past, forgot
+ The child of my brief pain, and gave to one
+ That nestled in her place my care-born love.
+ Now you would strike again----
+
+ _Pel._ Sweet, by my soul,--
+ Nay, Sachinessa, dearest heart, be calm.
+ Your words have never in our mated life
+ Moved me as now. If Stesilaus yields,
+ And his stern will be broken by your plea,
+ I am content.
+
+ _Ste._ I'm so far moved, my friend,
+ That I will hear Archippe speak her wish.
+ Her love for Pyrrha will not match with that
+ Your wife bestows on Phania.
+
+ _Arc._ Ay, my lord,
+ I've never loved the stranger as my own,
+ But she is dearer than my own grown strange.
+ I see in Phania all my tender loss,
+ But it is lost forever. Give me, Pyrrha.
+ I have no other daughter.
+
+ _Ste._ Keep her, dame.
+ But make this weakness not your heckling ground
+ Where you would spar for favors. No more suits!
+
+ _Pel._ And, Sachinessa, hear the same from me.
+
+ _Sac._ You borrow feathers and I'll twitch 'em out!
+
+ _Ste._ [_To Archippe_] Lest you should badger, footed safe on this,
+ Know that my judgment's not earwigged by you
+ To this repeal, but now configures pat
+ To the act itself, that keeps a constant step
+ With our first purpose. Our intent comes out
+ With even edges, though reversed in face.
+ An Athens' maid shall be a Spartan mother,
+ And here shall dwell a dame of Spartan blood.
+
+ _Pel._ You hear it, Sachinessa. I'm not one
+ To throw my pack away in sight of home.
+ Come mud, come mire, I bear my judgment out,
+ As Athens knows.
+
+ _Sac._ I'll swear to it there's no man
+ I' the city better hides the sun with a sieve!
+
+ _Ste._ And secondly, my dame, know that I've won
+ My high contention that the laws of Sparta
+ Are best for brooding earth a godlike race.
+ For here my proof enroots in warmest life
+ That they can aggrandize the chalky veins
+ Of pampered Attica to ducts that bear
+ The red, unconquered sap of Lacedaemon.
+
+ _Sac._ So Pyrrha is your proof!
+
+ _Ste._ No question there.
+ A weak, Athenian babe grows up the pride
+ Of Sparta, while a budling of her own,
+ Nursled by Athens' soft and careless shift,
+ Scarce grows to woman's level----
+
+ _Sac._ Why, you puffed----
+ You pride-blown----
+
+ _Arc._ Come with me!
+
+ _Sac._ But such a bladder!
+ He'd top a flood into the second world
+ And wet but half his skin!
+
+ _Arc._ Nay, Sachinessa,
+ Our suit is won. No words! We'll haste once more
+ To Philon's shrine. For this dear joy I'll bend
+ A willing knee. Come, come!
+ [_Draws her away, upper right_]
+
+ _Pel._ [_Capering_] Could reel it now
+ Like school-boy 'scaped a whipping!
+
+ _Ste._ Shame! Your years
+ Will blush. [_Goes left_] Now Biades, and then farewell!
+
+ _Pel._ Ah, there's my mourning cloak! I'll go at once
+ To th' Council, and----
+
+ _Ste._ Vain labor, Pelagon.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, I will stir them!
+
+ [_Exit, upper right. Biades enters left. He is arrayed in a purple
+ gown with long train held up by his monkey. A peacock fan swings
+ from a girdle, and jewels dangle from his ears. He carries a
+ scroll from which he reads as he walks, tittering over the
+ matter. Stesilaus watches him curiously, then amazedly recognizes
+ him_]
+
+ _Ste._ Biades! Is 't he?
+ May eyes report it to a brain unshaken?
+ ... Ho, sir,--or madam?
+
+ _Bia._ Did you speak, my lord?
+ Your pardon! I was buried here,--quite drowned
+ I' the honey of this tale. Sir, it suggests,--
+ But that's not it,--the style, so quaint, so pure,--
+ It plays with thoughts and leaves them bright as shells
+ The sea has polished to their curling edges.
+ You'll hear this line? 'Tis worth a pause. Eh, not?
+ You've never wooed the script? Ah, I forget.
+ War is the art of Sparta.
+
+ _Ste._ Are you man?
+
+ _Bia._ What's that to an artist, sir? Life in me packs
+ The germinal grain of all, and what may come
+ To birth and bloom, I leave to nursing Fate.
+ But you seem ruffled,--warm. Pray have my fan.
+ Then take my parchment,--sit you in this nook
+ And read of Corys and his water-nymph
+ Until the charm of an unhurrying world
+ Steals wave-like round you.
+
+ _Ste._ Olympus! Was 't this voice
+ That tripped my reason? Led my cautious years
+ To take instruction from a dizzened ape
+ And lose the cause they guarded? Was 't myself
+ So slubbered judgment----
+
+ _Bia._ Ah, must I believe
+ You honored my good counsel?
+
+ _Ste._ Good!
+
+ _Bia._ 'Twas good
+ For Athens. Ha, you slipped into the noose
+ As easily as my finger takes this ring.
+ A wondrous sapphire here. You know the stone?
+ This is from Egypt,--has the desert fire
+ 'Neath Nilus' liquid smile. Is 't not a treasure?
+ But I forget. Your Sparta has no gems.
+ By Hera's belt, your country goes too bare
+ For this adorned earth!
+
+ _Ste._ Come, Biades!
+ Throw off that gown, and with a captain's sword
+ Deny this folly!
+
+ _Bia._ Friend, 'tis not my hour
+ For exercise. Our moods, I see, would quarrel.
+ But here's my thornless world. You'll pardon me.
+
+ [_Resumes walking and reading as before. Pyrrha enters, middle left,
+ and stands watching him. He looks up and is struck motionless to
+ find her eyes upon him. She comes nearer for a detached scrutiny,
+ then crosses right_]
+
+ _Ste._ Find me Alcanor, daughter. And this hour
+ We leave for Sparta.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I am ready, sir.
+
+ [_Exit, lower right. Stesilaus goes into house, upper left_]
+
+ _Bia._ She has good eyes, and used them. Overshot,
+ By Hermes! I must follow,--'twixt this fool
+ And meditation's eye must interpose
+ My soldier self!
+
+ [_Tears off robe, under which he wears a simple, belted tunic, flings
+ jewels from his ears, and drives out Bico. Goes off, lower right.
+ Enter Pelagon, much ruffled, from street_]
+
+ _Pel._ Where's Stesilaus? Stesilaus, ho!
+ Find Stesilaus!
+ [_Stesilaus returns, upper left_]
+ O, my friend, they're mad,
+ And you must fly! I never was so battered!
+ The senators cry out you played with them
+ As though their stationed honors were a row
+ Of last year's weanlings,--first to say you bore
+ Full power to treat, then at their open answer
+ To cover and prefer the opposite,
+ Declaring that their noble terms must cool
+ On th' road to Sparta! As I speak your comrades
+ Are driven through the gates. You must not stay.
+ They'll have your life, they are so worked. Come, come!
+ I know a way--I'll get you through----
+
+ _Ste._ I'll go
+ The way I came.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, nay, I'll slip you out!
+ Leave here your wife and daughter. In gentler hour
+ I'll send them after, with your son,--
+
+ _Ste._ I'll speak
+ To Pyrrha----
+
+ _Pel._ No! This way! The world's at somersault!
+ The turtle's on his back, his claws to Heaven!
+ No one would hear me! _Me!_ The voice of Athens!
+ And jeered me down, for I was Biades' kin,--
+ Though why the wind sits so I know not!
+ Come--come--I was so battered----
+
+ [_Exeunt, upper left. Pyrrha and Biades enter, lower right_]
+
+ _Bia._ But one word!
+
+ _Pyrr._ I've let you shower words in hope to drain
+ Your breath of them, but they grow to a hail.
+ Pelt me no more, Athenian.
+
+ _Bia._ O, that name
+ I held my pearl of honor is become
+ A wounding thorn! I'll wear 't no more.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You'll be
+ A Spartan?
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, if you are one!
+
+ _Pyrr._ So vows
+ An Athens' captain.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, I have no place,
+ No rank, no office, duty or pursuit,
+ But this my gage is in. Nor rest till I have won!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Then you'll die weary, sir. So long 'twill take
+ To make me yours.
+
+ _Bia._ If you will love my shade
+ I'll on the instant make myself a ghost!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Love's burning deeds do ever lie before him.
+ He ne'er gets past to make them history.
+
+ _Bia._ O, hear my oath! Thy birthland shall be mine!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Whist, Biades! The gods might hear you too.
+
+ _Bia._ I'll swear it in the ears of Zeus!
+
+ _Pyrr._ By what
+ Irreverenced deity wilt break it?
+
+ _Bia._ Ah,
+ By none, fair Pyrrha! I'll stake my golden part
+ In love's eternity, no land's more dear
+ To my own heart than that which gave you birth.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ay, for on Spartan soil the laurel grows
+ Which you would pluck from drenched defeat and set
+ Among your bays. So dear as that!
+
+ [_A clamor is heard in street_]
+
+ _Bia._ I'll woo
+ In better time. Till then let this pure gem
+ Speak for me on your breast. 'Tis like my love,
+ No sudden thing. For as this captive fire
+ Dreamed in the heart of earth and could not wake
+ Till beauty born in man sent down his kiss,
+ So lay my love in Life from her first breath,
+ Deep as unconsciousness, till at your step
+ It knew itself. You scorn the half-hour flame,
+ But in your coming like an instant dawn
+ Find all its brevity. Ay, Pyrrha, sweet!
+ And let my token lie, a patient prayer,
+ Upon your bosom. Heaven should have its sun!
+
+ [_Drops the locket into the folds of her dress. She casts it to the
+ ground_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Athens is such a sun, and Sparta as my foot
+ Shall overcloud it! [_Exit, middle left_]
+
+ _Bia._ Had she crushed my gem
+ To bleeding dust, I'd pay it o'er to see
+ Such flame unsheathe. Bright Eos necklaced with
+ A darkling east could not more beauteously
+ Threat earth with storm. [_Takes up the locket_]
+ You'll wear it yet, my terror,
+ Or I'll cut out the tongue that can not wag
+ To a woman's heart.
+ [_Enter Creon from street_]
+ What, Creon? Dumb with news?
+ Which I will guess before your tongue's uncrimped.
+ We've lost our gentle guests? Our Spartan friends
+ Are off?
+
+ _Cre._ They're driven out. But that is old.
+ Atop that tale, like mountain on a hump,
+ Comes one will wake you, sir! The tumbling streams
+ That bore the Spartans out, rage back again,
+ A gathered flood against you,--you, my lord!
+
+ _Bia._ Ah!
+
+ _Cre._ Sinon's poison spreads till men
+ That yesterday lay down before you, now
+ Cry for your death. I warned you, friend!
+
+ _Bia._ You did.
+ Be happy then. Your duty's done.
+
+ _Cre._ Oh, sir,
+ Your house is sacked, and all your golden plate,
+ Parcelled on robber backs, is carried out
+ And spots the city with a hundred suns!
+
+ _Bia._ There's more i' the world. Let that not trouble you.
+
+ _Cre._ Your robes are in the street, and carters' wheels
+ Grow royal with them!
+
+ _Bia._ Well, there yet are looms.
+ While weavers know their art this is no loss.
+
+ _Cre._ Your pictures----
+
+ _Bia._ What? If they've one finger laid
+ On those immortal treasures----
+
+ _Cre._ All are riddled!
+
+ _Bia._ All, Creon? Not my Zeuxis? No! The stones
+ Hurled at it would have paused as though a god
+ Were hidden there!
+
+ _Cre._ All, friend.
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, these are tears.
+ But I will chide them and think on my sword.
+ Now I must bend me to the senators,--
+ Get leave to call my troops,--
+ [_Enter a body of senators, Amentor at their head_]
+ Most noble lords,
+ I was about to seek you.
+
+ _Amen._ Shifts your mood,
+ Proud Biades? The answer's not yet cold
+ That came so hot from you,--a two-edged shame
+ That struck into your honor as our own!
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, gentle senators, Athenian fathers!
+ That you could note so low, so foul a charge
+ As secret Sinon brought against my name,
+ Gave me the block, the bellows, and the fire
+ Wherewith I forged my answer,--one that kept
+ My honor whole, and if your own needs surgery,
+ Lay 't not to me, but let good sense mend all,
+ And give me leave to go against this mob
+ Now scarring Athens' beauty.
+
+ _Amen._ Go alone.
+
+ _Bia._ I have an army.
+
+ _Amen._ Ask Lord Sinon that.
+
+ _Bia._ When fishes drown!
+
+ _Amen._ Put out your single arm,
+ And feel your army in it. Athens' troops
+ Are now in Sinon's charge. You are no more
+ Her general. You are banished.
+
+ _Bia._ Is this so?
+
+ _Senators._ It is.
+
+ _Bia._ Then I am dumb. Words on your heat
+ Would fall as snow,--and I am not a man
+ To let my scars speak, though my body bears
+ Enough to cry you shame.
+
+ _Amen._ We know your valor,
+ But with it goes a pride no State could bear
+ But that it must. Make your escape, my lord.
+ The people pressed us, and we save your life
+ By this decree.
+
+ _Bia._ O, Athens that did love me!
+
+ _Amen._ And now repents that love, for know you, sir,
+ Though men may be irreverent as they choose,
+ They'll follow only who revere their gods.
+
+ [_Exeunt senators_]
+
+ _Cre._ But you were meek!
+
+ _Bia._ If I had let them know
+ I've yet a tongue, they might have had that too,
+ And in the courts where I must sue for love
+ 'Twill be my royal member,--all my suite
+ And kingly plenitude.
+
+ _Cre._ They will repent.
+
+ _Bia._ On knees, sir! Banished! O, my heart could lend
+ Hot Sirius fire!
+
+ _Cre._ You! Banished!
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, while sense
+ From wit and speech are undivorced, and courage
+ Knits them in purpose drinking up the seas
+ That distance me from Athens, who shall say
+ I'm banished? Bribe mankind and nature too,
+ Ye bleary senators! Suborn the winds!
+ Put me at end of farthest watery leagues!
+ While there's no rift between me and my gods,
+ I'll shake this night as from Apollo's brow
+ And show my day emergent!
+
+ _Cre._ Where wilt go?
+
+ _Bia._ To Persia first, where I am dear to Phernes.
+ And then, perchance, with Persia at my back,
+ Sparta may find me fair, though now I'm black
+ As Pluto's poker. We'll not flag, my heart,
+ Till every fleet o' the world rides here and makes
+ This saucy harbor tremble! What an ague then
+ Shall shake thee, Athens, thinking on this hour!
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT III
+
+
+SCENE: _The assembly ground of the Spartans. Maidens discovered. A dance
+is ending._
+
+
+ _Nac._ We limped through that. Apollo! Are there thorns
+ I' the grass? We'll better it. Come!
+
+ _Dia._ No time. I hear
+ The senators.
+
+ _Nac._ They wait beyond the bridge
+ For old Aristogeiton. Come, my maids!
+ You, Dianessa need to school your toes.
+ 'Twas you played wild-foot--twice!
+
+ _Art._ Save her a slip
+ When Agis' eye is on her!
+
+ _Nac._ Faith, she'd be
+ No bride this year!
+
+ _Dia._ What ache for that? His love
+ Is slight if 't hangs upon my toes.
+
+ _Nac._ My troth!
+ Less might catch more!
+
+ _Dia._ You, Nacia, are not so lithe
+ As a ferret in a hoop. An Athens maid
+ Might labor so in all her skirts.
+
+ _Nac._ Ho, ho!
+ A little puff blow such a fire? The coals
+ Were hot then!
+
+ _Myr._ Nay, my girls, we'll douse you both
+ I' the river yonder if you flame at naught.
+ How, Dianessa, dance the maids of Athens?
+ But surely not in skirts!
+
+ _Dia._ My father saw them,
+ And so he said.
+
+ _Myr._ Why dance at all then? Grace
+ That cadent girdles the invisible waves
+ Of flute and harp is born of faining limbs,
+ And hide them who may see it?
+
+ _The._ No doubt they bob
+ Like bears in blankets, and believe they dance.
+
+ _Nac._ Pyrrha could say. But since she came from Athens
+ Who hears her speak?
+
+ _Art._ She keeps from all our games,
+ And scorns the wrestle, though our noblest youths
+ Have sent her challenge.
+
+ _The._ Ay! Lets Dianessa wear
+ The vestal bays, nor cares if Hieron
+ Be there to see.
+
+ _Myr._ Come, Pyrrha, tell us how
+ The Athenian maidens dance with shrouded feet.
+
+ _Pyrr._ They wear their robes as Morning does the mist
+ That makes her beauty greater and her dream
+ Live on in men.
+
+ _Dia._ Ah, maidens, here's a tale
+ For the other ear.
+
+ _Pyrr._ The bare and brazen sun
+ That's up without a cloud, cheers to the hunt,
+ The fight, the bruited path,--makes careful dames
+ Send linen to the ford, and say "Zeus grant,
+ We'll air the beds!"
+
+ _Nac._ Ay, wives must know their season.
+
+ _Pyrr._ But let night-swimming Morn come up
+ In foamy veil, and her priest-hearted rose
+ Stays lusty feet and gives adventure's hour
+ To the achieving soul.
+
+ _Art._ What kin is this
+ To th' matter?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Why, Artante, when we dance
+ Half naked as we do before the youths,
+ They say of us "A bed-mate there, and strong
+ To bear and breed brave warriors for my house."
+ But they in Athens who so watch the dance,
+ See sheatheless Being shine through form that would,
+ Not softened thus, first fill the ruder eye
+ And leave unseen the token of a grace
+ Earth may not shadow.
+
+ _Dia._ Nay, you speak Athenian!
+ Let's have it in our tongue.
+
+ _Nac._ What grace can be
+ So badgered in a gown?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ask flying doves,
+ That rhythm the air till it doth ache with loss
+ When they have passed. So have these maidens taught
+ The silken fold to be their winged part.
+
+ _Myr._ Ask her no more. Alack, our Pyrrha drank
+ Of charmed Ilissus,--must go back to Athens!
+
+ _Nac._ But come! Our dance! We yet are Spartan maids.
+
+ _Dia._ [_Taking wreath from her hair_] Our flowers are far from morning.
+ See, these buds
+ Are pale as they had never known the dew.
+ But I know where some fleecy clusters blow
+ And daintily edge the stream. Like tiny birds,
+ Green-necked and lily-winged, they are alight
+ A hundred to a stem. I'll have a wreath
+ Of them.
+
+ _Myr._ And I. These sad things are less bright
+ Than locks they should adorn.
+
+ _Art._ New garlands, all!
+ Where grow these favors? Dianessa, lead!
+
+ [_They go off, rear left. Pyrrha waits a meditative moment, then turns
+ to follow. A bough brushes her cheek. She puts up her hand and
+ plucks a bunch of berries from it_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ 'Tis like his ruby. Nature loved them both
+ With the same kiss,--the berry and the stone.
+ [_Fastens cluster to her bosom_]
+ "Heaven should have its sun." This sun will fade,
+ But that I threw away had ne'er lost hue
+ So near my heart, giving and taking fire.
+ [_Something thrown from the bushes falls at her feet. She gazes at it,
+ not taking it up_]
+ Ah! Biades' jewel! Who.... [_Looks about guardedly_]
+
+ [_Biades comes from the woods. He is dressed as a Helot in a scant
+ tunic of goat-skin, and wears a large cap_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Whose slave are you,
+ Bold Helot?
+
+ _Bia._ [_Kneeling_] Thine! [_Takes off cap, revealing his quantity of
+ dark curls_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Are you in love with death,
+ That you have come to Sparta?
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, I come
+ A banished man.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I've heard how you were plucked.
+
+ _Bia._ No feather left.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Life, sir, is yours, and you
+ Cast it away in Lacedaemon.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay,--
+
+ _Pyrr._ You whose dark outrage made her honor bleed,
+ Think on her burning wound to set the foot
+ Of impudence and live?
+
+ _Bia._ I know the Spartans.
+ They will exalt my courage above death.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Courage that reckons so bates its own worth
+ Till a coward might disport it. You will meet
+ Death's mercy but no other.
+
+ _Bia._ No, the virtue
+ Dearest in them they'll hold dear in myself.
+ But if not so,--blow out your candle, Fate,
+ I'll go to bed.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Why not have fled to Persia?
+ She's softer mannered,--has no aching pride
+ Your death would poultice.
+
+ _Bia._ Pyrrha lives in Sparta.
+ Howe'er I set my feet, love turned them here.
+ Which way I bent some tinged thought of thee
+ Crept as a secret sun to every sense
+ And made the hidden threads of being blush
+ Like coral boughs when Aphrodite's foot
+ Is on the wave.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Athenian, what canst hope
+ From Stesilaus' daughter?
+
+ _Bia._ I ask naught.
+ But had a gem of hers that hourly cried
+ To clasp its mistress, and to bring it thus,
+ With Death a looker-on, I thought might make
+ The peasant service shine so sovranly
+ That even her royal and offended eyes
+ Might gently entertain it.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Deck the bark
+ Of yon shag ilex and 'twill wear your trinket
+ With the same grace and thanks.
+
+ _Bia._ Thy grace is hers
+ Who walked unrobed from hands of the high gods
+ Grown jealous of the beauty they had made.
+ Not this, nor any jewel may adorn it,
+ Though swartest pebbles might grow ruby proud,
+ And rubies throb with breath to be so worn.
+ And for thy thanks, I have not come this way
+ To ask for them. Keep them for one so poor
+ He lets his heart for hire.
+ [_Puts locket slowly under his tunic_]
+ And yet my ears
+ Fed on a sigh when I was hidden there.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Who is so strong as never to have sighed?
+ That secret moment was my weakest too.
+ I'm now a Spartan, and my father's name
+ Is Stesilaus. You may know it, sir,
+ Who wert of Athens, but whose country now
+ Is so much ground as you may beg of foes,
+ And that, Zeus help, they'll measure without grudge.
+ You're not so tall your grave would scant a field,
+ Or make a garden less.
+
+ [_Sounds of approach across bridge, lower right_]
+
+ _Bia._ Does Fate come noisy-footed?
+ I thought she crept, and loved the jungle-leap.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Hide, sir! I'll be as secret as these shrubs,
+ And not reveal you sooner. With the night
+ You may steal out of Sparta.
+
+ _Bia._ I'll go out winged
+ With Spartan ships, and honor as a bride
+ Shall sail with me!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Are you so mad? Then die!
+
+ [_Enter ephors and senators, all old men, followed by warriors, then
+ youths, wives, maidens, children, and attendant slaves. Biades
+ draws his cap down and lies slouching on the grass. The ephors
+ and senators take seats which the Helots have prepared for them_]
+
+ _First Ephor._ What! Must we wait? Where are these merry slips?
+
+ _First Senator._ The woods are dancing yonder. By that sign
+ They come.
+
+ [_Re-enter Dianessa, Myrta, and companions, who dance before the
+ assembly, the figure symbolizing the capture of Persephone.
+ They continue dancing, the youths joining, until every maid
+ has won a partner._]
+
+ _Ste._ [_To Archippe_] Our Pyrrha does not dance. Why's that?
+
+ _Arc._ No why at all. I'll rate her. Sulky chuff!
+
+ _Ste._ Ay, you'll be on her heels!
+
+ _Arc._ The younger maids
+ Are chosen. She'll be left. There's Hieron
+ With eyes like begging moons which way she goes,
+ But she draws off,--
+
+ _Ste._ Well, well! She'll please herself.
+
+ _Arc._ In Phania, I'd have had a daughter now----
+
+ _Ste._ What, madam? Gabble here? Be done!
+
+ _Agis._ [_Among the young men_] I thirst.
+ [_To Biades_] Up, slave! Fill me a cup. Come, move, you drone!
+
+ [_Biades slowly rises and goes to spring under trees, rear_]
+
+ _A Young Lord._ What Helot's that?
+
+ _Another._ Some dog o' the farms. A staff
+ On 's back might help his legs.
+
+ _Another._ I'll put mine to 't.
+
+ [_Biades lazily returns with cup. In handing it to Agis he spills part
+ of the contents_]
+
+ _Agis._ [_Emptying the cup in Biades' face_] By Dis and Rhadamanthus! Sot!
+ Whose man
+ Is this?
+
+ _Bia._ My own, you Spartan whelp!
+
+ [_Gives Agis a blow, so unexpected that it knocks him down. His head
+ strikes the root of a tree and he does not rise. A number of
+ Spartans rush upon Biades. Others bear Agis off, left_]
+
+ _Voices._ The dog!
+ Tread him to earth! Down! down!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Springing from them and taking off his cap_]
+ What, Greeks? You'd kill
+ A brother?
+
+ _A Voice._ Biades!
+
+ _Bia._ My friends----
+
+ _Voices._ Ha, ha! His friends!
+
+ _Lys._ What friending was 't you gave us on the day
+ You drove us out of Athens? Hoot and club
+ Then spoke how dear you loved us. We had not
+ Brought off our lives if your desire had dared
+ Blow full on Athens' heat.
+
+ _Gir._ Brought off our lives?
+ Where's Heracordus? Stoned at Athens' gate,
+ And dead upon the road.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, brothers----
+
+ _Gir._ Ha!
+ If you're a brother, weep beside his grave.
+ I'll show it you.
+
+ _Lys._ And all the graves where lie
+ The dead we brought two bleeding years ago
+ From Decalea's wall, where you gave entry
+ Then broke the truce with charge!
+
+ _Bia._ But hear, my lords----
+
+ _Gir._ Come, wail beside them till they wake and ask
+ What new calamity brews in your tears!
+
+ [_Enter Lenon_]
+
+ _Len._ Agis yet swoons. That root was edged with death.
+ We fear he's gone.
+
+ _Gir._ For this alone, Athenian,
+ You should not live,--though all your else-wrought deeds
+ Were mercy's pawn for you.
+
+ _Bia._ Ye fathers, hear!
+ If ye know Justice,--and the world has said
+ Her lovers dwell in Sparta,--shall he cry
+ To scorn-shut ears, whose injuries taking voice
+ Should pass in thunder where your virtues sleep?
+ Hear one whose wrongs have bruised him to your coast,
+ And let it not be said that you from safe
+ Unshaken rocks met suppliant hands with spears!
+
+ _Ste._ Ye noble elders, there's a sort of mercy
+ On which dishonor feeds. As pasty, soft
+ As butter in the sun, it chokes the sluice
+ Of reason,--in marshy obliteration lays
+ The marks and bounds of justice,--nauseous spreads
+ Till mind is left no throne. Let it not come
+ Where sit the guards of honor!
+
+ _Bia._ I grant you so.
+ But what I ask is not thus natured, sir!
+ Sages of Lacedaemon, there's a mercy
+ That veins the very rock of Justice' seat.
+ It is the agent of divinest mould
+ In all the world. By it the mind grows fair
+ With blossoms deity may gather. 'Tis
+ As precious to the soul as south-lipped winds
+ To the winter-aching earth. Go bare of it,
+ Though ye know Virtue ye wear not her pearl.
+ I beg my life that you in saving me
+ May save the heavenliest favor given to men,
+ Nor crush it out of Sparta, leaving her
+ The scarred and barren terror gods forsake.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ Shall hear his plea? He may have argument
+ Of worthy note.
+
+ _Second Senator._ 'Tis not our way to judge
+ The dumb.
+
+ _Third Ephor._ [_Very old, creakingly_]
+ Why, if a lion, boar, or pard,
+ Or any beast, should pause as we did burn
+ In chase, and beg us hear his cause, I think
+ Our ears would ope.
+
+ _Ste._ Ay, and the earth too, sir,
+ Bearing such wonder on it! Folly's self
+ Would be too wise to listen to this man,
+ Yet ye would hear him!
+
+ _Fourth Ephor._ More than would. We will.
+
+ _Bia._ This clemency shows like yourselves,--the gem
+ Of mind's adornment, as ye are the lustre
+ Of Sparta's matchless race!
+
+ _Ste._ Now he is off.
+ Will gallop with us to what ditch he choose.
+
+ _First Senator._ Speak, Biades.
+
+ _Bia._ Of Agis then, my lords,--
+ This newly raw offence,--be my first word.
+ And I'll not stay for garnish. Truth is bare,
+ And bravest so. Though 'twas my Helot guise
+ Drew Agis' insult on me, think you, sirs,
+ It fell upon a proud and free-born Greek,
+ And who is here that could with putting on
+ A slave's vile dress put on his nature too,
+ Drain off his ancient, high nobility,
+ And in one brutish instant lose the blood
+ That made his fathers heroes? Is there one?
+
+ _First Ephor._ We grant you, none.
+
+ _Bia._ Your hearts then struck my blow,
+ Therefore must pardon it. If Agis' death
+ Falls from it, 'tis but accident that sleeps
+ In every motion, and in mine awoke
+ Untimely. Who, so shorn of wisdom, thinks
+ That I, a suitor here for barest life,
+ Meant him a vital stroke that would o'ercry
+ My prayers and make a mock of suppliance?
+ I'll mourn with you, my lords, but ask you wring
+ The neck of Fate, and leave my head where 'tis
+ To praise the just of Sparta.
+
+ _Third Senator._ So we might
+ But for the heavier charges that engage
+ The sighs of mercy 'gainst you ere they blow
+ This deed a pardon. What of Decalea?
+
+ _Bia._ That was a ruse the Spartans taught me, sir,
+ When at Eleusis they ensnared my troops
+ Within the gates, and naught passed out again
+ Save rivers of their blood. If I must die
+ For Decalea, die you with me, men,
+ For red Eleusis.
+
+ _Fourth Senator._ This is justice too.
+ I saw Eleusis. He is clear on that.
+
+ _Ste._ I warn you, senators! The fleetest wit
+ That pauses on his guile is honey-mired
+ And ne'er gets farther.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We'll not keep his road
+ An inch past justice, but we'll go so far.
