您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Life Is A Dream
act ii   Scene I
Pedro Calderon de la Barca
下载:Life Is A Dream.txt
本书全文检索:
       A Throne-room in the Palace. Music within.
       (Enter King and Clotaldo, meeting a Lord in waiting)
       KING
       You, for a moment beckon'd from your office,
       Tell me thus far how goes it. In due time
       The potion left him?
       LORD
       At the very hour
       To which your Highness temper'd it. Yet not
       So wholly but some lingering mist still hung
       About his dawning senses--which to clear,
       We fill'd and handed him a morning drink
       With sleep's specific antidote suffused;
       And while with princely raiment we invested
       What nature surely modell'd for a Prince--
       All but the sword--as you directed--
       KING
       Ay--
       LORD
       If not too loudly, yet emphatically
       Still with the title of a Prince address'd him.
       KING
       How bore he that?
       LORD
       With all the rest, my liege,
       I will not say so like one in a dream
       As one himself misdoubting that he dream'd.
       KING
       So far so well, Clotaldo, either way,
       And best of all if tow'rd the worse I dread.
       But yet no violence?
       LORD
       At most, impatience;
       Wearied perhaps with importunities
       We yet were bound to offer.
       KING
       Oh, Clotaldo!
       Though thus far well, yet would myself had drunk
       The potion he revives from! such suspense
       Crowds all the pulses of life's residue
       Into the present moment; and, I think,
       Whichever way the trembling scale may turn,
       Will leave the crown of Poland for some one
       To wait no longer than the setting sun!
       CLOTALDO
       Courage, my liege! The curtain is undrawn,
       And each must play his part out manfully,
       Leaving the rest to heaven.
       KING
       Whose written words
       If I should misinterpret or transgress!
       But as you say--
       (To the Lord, who exit.)
       You, back to him at once;
       Clotaldo, you, when he is somewhat used
       To the new world of which they call him Prince,
       Where place and face, and all, is strange to him,
       With your known features and familiar garb
       Shall then, as chorus to the scene, accost him,
       And by such earnest of that old and too
       Familiar world, assure him of the new.
       Last in the strange procession, I myself
       Will by one full and last development
       Complete the plot for that catastrophe
       That he must put to all; God grant it be
       The crown of Poland on his brows!--Hark! hark!--
       Was that his voice within!--Now louder--Oh,
       Clotaldo, what! so soon begun to roar!--
       Again! above the music-- But betide
       What may, until the moment, we must hide.
       (Exeunt King and Clotaldo.)
       SEGISMUND (within)
       Forbear! I stifle with your perfume! Cease
       Your crazy salutations! peace, I say
       Begone, or let me go, ere I go mad
       With all this babble, mummery, and glare,
       For I am growing dangerous--Air! room! air!--
       (He rushes in. Music ceases.)
       Oh but to save the reeling brain from wreck
       With its bewilder'd senses!
       (He covers his eyes for a while.)
       What! E'en now
       That Babel left behind me, but my eyes
       Pursued by the same glamour, that--unless
       Alike bewitch'd too--the confederate sense
       Vouches for palpable: bright-shining floors
       That ring hard answer back to the stamp'd heel,
       And shoot up airy columns marble-cold,
       That, as they climb, break into golden leaf
       And capital, till they embrace aloft
       In clustering flower and fruitage over walls
       Hung with such purple curtain as the West
       Fringes with such a gold; or over-laid
       With sanguine-glowing semblances of men,
       Each in his all but living action busied,
       Or from the wall they look from, with fix'd eyes
       Pursuing me; and one most strange of all
       That, as I pass'd the crystal on the wall,
       Look'd from it--left it--and as I return,
       Returns, and looks me face to face again--
       Unless some false reflection of my brain,
       The outward semblance of myself--Myself?
