| |
A Throne-room in the Palace, Music within.
Enter KING and CLOTALDO, meeting a Lord in waiting
KING. You, for a moment beckond from your office, | |
| Tell me thus far how goes it. In due time | |
| The potion left him? | |
| |
| LORD. At the very hour | |
| To which your Highness temperd it. Yet not | 5 |
| So wholly but some lingering mist still hung | |
| About his dawning senseswhich to clear, | |
| We filld and handed him a morning drink | |
| With sleeps specific antidote suffused; | |
| And while with princely raiment we invested | 10 |
| What nature surely modelld for a Prince | |
| All but the swordas you directed | |
| |
| KING. Ay | |
| |
| LORD. If not too loudly, yet emphatically | |
| Still with the title of a Prince addressd him. | 15 |
| |
| KING. How bore he that? | |
| |
| LORD. With all the rest, my liege, | |
| I will not say so like one in a dream | |
| As one himself misdoubting that he dreamd. | |
| |
| KING. So far so well, Clotaldo, either way, | 20 |
| And best of all if towrd the worse I dread. | |
| But yet no violence? | |
| |
| LORD. At most, impatience; | |
| Wearied perhaps with importunities | |
| We yet were bound to offer. | 25 |
| |
| KING. Oh, Clotaldo! | |
| Though thus far well, yet would myself had drunk | |
| The potion he revives from! such suspense | |
| Crowds all the pulses of lifes residue | |
| Into the present moment; and, I think, | 30 |
| Whichever way the trembling scale may turn, | |
| Will leave the crown of Poland for some one | |
| To wait no longer than the setting sun! | |
| |
| CLO. Courage, my liege! The curtain is undrawn, | |
| And each must play his part out manfully, | 35 |
| Leaving the rest to heaven. | |
| |
| KING. Whose written words | |
| If I should misinterpret or transgress! | |
| But as you say | |
| (To the Lord, who exit.) You, back to him at once; | 40 |
| Clotaldo, you, when he is somewhat used | |
| To the new world of which they call him Prince, | |
| Where place and face, and all, is strange to him, | |
| With your known features and familiar garb | |
| shall then, as chorus to the scene, accost him, | 45 |
| And by such earnest of that old and too | |
| Familiar world, assure him of the new. | |
| Last in the strange procession, I myself | |
| Will by one full and last development | |
| Complete the plot for that catastrophe | 50 |
| That he must put to all; God grant it be | |
| The crown of Poland on his brows!Hark! hark! | |
| Was that his voice within!Now louderOh, | |
| Clotaldo, what! so soon begun to roar! | |
| Again! above the musicBut betide | 55 |
What may, until the moment, we must hide. [Exeunt KING and CLOTALDO.| |
SEGISMUND (within). Forbear! I stifle with your perfume! cease | |
| Your crazy salutations! peace, I say | |
| Begone, or let me go, ere I go mad | |
| With all this babble, mummery, and glare, | 60 |
| For I am growing dangerousAir! room! air! [He rushes in. Music ceases. | |
| Oh but to save the reeling brain from wreck | |
| With its bewilderd senses! [He covers his eyes for a while. | |
| What! Een now | |
| That Babel left behind me, but my eyes | 65 |
| Pursued by the same glamour, thatunless | |
| Alike bewitchd toothe confederate sense | |
| Vouches for palpable: bright-shining floors | |
| That ring hard answer back to the stampd heel, | |
| And shoot up airy columns marble-cold, | 70 |
| That, as they climb, break into golden leaf | |
| And capital, till they embrace aloft | |
| In clustering flower and fruitage over walls | |
| Hung with such purple curtain as the West | |
| Fringes with such a gold; or over-laid | 75 |
| With sanguine-glowing semblances of men, | |
| Each in his all but living action busied, | |
| Or from the wall they look from, with fixd eyes | |
| Pursuing me; and one most strange of all | |
| That, as I passd the crystal on the wall, | 80 |
| Lookd from itleft itand as I return, | |
| Returns, and looks me face to face again | |
| Unless some false reflection of my brain, | |
| The outward semblance of myselfMyself? | |
| How know that tawdry shadow for myself, | 85 |
| But that it moves as I move; lifts his hand | |
| With mine; each motion echoing so close | |
| The immediate suggestion of the will | |
| In which myself I recognizeMyself! | |
| What, this fantastic Segismund the same | 90 |
| Who last night, as for all his nights before, | |
| Lay down to sleep in wolf-skin on the ground | |
| In a black turret which the wolf howld round, | |
