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    Mary Stuart

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      Immured me in a dungeon-tore from me

      My friends and servants; to unseemly want

      I was exposed, and hurried to the bar

      Of a disgraceful, insolent tribunal.

      No more of this;-in everlasting silence

      Be buried all the cruelties I suffered!

      See-I will throw the blame of all on fate,

      'Twere not your fault, no more than it was mine.

      An evil spirit rose from the abyss,

      To kindle in our hearts the flame of hate,

      By which our tender youth had been divided.

      It grew with us, and bad, designing men

      Fanned with their ready breath the fatal fire:

      Frantics, enthusiasts, with sword and dagger

      Armed the uncalled-for hand! This is the curse

      Of kings, that they, divided, tear the world

      In pieces with their hatred, and let loose

      The raging furies of all hellish strife!

      No foreign tongue is now between us, sister,

      [Approaching her confidently, and with a flattering tone.

      Now stand we face to face; now, sister, speak:

      Name but my crime, I'll fully satisfy you,-

      Alas! had you vouchsafed to hear me then,

      When I so earnest sought to meet your eye,

      It never would have come to this, nor would,

      Here in this mournful place, have happened now

      This so distressful, this so mournful meeting.

      ELIZABETH.

      My better stars preserved me. I was warned,

      And laid not to my breast the poisonous adder!

      Accuse not fate! your own deceitful heart

      It was, the wild ambition of your house

      As yet no enmities had passed between us,

      When your imperious uncle, the proud priest,

      Whose shameless hand grasps at all crowns, attacked me

      With unprovoked hostility, and taught

      You, but too docile, to assume my arms,

      To vest yourself with my imperial title,

      And meet me in the lists in mortal strife:

      What arms employed he not to storm my throne?

      The curses of the priests, the people's sword,

      The dreadful weapons of religious frenzy;-

      Even here in my own kingdom's peaceful haunts

      He fanned the flames of civil insurrection;

      But God is with me, and the haughty priest

      Has not maintained the field. The blow was aimed

      Full at my head, but yours it is which falls!

      MARY.

      I'm in the hand of heaven. You never will

      Exert so cruelly the power it gives you.

      ELIZABETH.

      Who shall prevent me? Say, did not your uncle

      Set all the kings of Europe the example,

      How to conclude a peace with those they hate.

      Be mine the school of Saint Bartholomew;

      What's kindred then to me, or nation's laws?

      The church can break the bands of every duty;

      It consecrates the regicide, the traitor;

      I only practise what your priests have taught!

      Say then, what surety can be offered me,

      Should I magnanimously loose your bonds?

      Say, with what lock can I secure your faith,

      Which by Saint Peter's keys cannot be opened?

      Force is my only surety; no alliance

      Can be concluded with a race of vipers.

      MARY.

      Oh! this is but your wretched, dark suspicion!

      For you have constantly regarded me

      But as a stranger, and an enemy.

      Had you declared me heir to your dominions,

      As is my right, then gratitude and love

      In me had fixed, for you, a faithful friend

      And kinswoman.

      ELIZABETH.

      Your friendship is abroad,

      Your house is papacy, the monk your brother.

      Name you my successor! The treacherous snare!

      That in my life you might seduce my people;

      And, like a sly Armida, in your net

      Entangle all our noble English youth;

      That all might turn to the new rising sun,

      And I--

      MARY.

      O sister, rule your realm in peace;

      I give up every claim to these domains-

      Alas! the pinions of my soul are lamed;

      Greatness entices me no more: your point

      Is gained; I am but Mary's shadow now-

      My noble spirit is at last broke down

      By long captivity:-you've done your worst

      On me; you have destroyed me in my bloom!

      Now, end your work, my sister;-speak at length

      The word, which to pronounce has brought you hither;

      For I will ne'er believe that you are come,

      To mock unfeelingly your hapless victim.

      Pronounce this word;-say, "Mary, you are free:

      You have already felt my power,-learn now

      To honor too my generosity."

      Say this, and I will take my life, will take

      My freedom, as a present from your hands.

      One word makes all undone;-I wait for it;-

      Oh, let it not be needlessly delayed.

      Woe to you if you end not with this word!

      For should you not, like some divinity,

      Dispensing noble blessings, quit me now,

      Then, sister, not for all this island's wealth,

      For all the realms encircled by the deep,

      Would I exchange my present lot for yours.

      ELIZABETH.