       How know that tawdry shadow for myself,
       But that it moves as I move; lifts his hand
       With mine; each motion echoing so close
       The immediate suggestion of the will
       In which myself I recognize--Myself!--
       What, this fantastic Segismund the same
       Who last night, as for all his nights before,
       Lay down to sleep in wolf-skin on the ground
       In a black turret which the wolf howl'd round,
       And woke again upon a golden bed,
       Round which as clouds about a rising sun,
       In scarce less glittering caparison,
       Gather'd gay shapes that, underneath a breeze
       Of music, handed him upon their knees
       The wine of heaven in a cup of gold,
       And still in soft melodious under-song
       Hailing me Prince of Poland!--'Segismund,'
       They said, 'Our Prince! The Prince of Poland!' and
       Again, 'Oh, welcome, welcome, to his own,
       'Our own Prince Segismund--'
       Oh, but a blast--
       One blast of the rough mountain air! one look
       At the grim features--
       (He goes to the window.)
       What they disvizor'd also! shatter'd chaos
       Cast into stately shape and masonry,
       Between whose channel'd and perspective sides
       Compact with rooted towers, and flourishing
       To heaven with gilded pinnacle and spire,
       Flows the live current ever to and fro
       With open aspect and free step!--Clotaldo!
       Clotaldo!--calling as one scarce dares call
       For him who suddenly might break the spell
       One fears to walk without him--Why, that I,
       With unencumber'd step as any there,
       Go stumbling through my glory--feeling for
       That iron leading-string--ay, for myself--
       For that fast-anchor'd self of yesterday,
       Of yesterday, and all my life before,
       Ere drifted clean from self-identity
       Upon the fluctuation of to-day's
       Mad whirling circumstance!--And, fool, why not?
       If reason, sense, and self-identity
       Obliterated from a worn-out brain,
       Art thou not maddest striving to be sane,
       And catching at that Self of yesterday
       That, like a leper's rags, best flung away!
       Or if not mad, then dreaming--dreaming?--well--
       Dreaming then--Or, if self to self be true,
       Not mock'd by that, but as poor souls have been
       By those who wrong'd them, to give wrong new relish?
       Or have those stars indeed they told me of
       As masters of my wretched life of old,
       Into some happier constellation roll'd,
       And brought my better fortune out on earth
       Clear as themselves in heaven!--Prince Segismund
       They call'd me--and at will I shook them off--
       Will they return again at my command
       Again to call me so?--Within there! You!
       Segismund calls--Prince Segismund--
       (He has seated himself on the throne. Enter Chamberlain, with lords in waiting.)
       CHAMBERLAIN
       I rejoice
       That unadvised of any but the voice
       Of royal instinct in the blood, your Highness
       Has ta'en the chair that you were born to fill.
       SEGISMUND
       The chair?
       CHAMBERLAIN
       The royal throne of Poland, Sir,
       Which may your Royal Highness keep as long
       As he that now rules from it shall have ruled
       When heaven has call'd him to itself.
       SEGISMUND
       When he?--
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Your royal father, King Basilio, Sir.
       SEGISMUND
       My royal father--King Basilio.
       You see I answer but as Echo does,
       Not knowing what she listens or repeats.
       This is my throne--this is my palace--Oh,
       But this out of the window?--
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Warsaw, Sir,
       Your capital--
       SEGISMUND
       And all the moving people?
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Your subjects and your vassals like ourselves.
       SEGISMUND
       Ay, ay--my subjects--in my capital--
       Warsaw--and I am Prince of it--You see
       It needs much iteration to strike sense
       Into the human echo.
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Left awhile
       In the quick brain, the word will quickly to
       Full meaning blow.
       SEGISMUND
       You think so?
       CHAMBERLAIN
       And meanwhile
       Lest our obsequiousness, which means no worse
       Than customary honour to the Prince
       We most rejoice to welcome, trouble you,
       Should we retire again? or stand apart?
       Or would your Highness have the music play
       Again, which meditation, as they say,
       So often loves to float upon?
       SEGISMUND
       The music?
       No--yes--perhaps the trumpet--
       (Aside)
       Yet if that
       Brought back the troop!
       A LORD.
       The trumpet! There again
       How trumpet-like spoke out the blood of Poland!
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Before the morning is far up, your Highness
       Will have the trumpet marshalling your soldiers
       Under the Palace windows.
       SEGISMUND
       Ah, my soldiers--
       My soldiers--not black-vizor'd?--
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Sir?
       SEGISMUND
       No matter.