| And woke again upon a golden bed, | |
| Round which as clouds about a rising sun, | 95 |
| In scarce less glittering caparison, | |
| Gatherd gay shapes that, underneath a breeze | |
| Of music, handed him upon their knees | |
| The wine of heaven in a cup of gold, | |
| And still in soft melodious under-song | 100 |
| Hailing me Prince of Poland!Segismund, | |
| They said, Our Prince! The Prince of Poland! and | |
| Again, Oh, welcome, welcome, to his own, | |
| Our own Prince Segismund | |
| Oh, but a blast | 105 |
| One blast of the rough mountain air! one look | |
| At the grim features [He goes to the window. | |
| What they disvizord also! shatterd chaos | |
| Cast into stately shape and masonry, | |
| Between whose channeld and perspective sides | 110 |
| Compact with rooted towers, and flourishing | |
| To heaven with gilded pinnacle and spire, | |
| Flows the live current ever to and fro | |
| With open aspect and free step!Clotaldo! | |
| Clotaldo!calling as one scarce dares call | 115 |
| For him who suddenly might break the spell | |
| One fears to walk without himWhy, that I, | |
| With unencumberd step as any there, | |
| Go stumbling through my glory-feeling for | |
| That iron leading-stringay, for myself | 120 |
| For that fast-anchord self of yesterday, | |
| Of yesterday, and all my life before, | |
| Ere drifted clean from self-identity | |
| Upon the fluctuation of to-days | |
| Mad whirling circumstance!And, fool, why not? | 125 |
| If reason, sense, and self-identity | |
| Obliterated from a worn-out brain, | |
| Art thou not maddest striving to be sane, | |
| And catching at that Self of yesterday | |
| That, like a lepers rags, best flung away! | 130 |
| Or if not mad, then dreamingdreaming?well | |
| Dreaming thenOr, if self to self be true, | |
| Not mockd by that, but as poor souls have been | |
| By those who wrongd them, to give wrong new relish? | |
| Or have those stars indeed they told me of | 135 |
| As masters of my wretched life of old, | |
| Into some happier constellation rolld, | |
| And brought my better fortune out on earth | |
| Clear as themselves in heaven!Prince Segismund | |
| They calld meand at will I shook them off | 140 |
| Will they return again at my command | |
| Again to call me so?Within there! You! | |
| Segismund callsPrince Segismund | |
| |
(He has seated himself on the throne. Enter CHAMBERLAIN, with lords in waiting.)
CHAMB. I rejoice | |
| That unadvised of any but the voice | 145 |
| Of royal instinct in the blood, your Highness | |
| Has taen the chair that you were born to fill. | |
| |
| SEG. The chair? | |
| |
| CHAMB. The royal throne of Poland, Sir, | |
| Which may your Royal Highness keep as long | 150 |
| As he that now rules from it shall have ruled | |
| When heaven has calld him to itself. | |
| |
| SEG. When he? | |
| |
| CHAMB. Your royal father, King Basilio, Sir. | |
| |
| SEG. My royal fatherKing Basilio. | 155 |
| You see I answer but as Echo does, | |
| Not knowing what she listens or repeats. | |
| This is my thronethis is my palace-Oh, | |
| But this out of the window? | |
| |
| CHAMB. Warsaw, Sir, | 160 |
| Your capital | |
| |
| SEG. And all the moving people? | |
| |
| CHAMB. Your subjects and your vassals like ourselves. | |
| |
| SEG. Ay, aymy subjectsin my capital | |
| Warsawand I am Prince of itYou see | 165 |
| It needs much iteration to strike sense | |
| Into the human echo. | |
| |
| CHAMB. Left awhile | |
| In the quick brain, the word will quickly to | |
| Full meaning blow. | 170 |
| |
| SEG. You think so? | |
| |
| CHAMB. And meanwhile | |
| Lest our obsequiousness, which means no worse | |
| Than customary honour to the Prince | |
| We most rejoice to welcome, trouble you, | 175 |
| Should we retire again? or stand apart? | |
| Or would your Highness have the music play | |
| Again, which meditation, as they say, | |
| So often loves to float upon? | |
| |
| SEG. The music? | 180 |
| Noyesperhaps the trumpet(Aside) Yet if that | |
| Brought back the troop! | |
| |
| A LORD. The trumpet! There again | |
| How trumpet-like spoke out the blood of Poland! | |
| |
| CHAMB. Before the morning is far up, your Highness | 185 |
| Will have the trumpet marshalling your soldiers | |
| Under the Palace windows. | |
| |
| SEG. Ah, my soldiers | |
| My soldiersnot black-vizord? | |
| |
| CHAMB. Sir? | 190 |
| |
| SEG. No matter. | |
| Butone thingfor a momentin your ear | |
