Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Scenes From The Magico Prodigioso. From The Spanish Of Calderon. by Percy Bysshe Shelley
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Scenes From The Magico Prodigioso. From The Spanish Of Calderon.

    By Percy Bysshe Shelley



    SCENE 1:

    ENTER CYPRIAN, DRESSED AS A STUDENT;
    CLARIN AND MOSCON AS POOR SCHOLARS, WITH BOOKS.

    CYPRIAN:
    In the sweet solitude of this calm place,
    This intricate wild wilderness of trees
    And flowers and undergrowth of odorous plants,
    Leave me; the books you brought out of the house
    To me are ever best society.
    And while with glorious festival and song,
    Antioch now celebrates the consecration
    Of a proud temple to great Jupiter,
    And bears his image in loud jubilee
    To its new shrine, I would consume what still
    Lives of the dying day in studious thought,
    Far from the throng and turmoil. You, my friends,
    Go, and enjoy the festival; it will
    Be worth your pains. You may return for me
    When the sun seeks its grave among the billows
    Which, among dim gray clouds on the horizon,
    Dance like white plumes upon a hearse; - and here
    I shall expect you.

    NOTES:
    _14 So transcr.; Be worth the labour, and return for me 1824.
    _16, _17 So 1824;
    Hid among dim gray clouds on the horizon
    Which dance like plumes - transcr., Forman.

    MOSCON:
    I cannot bring my mind,
    Great as my haste to see the festival
    Certainly is, to leave you, Sir, without
    Just saying some three or four thousand words.
    How is it possible that on a day
    Of such festivity, you can be content
    To come forth to a solitary country
    With three or four old books, and turn your back
    On all this mirth?

    NOTES:
    _21 thousand transcr.; hundred 1824.
    _23 be content transcr.; bring your mind 1824.

    CLARIN:
    My master's in the right;
    There is not anything more tiresome
    Than a procession day, with troops, and priests,
    And dances, and all that.

    NOTE:
    _28 and priests transcr.; of men 1824.

    MOSCON:
    From first to last,
    Clarin, you are a temporizing flatterer;
    You praise not what you feel but what he does; -
    Toadeater!

    CLARIN:
    You lie - under a mistake -
    For this is the most civil sort of lie
    That can be given to a man's face. I now
    Say what I think.

    CYPRIAN:
    Enough, you foolish fellows!
    Puffed up with your own doting ignorance,
    You always take the two sides of one question.
    Now go; and as I said, return for me
    When night falls, veiling in its shadows wide
    This glorious fabric of the universe.

    NOTE:
    _36 doting ignorance transcr.; ignorance and pride 1824.

    MOSCON:
    How happens it, although you can maintain
    The folly of enjoying festivals,
    That yet you go there?

    CLARIN:
    Nay, the consequence
    Is clear: - who ever did what he advises
    Others to do? -

    MOSCON:
    Would that my feet were wings,
    So would I fly to Livia.

    [EXIT.]

    CLARIN:
    To speak truth,
    Livia is she who has surprised my heart;
    But he is more than half-way there. - Soho!
    Livia, I come; good sport, Livia, soho!

    [EXIT.]

    CYPRIAN:
    Now, since I am alone, let me examine
    The question which has long disturbed my mind
    With doubt, since first I read in Plinius
    The words of mystic import and deep sense
    In which he defines God. My intellect
    Can find no God with whom these marks and signs
    Fitly agree. It is a hidden truth
    Which I must fathom.

    [CYPRIAN READS;
    THE DAEMON, DRESSED IN A COURT DRESS, ENTERS.]

    NOTE:
    _57 Stage Direction: So transcr. Reads. Enter the Devil as a fine
        gentleman 1824.

    DAEMON:
    Search even as thou wilt,
    But thou shalt never find what I can hide.

    CYPRIAN:
    What noise is that among the boughs? Who moves?
    What art thou? -

    DAEMON:
    'Tis a foreign gentleman.
    Even from this morning I have lost my way
    In this wild place; and my poor horse at last,
    Quite overcome, has stretched himself upon
    The enamelled tapestry of this mossy mountain,
    And feeds and rests at the same time. I was
    Upon my way to Antioch upon business
    Of some importance, but wrapped up in cares
    (Who is exempt from this inheritance?)
    I parted from my company, and lost
    My way, and lost my servants and my comrades.