+
+ _Ste._ So you resolve, but Hecate at his smile
+ Would plod beside him like a market lass,
+ Forgetting vengeance.
+
+ _Bia._ Honored Stesilaus:----
+
+ _Ste._ Honored? Ay, Biades! With gibe and jeer
+ That shook the walls of Athens! By my staff,
+ I'll----
+
+ _Bia._ Noble fathers, hear me for yourselves,
+ Who, loved of Pallas, in this council sit
+ Her earthly heirs and nature's demigods!
+ This rage of Stesilaus is itself
+ Sanction and seal for my adoption here,
+ A son of Sparta.
+
+ _Ste._ Ha! Now he would drive
+ The mares of Diomed!
+
+ _Bia._ My lords,----
+
+ _Ste._ Prove this?
+
+ _Bia._ Why made you Stesilaus head and tongue
+ Of envoy unto Athens? For you thought
+ His mind, most apt, fluidic, politic,
+ More quick than danger, would take shape of need,
+ Repairing your defense fast as you found
+ Your safety cramped. If I o'ercame him then
+ With wit that watched with sleepless spear at door
+ Of Athens' housed trust, must you not crown in me
+ The quality held sovereign in him?
+
+ _Ste._ You hear, you elders,--must!
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, must,--and must!
+ Or at the fontal spring of justice break
+ Your cups and thirst. No alien dripple may
+ Content you then.
+
+ _First Senator._ We listen, Biades.
+
+ _Bia._ When swords of an uneven temper meet,
+ Who scorns the better proved? Nay, you do set
+ Your love upon it,--in your armory
+ Give it a burnished place. And I who crossed
+ With Stesilaus, for my triumph ask
+ To be of Sparta's armor.
+
+ _Ste._ Our dead shall answer!
+
+ _Bia._ They shall. For every heart my steel made cold,
+ Is proof how well I served my Athens,--proof
+ Of loyal heat with which I'll serve the State
+ That makes me hers! A true-bred Greek, outthrust
+ And homeless, seeks a foster-land, that he
+ May lift for her his sword, nor wasteful let
+ The chiefest virtue in him die unused
+ While his lost name no more climbs to the gods.
+
+ _Second Senator._ Would you ally with us 'gainst Attica?
+
+ _Bia._ I'm yours for that. By th' mother of the sea,
+ Her tears shall wash your feet!
+
+ _Third Senator._ What way wouldst take?
+
+ _Bia._ The way to Phernes and the Persian fleet
+ Now boastful before Rhodes. Grant me a convoy,
+ I'll forge with Persia Lacedaemon's sword,
+ And cut the crest from Athens.
+
+ _Fourth Senator._ We have failed
+ With Phernes.
+
+ _Bia._ You'll not fail again. He's sworn
+ My friend.
+
+ _First Senator._ Our ships are few.
+
+ _Bia._ But Corinth holds
+ Her sea-wings spread for any need of yours.
+
+ _Ste._ Hear me, ye warriors! He will lead
+ Our force afar, then stir up neighbor foes
+ To scourge unarmored Sparta! Think that one,
+ Cradled in silk and fed on nectared drops----
+
+ _Bia._ There, sir, I'm bold to say you're off the road
+ Of truth. My nurse was of your people, brought
+ From sterner Sparta for my orphan rearing,
+ By my good uncle Pelagon,--a man
+ Ye know your friend. From her wise hands I took
+ Your doughty-nurturing bread, and broth black-brewed,
+ That drives the shade of fear from veins of men.
+
+ _Ste._ I've bread now in my wallet. Let us see
+ Your teeth in 't.
+
+ [_Takes out a piece of coarse, stale bread and offers it to
+ Biades_]
+
+ _Bia._ Pardon, sir! I do not hunger.
+ A Helot shared with me.
+
+ _Ste._ 'Twill keep till you
+ Would sup. But, you must try our broth, sir. Pulse
+ Is seething yonder. Youths, bring here a bowl.
+ We have a guest who'd call his childhood up
+ In good black brew. Hark, Lenon!
+
+ [_Whispers to Lenon, who goes off left_]
+
+ _Third Ephor._ It is truth.
+ Amycla was your nurse. I know the year
+ That she was sent to Athens.
+
+ _Bia._ On her lap
+ I learned a love for Sparta that returned
+ In warrior days to blunt my assaulting sword
+ And wound me from your side. She taught me too
+ The lyric wafture that dead hero-lips
+ Send on undying,--songs your young men sing,
+ And old men flush to hear,--and as a youth
+ I longed to make my civil Athens street
+ Echo to Sparta with a brother's call.
+
+ _Third Ephor._ But I am moved.
+
+ _Fourth Ephor._ And I.
+
+ _Ste._ Art grown so old
+ You'll feed on pap again? Come, Biades,
+ A song Amycla taught you! One will prove
+ Your love remembers Sparta.
+
+ _Bia._ Sir, I'm not
+ Your zany.
+
+ _Ste._ But you'd make my country one,
+ To antic for you.
+
+ [_Re-enter Lenon with bowl of broth_]
+
+ _Ste._ Here's your portion, sir.
+ Amycla made no better. Will you drink?
+
+ [_Gives bowl to Biades, who regards the black mixture dubiously. All
+ are silent, watching him. He looks at Pyrrha_]
+
+ _Bia._ [_To Pyrrha_] Is 't poison?
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Stolid_] It may be.
+
+ _Bia._ [_To Senators_] Your will's in this?
+
+ _First Senator._ It is.
+
+ _Bia._ If this be pledge that binds me yours,
+ Fellow of board and field, I drink long life
+ To our compact. But if death waits here,--to you,
+ O comrade shades, and our good fellowship!
+ [_Drinks. The Spartans applaud_]
+
+ _Ste._ You lean to him, and Sparta topples with you!
+
+ _A Young Man._ [_Entering_] Agis is up! He comes! And bears no grudge
+ For a good Greek blow. Says you could give no less.
+
+ [_Enter Agis_]
+
+ _Bia._ High Zeus, I thank thee! Agis, thou dost live
+ To take my pardon and to give me thine! [_They take hands_]
+
+ _Ste._ So soft?
+
+ _Lys._ Better than blows.
+
+ _Ste._ Ha! Like disease
+ He'll spread the woman till our eyes drop tears
+ Instead of fire. When Spartan eagles moult,
+ They'll go no farther than Athenian owls.
+
+ _Lys._ He's valiant.
+
+ _Ste._ There's no braver tongue.
+
+ _Lys._ And friend
+ To Phernes.
+
+ _Ste._ So he says.
+
+ _Lys._ Nay, that's well known.
+
+ _Ste._ My captain comrades, and ye aged fathers,
+ If ye had seen him strut, a vanity
+ As brainless as the monkey at his heels,
+ With woman velvets making slut of wealth
+ Trailing foul dust,--a peacock fan at 's cheek
+ Where a soldier's beard should grow, and bangled ears
+ Whose swinging jewels tickled a white neck
+ Soft as a harlot's pillow,--this at time
+ His city laid such honor on his head
+ As would have kept a brave man on his knees
+ For wisdom to uphold it,--had ye looked on this,
+ Ye'd call the weakest maiden from her wheel
+ To lead our wars ere trust to Biades!
+
+ _First Ephor._ A picture this,--shakes faith.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ We trust too far.
+
+ _Ste._ Sirs, had ye seen what I but paint----
+
+ _Bia._ My lords,
+ I'll wrestle with the stoutest Spartan youth
+ That makes your wars most dreaded, and these limbs,
+ Now shrunk with fasting, wasted and forsook
+ By Fortune that once fed them as her own,
+ Will prove my right to captain Sparta's host!
+
+ _Ste._ Our women could undo you, girl of Athens!
+ Meet his bold brag with this. One of our maids
+ Shall throw him! Ay! Then he'll betake his shame
+ To any shade will hide it.
+
+ _Hie._ Sir, I sue
+ To lay this boast.
+
+ _Agis._ My prayer be first, my lords!
+
+ _Voices._ A lot! A lot!
+
+ _Ste._ Nay, sons, a fall from you
+ Would give him hope to pick his honor up
+ And steal again to favor. He will plead
+ That you, full-fed, met him in famished hour,
+ When Fate hung him with bruises leeching strength,
+ And gave you victory. Let my offer hold.
+ A maiden to him, and we'll hear no more
+ Of valorous Biades.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We are agreed.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ Who is our strongest maid?
+
+ _Lys._ We've six whose claims
+ Push equal. All in public game have won
+ The bow of Artemis.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We'll choose from these.
+
+ _Bia._ Olympus, shower me woes! I will not cringe,
+ So they be man's. But save me from a mock
+ That makes misfortune past seem sweet as drops
+ From Hera's healing cup!
+
+ _Dia._ A mock? The gods
+ Have never honored you till now.
+
+ _Myr._ See these,
+ My bantling? Arms that made Kalides wear
+ A three months' bruise!
+
+ _The._ And these have locked the strength
+ Of Lenon in defeat!
+
+ _Dia._ Ask Mirador
+ If he liked well the sandy bed I gave him.
+
+ _Nac._ Bethink you now how you'll outcrow disgrace,
+ For you'll be short of breath when you've gone through
+ The brash I'll give you.
+
+ _Dia._ Then he'll show his reefed
+ And wattled skin, and say that want of bread
+ O'ercame him, not our valor.
+
+ _Art._ Look you, maids!
+ His hollow eyes do beg some pity of us.
+ We'll give him yet a chance, and mate him with
+ Our lame Coraina. She's near well again.
+ Will drop her crutch to be our champion.
+
+ _Bia._ Zeus,
+ Behold me patient! Furies, though I lack
+ Some vaunting flesh, the sharpest ill that on
+ My body ravins feeds a spirit that
+ Might meet with Heracles and give him need
+ Of both his arms!
+
+ _Dia._ Ha! Better! Maids, his tongue
+ Will fight yet!
+
+ _Ste._ Peace! The ephors choose
+ That Dianessa bear this honor off.
+ She threw strong Mirador, first of the youths,
+ Which puts her o'er the rest.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We've else determined
+ That with the fall the Athenian forfeits life.
+
+ _Bia._ And if I win, my lords? Since life must pay
+ Defeat, should victory not solicit me
+ With counterpoised prize?
+
+ _First Ephor._ We shall accept you
+ Leader and comrade, and give escort fair
+ To bear your suit to Phernes.
+
+ _Lys._ More! The maid
+ Shall be your bride, and bind you son and brother
+ To Sparta's love.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ You, Stesilaus, assent?
+
+ _Ste._ Since without risk you may pursue your folly,
+ I'll not oppose you.
+
+ _First Ephor._ Dianessa, you
+ Abide our will?
+
+ _Dia._ And welcome it. 'Twill work
+ Like Mars in me, and make my arm
+ The gallows of his fame. The Athenian lady!
+ I'd choose a husband among men.
+
+ _Bia._ And I,
+ My generous, dear lords, would woo and win
+ Some mute and humble maid. I would not force
+ The noble Dianessa bend her head
+ To one unworthied by a hostile Fate.
+
+ _First Ephor._ Tut, sir! If Fortune's love returns with heat
+ That makes you conqueror, by that same sun
+ Her pride will melt, and you will find her meek
+ As gosling in your hand.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ 'Tis settled so.
+ Wear what you win.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Rising_] Ye reverend men, and you,
+ My noble father, may my suit reveal
+ My love to Sparta and your love to me,
+ Which has not spoken in this act of yours
+ That overpeers me and gives up my due
+ To Dianessa.
+
+ _First Ephor._ Ha?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Though Mirador
+ Was forced below her, never in a bout
+ Has she ta'en honors from me, while I oft
+ Have left her down.
+
+ _Second Ephor._ Speak'st truly?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Hear herself
+ Avouch it.
+
+ _Dia._ Ay, you overmate me, but
+ The gap between us will not cast the match
+ To Biades. And I was chosen.
+
+ _Fourth Ephor._ Nay,
+ You must give place.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I've other reason, sir.
+ It is my dear, war-honored father lays
+ This match on Sparta, and my pride of house
+ Would bear his counsel through the act that sets
+ The sage's seal upon it.
+
+ _First Ephor._ A daughter, sir!
+
+ _Ste._ Bare duty might so speak.
+
+ _Pyrr._ This gives me warmth
+ My maiden comrades lack. By every vein
+ My father gave me, his time-laurelled brow
+ Shall never wear a garland less!
+
+ _Second Ephor._ Well sworn!
+
+ _Pyrr._ And for I saw----
+
+ _Third Ephor._ More reasons?
+
+ _Pyrr._ --the rude shame
+ The Athenian put upon the ambassadors,
+ And mine own eyes bore him in lowest semblance,
+ Demeaned from manhood, his dishonor wrapped
+ In purple cost that left it yet more naked.
+ I swear he shall not honored lead our wars!
+ If our gray heroes fail us, we have dames
+ To choose from,--need not go to Athens!
+
+ _First Ephor._ This speaks! The victory's won where courage makes
+ Such stout provision.
+
+ _Pyrr._ If I fail, my lords,
+ Then gods are mongers and their favors sell,
+ Denying honest prayers.
+
+ _Lys._ Come, Biades.
+ Art ready?
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, long past!
+
+ _First Ephor._ Your places then.
+
+ _Ste._ Delay you! Biades, with modesty
+ Unlooked for, but most fit, you gave up claim
+ To Dianessa.----
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, 'twas but an offer
+ Whose bounty met refusal.
+
+ _Ste._ I'll accept it
+ In Pyrrha's name.
+
+ _Bia._ So prudent against loss?
+ This caution, sir, gives me a victor's heart.
+
+ _Ste._ Triumph is hers a certain thousand times,
+ And yours a dicer's once, slipped you between
+ Hiccough and snore of gods at shutting time.
+ But since that once will have a thousandth chance
+ To trouble me, I'll grant you free of Pyrrha.
+
+ _Bia._ Wait till 'tis begged. Lysander spoke with kind
+ And equal honor, which did soften me
+ To leave his daughter his. And others here
+ Have tendered me the gentle looks that breed
+ The answering benison till hearts of earth
+ Feel heaven's element. But you, whose hate
+ Should hiss from crawling shape, not upright man's,
+ Wake fires in me that eat through godly patience
+ And sweep to battle. I'll endure no further.
+ Back with your taunts! And if 'twill make you sore
+ Where pride is daintiest, I'll your daughter wed
+ Because she is your daughter!
+
+ _Ste._ Bark, you puppy,
+ But you'll not carry it!
+
+ _Bia._ Were she featured foul
+ As snaked Medusa,--her brow a hanging night,--
+ Her figure hooped as age when chin and toes
+ Are neighbors,--and of speech so scaly, harsh
+ As Stesilaus,--I, with no more color
+ Or shade of reason than that you deny me,
+ Would make her bride. The ephors gave their word,
+ And what I win I'll wear!
+
+ _First Ephor._ We'll see you do.
+ Content you, Stesilaus. None will weep
+ To know your bluff soul matched. To place! To place!
+
+ [_They wrestle. Pyrrha loses. Silence, then applause for Biades_]
+
+ _A Lord._ My heart upheld him, for I know him brave.
+
+ _Another._ I saw his dripping sword on Theban plain
+ Cut through the knotted fray and make two fields
+ O' the combat.
+
+ _Another._ He can pray too, Delphi knows!
+
+ _Another._ But when his gallant prayers their action find
+ The gods themselves rage in them.
+
+ _First Ephor._ [_To Pyrrha_] Daughter, take
+ Fair thanks from us for brave support of Sparta,
+ And having lost, more thanks for giving her
+ Another soldier. Has defeat made soft
+ Your heart for swift espousal?
+
+ _Bia._ Let me woo
+ In slower way, good father. Tho' my boast
+ Rose high 'gainst Stesilaus' scorn, I'm not
+ Of heart so rash that I would lose her love
+ By taking it. With Sparta's aid now mine,
+ I'll ask her choose a noble guard and sail
+ With me, that I, by time and fortune graced,
+ May win a double suit, herself and Persia.
+
+ _First Ephor._ We'll think of it. Our plans are still unthreshed.
+ Come with us, Biades.
+
+ [_Ephors, with senators and Biades, lead the way over bridge. All
+ follow except Stesilaus and Pyrrha_]
+
+ _Ste._ How was 't he won?
+ And he was livid famine! Scurfed with weeks
+ Of beggary! While you--such arms had saved
+ Antiope from Theseus!
+ [_Pyrrha droops silent_]
+ Up, my daughter!
+ We'll make this fall our hope. You shall take sail
+ With Biades----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Gods hear me, no!
+
+ _Ste._ You will.
+ I know his aim. He will betray our force
+ To Athens,--pardon's price. Athenian ease
+ Is in his marrow like a siren sleep,
+ And all this hardy show is but to buy
+ His languors back. You'll watch within his ship,
+ With Hieron a second secret eye,
+ And when his treachery ripens, take command
+ And bring him bound to Sparta.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Be so near?
+ Sail in his ship?
+
+ _Ste._ Be near him as a wife.
+ Watch close. Lie in his thoughts, though not his bed.
+ And if he presses to the shrine of favor,
+ Here is my dagger. This will be your guard.
+ Let him meet death upon it,--and that death
+ Be honor's sanctuary. Come! My brow
+ Must smooth submissive to the senators.
+ Clear too your face with summer policy.
+ Thus openly we'll hide. The State's turned fool,
+ And naught between her and perdition save
+ An old man and a girl! [_Exit_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Gazing at dagger_] If this cold blade
+ Were seeking traitors 't might look in my heart.
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT IV
+
+
+SCENE: _On board a galley off Athens. An open door left of centre, rear,
+shows a moonlit sea. Cressets burning within. Pyrrha discovered, seated
+and fingering a dagger. A diminishing sound of dipping oars and rowers
+singing._
+
+
+ God of the bold who ride
+ With song o'er their dead
+ Whose unsown graves wait wide,
+ The singers' bed,--
+ Poseidon, befriend, befriend,
+ And the good wind send!
+
+ The sirens are on their rocks;
+ Like a pierced moon
+ Weeping her gold, their locks
+ To the waters run.
+ Poseidon, befriend, befriend,
+ And the good wind send!
+
+ Fleet are the foam-toothed hounds
+ That hunt unfed,
+ With hunger that aches like wounds,
+ And ships their bread.
+ Poseidon, befriend, befriend,
+ And the good wind send!
+
+ [_Enter Lysander_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Lysander! You? Is 't battle?
+
+ _Lys._ At dawn we move
+ Upon the Athenian ships.
+
+ _Pyrr._ They've come from harbor?
+
+ _Lys._ Nay, lurking still, fear-cabled to the land,
+ Like weanlings round a skirt.
+
+ _Pyrr._ At last a battle!
+ And Biades is true. The watch is done.
+ I'm sick of spying, hanging on him like
+ A doubt with teeth. He leaves this galley then?
+
+ _Lys._ Commands from the _Ino_, now so brave repaired
+ She sits her place as though the sea and air
+ Debated who should claim her, and she no more
+ Adorns both elements than herself's adorned
+ By our young admiral.
+
+ _Pyrr._ He is gone? So soon?
+
+ _Lys._ Went, but is here again, and here must stay
+ These next three hours or more.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Why so, Lysander?
+
+ _Lys._ We sacrifice aboard Thrasyllus' ship,
+ Where now the captains gather, and the hand
+ Of one who leads the foe to his fathers' hearth
+ Would cloud the omen. He must keep apart.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You've told him that?
+
+ _Lys._ We have not dared.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Not dared?
+ Way, Spartan lions, for the Athenian puppy!
+
+ _Lys._ He's tender with his honor.
+
+ _Pyrr._ His honor!
+
+ _Lys._ Soft!
+ We shunt all danger if you mew him here
+ Unwitting of our hand.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I do not wear
+ Athene's aegis on my jerkin, friend.
+
+ _Lys._ You can divinely drug his vanity
+ Without immortal aid. Attach him by 't,
+ For free he'll chafe. Drift with him in such wise
+ He'll not suspect our rudder.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ay, more lies.
+
+ _Lys._ Truth is no absolute virtue. 'Tis a vice
+ If 't takes a screw from safety.
+
+ _Pyrr._ There is law
+ Higher than Sparta utters. If not so,
+ What mean our altars, and a kneeling world?
+
+ _Lys._ Hmm! I delay the sacrifice. Dost know
+ I take my Dianessa? A virgin's hand
+ Must weave the victim's garland.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ah, the moon
+ Of Artemis! A virgin's hand. They ask
+ Not mine?
+
+ _Lys._ You are a bride in Sparta's eyes.
+ Would Truth might speak it too! For Biades
+ Has won all love but yours.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'll wed no traitor.
+
+ _Lys._ What? He is false?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ay, false to Athens.
+
+ _Lys._ Phut!
+
+ [_Enter Hieron_]
+
+ _Hie._ How like you this, sir? Biades has stripped
+ The galley of its rowers,--sent them all
+ To his gilded _Ino_,--every boat in charter
+ To bear his trappings,--parchments, maps, and gifts
+ From Phernes,--curtains, instruments----
+
+ _Lys._ The stuff
+ Goes with the admiral, and what other way
+ Than by the boats? Say naught of 't.
+
+ _Hie._ This a time
+ To spend a feathering!
+
+ _Lys._ Nay----
+
+ _Hie._ And why send all?
+ A half--a third--had answered. There's not left
+ An oarsman on the galley save the men
+ Who brought you from the _Thetis_.
+
+ _Lys._ You've the guard,--
+ Yourself its head. Give Biades his way
+ When prudence pays no cost. We've hedged and hemmed
+ His wrestling will until his pride is brashed
+ To the rebel quick----
+
+ _Hie._ Sst! He is here.
+
+ [_Biades stands in door_]
+
+ _Bia._ Lysander,
+ They hail you from Thrasyllus' ship. You stay
+ The rites.
+
+ _Lys._ [_Troubled_] But is it time----
+
+ _Bia._ Full time.
+
+ _Lys._ My boat----
+
+ _Bia._ Is waiting.
+
+ _Lys._ I--you, sir----
+
+ _Bia._ You'll bear my grace
+ To our priestly captains?
+
+ _Lys._ You stay here?
+
+ _Bia._ I shall,
+ If you'll not press me other. As you pray
+ For clearer omen and a morning battle,
+ Let only those whose land holds them untainted
+ Stand in the holy ring.
+
+ _Lys._ Above our prayers
+ This act will speak to Heaven in Sparta's name
+ And make her gods your own.
+
+ _Bia._ If that might be,
+ Lysander! To have no altars is a fate
+ Man can not bear for long.
+
+ _Hie._ The rowers, sir!
+ How soon do they return?
+
+ _Bia._ They've leave to see
+ The midnight toward with their fellow crew
+ On the _Ino_.
+
+ _Hie._ Midnight!
+
+ _Bia._ Loyal beggars, all.
+ They're sad to lose their captain, and I pay
+ Their grieving flattery with this stinted lease
+ From duty here. They'll use 't in prayerful rite----
+
+ _Hie._ Not prayer! The casks will drip too free for that.
+ If any prayers come from the heart to throat,
+ They'll downward wash again, not out and fly.
+ Say'st midnight, sir?
+
+ _Bia._ I do. They will return
+ In time to set the galley from the cast
+ Of morning danger.
+
+ _Hie._ Move again? The ship
+ Is now to rearward, by some rods.
+
+ _Bia._ She is.
+ And shall go farther. Here's no fighting deck.
+
+ _Hie._ Ay, these soft cabins, Corinth-modelled as
+ A prince, would make a floating holiday,
+ Put soldiers from their place.
+
+ _Bia._ The ship must lie
+ Full east, on th' safest wave. We've treasure 'neath
+ These sails that make their weathered woof more dear
+ Than threaded gold of Hera's mantle.
+
+ _Hie._ Ah,
+ You mean the women.
+
+ _Bia._ No,--a woman. Come,
+ Lysander.
+
+ _Lys._ Sir, what time wilt take your place
+ Aboard the _Ino_?
+
+ _Bia._ Give me till the midnight,
+ I'll from that moment be your admiral.
+ But for these gentle hours that lie between,
+ I would as merest man use their light wings
+ To chase a hope through heaven.
+
+ _Lys._ [_With a glance at Pyrrha_] And bring it down,
+ My lord!
+
+ [_Exeunt Lysander, Biades, and Hieron_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Now, Impudence, no more's to do!
+ Go up and take thy crown. Before my eyes
+ He teaches them he wooes me, and my pride
+ Mutely abets his guile. [_Holds up the dagger_] My fine defence,
+ Thou'rt warder to a bosom unbesieged.
+ In Biades' contempt I have a guard
+ That saves thine office. Go, you glittering mock!
+ [_In a passion of resolution she throws the dagger through the door_]
+ That's done. No matter. He does not look at me,
+ Or looks as though his eyes begged pardon of him,
+ For their chance stop on nothing.
+
+ [_Re-enter Biades, the dagger in his hand_]
+
+ _Bia._ Here's a toy
+ Caught from the rigging. Yours, I think.
+ [_Offers it to her. She does not take it_]
+ It must be dear. I've seen you fondle it.
+ Is it not yours?
+
+ _Pyrr._ It was.
+
+ _Bia._ Then is. And worth
+ Your keeping. A good blade, though Spartan plain.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'm weary of it. In Athens I shall find
+ Another pattern.
+
+ _Bia._ [_Testing blade_] Fine and strong. Will wear
+ A hundred years, then make a door for death.
+ [_Turns it against his heart. She starts_]
+ You'll take it, Pyrrha. To throw it to the sea
+ Were waste for an Athenian.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Keep it then.
+
+ _Bia._ You give this blade to me?
+
+ _Pyrr._ I care not. Keep
+ What you have praised.
+
+ _Bia._ [_Pressing it against his cheek_] A gentle weapon,--but
+ I've somewhat 'gainst it.
+ [_Goes to door and throws it far into the sea_]
+ Kiss the waves, my friend!
+
+ [_Returns to Pyrrha and sits by her_]
+
+ _Bia._ [_Softly_] I leave the ship to-night.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Uneasy_] And time you led
+ The fleet to battle. You've excused delay
+ Till palling breath became the shroud of action,
+ And yet refused it funeral.
+
+ _Bia._ I know
+ How you have doubted. O, this soul of Sparta,
+ That can not trust! It peeps from every eye,
+ Deepest where kindest. Tags each friendly word
+ With its unspoken dread,--and comradeship,
+ That strives to wrap it in a gala cloak,
+ Strains vainly round the huge, dun doubt, agape
+ In dreary revelation.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You are free
+ To leave us.
+
+ _Bia._ Free? Five Spartan nobles watch
+ Beside me, move with every step, for so
+ The admiral must be honored! Hieron
+ Foregoes his place at sacrifice to serve
+ My dignity. Not for his gods he'll put
+ A furlong 'tween us.
+
+ _Pyrr._ He's the ship's good eye.
+ And all the men except the lords of guard
+ Are, by your grace, a-neighboring. Would you leave
+ The galley without watch?
+
+ _Bia._ No, Pyrrha, sweet.
+ But I would woo you with no ear at the door.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Rising_] My lord!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Indifferent_] Nay, then. I can't oppose the sex
+ Of Aphrodite. My one frailty.
+
+ _Pyrr._ One!
+
+ _Bia._ What? I have more?
+
+ _Pyrr._ The moments of your life
+ Are not so many!
+
+ _Bia._ Gods be thanked, I'm young!
+ How may I change to please a Spartan scold?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Be anything you're not.
+
+ _Bia._ You have not heard
+ I am the admiral of the Spartan fleet,
+ With Persian Phernes yonder at my beck,
+ Broad-winged with all Phoenicia? You know not
+ I am a general?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Oh, to be that name,
+ Not make 't thy bauble! What dost know
+ Of secret, sleepless hours, and delving thought
+ That nations may lie safe? By what grave right
+ Wear you the title? What deep sacrifice?
+
+ _Bia._ Leave sacrifice to fools and women! Ay,
+ More lies are huddled in that saintly word
+ Than ever smirked outside it. The strong soul
+ Low bowing there, lies to his god,--the weak
+ Lies to the world behind a holy shield
+ That turns the spear of justice. Pallas, hear!
+ A general makes himself a master, lest
+ The State make him a servant.
+
+ _Pyrr._ True in _Athens_!
+ But you've another name. I've heard you called
+ The young philosopher. Play you at that.
+ 'Twill tire naught but the tongue. Yours will go far.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, spare me toil of spirit searching through
+ Earth, sea, and sky for phrases magical
+ To wrap creation in, as 'twere a babe
+ Each man might call his own could he but find
+ Some good-wife fancy to deliver it.
+ No other hope?
+
+ _Pyrr._ They name you poet, too.
+ Build round your spirit an Elysian cheat
+ And buzz it through upon a golden wing.
+ Is that not idle enough?
+
+ _Bia._ You touch me now
+ With flattery's gold point. I wince and love
+ The pain. Yet I'd not be a frolic breath
+ At play with Spring and florets in the dew,
+ Or move in rhymed courtesies before
+ The smile or frown of gods. Trick my dear soul
+ In May-day rags to catch a languid eye.
+ Babble of moods and minds, how some think this,
+ Some that, and some have never thought. Drone how
+ On such a day one struck another down,
+ Or led a fleet, or laid a city wall.
+
+ _Pyrr._ What would you sing then, pray?
+
+ _Bia._ I would not sing.
+ Was there not poetry before men spake?
+ I'd go behind the broidered veil we've wrought
+ Before the face of one that we loved much
+ And then forgot for beauty of the shroud.
+ The old lere's lost, the new but irks our dream.