| Do you know one Clotaldo? | |
| |
| CHAMB. Oh, my Lord, | |
| He and myself together, I may say, | 195 |
| Although in different vocations, | |
| Have silverd in your royal fathers service; | |
| And, as I trust, with both of us a few | |
| White hairs to fall in yours. | |
| |
| SEG. Well said, well said! | 200 |
| Basilio, my fatherwellClotaldo | |
| Is he my kinsman too? | |
| |
| CHAMB. Oh, my good Lord, | |
| A General simply in your Highness service, | |
| Than whom your Highness has no trustier. | 205 |
| |
| SEG. Ay, so you said before, I think. And you | |
| With that white wand of yours | |
| Why, now I think ont, I have read of such | |
| A silver-haird magician with a wand, | |
| Who in a moment, with a wave of it, | 210 |
| Turnd rags to jewels, clowns to emperors, | |
| By some benigner magic than the stars | |
| Spirited poor good people out of hand | |
| From all their woes; in some enchanted sleep | |
| Carried them off on cloud or dragon-back | 215 |
| Over the mountains, over the wide Deep, | |
| And set them down to wake in Fairyland. | |
| |
| CHAMB. Oh, my good Lord, you laugh at meand I | |
| Right glad to make you laugh at such a price: | |
| You know me no enchanter: if I were, | 220 |
| I and my wand as much as your Highness, | |
| As now your chamberlain | |
| |
| SEG. My chamberlain? | |
| And these that follow you? | |
| |
| CHAMB. On you, my Lord, | 225 |
| Your Highness lords in waiting. | |
| |
| SEG. Lords in waiting. | |
| Well, I have now learnd to repeat, I think, | |
| If only but by roteThis is my palace, | |
| And this my thronewhich unadvisedAnd that | 230 |
| Out of the window there my Capital; | |
| And all the people moving up and down | |
| My subjects and my vassals like yourselves, | |
| My chamberlainand lords in waitingand | |
| Clotaldoand Clotaldo? | 235 |
| You are an aged, and seem a reverend man | |
| You do notthough his fellow-officer | |
| You do not mean to mock me? | |
| |
| CHAMB. Oh, my Lord! | |
| |
| SEG. Well thenIf no magician, as you say, | 240 |
| Yet setting me a riddle, that my brain, | |
| With all its senses whirling, cannot solve, | |
| Yourself or one of these with you must answer | |
| How Ithat only last night fell asleep | |
| Not knowing that the very soil of earth | 245 |
| I lay down-chaindto sleep upon was Poland | |
| Awake to find myself the Lord of it, | |
| With Lords, and Generals, and Chamberlains, | |
| And evn my very Gaoler, for my vassals! | |
| |
Enter suddenly CLOTALDO
Clotaldo. Stand all aside | 250 |
| That I may put into his hand the clue | |
| To lead him out of this amazement. Sir, | |
| Vouchsafe your Highness from my bended knee | |
| Receive my homage first. | |
| |
| SEG. Clotaldo! What, | 255 |
| At lasthis old self-undisguised where all | |
| Is masqueradeto end it!You kneeling too! | |
| What! have the stars you told me long ago | |
| Laid that old work upon you, added this, | |
| That, having chaind your prisoner so long, | 260 |
| You loose his body now to slay his wits, | |
| Dragging himhow I know notwhither scarce | |
| I understanddressing him up in all | |
| This frippery, with your dumb familiars | |
| Disvizord, and their lips unlockd to lie, | 265 |
| Calling him Prince and King, and, madman-like, | |
| Setting a crown of straw upon his head? | |
| |
| CLO. Would but your Highness, as indeed I now | |
| Must call youand upon his bended knee | |
| Never bent Subject more devotedly | 270 |
| However all about you, and perhaps | |
| You to yourself incomprehensiblest, | |
| But rest in the assurance of your own | |
| Sane waking senses, by these witnesses | |
| Attested, till the story of it all, | 275 |
| Of which I bring a chapter, be reveald, | |
| Assured of all you see and hear as neither | |
| Madness nor mockery | |
| |
| SEG. What then? | |
| |
| CLO. All it seems: | 280 |
| This palace with its royal garniture; | |
| This capital of which it is the eye, | |
| With all its temples, marts, and arsenals; | |
| This realm of which this city is the head, | |
| With all its cities, villages, and tilth, | 285 |
| Its armies, fleets, and commerce; all your own; | |
| And all the living souls that make them up, | |
| From those who now, and those who shall, salute you, | |
| Down to the poorest peasant of the realm, | |
| Your subjectsWho, though now their mighty voice | 290 |
| Sleeps in the general body unapprized, | |
| Wait but a word from those about you now | |