    CYPRIAN:
    'Tis singular that even within the sight
    Of the high towers of Antioch you could lose
    Your way. Of all the avenues and green paths
    Of this wild wood there is not one but leads,
    As to its centre, to the walls of Antioch;
    Take which you will, you cannot miss your road.

    DAEMON:
    And such is ignorance! Even in the sight
    Of knowledge, it can draw no profit from it.
    But as it still is early, and as I
    Have no acquaintances in Antioch,
    Being a stranger there, I will even wait
    The few surviving hours of the day,
    Until the night shall conquer it. I see
    Both by your dress and by the books in which
    You find delight and company, that you
    Are a great student; - for my part, I feel
    Much sympathy in such pursuits.

    NOTE:
    _87 in transcr.; with 1824.

    CYPRIAN:
    Have you
    Studied much?

    DAEMON:
    No, - and yet I know enough
    Not to be wholly ignorant.

    CYPRIAN:
    Pray, Sir,
    What science may you know? -

    DAEMON:
    Many.

    CYPRIAN:
    Alas!
    Much pains must we expend on one alone,
    And even then attain it not; - but you
    Have the presumption to assert that you
    Know many without study.

    DAEMON:
    And with truth.
    For in the country whence I come the sciences
    Require no learning, - they are known.

    NOTE:
    _95 come the sciences]come sciences 1824.

    CYPRIAN:
    Oh, would
    I were of that bright country! for in this
    The more we study, we the more discover
    Our ignorance.

    DAEMON:
    It is so true, that I
    Had so much arrogance as to oppose
    The chair of the most high Professorship,
    And obtained many votes, and, though I lost,
    The attempt was still more glorious, than the failure
    Could be dishonourable. If you believe not,
    Let us refer it to dispute respecting
    That which you know the best, and although I
    Know not the opinion you maintain, and though
    It be the true one, I will take the contrary.

    NOTE:
    _106 the transcr.; wanting, 1824.

    CYPRIAN:
    The offer gives me pleasure. I am now
    Debating with myself upon a passage
    Of Plinius, and my mind is racked with doubt
    To understand and know who is the God
    Of whom he speaks.

    DAEMON:
    It is a passage, if
    I recollect it right, couched in these words
    'God is one supreme goodness, one pure essence,
    One substance, and one sense, all sight, all hands.'

    CYPRIAN:
    'Tis true.

    DAEMON:
    What difficulty find you here?

    CYPRIAN:
    I do not recognize among the Gods
    The God defined by Plinius; if he must
    Be supreme goodness, even Jupiter
    Is not supremely good; because we see
    His deeds are evil, and his attributes
    Tainted with mortal weakness; in what manner
    Can supreme goodness be consistent with
    The passions of humanity?

    DAEMON:
    The wisdom
    Of the old world masked with the names of Gods
    The attributes of Nature and of Man;
    A sort of popular philosophy.

    CYPRIAN:
    This reply will not satisfy me, for
    Such awe is due to the high name of God
    That ill should never be imputed. Then,
    Examining the question with more care,
    It follows, that the Gods would always will
    That which is best, were they supremely good.
    How then does one will one thing, one another?
    And that you may not say that I allege
    Poetical or philosophic learning: -
    Consider the ambiguous responses
    Of their oracular statues; from two shrines
    Two armies shall obtain the assurance of
    One victory. Is it not indisputable
    That two contending wills can never lead
    To the same end? And, being opposite,
    If one be good, is not the other evil?
    Evil in God is inconceivable;
    But supreme goodness fails among the Gods
    Without their union.

    NOTE:
    _133 would transcr.; should 1824.

    DAEMON:
    I deny your major.
    These responses are means towards some end
    Unfathomed by our intellectual beam.
    They are the work of Providence, and more
    The battle's loss may profit those who lose,
    Than victory advantage those who win.

    CYPRIAN:
    That I admit; and yet that God should not
    (Falsehood is incompatible with deity)
    Assure the victory; it would be enough
    To have permitted the defeat. If God
    Be all sight, - God, who had beheld the truth,
    Would not have given assurance of an end
    Never to be accomplished: thus, although
    The Deity may according to his attributes
    Be well distinguished into persons, yet
    Even in the minutest circumstance
    His essence must be one.

