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    The Bride of Messina (play)

    Page 8
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      In turn at every gate

      Is heard the dreaded knock of fate,

      The message of unutterable woe!

      BERENGAR.

      When, in the sere

      And autumn leaves decayed,

      The mournful forest tells how quickly fade

      The glories of the year!

      When in the silent tomb oppressed,

      Frail man, with weight of days,

      Sinks to his tranquil rest;

      Contented nature but obeys

      Her everlasting law,-

      The general doom awakes no shuddering awe!

      But, mortals, oh! prepare

      For mightier ills; with ruthless hand

      Fell murder cuts the holy band-

      The kindred tie: insatiate death,

      With unrelenting rage,

      Bears to his bark the flower of blooming age!

      CAJETAN.

      When clouds athwart the lowering sky

      Are driven-when bursts with hollow moan

      The thunder's peal-our trembling bosoms own

      The might of awful destiny!

      Yet oft the lightning's glare

      Darts sudden through the cloudless air:-

      Then in thy short delusive day

      Of bliss, oh! dread the treacherous snare;

      Nor prize the fleeting goods in vain,

      The flowers that bloom but to decay!

      Nor wealth, nor joy, nor aught but pain,

      Was e'er to mortal's lot secure:-

      Our first best lesson-to endure!

      ISABELLA.

      What shall I hear? What horrors lurk beneath

      This funeral pall?

      [She steps towards the bier, but suddenly pauses,

      and stands irresolute.

      Some strange, mysterious dread

      Enthrals my sense. I would approach, and sudden

      The ice-cold grasp of terror holds me back!

      [To BEATRICE, who has thrown herself between her and the bier.

      Whate'er it be, I will unveil--

      [On raising the pall she discovers the body of DON MANUEL.

      Eternal Powers! it is my son!

      [She stands in mute horror. BEATRICE sinks to the ground

      with a shriek of anguish near the bier.

      CHORUS.

      Unhappy mother! 'tis thy son. Thy lips

      Have uttered what my faltering tongue denied.

      ISABELLA.

      My soul! My Manuel! Oh, eternal grief!

      And is it thus I see thee? Thus thy life

      Has bought thy sister from the spoiler's rage?

      Where was thy brother? Could no arm be found

      To shield thee? Oh, be cursed the hand that dug

      These gory wounds! A curse on her that bore

      The murderer of my son! Ten thousand curses

      On all their race!

      CHORUS.

      Woe! Woe!

      ISABELLA.

      And is it thus

      Ye keep your word, ye gods? Is this your truth?

      Alas for him that trusts with honest heart

      Your soothing wiles! Why have I hoped and trembled?

      And this the issue of my prayers! Attend,

      Ye terror-stricken witnesses, that feed

      Your gaze upon my anguish; learn to know

      How warning visions cheat, and boding seers

      But mock our credulous hopes; let none believe

      The voice of heaven!

      When in my teeming womb

      This daughter lay, her father, in a dream

      Saw from his nuptial couch two laurels grow,

      And in the midst a lily all in flames,

      That, catching swift the boughs and knotted stems

      Burst forth with crackling rage, and o'er the house

      Spread in one mighty sea of fire. Perplexed

      By this terrific dream my husband sought

      The counsels of the mystic art, and thus

      Pronounced the sage: "If I a daughter bore,

      The murderess of his sons, the destined spring

      Of ruin to our house, the baleful child

      Should see the light."

      Chorus (CAJETAN and BOHEMUND).

      What hast thou said, my mistress?

      Woe! Woe!

      ISABELLA.

      For this her ruthless father spoke

      The dire behest of death. I rescued her,

      The innocent, the doomed one; from my arms

      The babe was torn; to stay the curse of heaven,

      And save my sons, the mother gave her child;

      And now by robber hands her brother falls;

      My child is guiltless. Oh, she slew him not!

      CHORUS.

      Woe! Woe!

      ISABELLA.

      No trust the fabling readers of the stars

      Have e'er deserved. Hear how another spoke

      With comfort to my soul, and him I deemed

      Inspired to voice the secrets of the skies!

      "My daughter should unite in love the hearts

      Of my dissevered sons;" and thus their tales

      Of curse and blessing on her head proclaim

      Each other's falsehood. No, she ne'er has brought

      A curse, the innocent; nor time was given

      The blessed promise to fulfil; their tongues

      Were false alike; their boasted art is vain;

      With trick of words they cheat our credulous ears,

      Or are themselves deceived! Naught ye may know

      Of dark futurity, the sable streams

      Of hell the fountain of your hidden lore,

      Or yon bright spring of everlasting light!