       But--one thing--for a moment--in your ear--
       Do you know one Clotaldo?
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Oh, my Lord,
       He and myself together, I may say,
       Although in different vocations,
       Have silver'd in your royal father's service;
       And, as I trust, with both of us a few
       White hairs to fall in yours.
       SEGISMUND
       Well said, well said!
       Basilio, my father--well--Clotaldo
       Is he my kinsman too?
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Oh, my good Lord,
       A General simply in your Highness' service,
       Than whom your Highness has no trustier.
       SEGISMUND
       Ay, so you said before, I think. And you
       With that white wand of yours--
       Why, now I think on't, I have read of such
       A silver-hair'd magician with a wand,
       Who in a moment, with a wave of it,
       Turn'd rags to jewels, clowns to emperors,
       By some benigner magic than the stars
       Spirited poor good people out of hand
       From all their woes; in some enchanted sleep
       Carried them off on cloud or dragon-back
       Over the mountains, over the wide Deep,
       And set them down to wake in Fairyland.
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Oh, my good Lord, you laugh at me--and I
       Right glad to make you laugh at such a price:
       You know me no enchanter: if I were,
       I and my wand as much as your Highness',
       As now your chamberlain--
       SEGISMUND
       My chamberlain?--
       And these that follow you?--
       CHAMBERLAIN
       On you, my Lord,
       Your Highness' lords in waiting.
       SEGISMUND
       Lords in waiting.
       Well, I have now learn'd to repeat, I think,
       If only but by rote--This is my palace,
       And this my throne--which unadvised--And that
       Out of the window there my Capital;
       And all the people moving up and down
       My subjects and my vassals like yourselves,
       My chamberlain--and lords in waiting--and
       Clotaldo--and Clotaldo?--
       You are an aged, and seem a reverend man--
       You do not--though his fellow-officer--
       You do not mean to mock me?
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Oh, my Lord!
       SEGISMUND
       Well then--If no magician, as you say,
       Yet setting me a riddle, that my brain,
       With all its senses whirling, cannot solve,
       Yourself or one of these with you must answer--
       How I--that only last night fell asleep
       Not knowing that the very soil of earth
       I lay down--chain'd--to sleep upon was Poland--
       Awake to find myself the Lord of it,
       With Lords, and Generals, and Chamberlains,
       And ev'n my very Gaoler, for my vassals!
       Enter suddenly Clotaldo
       CLOTALDO
       Stand all aside
       That I may put into his hand the clue
       To lead him out of this amazement. Sir,
       Vouchsafe your Highness from my bended knee
       Receive my homage first.
       SEGISMUND
       Clotaldo! What,
       At last--his old self--undisguised where all
       Is masquerade--to end it!--You kneeling too!
       What! have the stars you told me long ago
       Laid that old work upon you, added this,
       That, having chain'd your prisoner so long,
       You loose his body now to slay his wits,
       Dragging him--how I know not--whither scarce
       I understand--dressing him up in all
       This frippery, with your dumb familiars
       Disvizor'd, and their lips unlock'd to lie,
       Calling him Prince and King, and, madman-like,
       Setting a crown of straw upon his head?
       CLOTALDO
       Would but your Highness, as indeed I now
       Must call you--and upon his bended knee
       Never bent Subject more devotedly--
       However all about you, and perhaps
       You to yourself incomprehensiblest,
       But rest in the assurance of your own
       Sane waking senses, by these witnesses
       Attested, till the story of it all,
       Of which I bring a chapter, be reveal'd,
       Assured of all you see and hear as neither
       Madness nor mockery--
       SEGISMUND
       What then?
       CLOTALDO
       All it seems:
       This palace with its royal garniture;
       This capital of which it is the eye,
       With all its temples, marts, and arsenals;
       This realm of which this city is the head,
       With all its cities, villages, and tilth,
       Its armies, fleets, and commerce; all your own;
       And all the living souls that make them up,
       From those who now, and those who shall, salute you,
       Down to the poorest peasant of the realm,
       Your subjects--Who, though now their mighty voice
       Sleeps in the general body unapprized,
       Wait but a word from those about you now
       To hail you Prince of Poland, Segismund.
