<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ACT THE SECOND. </h2>
<p>SCENE I.<br/>
<br/>
THE STREET IN FRONT OF LYSANDER'S HOUSE.<br/>
<br/>
Enter CYPRIAN, MOSCON, and CLARIN, in gala dresses.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN [aside]. Where, presumptuous thoughts, ah! where,<br/>
Would you lead me, whither go?<br/>
If for certain now you know<br/>
That the high attempts you dare<br/>
Are delusive dreams of bliss,<br/>
Since you strive to scale heaven's wall,<br/>
But from that proud height to fall<br/>
Headlong down a dark abyss?<br/>
I Justina saw..... So near<br/>
Would to God I had not seen her,<br/>
Nor in her divine demeanour<br/>
All the light of heaven's fourth sphere.<br/>
Lovers twain for her contend,<br/>
Both being jealous each should woo,<br/>
And I, jealous of the two,<br/>
Know not which doth most offend.<br/>
All I know is, that suspicion,<br/>
Her disdain, my own desires,<br/>
Fill my heart with furious fires—<br/>
Drive me, ah! to my perdition.<br/>
This I know, and know no more,<br/>
This I feel in all my strait;<br/>
Heavens! Justina is my fate!<br/>
Heavens! Justina I adore!—<br/>
Moscon.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Sir.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Inquire, I pray,<br/>
If Lysander's in.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. I fly.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. No, sir, no. On me rely,—<br/>
Moscon can't go there to-day.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Ever wrangling in this way,<br/>
How ye both my patience try!<br/>
Why can he not go? Say why?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Because to-day is not his day.<br/>
Mine it is, sir, to his sorrow.<br/>
So your message I will bear.<br/>
Moscon can't to-day go there;<br/>
He will have his turn to-morrow.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What new madness can this be<br/>
Which your usual feud doth show?<br/>
But now neither of you go,<br/>
Since in all her brilliancy<br/>
Comes Justina.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. From the street<br/>
To her house she goes.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE II.<br/>
<br/>
Enter JUSTINA and LIVIA, veiled.—CYPRIAN, MOSCON, and CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Ah, me!<br/>
Cyprian's here. [Aside to her.] See, Livia, see!<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN [aside]. I must strive and be discreet,<br/>
Feigning with a ready wit,<br/>
Till my jealousy I can prove.<br/>
I will only speak of love,<br/>
If my jealousy will permit.<br/>
Not in vain, senora sweet,—<br/>
Have I changed my student's dress,<br/>
The livery of thy loveliness,<br/>
As a servant at thy feet,<br/>
Thus I wear. If sighs could move thee<br/>
I would labour to deserve thee;<br/>
Give me leave at least to serve thee,<br/>
Since thou wilt not let me love thee.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Slight effect, sir, as I see,<br/>
Have my words produced on you,<br/>
Since they have not brought....<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Too true!<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. A forgetfulness of me.<br/>
In what way must I explain<br/>
Clearer than I have done before,<br/>
That persistence at my door<br/>
Is and ever must be vain?<br/>
If a day, a month, a year,<br/>
If for ages there you stay,<br/>
Naught but this that now I say<br/>
Ever can you hope to hear.<br/>
As it were my latest breath,<br/>
Let this sad assurance move thee,—<br/>
Fate forbids that I should love thee,<br/>
Cyprian, except in death.<br/>
[She moves towards the house.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. At these words my hopes revive:—<br/>
Sad! no, no, to joy they move me,<br/>
For if thou in death canst love me,<br/>
Soon for me will death arrive.<br/>
Be it so; and since so nigh<br/>
Comes the hour your words to prove—<br/>
Ah! even now begin to love,<br/>
Since I now begin to die.<br/>
<br/>
[JUSTINA enters.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE III.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN, MOSCON, CLARIN, and LIVIA.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Livia, while my master yonder,<br/>
Like a living skeleton,<br/>
Life and motion being gone,<br/>
On his luckless love doth ponder,<br/>
Give me an embrace.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Stay, stay.<br/>
Patience, man! until I see,<br/>
For I like my conscience free,<br/>
If to-day is your right day.—<br/>
Tuesday, yes, and Wednesday, no.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. What are you counting there? Awake!<br/>
Moscon's mum.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. He might mistake,<br/>
And I wish not to act so.<br/>
For, desiring to pursue<br/>
A just course betwixt you both,<br/>
Turn about, I would be loth<br/>
Not to give you each his due.<br/>
But I see that you are right,<br/>
'Tis your day.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Embrace me, then.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Yes, again, and yet again.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Hark to me, my lady bright,<br/>