      First Chorus (CAJETAN).

      Woe! Woe! thy tongue refrain!

      Oh, pause, nor thus with impious rage

      The might of heaven profane;

      The holy oracles are wise-

      Expect with awe thy coming destinies!

      ISABELLA.

      My tongue shall speak as prompts my swelling heart;

      My griefs shall cry to heaven. Why do we lift

      Our suppliant hands, and at the sacred shrines

      Kneel to adore? Good, easy dupes! What win we

      From faith and pious awe? to touch with prayers

      The tenants of yon azure realms on high,

      Were hard as with an arrow's point to pierce

      The silvery moon. Hid is the womb of time,

      Impregnable to mortal glance, and deaf

      The adamantine walls of heaven rebound

      The voice of anguish:-Oh, 'tis one, whate'er

      The flight of birds-the aspect of the stars!

      The book of nature is a maze-a dream

      The sage's art-and every sign a falsehood!

      Second Chorus (BOHEMUND).

      Woe! Woe! Ill-fated woman, stay

      Thy maddening blasphemies;

      Thou but disown'st, with purblind eyes,

      The flaming orb of day!

      Confess the gods,-they dwell on high-

      They circle thee with awful majesty!

      All the Knights.

      Confess the gods-they dwell on high-

      They circle thee with awful majesty!

      BEATRICE.

      Why hast thou saved thy daughter, and defied

      The curse of heaven, that marked me in thy womb

      The child of woe? Short-sighted mother!-vain

      Thy little arts to cheat the doom declared

      By the all-wise interpreters, that knit

      The far and near; and, with prophetic ken,

      See the late harvest spring in times unborn.

      Oh, thou hast brought destruction on thy race,

      Withholding from the avenging gods their prey;

      Threefold, with new embittered rage, they ask

      The direful penalty; no thanks thy boon

      Of life deserves-the fatal gift was sorrow!

      Second Chorus (BERENGAR) looking towards the door

      with signs of agitation.

      Hark to the sound of
    dread!

      The rattling, brazen din I hear!

      Of hell-born snakes the hissing tones are near!

      Yes-'tis the furies' tread!

      CAJETAN.

      In crumbling ruin wide,

      Fall, fall, thou roof, and sink, thou trembling floor

      That bear'st the dread, unearthly stride!

      Ye sable damps arise!

      Mount from the abyss in smoky spray,

      And pall the brightness of the day!

      Vanish, ye guardian powers!

      They come! The avenging deities

      DON CAESAR, ISABELLA, BEATRICE. The Chorus.

      [On the entrance of DON CAESAR the Chorus station themselves

      before him imploringly. He remains standing alone in the

      centre of the stage.

      BEATRICE.

      Alas! 'tis he--

      ISABELLA (stepping to meet him).

      My Caesar! Oh, my son!

      And is it thus I meet the? Look! Behold!

      The crime of hand accursed!

      [She leads him to the corpse.

      First Chorus (CAJETAN, BERENGAR).

      Break forth once more

      Ye wounds! Flow, flow, in swarthy flood,

      Thou streaming gore!

      ISABELLA.

      Shuddering with earnest gaze, and motionless,

      Thou stand'st.-yes! there my hopes repose, and all

      That earth has of thy brother; in the bud

      Nipped is your concord's tender flower, nor ever

      With beauteous fruit shall glad a mother's eyes,

      DON CAESAR.

      Be comforted; thy sons, with honest heart,

      To peace aspired, but heaven's decree was blood!

      ISABELLA.

      I know thou lovedst him well; I saw between ye,

      With joy, the bands old Nature sweetly twined;

      Thou wouldst have borne him in thy heart of hearts

      With rich atonement of long wasted years!

      But see-fell murder thwarts thy dear design,

      And naught remains but vengeance!

      DON CAESAR.

      Come, my mother,

      This is no place for thee. Oh, haste and leave

      This sight of woe.

      [He endeavors to drag her away.

      ISABELLA (throwing herself into his arms).

      Thou livest! I have a son!

      BEATRICE.

      Alas! my mother!

      DON CAESAR.

      On this faithful bosom

      Weep out thy pains; nor lost thy son,-his love

      Shall dwell immortal in thy Caesar's breast.

      First Chorus (CAJETAN, BERENGAR, MANFRED).

      Break forth, ye wounds!

      Dumb witness! the truth proclaim;

      Flow fast, thou gory stream!

      ISABELLA (clasping the hands of DON CAESAR and BEATRICE).

      My children!

      DON CAESAR.

