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    The Bride of Messina (play)

    Page 7
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      Though swift of deed the traces fade

      From earth, before the enlivening ray;

      As o'er the brow the transient shade

      Of thought, the hues of fancy flit away:-

      Yet in the mystic womb unseen,

      Of the dark ruling hours that sway

      Our mortal lot, whate'er has been,

      With new creative germ defies decay.

      The blooming field is time

      For nature's ever-teeming shoot,

      And all is seed, and all is fruit.

      [The Chorus goes away, bearing the corpse of DON MANUEL on a bier.

      SCENE-The hall of pillars. It is night.

      The stage is lighted from above by a single large lamp.

      DONNA ISABELLA and DIEGO advance to the front.

      ISABELLA.

      As yet no joyful tidings, not a trace

      Found of the lost one!

      DIEGO.

      Nothing have we heard,

      My mistress; yet o'er every track, unwearied,

      Thy sons pursue. Ere long the rescued maid

      Shall smile at dangers past.

      ISABELLA.

      Alas! Diego,

      My heart is sad; 'twas I that caused this woe!

      DIEGO.

      Vex not thy anxious bosom; naught escaped

      Thy thoughtful care.

      ISABELLA.

      Oh! had I earlier shown

      The hidden treasure!

      DIEGO.

      Prudent were thy counsels,

      Wisely thou left'st her in retirement's shade;

      So, trust in heaven.

      ISABELLA.

      Alas! no joy is perfect

      Without this chance of ill my bliss were pure.

      DIEGO.

      Thy happiness is but delayed; enjoy

      The concord of thy sons.

      ISABELLA.

      The sight was rapture

      Supreme, when, locked in one another's arms,

      They glowed with brothers' love.

      DIEGO.

      And in the heart

      It burns; for ne'er their princely souls have stooped

      To mean disguise.

      ISABELLA.

      Now, too, their bosoms wake

      To gentler thoughts, and own their softening sway

      Of love. No more their hot, impetuous youth

      Revels in liberty untamed, and spurns

      Restraint of law, attempered passion's self,

      With modest, chaste reserve.

      To thee, Diego,

      I will unfold my secret heart; this hour

      Of feeling's opening bloom, expected long,

      Wakes boding fears: thou know'st to sudden rage

      Love stirs tumultuous breasts; and if this flame

      With jealousy should rouse the slumbering fires

      Of ancient hate-I shudder at the thought!

      If these discordant souls perchance have thrilled

      In fatal unison! Enough; the clouds

      That black with thundering menace o'er me hung

      Are past; some angel sped them tranquil by,

      And my enfranchised spirit breathes again.

      DIEGO.

      Rejoice, my mistress; for thy gentle sense

      And soft, prevailing art more weal have wrought

      Than all thy husband's power. Be praise to thee

      And thy auspicious star!

      ISABELLA.

      Yes, fortune smiled;

      Nor light the task, so long with apt disguise

      To veil the cherished secret of my heart,

      And cheat my ever-jealous lord: more hard

      To stifle mighty nature's pleading voice,

      That, like a prisoned fire, forever strove

      To rend its confines.

      DIEGO.

      All shall yet be well;

      Fortune, propitious to our hopes, gave pledge

      Of bliss that time will show.

      ISABELLA.

      I praise not yet

      My natal star, while darkening o'er my fate

      This mystery hangs: too well the dire mischance

      Tells of the fiend whose never-slumbering rage

      Pursues our house. Now list what I have done,

      And praise or blame me as thou wilt; from thee

      My bosom guards no secret: ill I brook

      This dull repose, while swift o'er land and sea

      My sons unwearied, track their sister's flight,

      Yes, I have sought; heaven counsels oft, when vain

      All mortal aid.

      DIEGO.

      What I may know, my mistress,

      Declare.

      ISABELLA.

      On Etna's solitary height

      A reverend hermit dwells,-benamed of old

      The mountain seer,-who to the realms of light

      More near abiding than the toilsome race

      Of mortals here below, with purer air

      Has cleansed each earthly, grosser sense away;

      And from the lofty peak of gathered years,

      As from his mountain home, with downward glance

      Surveys the crooked paths of worldly strife.

      To him are known the fortunes of our house;

      Oft has the holy sage besought response

      From heaven, and many a curse with earnest prayer

      Averted: thither at my bidding flew,

      On wings of youthful haste, a messenger,

      To ask some tidings of my child: each hour

      I wait his homeward footsteps.

      DIEGO.

      If mine eyes

      Deceive me not, he comes; and well his speed

      Has earned thy praise.