       SEGISMUND
       All this is so?
       CLOTALDO
       As sure as anything
       Is, or can be.
       SEGISMUND
       You swear it on the faith
       You taught me--elsewhere?--
       CLO (kissing the hilt of his sword)
       Swear it upon this Symbol,
       and champion of the holy faith
       I wear it to defend.
       SEGISMUND (to himself)
       My eyes have not deceived me, nor my ears,
       With this transfiguration, nor the strain
       Of royal welcome that arose and blew,
       Breathed from no lying lips, along with it.
       For here Clotaldo comes, his own old self,
       Who, if not Lie and phantom with the rest--
       (Aloud)
       Well, then, all this is thus.
       For have not these fine people told me so,
       And you, Clotaldo, sworn it? And the Why
       And Wherefore are to follow by and bye!
       And yet--and yet--why wait for that which you
       Who take your oath on it can answer--and
       Indeed it presses hard upon my brain--
       What I was asking of these gentlemen
       When you came in upon us; how it is
       That I--the Segismund you know so long
       No longer than the sun that rose to-day
       Rose--and from what you know--
       Rose to be Prince of Poland?
       CLOTALDO
       So to be
       Acknowledged and entreated, Sir.
       SEGISMUND
       So be
       Acknowledged and entreated--
       Well--But if now by all, by some at least
       So known--if not entreated--heretofore--
       Though not by you--For, now I think again,
       Of what should be your attestation worth,
       You that of all my questionable subjects
       Who knowing what, yet left me where I was,
       You least of all, Clotaldo, till the dawn
       Of this first day that told it to myself?
       CLOTALDO
       Oh, let your Highness draw the line across
       Fore-written sorrow, and in this new dawn
       Bury that long sad night.
       SEGISMUND
       Not ev'n the Dead,
       Call'd to the resurrection of the blest,
       Shall so directly drop all memory
       Of woes and wrongs foregone!
       CLOTALDO
       But not resent--
       Purged by the trial of that sorrow past
       For full fruition of their present bliss.
       SEGISMUND
       But leaving with the Judge what, till this earth
       Be cancell'd in the burning heavens, He leaves
       His earthly delegates to execute,
       Of retribution in reward to them
       And woe to those who wrong'd them--Not as you,
       Not you, Clotaldo, knowing not--And yet
       Ev'n to the guiltiest wretch in all the realm,
       Of any treason guilty short of that,
       Stern usage--but assuredly not knowing,
       Not knowing 'twas your sovereign lord, Clotaldo,
       You used so sternly.
       CLOTALDO
       Ay, sir; with the same
       Devotion and fidelity that now
       Does homage to him for my sovereign.
       SEGISMUND
       Fidelity that held his Prince in chains!
       CLOTALDO
       Fidelity more fast than had it loosed him--
       SEGISMUND
       Ev'n from the very dawn of consciousness
       Down at the bottom of the barren rocks,
       Where scarce a ray of sunshine found him out,
       In which the poorest beggar of my realm
       At least to human-full proportion grows--
       Me! Me--whose station was the kingdom's top
       To flourish in, reaching my head to heaven,
       And with my branches overshadowing
       The meaner growth below!
       CLOTALDO
       Still with the same
       Fidelity--
       SEGISMUND
       To me!--
       CLOTALDO
       Ay, sir, to you,
       Through that divine allegiance upon which
       All Order and Authority is based;
       Which to revolt against--
       SEGISMUND
       Were to revolt
       Against the stars, belike!
       CLOTALDO
       And him who reads them;
       And by that right, and by the sovereignty
       He wears as you shall wear it after him;
       Ay, one to whom yourself--
       Yourself, ev'n more than any subject here,
       Are bound by yet another and more strong
       Allegiance--King Basilio--your Father--
       SEGISMUND
       Basilio--King--my father!--
       CLOTALDO
       Oh, my Lord,
       Let me beseech you on my bended knee,
       For your own sake--for Poland's--and for his,
       Who, looking up for counsel to the skies,
       Did what he did under authority
       To which the kings of earth themselves are subject,
       And whose behest not only he that suffers,
       But he that executes, not comprehends,
       But only He that orders it--
       SEGISMUND
       The King--
       My father!--Either I am mad already,
       Or that way driving fast--or I should know
       That fathers do not use their children so,
       Or men were loosed from all allegiance
       To fathers, kings, and heaven that order'd all.