May I from your ardour borrow<br/>
A good omen in my case;<br/>
And as Clarin you embrace,<br/>
Moscon you'll embrace to-morrow!<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Your suspicion is, in fact,<br/>
Quite absurd; on me rely.<br/>
Jupiter forbid that I<br/>
Should commit so bad an act<br/>
As to be cool in any way<br/>
To a friend. I will to thee<br/>
Give an embrace in equity,<br/>
When it is your worship's day.<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE IV.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN, MOSCON, and CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Well, I'll not be by to see,<br/>
That's a comfort.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. How? why so?<br/>
Need I be chagrined to know,<br/>
If the girl's not mine, that she<br/>
Thus to you her debt did pay.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. No.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. This makes my point more strong,<br/>
Since to me it were no wrong<br/>
If it chanced not on my day.<br/>
But our master yonder, see,<br/>
How absorbed he seems.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. More near,<br/>
If he speaks I'd like to hear.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. And I, too, would like.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Ah me!<br/>
[As MOSCON and CLARIN approach CYPRIAN from opposite sides, he<br/>
gesticulates with his arms, and accidentally strikes both.<br/>
Love, how great thy agonies!—<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Ah! ah, me!<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Ah, me! I bawl.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Well, I think that we may call<br/>
This the land of the 'sigh-ah-mes'!<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What! and have you both been here?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. I, at least, was here, I'll swear.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. And I, also.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. O, despair<br/>
End at once my sad career!<br/>
Ah, what human heart to woe<br/>
Like to mine has given a home?<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE V.<br/>
<br/>
THE COUNTRY.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN, CLARIN, and MOSCON.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Whither Moscon, do we roam?<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. When we've reached the end, we'll know.<br/>
Leagues behind us lies the town,<br/>
Still we go.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. A strange proceeding!—<br/>
Little time have we for reading,<br/>
Idly pacing up and down.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Clarin, get thee home.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. And I?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Sly-boots, would you rather stay?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Go: here leave me both; away!<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Mind, he tells us both to fly.<br/>
<br/>
[Exeunt CLARIN and MOSCON.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE VI.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Memory of a maddened brain,<br/>
Do not with such strong control<br/>
Make me think another soul<br/>
Is what in my heart doth reign.<br/>
Blind idolator I have been—<br/>
Lost in love's ambitious flight,<br/>
Since such beauty met my sight,<br/>
Since a goddess I have seen.<br/>
Yet in such a maze of woe<br/>
Rigorous fate doth make me move,<br/>
That I know but whom I love,<br/>
And of whom I am jealous—no.<br/>
Yet this passion is so strong—<br/>
Ah, so sweet this fascination,<br/>
Driving my imagination<br/>
With resistless force along—<br/>
That I would (I know too well<br/>
How this madness doth degrade me)<br/>
To some devilish power to aid me,<br/>
Were it even to rise from hell,<br/>
Where some mightier power hath kept it,—<br/>
Sharing all its pains in common,—<br/>
I would, to possess this woman,<br/>
Give my soul.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE VII.<br/>
<br/>
The Demon and CYPRIAN.<br/>
<br/>
Demon [within]. And I accept it.<br/>
<br/>
[A great tempest is heard, with thunder and lightning.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What's this, ye heavens so pure?<br/>
Clear but a moment hence and now obscure,<br/>
Ye fright the gentle day!<br/>
The thunder-balls, the lightning's forked ray,<br/>
Leap from its riven breast—<br/>
Terrific shapes it cannot keep at rest;<br/>
All the whole heaven a crown of clouds doth wear,<br/>
And with the curling mist, like streaming hair,<br/>
This mountain's brow is bound.<br/>
Outspread below, the whole horizon round<br/>
Is one volcanic pyre.<br/>
The sun is dead, the air is smoke, heaven fire.<br/>
Philosophy, how far from thee I stray,<br/>
When I cannot explain the marvels of this day!<br/>
And now the sea, upborne on clouds the while,<br/>