+ We listen to ourselves, while round us ever
+ Are worlds that vainly pluck us to their doors,
+ Giving us sign in lightning, heat, and wave,
+ In flake of snow, flint-spark, and crystal rock,
+ In stones that make the iron creep, and color,
+ Fair flag and challenge to our shuttered minds.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Moving nearer_] Oh!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Seeming to forget her_] Round our lives is life whose destiny
+ Is that frontier no word of ours has crossed,
+ But man to come shall plant and harvest there,
+ Where his soul sets the plough.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Softly_] You know that too?
+
+ _Bia._ That life shall warm his barest common way
+ Of in and out. In field and market-place,
+ He'll lay his cheek 'gainst its unbodied love
+ And flush translations of its silent touch.
+ Then will be poets! Thought that now must fail
+ In bird-wing flight, shall from a violet's eye
+ O'erlook the sun. Till then I will not sing.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Not fight, philosophize, or sing!
+ What's left for an Athenian?
+
+ _Bia._ [_Remembering her_] Love, fair Pyrrha!
+ You know the tale how Chaos once uncurled
+ Her laboring bulk from round a fire-leafed rose
+ And sent its petals drifting down to fields
+ Where mortals foot with chance? Whoso they touch
+ Are lovers always, and one came to me.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Now here's ambition! And you live for that?
+
+ _Bia._ Ay there's the charm contents me with dull earth,
+ And puts a rainbow in my listless hand.
+ The way is pleasant if the road be love's,
+ And I'd not shorten it by one maid's eye.
+ To be a lover,--that's the graceful thing.
+ Then one moves velvetly, forgets no curve,
+ And lives his picture, line and color true.
+
+ _Pyrr._ That role's struck from your play, you'll find, my lord.
+ Maidens will smile, but scorn will set the lip,
+ And women's eyes be warm, but hate their fire
+ For you, the traitor.
+
+ _Bia._ Traitor?
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_In the door_] See the gleam
+ On Athens, yours no more. The softest breast
+ Within her walls is steel when you are named.
+
+ _Bia._ But there are maids in Sparta.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Not for you,
+ A traitor to the soil that gave you life.
+
+ _Bia._ That soil first cast me off.
+
+ _Pyrr._ A mother strikes
+ Her child, but should the child return the blow
+ Gods would droop eyes and blush.
+
+ _Bia._ But were I true
+ To my own land, I should be false to yours.
+
+ _Pyrr._ A virtue that. A maid might love you then.
+
+ _Bia._ A Spartan maid?
+
+ _Pyrr._ A Spartan maid. But now
+ We hold you as no more than loathed bait
+ To capture Athens. Used as a stuck fly
+ To hook a chub!
+
+ [_Enter Hieron_]
+
+ _Bia._ What saucy fury sports
+ With Hieron? His even smile's unfixed
+ As the middle of two minds.
+
+ _Hie._ Sir, Phernes sends
+ Six maidens from his ship to dance before you.
+ The noble Persian chooses time most fit
+ For wantoning,--the hour of sacrifice
+ And battle prayer.
+
+ _Bia._ You're justly kindled. What
+ Though it be royal custom in his East,--
+ A grace from king to king,--to garnish danger
+ With frillet of relief that makes death seem
+ The last-dropped toy, we'll dare to let him know
+ That we are Greeks, and walk the edge of graves
+ With eyes upon the gods. Go, pack them off!
+
+ _Hie._ Why,--so I meant. The act struck rudely on
+ Our ritual hour. But if his Eastern mind
+ Paints it a courtesy----
+
+ _Bia._ A sovereign honor.
+
+ _Hie._ He is of haughty blood,--burns at rebuff----
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, like a hornet blind. A thousand times
+ I've eased his fret and run his humor's mould
+ Like summer wax, lest he should break from Sparta
+ That stood in rigid ruin. Now I leave it!
+ His anger can be put to gentlest sleep,
+ But 'tis no babe when stirred. Choose as you will.
+
+ _Hie._ The honor is to you. Be yours the answer.
+
+ _Bia._ I'm worn with him. Three hours to-day I played
+ His vanity, while chance touched either side,
+ Waiting the word that should cut through suspense
+ And seal him ours for battle.
+
+ _Hie._ To huff his pride
+ 'Tween this and dawn would poorly soothe our own
+ At an uncertain cost. But let him leer
+ I' the oracles' face....
+
+ _Bia._ He has not sent Alissa?
+
+ _Hie._ There's one so calls herself. Spoke out the name
+ As we should fall before it.
+
+ _Bia._ She's most free
+ In Phernes' heart. Knows all the honey-ways
+ To his secret soul, and what is said to her
+ He'll hear ere morn. As you love victory,
+ I hope you met her gently.
+
+ _Hie._ If surprise
+ Made greeting harsh, I will undo that harm
+ With softer welcome. And beseech you, sir,
+ To suffer this mistimed civility
+ For Sparta's sake.
+
+ _Bia._ I will, dear Hieron,
+ Since 'tis your suit.
+
+ _Hie._ Thanks, thanks, my lord.
+
+ _Bia._ Let them come in. I'll see their briefest dance,
+ And give Alissa one commending word,
+ Which straight as faithful bee she'll hive
+ In Phernes' ear.
+ [_Exit Hieron_]
+ What think you of it, Pyrrha?
+ You do approve me?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Approve your wits, my friend.
+ Had they been Spartan trained, you'd bring them off,
+ Untarnished still, from argument with Zeus.
+
+ _Bia._ When Pallas praises, bow.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Poor Hieron
+ Is now the sweating agent of your will
+ To see these callets dance.
+
+ _Bia._ Unpitiful!
+ I'd touch my lips to Lethe, and you'd snatch
+ The oblivious drop from me! You know how dear
+ The bond that shall be cut with sword of dawn,--
+ So close no seer may tell which shall bleed most,
+ Athens or her lost son.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Art low at last?
+
+ _Bia._ Dun, dun, my Pyrrha, as a Barbary pigeon!
+ So low not all my pride can vaunt me up.
+ Then let me have my wine,--the draught of eyes,
+ Of music and of smiles, till I be drunk
+ And sleep.
+
+ [_Enter six Athenian youths, led by Clearchus, all disguised as Persian
+ dancers. As they dance before Biades his pleasure quickens to
+ abandonment_]
+
+ _Bia._ Ah, Pyrrha, you've denied my heart
+ All noble love, but here's a pleasure left.
+ Soft eyes and gentle bosoms may be mine
+ Where scorn is taught to sleep and never sting.
+ ... That is Alissa. We must honor her.
+
+ [_He signals Clearchus, and the others pass out, leaving him to dance
+ alone. As he ventures more flirtatiously about Biades, Pyrrha's
+ disgust increases and she retreats. Clearchus, dancing mockingly,
+ follows her to door, and when she has passed through audaciously
+ closes it_]
+
+ _Bia._ Now! Quick! In name of Zeus! The senators
+ Received my message?
+
+ _Clea._ [_Darting to Biades_] Ay, the answer's here!
+ [_Gives him a parchment_]
+ Full pardon! Athens will lay down her walls
+ To make your entry proud! Her gates are small,
+ For honor she intends you!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Glances at parchment and sobs_]
+ My Athens! Mine! Though she should take my life,
+ And my bruised body fling unburied forth,
+ Yet would my shade drop kisses on her soil
+ And weep to leave it for Elysium! [_With sudden control_]
+ What of my plan?
+
+ _Clea._ Adopted, in each item.
+ Soon as the dropping moon is in the sea,
+ The Athenian rowers, coming as your own,
+ Will board this galley and bear her a bird
+ To th' harbor nest.
+
+ _Bia._ They've force to meet the guards?
+
+ _Clea._ Thrice measured, sir. The _Theia_----
+
+ _Bia._ My own ship!
+
+ _Clea._ Your own--will meet you, every sailor true
+ As when he wept your banishment. And Phaon,
+ Critias, Pelagon, Antiganor,
+ With twenty senators and men of name,
+ Wait on her deck in welcome.
+
+ _Bia._ Back, ye tears!
+ The rowers know my signal?
+
+ _Clea._ Yes, my lord.
+ Three cressets on the left,--set here in this
+ Embrasure. They will watch, near as they dare,
+ And instantly as darts your triple gleam
+ Their oars will sweep you answer.
+
+ [_A commotion without_]
+
+ _Bia._ Hist! What's wrong?
+
+ [_Enter Hieron and Pyrrha. Hieron goes to Clearchus and tears off
+ his veil and head-dress_]
+
+ _Clea._ O, pardon! I'll confess!
+
+ _Hie._ 'Tis you, my lord,
+ I now unmask, not this bought wretch.
+
+ _Bia._ What, sir?
+
+ _Hie._ Your Persian dancers are Athenian boys,
+ All slim as lizards. We o'er-eyed their steps,
+ And on suspicion gave them such a pinch
+ The truth flew out.
+
+ _Bia._ Their guilt does not prove mine.
+ Is it my crime that Athens touched me near
+ With bribe of pardon?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Hear the boy. You are
+ Clearchus? And of Athens?
+
+ _Clea._ I am.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You brought
+ His pardon. Did he welcome it?
+
+ _Clea._ He did.
+
+ _Bia._ He lies! The coward lies!
+
+ _Clea._ He did agree
+ That Phernes should draw off his fleet and join
+ With Athens.
+
+ _Bia._ Oh! Where are the Olympian thunders
+ That they now let you live?
+
+ _Hie._ Draw off his fleet
+ To-night?
+
+ _Clea._ Ere dawn.
+
+ _Bia._ That such an atom--such
+ A trifle of a body could enclose
+ So great a lie!
+
+ _Clea._ The Persian is at watch,
+ Waiting the signal----
+
+ _Bia._ Toad!
+
+ _Clea._ If pardon came,
+ Two cressets set----
+
+ _Bia._ I'll shred him!
+
+ _Clea._ At the left----
+ Just here, my lord, would start the Persian ships
+ For Athens.
+
+ _Bia._ Oh!
+
+ _Clea._ But if three cressets burnt,
+ Then he would hold to Sparta.
+
+ _Hie._ Three?
+
+ _Clea._ Three, sir.
+ Look in his bosom if you'd read the proof.
+ His pardon's there.
+
+ _Bia._ By the altars I have lost,
+ By Sparta's yet unwon, I swear he lies!
+
+ [_Pyrrha snatches the parchment from his bosom_]
+
+ _Bia._ You bat--you mole--you cur-born flea----
+
+ _Clea._ [_To Hieron_] O, sir,
+ Your mercy! Save me from him!
+
+ _Hie._ Wait without.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Full pardon! Bring the irons! We are sold!
+ Irons for Biades!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Accepting defeat_] Ay, let me wear
+ My honor's livery. Every foe-locked gyve
+ Will be my country's kiss, and make my blood
+ Flow proud beneath it. Irons! Load me down,
+ Now that you know me man, and not the thrall
+ Of vilest fear that buys suspected breath
+ With a mother-city's doom.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'll grant you, sir,
+ That by this act you do no longer lie
+ In the unconsidered trash of estimation,
+ But have crept up in my surprised mind
+ To where I keep my jewels of regard.
+ That is soon said,--but for the rest, you die.
+ And more than die, for we shall hurl your name
+ A palsy over Athens.
+
+ _Bia._ You'll not fight
+ Athens and Persia!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Persia is not lost.
+ Your signal is unlit.
+
+ _Hie._ But we'll light ours!
+ Three cressets----
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Stopping him_] Wait! The event's too great
+ To helve with such slight word. That snivelling blab
+ May've lied, or crossed the signals, for the young
+ Are easiest dyed in craft, and take its hue
+ As natively as innocence doth wear
+ Its smile in sleep.
+
+ _Hie._ What then?
+
+ _Pyrr._ You'll go to Phernes.
+
+ _Hie._ There are no boats.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Tut, take the boats that brought
+ Those purfled cymlings here. Their rowers too.
+ Ah, Biades, you'll serve us still. And thought
+ To trap all Sparta with this tip-toe bait!
+ We have a saying. "Wit against the world,--"
+ And there's another too, "The last lie wins."
+ Hast heard it, Biades? We'll bear your word
+ To Phernes that with dawn you move with him
+ Upon the Athenian sails.
+
+ _Bia._ He'll hear no word
+ From Spartan mouth. So 'twas agreed between us,
+ To annul such move as this if chance should strip
+ My bent of cover. I alone may reach
+ His ear with Sparta's prayer.
+
+ _Pyrr._ We'll cast for proof
+ Of that. If true, we shall remember, sir,
+ That Sparta has won cities with no aid
+ From Persia.
+
+ _Bia._ You'll not go alone to meet
+ The strength of Athens?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Your far-winged name
+ And sea-born battle-skill shall go with us.
+ Your single arm's no loss, but in your fame,
+ Yet ours to use, the Spartan strength
+ Is doubled. Ha! They call us landmen,--say
+ We must have feet on ground ere we can fight.
+ But you they fear, bred to the wave, and first
+ Of their commanders.
+
+ _Bia._ Let me die, but leave
+ My name unmurdered.
+
+ _Pyrr._ It shall be outflung
+ In challenge to the Athenians. They know well
+ The sailor rabble loves you, and will oppose
+ But half a heart to Biades. Some too,
+ Of higher place, believe you wronged, and fear
+ The angered gods will station on your side.
+ By spearman Ares, you shall keep the oath
+ Great-sworn on Sparta's ground, to set her lance
+ Through Athens' triple shield! Ay, though you lie
+ In irons waiting death.
+
+ _Bia._ The sunken souls
+ Of deepest, damned Dis have never borne
+ So vile a sting! You can not mean it, Pyrrha.
+ Cast on my soul what Pluto would disbar
+ From his fire-vaulted hell? I'll proudly die
+ For treachery to you, but clear my name
+ To Athens. Take not life and honor too!
+
+ _Pyrr._ One you may save,--your life.
+
+ _Bia._ What do you say?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Draw Phernes back to us, and you shall live.
+
+ _Bia._ You offer me but death, knowing I could not live
+ A traitor.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You choose to die as one?
+
+ _Bia._ Oh, Zeus,
+ All-giver, hear!
+
+ _Pyrr._ What gain is death to you
+ If reputation dies eternally
+ In Athens' hate? Sparta will do as much
+ As spare your life.
+
+ _Bia._ Nay----
+
+ _Pyrr._ She shall nothing know
+ Of this hour's lapse----
+
+ _Bia._ O, bitter stars! O, Death
+ Past fatal!--reaching o'er thy charnel bound
+ To usurp the immortal garden! Die a traitor!
+ Never will dew from a forgiving eye
+ Fall on my grave!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Nor will the upbraiding gaze
+ Of Heaven be more tender. For you chose
+ To risk your country's life on turn of chance,
+ Having no surety that drawn to danger
+ You then could pluck her out. Ah, made her fate
+ Your stake at dice, because, escaped the hazard,
+ You'd toss with her to fortune! And your guilt
+ Is heavy in her fall as though your hand
+ Bore down her last defence and fierce untrussed
+ Her heart to th' wolvish air.
+
+ _Bia._ Oh, Pyrrha, Pyrrha!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Then why haste on to death? The noblest shades
+ Will make no room for you where'er they walk.
+ Why rush through the first gate to meet their cold
+ Immortal scorn?
+
+ _Bia._ But life with honor gone!
+
+ _Pyrr._ If death could buy it, then 'twere wise
+ To buy so goldenly. But that's too late.
+ Choose life,--with honor such as Sparta lays
+ On those who serve but her. This treachery
+ That we've by hap unbagged in 'ts eanling hour
+ Shall be safe snugged again. And cherished too!
+ For in my eyes it is the one brave flower
+ Of your most barren being. None shall know it,
+ And Sparta, as she will, may laurels weave
+ About your faith.
+
+ _Bia._ But Hieron?
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_To Hieron_] You'll swear with me? [_He hesitates_]
+ In Sparta's name? [_Takes his hand_] And mine?
+
+ _Bia._ No, no!
+
+ _Hie._ I'll swear.
+
+ _Bia._ Oh, not that price! No, till the end
+ O' the world!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Life, Biades, life!
+
+ _Bia._ I will not do it!
+ Athens may singly conquer!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Then you die
+ By Sparta's hand, and Athens holds your name
+ Accursed through time. The irons, Hieron.
+
+ [_Biades hunches despairingly, his face hidden_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Apart_] Gods! He will yield!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Looking up_] I'll do it,--dare to live,--
+ And Attica may call me what she will.
+ A traitor breathes, and feels the blessed sun.
+ He's ne'er so poor but can his housing find
+ In alms-lapped Nature. Her unchoosing airs
+ Ask not his name before they touch his brow
+ And tell him when 'tis spring. He yet may dream
+ In unrebuking shades, and birds will sing
+ As liquidly as though he were not by.
+ Food is yet food, and wine is ever wine.
+ I will not die. [_Rises_] By Maia's son, I'll live!
+ What is my country but the bit of earth
+ Where chance did spawn me? 'Tis no treachery.
+ We're traitors unto love, not hate,--to trust,
+ Not doubt and slander such as Athens poured
+ Upon me guiltless.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Crossing to him_] So you've found a way
+ To save both life and honor!
+
+ _Bia._ May a worm
+ Not creep to cleaner dust? Pyrrha, be kind.
+ Spare me the trampling foot.
+
+ _Pyrr._ We've lost an hour.
+ You'll send to Phernes?
+
+ _Bia._ First we'll signal him.
+ He may be setting off. We must despatch,
+ For if he saw no sign he meant to draw
+ His fleet from doubtful waters and give aid
+ To neither side. [_Taking up a light_] Three cressets--that was true.
+ When once these lights have spoken, he'll receive
+ Your envoy as myself. Then Hieron
+ May bear confirming word to him, and bring
+ Assurance back.
+
+ _Hie._ [_To Pyrrha_] You do not doubt?
+
+ _Pyrr._ Doubt now?
+ Nay, Hieron. I'll trust him with his _life_.
+
+ _Hie._ But----
+
+ _Bia._ [_Trembling_] O, ye gazing gods, must it be done?
+ In Athens' living heart set up the torch
+ That leaves her a charred blotch where she lay white
+ 'Neath heaven and smiled up to sister stars!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Come, Biades!
+
+ _Bia._ Shall not the earth be lost
+ To God's own eye when Athens, quenched, no more
+ Marks where we wander? I can not do it!
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Taking the cresset_] Too late,
+ My lord!
+
+ [Fixes light in the open embrasure, then places two others. Biades
+ falls back, mantling his face]
+
+ _Hie._ To Phernes now! We must not boggle this!
+
+ _Pyrr._ If you've a doubt, sir, look on that. [_Points to Biades_]
+
+ _Hie._ I'll hasten back to you.
+
+ _Bia._ But note our light.
+ The galley rowers may return ere you,
+ And move us to the east.
+
+ _Hie._ I shall not lose you.
+
+ _Bia._ What escort will you take? A noble one
+ Will best please Phernes.
+
+ _Hie._ Mirador and Agis
+ Shall go with me. Meanthes shall remain
+ To be your watch.
+
+ _Bia._ You'll tell them nothing?
+
+ _Hie._ Sir,
+ I've sworn. I shall say naught but this. That Athens
+ Proffered you pardon, and you hold to Sparta.
+
+ [_Exit Hieron. Pyrrha watches from the door until the boats put off.
+ The sea is now dark. Biades takes up a harp and strums it_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Turning_] You can do that? And I--I held my heart
+ At halt, there at the door, nor turned my head
+ Lest pity should emburn my eyes to tears. [_Crosses to him_]
+ Dost know that all the juniper in the world,
+ Burnt in thy house of honor, would not cleanse
+ Its doors of stench? [_Throws the harp aside_] And you can use that air
+ For breath of song!
+
+ _Bia._ Those are the bitterest words
+ That ever dropped me gall, but I can find
+ A crushed balsam in them,--for they say
+ You might have loved me, Pyrrha.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I might.
+
+ _Bia._ You did.
+ The moment that I cast my Spartan mask
+ And showed me true to Athens, you were mine.
+ That instant there was joy-fall on your heart
+ That swept its icy sentinels with fire,
+ And they were down. Oh, had I then proved staunch,
+ Ta'en helmet off to death and bade him strike,
+ You would have closed my eyes with kisses warm
+ As rose-drift on a tomb----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Nay, I'd have kept
+ Those eyes to be my light on earth, not star
+ Elysian skies. Had fought for you against
+ My mother Sparta. Fought as woman fights
+ For her one love,--with wit and armed tongue,
+ And cunning that throws puzzle on the gods.
+ Fought till subdued Death had knelt to Fate
+ And prayed your life for me!
+
+ _Bia._ Have I lost that?
+
+ _Pyrr._ You yielded--sank--unlustred even your soul
+ For a poor pinch of time----
+
+ _Bia._ But if some touch
+ Of heaven could make me true again----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Look on
+ Those lights, that you with single breath could turn
+ To weeping smoke,--they've lit a quenchless wreck
+ That all your sighs blow vain against,--a flame
+ Ungovernable to remorse. Not furrowing winds
+ That split the watery fields to Thetis' bed,
+ And make a foamy Ural of her shore,
+ Can sweep it out. Ay, groan and shake,
+ And draw your mantle up! Behind a cover
+ Thick as Taygetus' sides, I'd see you limned
+ In shame!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Springing up_] What's shame to love? To love fire-sprung
+ From instant meeting of fore-strangered eyes?
+ And such was ours, there in that Athens' grove.
+ Imperial of itself, it asks no loan
+ Of subject virtue's smock to drape it royal.
+ As fen-born vapors seem to nest the stars,
+ Yet far below them do but thatch the world
+ When they look down, the vassal qualities
+ May lift no touch to love, that yet must wear,
+ To earth's unvantaged eyes, their reek and hue.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Aerial love is but an earthling still,
+ It must come down for food or mortal die,
+ And what but virtues feed it?
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, you speak
+ Of a fair, lesser thing,--a grace not lit
+ From thurible in uncreated Hand,
+ But coaxed from clay to a persuaded life.
+ Garbed as the days,--patched, plastered, hung with dear
+ Possessive vanities, it serves to make
+ Contentment's bed, and cook a patient meal
+ On comfort's hearth,--even snuggles in the void
+ That else might ache, sings low, and makes
+ Companioned feet tread bravely to the grave.
+ It has a thousand names, but never one
+ Is love. Be thine that white, ungendered spark,
+ And naught can feed it, naught can make it less.
+ Virtue and vice, nobility and shame,
+ Are rags that drop away, while you sweep on,
+ Stripped as a flame, with arms about your star.
+
+ [_Pyrrha is silent. Both start at sound of a noise on the water_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ What sound is that?
+
+ _Bia._ The rowers are returning.
+
+ _Pyrr._ So quietly?
+
+ _Bia._ [_Goes to door and closes it_] The world shall not come in
+ On me and you. Be mine this broken hour,
+ And Hieron may flute through after-time
+ At secret doors where you lock up your favors.
+ For you will go with him.
+
+ _Pyrr._ A prophet too?
+
+ _Bia._ You'll make his home, but I shall come and go
+ The unseen master there.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Now for the vision!
+
+ _Bia._ You'll watch your door,--the unheard step is mine,--
+ And rock the babe born of a dream of me.
+ And I, far-wandered, lost unto myself,
+ Shall never lose you, Pyrrha. As the light
+ Wrapping the wave reveals its silver dance,
+ My being shall exult through shade and wear
+ The chlamys of your gleam. Your voice behind
+ The wind shall draw me lover-lipped to meet
+ Adventure's breath. You'll lie upon the hush
+ That girdles evening,--be the thrill within
+ The throstle's note, and silence when
+ His song is done.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Nay, it will speak of Phania,
+ Of Sybaris.----
+
+ _Bia._ Ay, and a hundred more
+ In whom I've sought for thee, my Pyrrha, always thee!
+ 'Twill speak of them as statues speak of shards
+ About their feet,--the sculptor's broken dreams
+ That made the perfect one.
+ [_The ship rocks_]
+ _Pyrr._ We're moving!
+
+ _Bia._ Yes,
+ You know,--to safer waters. Listen, Pyrrha,
+ To me--to _me_!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Those sounds----
+
+ _Bia._ [_Kneels_] Hear _me_! My head
+ I'll votive lay till you may set your feet
+ Like tangled roses in my curls----
+
+ [_Pyrrha springs toward the door, but Biades is before her. The noises
+ increase. Groans, blows, shouts_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Aside!
+ I'll pass!
+
+ _Bia._ O, save our bones. I am the stronger.
+ You know 't.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You! I'll wind you like a thread!
+
+ _Bia._ You didn't.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Didn't....
+
+ _Bia._ When we wrestled.
+
+ _Pyrr._ When....
+ Oh, _then_! My arm was lame. Come, I will pass!
+
+ _Bia._ Nay, 'twas your heart that spared me!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ay, like this!
+
+ [_Throws him aside. He staggers against the wall for support. She
+ opens door. Two soldiers in armor silently oppose spears to her
+ passage. She slowly closes the door_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ Where are we going?
+
+ _Bia._ You love me. What an arm!
+ 'Twas never lame!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Come! Tell me what's our port,
+ Then I shall know one place we do _not_ go.
+
+ _Bia._ Tut, love! Pry into men's affairs? Be calm----
+
+ _Pyrr._ What does this mean? [_Advancing_] I'll know!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Retreating_] You shall! It means
+ "The last lie wins." We go to harbor.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Ah!...
+ Those rowers....
+
+ _Bia._ Faithful and fleet as ever bore
+ An Athenian general home. They came upon
+ Your signal----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Mine?
+
+ _Bia._ They lay at watch, not Phernes.
+ Look on those lights! O, trinal star, set high
+ By my beloved! My honor's flaming hedge----
+
+ _Pyrr._ You fly,
+ But in a net! The Spartans heard those shouts.
+ They are in chase--you'll see----
+
+ _Bia._ They're unprepared.
+ The captains off their ships, the guards in doubt,
+ And oarsmen half asleep. But let them come
+ Far as they dare, and if they dare too far
+ From Persia's shelter, the Athenian fleet
+ Will close like jaws about them.
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Sits, with sudden hopelessness_] You have won,
+ My lord.
+
+ _Bia._ I have.
+
+ _Pyrr._ What will you do with me?
+
+ _Bia._ I'll wed thee, sweet.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I'll not----
+
+ _Bia._ Yes, love, you will.
+ There is a dagger hangs in Phelas' shop,
+ Shall be your bridal gift. A prized blade
+ Of coppered gold, hued like a battle morning.
+ Smooth-cheeked as Artemis, although inlaid
+ With pictured tale. A captured Amazon,
+ Wrought palely in alloy,--a silvered fear
+ On th' bronzen flush of courage,--bows before
+ Her conqueror, a knight who gently bends
+ As I do now----
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Thrusting him off_] No! Never! I'll not trust
+ Your dolphin nature! Long as fish have fins
+ You'll sport in every sea! Go--go to Phania!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Turns angrily from her_] Ay, by my gods that I have found again,
+ I shall wed none but an Athenian maid!
+ [_Pyrrha swoons. He rushes to her_]
+ Her heart is still. O, curse my double-tongue!
+ She's dead--she's dead! She takes the Spartan way--
+ To die, not yield! Oh, Pyrrha, Pyrrha, Pyrrha!
+ [_Rushes about distractedly_]
+ I will not live! I'll leap into the sea!
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_On her elbow, as he reaches door_] You might catch cold.
+ [_He stares at her. She sits up_]
+ Is this your grace in love?
+ Your pictured ease, with no dissuasive line?
+
+ _Bia._ O, Pyrrha, peace! Let us be done with cheat
+ And mockery!
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Rising_] My heart on that, my lord!
+
+ _Bia._ Own thou art mine! My world when sunsets die!
+ My breath of meadows lying past the moon!
+ Compassionate this earth, and in my soul
+ Fix thee its centre. Say thou'lt come!
+
+ _Pyrr._ My lord,
+ Could I be sure....
+
+ _Bia._ Ah, Pyrrha, there's no light
+ Falls from thine eye that does not sway me like
+ A bee in rose wind-shaken. I am thine.
+ There'll be no battle, but a nuptial feast
+ With three great armies for our brothered guests.
+ Your land and mine are one. Give me your hand.
+
+ _Pyrr._ I will. For Sparta's sake.
+
+ _Bia._ And love's!
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_Giving her hand_] And love's.
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT V
+
+
+SCENE: _The garden of Pelagon, as in first act. Enter youths and maidens
+dancing about Pyrrha and Biades. They sing:_
+
+
+ Hymen, god of bended knees,
+ Who would gain to thee must lose!
+ Take from us thy merry fees,
+ Though our fairest thou dost choose,--
+ Pyrrha and our Biades!
+
+ Fling the garland and the wreath!
+ Roses, roses consecrate,
+ That upgive their happy breath
+ In an ardor 'neath our feet,
+ Kissing fortune in their death!
+
+ Sparta's won, and Athens' wed!
+ Shyest hours of midnight, bring
+ Charm and blessing for the bed
+ Whence a fairer Greece shall spring
+ And her golden peace be bred!
+
+ [_They dance off, lower right, as Pelagon and Stesilaus enter middle
+ left_]
+
+ _Pel._ Ha, neatly sung! By Hermes, they have made
+ A tickling in my sandals.
+
+ _Ste._ Frivol!
+
+ _Pel._ Eh?
+ Nay, youth must wind his horn----
+
+ _Ste._ Not in my ears!
+
+ _Pel._ Though he never come to the hunt. But Biades
+ Has run the chase, and's bravely home again,
+ The game in pack.
+
+ _Ste._ Too noble game for him!
+ My girl! That I should ever play the sire
+ To a fop of Athens!
+
+ _Pel._ If the burn's so raw,
+ You've secret salve for it.
+
+ _Ste._ Yes. 'Tis not my blood
+ That so forgets its source!
+
+ _Pel._ Sh! Stesilaus!
+ A little butter on the tongue, my friend,
+ Does no man harm.
+
+ _Ste._ Butter a hackle, not
+ My tongue! If I'm so rubbed, I'll rasp the winds
+ Till they sprout ears. Don't "sh" me, Pelagon.
+ I'll muffle in no corners.