| To hail you Prince of Poland, Segismund. | |
| |
| SEG. All this is so? | |
| |
| CLO. As sure as anything | 295 |
| Is, or can be. | |
| |
| SEG. You swear it on the faith | |
| You taught meelsewhere? | |
| |
| CLO. (kissing the hilt of his sword). Swear it upon this | |
| Symbol, and champion of the holy faith | 300 |
| I wear it to defend. | |
| |
| SEG. (to himself). My eyes have not deceived me, nor my ears, | |
| With this transfiguration, nor the strain | |
| Of royal welcome that arose and blew, | |
| Breathed from no lying lips, along with it. | 305 |
| For here Clotaldo comes, his own old self, | |
| Who, if not Lie and phantom with the rest | |
| (Aloud) Well, then, all this is thus. | |
| For have not these fine people told me so, | |
| And you, Clotaldo, sworn it? And the Why | 310 |
| And Wherefore are to follow by and bye! | |
| And yetand yetwhy wait for that which you | |
| Who take your oath on it can answerand | |
| Indeed it presses hard upon my brain | |
| What I was asking of these gentlemen | 315 |
| When you came in upon us; how it is | |
| That Ithe Segismund you know so long | |
| No longer than the sun that rose to-day | |
| Roseand from what you know | |
| Rose to be Prince of Poland? | 320 |
| |
| CLO. So to be | |
| Acknowledged and entreated, Sir. | |
| |
| SEG. So be | |
| Acknowledged and entreated | |
| WellBut if now by all, by some at least | 325 |
| So knownif not entreatedheretofore | |
| Though not by youFor, now I think again, | |
| Of what should be your attestation worth, | |
| You that of all my questionable subjects | |
| Who knowing what, yet left me where I was, | 330 |
| You least of all, Clotaldo, till the dawn | |
| Of this first day that told it to myself? | |
| |
| CLO. Oh, let your Highness draw the line across | |
| Fore-written sorrow, and in this new dawn | |
| Bury that long sad night. | 335 |
| |
| SEG. Not evn the Dead, | |
| Calld to the resurrection of the blest, | |
| Shall so directly drop all memory | |
| Of woes and wrongs foregone! | |
| |
| CLO. But not resent | 340 |
| Purged by the trial of that sorrow past | |
| For full fruition of their present bliss. | |
| |
| SEG. But leaving with the Judge what, till this earth | |
| Be cancelld in the burning heavens, He leaves | |
| His earthly delegates to execute, | 345 |
| Of retribution in reward to them | |
| And woe to those who wrongd themNot as you, | |
| Not you, Clotaldo, knowing notAnd yet | |
| Evn to the guiltiest wretch in all the realm, | |
| Of any treason guilty short of that, | 350 |
| Stern usagebut assuredly not knowing, | |
| Not knowing twas your sovereign lord, Clotaldo, | |
| You used so sternly. | |
| |
| CLO. Ay, sir; with the same | |
| Devotion and fidelity that now | 355 |
| Does homage to him for my sovereign. | |
| |
| SEG. Fidelity that held his Prince in chains! | |
| |
| CLO. Fidelity more fast than had it loosed him | |
| |
| SEG. Evn from the very dawn of consciousness | |
| Down at the bottom of the barren rocks, | 360 |
| Where scarce a ray of sunshine found him out, | |
| In which the poorest beggar of my realm | |
| At least to human-full proportion grows | |
| Me! Mewhose station was the kingdoms top | |
| To flourish in, reaching my head to heaven, | 365 |
| And with my branches overshadowing | |
| The meaner growth below! | |
| |
| CLO. Still with the same | |
| Fidelity | |
| |
| SEG. To me! | 370 |
| |
| CLO. Ay, sir, to you, | |
| Through that divine allegiance upon which | |
| All Order and Authority is based; | |
| Which to revolt against | |
| |
| SEG. Were to revolt | 375 |
| Against the stars, belike! | |
| |
| CLO. And him who reads them; | |
| And by that right, and by the sovereignty | |
| He wears as you shall wear it after him; | |
| Ay, one to whom yourself | 380 |
| Yourself, evn more than any subject here, | |
| Are bound by yet another and more strong | |
| AllegianceKing Basilioyour Father | |
| |
| SEG. BasilioKingmy father! | |
| |
| CLO. Oh, my Lord, | 385 |
| Let me beseech you on my bended knee, | |
| For your own sakefor Polandsand for his, | |
| Who, looking up for counsel to the skies, | |
| Did what he did under authority | |
| To which the kings of earth themselves are subject, | 390 |
| And whose behest not only he that suffers, | |
| But he that executes, not comprehends, | |
| But only He that orders it | |
| |
| SEG. The King | |
| My father!Either I am mad already, | 395 |
| Or that way driving fastor I should know | |