Seems like some ruined pile,<br/>
That crumbling down the wind as 'twere a wall,<br/>
In dust not foam doth fall.<br/>
And struggling through the gloom,<br/>
Facing the storm, a mighty ship seeks room<br/>
On the open sea, whose rage it seems to court,<br/>
Flying the dangerous pity of the port.<br/>
The noise, the terror, and that fearful cry,<br/>
Give fatal augury<br/>
Of the impending stroke. Death hesitates,<br/>
For each already dies who death awaits.<br/>
With portents the whole atmosphere is rife,<br/>
Nor is it all the effect of elemental strife.<br/>
The ship is rigged with tempest as it flies.*<br/>
It rushes on the lee,<br/>
The war is now no longer of the sea;<br/>
Upon a hidden rock<br/>
It strikes: it breaks as with a thunder shock.<br/>
Blood flakes the foam where helpless it is tost.<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] *Hartzenbusch remarks that there is no corresponding rhyme<br/>
for this line in the original, and that both the sense and the<br/>
versification are defective.—'Comedias de Calderon', t. 2, p. 178.<br/></p>
<p>[The sound of the tempest increases, and voices are heard within.<br/>
<br/>
VOICES WITHIN. We sink! we sink! we're lost!<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [within]. For what I have in hand,<br/>
I'll trust this plank to bear me to the land.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. As scorning the wild wave<br/>
One man alone his life attempts to save.<br/>
While lurching over, mid the billows' swell,<br/>
The great ship sinks to where the Tritons dwell;<br/>
There, with its mighty ribs asunder rent,<br/>
It lies a corse of the sea, its grave and monument.<br/>
<br/>
[Enter The Demon, dripping with wet, as if escaped from the sea.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. For the end I wish to gain<br/>
It was of necessity<br/>
That upon this sapphire sea<br/>
I this fearful storm should feign,<br/>
And in form unlike that one<br/>
Which in this wild wood I wore,<br/>
When I found my deepest lore<br/>
By his keener wit outdone,<br/>
Come again to assail him here,<br/>
Trusting better now to prove<br/>
Both his intellect and his love.—<br/>
[Aloud.<br/>
Earth, loved earth, O mother dear,<br/>
From this monster, this wild sea,<br/>
Give me shelter in thy arms.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Lose, my friend, the dread alarms,<br/>
And the cruel memory<br/>
Of thy peril happily past;<br/>
Since we learn or late or soon,<br/>
That beneath the inconstant moon<br/>
Human bliss doth never last.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Who are thou, at whose kind feet<br/>
Has my fortune cast me here?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. One who with a pitying tear,<br/>
For a ruin so complete,<br/>
Would alleviate your woe.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Ah, impossible!—for me<br/>
Never, never, can there be<br/>
Any solace.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. How, why so?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. All my priceless wealth I've lost...<br/>
But I'm wrong to thus complain,<br/>
I'll forget, nay, think it gain,<br/>
Since my life it hath not cost.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Now that the wild whirl malign<br/>
Of this earthquake storm doth cease,<br/>
And the sky returns to peace,<br/>
Quiet, calm, and crystalline,<br/>
And the bright succeeds the dark<br/>
With such strange rapidity,<br/>
That the storm would seem to be<br/>
Only raised to sink thy bark,<br/>
Tell me who thou art, repay<br/>
Thus a sympathy so sincere.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. It has cost me to come here<br/>
More than you have seen to-day,<br/>
More than I can well express;<br/>
Of the miseries I recall<br/>
This ship's loss is least of all.<br/>
Would you see that clearly?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Yes.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. I am since you wish to know it,<br/>
An epitome, a wonder*<br/>
Of all happiness and misfortune,<br/>
One I have lost, I weep the other.<br/>
By my gifts was I so glorious,<br/>
So conspicuous in my order,<br/>
Of a lineage so illustrious,<br/>
With a mind so well informed,<br/>
That my rare endowments feeling,<br/>
A great king (in truth the noblest<br/>
King of Kings, for all would tremble<br/>
If he looked in anger on them,)<br/>
In his palace roofed with diamonds<br/>
And with gems as bright as morning,<br/>
(If I called them stars, 'tis certain<br/>
The comparison were too modest,)<br/>
His especial favourite called me.<br/>
Which high epithet of honour<br/>
So enflamed my pride, as rival<br/>
For his royal seat I plotted,<br/>
Hoping soon my victor footsteps<br/>
Would his golden thrones have trodden.<br/>
It was an unheard-of daring,<br/>
THAT, chastized I must acknowledge,<br/>
I was mad; but then repentance<br/>
Were a still insaner folly.<br/>
Obstinate in my resistance,<br/>
With my spirit yet unconquered,<br/>
I preferred to fall with courage<br/>
Than surrender with dishonour.<br/>
If the attempt was rash, the rashness<br/>