+
+ _Pel._ Hist, I say----
+
+ _Ste._ Don't zizz into my beard! We are not curs
+ To nose and smell in council!
+
+ _Pel._ Ruin's on us!
+ You will be heard----
+
+ [_Enter Menas, upper right_]
+
+ _Menas._ Joy to the noble fathers!
+ Sweet saviors of our city!
+
+ _Ste._ Sweet!
+
+ _Menas._ What says
+ Our Stesilaus?
+
+ _Pel._ Ahem! The Spartan joy
+ Is ever dumb. But see him stirred to heart
+ That by a gift from out his very life,
+ His dearest daughter, peace is home in Athens,
+ And's forced no more to camp and cadge and beg
+ At our shut gates. Yet it goes hard to part
+ Wi' the fairest branch on's tree.
+
+ _Menas._ In Biades
+ He finds a treasured son.
+
+ _Ste._ By a mermaid's shoes,
+ A precious son!
+
+ _Menas._ How, sir?
+
+ _Pel._ Indeed, indeed,
+ A jewel of a son! Will you, friend Menas,
+ Float with the senators, and bring to shore
+ Report of how they drift,--what currents favor
+ And what now counter us?
+
+ _Menas._ I'll go, my lords,
+ To hear the latest honor they conclude
+ Best caps your fame, and bring it in a word. [_Exit Menas_]
+
+ _Ste._ I had two minds to throw the truth in 's face
+ And see him strangle on it.
+
+ _Pel._ Friend, wouldst make
+ My old knees creak to earth? I sue to you
+ Be soft as prudence. Shall we now be false
+ To our dearly tended hope--united Greece?
+ Now when the fact is on us, and our dream
+ Walks in the day? I beg you clear your heart
+ Of selfish fire that eats the very pattern
+ Of love's new world. It is ungraced, perverse
+ As altar flame that would devour the shrine
+ 'Twas lit to honor.
+
+ _Ste._ Think of Greece? What's Greece,
+ When my own daughter pairs with----
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, but mine.
+ When you are bitterest set, say to yourself
+ She's of my loins, and when more softly taken,
+ Then call her yours. But openly be constant
+ To a father's right in her, and proudly sire
+ Her honors. And 's for Biades, he's but
+ A brocket yet, his antlers barely bossed.
+ My oath upon it, your reshaping hand
+ Firm-cupped about his overweening spring,
+ Will be a second cradle where he'll grow
+ Fair to your fashion. Think on that.
+
+ _Ste._ I will.
+ There's comfort. Ay, so, so. The terms of peace
+ Make him a Spartan. Pyrrha stood with me
+ Stout-willed on that.
+
+ _Pel._ Then whist! You trust your wife?
+
+ _Ste._ You speak to Stesilaus.
+
+ _Pel._ Eh, I know
+ You've her in hand. My Sachinessa now-- [_Sighs_]
+ But she loves Phania best. That locks her tongue.
+ And, friend, do you not see the high all-ruling Will
+ Has moved behind our own?
+
+ _Ste._ I think it so.
+ Our aim achieves its heaven, though we smart
+ Beneath it. To the outer glozing fame
+ That now attires us splendent, we may add
+ Inmost applause. When we exchanged our babes,
+ 'Twas for this end and day, and had we held
+ To our first intent and taken our own again,
+ Our hope had died unfruitive. 'Twas there
+ That deity came in and shifted us
+ To th' true sybillic course.
+
+ _Pel._ Who dares say else?
+ We'll wear the issue as a sacred robe
+ Fallen on us from Olympus.
+
+ _Ste._ Which our wisdom
+ Fits comely to us. Forget it not, such gift
+ Had been withheld from minds too poor to be
+ The heirs of Zeus.
+
+ _Pel._ But if the clay-eyed mob,
+ Whose pottage traffic up Olympian paths
+ Blocks commerce godly and invisible----
+
+ _Ste._ Tush, cut the string, if you have aught in bag.
+
+ _Pel._ Why, I would say if some of grosser sight
+ Than our two selves, should fumble on our secret
+ That Pyrrha is Athens born----
+
+ _Ste._ Nay, put your fears
+ In pocket. It shall not be known.
+
+ [_Enter Biades_]
+
+ _Bia._ Ha, nunky!
+ Where is my happy father? [_Sees Stesilaus_] A suit, my lord!
+ I've Pyrrha's leave to make our home in Athens
+ If thou wilt bless our dwelling. Crave thy grace
+ For sake of her in whom thy pride best flowers!
+ Here she'll o'erlay all Spartan crudity
+ With suavest bloom, and take e'en native place
+ Where Athens' love would set her.
+
+ _Ste._ Never, sir! [_Exit, middle left_]
+
+ _Bia._ The gray fox snaps. Ho, but I'll draw his teeth,
+ And he shall yelp for 't too!
+
+ _Pel._ Shame, sir! Not give
+ The road to him? The father of your bride?
+
+ _Bia._ I will when she's his daughter.
+
+ _Pel._ What! What, boy?
+
+ _Bia._ I say when she's his daughter. Let that in
+ At your good ear, and in the t'other one
+ I'll call _you_ father.
+
+ _Pel._ Ruin! It's come!
+
+ _Bia._ Who thinks
+ I'd make that Spartan grunt my father, knows
+ Not me! What? Set that boding beard at head
+ Of my Athenian house? Or go to Sparta
+ To hut me where I would not ask a stall
+ For a borrowed horse?
+
+ _Pel._ But----
+
+ _Bia._ Scratch my helpless throat
+ With bread a pig would stick at? Swallow brew
+ Of salt and soot? And chafe my pumiced skin
+ With itching linsey?--or an untanned hide,
+ As man were still the beast that wore it?
+
+ _Pel._ Peace,
+ My son----
+
+ _Bia._ Say grace for leeks and goose-foot?
+
+ _Pel._ But----
+
+ _Bia._ Though Eros pinned me head and foot with shafts,
+ I've saved my eyes, bless my united wits,
+ And know the high-road! I'll not lose me on
+ A pig-trail to a sty.
+
+ _Pel._ But if these Spartans hear
+ They'll sack the city! Zeus deliver us!
+ We're lost! we're lost! Oh, Biades!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Calm_] Talk in a muff, good father Pelagon,
+ Or we indeed are lost.
+
+ _Pel._ You'll keep the secret?
+
+ _Bia._ A time. I've plans in seed will make all Sparta
+ A garden for my Athens, where her fame
+ Shall browse to its tallest. Trust me, Pelagon.
+ I'm still a general!
+
+ [_Enter, lower right, young men who surround Biades, and press him off,
+ singing_]
+
+ Gander now must keep with goose!
+ Biades, O, Biades,
+ Thou shalt ne'er the cord unloose,
+ For the mighty god decrees
+ He shall hang who dares the noose!
+
+ [_Re-enter Stesilaus_]
+
+ _Ste._ He's gone? I took
+ My anger off where it might safely blow.
+ This path brushed clear by Heaven must not be closed
+ By our stumbling selves. The widgeon! He would fly
+ Above the eagle, but I'll snip his feathers,
+ Give me good time! He'd live in Athens, ha!
+ And swore on Hera's altar he would be
+ A son of Sparta!
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, I noted, sir,
+ That Sparta was not named in 's oath.
+
+ _Ste._ What now?
+
+ _Pel._ Naught, naught, my friend! Yet he but swore to make
+ The land of Pyrrha his.
+
+ _Ste._ And what meant that
+ But Sparta? If his warm wooer's oath must cool,
+ We've winters that will do it.
+
+ _Pel._ Caution's best.
+ Slow-mare will get you home.
+
+ _Ste._ A year or two
+ Of good black bread, and free winds on his skin
+ Will take the maiden from his cheeks and set
+ A true man's beard there. Tush! I thought that Fate,
+ Granting my main desire, gave me this plague,
+ Which, with the rest, now proves my life has pleased
+ High arbiters. You're silent, Pelagon.
+
+ _Pel._ No, no! Yes, yes! I think so. 'Tis indeed!
+
+ _Ste._ Come, come, my friend! We will go forth and meet
+ The occasion as a guest, bethinking us
+ We walk between mankind and deity.
+
+ [_They start out and are met by Alcanor and Phania who fall before
+ them_]
+
+ _Pha._ [_Kneeling to Stesilaus_] Your blessing, father!
+
+ _Alc._ [_At Pelagon's feet_] Blessing, dearest father!
+
+ _Pel._ What, what!
+
+ _Pha._ [_To Stesilaus_] Forgive your child!
+
+ _Alc._ The priest----
+
+ _Ste._ My child?
+
+ _Alc._ The priest has made us one.
+
+ _Pel._ What priest? Who dared
+ Defile the altar with such rite?
+
+ _Alc._ [_Rising_] Defile?
+ Though you're my Phania's father, you shall cast
+ No stain upon that holy ceremony
+ Whose odor yet is round us. Sir, the priest
+ Has blessed us. Do you as you please. Come, Phania!
+ Come, sweet! We'll smile at this. Though a father's curse
+ Bethorn our way, a gentler heaven will drop
+ Its soft approval where thy feet must pass. [_Going_]
+
+ _Pel._ Speak, Stesilaus! Stop your wretched son!
+
+ _Alc._ Not wretched, sir, while Phania is my own.
+ We shall be blest when you, too late, beseech
+ Unhearing gods forgive you this!
+
+ _Pel._ Stay, sir!
+ O, miserable boy!
+
+ _Pha._ No, father, no!
+ He's happy in my love as leaf in air,
+ As the sea-crystalled fish, as lotos in
+ Its pool,--and I--O, sir, my joy has wings,
+ And tho' I love you dear and daughterly,--
+ Who gave me life,--your anger has no weight
+ To keep my feet on earth. Like twirling lark
+ Too high for storm to reach, I dance above
+ Displeasure's cloud. [_Trips off with Alcanor_]
+
+ _Pel._ Sweet wretches! Here's a turn!
+ My little Phania! Friend, what shall we do?
+
+ _Ste._ Again the finger of the gods.
+
+ _Pel._ The gods
+ To limbo! I will save my daughter!
+
+ _Ste._ Yours?
+
+ _Pel._ Yea, by each hour of prattle at my knee!
+ By all my care that's been her constant nurse,
+ And every joy that from devotion sprang
+ To meet me like a flower as she grew,
+ She's mine, mine, mine! Oh, Stesilaus, oh,
+ Whosever she may be, I love the chick,
+ And she shall not be damned!
+
+ [_Enter, upper left, Sachinessa and Archippe_]
+
+ _Ste._ Here's a reproach
+ Comes with a dual mouth. If we show doubt,
+ They'll put us under pestle. Rally, sir!
+
+ _Sac._ [_To Archippe_] Are you all lump? Pick up your courage. Why!
+ The gods are gods by their audacity.
+ I'll bring it off. Now, Pelagon?
+
+ _Pel._ [_Who has turned to flee_] What, you,
+ My love?
+
+ _Sac._ Such heavy news! Enough to make
+ The gods no more co-venture with a world
+ Augmented so!
+
+ _Pel._ What, Sachinessa, what?
+
+ _Sac._ Our Phania's married to Alcanor.
+
+ _Pel._ Eh?
+
+ _Sac._ Now are you pleased? Now is your cruelty
+ Full-fed, or must it glut again?
+
+ _Pel._ My sweet----
+
+ _Sac._ You'll meddle with high Zeus! Have you enough?
+
+ _Pel._ Oh, Sachinessa!
+
+ _Sac._ Brother and sister bound
+ In an abhorrent union that will drive
+ Their shades forever from Elysian ground!
+ Nay, even Hades will make fast her gates
+ 'Gainst such offenders, innocently vile!
+ Archippe, speak to that unbending man,
+ Half author of this shame! I'd thin his beard
+ If Heaven had mocked me with his long, smug face
+ For husband! Ugh! The whiskered horse!
+
+ _Arc._ Dumb, sir?
+ You've no defence?--no master argument
+ To prove your wisdom's never off the road
+ To Zeus' gate? Not once in all your life,
+ Although your daughter's to her brother wedded?
+
+ _Ste._ 'Tis well. I can not doubt the gods.
+
+ [_They stare at him_]
+
+ _Arc._ Her brother born?
+ So foul a hap?
+
+ _Ste._ A thing too dread in thought,
+ And in the act unutterable if Zeus
+ Be unconcerned in it. Therefore believe
+ His hand here moves, and holy majesty
+ O'errules the mortal scruple, so dividing
+ This horror from its kind. May it not be
+ The blood of Stesilaus hath in 'ts flow
+ A heavenly tinct that makes it not a sin,
+ But rather virtue, to keep pure the stream
+ From baser founts? They've done no more than kings
+ And gods before them.
+
+ _Sac._ Pelagon, _your_ croak!
+
+ _Pel._ I take a lower ground, my dearest dove.
+ All Athens knows me modest----
+
+ _Sac._ Ay to that!
+ Can blush as deep as any crow that flies!
+
+ _Pel._ Now, now! From first to last I've held it truth
+ That breeding scantles birth, and on that count
+ Make Phania our daughter.
+
+ _Sac._ Oh, you do?
+
+ _Pel._ I stand on this, that training is the man.
+ Or woman, let us say, and not the blood
+ We buried with our fathers. So these two
+ Mate not ancestrally, but in their lives
+ That distantly upbred have not between them
+ A structural thread to bind them of one house.
+
+ _Sac._ What men are these?
+
+ _Arc._ I am no more afraid
+ Of him I thought was Stesilaus.
+
+ _Ste._ Listen,
+ You women. Though we are thus righted----
+
+ _Sac._ Humph!
+
+ _Ste._ In man's and Heaven's eye, we yet will bow
+ To your own wish in this. As once we gave
+ Your sighs the right of way, we now will ease
+ This second woe by taking swiftest means
+ To part this clucking pair.
+
+ _Sac._ You'll yield to _us_?
+
+ _Arc._ How like you, Sachinessa, this high place
+ Above the gods?
+
+ _Sac._ They shall be parted?
+
+ _Ste._ Ay,
+ We do consent.
+
+ _Sac._ Nay, you shall please yourselves.
+ For my own part, I will not break their bonds
+ And set their hearts a-bleeding.
+
+ _Arc._ No, nor I.
+
+ _Ste._ How now, vapidity?
+
+ _Arc._ I mean, my lord,
+ You have convinced me, and this marriage bond
+ Shall be as Zeus has made it.
+
+ _Sac._ Pelagon,
+ Your reason captures mine, and I repent
+ My mockery. This strange event's no more
+ Uncouth, now you have pried the way for me
+ To wisdom's bed of truth. I clearly see
+ Thai man and woman of one mother born
+ May be no kin. The marriage shall stand.
+
+ _Pel._ In name of Zeus!
+
+ _Arc._ Yes, in his name.
+
+ _Ste._ Nay, wife,
+ We know your simple heart, and read its horror
+ Through this pretence so suddenly clapped on.
+ We shall reject a forced and sad submission----
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, ay, we shall! I'll act at once, and stop
+ Their kisses, riveting a bond unblessed----
+
+ _Sac._ Unblessed?
+
+ _Pel._ My golden joy, I speak your thought
+ Not mine.
+
+ [_A clamor in street_]
+
+ _Ste._ They come for us.
+
+ _Pel._ I hear my name.
+ We'll out and greet them.
+
+ _Ste._ No, my friend.
+ Let them come in unnoted.
+
+ _Pel._ Ay, we'll sit
+ Withdrawn, in gentle argument. Here's shade.
+
+ [_They go aside. Enter Lysander, Agis, Creon, Menas, and a score of
+ Spartans and Athenians_]
+
+ _Lys._ Is Stesilaus here? We must be heard.
+
+ _Arc._ He's here.
+
+ _Menas._ And Pelagon! Where's Pelagon?
+
+ _Sac._ His good ear's toward, sir.
+
+ _Pel._ [_Unable to keep aside_] Did I not hear
+ My name?
+
+ _Sac._ Why, so I said.
+
+ _Agis._ [_Advancing to Stesilaus_] My lord, we come----
+
+ _Ste._ What haste, good Agis? Goes the world so fast?
+
+ _Agis._ As fast as Fate can drive it, and you, my lord,
+ Are under foot.
+
+ _Pel._ [_Who has been listening to Menas_] You hear it, Stesilaus!
+ Athens is ashes! We're betrayed, betrayed!
+
+ [_Biades, Pyrrha, Phania, Alcanor, and their companions
+ swarm in, lower right_]
+
+ _Ste._ Silence, and let us hear! Now, Agis, speak.
+
+ _Agis._ And grieve that 'tis my part. The Spartans know
+ Your treachery----
+
+ _Ste._ Who dares to give such a name
+ To deed of mine?
+
+ _Agis._ Denial comes too far
+ Behind the proof, my lord.
+
+ _Ste._ The proof? What proof?
+
+ _Lys._ 'Tis known to all. The very curb cries out
+ That Pyrrha is Athenian born, the child
+ Of Pelagon.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Oh, Zeus!
+
+ _Bia._ Bear up, my Pyrrha!
+
+ _Agis._ Ay, Athens weds with Athens, and on that
+ You build the peace of Sparta! A bold deceit
+ Of yours and Pelagon's, whereby we're sold
+ To a foeman's pleasure!
+
+ _A Spartan._ Though the heart of Athens
+ Be in the knot that binds your traitorous bargain,
+ We'll cut it through!
+
+ _Agis._ Will you deny you changed
+ Your babes in cradle?
+
+ [_Silence_]
+
+ _Bia._ Pray you, who revealed
+ This ancient secret?
+
+ _Menas._ Creon came----
+
+ _Bia._ Ah, Creon!
+
+ _Menas._ Before the senate, then in seat to unfold
+ From rivalrous invention, topless honors
+ For these two lords, whose guilt had long devoured
+ Such labor's root and reason.
+
+ _Bia._ Creon came?
+
+ _Menas._ And bared the tale, made his by accident,
+ And swore you knew it too,--that Pyrrha there
+ Is Pelagon's daughter, and Phania is the child
+ Of Spartan Stesilaus.
+
+ _Pha._ Oh, oh, oh!
+
+ _Alc._ A rope for me then!
+
+ _Cre._ [_To Biades_] Sir, I did not speak,
+ But trusted all to you, until the secret
+ Laid night on Phania's innocence and grew
+ Too foul to keep.
+
+ _Pyrr._ You knew this, Biades?
+
+ _Bia._ And knew you would forgive!
+
+ _Pyrr._ This was the spring
+ Of all your oaths! In my espoused hand
+ You'd lay my country's peace, knowing her name
+ Was Attica! This was your proof of love.
+ The oiled wedge that let you in my heart!
+ False in the trothal moment that should make
+ The foulest for an instant pure!
+
+ _Bia._ But hear----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Oh, in that hour which women wrap in rose
+ And hide where thoughts like guardian doves may go,
+ You set a cautel touching it with death
+ That leaves me treasureless!
+
+ _Bia._ My Pyrrha,----
+
+ _Pyrr._ Not yours!
+
+ _Bia._ Howe'er 'twas done, I won you!
+
+ _Pyrr._ Won a Spartan!
+ Now keep the shadow. As an Athenian maid
+ I do renounce you! [_Escapes him_]
+
+ _Bia._ Ah! Zeus loves the dice.
+ He's always at the game. But who'd have thought
+ This throw would be against me? Hear me, sweet!
+ [_To Stesilaus_]
+ Dear father, speak to her. She'll heed your voice,
+ Your judgment ripe, and words set out like cups
+ With wisdom's honey.
+
+ _Pel._ [_Awake to fathership_] Ay, my son, I will!
+
+ _Bia._ Not you, in name of hope! [_Follows Pyrrha_]
+
+ _Alc._ Monsters of fatherhood, how dare you show
+ Your faces in this sun? Go seek some cave
+ Whose darkest den will not betray a shame
+ Of its own hue! No, Phania, do not cling
+ To my unwilling breast that now must be
+ A hedge of swords to your bird bosom. [_Holds her tightly_]
+
+ _Pha._ Oh!
+
+ _Cre._ Withdraw your hand, proud Spartan!
+
+ _Alc._ I will protect
+ My sister, sir, from any lord of Athens!
+
+ _Sac._ Look, Pelagon,--and Stesilaus,--here!
+ Look on this warbling joy hatched tenderly
+ In nest of your conceit, which you've kept warm
+ Forgetting you had hearts where love bechid
+ Sat in unfeathered cold. If you are fathers,
+ Drink of their ecstasy till every vein
+ Applauds it!
+
+ _Lys._ Pray you, peace! The Senators!
+
+ [_Enter Amentor and other Senators_]
+
+ _Ste._ What's your demand?
+
+ _Amen._ Your life, Lord Stesilaus.
+ And that of Pelagon, in Athens' name.
+
+ _Pel._ My life?
+
+ _Amen._ Not less will still this wind and save
+ Our homes from undefended sack. They've seized
+ The citadel----
+
+ _Bia._ Then on my armor! Wife
+ May whistle when the bugle calls!
+
+ _Amen._ Stay, sir!
+ The Spartans are in power, and any check
+ Means slaughter. There's no help. The Persian fleet
+ Has sailed. The Athenians drop their useless arms
+ And follow at command, knowing no way
+ To win but by a bloodless yielding.
+
+ _Bia._ Yield!
+
+ _Amen._ Sir, we must grant the Spartans these two lives,
+ Whereon they'll strike no further. So they swear.
+
+ _Sac._ [_To Pelagon_] This is your downy Peace wooed from the clouds
+ To hover over Athens! Save the name!
+ She's from a briar-patch, not Heaven! Her wings
+ Are full of burrs!
+
+ _Bia._ [_Holding Pelagon_] Stand to! A scuttled ship
+ Has no choice deck. There's nothing to be saved
+ But dignity.
+
+ _Pel._ Nay, that's for Stesilaus! [_Breaking away_]
+ My life, my life!
+
+ [_Noise mounts without. The wall is broken through, rear, and the
+ breach reveals the street filled with angry Spartans_]
+
+ _Amen._ Peace!
+
+ _Gir._ Give us Stesilaus!
+
+ _Voices._ And Pelagon! The traitors! Give them up!
+
+ _Amen._ You see them. There they stand.
+ [_Misses Pelagon_]
+ Where's Pelagon?
+
+ _Voices._ We have him here! Bring Stesilaus!
+
+ _Arc._ Hold!
+ I am Archippe. Let me speak.
+
+ _Voices._ No mercy!
+
+ _Arc._ I ask none, friends. The wife of Stesilaus
+ Is not so much in 's debt she owes him aught
+ On mercy's score.
+
+ _Gir._ Then speak.
+
+ _Arc._ Is Philon here?
+ The reverend priest?
+
+ _Voices._ He comes! Make way! He's here!
+
+ [_Philon comes out_]
+
+ _Philon._ Speak first, Archippe. I'll follow you.
+
+ _Arc._ My friends,
+ I'm such a one as you do most contemn,--
+ A woman disobedient to her lord.
+ But if you judgment give upon that point,
+ Remember that my lord is Stesilaus.
+ When this my daughter here,--yes, Pyrrha, she,--
+ Child of my nurturing blood,----
+
+ _Voices._ What? What? Your child?
+
+ _Amen._ Silence! Speak on, Archippe.
+
+ _Arc._ When she lay
+ A morsel cradled, two months' breath in her,
+ Came he, the father, swearing she must go
+ To Sachinessa's breast, and I must take
+ Her Phania to my own,--thereby to serve
+ In some occulted way the future good
+ Of Greece. And all the mercy won from him
+ Was leave to journey with my child to Athens----
+
+ _Sac._ But I was not so meek! By Pallas, no!
+ What--who--was Pelagon, to rob my bosom
+ Of Hera's gift? Who made him greater than
+ The gods? 'Tis but a girl, he said, to me,
+ A mother! I went to Philon then, the priest
+ Whom Athens honors, and by holy counsel,
+ We did not change our babes, but let our deed
+ Wear face that pleased them, with a heart our own,
+ And home Archippe went with Pyrrha safe,
+ While I in Athens held my Phania close.
+ And they, fond sires, who knew no difference
+ Between a _girl_ and _girl_, hugged their deep plan
+ And built the phantom of united Greece
+ Upon it.
+
+ _Arc._ If those ghostly towers, now fallen,
+ May rise again, it is our act, my lords,
+ Provides them nature's base, and not a dream's.
+ Condemn us, if you will, as erring wives,
+ But as true mothers give us softer justice.
+ And if there's scale or balance that can hold
+ Such torturous weight, lay on it all the pain
+ Of lonely years that saw me turn my face
+ From my loved daughter, lest this man of rock
+ Should know her mine and his.
+
+ _Pyrr._ Your own, your own,
+ My mother!
+
+ _Ste._ So you slip me, dame,
+ And Pyrrha goes with you. But Biades
+ Is under thumb by this same turn. He now
+ Must know himself a Spartan, and shall keep
+ My terms.
+
+ _Arc._ Make them full easy. You shall lay
+ No marring hand upon our children's joy
+ As fell on mine.
+
+ _Bia._ O, sue for me, Archippe!
+ Give me my bride! Whatever be her race,
+ Her home is in my arms!
+
+ _Arc._ Forgive him, Pyrrha.
+ Not for his pleading, but for love I know
+ You bear him.
+
+ [_Pyrrha permits Biades to embrace her_]
+
+ _Alc._ [_To Phania_] Sweet, we know our heaven by
+ Those moments in a hell.
+
+ _Amen._ Here's feast enough!
+
+ _Bia._ But poor old Creon in this rain of porridge
+ Starves for a spoon.
+
+ _Cre._ And you, perforce, take one
+ Of Spartan make.
+
+ _Bia._ I'm caught. But in love's lap.
+ I'll swallow Sparta for so dear a bed.
+
+ _Menas._ And you need fear no distaff tyranny,
+ My lord. There you are safe. Although your bride
+ Be Hera-limbed, you've proved yourself her Zeus
+ In open match.
+
+ _Cre._ How if her moved heart
+ Crept to her arm and slipped the victory
+ Unwon to love?
+
+ [_Biades is suddenly embarrassed_]
+
+ _Pyrr._ [_With a caress of assurance_] If that were so, my lords,
+ My pride would harbor his, and none should know
+ My secret.
+
+ _Ste._ Senators, and men of Athens,
+ Art dumb when justice waits on you for voice?
+ What censure have you for these rebel wives,
+ And this unsainted priest?
+
+ _Amen._ [_To Philon_] You counselled them
+ To their deceit?
+
+ _Philon._ I did.
+
+ _Amen._ You've no defence?
+
+ _Philon._ I need none.
+
+ _Ste._ Ha!
+
+ _Philon._ Whoso reveres the gods
+ Draws of their strength in every mortal inch,
+ And in this act I did them reverence,
+ Standing between their wish and meddling wits
+ Of these presumptive men. But pardon them.
+ For it is shame enough to've thought to make
+ A frislet of their own shake like the locks
+ Of cloud-haired Zeus. For me, my hand is on
+ My altar, and I fear no fall.
+
+ _Amen._ No more,
+ Good Philon.
+
+ _Philon._ Ay, a word, This morning, sir,
+ I blessed the couple here, knowing them free
+ Of kindred blood,--Alcanor and his Phania.
+ The strands are doubly woven that now bind
+ Sparta and Athens. Pyrrha and Biades
+ Were first to link them one, and now this pair
+ Unites them o'er.
+
+ _Amen._ You hear, my Spartan friends.
+ What say you? Is it peace?
+
+ _Spartans._ Peace be to Athens!
+
+ _Amen._ And peace to Sparta! Hearts and altars guard it!
+ Go, citizens! See that the chariots
+ Glow with new garlands for this double bridal.
+ And let the noble wives of these proud lords
+ Co-queen festivity. All shall rejoice
+ Save this convicted pair,--you, Pelagon,
+ And Stesilaus. You we prison here,
+ Your own sole company, nor shall you speak
+ Save in a rhyme now dim with little use,
+ But shall be better known from this day forth
+ With polish you shall give it. Hear it, sirs:
+
+ _The man who would his own pie bake_
+ _Must from his wife ten fingers take._
+
+ [_Curtain falls and rises. Pelagon and Stesilaus are discovered,
+ their backs to each other, the only occupants of the garden.
+ Through the breach in the wall the festal procession is seen
+ passing. Curtain_]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+KIDMIR
+
+A PLAY IN FOUR ACTS
+
+
+
+
+_CHARACTERS_
+
+
+ OSWALD, _Earl of Clyffe_
+ BERTRAND, _sometime_ VAIRDELAN, _his son_
+ CHARILUS, _a Greek_
+ ARDIA, _his daughter_
+ BIONDEL _and_ VIGARD, _sons of Charilus_
+ BANISSAT, _Prince of Avesta_
+ PRINCE FREDERICK
+ BERENICE, _his daughter_
+ GAINA, _serving-woman to Ardia_
+ BARCA, _servant to Charilus_
+ RAMUNIN, _a headsman_
+ SEVEN MAIDENS, _friends of Ardia_
+
+ _Followers of Banissat, soldiers of Oswald, nobles, wedding-guests,
+ dancers, guards, &c._
+
+ Time: _During the later Crusades_
+ Place: _The southern coast of Asia Minor_
+
+
+
+
+ACT I
+
+
+SCENE: _A hall in the castle of Charilus on the heights of Kidmir. The
+open rear, through which is seen a sunset sky, leads to a parapet
+overlooking the city of Avesta and the coast of Suli. Entrances right
+and left of parapet. Midway down, right, the door to a chamber._
+
+_Charilus stands on parapet and looks down toward Avesta. Barca waits
+within the hall._
+
+
+ _Char._ O, sea-washed city, must the hail of fire
+ Crimson thy milky walls, and salt winds strive
+ In vain to sweeten ditches dark with blood
+ From thy tapped heart? Come, Barca, be my eyes,
+ Who climbs the heights?
+
+ [_Barca advances and looks over_]
+
+ _Barca._ Lords Vigard and Biondel
+ Are on the pass.