    NOTE:
    _157 had transcr.; wanting, 1824.

    DAEMON:
    To attain the end
    The affections of the actors in the scene
    Must have been thus influenced by his voice.

    CYPRIAN:
    But for a purpose thus subordinate
    He might have employed Genii, good or evil, -
    A sort of spirits called so by the learned,
    Who roam about inspiring good or evil,
    And from whose influence and existence we
    May well infer our immortality.
    Thus God might easily, without descent
    To a gross falsehood in his proper person,
    Have moved the affections by this mediation
    To the just point.

    NOTE:
    _172 descent transcr.; descending 1824.

    DAEMON:
    These trifling contradictions
    Do not suffice to impugn the unity
    Of the high Gods; in things of great importance
    They still appear unanimous; consider
    That glorious fabric, man, - his workmanship
    Is stamped with one conception.

    CYPRIAN:
    Who made man
    Must have, methinks, the advantage of the others.
    If they are equal, might they not have risen
    In opposition to the work, and being
    All hands, according to our author here,
    Have still destroyed even as the other made?
    If equal in their power, unequal only
    In opportunity, which of the two
    Will remain conqueror?

    NOTE:
    _186 unequal only transcr.; and only unequal 1824.

    DAEMON:
    On impossible
    And false hypothesis there can be built
    No argument. Say, what do you infer
    From this?

    CYPRIAN:
    That there must be a mighty God
    Of supreme goodness and of highest grace,
    All sight, all hands, all truth, infallible,
    Without an equal and without a rival,
    The cause of all things and the effect of nothing,
    One power, one will, one substance, and one essence.
    And, in whatever persons, one or two,
    His attributes may be distinguished, one
    Sovereign power, one solitary essence,
    One cause of all cause.

    NOTE:
    _197 And]query, Ay?

    [THEY RISE.]

    DAEMON:
    How can I impugn
    So clear a consequence?

    NOTE:
    _200 all cause 1824; all things transcr.

    CYPRIAN:
    Do you regret
    My victory?

    DAEMON:
    Who but regrets a check
    In rivalry of wit? I could reply
    And urge new difficulties, but will now
    Depart, for I hear steps of men approaching,
    And it is time that I should now pursue
    My journey to the city.

    CYPRIAN:
    Go in peace!

    DAEMON:
    Remain in peace! - Since thus it profits him
    To study, I will wrap his senses up
    In sweet oblivion of all thought but of
    A piece of excellent beauty; and, as I
    Have power given me to wage enmity
    Against Justina's soul, I will extract
    From one effect two vengeances.

    [ASIDE AND EXIT.]

    NOTE:
    _214 Stage direction So transcr.; Exit 1824.

    CYPRIAN:
    I never
    Met a more learned person. Let me now
    Revolve this doubt again with careful mind.

    [HE READS.]

    [FLORO AND LELIO ENTER.]

    LELIO:
    Here stop. These toppling rocks and tangled boughs,
    Impenetrable by the noonday beam,
    Shall be sole witnesses of what we -

    FLORO:
    Draw!
    If there were words, here is the place for deeds.

    LELIO:
    Thou needest not instruct me; well I know
    That in the field, the silent tongue of steel
    Speaks thus, -

    [THEY FIGHT.]

    CYPRIAN:
    Ha! what is this? Lelio, - Floro,
    Be it enough that Cyprian stands between you,
    Although unarmed.

    LELIO:
    Whence comest thou, to stand
    Between me and my vengeance?

    FLORO:
    From what rocks
    And desert cells?

    [ENTER MOSCON AND CLARIN.]

    MOSCON:
    Run! run! for where we left
    My master. I now hear the clash of swords.

    NOTES:
    _228 I now hear transcr.; we hear 1824.
    _227-_229 lines of otherwise arranged, 1824.

    CLARIN:
    I never run to approach things of this sort
    But only to avoid them. Sir! Cyprian! sir!

    CYPRIAN:
    Be silent, fellows! What! two friends who are
    In blood and fame the eyes and hope of Antioch,
    One of the noble race of the Colalti,
    The other son o' the Governor, adventure
    And cast away, on some slight cause no doubt,
    Two lives, the honour of their country?