      And you confess at last that you are conquered:

      Are all your schemes run out? No more assassins

      Now on the road? Will no adventurer

      Attempt again for you the sad achievement?

      Yes, madam, it is over:-you'll seduce

      No mortal more. The world has other cares;-

      None is ambitious of the dangerous honor

      Of being your fourth husband-you destroy

      Your wooers like your husbands.

      MARY (starting angrily).

      Sister, sister!-

      Grant me forbearance, all ye powers of heaven!

      ELIZABETH (regards her long with a look of proud contempt).

      Those then, my Lord of Leicester, are the charms

      Which no man with impunity can view,

      Near which no woman dare to stand?

      In sooth, this honor has been cheaply gained;

      She who to all is common, may with ease

      Become the common object of applause.

      MARY.

      This is too much!

      ELIZABETH (laughing insultingly).

      You show us now, indeed,

      Your real face; till now 'twas but the mask.

      MARY (burning with rage, yet dignified and noble).

      My sins were human, and the faults of youth:

      Superior force misled me. I have never

      Denied or sought to hide it: I despised

      All false appearance, as became a queen.

      The worst of me is known, and I can say,

      That I am better than the fame I bear.

      Woe to you! when, in time to come, the world

      Shall draw the robe of honor from your deeds,

      With which thy arch-hypocrisy has veiled

      The raging flames of lawless, secret lust.

      Virtue was not your portion from your mother;

      Well know we what it was which brought the head

      Of Anna Boleyn to the fatal block.

      SHREWSBURY (stepping between both QUEENS).

      Oh! Heaven! Alas, and must it come to this!

      Is this the moderation, the submission,

      My lady?--

      MARY.

      Moderation! I've supported

      What human nature can support: farewell,


      Lamb-hearted resignation, passive patience,

      Fly to thy native heaven; burst at length

      Thy bonds, come forward from thy dreary cave,

      In all thy fury, long suppressed rancor!

      And thou, who to the angered basilisk

      Impart'st the murderous glance, oh, arm my tongue

      With poisoned darts!

      SHREWSBURY.

      She is beside herself!

      Exasperated, mad! My liege, forgive her.

      [ELIZABETH, speechless with anger, casts enraged looks at MARY.

      LEICESTER (in the most violent agitation; he seeks to lead ELIZABETH

      away).

      Attend not to her rage! Away, away,

      From this disastrous place!

      MARY (raising her voice).

      A bastard soils,

      Profanes the English throne! The generous Britons

      Are cheated by a juggler, [whose whole figure

      Is false and painted, heart as well as face!]

      If right prevailed, you now would in the dust

      Before me lie, for I'm your rightful monarch!

      [ELIZABETH hastily quits the stage; the lords follow her

      in the greatest consternation.

      SCENE V.

      MARY, KENNEDY.

      KENNEDY.

      What have you done? She has gone hence in wrath

      All hope is over now!

      MARY (still quite beside herself).

      Gone hence in wrath!

      She carries death within her heart! I know it.

      [Falling on KENNEDY'S bosom.

      Now I am happy, Hannah! and at last,

      After whole years of sorrow and abasement,

      One moment of victorious revenge

      A weight falls off my heart, a weight of mountains;

      I plunged the steel in my oppressor's breast!

      KENNEDY.

      Unhappy lady! Frenzy overcomes you.

      Yes, you have wounded your inveterate foe;

      'Tis she who wields the lightning, she is queen,

      You have insulted her before her minion.

      MARY.

      I have abased her before Leicester's eyes;

      He saw it, he was witness of my triumph.

      How did I hurl her from her haughty height,

      He saw it, and his presence strengthened me.

      SCENE VI.

      Enter MORTIMER.

      KENNEDY.

      Oh, Sir! What an occurrence!

      MORTIMER.

      I heard all-

      [Gives the nurse a sign to repair to her post,

      and draws nearer; his whole appearance expresses

      the utmost violence of passion.

      Thine is the palm;-thou trod'st her to the dust!-

      Thou wast the queen, she was the malefactor;-

      I am transported with thy noble courage;-

      Yes! I adore thee; like a Deity,

      My sense is dazzled by thy heavenly beams.

      MARY (with vivacity and expectation).

      You spoke with Leicester, gave my letter to him.

      My present, too?-oh, speak, sir.

      MORTIMER (beholding her with glowing looks).

      How thy noble,

      Thy royal indignation shone, and cast

      A glory round thy beauty; yes, by heavens,

      Thou art the fairest woman upon earth!

      MARY.