+
+ _Char._ My sons so soon returned!
+ No other?
+
+ _Barca._ Farther down, my lord, I see
+ The knight, Sir Vairdelan.
+
+ _Char._ Then we shall hear
+ His sunset song.
+
+ _Barca._ The stairway through the cliff
+ Is closed. Shall I give signal, sir, to hoist
+ The upper gate?
+
+ _Char._ That is my charge henceforth. [_Going left_]
+ They will be hungered. [_Turns to Barca_]
+ Scant the board in nothing. [_Exit left_]
+
+ [_Gaina enters, right, rear, carrying a tray piled with candles_]
+
+ _Gaina._ Thank goodness, Barca, you're where you're wanted for once!
+ Help me with these winkers. [_Giving him candles_] My mistress kept me
+ out on the cliffs when I ought to 'a' been inside an hour ago doing my
+ honest work. I got her in at last, but I had to be round with her, poor
+ soul! I told her what!
+
+ _Barca._ [_Placing candles_] She was watching for her brothers?
+
+ _Gaina._ [_Puts tray down_] Brothers! It was a sight of that singing
+ knight she wanted. He went down the pass this morning and she has gone
+ about all day like a bird with a sore throat.
+
+ _Barca._ God gave her eyes, and Sir Vairdelan is good to see. When I
+ look at him I feel somehow as if the sun were just up and everybody had
+ another chance.
+
+ _Gaina._ A man who lets his sword rust at home while he goes about
+ tootle-de-rooling on a flute! And she could be the princess of Avesta
+ if she'd look in the right place. Well, if she had _my_ eyes!
+
+ _Barca._ What! You would have your mistress marry Banissat? An
+ unbeliever?
+
+ _Gaina._ A prince is a prince,--and I'd say the same if my mistress
+ were my own daughter.
+
+ _Barca._ And you a Christian!
+
+ _Gaina._ A Christian of Corinth, I'd have you know. There are Christians
+ and Christians, please you! And for my mistress, dear heart, it would
+ take more than marrying a prince to send her to--to----
+
+ _Barca._ Let it out.
+
+ _Gaina._ Hell, then,--if you want to bite ginger. And who but Banissat
+ can stand between her father and that English Oswald--who is just plain
+ devil and not an Englishman at all----
+
+ _Barca._ Devil? A knight of the Cross leading the army of the Lord to
+ Jerusalem.
+
+ _Gaina._ Nobody but the devil, I tell you! And I wouldn't speak to him
+ if I met him walking with Saint Peter, unless he showed me his bare feet
+ with ten good toes on 'em. It might be all right for Peter, but a woman
+ can't be too careful, and the master took me out of a good family in
+ Corinth. And this Vairdelan who is no more a knight than I'm a lady--the
+ next time he goes down the pass he will lose his way up again, or my
+ head's a goose-egg, that's all!
+
+ _Barca._ Gently, Gaina. You were young once.
+
+ _Gaina._ Once? I've more hairs than wrinkles yet, which some can't say
+ and tell the truth!
+
+ _Barca._ Tongue in! Here's the master. [_Moves right_]
+
+ _Gaina._ My candles!
+
+ [_Seizes tray and goes out, right, as Charilus re-enters left_]
+
+ _Char._ [_To Barca_] Look to the supper.
+ [_Exit Barca, right. Charilus crosses to parapet and looks down_]
+ Doubt-blown city, rest.
+ Sleep on my heart. You shall not bleed for me.
+
+ [_Enter Ardia from chamber midway right_]
+
+ _Ard._ Alone, my father?
+
+ _Char._ Never alone, and yet
+ My wish was calling thee. [_Sits, and draws her beside him_]
+
+ _Ard._ Ah, not one guard
+ About thee?
+
+ _Char._ The only guard is always near,--
+ A fearless heart.
+
+ _Ard._ Then I have none. My heart
+ Is made of fears.
+
+ _Char._ No charm but love will lift
+ Our gates of rock.
+
+ _Ard._ But who knows love from hate
+ In days like these? Some foe with friendship's eyes,
+ Some secret knife of Oswald's----
+
+ _Char._ None may tread
+ The guarded pass save our knight Vairdelan
+ And your two brothers.
+
+ _Ard._ Vairdelan is late.
+ Why went he down?
+
+ _Char._ Knights true as he, my girl,
+ Are never questioned.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Starting_] Who are at the gates?
+
+ _Char._ Your brothers come.
+
+ _Ard._ So soon? That means good news
+ From Banissat. He'll be your strength against
+ This mighty Oswald.
+
+ _Char._ Fair his word may be,
+ But I go down the pass.
+
+ _Ard._ Go down? To meet
+ That fiend?
+
+ _Char._ The man who calls himself my foe,
+ But named of God my brother.
+
+ _Ard._ O, too much
+ Thou lovest love! A fiend, I say!
+
+ _Char._ That name
+ Give unto me when I consent to piece
+ This spun-out life with breath of babes and gasp
+ Of dying mothers. Would you feed these veins,
+ Gelid and old, all golden venture done,
+ With the warm waste of youth whose saved stream
+ Might bear mankind unto the port of gods?
+
+ _Ard._ But you--you are my father!
+
+ _Char._ It is such cries
+ Unsettle justice till her shaken scales
+ Weigh nations 'gainst a heart.
+
+ _Ard._ Must I not love you?
+
+ _Char._ My Ardia, fair as though thou wert not mine,
+ Or wert all hers who made gray Corinth young,
+ The love that feeds behind a sheltered door
+ Must be unroofed and take its bread of stars
+ Ere it may answer to its holy name.
+ The heart must build no walls----
+
+ _Ard._ I build them not,
+ But find them risen about me. You are here,
+ Guardful and best, fending my eyes,--there stands
+ My Biondel,--there Vigard brave,--and there....
+
+ _Char._ And there, my daughter?
+
+ _Ard._ Hark! 'Tis Vairdelan's voice!
+
+ [_Singing heard below_]
+
+ O fires that build upon the sea
+ Till wave and foam of ye are part,
+ And burn in mated ecstasy,
+ Ye build again within my heart.
+
+ O clouds that breathe in flame and run
+ In linked dreams along the sky
+ In me the fire is never done,
+ Though Eve's gray hand soon puts ye by.
+
+ Christ be my Hand of Eve upon
+ The flame that tireless, fadeless leaps!
+ Haste holily, O Mary's moon,
+ With dew for fire that never sleeps!
+
+ [_Ardia keeps a listening attitude, not heeding the entrance of her
+ brothers who come on left_]
+
+ _Char._ Well, sons?
+
+ _Bion._ Ay, well! That is the word we bring.
+ Avesta's prince, the gracious Banissat,
+ Is now your sworn defender.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Turning_] And asks no price?
+
+ _Bion._ No more than your fair self, my sister.
+
+ _Vig._ [_As Ardia stands silent_] You doubt?
+ 'Tis true. He'll make you princess!
+
+ _Ard._ He is old....
+
+ _Bion._ What call you old? He's in the fairest top
+ Of manhood.
+
+ _Vig._ Old!
+
+ _Ard._ And cannot sing....
+
+ _Vig._ Not sing!
+
+ _Ard._ What need have we of him? Can Oswald scale
+ These rock-barred heights?
+
+ _Vig._ Starvation can.
+
+ _Ard._ We've food
+ Will last three harvest moons.
+
+ _Bion._ And Oswald camps
+ Where plain and sea will feed ten thousand men
+ As many years.
+
+ _Vig._ While here our skeletons
+ With bleached grin may watch the feast below!
+
+ _Ard._ To starve ... is that so terrible? 'Tis but
+ One way of dying.
+
+ _Vig._ Dying?
+
+ _Char._ Say no more.
+ The morrow's dawn shall light my way to Oswald.
+
+ _Bion._ You'll go to him? Then death!
+
+ _Vig._ [_To Ardia_] See what you do?
+
+ _Ard._ Forgive me. [_Runs to her father and clings to him_]
+ Now! Bind me to Banissat.
+
+ _Char._ Nay, thou art free.
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Ardia_] Our lives shall thank you.
+
+ _Vig._ Thanks?
+ You speak her part.
+
+ [_Ardia leaves her father and moves to edge of parapet_]
+
+ _Bion._ [_Following her_] Dost know a better way?
+
+ _Ard._ I pray you, leave me.
+
+ _Vig._ Princess of Avesta!
+
+ _Ard._ Your supper waits.
+
+ _Vig._ [_Starting right_] Come, brother!
+
+ _Char._ Though I've supped,
+ I'll sit with you, my sons. Discourse is ever
+ The best dish at the board.
+
+ _Bion._ We thank you, sir.
+
+ [_Exeunt Biondel, Vigard, Charilus, right_]
+
+ _Ard._ And am I wooed and won? Dreams of a dream,
+ Where are ye now?... A lover with no song.
+ No carols stealing sweetness from the moon;
+ No trembling hand to drop a morning rose
+ Where I may walk.
+ [_Takes a rose from her bosom and casts it away_]
+ No rose.... no Vairdelan!
+
+ [_Re-enter Gaina_]
+
+ _Gaina._ Here, mistress? Dearie dear, a-weeping?
+
+ _Ard._ No.
+
+ _Gaina._ Say you were, 'twere a better sight than this fetching of dry
+ sighs. They 'most take the skin of a woe that a little tear-water would
+ bring up easy enough.
+
+ _Ard._ O, Gaina, Gaina, did you see my mother buried?
+
+ _Gaina._ Ay, 'twas a sweet grave we laid her in over in Corinth. You'll
+ never make as pretty a corpse, my dear.
+
+ _Ard._ Was I there?
+
+ _Gaina._ Troth, you were, and trouble enough you gave me. You wanted to
+ climb into the coffin and go to sleep too, you said.
+
+ _Ard._ O, had you buried me with her I should not have seen this day!
+
+ _Gaina._ Most like you wouldn't. Come, honey dove, come to your room and
+ brighten yourself a bit. There's the new veil just begging to be looked
+ at. I'll put it on you, and----
+
+ _Ard._ No, I don't want you. [_Going, right_]
+
+ _Gaina._ O, ho, I can read his name you do want, and not kill a bird for
+ it either.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Turning_] Who, magpie? Who?
+
+ _Gaina._ Your eyes may save my tongue if they squint sou'west.
+
+ _Ard._ Is he coming?
+
+ _Gaina._ Who, my cuckoo? Who?
+
+ [_Bertrand enters left. Ardia starts off right_]
+
+ _Ber._ Ardia!
+
+ _Ard._ [_Weakly, pausing at her door_] Vairdelan....
+
+ _Ber._ Will not you stay?
+
+ _Ard._ I will return. [_Exit_]
+
+ _Ber._ Your mistress is not well?
+
+ _Gaina._ You've eyes, sir.
+
+ _Ber._ This fear of Oswald----
+
+ _Gaina._ Her trouble's nearer home, sir.
+
+ _Ber._ Her father----
+
+ _Gaina._ Nay, it wears no beard, though it may in time.
+
+ _Ber._ What troubles her, dear Gaina?
+
+ _Gaina._ A man, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ A man!
+
+ _Gaina._ There, don't feel for your sword, for that's at home, and I
+ never heard yet of spitting a man with a flute, though it may e'en go
+ to the heart of a woman if she be young and soft like my mistress.
+
+ _Ber._ The truth, Gaina!
+
+ _Gaina._ I can spare it, sir. My master's daughter is so in love with
+ you----
+
+ _Ber._ Angels do not love!
+
+ _Gaina._ That may be. I'm speaking of my mistress, "Magpie!" Not meaning
+ you, sir.
+
+ _Ber._ She can not love me!
+
+ _Gaina._ That's what I said--at first. A roaming creature with only his
+ cloak for shelter, though it's a good gentleman's weave, I'll allow, and
+ I know you'll go away before her poor heart gets too heavy for carrying.
+ It's nigh that now, and before you came it was so light she was tripping
+ and chirping till I could 'a' sworn she had no heart at all--just toes
+ and wings. And now, dear soul,--but you'll go, sir? You know you'd have
+ to hunt the door soon enough if her brothers got a breath of what's
+ between you.
+
+ _Ber._ There's nothing between us!
+
+ _Gaina._ A bat could see it by daylight. It's been in your eyes all the
+ time.
+
+ _Ber._ I never meant it!
+
+ _Gaina._ Shame to you then. You'll go, sir?
+
+ _Ber._ Yes, yes, yes!
+
+ _Gaina._ Here's my lady. Now don't tell her you're going. Just go.
+
+ _Ber._ Just ... go.
+
+ _Gaina._ [_At right_] Ay, you've got it.
+
+ [_Exit Gaina as Ardia re-enters_]
+
+ _Ard._ My brothers are at supper. Will you join them,
+ Or do you fast?
+
+ _Ber._ I fast.
+
+ _Ard._ A stern religion
+ Is yours, my friend.
+
+ _Ber._ I've chosen it. Ardia,
+ You know me for a knight.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Softly_] Who wears no sword.
+
+ _Ber._ But in the English isle where I was born,
+ I was a monk ... and true. True am I now,
+ Save that my cell is what men call the world.
+
+ _Ard._ Spare speech and me. I know the rest.
+
+ _Ber._ Your prayers
+ Then be my bond that Christ may search my heart
+ And find no part not his.
+
+ _Ard._ No prayer of mine
+ Shall fetter youth to bloodless vows. And you
+ Look not as one faith-leeched of life. Your cheek
+ Is sudden gray, not changeless pale. 'Tis hued
+ Like rebel morning pushing back a dawn
+ Too eager for its peace. A monk. Our ways
+ Part as our souls. Know you I am to wed
+ Prince Banissat? So dumb?
+ My father comes!
+ [_Meets Charilus re-entering and leads him to a seat_]
+ Our guest was telling me of English days.
+ Now you change tongue with him and speak the tale
+ You promised yester night. Why does this Oswald,
+ This war-mad lord of England, on his way
+ To free the holy tomb, forget his path
+ And turn his army's strength against a man
+ No greater than thyself?
+
+ _Char._ Yes, you shall know.
+
+ _Ard._ At last!
+
+ _Char._ For morning parts us.
+
+ _Ard._ Oh! Not that!
+
+ _Ber._ Shall I go in, my lord?
+
+ _Char._ Nay, Vairdelan.
+ I'd have thee hear. Thou thinkest me a man
+ Of holy heart.
+
+ _Ard._ Ah, who does not?
+
+ _Char._ There's one
+ Has cause for doubt. 'Twas I who slew in rage
+ Earl Oswald's father.
+
+ _Ard._ You? These hands?
+
+ _Char._ These hands.
+
+ _Ber._ I've heard 'twas so.
+
+ _Ard._ You've heard?
+
+ _Char._ 'Tis thirty years
+ Since Oswald, with his father, John of Clyffe,
+ Marched in Red Giles' crusade. You know of that?
+
+ _Ber._ My grandsire captained there.
+
+ _Char._ I served not Christ,
+ At least as they, with pillage, fire and rape.
+ But there were some among the English youths
+ Who took my heart, and Oswald was my choice
+ Of all who camped before the holy gates.
+
+ _Ard._ That man!
+
+ _Char._ I, too, was young ... and I was wed.
+ Not to my Ardia's mother, but to her
+ Whose heart yet boldly beats in my two sons.
+ In her strange beauty John of Clyffe found death.
+ He sought her, and I slew him. When his blood
+ Ran at my feet, I fled,--not from the swords
+ Hot on my path, but from that stream of blood.
+
+ _Ard._ Dear, dear my father! 'Twas a world ago!
+
+ _Char._ I was not of the many who can kill
+ And laugh again, nor yet of hermit-heart.
+ But for myself had made a gentle god
+ Whom my soul served.
+
+ _Ber._ I know, my lord, that sweet
+ Idolatry, and dream what thou didst suffer
+ So shaken from it.
+
+ _Char._ Far as man knows the world
+ I fled the scarlet stream that followed me,
+ And on the skyward slope of Himalay,
+ Between the white of snows and blue of heaven,
+ Saw it no more.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Kissing his hands_] O, white, forgiven hands!
+
+ _Char._ There, near to God as man may come nor lose
+ The body's mould, I saw in solvent thought
+ That knows not time, a sinless star,--this earth
+ That shall be. Back unto my world I came,
+ And that my dream might live I lived my dream,
+ Servant to love even where the slaves of hate
+ Whet sword and knife.
+
+ _Ard._ O, true!
+
+ _Ber._ 'Tis sung of thee!
+
+ _Char._ Now am I old, but love does not deny me
+ One service more. To-morrow I shall go
+ To die at Oswald's feet----
+
+ _Ber._ [_Eagerly_] You will go down?
+
+ _Ard._ No, no! He shall not go! Prince Banissat
+ Will save him! He has promised!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Gazing at Ardia_] Banissat?
+ So 'twas a bargain. Thou'rt fair goods to be
+ On th' vender's table. [_Turns to Charilus_] You choose well, my lord.
+
+ _Ard._ What words!
+
+ _Ber._ I bring a message from th' earl.
+
+ _Ard._ From Oswald? [_Shrinking_] You know him?
+
+ _Ber._ If any man
+ May know him,--but I better know his son.
+
+ _Ard._ The vicious Bertrand?
+
+ _Ber._ Vicious?
+
+ _Ard._ O, so foul
+ He shuns the day, and walks on moonless nights
+ Most like his soul!
+
+ _Ber._ You speak of Bertrand?
+
+ _Ard._ Ay!
+ More wolfish than his father,--beast whose sword
+ Should be his body's part as tigers wear
+ Their claws from birth!
+
+ _Ber._ A bold delusion this!
+
+ _Char._ She speaks untempered rumor. Slander, sir,
+ Is out of breath with sporting Bertrand's name,
+ And giveth way to winds that blow it past
+ Belief's last border.
+
+ _Ard._ Slander?
+
+ _Ber._ What will shake
+ These fancies from your heart?
+
+ _Ard._ A miracle.
+ Naught less.
+
+ _Ber._ Hard terms. [_Turns to Charilus_] I know this Bertrand well.
+ If any happy merit in myself
+ Has won your love, bestow the same on him.
+ What I may share is his.
+
+ _Char._ Here's living hope!
+
+ _Ber._ He, like myself, was cloister-bred, and passed
+ Peaceful, uncounted days until the death
+ Of his three brothers, slain in one mad hour.
+ Earl Oswald then bethought him of the son
+ So early given to Christ. "I have no heir,"
+ He said, "but God lacks not for monks." And straight
+ With power and gold bought full release for Bertrand,
+ Save that release his soul and God might give.
+
+ _Char._ You make me love his story.
+
+ _Ber._ True to peace
+ Even in the camp of war, he lives withdrawn,
+ And so gives Rumor sweep for what she would,
+ While in her swollen report the earl conceals
+ His monkish son's true nature.
+
+ _Char._ I'll know this youth!
+
+ _Ber._ He keeps his tent by day, and steals at night
+ To forest glens, his armor but a cloak,
+ His sword a flute----
+
+ _Ard._ O, light from Heaven!
+
+ _Ber._ Sometimes
+ He farther goes, even far as Kidmir heights,
+ And at the feet of Charilus he learns
+ A love more true than fane and cloister taught,--
+ The love that made the houseless, barefoot Christ,
+ With open breast to all unbrothered woe,--
+ And now he kneels and of that gentlest love
+ Asks pardon.
+
+ _Char._ Bertrand, son of Oswald, rise.
+ There's no forgiving in the sinless star.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Rising, to Ardia_] And you?
+
+ _Ard._ Ah ... when I've breath!
+
+ _Ber._ What I have said,
+ My lord, makes way for what is yet to say.
+ To-day I waited by Avesta's gate
+ For this [_taking out paper_] my father's word, response to mine
+ Sent days ago to him. Here, sir, he says: [_Reads_]
+
+ "Son of my hope, your words are not more strange to me than these I
+ write with my own hand. If Charilus will come to Suli Castle, the which
+ my swords have taken while you sang and slept, my door shall open to him
+ as Kidmir gates have opened unto you. By Christ, I swear the treatment
+ that he gave my blood he shall have again from me. But if he come not
+ down, then shall I reach him through Avesta's heart, and the love he now
+ spurns will be cold in my sword. Despatch this, I pray you, for I would
+ hasten to Jerusalem, leaving you my conquered princedom, whose head is
+ Ilon and whose foot is the city of Ramoor. Thine as thy heart speaks,
+ Oswald."
+
+ _Char._ Your father's hand?
+
+ _Ber._ Doubt flies from it, although
+ The vein is alien, sir. It is his hand.
+ And, I do think, his heart, wherein, my lord,
+ Your gentleness to me, like creeping rain,
+ Has moistened love's dry root, whose pent-up bloom
+ Is by that nurture freed, and magical
+ Now glows before us.
+
+ _Char._ This I would believe. [_Starts off right_]
+ Vigard and Biondel must have this news
+ From my slow lips, lest with the sudden truth
+ They strike ablaze. They have their mother's fire.
+ Albanian Gartha was not one to die
+ And leave her sons no part in her wild race. [_Exit_]
+
+ _Ber._ You are not Gartha's daughter?
+
+ _Ard._ No, my lord.
+ Claris of Corinth bore me, and my flame
+ Is joy, not anger. O, this miracle
+ You've wrought for me!
+
+ _Ber._ I wrought?
+
+ _Ard._ 'Tis no less strange
+ When God through his bare tool reveals his hand,
+ Than when invisible his power stirs
+ And makes a chasm in sense. So when you stood
+ Before me, Bertrand's self, with yet the voice,
+ The eyes, the heart of Vairdelan, I knew
+ That was my miracle. O Heaven-sign
+ At which my world grew blithe and shook May-boughs
+ With birds in every branch!
+
+ _Ber._ You've no more fear
+ For Charilus?
+
+ _Ard._ None, none.
+ Nor for myself.
+
+ _Ber._ Yourself?
+
+ _Ard._ O, seems no soul need trouble now
+ In this vast world!
+
+ [_Re-enter Charilus and sons_]
+
+ _Bion._ You are not Vairdelan?
+
+ _Vig._ You're Bertrand, Oswald's son?
+
+ _Ber._ 'Tis true.
+
+ _Vig._ That truth
+ Should cut your throat, and I could lend my sword
+ For such a matter.
+
+ _Bion._ Come! What knightly plea
+ Coats this deceit with honor?
+
+ _Ber._ None, my lord.
+ If I've made trespass deeper than your love
+ Will bear me out, my hope is in your pardon.
+
+ _Bion._ A lie made you our guest, and guest you are
+ Until we meet on Suli plain.
+
+ _Char._ My son!
+
+ _Ard._ Call you that pardon, Biondel?
+
+ _Bion._ I speak
+ No pardon.
+
+ _Ard._ But you shall--you must. O, say it!
+ You know our father goes to Oswald.
+
+ _Vig._ Know
+ That fools and women talk! The gates are sealed.
+
+ _Bion._ I'll guard the pass against my father's self
+ If so much rudeness may make stand between
+ His death and life.
+
+ _Char._ My sons, I thank your love,
+ But I go down. The guards, the gates are mine,
+ And to my will they open.
+
+ _Vig._ 'Tis that girl,
+ That silvery Greek----
+
+ _Char._ If your quick blood must stir,
+ Let manners grace it.
+
+ _Ard._ O, my dearest brothers,
+ Do you not love me?
+
+ _Bion._ Better than you know.
+ We love you, serve you, though yourself obstruct
+ The way to safety.
+
+ _Vig._ You would trust the man
+ Who wrapped him in a lie to enter here?
+ Sat at our father's board and brake his bread
+ To feed an enemy?
+
+ _Ber._ The bread I brake
+ Fed friendship's heart in me, and made this roof
+ A temple. Do you not know me, Vigard?
+
+ _Vig._ Nay,
+ I knew a Vairdelan--you are not he.
+
+ _Bion._ If Oswald means no harm to Charilus,
+ Let him pass on. Jerusalem awaits
+ His savage sword.
+
+ _Char._ My son, that Oswald thus
+ Compels me to him is to me but proof
+ That hearts may greet above long years of hate.
+ In this I see Love beckoning Man across
+ The wastrel lands of war to fields unwet
+ With blood, to days----
+
+ _Vig._ Unhearted cowards then!
+ Praise Allah, we yet live where rapiers thresh
+ The fields of men and leave the bravest standing!
+ Is 't not the Prophet's word that Paradise
+ Lies 'neath the shade of swords?
+
+ _Char._ Allah be yours!
+ But I would walk beneath unrisen stars,
+ Beyond hate's eyeless clouds----
+
+ _Bion._ O, spare us, sir!
+ Each day brings its own sun, and by that light,
+ No other, men must walk. If this our time
+ Be dark to you, 'tis in your vision, not
+ In the lit heavens, from whose shoreless depth
+ No hook of prayer or prophecy may draw
+ One star before its hour. Pray you be done
+ With this moon madness. Banissat will meet
+ The force of Oswald. With the morn he comes
+ To seal his troth with Ardia----
+
+ _Char._ By no word
+ Of mine. If you have given him pledge, your honor
+ Shall dip to dust and drudge your forfeit out,
+ Ere virgin bondage pay it. Hark, Biondel,
+ And hear me, Vigard! I alone shall meet
+ Earl Oswald. If the blood I shed yet cries
+ For blood, here are the veins shall make it dumb.
+
+ _Bion._ But, sir,----
+
+ _Char._ No more. Your sister stays with you.
+ Regard her will, nor ope these doors unbidden
+ To Banissat.
+
+ _Ard._ I stay? O, never think
+ I shall not go with thee!
+
+ _Char._ You go?
+
+ _Ard._ I'm safe
+ With thee, my father. Here....
+
+ _Vig._ Here you have brothers!
+
+ _Ard._ I mean no slight upon you, but my fate
+ Keeps with my father.
+
+ _Char._ I should doubt the God
+ Who bids me go if I denied you this.
+ Thyself art Peace, and where thou goest moves
+ Her radiance. Make you ready. And good-night, all!
+ Sir Bertrand, know the sleep that fits the heart
+ For journeying. [_Exit right, rear_]
+
+ _Vig._ [_To Ardia_] There's one will stop your way--
+ Prince Banissat!
+
+ _Bion._ We'll send him word this hour,
+ For while the edge be on his sudden love
+ He'll thank us to be swift.
+
+ _Ber._ You loved me once,
+ My lords.
+
+ _Bion._ True, son of Oswald.
+
+ _Ber._ Though you used
+ Some bitter words, I know your inmost heart
+ Holds me a man undoubted. There I'm stamped
+ In honor's verity; and when I vow,
+ By my soul's faith, that Charilus is safe,
+ You know 'tis truth.
+
+ _Bion._ Be you our father's hostage,
+ If this mad thing must be. Stay you with us,
+ And we are silent.
+
+ _Ard._ Stay? You ask too much.
+
+ _Vig._ No fear, soft sister. Mark him. We're refused.
+ He'll stuff the air with words, not clear it with
+ One pinch of proof.
+
+ _Ber._ My lords, were I to stay,
+ 'Twould make an act of faith lose point and purpose,
+ And blazon doubt before my father's face.
+
+ _Vig._ You mark?
+
+ _Ber._ 'Twould louder cry of war; uproot
+ Love's seedling in its tenderest hour, and make
+ Once more the bane and night-weed spring. But hear
+ An oath of mine. If Charilus meet harm
+ In Oswald's camp, I shall return and ask
+ The same stroke from your hands.
+
+ _Ard._ O, do not swear!
+
+ _Ber._ By every hope I have to enter Heaven,
+ By the right hand of God, by this white cross
+ That knew my mother's last, death-holy kiss,
+ By every sacred thing I know and love,
+ If Charilus comes up these heights no more,
+ Here shall I lay my life beneath your sword.
+
+ [_Barca re-enters right_]
+
+ _Barca._ [_To Bertrand_] The master asks a word with you, my lord.
+
+ [_Exit Bertrand with Barca_]
+
+ _Ard._ Will you accept his oath?
+
+ _Vig._ Go to your room.
+
+ _Bion._ We'll talk alone.
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, hear me first. You think
+ To force me to the arms of Banissat.
+ Give over that wild thought.
+
+ _Bion._ 'Twas not so wild
+ An hour ago.
+
+ _Ard._ Fate lifts the hand that laid
+ Compulsion on me. I am free. O, free!
+ No strait of life or death can make me less
+ Than mistress of myself.
+
+ _Bion._ Our destiny
+ Is bound with Banissat. Make him our foe,
+ And where shall we find peace? Not on these peaks.
+
+ _Ard._ Is he our jailer then? This Banissat?
+ Our prison his good favor? Nay, the world
+ Has many roads, and courage even yet
+ May blaze a new one.
+
+ _Bion._ Rooted life is best.
+ I am not one to make my bed on winds,
+ Or stroll the earth for fortune's grudged scraps
+ Snatched from a rapier's point.
+
+ _Ard._ Know this. My hand
+ Shall never lie in Banissat's. Give up
+ A hope so barren. There's better pasturage
+ For wits so bold as yours. Now Oswald holds
+ The breadth of Suli plain, the heights of Tor,
+ Winged by the sea from Ilon to Ramoor--
+ A principality whose circuit leaves
+ Avesta as a fly pinned to a wall.
+
+ _Vig._ What's Oswald's fief to us? We are no sons of his.
+
+ _Ard._ Lord Bertrand holds the princedom here
+ While Oswald goes to wars in Palestine.
+
+ _Bion._ He told you this?
+
+ _Ard._ Did you not read as much
+ In Oswald's letter? There 'twas plainly said.
+
+ _Bion._ Still is our surest hope with Banissat.
+
+ _Ard._ When Bertram! is your friend? O, more than friend!
+ A brother!
+
+ _Bion._ Ah ... do you say "brother"?
+
+ _Ard._ True
+ As though he had been born our father's son!
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Vigard_] You hear?
+
+ _Vig._ With more than ears.