Was not solely my misfortune,<br/>
For among his numerous vassals<br/>
Not a few my standard followed.<br/>
From his court, in fine, thus vanquished,<br/>
Though part victor in the contest,<br/>
I went forth, my eyes outflashing<br/>
Flames of anger and abhorrence,<br/>
And my lips proclaiming vengeance<br/>
For the public insult offered<br/>
To my pride, among his people<br/>
Scattering murder, rapine, horror.<br/>
Then a bloody pirate, I<br/>
The wide plains of the sea ran over,<br/>
Argus of its dangerous shallows,<br/>
Lynx-eyed where the reefs lay covered;<br/>
In that vessel which the wind<br/>
Bit by bit so soon demolished,<br/>
In that vessel which the sea<br/>
As a dustless ruin swallowed,<br/>
I to-day these fields of crystal<br/>
Eagerly ran o'er, my object<br/>
Being stone by stone to examine,<br/>
Tree by tree to search this forest:—<br/>
For a man in it is living,<br/>
Whom it is of great importance<br/>
I should see, this day expecting<br/>
The fulfilment of a promise<br/>
Which he gave and I accepted.<br/>
This infuriate tempest stopped me.<br/>
And although my powerful genius<br/>
Could chain up east, south, and north wind,<br/>
I cared not, as if despairing<br/>
Of success, with other objects,<br/>
Other aims in view, to turn them<br/>
To the west wind's summer softness.—<br/>
[Aside.<br/>
(I have said I could, but did not,<br/>
For I note the dangerous workings<br/>
Of his mind, and thus to magic<br/>
Bind him by these hints the stronger.)<br/>
Let not my wild fury fright thee,<br/>
Nor be at my power astonished,<br/>
For I could my own death give me,<br/>
If I were by rage so prompted,<br/>
And so great that power, the sunlight,<br/>
By my science could be blotted.<br/>
I, in magic am so mighty,<br/>
That I can describe the orbits<br/>
Of the stars, for I have travelled<br/>
Through the farthest and beyond them.<br/>
And in order that this boasting<br/>
May not seem to you mere bombast,<br/>
Look, if at this very instant<br/>
You desire it, this untrodden<br/>
Nimrod of rude rocks more savage<br/>
Than of Babylon is recorded,<br/>
Shall without a leaf being shaken,<br/>
Show the most horrific portents.<br/>
I am, then, the orphan guest here<br/>
Of these ash-trees, of these poplars,<br/>
And though what I am, assistance<br/>
At thy feet here I ask from thee:<br/>
And I wish the good I purchase<br/>
To repay thee with the product<br/>
Of unnumbered years of study,<br/>
Though it now slight effort costs me,<br/>
Giving to your wildest wishes<br/>
[Aside.<br/>
(Here I touch his love,) the fondest<br/>
Longings of your heart, whatever<br/>
Passion can desire or covet.<br/>
If through courtesy or caution<br/>
You should not accept my offer,<br/>
Let my good intentions pay you,<br/>
If from greater acts you stop me.<br/>
For the pity that you show me,<br/>
Which I thankfully acknowledge,<br/>
I will be a friend so faithful,<br/>
That henceforth the changeful monster<br/>
Of events and acts, called Fortune,<br/>
Which 'twixt flattering words and scornful,<br/>
Generous now, and now a miser,<br/>
Shows a friendly face or hostile,<br/>
Neither it nor that laborious<br/>
Ever flying, running worker,<br/>
Time, the loadstone of the ages,<br/>
Nor even heaven itself, heaven proper,<br/>
To whose stars the dark world oweth<br/>
All its most divine adornment,<br/>
Will have power to separate me<br/>
From your side a single moment,<br/>
Since you here have given me welcome.<br/>
And even this is almost nothing<br/>
When compared with what my wishes<br/>
Hope hereafter to accomplish.<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] *Asonante in 1-3, to the end of the speech.<br/></p>
<p>CYPRIAN. Well to the sea, my thanks are due, that bore<br/>
You struggling to the shore,<br/>
And led you to this grove,<br/>
Where you will quickly prove<br/>
The friendly feelings that inflame my breast,<br/>
If happily I merit such a guest.<br/>
Then let us homeward wend,<br/>
For I esteem you now as an old friend.<br/>
My guest you are, and so you must not leave me<br/>
While my house suits you.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Do you then receive me<br/>
Wholly as yours?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN [embracing him]. This act doth prove it true,<br/>
That seals an eternal bond betwixt us two.—<br/>
[Aside.<br/>
Oh! if I could win o'er<br/>
This man to instruct me in his magic lore!<br/>
Since by that art my love might gain<br/>
Some solace for its pain;<br/>
Or yielding to its mighty laws<br/>
My love at length might win my love's sweet cause—<br/>
The cause of all my torment, madness, rage.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. The working of his mind and love I gauge.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE VIII.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN and MOSCON enter running from opposite sides.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN and The Demon.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Oh! are you sir, alive?<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. My friend, do you<br/>
Speak civilly for once as something new?<br/>