      Sir, satisfy, I beg you, my impatience;

      What says his lordship? Say, sir, may I hope?

      MORTIMER.

      Who?-he?-he is a wretch, a very coward,

      Hope naught from him; despise him, and forget him!

      MARY.

      What say you?

      MORTIMER.

      He deliver, and possess you!

      Why let him dare it:-he!-he must with me

      In mortal contest first deserve the prize!

      MARY.

      You gave him not my letter? Then, indeed

      My hopes are lost!

      MORTIMER.

      The coward loves his life.

      Whoe'er would rescue you, and call you his,

      Must boldly dare affront e'en death itself!

      MARY.

      Will he do nothing for me?

      MORTIMER.

      Speak not of him.

      What can he do? What need have we of him?

      I will release you; I alone.

      MARY.

      Alas!

      What power have you?

      MORTIMER.

      Deceive yourself no more;

      Think not your case is now as formerly;

      The moment that the queen thus quitted you,

      And that your interview had ta'en this turn,

      All hope was lost, each way of mercy shut.

      Now deeds must speak, now boldness must decide,

      To compass all must all be hazarded;

      You must be free before the morning break.

      MARY.

      What say you, sir-to-night?-impossible!

      MORTIMER.

      Hear what has been resolved:-I led my friends

      Into a private chapel, where a priest

      Heard our confession, and, for every sin

      We had committed, gave us absolution;

      He gave us absolution too, beforehand,

      For every crime we might commit in future;

      He gave us too the final sacrament,

      And we are ready for the final journey.

      MARY.

      Oh, what an awful, dreadful preparation!

      MORTIMER.

      We scale, this very night, the castle's walls;

      The keys are in my power; the guards we murder!

      Then from thy chamber bear thee forcibly.

      Each living soul must die beneath our hands,

      That none remain who might disclose the deed.

      MARY.

      And Drury, Paulet, my two keepers, they

      Would sooner spill their dearest drop of blood.

      MORTIMER.

      They fall the very first beneath my steel.

      MARY.

      What, sir! Your uncle? How! Your second father!

      MORTIMER.

      Must perish by my hand-I murder him!

      MARY.

      Oh, bloody outrage!

      MORTIMER.

      We have been absolved

      Beforehand; I may perpetrate the worst;

      I can, I will do so!

      MARY.

      Oh, dreadful, dreadful!

      MORTIMER.

      And should I be obliged to kill the queen,

      I've sworn upon the host, it must be done!

      MARY.

      No, Mortimer; ere so much blood for me--

      MORTIMER.

      What is the life of all compared to thee,

      And to my love? The bond which holds the world

      Together may be loosed, a second deluge

      Come rolling on, and swallow all creation!

      Henceforth I value nothing; ere I quit

      My hold on thee, may earth and time be ended!

      MARY (retiring)

      Heavens! Sir, what language, and what looks! They scare,

      They frighten me!

      MORTIMER (with unsteady looks, expressive of great madness).

      Life's but a moment-death

      Is but a moment too. Why! let them drag me

      To Tyburn, let them tear me limb from limb,

      With red-hot pincers--

      [Violently approaching her with extended arms.

      If I clasp but thee

      Within my arms, thou fervently beloved!

      MARY.

      Madman, avaunt!

      MORTIMER.

      To rest upon this bosom,

      To press upon this passion-breathing mouth--

      MARY.

      Leave me, for God's sake, sir; let me go in--

      MORTIMER.

      He is a madman who neglects to clasp

      His bliss in folds that never may be loosed,

      When Heaven has kindly given it to his arms.


      I will deliver you, and though it cost

      A thousand lives, I do it; but I swear,

      As God's in Heaven I will possess you too!

      MARY.

      Oh! will no God, no angel shelter me?

      Dread destiny! thou throwest me, in thy wrath,

      From one tremendous terror to the other!

      Was I then born to waken naught but frenzy?

      Do hate and love conspire alike to fright me!

      MORTIMER.

      Yes, glowing as their hatred is my love;

      They would behead thee, they would wound this neck,

      So dazzling white, with the disgraceful axe!

      Oh! offer to the living god of joy

      What thou must sacrifice to bloody hate!

      Inspire thy happy lover with those charms

      Which are no more thine own. Those golden locks

      Are forfeit to the dismal powers of death,

      Oh! use them to entwine thy slave forever!

      MARY.

      Alas! alas! what language must I hear!

      My woe, my sufferings should be sacred to you,

     


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