+
+ _Bion._ We have been blind.
+
+ _Vig._ A brother!
+
+ _Bion._ All is clear enough, now that
+ We've eyes for it. Your pardon, sister.
+
+ _Ard._ Pardon?
+
+ _Bion._ Pray you! We thought your scorn of Banissat
+ Marked you of creeping spirit, when your aim
+ Shot o'er our lowered eyes.
+
+ _Vig._ Ay, she has sped
+ Before our boldest care of her, and left
+ Our duty lurching.
+
+ _Ard._ These are drunken words.
+
+ _Vig._ If you would wed Lord Bertrand,----
+
+ _Ard._ O, you think....
+
+ _Bion._ Your hope has shown its wing. Best bid it fly.
+
+ _Vig._ Speak without fear. This changes all.
+
+ _Ard._ You mean
+ You'll not delay us? You will let us go?
+
+ _Vig._ And speed you too! High stroke, this anxious hour
+ To journey in his care!
+
+ _Bion._ Yet shielded by
+ Our father's dignity.
+
+ _Ard._ How you mistake!
+ He does not woo me!
+
+ _Vig._ Now the modest foot!
+ But we have seen the other. Trust us, sister.
+
+ _Bion._ Mistake? I now recall his looks, his sighs,
+ As from a love immured,--his songs, too warm
+ For piety's cool breath,--and more that tends
+ To happy proof.
+
+ _Vig._ How dare he woo thee when
+ Mere Vairdelan? This blade had stood between!
+
+ _Bion._ Such beggar suit would then have cheapened thee
+ Beneath a prince's wearing. [_Leading her to door, right_]
+ No drooping now!
+ The way lies clear.
+
+ _Ard._ O, brother----
+
+ _Bion._ Get you in.
+
+ _Ard._ Will you not listen?
+
+ _Bion._ Leave your hope with us,
+ Your secret is our own. [_Closes door upon her_]
+
+ _Vig._ Here's change of sky.
+ You trust Lord Bertrand?
+
+ _Bion._ That is now our course.
+ Our father will go down.
+
+ _Vig._ What's in your heart?
+ I'll open mine.
+
+ _Bion._ I beg you do.
+
+ _Vig._ Ramoor
+ And Ilon now are crownless. Suli's prince
+ Must have new governors.
+
+ _Bion._ But Christian ones.
+ That bars our way.
+
+ _Vig._ The Prophet's cloak fits well
+ With any fortune.
+
+ _Bion._ Ah....
+
+ _Vig._ We've but to change
+ The color, not the cut.
+
+ _Bion._ [_Listening_] He comes!
+
+ _Vig._ We'll speak.
+
+ _Bion._ Not yet, my Vigard. Let this fruiting hope
+ Swell to a golden fall. Wait with the sun.
+ No green and forward plucking.
+
+ [_Re-enter Ardia_]
+
+ _Ard._ Hear me, brothers----
+
+ _Bion._ Not now. The prince!
+
+ [_Re-enter Bertrand, right_]
+
+ _Ber._ I pray your answer, friends.
+ Let us go down unhindered, and my oath
+ I leave with you, a hostage sure as though
+ With iron bonds you held my breathing form:
+ For in that oath I leave no treasure less
+ Than honor, knighthood, and what in me moves
+ Deathless to God.
+
+ _Bion._ It is enough. Our guest
+ Is free.
+
+ _Ber._ Once more my brothers!
+
+ _Bion._ Know us ever
+ By that dear name.
+
+ _Vig._ And this deep oath you take
+ For Charilus' sake, is sworn too for our sister?
+
+ _Ber._ For Ardia? No, my lord.
+
+ _Vig._ Do you say no?
+
+ _Ber._ I must so answer you. For the fell harm
+ That touches her would of myself make end.
+ My honor so impeached would cease to breathe
+ The air itself made foul. I could not come
+ Having no life to bring me.
+
+ _Bion._ We believe you.
+ Go with our father. Take our sister too.
+ And we upon these heights shall pray, as you
+ On Suli plain, that Charilus may see
+ His sons again.
+
+ _Ber._ Come, let him know! This wished
+ Obedience will give him sleep.
+
+ [_Exeunt Bertrand, Vigard, and Biondel, right rear_]
+
+ _Ard._ Is 't best
+ That Truth be dumb? I'll watch this weaving Fate,
+ And feed her web with silence.... Oh, with hope!
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT II
+
+
+SCENE 1. _A hall in the castle of Suli. Heavy doors open left, half-way
+up. Large window with iron grating, rear. Couches, chairs, scattered.
+Tables from which servants are removing the remnants of a feast. They
+are quarrelling, chaffing, singing, as the curtain risen._
+
+
+ _First Ser._ Shifty, there!
+
+ _Second Ser._ What, can't a soldier eat?
+
+ _First Ser._ You a soldier, lickspoon?
+
+ _Second Ser._ I've drawn a sword, sir!
+
+ _First Ser._ Ay, and cut a cheese.
+
+ _Third Ser._ [_Lifting flask_] Here's to----
+
+ _Fourth Ser._ [_Seizing flask_] No man shall guzzle my master's wine
+ before me. [_Drains vessel_]
+
+ _Third Ser._ [_Sadly, turning up empty flask_] Not after you, either.
+
+ _Fifth Ser._ Well, well, and two moons back we were saying grace over
+ ditch-water!
+
+ _Sixth Ser._ Ay, we were good Christians then. A full stomach makes lean
+ prayers. Now we've such a plenty we can spare the devil a fillip, and
+ never a grace for it.
+
+ _First Ser._ [_Tugging at table_] Take a leg there! This is no
+ grasshopper. [_Others help him move table to wall, right_] Look about
+ you! The maskers will be in here.
+
+ _Second Ser._ Here? They'll be everywhere to-night. Such a jig-making
+ over the new prince!
+
+ _Second Ser._ Not a corner to drop into and sleep off a good supper with
+ a clear conscience!
+
+ _Sixth Ser._ Sleep? What have we to do with sleep? We fight, we eat, we
+ dance. That's my soldier!
+
+ _Second Ser._ We kill, we cut, we caper! [_Sings_]
+ The soldier rides on Fortune's wheel,
+
+ _All._ Round we go,
+ Round we go!
+
+ _Second Ser._ Now up the head and now the heel,
+
+ _All._ Round we go,
+ Round----
+
+ [_Enter seventh servant_]
+
+ _Seventh Ser._ Quiet, you devils! The master's coming.
+
+ _Second Ser._ What, can't a soldier sing? Haven't we fought like true
+ men? When did we give quarter? When did we show mercy? And now can't we
+ be happy? Can't we take breath?
+
+ _Seventh Ser._ Sh! and I'll tell you what I've seen. I've seen the
+ daughter of Old Wisdom.
+
+ _Sixth Ser._ He get a daughter!
+
+ _Seventh Ser._ The maid of Kidmir. Ardia of the Stars they call her, but
+ if the sun could shine in the middle of a dark night she would be like
+ that.
+
+ _First Ser._ Foh, the Lady Berenice will put out her candle.
+
+ _Seventh Ser._ The Lady Berenice is as like her as the back of my hand
+ to Juno's cheek!
+
+ _First Ser._ A heathen comparison! There's a Christian blow for it!
+
+ [_They scuffle. Enter Oswald in talk with Bertrand. Servants finish
+ their work quietly and go out_]
+
+ _Osw._ My heart is whole again, now you've escaped
+ The claws of Kidmir.
+
+ _Ber._ Say the arms that closed
+ Like God's around me!
+
+ _Osw._ Fox, and lion too.
+ That's Charilus. I knew him young,--when blood
+ Tells nature's truth,--ere he had sucked
+ Philosophy's pale milk and made his truce
+ With prudence and long life. The heart then his
+ He carries now----
+
+ _Ber._ Then, sir, you must have known
+ The Maker's marvel,--youth that outstripped age
+ And grayest saints in virtue.
+
+ _Osw._ Tut! No matter.
+ You're safe. And he is here ... within these walls.
+
+ _Ber._ A guest of faith who holds your honor bound
+ High hostage for his life.
+
+ _Osw._ My honor? Trust me!
+ I'll care for that. No more I'll blush to lift
+ My shield i' the sun. The spot of thirty years
+ Shall be wiped out.
+
+ _Ber._ With love, my father?
+
+ _Osw._ [_After a pause_] Ay,
+ 'Tis love shall do it.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Lifting his father's hand to his lips_] You bind my heart to you.
+
+ _Osw._ Too soft, my warrior. Keep such woman's play
+ For Berenice. She will thank you for it.
+ I'm rough and old, and need the soldier clap
+ To start the singing blood. [_Clapping Bertrand_] A blow with good
+ Red heart in 't!
+
+ _Ber._ Berenice?
+
+ _Osw._ Ah, that takes you!
+ She's here at last. Prince Frederick arrived
+ Three days ago, and with him his fair daughter,
+ Too dear of value to be left behind,
+ The prey of quarrelling kings. You'll dance with her
+ To-night.
+
+ _Ber._ You'll pardon me. I shall not dance.
+
+ _Osw._ Faugh, there's the monk again! Why, boy, we'll pray
+ The better for a little tripping,--fight
+ The better too. One dance with Berenice!
+ A beauty, sir, who makes me hate the years
+ That lie 'tween youth and me. She was to wed
+ A son of mine by vow above her cradle,
+ And I have buried every son save you.
+
+ _Ber._ May I not keep one vow?
+
+ _Osw._ The pope long since
+ Released you. Now----
+
+ _Ber._ My compact was with Christ.
+
+ _Osw._ Why cling to one when all the rest are broken?
+
+ _Ber._ It is the one lies wholly in my choice.
+
+ _Osw._ You left your cell.
+
+ _Ber._ Do you forget 'twas you
+ Who shook to ground my cloister walls, and locked
+ All holy doors against me?
+
+ _Osw._ True, I did it.
+ And with good warrant. Broadest Christendom
+ Upheld my right and gave me back my heir.
+ Small gain if you refuse to wed. My need
+ Is not for sons but grandsons now. My boy,
+ You'll let me see your children at my knee?
+ Ho, hide your face? Then there's a heart in you.
+ Why should I toil through blood and groans and fire
+ To make a name my shroud will wrap with me?
+
+ _Ber._ Toil then to give this land to God, and live
+ So long as love shall live in men.
+
+ _Osw._ Pale fame!
+ Have you no blood of mine? How could my fire
+ Father this sluggish monk? There was a maid
+ On Kidmir, Charilus' daughter, who has come
+ In wag of him, which speaks a fearless wench,--
+ She taught you nothing in those moons you passed
+ Upon her peaks?
+
+ _Ber._ Sir?
+
+ _Osw._ When I saw her face
+ Flash from her veil, I could have sworn
+ Your vow was drowned in her lake-eyes, and that
+ Her captured softness had made easy way
+ For royal Berenice. Now you talk
+ Out of your cowl----
+
+ _Ber._ Not so! I am a knight!
+ Your words have made me one! Now could I draw
+ This sword that knows not blood----
+
+ _Osw._ I'll bout with thee
+ For any woman. Come! Thou'lt be a man
+ Ere long. Come, sir!
+
+ _Ber._ You've set a foot most foul
+ Upon the flower of time!
+
+ _Osw._ It seems I've hit
+ The mark i' the very eye.
+
+ _Ber._ The whitest thought
+ That holds her first must shrive itself!
+
+ _Osw._ So, so!
+ Come, end the song. She's yours. 'Tis not the moon
+ You cry for, take an old man's word.
+
+ _Ber._ The moon
+ Were nearer to me!
+
+ _Osw._ Trrr-rrr-rr!
+
+ _Ber._ My lord?
+
+ _Osw._ A woman. Ask and have. I'll send her here.
+ This is the hour to bait you, and I'd not lose it
+ For half of Suli.
+
+ _Ber._ Stay! I will not see her.
+ I dare not look upon her lest I lose
+ Christ and myself.
+
+ _Osw._ Are you so tuned? We'll have
+ A wedding yet.
+
+ _Ber._ Forget that word, and I
+ Forgive you for it.
+
+ _Osw._ A wedding, prince of Suli.
+ This plain shall ring to Antioch.
+
+ _Ber._ Nay, father,--
+ And yet I thank you that your heart would make
+ So fair a maid my bride.
+
+ _Osw._ Fair? That's no word.
+ She's glory's darling pearl,--the morning's eye
+ That makes the night forgot! When you have seen her----
+
+ _Ber._ When I have seen her?
+
+ _Osw._ Ay,----
+
+ _Ber._ Do you not speak
+ Of Ardia?
+
+ _Osw._ Ardia! Gods! Wed Kidmir's trull?
+ Make me a doting grandsire to the heir
+ Of Charilus? Hear it, stars! Am I the fool
+ O' the earth? Give up my English forests, bare
+ My purse for troops, and foot by foot fight way
+ To Suli sands,--all this that I may set
+ A droning dotard's line upon a throne,
+ And be the ass of chronicle? O, poison!
+ Well, well, I'm done. The girl is fair enough.
+ And you shall have her if she pleases you.
+ But Berenice--there's your bride, my boy!
+
+ _Ber._ Wed Berenice? With that name you save me.
+ By that I see the darkness coiling deep
+ Along my bridal way. 'Twas Ardia's name
+ That lit the path till I dared let my eyes,
+ Though not my will, go venturing on 't.
+
+ _Osw._ My son,----
+
+ _Ber._ Never again, my father, speak to me
+ In this night's strain. Till morning I shall pray.
+ And then I fast. Good-night.
+
+ _Osw._ One moment. One!
+ The sunrise feast? Will you not be with us?
+ I drink with Charilus the cup of peace.
+
+ _Ber._ And love that breaks no peace?
+
+ _Osw._ [_Assenting_] See how you bend me?
+ All that you ask I give, but you to me
+ Yield nothing.
+
+ _Ber._ Sir, this sword, my knightly suit,
+ And princely title, make denial for me.
+
+ _Osw._ Your pardon. I forget you count it much
+ To give a crust and cell for this broad kingdom.
+ I who have paid my heart out for a crown
+ Must thank you now to wear it.
+
+ _Ber._ Good-night.
+
+ _Osw._ O, son,
+ Have you no patience with a man grown old
+ In many battles? Now feel I my age,
+ Knowing the dearest blows of my long life
+ Have bought me but this shadow. In you is drained
+ Ambition's heart,--my every burning aim
+ Fails here in you, and cools unforged, unshapen.
+ Yet do you turn from me as though 'twere I
+ Not you who gave the wound that parts us.
+
+ _Ber._ I?
+
+ _Osw._ Of all my sons I loved you best. You think
+ I gave you to the friars with no twinge
+ Here at my heart? Your mother said "One son
+ We must return to God," and I said "Yea,
+ So it be not my Bertrand." But her will
+ Ran 'gainst me. When she had her way, I longed
+ Through many a day to have you at my side,
+ While you were happy with your songs and saints,
+ Your father quite forgot.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Stirred_] Nay, not forgot.
+ And I am with you now.
+
+ _Osw._ O, let me feel
+ My son is mine! I'll yield you anything.
+ Ay, even Ardia! She shall be my daughter----
+
+ _Ber._ By heaven that keeps me true, I will not hear
+ That name again! There's maddest music in it.
+ I see her when I hear it. [_Covering his eyes_]
+
+ _Osw._ [_Aside_] I see the lime
+ Will catch you.
+
+ _Ber._ Again, good-night.
+
+ _Osw._ One favor, son.
+ And slight too, by 'r lady!
+
+ _Ber._ Speak it, sir.
+
+ _Osw._ I gave my word you'd wait on Berenice.
+ I' faith, I know not what excuse to make
+ To Frederick. 'Tis barest courtesy
+ To give her greeting.
+
+ _Ber._ I will welcome her,
+ Our guest.
+
+ _Osw._ Enough! [_Going_] You'll wait us here?
+
+ _Ber._ I'll wait.
+
+ [_Exit Oswald. Bertrand sits with head bowed and does not heed maskers
+ who enter and dance about him. They cover him with their garlands
+ as they go off. A song is heard within_]
+
+ What save winds shall kiss his bones
+ Bleaching on the desert stones?
+ What but waves o'er him shall sigh
+ Who doth drowned sea-deep lie?
+ What save worms to him shall come
+ Locked in earth, bound, keyless, dumb?
+
+ Wild the wind and cold the wave,
+ Sharp the tooth within the grave!
+ Be such kisses for my ghost,
+ Heart, my Heart, when thou art lost!
+ Love me, Love, an hour and we
+ Mock the cold eternity!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Taking up a flower_] Eternity in this?
+
+ [_Ardia enters. He does not see her until she speaks_]
+
+ _Ard._ Prince Bertrand?
+
+ _Ber._ [_Rising_] You?
+ Not Berenice!
+
+ _Ard._ Ah ... you wait for her?
+
+ _Ber._ Who brought you here?
+
+ _Ard._ The earl. Your father.
+
+ _Ber._ He!
+ What said he?
+
+ _Ard._ That you prayed to see me, sir.
+
+ _Ber._ O, faithless! He deceived you.
+
+ _Ard._ I will go.
+
+ _Ber._ Stay--tell me--how you fare.
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, you await
+ The princess.
+
+ _Ber._ You've all comfort? No least lack?
+
+ _Ard._ I've food and bed, but little company.
+
+ _Ber._ My father's plans press hard, and I'm a part
+ Of them. Each hour he calls me.
+
+ _Ard._ I know, my lord,
+ This is not Kidmir. I've my father too.
+ You've yours ... and Berenice.
+
+ _Ber._ Nay, it seems
+ Fate hath her changelings. You have come, not she.
+
+ _Ard._ I sought no meeting, sir, but being here,
+ I'll ask you of my father. Is he safe?
+ Earl Oswald means no treachery to his guest?
+
+ _Ber._ At sunrise he will drink the cup of peace.
+
+ _Ard._ That's hours away! He knows your life is pledged
+ For Charilus' safety?
+
+ _Ber._ No. I will not wake
+ A doubt against his honor.
+
+ _Ard._ He should know.
+ I've seen his eyes. Good hap, you have your mother's.
+
+ _Ber._ If he be vile as you so fear he is,
+ My pledge would be no leash to his hold will.
+ He'd chain me here till he destroyed your brothers.
+ Let him know naught, I'm free to keep my oath.
+ But this should not be spoken. We do wrong
+ To talk of things that have no being save
+ In our own midnight fears.
+
+ _Ard._ Well, I shall sleep.
+ Good-night, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ Am I not Vairdelan?
+
+ _Ard._ Ay, when you smile so.
+ [_Holds out her hands, and drops them untouched_]
+ Far, O far from Kidmir!
+
+ _Ber._ Yea, an eternal journey my lost soul
+ May find it. Ardia, counsel me. Two ways
+ Stretch long before me, and I faint
+ In daring either. Give me of your strength.
+
+ _Ard._ My strength? I have none.
+
+ _Ber._ You have God's.
+ Men, proud in valor, stray and lose his hand;
+ The woman holds it ever, walking floods
+ And trampling fire where men go down.
+
+ _Ard._ Tell me!
+ How may I help you?
+
+ _Ber._ Sit then. I will speak.
+ [_She sits; He stands near her_]
+ I have agreed to be the sovereign
+ Of sword-won Suli.
+
+ _Ard._ None will better serve
+ Where he is master. O, this spear-torn land
+ Shall flower to heaven and mate her bloom with stars!
+
+ _Ber._ A bloom that dies with me?
+
+ _Ard._ Death cannot make
+ The spirit barren.
+
+ _Ber._ [_At distance_] Through me my father hopes
+ To found a princely house o'er-topping Asia
+ With Christ-lit towers.
+
+ _Ard._ Oh!... Then you will wed.
+
+ _Ber._ [_His eyes down_] My bride is chosen.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Rising_] Chosen? [_Sits again_]
+ Nay.... I know....
+
+ _Ber._ [_Returning_] Your hidden eyes hide not the loathing there
+ For me forsworn. Why have I troubled you?
+ Look on me, Ardia. I am not yet fallen.
+ I take your answer. You have chosen my way,
+ And I set forth upon it--_not_ forsworn.
+
+ _Ard._ That word is naught. I do not think of it.
+
+ _Ber._ Must man not keep his pledge?
+
+ _Ard._ To mortals, yes.
+ For so our lives are knit, and part to part
+ Keep sound and whole. But pledges unto God
+ Man cannot make or keep till he may bind
+ The Will that journeys with the launched world.
+ So might His rivers say "Here will we rest,
+ And worship thee," nor run into the sea,
+ And God must be content though all his fields
+ Burn waterless. So might the winds vow Him
+ Unbroken calm, and God who needs his storms
+ Must still his own desire while his dear earth
+ Goes pestilent.
+
+ _Ber._ Unsentient things! He shares
+ His will with man.
+
+ _Ard._ But not to enslave his own.
+ Christ seals no bond the lips lay on the soul
+ That is each instant new as life, as change,
+ As the importuning world. Ah, he who sells
+ To one hour's narrow need the zenith light
+ Of unborn days would snuff out time and know
+ No rising sun. Himself would be a slavedom
+ Where never Christ would walk.
+
+ _Ber._ Is 't Ardia speaks?
+
+ _Ard._ Truth speaks, not I. If man must vow,
+ Let it not be to love no woman,--wear
+ The vest of fire, and in a sunless cell
+ Chain Heaven-arteried life,--then peering out,
+ Cling to the nested eaves transfixed to see
+ His fled desires wear the horizon flame.
+ But let him vow his Christ shall shrink no vein
+ Of broad and pauseless being; ay,--shall keep
+ Sweet surgence with his blood, climb with his spirit
+ Time's lifting hills, and hold in watch with him
+ The unshrouding pinnacles where love puts off
+ The old clouds for the dawn. Forsworn? O, heart
+ Cell-bound, thy very vows deny thy Christ.
+ Who serve him wear no chains.
+
+ _Ber._ You think me true?
+ And yet I felt your wounded, doubting eyes
+ Raining me scorn. Why was it, Ardia?
+
+ _Ard._ Scorn?
+ I have forgot why 'twas--or shall forget.
+
+ _Ber._ And there was pity too, that dropped your lids.
+ And would have sheltered me. Is that forgot?
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, that.... I'll tell you that. I thought of Love,
+ Man's angel, and the heart-lone way of him
+ Who missed and found her not. Never to take
+ More courage from the fall of her sure feet
+ On heights that wind between death and the stars;
+ Or where his road burns through the shadeless sands,
+ Reach for the hand with fountains in its touch
+ And feel the palm-breath round him. Not to know
+ Her eyes when night is come, and there's no star;
+ Her breast, that pillowing the darkened waste,
+ Keeps warm the bitten earth and gives him dream
+ To meet and match the dawn. So wept my thoughts,
+ Forgetting that you are no wanderer,
+ But kingly housed will rule a tamed realm.
+ Or should a harvest come of spears, not grain,
+ Yet is your princess brave and beautiful,
+ And bears, may be, a mating heart. Love then
+ Will come to you----
+
+ _Ber._ My princess?
+
+ _Ard._ Berenice.
+ Your father's choice ... and yours.
+
+ _Ber._ My Ardia! Mine!
+ Could such a lie creep to your soul and find
+ No lances at the door? [_Kneels, kissing her hands_]
+ My love, my love, my love!
+ Let honors fail, and stars forget my name,
+ 'Tis thou shalt walk beside me, thou my chosen!
+ I'll hear thy footfall on the winter steep,
+ And take thy hand where desert noons are white,
+ But close thy breast shall lie upon my heart,
+ Nor pillow the bitten waste, my own, my own!
+ [_She moves from him. He rises_]
+ Why are you silent, pale, and heaven-still?
+
+ _Ard._ I must be still. I've mourned my heart-walls thin.
+ This joy will break them. Joy to hear your voice
+ With love's mate-music in it cry to me.
+ My joy! I'll drink it all, nor lose one drop,
+ For I shall have no more.
+
+ _Ber._ No more? No less
+ Than life can hold!
+
+ _Ard._ Hear me, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ You love me!
+
+ _Ard._ I shall not be your wife.
+
+ _Ber._ You're mine--all mine!
+
+ _Ard._ You hold your vow yet sacred, breaking it
+ By the sole might of love. You do not feel
+ The vision round you in whose light that vow
+ Falls like a grave-cloth from an angel's limbs.
+ Ah, Christ would be no bridal guest of ours,
+ Shut out by your heart's fear.
+ [_He stands as if stricken_]
+ You see 'tis true.
+ You listen for his sanction, and you hear
+ The ring of your own vow.
+ [_He sits bowed_]
+ You hear it now
+ Above your passion's chime. 'Twill fill the air
+ When love's mad bells grow quiet, and your soul
+ Asks the old question. Let me then be far
+ From thee, nor stay to be a clasped fire
+ Eating thy side.
+
+ _Ber._ You'll heal me of my fear.
+ [_Reaching his hands to her_]
+ My fountain and my palm!
+
+ _Ard._ Your doubt would stir
+ Beneath your tenderest deep. My nearing step
+ Would as a trumpet start its buried storm
+ To sweep our meeting eyes.
+
+ _Ber._ If Christ would give
+ A sign,--leave me no choice,--no other way
+
+ _Ard._ The torch of Fate but blinds us when the heart
+ Beareth no light.
+
+ _Ber._ Not Fate, but Heaven--there
+ I'd read my sign.
+
+ _Ard._ Hope not, my lord, that Heaven
+ Will drive me to your arms. Farewell.
+
+ _Ber._ No, no!
+ To keep you I'll dare hell----
+
+ _Ard._ Dare hell? My love
+ Walks not that fiery verge, but waits thine own
+ In regions nearer God. There we shall meet,
+ And there will be no hell.
+ [_Turns to go, but is drawn back by his grief_]
+ Thou art a prince
+ Of Christ. Arise and rule this land for him.
+ There is no sin in you. You've kissed my hands,
+ And they are bright as stars!
+
+ _Ber._ O, can you go?
+ You do not love me. In your breast are wings--
+ No heart, but wings that seek the mountain sky.
+ Go perch above me, leave me dying here.
+ And cool your bosom with a virgin song
+ To mateless heaven!
+
+ _Ard._ Who is cruel now?
+ You have the world to feed on, need not eat
+ Your heart as I must--I, the woman. Dear,
+ Where Kidmir cliffs climb highest to the sky
+ I'll keep my watch, but thou shall rise above me
+ In thought of men. O'er all discerning shall
+ Thy purpose wing, perhaps be drunk of clouds,
+ But light shall follow where thine aim has sped,
+ And leading upward with your comrade world,
+ My Kidmir shall seem lowly, where I walk
+ With stintless ache beneath the cedar boughs
+ On pain's moon nights. And oh, the Springs to pass,
+ When each bride-bud shall be a wound to me,
+ When grasses young, and softly pushing moss,
+ Shall urge my feet like fire, and I must stand
+ Quite still ... quite still ... with all my unborn babes
+ Dead in my heart.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Motionless_] You dare not leave me now.
+ You dare not, Ardia.
+
+ _Ard._ I dare not stay.
+
+ [_As she nears the great doors they rumble shut and are noisily barred
+ without_]
+
+ _Ard._ Ho! Open, open, open! I pray you, open!
+ [_Beats on door, then leans to the silence_]
+ Shut in ... shut in! So Oswald's treachery
+ Begins with me. My father, we are lost.
+ You are to die, and I--to-morrow, oh,
+ My honor will go wasting on the fields
+ With every soldier's breath! You hear, my lord?
+ We are shut in....
+
+ _Ber._ The miracle!
+
+ _Ard._ Together....
+
+ _Ber._ The sign! the sign!
+
+ _Ard._ For all the night....
+
+ _Ber._ For all
+ Eternity! There is no other way.
+ I take you as from Christ. My bride, my bride!
+
+ [Curtain]
+
+
+SCENE 2. _The same. Gray of morning seen through grating of window,
+rear, where Bertrand stands looking out and upward. Ardia is sleeping
+on a couch. The dawn-light wakes her and she starts up._
+
+
+ _Ard._ 'Tis morning. Bertrand! You have watched all night?
+
+ _Ber._ O, there has been no night.
+
+ _Ard._ I slept it through.
+
+ _Ber._ Thy body slept, but thou hast been with me
+ O'er all the world, and farther than the world,
+ Out where the life begins.
+
+ _Ard._ That may be true,
+ For I had wondrous dreams.
+
+ _Ber._ You speak of dreams?
+ A magic touched me, and I woke from dream
+ Knowing my life. What ways we went! All things
+ Seemed new, warm with the Maker's hand, as young
+ As our own eyes, but 'twas eternity
+ That kept them sweet, unaging.
+
+ _Ard._ It was Love
+ Who gave thee eyes to see the world immortal
+ Even in our own.
+
+ _Ber._ Do all Love's votaries
+ Walk with such magic sight?
+
+ _Ard._ In truth! I've seen
+ A beggar woman tread the road-side dust
+ As it were showered gold, because she had
+ Love's eyes. And we--what joys our joy shall find!
+ The pearling skies with rose-breath drinking ours
+ 'Tween sea and dawn! The leaves that turn i' the wind
+ And tremble in our hearts--the brook-song that
+ Began beyond the stars--the woodland nests,
+ Breast-warm----
+
+ _Ber._ And one is ours.
+
+ _Ard._ The lark that leaves
+ His meadow-mate and reels at the sun's door
+ Dropping his song of fire and clover-dew
+ Down to her heart.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Kissing her_] As this in thine!
+
+ _Ard._ And all
+ Life's dearer-veined joys,--the way-side hands
+ That pluck to camp-fire glow,--the smile of age,
+ Gift-sweet and wise beside the garner door----
+
+ _Ber._ Ay, dear are these ... but when we came again
+ From that far, holy place....
+
+ _Ard._ Ah, in your dream.
+
+ _Ber._ Where no words go or come....
+
+ _Ard._ When we came back?