| That fathers do not use their children so, | |
| Or men were loosed from all allegiance | |
| To fathers, kings, and heaven that orderd all. | |
| But, mad or not, my hour is come, and I | 400 |
| Will have my reckoningEither you lie, | |
| Under the skirt of sinless majesty | |
| Shrouding your treason; or if that indeed, | |
| Guilty itself, take refuge in the stars | |
| That cannot hear the charge, or disavow | 405 |
| You, whether doer or deviser, who | |
| Come first to hand, shall pay the penalty | |
| By the same hand you owe it to (Seizing CLOTALDOS sword and about to strike him.) | |
| |
Enter ROSAURA suddenly
ROSAURA. Fie, my Lordforbear, | |
| What! a young hand raised against silver hair! (She retreats through the crowd.) | 410 |
| |
| SEG. Stay! stay! What come and vanishd as before | |
| I scarce remember howbut | |
| |
| Voices within. Room for Astolfo, Duke of Muscovy! | |
| |
Enter ASTOLFO
ASTOLFO. Welcome, thrice welcome, the auspicious day, | |
| When from the mountain where he darkling lay, | 415 |
| The Polish sun into the firmament | |
| Sprung all the brighter for his late ascent, | |
| And in meridian glory | |
| |
| SEG. Where is he? | |
| Why must I ask this twice? | 420 |
| |
| A LORD. The Page, my Lord? | |
| I wonder at his boldness | |
| |
| SEG. But I tell you | |
| He came with Angel written in his face | |
| As now it is, when all was black as hell | 425 |
| About, and none of you who nowhe came, | |
| And Angel-like flung me a shining sword | |
| To cut my way through darkness; and again | |
| Angel-like wrests it from me in behalf | |
| Of onewhom I will spare for sparing him: | 430 |
| But he must come and plead with that same voice | |
| That prayd for mein vain. | |
| |
| CHAMB. He is gone for, | |
| And shall attend your pleasure, sir. Meanwhile, | |
| Will not your Highness, as in courtesy, | 435 |
| Return your royal cousins greeting? | |
| |
| SEG. Whose? | |
| |
| CHAMB. Astolfo, Duke of Muscovy, my Lord, | |
| Saluted, and with gallant compliment | |
| Welcomed you to your royal title. | 440 |
| |
| SEG. (to ASTOLFO). Oh | |
| You knew of this then? | |
| |
| AST. Knew of what, my Lord? | |
| |
| SEG. That I was Prince of Poland all the while, | |
| And you my subject? | 445 |
| |
| AST. Pardon me, my Lord, | |
| But some few hours ago myself I learnd | |
| Your dignity; but, knowing it, no more | |
| Than when I knew it not, your subject. | |
| |
| SEG. What then? | 450 |
| |
| AST. Your Highness chamberlain evn now has told you; | |
| Astolfo, Duke of Muscovy, | |
| Your fathers sisters son; your cousin, sir: | |
| And who as such, and in his own right Prince, | |
| Expects from you the courtesy he shows. | 455 |
| |
| CHAMB. His Highness is as yet unused to Court, | |
| And to the ceremonious interchange | |
| Of compliment, especially to those | |
| Who draw their blood from the same royal fountain. | |
| |
| SEG. Where is the lad? I weary of all this | 460 |
| Prince, cousins, chamberlains, and compliments | |
| Where are my soldiers? Blow the trumpet, and | |
| With one sharp blast scatter these butterflies | |
| And bring the men of iron to my side, | |
| With whom a king feels like a king indeed! | 465 |
| |
| Voices within. Within there! room for the Princess Estrella! | |
| |
Enter ESTRELLA with Ladies
ESTRELLA. Welcome, my Lord, right welcome to the throne | |
| That much too long has waited for your coming: | |
| And, in the general voice of Poland, hear | |
| A kinswoman and cousins no less sincere. | 470 |
| |
| SEG. Ay, this is welcomeworth indeed, | |
| And cousin cousinworth! Oh, I have thus | |
| Over the threshold of the mountain seen, | |
| Leading a bevy of fair stars, the moon | |
| Enter the court of heavenMy kinswoman! | 475 |
| My cousin! But my subject? | |
| |
| EST. If you please | |
| To count your cousin for your subject, sir, | |
| You shall not find her a disloyal. | |
| |
| SEG. Oh, | 480 |
| But there are twin stars in that heavenly face, | |
| That now I know for having over-ruled | |
| Those evil ones that darkend all my past | |
| And brought me forth from that captivity | |
| To be the slave of her who set me free. | 485 |
| |
| EST. Indeed, my Lord, these eyes have no such power | |
| Over the past or present: but perhaps | |
| They brighten at your welcome to supply | |
| The little that a ladys speech commends; | |
| And in the hope that, let whichever be | 490 |