    NOTE:
    _233 race transcr.; men 1824. Colalti]Colatti 1824.

    LELIO:
    Cyprian!
    Although my high respect towards your person
    Holds now my sword suspended, thou canst not
    Restore it to the slumber of the scabbard:
    Thou knowest more of science than the duel;
    For when two men of honour take the field,
    No counsel nor respect can make them friends
    But one must die in the dispute.

    NOTE:
    _239 of the transcr.; of its 1824.
    _242 No counsel nor 1839, 1st edition;
        No [...] or 1824; No reasoning or transcr.
    _243 dispute transcr. pursuit 1824.

    FLORO:
    I pray
    That you depart hence with your people, and
    Leave us to finish what we have begun
    Without advantage. -

    CYPRIAN:
    Though you may imagine
    That I know little of the laws of duel,
    Which vanity and valour instituted,
    You are in error. By my birth I am
    Held no less than yourselves to know the limits
    Of honour and of infamy, nor has study
    Quenched the free spirit which first ordered them;
    And thus to me, as one well experienced
    In the false quicksands of the sea of honour,
    You may refer the merits of the case;
    And if I should perceive in your relation
    That either has the right to satisfaction
    From the other, I give you my word of honour
    To leave you.

    NOTE:
    _253 well omit, cj. Forman.

    LELIO:
    Under this condition then
    I will relate the cause, and you will cede
    And must confess the impossibility
    Of compromise; for the same lady is
    Beloved by Floro and myself.

    FLORO:
    It seems
    Much to me that the light of day should look
    Upon that idol of my heart - but he -
    Leave us to fight, according to thy word.

    CYPRIAN:
    Permit one question further: is the lady
    Impossible to hope or not?

    LELIO:
    She is
    So excellent, that if the light of day
    Should excite Floro's jealousy, it were
    Without just cause, for even the light of day
    Trembles to gaze on her.

    CYPRIAN:
    Would you for your
    Part, marry her?

    FLORO:
    Such is my confidence.

    CYPRIAN:
    And you?

    LELIO:
    Oh! would that I could lift my hope
    So high, for though she is extremely poor,
    Her virtue is her dowry.

    CYPRIAN:
    And if you both
    Would marry her, is it not weak and vain,
    Culpable and unworthy, thus beforehand
    To slur her honour? What would the world say
    If one should slay the other, and if she
    Should afterwards espouse the murderer?

    [THE RIVALS AGREE TO REFER THEIR QUARREL TO CYPRIAN; WHO IN CONSEQUENCE
    VISITS JUSTINA, AND BECOMES ENAMOURED OF HER; SHE DISDAINS HIM, AND HE
    RETIRES TO A SOLITARY SEA-SHORE.]


    SCENE 2.

    CYPRIAN:
    O memory! permit it not
    That the tyrant of my thought
    Be another soul that still
    Holds dominion o'er the will,
    That would refuse, but can no more,
    To bend, to tremble, and adore.
    Vain idolatry! - I saw,
    And gazing, became blind with error;
    Weak ambition, which the awe
    Of her presence bound to terror!
    So beautiful she was - and I,
    Between my love and jealousy,
    Am so convulsed with hope and fear,
    Unworthy as it may appear; -
    So bitter is the life I live,
    That, hear me, Hell! I now would give
    To thy most detested spirit
    My soul, for ever to inherit,
    To suffer punishment and pine,
    So this woman may be mine.
    Hear'st thou, Hell! dost thou reject it?
    My soul is offered!

    DAEMON (UNSEEN):
    I accept it.

    [TEMPEST, WITH THUNDER AND LIGHTNING.]