That he's alive requires no demonstration.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. I struck this lofty note of admiration,<br/>
Thou noble lackey, to express my wonder,<br/>
How from this storm of lightning, rain, and thunder,<br/>
Without a miracle he could survive.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Will you stop wondering, now you see him alive?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. These are my servants, sir.—<br/>
What brings you here?<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Your spleen once more to stir.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. They have a pleasant humour.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Foolish pair,<br/>
Their weary wit is oft too hard to bear.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. This man, sir, waiting here,<br/>
Who is he?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. He's my guest, so do not fear.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Wherefore have guests at such a time as this?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN [to The Demon]. Your worth is lost on ignorance such as his.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. My master's right. Are you, forsooth, his heir?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. No; but our new friend there,<br/>
Looks like a guest, unless I deceive me, who<br/>
Will honour our poor house a year or two.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Why?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. When a guest soon means to go away,<br/>
Well, he'll not make much smoke in the house, we say.<br/>
But this....<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Speak out.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Will make, I do not joke..<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. What?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. In the house a deuced deal of smoke.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. In order to repair<br/>
The danger done by the rude sea and air,<br/>
Come thou with me.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. [Aside.] I'm thine, while thou hast breath.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I go to prepare thy rest.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. And I thy death:—<br/>
An entrance having gained<br/>
Within his breast, and thus my end obtained;<br/>
My rage insatiate now without control<br/>
Seeks by another way to win Justina's soul.<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Guess, if you can, what I am thinking about.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. What is it?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. That a new volcano has burst out<br/>
In the late storm, there's such a sulphur smell.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. It came from the guest, as my good nose could tell.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. He uses bad pastilles, then; but I can<br/>
Infer the cause.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. What is it?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. The poor gentleman<br/>
Has a slight rash on his skin, a ticklish glow,<br/>
And uses sulphur ointment.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Gad! 'tis so.<br/>
[Exeunt.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE IX.<br/>
<br/>
THE STREET.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS and FABIUS.<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS. You return, then, to this street.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Yes; the life that I deplore<br/>
I return to seek once more<br/>
Where 'twas lost. Ah! guide my feet,<br/>
Love, to find it!—<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS. That house there<br/>
Is Justina's; come away.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Wherefore, when I will to-day<br/>
Once again my love declare.<br/>
And as she, I saw it plain,<br/>
Trusted some one else at night,<br/>
'Tis not strange, in open light,<br/>
That I try to soothe my pain.<br/>
Leave me, go; for it is best<br/>
That I enter here alone.<br/>
My rank in Antioch is known,<br/>
My father Governor; thus drest<br/>
In his robe as 'twere, my strong<br/>
Passion listening to no mentor,<br/>
I Justina's house will enter<br/>
To protest against my wrong.<br/>
[Exeunt.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE X.<br/>
<br/>
A HALL IN THE HOUSE OF LYSANDER.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA, and afterwards LELIUS.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Livia.... But a step! who's there?<br/>
<br/>
[LELIUS enters<br/>
LELIUS. It is I.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. What novelty,<br/>
What extreme temerity,<br/>
Thus, my lord, compels you?...<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Spare<br/>
Your reproaches. Jealous-grown,<br/>
I can bear that you reprove.<br/>
Pardon me, for with my love<br/>
My respect has also flown.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Why, at such a perilous cost<br/>
