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    Mary Stuart

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      Just as the luckless deed had been attempted;

      Searched with strict scrutiny the queen's apartments,

      And found there--

      LEICESTER.

      What?

      MORTIMER.

      A letter which the queen

      Had just addressed to you--

      LEICESTER.

      Unhappy woman!

      MORTIMER.

      In which she calls on you to keep your word,

      Renews the promise of her hand, and mentions

      The picture which she sent you.

      LEICESTER.

      Death and hell!

      MORTIMER.

      Lord Burleigh has the letter.

      LEICESTER.

      I am lost!

      [During the following speech of MORTIMER, LEICESTER

      goes up and down as in despair.

      MORTIMER.

      Improve the moment; be beforehand with him,

      And save yourself-save her! An oath can clear

      Your fame; contrive excuses to avert

      The worst. I am disarmed, can do no more;

      My comrades are dispersed-to pieces fallen

      Our whole confederacy. For Scotland I

      To rally such new friends as there I may.

      'Tis now your turn, my lord; try what your weight,

      What bold assurance can effect.

      LEICESTER (stops suddenly as if resolved).

      I will.

      [Goes to the door, opens it, and calls.

      Who waits without? Guards! seize this wretched traitor!

      [To the officer, who comes in with soldiers.

      And guard him closely! A most dreadful plot

      Is brought to light-I'll to her majesty.

      MORTIMER (stands for a time petrified with wonder; collects himself soon,

      and follows LEICESTER with his looks expressive of the most

      sovereign contempt).

      Infamous wretch! But I deserve it all.

      Who told me then to trust this practised villain?

      Now o'er my head he strides, and on my fall

      He builds the bridge of safety! be it so;

      Go, save thyself-my lips are sealed forever;

      I will not join even thee in my destruction;

      I would not own thee, no, not even in death;

      Life is the faithless villain's only good!

      [To the officer of the guard, who steps forward to seize him.

      What wilt thou, slave of tyranny, with me?

      I laugh to scorn thy threatenings; I am free.

      [Drawing a dagger.

      OFFICER.

      He's armed; rush in and wrest his weapon from him.

      [They rush upon him, he defends himself.

      MORTIMER (raising his voice).

      And in this latest moment shall my heart

      Expand itself in freedom, and my tongue

      Shall break this long constraint. Curse and destruction

      Light on you all who have betrayed your faith,

      Your God, and your true sovereign! Who, alike

      To earthly Mary false as to the heavenly,

      Have sold your duties to this bastard queen!

      OFFICER.

      Hear you these blasphemies? Rush forward-seize him.

      MORTIMER.

      Beloved queen! I could not set thee free;

      Yet take a lesson from me how to die.

      Mary, thou holy one, O! pray for me!

      And take me to thy heavenly home on high.

      [Stabs himself, and falls into the arms of the guard.

      SCENE V.

      The apartment of the Queen.

      ELIZABETH, with a letter in her hand, BURLEIGH.

      ELIZABETH.

      To lure me thither! trifle with me thus!

      The traitor! Thus to lead me, as in triumph,

      Into the presence of his paramour!

      Oh, Burleigh! ne'er was woman so deceived.

      BURLEIGH.

      I cannot yet conceive what potent means,

      What magic he exerted, to surprise

      My queen's accustomed prudence.

      ELIZABETH.

      Oh, I die

      For shame! How must he laugh to scorn my weakness!

      I thought to humble her, and was myself

      The object of her bitter scorn.

      BURLEIGH.

      By this

      You see how faithfully I counselled you.

      ELIZABETH.

      Oh, I am sorely punished, that I turned

      My ear from your wise counsels; yet I thought

      I might confide in him. Who could suspect

      Beneath the vows of faithfullest devotion

      A deadly snare? In whom can I confide

      When he deceives me? He, whom I have made

      The greatest of the great, and ever set

      The nearest to my heart, and in this court

      Allowed to play the master and the king.

      BURLEIGH.

      Yet in that very moment he betrayed you,

      Betrayed you to this wily Queen of Scots.

      ELIZABETH.

      Oh, she shall pay me for it with her life!

      Is the death-warrant ready?

      BURLEIGH.

      'Tis prepared

      As you commanded.

      ELIZABETH.

      She shall surely die-

      He shall behold her fall, and fall himself!