       But, mad or not, my hour is come, and I
       Will have my reckoning--Either you lie,
       Under the skirt of sinless majesty
       Shrouding your treason; or if that indeed,
       Guilty itself, take refuge in the stars
       That cannot hear the charge, or disavow--
       You, whether doer or deviser, who
       Come first to hand, shall pay the penalty
       By the same hand you owe it to--
       (Seizing Clotaldo's sword and about to strike him.)
       (Enter Rosaura suddenly.)
       ROSAURA
       Fie, my Lord--forbear,
       What! a young hand raised against silver hair!--
       (She retreats through the crowd.)
       SEGISMUND
       Stay! stay! What come and vanish'd as before--
       I scarce remember how--but--
       (Voices within. Room for Astolfo, Duke of Muscovy!)
       (Enter Astolfo)
       ASTOLFO
       Welcome, thrice welcome, the auspicious day,
       When from the mountain where he darkling lay,
       The Polish sun into the firmament
       Sprung all the brighter for his late ascent,
       And in meridian glory--
       SEGISMUND
       Where is he?
       Why must I ask this twice?--
       A LORD.
       The Page, my Lord?
       I wonder at his boldness--
       SEGISMUND
       But I tell you
       He came with Angel written in his face
       As now it is, when all was black as hell
       About, and none of you who now--he came,
       And Angel-like flung me a shining sword
       To cut my way through darkness; and again
       Angel-like wrests it from me in behalf
       Of one--whom I will spare for sparing him:
       But he must come and plead with that same voice
       That pray'd for me--in vain.
       CHAMBERLAIN
       He is gone for,
       And shall attend your pleasure, sir. Meanwhile,
       Will not your Highness, as in courtesy,
       Return your royal cousin's greeting?
       SEGISMUND
       Whose?
       CHAMBERLAIN
       Astolfo, Duke of Muscovy, my Lord,
       Saluted, and with gallant compliment
       Welcomed you to your royal title.
       SEGISMUND (to Astolfo)
       Oh--
       You knew of this then?
       ASTOLFO
       Knew of what, my Lord?
       SEGISMUND
       That I was Prince of Poland all the while,
       And you my subject?
       ASTOLFO
       Pardon me, my Lord,
       But some few hours ago myself I learn'd
       Your dignity; but, knowing it, no more
       Than when I knew it not, your subject.
       SEGISMUND
       What then?
       ASTOLFO
       Your Highness' chamberlain ev'n now has told you;
       Astolfo, Duke of Muscovy,
       Your father's sister's son; your cousin, sir:
       And who as such, and in his own right Prince,
       Expects from you the courtesy he shows.
       CHAMBERLAIN
       His Highness is as yet unused to Court,
       And to the ceremonious interchange
       Of compliment, especially to those
       Who draw their blood from the same royal fountain.
       SEGISMUND
       Where is the lad? I weary of all this--
       Prince, cousins, chamberlains, and compliments--
       Where are my soldiers? Blow the trumpet, and
       With one sharp blast scatter these butterflies
       And bring the men of iron to my side,
       With whom a king feels like a king indeed!
       (Voices within. Within there! room for the Princess Estrella!)
       (Enter Estrella with Ladies.)
       ESTRELLA
       Welcome, my Lord, right welcome to the throne
       That much too long has waited for your coming:
       And, in the general voice of Poland, hear
       A kinswoman and cousin's no less sincere.
       SEGISMUND
       Ay, this is welcome-worth indeed,
       And cousin cousin-worth! Oh, I have thus
       Over the threshold of the mountain seen,
       Leading a bevy of fair stars, the moon
       Enter the court of heaven--My kinswoman!
       My cousin! But my subject?--
       ESTRELLA
       If you please
       To count your cousin for your subject, sir,
       You shall not find her a disloyal.
       SEGISMUND
       Oh,
       But there are twin stars in that heavenly face,
       That now I know for having over-ruled
       Those evil ones that darken'd all my past
       And brought me forth from that captivity
       To be the slave of her who set me free.