    CYPRIAN:
    What is this? ye heavens for ever pure,
    At once intensely radiant and obscure!
    Athwart the aethereal halls
    The lightning's arrow and the thunder-balls
    The day affright,
    As from the horizon round,
    Burst with earthquake sound,
    In mighty torrents the electric fountains; -
    Clouds quench the sun, and thunder-smoke
    Strangles the air, and fire eclipses Heaven.
    Philosophy, thou canst not even
    Compel their causes underneath thy yoke:
    From yonder clouds even to the waves below
    The fragments of a single ruin choke
    Imagination's flight;
    For, on flakes of surge, like feathers light,
    The ashes of the desolation, cast
    Upon the gloomy blast,
    Tell of the footsteps of the storm;
    And nearer, see, the melancholy form
    Of a great ship, the outcast of the sea,
    Drives miserably!
    And it must fly the pity of the port,
    Or perish, and its last and sole resort
    Is its own raging enemy.
    The terror of the thrilling cry
    Was a fatal prophecy
    Of coming death, who hovers now
    Upon that shattered prow,
    That they who die not may be dying still.
    And not alone the insane elements
    Are populous with wild portents,
    But that sad ship is as a miracle
    Of sudden ruin, for it drives so fast
    It seems as if it had arrayed its form
    With the headlong storm.
    It strikes - I almost feel the shock, -
    It stumbles on a jagged rock, -
    Sparkles of blood on the white foam are cast.

    [A TEMPEST.]

    ALL EXCLAIM [WITHIN]:
    We are all lost!

    DAEMON [WITHIN]:
    Now from this plank will I
    Pass to the land and thus fulfil my scheme.

    CYPRIAN:
    As in contempt of the elemental rage
    A man comes forth in safety, while the ship's
    Great form is in a watery eclipse
    Obliterated from the Oceans page,
    And round its wreck the huge sea-monsters sit,
    A horrid conclave, and the whistling wave
    Is heaped over its carcase, like a grave.

    [THE DAEMON ENTERS, AS ESCAPED FROM THE SEA.]

    DAEMON [ASIDE]:
    It was essential to my purposes
    To wake a tumult on the sapphire ocean,
    That in this unknown form I might at length
    Wipe out the blot of the discomfiture
    Sustained upon the mountain, and assail
    With a new war the soul of Cyprian,
    Forging the instruments of his destruction
    Even from his love and from his wisdom. - O
    Beloved earth, dear mother, in thy bosom
    I seek a refuge from the monster who
    Precipitates itself upon me.

    CYPRIAN:
    Friend,
    Collect thyself; and be the memory
    Of thy late suffering, and thy greatest sorrow
    But as a shadow of the past, - for nothing
    Beneath the circle of the moon, but flows
    And changes, and can never know repose.

    DAEMON:
    And who art thou, before whose feet my fate
    Has prostrated me?

    CYPRIAN:
    One who, moved with pity,
    Would soothe its stings.

    DAEMON:
    Oh, that can never be!
    No solace can my lasting sorrows find.

    CYPRIAN:
    Wherefore?

    DAEMON:
    Because my happiness is lost.
    Yet I lament what has long ceased to be
    The object of desire or memory,
    And my life is not life.

    CYPRIAN:
    Now, since the fury
    Of this earthquaking hurricane is still,
    And the crystalline Heaven has reassumed
    Its windless calm so quickly, that it seems
    As if its heavy wrath had been awakened
    Only to overwhelm that vessel, - speak,
    Who art thou, and whence comest thou?

    DAEMON:
    Far more
    My coming hither cost, than thou hast seen
    Or I can tell. Among my misadventures
    This shipwreck is the least. Wilt thou hear?

    CYPRIAN:
    Speak.