      I've driven him from my heart. No longer love,

      Revenge alone is there: and high as once

      He stood, so low and shameful be his fall!

      A monument of my severity,

      As once the proud example of my weakness.

      Conduct him to the Tower; let a commission

      Of peers be named to try him. He shall feel

      In its full weight the rigor of the law.

      BURLEIGH.

      But he will seek thy presence; he will clear--

      ELIZABETH.

      How can he clear himself? Does not the letter

      Convict him. Oh, his crimes are manifest!

      BURLEIGH.

      But thou art mild and gracious! His appearance,

      His powerful presence--

      ELIZABETH.

      I will never see him;

      No never, never more. Are orders given

      Not to admit him should he come?

      BURLEIGH.

      'Tis done.

      PAGE (entering).

      The Earl of Leicester!

      ELIZABETH.

      The presumptuous man!

      I will not see him. Tell him that I will not.

      PAGE.

      I am afraid to bring my lord this message,

      Nor would he credit it.

      ELIZABETH.

      And I have raised him

      So high that my own servants tremble more

      At him than me!

      BURLEIGH (to the PAGE).

      The queen forbids his presence.

      [The PAGE retires slowly.

      ELIZABETH (after a pause).

      Yet, if it still were possible? If he

      Could clear himself? Might it not be a snare

      Laid by the cunning one, to sever me

      From my best friends-the ever-treacherous harlot!

      She might have writ the letter, but to raise

      Poisonous suspicion in my heart, to ruin

      The man she hates.

      BURLEIGH.

      Yet, gracious queen, consider.

      SCENE VI.

      LEICESTER (bursts open the door with violence,

      and enters with an imperious air).

      LEICESTER.

      Fain would I see the shameless man who dares

      Forbid me the apartments of my queen!

      ELIZABETH (avoiding his sight).

      Audacious slave!

      LEICESTER.

      To turn me from the door!

      If for a Burleigh she be visible,

      She must be so to me!

      BURLEIGH.

      My lord, you are

      Too bold, without pe
    rmission to intrude.

      LEICESTER.

      My lord, you are too arrogant, to take

      The lead in these apartments. What! Permission!

      I know of none who stands so high at court

      As to permit my doings, or refuse them.

      [Humbly approaching ELIZABETH.

      'Tis from my sovereign's lips alone that I--

      ELIZABETH (without looking at him).

      Out of my sight, deceitful, worthless traitor!

      LEICESTER.

      'Tis not my gracious queen I hear, but Burleigh,

      My enemy, in these ungentle words.

      To my imperial mistress I appeal;

      Thou hast lent him thine ear; I ask the like.

      ELIZABETH.

      Speak, shameless wretch! Increase your crime-deny it.

      LEICESTER.

      Dismiss this troublesome intruder first.

      Withdraw, my lord; it is not of your office

      To play the third man here: between the queen

      And me there is no need of witnesses.

      Retire--

      ELIZABETH (to BURLEIGH).

      Remain, my lord; 'tis my command.

      LEICESTER.

      What has a third to do 'twixt thee and me?

      I have to clear myself before my queen,

      My worshipped queen; I will maintain the rights

      Which thou hast given me; these rights are sacred,

      And I insist upon it, that my lord

      Retire.

      ELIZABETH.

      This haughty tone befits you well.

      LEICESTER.

      It well befits me; am not I the man,

      The happy man, to whom thy gracious favor

      Has given the highest station? this exalts me

      Above this Burleigh, and above them all.

      Thy heart imparted me this rank, and what

      Thy favor gave, by heavens I will maintain

      At my life's hazard. Let him go, it needs

      Two moments only to exculpate me.

      ELIZABETH.

      Think not, with cunning words, to hide the truth.

      LEICESTER.

      That fear from him, so voluble of speech:

      But what I say is to the heart addressed;

      And I will justify what I have dared

      To do, confiding in thy generous favor,

      Before thy heart alone. I recognize

      No other jurisdiction.

      ELIZABETH.

      Base deceiver

      'Tis this, e'en this, which above all condemns you.

      My lord, produce the letter.

      [To BURLEIGH.

      BURLEIGH.

      Here it is.

      LEICESTER (running over the letter without losing his presence of mind).

      'Tis Mary Stuart's hand--

      ELIZABETH.