+
+ _Ber._ Walking the light between the parted stars,
+ And met the days that knew us ... naught could hide
+ The eternal joy within it. Twas a world
+ Whose beauty lay allwheres. O, not alone
+ In morning skies and mated larks a-wing!
+ Each rag-hung thing was dipped in chosen time
+ And wore its royal hour.
+
+ _Ard._ If that could be!
+
+ _Ber._ What seers, what eyes of light, outshone the pain
+ That gave them being! Tears that silvered graves
+ Globed in their pearl the immortal hope of men,
+ And seemed as beautiful as prophecy
+ Burning in its own truth. Ay, where a man
+ Fell murdered, crying "I forgive," the ground
+ Sprang as a garden----
+
+ _Ard._ Murdered? O, not that!
+ How could you say it? I had forgot, forgot!
+ Love in your dream looked you quite through the soul
+ Of Time on things to be? What saw you then?
+ Ah, tell me!
+
+ _Ber._ Then?... Then came this dimmer light
+ Which you called morning, and I saw no more.
+
+ _Ard._ I would I knew!
+
+ _Ber._ You fear even now?
+
+ _Ard._ O, me!
+
+ _Ber._ Sweet, leave these shadows--dreams of ancient night
+ That cling too late upon a day-warm world.
+ Must I persuade you still that Oswald means
+ Our happiness?
+
+ _Ard._ Hark you! They come, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ The sunrise feast. Fit place and time to break
+ The fast of love.
+
+ _Ard._ O, hear! So many feet!
+
+ _Ber._ Dear trembler, do not fear.
+
+ _Ard._ They're here, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ Welcome the world. It has no eye can make
+ Our own seek earth.
+
+ [_Doors open. Enter Frederick, Oswald, Charilus, Berenice, with lords
+ and ladies attending. Servants follow bearing trays, and lay the
+ table. Ardia hastens to her father and they talk apart. Oswald
+ advances to Bertrand, right, the others lingering left_]
+
+ _Osw._ I am forgiven?
+
+ _Ber._ Forgiven!
+ Ask God and Love! I'll thank you all my life
+ That you did force me take my only way
+ To Heaven.
+
+ _Osw._ Hmm! And I spent a bitter night
+ Fearing your morning face.
+
+ _Ber._ It was my soul's
+ Birth-night.
+
+ _Osw._ God bless me, you are grateful, sir.
+ But you've good reason. [_Looks at Ardia_] I had no such mate
+ To make the dark hours fly.
+
+ _Ber._ Pray speak to her.
+
+ _Osw._ In my good time.
+
+ _Ber._ Nay, now!
+
+ _Osw._ The day is long.
+ I shall be gentle, for I owe her much
+ Who gives me back my son. Come to our guests.
+
+ _Ber._ Does Frederick----
+
+ _Osw._ Ay, he knows all, and bears
+ No grudge.
+
+ _Ber._ Knows all?
+
+ _Osw._ He clapped my plot as though
+ His own thick noll had hatched it.
+
+ _Ber._ And the princess----
+
+ _Osw._ You see her smile? There's answer for you. Come!
+ No blush! Put on a face. Your bridal news
+ Shall sauce our banquet.
+
+ [_They move to guests_]
+
+ _Fred._ [_To Bertrand_] Greet you, sir! But why
+ So pale, my lord? I fear me you have spent
+ A sleepless night.
+
+ _Ber._ Ay, as the stars.
+
+ _A Lord._ The stars?
+ He winked then, by the rood!
+
+ _Ber._ What do you say?
+
+ _Lord._ I say the stars do wink, most gracious prince.
+
+ _Osw._ Come, find your seats, my friends! Yet two of us,
+ Lord Charilus and my unworthy self
+ Must keep our feet till we have drunk the wine
+ Made sacrosanct by one night's rest upon
+ The Virgin's altar.
+ [_Bertrand places Ardia's seat by her father, who stands at the left
+ of Oswald_]
+ You, fair Berenice,
+ Sit at my right, and on your other side
+ The graceless prince of Suli begs for room.
+
+ _Bere._ He beg, my lord? I have not heard his tongue,
+ And for his eyes, I fear no leek of Wales
+ Could pull a beggar's tear from them to oil
+ This suit. But he is welcome.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Taking seat by her_] Thank you, lady.
+
+ [_When all are seated save Charilus and Oswald a priest enters bearing
+ a chalice of wine which he places on table before Oswald_]
+
+ _Osw._ This is the cup by angels visited
+ In night's deep hours. Herein they dropped the peace
+ Of Heaven, which Charilus and I shall take
+ Into our hearts. I know in truth it holds
+ Sweet peace for me--the peace that thirty years
+ My veins have ached for. Charilus, what say you?
+
+ _Char._ My heart can hold no more of peace than now
+ Doth fill it, but I drink with you, my lord.
+
+ [_Drinks from goblet which Oswald has filled from chalice, and Oswald
+ drinks from goblet filled by Charilus_]
+
+ _Osw._ [_Dropping his glass_] Is peace a fire?
+ I' faith, this kindles me!
+ Thou smileless priest, take off the Virgin's cup!
+ You think it needs another blessing, sir,
+ Since my bold hand has touched it? Out with you!
+ [_Exit priest with chalice_]
+ That pinch-face has seen hell and fasts to keep
+ The ghost down. I'll not fast. Set to, my friends.
+ Fill up your bowls, for I've a health for you.
+ We drink to Berenice, bride to be
+ Of Bertrand, prince of Suli and my son!
+
+ _A Lord._ [_As all lift their glasses_]
+ We pledge the bride of Bertrand--Berenice!
+
+ _Ber._ Drink not, my lords, till you have changed that name
+ To Ardia, daughter of our noble guest,
+ Lord Charilus!
+
+ _Fred._ [_Rising_] If this be sport, Earl Oswald,
+ A world of groans shall pay for 't!
+
+ _Bere._ [_In mock swoon_] Oh.... I faint....
+
+ [_Her ladies help her_]
+
+ _Osw._ You bawling ass! You thousand times a fool!
+
+ _Ber._ [_To Oswald_] You've woven a maze about me, and I'm blind
+ With 't, yet I see to pluck one truth,--my bride
+ Is Ardia. No other under Heaven! My lords,
+ It is the wine----
+
+ _Osw._ Would then 'twere in your throat!
+ Is this the riddle of your morning smile?
+ Your fair compliance, soft submission? Sir,
+ By my heart's blood, I'll give you to the sword
+ Ere you shall make me father to a drab--
+ The spoil of your own lust, the--What, you draw?
+ Ay, strike me down! Let me be first to fall
+ Beneath your mighty sword! The rust has lain
+ A lifetime on it, and a father's blood
+ May cleanse it bright as Heaven!
+
+ _Ber._ O, my Christ!
+
+ _Osw._ Yea, call on him, and he will hear thee too,
+ Who honorest so thy father!
+ [_Bertrand stands speechless_]
+ Now, my lords,
+ Since he no longer brays, I have a tale
+ To tell you. I, too, had a father, though
+ The world has long forgot him.
+
+ _Fred._ No, my friend.
+ Well do I bear in mind his fair, proud face,
+ And glory of his arms.
+
+ _Osw._ He was struck down
+ Because a minion, straying from the hearth,
+ Looked on his beauty with her nestling eyes.
+
+ _Fred._ For no more cause?
+
+ _Osw._ I swear it. Friends, if death
+ Were the cold price for kissing of a jade,
+ Who here would be alive? For so slight sin
+ Was my brave father murdered. Charilus, speak!
+ Was not the princely heart of John of Clyffe
+ Ripped with a hate-keen sword,--the sword of him
+ Who claimed the lordship of those rebel lips
+ That chose my father liege?
+
+ _Char._ It is too true.
+
+ _Osw._ Who better knows? Say that a wilding flies
+ The builded bower, hearing a lordlier song
+ Pass on the wind than her dull mate can tune,
+ Must then the singer die, who scarcely knows
+ His song is heard, or that a bold wing follows?
+
+ _Char._ Whether the earl of Clyffe sang then to woo,
+ As I believe, or for the love of song,
+ As you do say, my lord,--his death was sin,
+ And he who wrought that woe shed tears enough
+ To clear his stain, if tears may whiten souls.
+
+ _Osw._ A murderer's tears! But what of mine, the son's?
+
+ _Ber._ Your oath--your honor, sir! Where is the love
+ You swore should cleanse your shield?
+
+ _Osw._ Safe in my heart.
+ And burning for my father.
+
+ _Ber._ God of pity!
+
+ _Osw._ That was the love I spoke of.
+
+ _Ber._ All be deaf
+ But hell!
+
+ _Osw._ Hear the full tale, my friends. I swear
+ The earl of Clyffe died for no more offence
+ Than I have here set out,--and I, his only son,
+ Kissed his red wounds and from his breast unbound
+ This bloody scarf--[_taking scarf from his bosom_] that then was
+ crimson, now
+ In age-grown black bemourns my step that comes
+ So sluggish to revenge. For thirty years
+ Had passed ere I beheld his murderer,
+ Then face to face we stood ... and face to face
+ We stand ... for this is he, this Charilus
+ Of Kidmir--peace-lipped Cain--gray hypocrite,
+ Whose blood is honey in his veins, whose eyes
+ Stare on the world as he were some bland god
+ Who made it and said "good."
+
+ _Char._ Sir, I would send
+ My daughter to her brothers. Grant me this.
+ And I am ready for what death you please.
+
+ _Ard._ I will not go. One sword shall strike us both.
+ [_Turns to Oswald_]
+ But first a word to you. When Charilus falls,
+ Say farewell to your son. He pledged his life
+ To my two brothers for our father's safety,
+ And you, who know him least, yet know he'll keep
+ That pledge.
+
+ _Osw._ What, creature, will you lie?
+
+ _Ard._ I speak
+ The truth. Strike, if you can, this gray old man,
+ Silvered in service to the one high God,
+ Sinless as sunlight, fair in sweetened age,--
+ Let forth his sainted blood, and Bertrand lives
+ No longer than the shortest time between
+ Suli and Kidmir.
+
+ _Osw._ That's a lifetime then!
+ He shall not step! I'll have him hung with chains
+ Till he is fast as rooted oaks in earth!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Stunned_] A guest betrayed....
+
+ _Osw._ Betrayed? I promised him
+ Such treatment as he gave my blood. And he
+ Shall have it--death!
+
+ _Char._ Peace be my heir!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Takes stand by Charilus_] Death, sir?
+ First break this sword! Thy sin must be unnamed
+ Until the angel who doth write thee damned
+ Gives it foul christening. I break my pledge.
+ I will not go to Kidmir. Here I'll give
+ My life for Charilus.
+
+ _Char._ No blow for me!
+ O, may I unavenged lie forgot,
+ And my forgiving blood make barren ground
+ Alive with asphodel----
+
+ _Ber._ Nay, I will strike,
+ Though a father's sword meet mine!
+
+ [_Charilus trembles, and supports himself by Ardia's arm_]
+
+ _Osw._ Commend me, stars!
+ You counselled well. [_To Bertrand_] Fool, do not draw. There's none
+ Will run against you. Charilus is dead,
+ And by a way more sure. His holy goblet
+ Held one rich drop the angels put not there
+ Nor Virgin blessed. See how he pales--and stares--
+ And cannot get his voice? So are we spared
+ A swan-song homily trickling through his beard.
+ Be off, old pray-lip--off, and take with you
+ Your cat-foot peace and milky piety!
+ I serve a vengeful God who armeth men
+ For his own wars!
+
+ _Ber._ Heaven, draw thy clouds about thee!
+
+ [_Charilus dies in Ardia's arms_]
+
+ _Osw._ He's dead! The air of earth is sweet again.
+ I have no enemy!
+
+ _Ber._ [_Looking up from the body_] You have no son.
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT III
+
+
+SCENE: _On Kidmir Pass. Moonlight paling to dawn. Ardia alone,
+struggling up the Pass._
+
+
+ _Ard._ [_Looking back_] They do not follow. I am safe from that.
+ [_Sits on a rock_]
+ Why should I climb? There is no rest up there.
+ But there is death, mayhap,--and that is worth
+ The sorest climbing. O, my father dear,
+ Is 't thy dead self so heavy on my heart?
+ Thou shouldst be light upon thy spirit wings,
+ And give me of thy freedom.
+ [_Gaina enters from above_]
+ Gaina, hast found
+ The spring?
+
+ _Gaina._ 'Tis farther up.
+
+ _Ard._ More steps.
+
+ _Gaina._ Wait here.
+ Barca will bring you drink. Nay, sit you still.
+
+ _Ard._ I must. How this weak body masters us,
+ Cooling the bravest will that in strong limbs
+ Might dance to any goal! Yet do we say
+ The will is lord, whose flush is in the blood
+ And fades wi' the paling body. By that lie
+ We cling to Heaven and immortality.
+ ... O, I am lost so deep I need not fear
+ The farthest bolt of God! Out, out the pale
+ Of his concern!
+
+ _Gaina._ Why now, honey dear!
+ A sip of fine spring water and you'll be
+ A lark o' the morning! All's not bad, I say.
+ There's Banissat would marry you to-morrow!
+ What pretty words he spoke, and took us in
+ Like a good father--but I saw him look!
+ And he were shaved he'd have a merry eye.
+ Such meal and honey! _I've_ a thankful tooth!
+ Come now, what say you? Run from such a fortune,
+ And stumbling is no matter. Ay, a trip
+ Or two were well enough.
+
+ _Ard._ Yes, foolish 'twas
+ To fly from Banissat.
+
+ _Gaina._ You know it? Well, well,
+ If it's your own right mind you've run to, dearie,
+ There's no harm done past mending.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Taking a small dagger from her dress_] This had saved
+ My feet these weary steps.
+
+ _Gaina._ Sweet Mary, save us!
+ Wouldst slay a prince for loving thee?
+
+ _Ard._ No, wretch.
+ I could not take another's life though 'twere
+ Of all the world the foulest.
+
+ _Gaina._ Bless the lass!
+
+ _Ard._ But out of pity I could take my own.
+ Why should my heart beat on and labor so
+ For merest leave to beat again?
+
+ _Gaina._ Now, now!
+ [_Enter Barca_]
+ Here's Barca, praise the saints! Now you'll take heart!
+
+ [_Ardia takes gourd from Barca and drinks_]
+
+ _Ard._ Thanks, Barca. But there's misery in the draught
+ That makes me keen again. I fear me I'll
+ Yet hope.
+
+ _Barca._ Will you walk on?
+
+ _Ard._ Yes, come.
+
+ _Barca._ [_Listening_] What's that?
+ A noise below!
+
+ _Ard._ Some one from Banissat!
+ I'll not be taken!
+
+ _Barca._ Come aside, my lady.
+ Here is good hiding.
+
+ [_They go behind a great rock half hidden by cedars. Bertrand enters
+ below. Ardia steps out and stands before him. He kneels_]
+
+ _Ber._ Spirit, hast come for me? I'll join thee, love,
+ When I have climbed this peak and met the sword
+ That sets my honor free.
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, rise, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ [_Rising_] Thy living self? Here in the night alone?
+
+ _Ard._ Barca is here, and Gaina.
+
+ _Ber._ Sweet, the moon
+ Makes thee so fair.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Smiling_] Was I not always fair?
+
+ _Ber._ [_Embracing her_] My living love! Sit here,--and now thy story.
+
+ _Ard._ I'll shorten it to get to thine.
+
+ _Ber._ You had
+ The dagger that I sent you? [_She shows it to him_] My sole gift
+ To love.
+
+ _Ard._ O, it was dear as death then seemed
+ To me!
+
+ _Ber._ Cast it away.
+
+ _Ard._ No, for love's sake
+ I'll keep it, and it shall do no work save God's.
+ Listen ... it prophesies.... I'll need it yet.
+
+ _Ber._ O, I was mad to send it! Would you wreck
+ This tent set fair upon the soul's long road,
+ By pain-craft wrought of every whiter dream,
+ Where God may sit with us and map the winds
+ That forward blow and back, the paths laid free
+ To His far end, and those where blind walls rise
+ Breast-piled with thwarted dust? Dear soul of me,
+ Would we know Heaven we must listen here,
+ And one word lost may mean a path all dark
+ When we fare outward. This is not for you,
+ This fear-born blade. Away with it!
+ [_She clasps it closer_]
+ Is not
+ Your danger past?
+
+ _Ard._ Not while Avesta loves.
+
+ _Ber._ O God! But tell me now the full, foul story,--
+ Yet not all foul, since you are here alive.
+
+ _Ard._ Your father----
+
+ _Ber._ I've no father!
+
+ _Ard._ --sent me forth
+ With my two servants. When we reached Avesta,
+ The prince met us with welcome, much too warm
+ Methought, so in the night we stole away
+ And reached the pass--all with some wit and care,
+ As you shall know hereafter. Now your word.
+
+ _Ber._ I was imprisoned.
+
+ _Ard._ Yes, I know.
+
+ _Ber._ A guard
+ Gave me his sword. I fought the others.
+
+ _Ard._ Fought?
+
+ _Ber._ And killed. Look on this blade. A brother's blood.
+
+ _Ard._ My love!
+
+ _Ber._ At last I am Earl Oswald's son!
+
+ _Ard._ My Bertrand! [_Drawing aside his cloak_]
+ You are wounded! Vairdelan!
+
+ _Ber._ That name is no more mine.
+
+ _Ard._ How did you pass
+ Avesta?
+
+ _Ber._ The guards were friends of Vairdelan.
+ I used the stainless name that I had lost.
+ O, I have lied to keep my word, and slew
+ That I might die!
+
+ _Ard._ Might die? You mean ... my brothers.
+ They must be merciful.
+
+ _Ber._ With Charilus slain?
+
+ _Ard._ O, me! I too shall die. And that is best,
+ If anything we do be worst or best.
+ I've read within my father's secret script
+ That earth shall lose its heart of fire, and lie
+ Dead-cold and dark with no green thing upon it.
+ Then this black crust shall bear no form of man,
+ Nor trace of him. Why then such ceaseless pain
+ To look a little longer on the sun,
+ When he who seals his eyes this day with dust
+ But leagues with time to reach the journey's end
+ Without the journey's ache?
+
+ _Ber._ Hast lost thy faith?
+ My heart, say earth must be its own still grave,
+ Our destiny lies farther. But were life
+ A march to naught, I'd choose it for the sake
+ Of one bright wonder by the way--your love,
+ My Ardia.
+
+ _Ard._ You love me, yet would die. Thou'rt mine!
+ And I will hold thee, yea, on this warm earth,
+ Not in some strange and tearless world!
+
+ [_While they speak Barca moves up the pass and listens_]
+
+ _Barca._ My lord?
+
+ _Ber._ Ay, Barca?
+
+ _Barca._ Men are on the pass.
+
+ _Ard._ Above?
+ My brothers! Oh!
+
+ _Ber._ I go to meet them.
+
+ _Ard._ Stay!
+
+ _Ber._ They shall not come to me. I go to them.
+ My honor, love, my honor!
+
+ _Ard._ O, men, men!
+ You build a shrine to love and ask us fling
+ Our lives, our souls into it. Once within,
+ The door forever shut, there sits a god,
+ A monster-god, your honor, and we must sue
+ For barest room to stand or crouch or kneel
+ Where by your oaths we should be sovereign.
+
+ _Ber._ The shrine itself is honor, dear, my heart.
+ That gone, we have indeed no holy place
+ To shelter love. Was 't not yourself who said
+ That man to man must keep his pledge?
+
+ _Ard._ Ah me,
+ That shining night! That night of golden wings!
+ And now comes this. Can such two nights be born
+ In the same world, and but one sun between?
+ [_Bertrand staggers_]
+ You're bleeding still!
+
+ _Ber._ Fast, fast.
+
+ _Ard._ My veil----
+ I'll wrap you with it! [_Binds wound_]
+
+ _Ber._ Thanks, for I would live
+ To die upon their swords.
+
+ _Ard._ Wait, wait, my lord!
+ O, do not meet them in their first deep rage----
+
+ _Ber._ Farewell!
+
+ _Ard._ You shall not see them till my prayers
+ Have turned their hearts from blood.
+
+ _Ber._ Part thou with hope
+ And pain will leave thee too. That is the wrench,
+ Not death.
+
+ _Ard._ Stay, stay! Are there not miracles yet?
+ I'll hide you yonder till----
+
+ _Ber._ They come!
+
+ [_Hurries up pass, staggers and falls_]
+
+ _Ard._ He faints!
+ The miracle begins! Here, Barca, Gaina,
+ Bear him aside. He swift! Then come to me.
+ O, gently, Barca! Haste!
+ [_Barca draws Bertrand behind the rocks_]
+ He shall be saved!
+ Thou'lt not deny me, Heaven! O, forget
+ That ever I blasphemed Thee!
+
+ [_Enter, above, Biondel and Vigard_]
+
+ _Vig._ Who is here?
+
+ _Ard._ My brothers!
+
+ _Vig._ Ardia, by my life!
+
+ _Bion._ 'Tis she.
+ What do you here?
+
+ _Ard._ I go to you. Where else
+ Shall I find shelter in a world now bare
+ Save where your hearts make gentle room for me?
+
+ _Bion._ What do you mean? Where is our father? Speak!
+
+ _Ard._ You have not heard? Why then do you go down?
+
+ _Bion._ For word of Charilus. No messenger
+ Has come. All night we watched. What can you say
+ More than this fearful meeting tells? No word?
+ Are you the ghost you look? Is Charilus safe?
+
+ _Ard._ Safe as yon Heaven would have him. He is dead.
+ [_Silence_]
+ You loved him, though you went another way
+ To find your God.
+
+ _Bion._ Our father dead? O, sister,
+ Not cold, not still, not silent to his sons.
+ Who loved his voice even when they most forsook it!
+
+ _Ard._ Oswald betrayed us.
+
+ _Vig._ O, my sword, 'tis thou
+ Shalt split his heart, though every spear in Suli
+ Then pierce my own! [_Going_]
+
+ _Bion._ Stay, Vigard!
+
+ _Vig._ Earth is fire!
+ Can you be still upon it? Where is Bertrand
+ With his deep oaths? O, coward! I will seek him----
+
+ _Ard._ No need. He'll come to you.
+
+ _Bion._ He'll keep his oath,
+ You think?
+
+ _Ard._ I know he will.
+
+ _Vig._ So knew you too
+ That Charilus was safe. Call him to life,
+ And we'll believe you yet!
+
+ _Bion._ How died our father?
+ [_Ardia weeps_]
+ No matter now. And Oswald cast you out?
+ Afoot?
+
+ _Gaina._ Ay, so he did! I'll answer that!
+
+ _Ard._ He sent us under guard.
+
+ _Gaina._ Ay, but afoot!
+ And 'twas a trudge to Avesta. O, the day!
+
+ _Bion._ Prince Banissat gave you no help?
+
+ _Gaina._ No help?
+ Who said so? There's a prince! He drew his sword,
+ And swore he'd drive Earl Oswald to the sea,
+ And said "Avesta's yours,"--that to my mistress,
+ She then bedraggled and so full of tears
+ She had no words to thank him. I did that!
+ Then we had sup and bed, and when my bones
+ Were sweet with sleep, why we must up again
+ And tug it to the peak.
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Ardia_] He sheltered you!
+ Then there was hope, which you have trampled down
+ By this mad flight.
+
+ _Ard._ I dared not think the prince
+ Would make my bitter fortunes his. In you
+ Lay my defence, and to your love I came.
+ You must make peace with Oswald. Yes, my brothers,
+ Although you write it with our father's blood.
+ He is all powerful. When Bertrand comes----
+
+ _Vig._ Ha, when he comes!
+
+ _Bion._ What then?
+
+ _Ard._ You may demand
+ Whate'er you will of Oswald, if you spare
+ The dear life of his son.
+
+ _Vig._ I'll have that life
+ And Oswald's too!
+
+ _Ard._ He'll make you any terms----
+
+ _Vig._ Ay, any terms, and keep none, once his son
+ Is safe.
+
+ _Bion._ [_Looking down the pass_] Who comes?--with gleaming lances? Ah....
+ The prince!
+
+ _Vig._ By Allah, he!
+
+ [_It is now dawn. Ardia steps back into shadow as Banissat and followers
+ enter. His retainers wait at entrance below while he advances_]
+
+ _Ban._ Good-morrow, friends.
+
+ _Bion._ Hail to you, Banissat!
+
+ _Ban._ I seek a dove
+ That fled my hand last night. Has 't flown your way?
+
+ _Bion._ Our sister is with us.
+
+ _Ban._ Then search ends here.
+
+ _Bion._ Her flight meant no ingratitude, my lord.
+ Her father's arms grown cold, she came to ours
+ By the shortest way, bringing her honor home
+ Where none might question it.
+
+ _Ban._ We love her more
+ For watchful care of what to us is precious
+ As to herself. Heaven-pure must be the bride
+ Of Banissat, and tainted Heaven will put
+ The earth to blush ere she will bring us shame.
+ I offer her my princedom.
+
+ _Ard._ [_Stepping out_] One whose veil
+ Is lost? Whose face is common to the eyes
+ Of beggars by the road?
+
+ _Ban._ O, bald and bitter!
+ But did not one, our Lady of Paradise,
+ Walk with bare brow among our counsellors?
+ And you are pure as she. Who dares to soil
+ The chosen of Banissat with whisper that
+ He saw you on this journey, forfeits eyes
+ And tongue. So silence shall give burial deep
+ To every slander.
+
+ _Ard._ You will not forget.
+
+ _Ban._ Yourself shall be my dear oblivion.
+ For Beauty keeps no records, has no past;
+ Her arms engird love's moment, and there is
+ No other time.
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, Beauty's history
+ Is writ beneath her bloom, and when that goes
+ The deep, uncovered scars are hated more
+ Because of love that kissed them unaware.
+ I dare not wed you, but say that I dared,
+ Wouldst grasp my broken fortunes when you need
+ Strong Antioch's staff and sceptre to make good
+ Your gates 'gainst Oswald? And I've heard, my lord,
+ That Antioch's daughter is a prize you seek.
+
+ _Ban._ Be not o'er-jealous, Ardia of the Stars,
+ For Antioch shall serve thee. There my suit
+ Is but a fair appearance,--there I woo
+ To make thy state secure, and thou shalt be
+ Bride of my heart unrivalled.
+
+ _Ard._ Hear me then!
+ I am betrothed to Bertrand. He is sworn
+ To me as I to him.
+
+ _Vig._ Death to your tongue!
+ You'd wed your father's slayer?
+
+ _Ard._ I would wed
+ Lord Bertrand. [_Kneels to Biondel_] Brother!
+
+ _Vig._ Give no ear to her!
+
+ _Ard._ If you would save Avesta and yourselves,
+ Make peace with Oswald. Trust not Antioch.
+ When Bertrand comes----
+
+ _Vig._ He will not come! He's not
+ A fool as thou!
+
+ _Ard._ He comes!
+
+ _Vig._ [_Lifting his sword_] Then here's his welcome!
+
+ [_Bertrand comes out and walks slowly to the group. Vigard, amazed,
+ lowers his sword_]
+
+ _Ber._ My friends, well met. You cut my journey short.
+
+ [_Gives his sword to Biondel_]
+
+ _Bion._ You have come back ... to death?
+
+ _Ber._ The blow, my lord.
+ Your work is wellnigh done. An easy stroke
+ Will finish it.
+
+ _Vig._ And whose is that?
+
+ _Bion._ Not mine.
+ I do condemn him, but can lift no hand
+ To seal mine order.
+
+ _Vig._ I am not so weak.
+ This blow for Charilus!
+
+ _Ard._ [_Staying him_] If Bertrand dies
+ My honor goes unto a grave so deep
+ No shoot of green will ever from it spring
+ For the world's eye to light on.
+
+ _Bion._ You make much
+ Of broken troth. There's many a maid has lived
+ In wedded honor with a second choice.
+
+ _Ard._ But I may not.
+
+ _Bion._ Peace, sister.
+
+ _Ard._ Let him live,
+ And Suli's glory will enwrap my name
+ Stainless and safe.
+
+ _Ban._ 'Tis safe with me. Ay, safer.
+ Let Antioch enlist with me, and I
+ Shall wear the name of Suli with my own.
+
+ _Ard._ You've yet to hear ... you do not know, my lord....
+
+ _Ber._ Sweet, plead no more. Let me go on to Heaven
+ If 't be God wills his gates shall ope to me.
+
+ _Vig._ You'll stop in hell a thousand years or so!
+
+ _Ard._ Wait! I will tell----
+
+ _Vig._ You've said too much!
+
+ _Bion._ Speak, Ardia.
+
+ _Ard._ In Suli castle where I was betrothed
+ To Bertrand, just one sun agone--but one--
+ He spent the night with me.
+
+ _Vig._ She lies!
+
+ _Ard._ Say now
+ If Banissat, or any lord save Bertrand,
+ Will make me wife.
+
+ _Bion._ Must I believe you?
+
+ _Ban._ No.
+ A woman's trick.
+
+ _Ard._ There's proof. Ask whom you will
+ Of Oswald's train--the lords who saw me cast
+ From Suli's door, too vile for word or touch.
+ Ask any trooper, jesting by the way,
+ And hear my name made foul. The army rings
+ With it. Ask any gossip of the tents----
+
+ _Ban._ O, stop her tongue! It thunders on me! All
+ The air is storm! Peace, or I'll strike her down!
+
+ _Bion._ This seals your death, Lord Bertrand. Now my hand
+ Is hot and willing.
+
+ [_Enter a messenger below. He gives a packet to Banissat_]
+
+ _Messenger._ Antioch sends this,
+ O, prince!
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Bertrand_] I had your word above all oaths
+ That you would guard our sister. When the priest
+ Strips bare the shrine, not outraged God or man
+ Shall show him mercy.
+
+ _Ard._ He is innocent!