    DAEMON:
    Since thou desirest, I will then unveil
    Myself to thee; - for in myself I am
    A world of happiness and misery;
    This I have lost, and that I must lament
    Forever. In my attributes I stood
    So high and so heroically great,
    In lineage so supreme, and with a genius
    Which penetrated with a glance the world
    Beneath my feet, that, won by my high merit,
    A king - whom I may call the King of kings,
    Because all others tremble in their pride
    Before the terrors of His countenance,
    In His high palace roofed with brightest gems
    Of living light - call them the stars of Heaven -
    Named me His counsellor. But the high praise
    Stung me with pride and envy, and I rose
    In mighty competition, to ascend
    His seat and place my foot triumphantly
    Upon His subject thrones. Chastised, I know
    The depth to which ambition falls; too mad
    Was the attempt, and yet more mad were now
    Repentance of the irrevocable deed: -
    Therefore I chose this ruin, with the glory
    Of not to be subdued, before the shame
    Of reconciling me with Him who reigns
    By coward cession. - Nor was I alone,
    Nor am I now, nor shall I be alone;
    And there was hope, and there may still be hope,
    For many suffrages among His vassals
    Hailed me their lord and king, and many still
    Are mine, and many more, perchance shall be.
    Thus vanquished, though in fact victorious,
    I left His seat of empire, from mine eye
    Shooting forth poisonous lightning, while my words
    With inauspicious thunderings shook Heaven,
    Proclaiming vengeance, public as my wrong,
    And imprecating on His prostrate slaves
    Rapine, and death, and outrage. Then I sailed
    Over the mighty fabric of the world, -
    A pirate ambushed in its pathless sands,
    A lynx crouched watchfully among its caves
    And craggy shores; and I have wandered over
    The expanse of these wide wildernesses
    In this great ship, whose bulk is now dissolved
    In the light breathings of the invisible wind,
    And which the sea has made a dustless ruin,
    Seeking ever a mountain, through whose forests
    I seek a man, whom I must now compel
    To keep his word with me. I came arrayed
    In tempest, and although my power could well
    Bridle the forest winds in their career,
    For other causes I forbore to soothe
    Their fury to Favonian gentleness;
    I could and would not;
    [ASIDE.]
    (thus I wake in him
    A love of magic art). Let not this tempest,
    Nor the succeeding calm excite thy wonder;
    For by my art the sun would turn as pale
    As his weak sister with unwonted fear;
    And in my wisdom are the orbs of Heaven
    Written as in a record; I have pierced
    The flaming circles of their wondrous spheres
    And know them as thou knowest every corner
    Of this dim spot. Let it not seem to thee
    That I boast vainly; wouldst thou that I work
    A charm over this waste and savage wood,
    This Babylon of crags and aged trees,
    Filling its leafy coverts with a horror
    Thrilling and strange? I am the friendless guest
    Of these wild oaks and pines - and as from thee
    I have received the hospitality
    Of this rude place, I offer thee the fruit
    Of years of toil in recompense; whate'er
    Thy wildest dream presented to thy thought
    As object of desire, that shall be thine.

    ...

    And thenceforth shall so firm an amity
    'Twixt thee and me be, that neither Fortune,
    The monstrous phantom which pursues success,
    That careful miser, that free prodigal,
    Who ever alternates, with changeful hand,
    Evil and good, reproach and fame; nor Time,
    That lodestar of the ages, to whose beam
    The winged years speed o'er the intervals
    Of their unequal revolutions; nor
    Heaven itself, whose beautiful bright stars
    Rule and adorn the world, can ever make
    The least division between thee and me,
    Since now I find a refuge in thy favour.

    NOTES:
    _146 wide glassy wildernesses Rossetti.
    _150 Seeking forever cj. Forman.
    _154 forest]fiercest cj. Rossetti.


    SCENE 3.

    THE DAEMON TEMPTS JUSTINA, WHO IS A CHRISTIAN.

    DAEMON:
    Abyss of Hell! I call on thee,
    Thou wild misrule of thine own anarchy!
    From thy prison-house set free
    The spirits of voluptuous death,
    That with their mighty breath
    They may destroy a world of virgin thoughts;
    Let her chaste mind with fancies thick as motes
    Be peopled from thy shadowy deep,
    Till her guiltless fantasy
    Full to overflowing be!
    And with sweetest harmony,
    Let birds, and flowers, and leaves, and all things move
    To love, only to love.
    Let nothing meet her eyes
    But signs of Love's soft victories;
    Let nothing meet her ear
    But sounds of Love's sweet sorrow,
    So that from faith no succour she may borrow,
    But, guided by my spirit blind
    And in a magic snare entwined,
    She may now seek Cyprian.
    Begin, while I in silence bind
    My voice, when thy sweet song thou hast began.

    NOTE:
    _18 she may]may she 1824.

    A VOICE [WITHIN]:
    What is the glory far above
    All else in human life?

    ALL:
    Love! love!

    [WHILE THESE WORDS ARE SUNG,
    THE DAEMON GOES OUT AT ONE DOOR,
    AND JUSTINA ENTERS AT ANOTHER.]