       ESTRELLA
       Indeed, my Lord, these eyes have no such power
       Over the past or present: but perhaps
       They brighten at your welcome to supply
       The little that a lady's speech commends;
       And in the hope that, let whichever be
       The other's subject, we may both be friends.
       SEGISMUND
       Your hand to that--But why does this warm hand
       Shoot a cold shudder through me?
       ESTRELLA
       In revenge
       For likening me to that cold moon, perhaps.
       SEGISMUND
       Oh, but the lip whose music tells me so
       Breathes of a warmer planet, and that lip
       Shall remedy the treason of the hand!
       (He catches to embrace her.)
       ESTRELLA
       Release me, sir!
       CHAMBERLAIN
       And pardon me, my Lord.
       This lady is a Princess absolute,
       As Prince he is who just saluted you,
       And claims her by affiance.
       SEGISMUND
       Hence, old fool,
       For ever thrusting that white stick of yours
       Between me and my pleasure!
       ASTOLFO
       This cause is mine.
       Forbear, sir--
       SEGISMUND
       What, sir mouth-piece, you again?
       ASTOLFO
       My Lord, I waive your insult to myself
       In recognition of the dignity
       You yet are new to, and that greater still
       You look in time to wear. But for this lady--
       Whom, if my cousin now, I hope to claim
       Henceforth by yet a nearer, dearer name--
       SEGISMUND
       And what care I? She is my cousin too:
       And if you be a Prince--well, am not I
       Lord of the very soil you stand upon?
       By that, and by that right beside of blood
       That like a fiery fountain hitherto
       Pent in the rock leaps toward her at her touch,
       Mine, before all the cousins in Muscovy!
       You call me Prince of Poland, and yourselves
       My subjects--traitors therefore to this hour,
       Who let me perish all my youth away
       Chain'd there among the mountains; till, forsooth,
       Terrified at your treachery foregone,
       You spirit me up here, I know not how,
       Popinjay-like invest me like yourselves,
       Choke me with scent and music that I loathe,
       And, worse than all the music and the scent,
       With false, long-winded, fulsome compliment,
       That 'Oh, you are my subjects!' and in word
       Reiterating still obedience,
       Thwart me in deed at every step I take:
       When just about to wreak a just revenge
       Upon that old arch-traitor of you all,
       Filch from my vengeance him I hate; and him
       I loved--the first and only face--till this--
       I cared to look on in your ugly court--
       And now when palpably I grasp at last
       What hitherto but shadow'd in my dreams--
       Affiances and interferences,
       The first who dares to meddle with me more--
       Princes and chamberlains and counsellors,
       Touch her who dares!--
       ASTOLFO
       That dare I--
       SEGISMUND (seizing him by the throat)
       You dare!
       CHAMBERLAIN
       My Lord!--
       A LORD.
       His strength's a lion's--
       (Voices within. The King! The King!--)
       (Enter King.)
       A LORD.
       And on a sudden how he stands at gaze
       As might a wolf just fasten'd on his prey,
       Glaring at a suddenly encounter'd lion.
       KING
       And I that hither flew with open arms
       To fold them round my son, must now return
       To press them to an empty heart again!
       (He sits on the throne.)
       SEGISMUND
       That is the King?--My father?
       (After a long pause.)
       I have heard
       That sometimes some blind instinct has been known
       To draw to mutual recognition those
       Of the same blood, beyond all memory
       Divided, or ev'n never met before.
       I know not how this is--perhaps in brutes
       That live by kindlier instincts--but I know
       That looking now upon that head whose crown
       Pronounces him a sovereign king, I feel
       No setting of the current in my blood
       Tow'rd him as sire. How is't with you, old man,
       Tow'rd him they call your son?--
       KING
       Alas! Alas!
       SEGISMUND
       Your sorrow, then?
       KING
       Beholding what I do.
       SEGISMUND
       Ay, but how know this sorrow that has grown
       And moulded to this present shape of man,
       As of your own creation?
       KING
       Ev'n from birth.