      Read and be dumb!

      LEICESTER (having read it quietly).

      Appearance is against me, yet I hope

      I shall not by appearances be judged.

      ELIZABETH.

      Can you deny your secret correspondence

      With Mary?-that she sent and you received

      Her picture, that you gave her hopes of rescue?

      LEICESTER.

      It were an easy matter, if I felt

      That I were guilty of a crime, to challenge

      The testimony of my enemy:

      Yet bold is my good conscience. I confess

      That she hath said the truth.

      ELIZABETH.

      Well then, thou wretch!

      BURLEIGH.

      His own words sentence him--

      ELIZABETH.

      Out of my sight!

      Away! Conduct the traitor to the Tower!

      LEICESTER.

      I am no traitor; it was wrong, I own,

      To make a secret of this step to thee;

      Yet pure was my intention, it was done

      To search into her plots and to confound them.

      ELIZABETH.

      Vain subterfuge!

      BURLEIGH.

      And do you think, my lord--

      LEICESTER.

      I've played a dangerous game, I know it well,

      And none but Leicester dare be bold enough

      To risk it at this court. The world must know

      How I detest this Stuart, and the rank

      Which here I hold; my monarch's confidence,

      With which she honors me, must sure suffice

      To overturn all doubt of my intentions.

      Well may the man thy favor above all

      Distinguishes pursue a daring course

      To do his duty!

      BURLEIGH.

      If the course was good,

      Wherefore conceal it?

      LEICESTER.

      You are used, my lord,

      To prate before you act; the very chime

      Of your own deeds. This is your manner, lord;

      But mine is first to act, and then to speak.

      BURLEIGH.

      Yes, now you speak because you must.

      LEICESTER (measuring him proudly and disdainfully with his eyes).

      And you

      Boast of a wonderful, a mighty action,

      That you have saved the queen, have snatched away

      The mask from treachery; all is known to you;

      You think, forsooth, that nothing can escape

      Your penetrating eyes. Poor, idle boaster!

      In spite of all your cunning, Mary Stuart

      Was free to-day, had I not hindered it.

      BURLEIGH.

      How? You?

      LEICESTER.

      Yes, I, my lord; the queen confided

      In Mortimer; she opened to the youth

      Her inmost soul! Yes, she went further still;

      She gave him, too, a secret, bloody charge,

      Which Paulet had before refused with horror.

      Say, is it so, or not?

      [The QUEEN and BURLEIGH look at one another with astonishment.

      BURLEIGH.

      Whence know ye this?

      LEICESTER.

      Nay, is it not a fact? Now answer me.

      And where, my lord, where were your thousand eyes,

      Not to discover Mortimer was false?

      That he, the Guise's tool, and Mary's creature,

      A raging papist, daring fanatic,

      Was come to free the Stuart, and to murder

      The Queen of England!

      ELIZABETH (with the utmost astonishment).

      How! This Mortimer!

      LEICESTER.

      'Twas he through whom our correspondence passed.

      This plot it was which introduced me to him.

      This very day she was to have been torn

      From her confinement; he, this very moment,

      Disclosed his plan to me: I took him prisoner,

      And gave him to the guard, when in despair

      To see his work o'erturned, himself unmasked,

      He slew himself!

      ELIZABETH.

      Oh, I indeed have been

      Deceived beyond example, Mortimer!

      BURLEIGH.

      This happened then but now? Since last we parted?

      LEICESTER.

      For my own sake, I must lament the deed;

      That he was thus cut off. His testimony,

      Were he alive, had fully cleared my fame,

      And freed me from suspicion; 'twas for this

      That I surrendered him to open justice.

      I thought to choose the most impartial course

      To verify and fix my innocence

      Before the world.

      BURLEIGH.

      He killed himself, you say

      Is't so? Or did you kill him?

      LEICESTER.

      Vile suspicion!

      Hear but the guard who seized him.

      [He goes to the door, and calls.

      Ho! who waits?

      [Enter the officer of the guard.

      Sir, tell the queen how Mortimer expired.

    &nbs
    p; OFFICER.

      I was on duty in the palace porch,

      When suddenly my lord threw wide the door,

      And ordered me to take the knight in charge,

      Denouncing him a traitor: upon this

      He grew enraged, and with most bitter curses

      Against our sovereign and our holy faith,

     


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