    THE FIRST VOICE:
    There is no form in which the fire
    Of love its traces has impressed not.
    Man lives far more in love's desire
    Than by life's breath, soon possessed not.
    If all that lives must love or die,
    All shapes on earth, or sea, or sky,
    With one consent to Heaven cry
    That the glory far above
    All else in life is -

    ALL:
    Love! oh, Love!

    JUSTINA:
    Thou melancholy Thought which art
    So flattering and so sweet, to thee
    When did I give the liberty
    Thus to afflict my heart?
    What is the cause of this new Power
    Which doth my fevered being move,
    Momently raging more and more?
    What subtle Pain is kindled now
    Which from my heart doth overflow
    Into my senses? -

    NOTE:
    _36 flattering Boscombe manuscript; fluttering 1824.

    ALL:
    Love! oh, Love!

    JUSTINA:
    'Tis that enamoured Nightingale
    Who gives me the reply;
    He ever tells the same soft tale
    Of passion and of constancy
    To his mate, who rapt and fond,
    Listening sits, a bough beyond.

    Be silent, Nightingale - no more
    Make me think, in hearing thee
    Thus tenderly thy love deplore,
    If a bird can feel his so,
    What a man would feel for me.
    And, voluptuous Vine, O thou
    Who seekest most when least pursuing, -
    To the trunk thou interlacest
    Art the verdure which embracest,
    And the weight which is its ruin, -
    No more, with green embraces, Vine,
    Make me think on what thou lovest, -
    For whilst thus thy boughs entwine
    I fear lest thou shouldst teach me, sophist,
    How arms might be entangled too.

    Light-enchanted Sunflower, thou
    Who gazest ever true and tender
    On the sun's revolving splendour!
    Follow not his faithless glance
    With thy faded countenance,
    Nor teach my beating heart to fear,
    If leaves can mourn without a tear,
    How eyes must weep! O Nightingale,
    Cease from thy enamoured tale, -
    Leafy Vine, unwreathe thy bower,
    Restless Sunflower, cease to move, -
    Or tell me all, what poisonous Power
    Ye use against me -

    NOTES:
    _58 To]Who to cj. Rossetti.
    _63 whilst thus Rossetti, Forman, Dowden; whilst thou thus 1824.

    ALL:
    Love! Love! Love!

    JUSTINA:
    It cannot be! - Whom have I ever loved?
    Trophies of my oblivion and disdain,
    Floro and Lelio did I not reject?
    And Cyprian? -
    [SHE BECOMES TROUBLED AT THE NAME OF CYPRIAN.]
    Did I not requite him
    With such severity, that he has fled
    Where none has ever heard of him again? -
    Alas! I now begin to fear that this
    May be the occasion whence desire grows bold,
    As if there were no danger. From the moment
    That I pronounced to my own listening heart,
    'Cyprian is absent!' - O me miserable!
    I know not what I feel!
    [MORE CALMLY.]
    It must be pity
    To think that such a man, whom all the world
    Admired, should be forgot by all the world,
    And I the cause.
    [SHE AGAIN BECOMES TROUBLED.]
    And yet if it were pity,
    Floro and Lelio might have equal share,
    For they are both imprisoned for my sake.
    [CALMLY.]
    Alas! what reasonings are these? it is
    Enough I pity him, and that, in vain,
    Without this ceremonious subtlety.
    And, woe is me! I know not where to find him now,
    Even should I seek him through this wide world.

    NOTE:
    _89 me miserable]miserable me editions 1839.

    [ENTER DAEMON.]

    DAEMON:
    Follow, and I will lead thee where he is.

    JUSTINA:
    And who art thou, who hast found entrance hither,
    Into my chamber through the doors and locks?
    Art thou a monstrous shadow which my madness
    Has formed in the idle air?

    DAEMON:
    No. I am one
    Called by the Thought which tyrannizes thee
    From his eternal dwelling; who this day
    Is pledged to bear thee unto Cyprian.

    JUSTINA:
    So shall thy promise fail. This agony
    Of passion which afflicts my heart and soul
    May sweep imagination in its storm;
    The will is firm.

    DAEMON:
    Already half is done
    In the imagination of an act.
    The sin incurred, the pleasure then remains;
    Let not the will stop half-way on the road.

    JUSTINA:
    I will not be discouraged, nor despair,
    Although I thought it, and although 'tis true
    That thought is but a prelude to the deed: -
    Thought is not in my power, but action is:
    I will not move my foot to follow thee.