       SEGISMUND
       But from that hour to this, near, as I think,
       Some twenty such renewals of the year
       As trace themselves upon the barren rocks,
       I never saw you, nor you me--unless,
       Unless, indeed, through one of those dark masks
       Through which a son might fail to recognize
       The best of fathers.
       KING
       Be that as you will:
       But, now we see each other face to face,
       Know me as you I know; which did I not,
       By whatsoever signs, assuredly
       You were not here to prove it at my risk.
       SEGISMUND
       You are my father.
       And is it true then, as Clotaldo swears,
       'Twas you that from the dawning birth of one
       Yourself brought into being,--you, I say,
       Who stole his very birthright; not alone
       That secondary and peculiar right
       Of sovereignty, but even that prime
       Inheritance that all men share alike,
       And chain'd him--chain'd him!--like a wild beast's whelp.
       Among as savage mountains, to this hour?
       Answer if this be thus.
       KING
       Oh, Segismund,
       In all that I have done that seems to you,
       And, without further hearing, fairly seems,
       Unnatural and cruel--'twas not I,
       But One who writes His order in the sky
       I dared not misinterpret nor neglect,
       Who knows with what reluctance--
       SEGISMUND
       Oh, those stars,
       Those stars, that too far up from human blame
       To clear themselves, or careless of the charge,
       Still bear upon their shining shoulders all
       The guilt men shift upon them!
       KING
       Nay, but think:
       Not only on the common score of kind,
       But that peculiar count of sovereignty--
       If not behind the beast in brain as heart,
       How should I thus deal with my innocent child,
       Doubly desired, and doubly dear when come,
       As that sweet second-self that all desire,
       And princes more than all, to root themselves
       By that succession in their people's hearts,
       Unless at that superior Will, to which
       Not kings alone, but sovereign nature bows?
       SEGISMUND
       And what had those same stars to tell of me
       That should compel a father and a king
       So much against that double instinct?
       KING
       That,
       Which I have brought you hither, at my peril,
       Against their written warning, to disprove,
       By justice, mercy, human kindliness.
       SEGISMUND
       And therefore made yourself their instrument
       To make your son the savage and the brute
       They only prophesied?--Are you not afear'd,
       Lest, irrespective as such creatures are
       Of such relationship, the brute you made
       Revenge the man you marr'd--like sire, like son.
       To do by you as you by me have done?
       KING
       You never had a savage heart from me;
       I may appeal to Poland.
       SEGISMUND
       Then from whom?
       If pure in fountain, poison'd by yourself
       When scarce begun to flow.--To make a man
       Not, as I see, degraded from the mould
       I came from, nor compared to those about,
       And then to throw your own flesh to the dogs!--
       Why not at once, I say, if terrified
       At the prophetic omens of my birth,
       Have drown'd or stifled me, as they do whelps
       Too costly or too dangerous to keep?
       KING
       That, living, you might learn to live, and rule
       Yourself and Poland.
       SEGISMUND
       By the means you took
       To spoil for either?
       KING
       Nay, but, Segismund!
       You know not--cannot know--happily wanting
       The sad experience on which knowledge grows,
       How the too early consciousness of power
       Spoils the best blood; nor whether for your long
       Constrain'd disheritance (which, but for me,
       Remember, and for my relenting love
       Bursting the bond of fate, had been eternal)
       You have not now a full indemnity;
       Wearing the blossom of your youth unspent
       In the voluptuous sunshine of a court,
       That often, by too early blossoming,
       Too soon deflowers the rose of royalty.
       SEGISMUND
       Ay, but what some precocious warmth may spill,
       May not an early frost as surely kill?