| The others subject, we may both be friends. | |
| |
| SEG. Your hand to thatBut why does this warm hand | |
| Shoot a cold shudder through me? | |
| |
| EST. In revenge | |
| For likening me to that cold moon, perhaps. | 495 |
| |
| SEG. Oh, but the lip whose music tells me so | |
| Breathes of a warmer planet, and that lip | |
| Shall remedy the treason of the hand! (He catches to embrace her.) | |
| |
| EST. Release me, sir! | |
| |
| CHAMB. And pardon me, my Lord. | 500 |
| This lady is a Princess absolute, | |
| As Prince he is who just saluted you, | |
| And claims her by affiance. | |
| |
| SEG. Hence, old fool, | |
| For ever thrusting that white stick of yours | 505 |
| Between me and my pleasure! | |
| |
| AST. This cause is mine. | |
| Forbear, sir | |
| |
| SEG. What, sir mouth-piece, you again? | |
| |
| AST. My Lord, I waive your insult to myself | 510 |
| In recognition of the dignity | |
| You yet are new to, and that greater still | |
| You look in time to wear. But for this lady | |
| Whom, if my cousin now, I hope to claim | |
| Henceforth by yet a nearer, dearer name | 515 |
| |
| SEG. And what care I? She is my cousin too: | |
| And if you be a Princewell, am not I | |
| Lord of the very soil you stand upon? | |
| By that, and by that right beside of blood | |
| That like a fiery fountain hitherto | 520 |
| Pent in the rock leaps toward her at her touch, | |
| Mine, before all the cousins in Muscovy! | |
| You call me Prince of Poland, and yourselves | |
| My subjectstraitors therefore to this hour, | |
| Who let me perish all my youth away | 525 |
| Chaind there among the mountains; till, forsooth, | |
| Terrified at your treachery foregone, | |
| You spirit me up here, I know not how, | |
| Popinjay-like invest me like yourselves, | |
| Choke me with scent and music that I loathe, | 530 |
| And, worse than all the music and the scent, | |
| With false, long-winded, fulsome compliment, | |
| That Oh, you are my subjects! and in word | |
| Reiterating still obedience, | |
| Thwart me in deed at every step I take: | 535 |
| When just about to wreak a just revenge | |
| Upon that old arch-traitor of you all, | |
| Filch from my vengeance him I hate; and him | |
| I lovedthe first and only facetill this | |
| I cared to look on in your ugly court | 540 |
| And now when palpably I grasp at last | |
| What hitherto but shadowd in my dreams | |
| Affiances and interferences, | |
| The first who dares to meddle with me more | |
| Princes and chamberlains and counsellors, | 545 |
| Touch her who dares! | |
| |
| AST. That dare I | |
| |
| SEG. (seizing him by the throat). You dare! | |
| |
| CHAMB. My Lord! | |
| |
| A LORD. His strengths a lions | 550 |
| |
| Voices within. The King! The King! | |
| |
Enter KING
A LORD. And on a sudden how he stands at gaze | |
| As might a wolf just fastend on his prey, | |
| Glaring at a suddenly encounterd lion. | |
| |
| KING. And I that hither flew with open arms | 555 |
| To fold them round my son, must now return | |
| To press them to an empty heart again! [He sits on the throne. | |
| |
| SEG. That is the King?My father? | |
| (After a long pause.) I have heard | |
| That sometimes some blind instinct has been known | 560 |
| To draw to mutual recognition those | |
| Of the same blood, beyond all memory | |
| Divided, or evn never met before. | |
| I know not how this isperhaps in brutes | |
| That live by kindlier instinctsbut I know | 565 |
| That looking now upon that head whose crown | |
| Pronounces him a sovereign king, I feel | |
| No setting of the current in my blood | |
| Towrd him as sire. How ist with you, old man, | |
| Towrd him they call your son? | 570 |
| |
| KING. Alas! Alas! | |
| |
| SEG. Your sorrow, then? | |
| |
| KING. Beholding what I do. | |
| |
| SEG. Ay, but how know this sorrow that has grown | |
| And moulded to this present shape of man, | 575 |
| As of your own creation? | |
| |
| KING. Evn from birth. | |
| |
| SEG. But from that hour to this, near, as I think, | |
| Some twenty such renewals of the year | |
| As trace themselves upon the barren rocks, | 580 |
| I never saw you, nor you meunless, | |
| Unless, indeed, through one of those dark masks | |
| Through which a son might fail to recognize | |
| The best of fathers. | |
| |
| KING. Be that as you will: | 585 |
| But, now we see each other face to face, | |
| Know me as you I know; which did I not, | |
| By whatsoever signs, assuredly | |