    DAEMON:
    But a far mightier wisdom than thine own
    Exerts itself within thee, with such power
    Compelling thee to that which it inclines
    That it shall force thy step; how wilt thou then
    Resist, Justina?

    NOTE:
    _123 inclines]inclines to cj. Rossetti.

    JUSTINA:
    By my free-will.

    DAEMON:
    I
    Must force thy will.

    JUSTINA:
    It is invincible;
    It were not free if thou hadst power upon it.

    [HE DRAWS, BUT CANNOT MOVE HER.]

    DAEMON:
    Come, where a pleasure waits thee.

    JUSTINA:
    It were bought
    Too dear.

    DAEMON:
    'Twill soothe thy heart to softest peace.

    JUSTINA:
    'Tis dread captivity.

    DAEMON:
    'Tis joy, 'tis glory.

    JUSTINA:
    'Tis shame, 'tis torment, 'tis despair.

    DAEMON:
    But how
    Canst thou defend thyself from that or me,
    If my power drags thee onward?

    JUSTINA:
    My defence
    Consists in God.

    [HE VAINLY ENDEAVOURS TO FORCE HER, AND AT LAST RELEASES HER.]

    DAEMON:
    Woman, thou hast subdued me,
    Only by not owning thyself subdued.
    But since thou thus findest defence in God,
    I will assume a feigned form, and thus
    Make thee a victim of my baffled rage.
    For I will mask a spirit in thy form
    Who will betray thy name to infamy,
    And doubly shall I triumph in thy loss,
    First by dishonouring thee, and then by turning
    False pleasure to true ignominy.

    [EXIT.]

    JUSTINA: I
    Appeal to Heaven against thee; so that Heaven
    May scatter thy delusions, and the blot
    Upon my fame vanish in idle thought,
    Even as flame dies in the envious air,
    And as the floweret wanes at morning frost;
    And thou shouldst never - But, alas! to whom
    Do I still speak? - Did not a man but now
    Stand here before me? - No, I am alone,
    And yet I saw him. Is he gone so quickly?
    Or can the heated mind engender shapes
    From its own fear? Some terrible and strange
    Peril is near. Lisander! father! lord!
    Livia! -

    [ENTER LISANDER AND LIVIA.]

    LISANDER:
    Oh, my daughter! What?

    LIVIA:
    What!

    JUSTINA:
    Saw you
    A man go forth from my apartment now? -
    I scarce contain myself!

    LISANDER:
    A man here!

    JUSTINA:
    Have you not seen him?

    LIVIA:
    No, Lady.

    JUSTINA: I saw him.

    LISANDER: 'Tis impossible; the doors
    Which led to this apartment were all locked.

    LIVIA [ASIDE]:
    I daresay it was Moscon whom she saw,
    For he was locked up in my room.

    LISANDER:
    It must
    Have been some image of thy fantasy.
    Such melancholy as thou feedest is
    Skilful in forming such in the vain air
    Out of the motes and atoms of the day.

    LIVIA:
    My master's in the right.

    JUSTINA:
    Oh, would it were
    Delusion; but I fear some greater ill.
    I feel as if out of my bleeding bosom
    My heart was torn in fragments; ay,
    Some mortal spell is wrought against my frame;
    So potent was the charm that, had not God
    Shielded my humble innocence from wrong,
    I should have sought my sorrow and my shame
    With willing steps. - Livia, quick, bring my cloak,
    For I must seek refuge from these extremes
    Even in the temple of the highest God
    Where secretly the faithful worship.

    LIVIA:
    Here.

    NOTE:
    _179 Where Rossetti; Which 1824.

    JUSTINA [PUTTING ON HER CLOAK]:
    In this, as in a shroud of snow, may I
    Quench the consuming fire in which I burn,
    Wasting away!

    LISANDER:
    And I will go with thee.

    LIVIA:
    When I once see them safe out of the house
    I shall breathe freely.

    JUSTINA:
    So do I confide
    In thy just favour, Heaven!

    LISANDER:
    Let us go.

    JUSTINA:
    Thine is the cause, great God! turn for my sake,
    And for Thine own, mercifully to me!



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