       KING
       But, Segismund, my son, whose quick discourse
       Proves I have not extinguish'd and destroy'd
       The Man you charge me with extinguishing,
       However it condemn me for the fault
       Of keeping a good light so long eclipsed,
       Reflect! This is the moment upon which
       Those stars, whose eyes, although we see them not,
       By day as well as night are on us still,
       Hang watching up in the meridian heaven
       Which way the balance turns; and if to you--
       As by your dealing God decide it may,
       To my confusion!--let me answer it
       Unto yourself alone, who shall at once
       Approve yourself to be your father's judge,
       And sovereign of Poland in his stead,
       By justice, mercy, self-sobriety,
       And all the reasonable attributes
       Without which, impotent to rule himself,
       Others one cannot, and one must not rule;
       But which if you but show the blossom of--
       All that is past we shall but look upon
       As the first out-fling of a generous nature
       Rioting in first liberty; and if
       This blossom do but promise such a flower
       As promises in turn its kindly fruit:
       Forthwith upon your brows the royal crown,
       That now weighs heavy on my aged brows,
       I will devolve; and while I pass away
       Into some cloister, with my Maker there
       To make my peace in penitence and prayer,
       Happily settle the disorder'd realm
       That now cries loudly for a lineal heir.
       SEGISMUND
       And so--
       When the crown falters on your shaking head,
       And slips the sceptre from your palsied hand,
       And Poland for her rightful heir cries out;
       When not only your stol'n monopoly
       Fails you of earthly power, but 'cross the grave
       The judgment-trumpet of another world
       Calls you to count for your abuse of this;
       Then, oh then, terrified by the double danger,
       You drag me from my den--
       Boast not of giving up at last the power
       You can no longer hold, and never rightly
       Held, but in fee for him you robb'd it from;
       And be assured your Savage, once let loose,
       Will not be caged again so quickly; not
       By threat or adulation to be tamed,
       Till he have had his quarrel out with those
       Who made him what he is.
       KING
       Beware! Beware!
       Subdue the kindled Tiger in your eye,
       Nor dream that it was sheer necessity
       Made me thus far relax the bond of fate,
       And, with far more of terror than of hope
       Threaten myself, my people, and the State.
       Know that, if old, I yet have vigour left
       To wield the sword as well as wear the crown;
       And if my more immediate issue fail,
       Not wanting scions of collateral blood,
       Whose wholesome growth shall more than compensate
       For all the loss of a distorted stem.
       SEGISMUND
       That will I straightway bring to trial--Oh,
       After a revelation such as this,
       The Last Day shall have little left to show
       Of righted wrong and villainy requited!
       Nay, Judgment now beginning upon earth,
       Myself, methinks, in sight of all my wrongs,
       Appointed heaven's avenging minister,
       Accuser, judge, and executioner
       Sword in hand, cite the guilty--First, as worst,
       The usurper of his son's inheritance;
       Him and his old accomplice, time and crime
       Inveterate, and unable to repay
       The golden years of life they stole away.
       What, does he yet maintain his state, and keep
       The throne he should be judged from? Down with him,
       That I may trample on the false white head
       So long has worn my crown! Where are my soldiers?
       Of all my subjects and my vassals here
       Not one to do my bidding? Hark! A trumpet!
       The trumpet--
       (He pauses as the trumpet sounds as in Act I., and masked Soldiers gradually fill in behind the Throne.)
       KING (rising before his throne)
       Ay, indeed, the trumpet blows
       A memorable note, to summon those
       Who, if forthwith you fall not at the feet
       Of him whose head you threaten with the dust,
       Forthwith shall draw the curtain of the Past
       About you; and this momentary gleam
       Of glory that you think to hold life-fast,
       So coming, so shall vanish, as a dream.
       SEGISMUND
       He prophesies; the old man prophesies;
       And, at his trumpet's summons, from the tower
       The leash-bound shadows loosen'd after me
       My rising glory reach and over-lour--
       But, reach not I my height, he shall not hold,
       But with me back to his own darkness!
       (He dashes toward the throne and is enclosed by the soldiers.)
       Traitors!
       Hold off! Unhand me!--Am not I your king?
       And you would strangle him!--
       But I am breaking with an inward Fire
       Shall scorch you off, and wrap me on the wings
       Of conflagration from a kindled pyre
       Of lying prophecies and prophet-kings
       Above the extinguish'd stars--Reach me the sword
       He flung me--Fill me such a bowl of wine
       As that you woke the day with--
       KING
       And shall close,--
       But of the vintage that Clotaldo knows.
       (Exeunt.)
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

Dramatis Personae
act i
   Scene I
   Scene II.
act ii
   Scene I
act iii
   Scene I.
act iv
   Scene I.