| You were not here to prove it at my risk. | |
| |
| SEG. You are my father. | 590 |
| And is it true then, as Clotaldo swears, | |
| Twas you that from the dawning birth of one | |
| Yourself brought into being,you, I say, | |
| Who stole his very birthright; not alone | |
| That secondary and peculiar right | 595 |
| Of sovereignty, but even that prime | |
| Inheritance that all men share alike, | |
| And chaind himchaind him!like a wild beasts whelp. | |
| Among as savage mountains, to this hour? | |
| Answer if this be thus. | 600 |
| |
| KING. Oh, Segismund, | |
| In all that I have done that seems to you, | |
| And, without further hearing, fairly seems, | |
| Unnatural and crueltwas not I, | |
| But One who writes His order in the sky | 605 |
| I dared not misinterpret nor neglect, | |
| Who knows with what reluctance | |
| |
| SEG. Oh, those stars, | |
| Those stars, that too far up from human blame | |
| To clear themselves, or careless of the charge, | 610 |
| Still bear upon their shining shoulders all | |
| The guilt men shift upon them! | |
| |
| KING. Nay, but think: | |
| Not only on the common score of kind, | |
| But that peculiar count of sovereignty | 615 |
| If not behind the beast in brain as heart, | |
| How should I thus deal with my innocent child, | |
| Doubly desired, and doubly dear when come, | |
| As that sweet second-self that all desire, | |
| And princes more than all, to root themselves | 620 |
| By that succession in their peoples hearts, | |
| Unless at that superior Will, to which | |
| Not kings alone, but sovereign nature bows? | |
| |
| SEG. And what had those same stars to tell of me | |
| That should compel a father and a king | 625 |
| So much against that double instinct? | |
| |
| KING. That, | |
| Which I have brought you hither, at my peril, | |
| Against their written warning, to disprove, | |
| By justice, mercy, human kindliness. | 630 |
| |
| SEG. And therefore made yourself their instrument | |
| To make your son the savage and the brute | |
| They only prophesied?Are you not afeard, | |
| Lest, irrespective as such creatures are | |
| Of such relationship, the brute you made | 635 |
| Revenge the man you marrdlike sire, like son. | |
| To do by you as you by me have done? | |
| |
| KING. You never had a savage heart from me; | |
| I may appeal to Poland. | |
| |
| SEG. Then from whom? | 640 |
| If pure in fountain, poisond by yourself | |
| When scarce begun to flow.To make a man | |
| Not, as I see, degraded from the mould | |
| I came from, nor compared to those about, | |
| And then to throw your own flesh to the dogs! | 645 |
| Why not at once, I say, if terrified | |
| At the prophetic omens of my birth, | |
| Have drownd or stifled me, as they do whelps | |
| Too costly or too dangerous to keep? | |
| |
| KING. That, living, you might learn to live, and rule | 650 |
| Yourself and Poland. | |
| |
| SEG. By the means you took | |
| To spoil for either? | |
| |
| KING. Nay, but, Segismund! | |
| You know notcannot knowhappily wanting | 655 |
| The sad experience on which knowledge grows, | |
| How the too early consciousness of power | |
| Spoils the best blood; nor whether for your long | |
| Constraind disheritance (which, but for me, | |
| Remember, and for my relenting love | 660 |
| Bursting the bond of fate, had been eternal) | |
| You have not now a full indemnity; | |
| Wearing the blossom of your youth unspent | |
| In the voluptuous sunshine of a court, | |
| That often, by too early blossoming, | 665 |
| Too soon deflowers the rose of royalty. | |
| |
| SEG. Ay, but what some precocious warmth may spill, | |
| May not an early frost as surely kill? | |
| |
| KING. But, Segismund, my son, whose quick discourse | |
| Proves I have not extinguishd and destroyd | 670 |
| The Man you charge me with extinguishing, | |
| However it condemn me for the fault | |
| Of keeping a good light so long eclipsed, | |
| Reflect! This is the moment upon which | |
| Those stars, whose eyes, although we see them not, | 675 |
| By day as well as night are on us still, | |
| Hang watching up in the meridian heaven | |
| Which way the balance turns; and if to you | |
| As by your dealing God decide it may, | |
| To my confusion!let me answer it | 680 |
| Unto yourself alone, who shall at once | |
| Approve yourself to be your fathers judge, | |
| And sovereign of Poland in his stead, | |
| By justice, mercy, self-sobriety, | |