      MESSENGER, ISABELLA, DIEGO.

      ISABELLA (to MESSENGER).

      Now speak, and nothing hide

      Of weal or woe; be truth upon thy lips!

      What tidings bear'st thou from the mountain seer?

      MESSENGER.

      His answer: "Quick! retrace thy steps; the lost one

      Is found."

      ISABELLA.

      Auspicious tongue! Celestial sounds

      Of peace and joy! thus ever to my vows.

      Thrice honored sage, thy kindly message spoke!

      But say, which heaven-directed brother traced

      My daughter?

      MESSENGER.

      'Twas thy eldest born that found

      The deep-secluded maid.

      ISABELLA.

      Is it Don Manuel

      That gives her to my arms? Oh, he was ever

      The child of blessing! Tell me, hast thou borne

      My offering to the aged man? the tapers

      To burn before his saint? for gifts, the prize

      Of worldly hearts, the man of God disdains.

      MESSENGER.

      He took the torches from my hands in silence

      And stepping to the altar-where the lamp

      Burned to his saint-illumed them at his fire,

      And instant set in flames the hermit cell,

      Where he has honored God these ninety years!

      ISABELLA.

      What hast thou said? What horrors fright my soul?

      MESSENGER.

      And three times shrieking "Woe!" with downward course,

      He fled; but silent with uplifted arm

      Beckoned me not to follow, nor regard him

      So hither I have hastened, terror-sped.

      ISABELLA.

      Oh, I am tossed amid the surge again

      Of doubt and anxious fears; thy tale appals

      With ominous sounds of ill. My daughter found-

      Thou sayest; and by my eldest born, Don Manuel?

      The tidings ne'er shall bless, that heralded

      This deed of woe!

      MESSENGER.

      My mistress! look around

      Behold the hermit's message to thine eyes

      Fulfilled. Some charm deludes my sense, or hither

      Thy daughter comes, girt by the warlike train

      Of thy two sons!

      [BEATRICE
    is carried in by the Second Chorus on a litter,

      and placed in the front of the stage. She is still without

      perception, and motionless.

      ISABELLA, DIEGO, MESSENGER, BEATRICE.

      Chorus (BOHEMUND, ROGER, HIPPOLYTE, and the other nine followers

      of DON CAESAR.)

      Chorus (BOHEMUND).

      Here at thy feet we lay

      The maid, obedient to our lord's command:

      'Twas thus he spoke-"Conduct her to my mother;

      And tell her that her son, Don Caesar, sends her!"

      ISABELLA (is advancing towards her with outstretched arms, and starts

      back in horror).

      Heavens! she is motionless and pale!

      Chorus (BOHEMUND).

      She lives,

      She will awake, but give her time to rouse

      From the dread shock that holds each sense enthralled.

      ISABELLA.

      My daughter! Child of all my cares and pains!

      And is it thus I see thee once again?

      Thus thou returnest to thy father's halls!

      Oh, let my breath relume thy vital spark;

      Yes! I will strain thee to a mother's arms

      And hold thee fast-till from the frost of death

      Released thy life-warm current throbs again.

      [To the Chorus.

      Where hast thou found her? Speak! What dire mischance

      Has caused this sight of woe?

      Chorus (BOHEMUND).

      My lips are dumb!

      Ask not of me: thy son will tell thee all-

      Don Caesar-for 'tis he that sends her.

      ISABELLA

      'Tell me

      Would'st thou not say Don Manuel?

      Chorus (BOHEMUND).

      'Tis Don Caesar

      That sends her to thee.

      ISABELLA (to the MESSENGER).

      How declared the Seer?

      Speak! Was it not Don Manuel?

      MESSENGER.

      'Twas he!

      Thy elder born.

      ISABELLA.

      Be blessings on his head

      Which e'er it be; to him I owe a daughter,

      Alas! that in this blissful hour, so long

      Expected, long implored, some envious fiend

      Should mar my joy! Oh, I must stem the tide

      Of nature's transport! In her childhood's home

      I see my daughter; me she knows not-heeds not-

      Nor answers to a mother's voice of love

      Ope, ye dear eyelids-hands be warm-and heave

      Thou lifeless bosom with responsive throbs

      To mine! 'Tis she! Diego, look! 'tis Beatrice!

      The long-concealed-the lost-the rescued one!

      Before the world I claim her for my own!

      Chorus (BOHEMUND).

      New signs of terror to my boding soul

      Are pictured;-in amazement lost I stand!

      What light shall pierce this gloom of mystery?