+ 'Twas Oswald's plot to cast me in the dust--
+ And there I lie where all the world may see--
+ But Bertrand's soul is guiltless----
+
+ _Vig._ Guiltless! Tush!
+ Your puzzle's clear. [_To Biondel_] She dies with him.
+
+ _Ard._ I die
+ If Bertrand dies. But, oh my brothers, we
+ Are young--we love--will you not let us live?
+
+ _Bion._ [_To Vigard_] 'Tis best she dies.
+
+ _Ber._ You will not dare----
+
+ _Bion._ The prince
+ Shall be her judge.
+
+ _Ban._ First let us speak aside,
+ For Antioch fails us, and we've more to weigh
+ Than the quick death of this too-guilty pair.
+
+ [_Banissat, Biondel, and Vigard go off above_]
+
+ _Ber._ I have brought death upon you.
+
+ _Ard._ Life, 'tis life
+ Now beating in the dawn! What music! Hear it!
+ O, we shall live, my lord, and live together!
+
+ _Ber._ In Heaven, love.
+
+ _Ard._ True, for this planet too,
+ Ay, even this earth, is set in Heaven as deep
+ As any star. 'Tis we are heaven to eyes
+ In other worlds, and would be to our own
+ Could we believe. O, hope with me, my Bertrand!
+ No, no, not hope, whose other half is doubt,
+ And to its dark and fearful double owes
+ Its very radiance, too, too unlike
+ Belief's transmuting sun!
+
+ _Ber._ Ah, love, no man ere broke
+ Undrained his cup, or brewed again those drops
+ To his desire----
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, every man is new
+ In destiny, his star his own, and foots
+ Unmeasured paths.
+
+ _Ber._ On mortal feet.
+
+ _Ard._ Be 't so,
+ Each birth is a high venture of the soul
+ Feeling an untried way for deity's dream,
+ And none may know where th' deep and twilight trail
+ Shall flash with God-rift, and the dawn be his.
+
+ _Ber._ O, bravest, bow thy head----
+
+ _Ard._ Nay, nay, my lord!
+ Lock up your spirit, let mine rule this hour,
+ Or be with me the flame of faith that leaps
+ To deed in God. For we do help him, dear.
+ Our parcelled strength is whole and new in His,
+ A power born that touches us again,
+ Breeding our greater self that yet gives back
+ His own increase, until the way is strewn
+ Even with his miracles and ours. So works
+ The unending drama out, where every act
+ Begets an act yet greater than itself.
+
+ _Ber._ Let me but kiss thy hands.
+
+ _Ard._ You will not help?
+ You'll not believe? Is it so strange
+ That you should live?
+
+ _Ber._ That hate should let me live.
+
+ _Ard._ Is it more strange that halo should grow love-still,
+ Than that the wind should cease, as now it does,
+ To strip the bloom from yonder bough, and lie
+ Unfelt within its silent place? More strange
+ That life should keep its flow in your warm veins
+ Than that the sun now creeping on the peaks
+ Should wander down and on and lay in gold
+ The valleys of the world, moved by no hand
+ We see or name, but know, but know!
+
+ [_Biondel, Vigard, and Banissat re-enter_]
+
+ _Ard._ He lives!
+
+ _Bion._ He lives. Speak the conditions, prince.
+
+ _Ban._ [_To Bertrand_] Your life
+ Is spared that she whose name is lost
+ May wear your own. You shall remain on Kidmir peak,
+ And make her yours by every priestly rite
+ With open, fair observance. Then Earl Oswald
+ Must greet as daughter one he vilely mocked
+ From his proud door, and far and wide acclaim her
+ Princess of Suli. Will his love for you
+ So bow his heart?
+
+ _Ber._ I may not speak for him.
+
+ _Ard._ He will consent.
+
+ _Ban._ And, further, he shall give
+ To Biondel the governorship of Ilon.
+ And grant Ramoor to Vigard.
+
+ _Ber._ Not for price
+ Of my poor life will Oswald yield these towns
+ To any save a Christian.
+
+ _Ban._ So we think.
+ And therefore will these lords forswear
+ The Prophet for your Christ.
+
+ _Ber._ Such sudden change----
+
+ _Vig._ Not sudden, sir. We've long debated it
+ In secret talk, but loved too well our prince
+ To so forsake his banner.
+
+ _Bion._ Now the day
+ Is here when as his true and Christian friends
+ We may best serve him, and yet keep the peace
+ For which our father died.
+
+ _Ber._ He is alive again
+ If you be true. Though wonder is in the hour
+ I will not stare or question.
+
+ _Ard._ Question nothing.
+ Do you not live?
+
+ _Bion._ The prince will summon Oswald
+ To earliest parley, and make our offer known.
+
+ _Ban._ Nor lose an instant. Here begins my journey.
+
+ [_Signs to retainers who start down the pass_]
+
+ _Bion._ We need not give you thanks when you've our hearts
+ That hold them.
+
+ _Ban._ By the sunset hour the earl
+ Shall give me answer. Meet me in Avesta
+ 'Tween dark and light.
+
+ _Bion._ We will, my lord.
+
+ [_Exit Banissat_]
+
+ _Ber._ O, strange!
+ Will he keep faith?
+
+ _Bion._ If you must doubt his heart,
+ Trust his affliction. Antioch lost to him,
+ What can he do but smile on Christian Oswald?
+ By that same argument I am condemned,
+ But beg a respite till this pushing peace,
+ Upsprung in haste, may bear you buds of proof.
+
+ _Ber._ What world is this?
+
+ _Vig._ Climb you no farther, sir.
+ Your wounds forbid. Our servants shall be sent
+ To bear you up.
+
+ _Bion._ Ay, wait you here, my lord.
+
+ [_Exeunt Biondel and Vigard above_]
+
+ _Ber._ Love, see the sun!
+
+ _Ard._ It is my heart, my heart!
+
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+ACT IV
+
+
+SCENE: _Same as first act. An altar near wall, left. Seven maidens
+putting fresh garlands about the hall._
+
+
+ _Mylitta._ She must be dressed by this. Come, let us sing!
+
+ _Mirimond._ No, wait! Our part is yet undone. Here hangs
+ A withered garland.
+
+ _Alenia._ Here another. See!
+ And there! Well, we are slack.
+
+ _Eudora._ Who would not be?
+ We've cause for sleepy wits and fingers too,
+ With seven days and nights of revelling.
+
+ _Garla._ And Charilus warm in 's grave.
+
+ _Myrana._ He'll be no colder
+ Let come a hundred months. Ten years, ten days,
+ 'Tis all the same i' the ground.
+
+ _Daphne._ And yet, I think
+ The daughter smiles too soon.
+
+ _Mylitta._ Troth, I would smile
+ For such a lord if all the world beside
+ Were wrapped in shroud.
+
+ _Mirimond._ I would the English knights
+ Were come! Full fifty, Barca said, would ride
+ From Suli.
+
+ _Mylitta._ I know you, chit. Your eyes will find
+ Their way.
+
+ _Mirimond._ Mayhap not all of us will take
+ The homeward ship for Corinth. Did we think
+ When we set sail we'd come in time to see
+ Our Ardia married?
+
+ _Mylitta._ You will dream.
+
+ _Garla._ If dreams
+ Were men, what maid would go unwed? Not you,
+ Mylitta.
+
+ _Myrana._ Come, our song! 'Tis time!
+
+ _Eudora._ Come, all!
+
+ [_They sing by Ardia's door_]
+
+ Mornings seven have we been
+ Wardens at thy door;
+ Now thy lord shall enter in,
+ And we come no more.
+
+ Mornings seven have we strewn
+ Lilies at thy door;
+ Now the virgin watch is done.
+ And we come no more.
+
+ Mornings seven have we sung
+ At thy maiden door;
+ Now the seventh morn is rung,
+ And we come no more.
+
+ [_Door opens and Ardia comes out. Gaina follows_]
+
+ _Ard._ A kiss to all! Who's happier here than I
+ Shall have my place.
+
+ _Mirimond._ We'll ask Lord Bertrand that.
+ Thou'rt no more mistress of your yeas and nays.
+
+ _Ard._ O, but I am! I have a votary now
+ Who'll make my words his wishes and himself
+ Bring them to pass.
+
+ _Mylitta._ No doubt. You'll cough
+ In oracles. He'll puzzle o'er your sneeze
+ That he may do its meaning. I have heard
+ Such husbands do inhabit a green moon,
+ And one may come to earth.
+
+ _Ard._ Kiss me, Mylitta!
+ Naught else will stop your mouth. O, dearest girls,
+ No father's here to give me to my lord,
+ And yet I smile, I wed. For why?--his love
+ Is not in earth with his dear body. No!
+ 'Tis all about me here, bathing my heart,
+ Now on my brow, now whispers at my ear,
+ Now runs before my eyes to make a light
+ Where they would rest. He loves this day as I do!
+ Yet I had stayed this busking marriage
+ Had not my brothers pressed me to such haste
+ And peace not waited on it. Think, dear maidens,
+ Peace everywhere! Avesta safe and free,
+ And Oswald's sword in sheath--
+ What is that chanting?
+
+ _Gaina._ [_Looking from parapet_] A train comes up the heights.
+
+ _Mylitta._ The English Lords!
+
+ [_Enter Barca, left_]
+
+ _Ard._ Barca, who comes?
+
+ _Barca._ Prince Banissat, my lady,
+ With all his court attending.
+
+ _Mirimond._ Banissat!
+ This is a Christian wedding.
+
+ _Ard._ We are at peace.
+
+ _Barca._ He brings you gifts. Your brothers go to meet him.
+
+ _Ard._ Where is Lord Bertrand?
+
+ _Barca._ Near at hand. He comes
+ This way.
+
+ [_Exit Barca, left_]
+
+ _Ard._ My girls, wouldst see what dainties lie
+ In yonder chamber?
+
+ _Mylitta._ Nay, we'll wait.
+
+ _Ard._ Moonstones
+ For golden hair--crescents and amber stars
+ For tresses dark----
+
+ _Girls._ O! O!
+
+ _Ard._ Veils of spun silver----
+
+ [_Maidens buzz through door right_]
+
+ _Ard._ Go, give them all!
+
+ _Gaina._ All, mistress? Not----
+
+ _Ard._ Go, go!
+
+ [_Exit Gaina. Bertrand enters, left. He is in princely costume_]
+
+ _Ber._ Art found, my heaven?
+
+ _Ard._ Thou'st not a fear thy Heaven
+ Is lost in me?
+
+ _Ber._ A doubt were my soul's shame.
+ [_Points up the heights_]
+ Does not yon giant cross arise to say
+ Christ reigns on Kidmir? Far as Suli plain
+ Men see the sun upon its silver sides
+ And hands upborne in prayer forget the sword
+ That sleeps unwakened.
+
+ _Ard._ Will it sleep for long?
+
+ _Ber._ Ay, else your father's death were devils' sport,
+ Not Heaven's will.
+
+ _Ard._ What word to-day from Oswald?
+
+ _Ber._ You name him?
+
+ _Ard._ Is he not our father?
+
+ _Ber._ O,
+ God's angel thou, not mine!
+
+ _Ard._ Does Biondel
+ Now wear the crown of Ilon?
+
+ _Ber._ That's confirmed.
+ And Vigard has Ramoor.
+
+ _Ard._ They profit much
+ By their new faith.
+
+ _Ber._ Do they not spare my life?
+ So Oswald gives these crowns. You think he pays
+ Too dear?
+
+ _Ard._ O, barest alms! I'd have the earth.
+ No less,--then want the sun,--ay, circling heaven,
+ And yet be beggared losing thee! But they
+ Must wear their purple o'er a Christian heart.
+ I would not doubt ... and yet....
+
+ _Ber._ They are the sons
+ Of Charilus.
+
+ _Ard._ And Banissat?
+
+ _Ber._ He vows
+ An endless peace with Suli.
+
+ _Ard._ And you are Suli.
+ Why am I fearful, knowing doubt is death?
+
+ _Ber._ Come, love, look down--nay, farther, toward the sea.
+ That sprawling mass that darkens now the plain,
+ Seeming to hugely breathe and cloud-like move,
+ Is Oswald's army making feast to-day,
+ For I, the prince, go wiving. Now I seem
+ To hear our names joined high in Heaven's air.
+ And Christ, too, listens smiling, knowing one land,
+ One throne is his forever. Sweet, 'twas he
+ Drew me from sheltered cell and flowered garth
+ To be his sovereign servant. He it was
+ Who called through you, who cried in Charilus' death
+ To wake my soul that shall not sleep again
+ Till Love has garnered all these eastern lands.
+
+ _Ard._ Amen, my husband-knight! I am content
+ To be your love next Christ. Within your heart.
+ 'Twill be sweet, gleaning where he walks before.
+
+ _Ber._ These words be your sole dower, for they hold
+ More sun for me than shining gold!
+
+ _Ard._ The guests!
+ Do you not hear them? Leave me now, my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ Thank patience and my stars, we reach the end
+ Of these stale ceremonies! Seven days
+ Of long, superfluous rites to make you mine
+ When our first kiss did wed us!
+
+ _Ard._ [_Mocking_] So ungentle
+ To your proud honors, sir? Nay, it is fit
+ Your wedding be as famous as your name,
+ O, Prince of Suli!
+ [_Voices heard, left_]
+ Go, to come again!
+
+ [_Exit Bertrand, right. Ardia turns to enter her room and faces Vigard
+ who comes on left. She draws her veil_]
+
+ _Vig._ Stay, sister.
+
+ _Ard._ Would you have me seen?
+
+ _Vig._ [_Throws back her veil_] Art fair
+ Again? As Kidmir skies!
+
+ _Ard._ It is my joy.
+
+ [_Enter left, Biondel, Banissat, and lords. Banissat pauses. The others
+ pass off, right_]
+
+ _Vig._ [_Taking Ardia'a hand to detain her_]
+ We have surprised our sister.
+
+ _Ban._ Blest the hour!
+ Now may I lay this gift within her hand--
+ Poor gift, that has no worth until that hand
+ Caresses it to splendor.
+
+ [_Kneels, offering her a small packet_]
+
+ _Ard._ [_Taking packet_] Courteous prince,
+ My thanks. And more than thanks that you should climb
+ Kidmir's uneasy steep to dearly grace
+ This day--for smiles of friends, more than fair gifts,
+ Do best adorn my bridal. [_Draws her veil and moves right_]
+
+ _Ban._ Night is come.
+ And through her mist the stars! [_Exit Ardia_]
+
+ _Vig._ Her bloom is washed
+ Somewhat with tears for Charilus, but she
+ Will flower again.
+
+ _Ban._ Now by the Prophet's soul
+ He who has kissed her lips had better've kissed
+ A flame of hell than so have touched
+ What shall be mine!
+
+ _Vig._ As thou dost love revenge,
+ Be patient.
+
+ _Ban._ Patience to the ox, to beasts
+ That dream 'twixt cud and whip! Am I not man?
+
+ _Vig._ You have endured, by truth.
+
+ _Ban._ Endured!
+
+ _Vig._ And now
+ Revenge! Ere night yon braggart cross shall bear
+ A burden that will start Earl Oswald's eyes
+ When he looks up from Suli plain.
+
+ _Ban._ This day
+ Shall see it! Come, once more let us look down.
+ See where the hosts of Allah charge upon
+ The sottish infidel! All yet is well.
+ The banner o'er Avesta signals still
+ The Prophet wins!
+
+ _Vig._ And when the tower of Suli
+ Gleams with the hoisted crescent, we shall know
+ Oswald is taken.
+
+ _Ban._ Ha! There's no way out!
+ The powers of Ilon, Avesta, and Ramoor,
+ Pen him in bloody triangle. Old rat,
+ You're in the trap! I should be there, not here,--
+ There at his throat----
+
+ _Vig._ Nay, here, my lord, you'll have
+ Your dearest triumph. Please you now, go in.
+ I'll watch here for the sign.
+
+ _Ban._ Your watch be short.
+
+ [_Exit, right. Re-enter Ardia_]
+
+ _Ard._ [_Holding out a flaming ornament_] Brother, see this!
+ The jewel of the house
+ Of Banissat. 'Tis sacred to his name.
+ I cannot take it, and he dare not give it.
+
+ _Vig._ It seems he dared.
+
+ _Ard._ What does he mean, dear Vigard?
+
+ _Vig._ To honor Suli's princess as most fit.
+
+ _Ard._ I tremble still from his deep look of fire,
+ And when I saw this burn methought his eye
+ Was yet upon me.
+
+ _Vig._ Fool, go to your maidens!
+
+ [_Enter Barca, left, with Ramunin_]
+
+ _Vig._ You're late, my man.
+
+ _Ram._ And yet in season, sir. [_Points up the heights_]
+ The cross is bare.
+
+ _Vig._ Get you within.
+ [_Exeunt Barca and Ramunin, left_]
+ Now, sister--
+ What, do you faint?
+
+ _Ard._ That face! Ramunin's face.
+ I saw it once, and shuddered many a day
+ Remembering it. The public crucifier,
+ Who serves the bloody prince of Antioch.
+ The same. What does he here upon this day
+ Of all the days of time?
+
+ _Vig._ 'Tis by your wish
+ That Kidmir gates are open.
+
+ _Ard._ And by yours.
+
+ _Vig._ Ay, let the world be witness you are made
+ The honored bride of Suli.
+
+ _Ard._ But Ramunin?
+ He said the cross was bare. Why such a jest
+ As horrid as his life? [_Looking out_] And all the knights
+ That were to come from Oswald--where are they?
+
+ _Vig._ They drank too deep last night for journeying
+ Up Kidmir road--or else they dare not cross
+ This outraged portal.
+
+ _Ard._ Have we not forgiven?
+ Ah, what is there? Look, Vigard, do you see?
+ A floating crescent!
+
+ _Vig._ Where?
+
+ _Ard._ O'er Suli tower.
+ O, this is Oswald's greeting to our house,
+ Better than any band of armed knights!
+ He lifts the Prophet's banner to his towers,
+ Even as you set the Savior's crucifix
+ On Kidmir! Now the one eternal God
+ Lives in his sign when cross and crescent smile
+ Love-set in the same heaven!
+
+ _Vig._ Allah be praised!
+
+ _Ard._ And Christ--forget not Christ!
+
+ _Vig._ We'll make an end now.
+ [_Exit, right_]
+
+ _Ard._ An end? Am I a bride--or sacrifice?
+
+ [_Goes in, right, at sound of approaching music. Enter, left, young
+ musicians playing flutes and harps. They pause before altar,
+ cross to right and seat themselves about Ardia's door. Guests
+ enter, filling rear of hall, and parapet. A maiden comes on,
+ dancing the grain-dance and scattering sesame. At the close of
+ dance, Ardia's maidens enter, each bearing a lighted candle
+ which she places on the altar. A Greek chant is heard as priest
+ approaches left. All wait his entrance, and the curtain falls,
+ rising again on the close of the ceremony. Bertrand and Ardia
+ stand centre. An aged priest at altar. Biondel and Banissat
+ conspicuous among the guests. Vigard not seen_]
+
+ _Bion._ Is all now done?
+
+ _Priest._ All's done. The spouse of Suli
+ May bow herself unto her master's feet,
+ Bespeaking so the love that has no wish
+ But service, no desire save her lord's will.
+
+ [_As Ardia would kneel, Bertrand prevents her_]
+
+ _Ber._ You shall not kneel.
+
+ _Ard._ 'Tis custom, dear my lord.
+
+ _Ber._ Then here it dies.
+
+ _Ard._ My mother did so much
+ For him who made her wife.
+
+ _Ber._ Thy knees shall bend
+ To God, and to none less. Reign at my side,
+ Princess of Suli, not my feet.
+
+ _Bion._ We hail
+ The bride of Suli!
+
+ _Guests._ Bride of Suli, hail!
+
+ _Vig._ [_Unseen_] Ho! Seize the traitor! Ho!
+
+ [_Enter Ramunin, right, and armed guards_]
+
+ _Ber._ Who speaks? And who
+ Is traitor here?
+
+ _Vig._ Thou, foulest murderer!
+
+ _Ber._ Who speaks?
+
+ _Vig._ Dead Charilus.
+
+ _Ard._ 'Tis Vigard's voice.
+ [_Vigard steps forth_]
+ What, Vigard, art thou mad? Wouldst shatter the globe
+ Of Heaven?
+
+ _Vig._ Nay, it was broken that same hour
+ When died our father.
+
+ _Ber._ Son of Charilus, speak
+ Your will. If you demand my life, 'tis yours.
+ I hold it by your gentle lease and love.
+ But while I ask not one poor breath for me,
+ I beg you pause, nor cast the innocent
+ To feed the vengeful and life-reaping fire
+ Oswald will kindle for his hapless son.
+
+ _Vig._ You think no fires will burn but of his kindling?
+
+ _Ard._ O shame! The crescent over Suli greets
+ The cross on Kidmir!
+
+ _Vig._ Ay, the crescent flies
+ From Suli, thanks to faithful Moslem hands
+ That set it there.
+
+ _Ard._ Ah.... Moslem hands?
+
+ _Vig._ You fool,
+ To think that Oswald fluttered compliments,
+ When he was dreaming how he'd bid you drink
+ Of that same cup he gave to Charilus!
+
+ _Ban._ Now, dearest lady, you are safe. To-day
+ The Faithful battled with the infidel,
+ And that bright crescent is the silent sign
+ We have the victory. Ramoor and Ilon
+ With pointed sword bore down on either side
+ The glutted, drunken army, while in front
+ Avesta like a whirlwind swept----
+
+ _Ard._ O, traitor!
+ You vowed unbroken peace with Suli!
+
+ _Ban._ Yea,
+ Will keep it too, for I am Suli now.
+
+ _Ard._ [_To her brothers_] Were you not sworn to Christ?
+
+ _Bion._ We are the Prophet's.
+
+ _Ard._ O, Heaven, hear not this! And Oswald's knights?
+
+ _Vig._ Sleep in Avesta's dungeons.
+
+ _Bion._ Banissat,
+ Avesta's golden prince, speak you the doom
+ Of Bertrand----
+
+ _Ard._ Doom? O----
+
+ _Ber._ Do not waste the breath
+ A kiss may save. A thousand times, your lips!
+
+ _Ard._ [_To Biondel_] Let him not die!
+
+ _Vig._ You'll pray soon that he may!
+ Speak, noble prince.
+
+ _Ban._ I, lord of conquered Suli,
+ Condemn the son of Oswald unto death
+ By crucifixion. Be his body nailed
+ Upon the cross now raised on Kidmir peak,
+ That Oswald may behold his groaning son,
+ And every Christian dog look up and see
+ How dies the Prophet's enemy.
+ [_To Ramunin_] Away!
+ Prick him with delicate tortures that yet leave
+ Him heart to heave his agony. Hear you!
+ If he live not three days upon the cross
+ Yourself shall hang beside him.
+
+ _Ram._ I've a hand
+ Has had some practice, sir.
+
+ _Ban._ We know it, fellow,
+ And therefore we employ you.
+
+ _Ram._ I put the nails
+ In young Deobus, he who hung five days
+ 'Twixt heaven and earth, and to the fifth eve groaned
+ As he would pull his heart up. I've a medal
+ Struck by the city for it.
+
+ _Ban._ I will match it,
+ If you match me the service.
+
+ _Ram._ That I'll do.
+ These English have strong hearts--will suck at pain
+ As life were in her dugs.
+
+ [_Exit Ramunin, guards, and Bertrand. Priest and guests follow. The
+ maidens huddle at door, right_]
+
+ _Bion._ Sister, you stare
+ Too hardly on this grief. It is a woe
+ That Heaven smiles on, and the cure now waits
+ In Banissat's fair mercy. You shall be
+ His royal wife, and Suli's princess still.
+
+ _Vig._ Speak to the prince.
+
+ _Ban._ Nay, let her hear my vow.
+ O, star of Kidmir, dear and beautiful,
+ I'll set thee in a bosom that shall be
+ A tender heaven round thee. Beat to earth
+ Is murmurous suspicion, and again
+ You shine unto the world, swept free of taint
+ By noble marriage with most careful rites----
+
+ _Ard._ I doubt, I doubt! One part, one point, one rite,
+ Broken in act, left gaping and divided,
+ One half performed, one half left all undone,
+ Leaves me dishonored still. She is not widowed
+ Who was not wife----
+
+ _Vig._ All's done! What more canst wish?
+
+ _Ard._ To lay my forehead on my husband's feet,
+ Which by the ancient custom of our house
+ Is maidhood's closing act, as 'tis the first
+ Of wifehood true. This thou wilt grant----
+
+ _Vig._ You're bound
+ By rites enough!
+
+ _Bion._ Canst stand uncertain on
+ So slight a matter?
+
+ _Ard._ Slight? Ah, you know naught
+ Of woman! Teach him, prince, that not a nick,
+ Or turn, or shade of custom would she spare
+ From this most holy ceremony. Wanting but
+ The smallest portion that gives leave to say
+ The measure lacks, she all her life will grieve,
+ Shed secret tears, and wear a blanchen face
+ When none knows why.
+
+ _Bion._ You shall not move us. Peace!
+
+ _Vig._ A brawling fancy!
+
+ _Ard._ Avesta's prince, thou who
+ Shalt be my lord, if any lord of earth
+ Be mine again, wouldst have my love, or hate?
+
+ _Ban._ Thy love, fair Ardia.
+
+ _Ard._ Then I pray you, sir,
+ Move thy forbearance yet one farther step
+ And pluck this boon for me. 'Tis near thy hand,
+ And O, how small a thing for you to give,
+ But as the sun of all my days to me!
+ Without it I may die----
+
+ _Ban._ Speak not of death. So sweet
+ I'll shelter thee, Death's self must bloom
+ If he creep near thy bower.
+
+ _Ard._ May I, my lord,
+ Keep honored place by thee when memory mocks
+ That place and honor? Grant me this, but this,
+ And here I swear if any act of man
+ May move a widowed heart, mine shall grow warm
+ To thee!
+
+ _Ban._ Do you speak truth?
+
+ _Ard._ Believe me, sir,
+ So dear a thing is this for which I sue,
+ That he who gives it must grow dear thereby;
+ And if he lift to him my prostrate life,
+ This gentle moment shall immortal be
+ And sweeten every hour we pass together.
+ Remembering this, my captive breast shall be
+ His free dominion, and my lips on his,
+ If they know warmth, shall take it from this cause,
+ This first dear tenderness.
+
+ _Ban._ We'll please you, mistress.
+ Bring in the man again.
+
+ [_Exit a guard_]
+
+ _Vig._ I beg you, prince----
+
+ _Ban._ By Allah, she shall have her beggar wish,
+ For no more reason than she wishes it!
+
+ _Vig._ It is her sickish humor, sir, to look
+ On him again. All this wild pother means
+ No more than that.
+
+ _Ban._ No more? We'll please her then
+ For our good peace to come.
+
+ _Bion._ A princely kindness.
+
+ [_They talk together. Ardia crosses to altar_]
+
+ _Ard._ Now one more miracle! God live in me,
+ And Christ direct my hand!
+
+ _Bion._ What do you say,
+ My sister?
+
+ _Ard._ But a word to mine own heart.
+
+ _Ban._ Nay, mine now, is it not?
+
+ _Ard._ So much of it
+ As dearest lenience may buy, my lord.
+
+ [_Bertrand is brought in guarded_]
+
+ _Bion._ The man is here. Now have your foolish will.
+
+ [_Ardia turns and looks at Bertrand. He is stripped of his rich dress
+ and wears only a girdled tunic falling to his knees. Arms and
+ feet are bare_]
+
+ _Ban._ [_To Bertrand_] Sir, we permit the lady of our soul
+ To end as her heart wills the rite that makes
+ Her wife and widow. Touch her not, nor speak.
+
+ [_Bertrand crosses to altar_]
+
+ _Ard._ Why should we touch, when souls inhabit eyes
+ And journey on a look? My heaven-lord,
+ Here is no priest to bless this act of mine,
+ But God will know his altar and the gift
+ I lay upon it. The life we thought to live--
+ That might have failed, and killed the dream now safe
+ From tarnish of the days. Earth has enough
+ Of blind and baffled lives, but great her need
+ Of dreams. And ours we leave with her, unworn,
+ Unpaled, warm round the love-seed she shall nurse
+ To million-budded life.
+
+ _Bion._ Come, make an end!
+
+ _Ard._ An end of love? The God of all the worlds
+ Cannot do that. Love born this darkest day
+ Shall be in flower on man's millennial path
+ And touch his step with Heaven.
+
+ _Vig._ Peace! Be done!
+
+ _Ard._ Ay ... done. My lord, think thou art in the world
+ Celestial, and from there smile on me--now--
+ [_Draws dagger from her bosom and stabs him. He falls_]
+ High God, as thou art Love, I struck for thee!
+ [_Bends over body_]
+ True aim. Full in the heart. I know the place,
+ For there my home is--there I live--and now
+ My house is down, I, too, must fall----
+
+ _Ban._ I'll pay thee!
+ What hast thou done?
+
+ _Ard._ What done? A miracle!
+ Who now can harm my love?
+
+ _Ban._ Your promises!
+ Your oaths!
+
+ _Ard._ I'd keep them, sir--ay, every one,
+ If grief would let me live to be your wife.
+ But I am weary, and my heavy stars
+ Have left their skies to hang upon me here.
+ My veins are empty, all their strength is out.
+ Does 't take so much to lift this little blade
+ And let it fall again?
+ [_Biondel takes the dagger from her_]
+ Think you I need
+ So poor a thing? Nay, God has struck for me,
+ As I for Him. I go with Vairdelan. [_Kneels by body_]
+ Look on this brow, if shame will let ye look.
+ An angel shaped it. Ye've unfashioned here
+ The work of Heaven. Sweet lips, no roses left?
+ Your hand, my lord, and now the sinless star. [_Dies_]
+
+ [_Curtain_]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mortal Gods and Other Plays, by
+Olive Tilford Dargan
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