| And all the reasonable attributes | 685 |
| Without which, impotent to rule himself, | |
| Others one cannot, and one must not rule; | |
| But which if you but show the blossom of | |
| All that is past we shall but look upon | |
| As the first out-fling of a generous nature | 690 |
| Rioting in first liberty; and if | |
| This blossom do but promise such a flower | |
| As promises in turn its kindly fruit: | |
| Forthwith upon your brows the royal crown, | |
| That now weighs heavy on my aged brows, | 695 |
| I will devolve; and while I pass away | |
| Into some cloister, with my Maker there | |
| To make my peace in penitence and prayer, | |
| Happily settle the disorderd realm | |
| That now cries loudly for a lineal heir. | 700 |
| |
| SEG. And so | |
| When the crown falters on your shaking head, | |
| And slips the sceptre from your palsied hand, | |
| And Poland for her rightful heir cries out; | |
| When not only your stoln monopoly | 705 |
| Fails you of earthly power, but cross the grave | |
| The judgment-trumpet of another world | |
| Calls you to count for your abuse of this; | |
| Then, oh then, terrified by the double danger, | |
| You drag me from my den | 710 |
| Boast not of giving up at last the power | |
| You can no longer hold, and never rightly | |
| Held, but in fee for him you robbd it from; | |
| And be assured your Savage, once let loose, | |
| Will not be caged again so quickly; not | 715 |
| By threat or adulation to be tamed, | |
| Till he have had his quarrel out with those | |
| Who made him what he is. | |
| |
| KING. Beware! Beware! | |
| Subdue the kindled Tiger in your eye, | 720 |
| Nor dream that it was sheer necessity | |
| Made me thus far relax the bond of fate, | |
| And, with far more of terror than of hope | |
| Threaten myself, my people, and the State. | |
| Know that, if old, I yet have vigour left | 725 |
| To wield the sword as well as wear the crown; | |
| And if my more immediate issue fail, | |
| Not wanting scions of collateral blood, | |
| Whose wholesome growth shall more than compensate | |
| For all the loss of a distorted stem. | 730 |
| |
| SEG. That will I straightway bring to trialOh, | |
| After a revelation such as this, | |
| The Last Day shall have little left to show | |
| Of righted wrong and villainy requited! | |
| Nay, Judgment now beginning upon earth, | 735 |
| Myself, methinks, in sight of all my wrongs, | |
| Appointed heavens avenging minister, | |
| Accuser, judge, and executioner | |
| Sword in hand, cite the guiltyFirst, as worst, | |
| The usurper of his sons inheritance; | 740 |
| Him and his old accomplice, time and crime | |
| Inveterate, and unable to repay | |
| The golden years of life they stole away. | |
| What, does he yet maintain his state, and keep | |
| The throne he should be judged from? Down with him, | 745 |
| That I may trample on the false white head | |
| So long has worn my crown! Where are my soldiers? | |
| Of all my subjects and my vassals here | |
| Not one to do my bidding? Hark! A trumpet! | |
| The trumpet (He pauses as the trumpet sounds as in ACT I., and masked Soldiers gradually fill in behind the Throne.) | 750 |
| |
| KING. (rising before his throne). Ay, indeed, the trumpet blows | |
| A memorable note, to summon those | |
| Who, if forthwith you fall not at the feet | |
| Of him whose head you threaten with the dust, | |
| Forthwith shall draw the curtain of the Past | 755 |
| About you; and this momentary gleam | |
| Of glory that you think to hold lifefast, | |
| So coming, so shall vanish, as a dream. | |
| |
| SEG. He prophesies; the old man prophesies; | |
| And, at his trumpets summons, from the tower | 760 |
| The leash-bound shadows loosend after me | |
| My rising glory reach and over-lour | |
| Bet, reach not I my height, he shall not hold, | |
| But with me back to his own darkness! (He dashes toward the throne and is enclosed by the soldiers.) | |
| Traitors! | 765 |
| Hold off! Unhand me!Am not I your king? | |
| And you would strangle him! | |
| But I am breaking with an inward Fire | |
| Shall scorch you off, and wrap me on the wings | |
| Of conflagration from a kindled pyre | 770 |
| Of lying prophecies and prophet-kings | |
| Above the extinguishd starsReach me the sword | |
| He flung meFill me such a bowl of wine | |
| As that you woke the day with | |
| |
| KING. And shall close, | 775 |
| But of the vintage that Clotaldo knows. [Exeunt. | |
| |