      ISABELLA (to the Chorus, who exhibit marks of confusion and

      embarrassment).

      Oh, ye hard hearts! Ye rude unpitying men!

      A mother's transport from your breast of steel

      Rebounds, as from the rocks the heaving surge!

      I look around your train, nor mark one glance

      Of soft regard. Where are my sons? Oh, tell me

      Why come they not, and from their beaming eyes

      Speak comfort to my soul? For here environed

      I stand amid the desert's raging brood,

      Or monsters of the deep!

      DIEGO.

      She opes her eyes!

      She moves! She lives!

      ISABELLA.

      She lives! On me be thrown

      Her earliest glance!

      DIEGO.

      See! They are closed again-

      She shudders!

      ISABELLA (to the Chorus).

      Quick! Retire-your aspect frights her.

      [Chorus steps back.

      RORER.

      Well pleased I shun her sight.

      DIEGO.

      With outstretched eyes,

      And wonderstruck, she seems to measure thee.

      BEATRICE.

      Not strange those lineaments-where am I?

      ISABELLA.

      Slowly

      Her sense returns.

      DIEGO.

      Behold! upon her knees

      She sinks.

      BEATRICE.

      Oh, angel visage of my mother!

      ISABELLA.

      Child of my heart!

      BEATRICE.

      See! kneeling at thy feet

      The guilty one!

      ISABELLA.

      I hold thee in my arms!

      Enough-forgotten all!

      DIEGO.

      Look in my face,

      Canst thou remember me?

      BEATRICE.

      The reverend brows

      Of honest old Diego!

      ISABELLA.

      Faithful guardian

      Of thy young years.

      BEATRICE.

      And am I once again

      With kindred?

      ISABELLA.

      Naught but death shall part us more!

      BEATRICE.

      Will thou ne'er send me to the stranger?

      ISABELLA.

      Never!

      Fate is appeased.

      BEATRICE.

      And am I next thy heart?

      And was it all a dream-a hideous dream?

      My mother! at my feet he fell! I know not

      What brought me hither-yet 'tis well. Oh, bliss!

      That I am safe in thy protecting arms;

      They would have ta'en me to the princess, mother-

      Sooner to death!

      ISABELLA.

      My daughter, calm thy fears;

      Messina's princess--

      BEATRICE.

      Name her not again!

      At that ill-omened sound the chill of death

      Creeps through my trembling frame.

      ISABELLA.

      My child! but hear me--

      BEATRICE.

      She has two sons by mortal hate dissevered,

      Don Manuel and Don Caesar--

      ISABELLA.

      'Tis myself!

      Behold thy mother!

      BEATRICE.

      Have I heard thee? Speak!

      ISABELLA.

      I am thy mother, and Messina's princess!

      BEATRICE.

      Art thou Don Manuel's and Don Caesar's mother?

      ISABELLA.

      And thine! They are thy brethren whom thou namest.

      BEATRICE.

      Oh, gleam of horrid light!

      ISABELLA.

      What troubles thee?

      Say, whence this strange emotion?

      BEATRICE.

      Yes! 'twas they!

      Now I remember all; no dream deceived me,

      They met-'tis fearful truth! Unhappy men!

      Where have ye hid him?

      [She rushes towards the Chorus; they turn away from her.

      A funeral march is heard in the distance.

      CHORUS.

      Horror! Horror!

      ISABELLA.

      Hid!

      Speak-who is hid? and what is true? Ye stand

      In silent dull amaze-as though ye fathomed

      Her words of mystery! In your faltering tones-

      Your brows-I read of horrors yet unknown,

      That would refrain my tongue! What is it? Tell me!

      I will know all! Why fix ye on the door

      That awe-struck gaze? What mournful music sounds?

      [The march is heard nearer.

      Chorus (BOHEMUND).

      It comes! it comes! and all shall be declared

      With terrible voice. My mistress! steel thy heart,

      Be firm, and bear with courage what awaits thee-

      For more than women's soul thy destined griefs

      Demand.

      ISABELLA.

      What comes? and what awaits me
    ? Hark

      With fearful tones the death-wail smites mine ear-

      It echoes through the house! Where are my sons?

      [The first Semi-chorus brings in the body of DON MANUEL

      on a bier, which is placed at the side of the stage.

      A black pall is spread over it.

      ISABELLA, BEATRICE, DIEGO.

      Both Choruses.

      First Chorus (CAJETAN).

      With sorrow in his train,

      From street to street the King of Terror glides;

      With stealthy foot, and slow,

      He creeps where'er the fleeting race

      Of man abides

     


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