      Oh, 'tis ecstasy! my mother,

      To see her in thy arms! henceforth in love

      A daughter-sister--

      ISABELLA (interrupting him).

      Thou hast kept thy word.

      My son; to thee I owe the rescued one;

      Yes, thou hast sent her--

      DON CAESAR (in astonishment).

      Whom, my mother, sayst thou,

      That I have sent?

      ISABELLA.

      She stands before thine eyes-

      Thy sister.

      DON CAESAR.

      She! My sister?

      ISABELLA.

      Ay, What other?

      DON CAESAR.

      My sister!

      ISABELLA.

      Thou hast sent her to me!

      DON CAESAR.

      Horror!

      His sister, too!

      CHORUS.

      Woe! woe!

      BEATRICE.

      Alas! my mother!

      ISABELLA.

      Speak! I am all amaze!

      DON CASAR.

      Be cursed the day

      When I was born!

      ISABELLA.

      Eternal powers!

      DON CAESAR.

      Accursed

      The womb that bore me; cursed the secret arts,

      The spring of all this woe; instant to crush thee,

      Though the dread thunder swept-ne'er should this arm

      Refrain the bolts of death: I slew my brother!

      Hear it and tremble! in her arms I found him;

      She was my love, my chosen bride; and he-

      My brother-in her arms! Thou hast heard all!

      If it be true-oh, if she be my sister-

      And his! then I have done a deed that mocks

      The power of sacrifice and prayers to ope

      The gates of mercy to my soul!

      Chorus (BOHEMUND).

      The tidings on thy heart dismayed

      Have burst, and naught remains; behold!

      'Tis come, nor long delayed,

      Whate'er the warning seers foretold:

      They spoke the message from on high,

      Their lips proclaimed resistless destiny!

      The mortal shall the curse fulfil

      Who seeks to turn predestined ill.

      ISABELLA.

      The gods have done their worst; if they be true

      Or false, 'tis one-for nothing they can add

      To this-the measure of their rage is full.

      Why should I tremble that have naught to fear?

      My darling son lies murdered, and the living

      I call my son no more. Oh! I have borne

      And nourished at my breast a basilisk

      That stung my best-beloved child. My daughter, haste,

      And leave this house of horrors-I devote it

      To the avenging fiends! In an evil hour

      'Twas crime that brought me hither, and of crime

      The victim I depart. Unwillingly

      I came-in sorrow I have lived-despairing

      I quit these halls; on me, the innocent,

      Descends this weight of woe! Enough-'tis shown

      That Heaven is just, and oracles are true!

      [Exit, followed by DIEGO.

      BEATRICE, DON CAESAR, the Chorus.

      DON CAESAR (detaining BEATRICE).

      My sister, wouldst thou leave me? On this head

      A mother's curse may fall-a brother's blood

      Cry with accusing voice to heaven-all nature

      Invoke eternal vengeance on my soul-

      But thou-oh! curse me not-I cannot bear it!

      [BEATRICE points with averted eyes to the body.

      I have not slain thy lover! 'twas thy brother,

      And mine that fell beneath my sword; and near

      As the departed one, the living owns

      The ties of blood: remember, too, 'tis I

      That most a sister's pity need-for pure

      His spirit winged its flight, and I am guilty!

      [BEATRICE bursts into an agony of tears.

      Weep! I will blend my tears with thine-nay, more,

      I will avenge thy brother; but the lover-

      Weep not for him-thy passionate, yearning tears

      My inmost heart. Oh! from the boundless depths

      Of our affliction, let me gather this,

      The last and only comfort-but to know

      That we are dear alike. One lot fulfilled

      Has made our rights and wretchedness the same;

      Entangled in one snare we fall together,

      Three hapless victims of unpitying fate,

      And share the mournful privilege of tears.

      But when I think that for the lover more

      Than for the brother bursts thy sorrow's tide,

      Then rage and envy mingle with my pain,

      And hope's last balm forsakes my withering soul?

      Nor joyful, as beseems, can I requite

      This inured shade:-yet after him content

      To mercy's throne my contrite spirit shall fly,

      Sped by this hand-if dying I may know

     
    That in one urn our ashes shall repose,

      With pious office of a sister's care.

      [He throws his arms around her with passionate tenderness.

      I loved thee, as I ne'er had loved before,

      When thou wert strange; and that I bear the curse

      Of brother's blood, 'tis but because I loved thee

      With measureless transport: love was all my guilt,

      But now thou art my sister, and I claim

      Soft pity's tribute.

      [He regards her with inquiring glances, and an air of

      painful suspense-then turns away with vehemence.

     


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