Have you dared...<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Because I'm mad.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. To intrude....<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Heart-broken, sad.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Here....<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Because, in truth, I'm lost.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Nor perceive how scandal views<br/>
Such an act as now you do<br/>
'Gainst....<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Be not so moved, for you<br/>
Little honour now can lose.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Lelius, spare at least my fame.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Ah, Justina, it were best<br/>
That this language you addressed<br/>
Unto him who nightly came<br/>
Down here from this balcony;—<br/>
'Tis enough for me to show<br/>
All your lightness that I know,<br/>
That less coy and cold to me<br/>
Your pretended honour prove.<br/>
If I am disdained, displaced,<br/>
'Tis another suits your taste,<br/>
Not that you your honour love.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Silence, cease, your words withhold.<br/>
Who with insult e'er before<br/>
Dared to pass my threshold's door?<br/>
Are you then so blind and bold,<br/>
So audacious, so insane,<br/>
As my pure light to eclipse,<br/>
Through the libel of your lips,<br/>
By chimeras false and vain?—<br/>
In my house a man?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. 'Tis so.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. From my balcony?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. With shame<br/>
I repeat it.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. O, my fame,<br/>
O'er us twain your Aegis throw.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XI.<br/>
<br/>
THE SAME.<br/>
<br/>
The Demon appears at the door which is behind JUSTINA.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. For the deep design I handle,<br/>
For my double plot I come<br/>
Raging to this simple home,<br/>
Now to work the greatest scandal<br/>
Ever seen. Here, brooding o'er him,<br/>
This wild lover mad with ire,<br/>
I will fan his jealous fire,<br/>
I will place myself before him,<br/>
Catch his eye, and then as fleeing,<br/>
In invisible gloom array me.<br/>
[He affects to come in, and being seen by LELIUS muffles himself in<br/>
his cloak, and re-enters the inner apartment.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Man, do you come here to slay me?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. No, to die.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. What object seeing<br/>
Paralyses thus your senses?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. What I see is your untruth.<br/>
Tell me now, the wish, forsooth,<br/>
Has invented my offences.<br/>
From that very chamber there<br/>
Came a man, I turned my head,<br/>
When he saw my face he fled<br/>
Back into the room.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. The air<br/>
Must this phantasy display—<br/>
This illusion.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Oh, that sight!<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Is it not enough by night,<br/>
Lelius, but in open day<br/>
Thus fictitious forms to see?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Phantom shape or real lover,<br/>
Now the truth I will discover.<br/>
[He goes into the room where The Demon had disappeared.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. I no hindrance offer thee,<br/>
For my innocence, a way,<br/>
At the cost of this permission,<br/>
Thus finds out the night's submission<br/>
To correct by the light of day.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XII.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER and JUSTINA; LELIUS, within.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. My Justina.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA [aside]. Woe is me!<br/>
Ah, if here before Lysander*<br/>
Lelius from that room comes forth!<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] *Asonante in a-i to the end of Scene XVII.<br/></p>
<p>LYSANDER. My misfortunes, my disasters<br/>
Fly to be consoled by thee.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. What can be the grief, the sadness,<br/>
That your face betrays so plainly?<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. And no wonder, when the pallor<br/>
Springs even from the heart. This sobbing<br/>
Stops my weak words in their passage.<br/>
<br/>
[LELIUS appears at the door of the apartment.<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. I begin now to believe,<br/>
Since he is not in this chamber,<br/>
Jealousy can cause these spectres.<br/>
He, the man I saw, has vanished,<br/>
How I know not.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA [aside to Lelius]. Come not forth,<br/>
Lelius, here before my father.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Convalescent in my sickness<br/>
I will wait till he is absent.<br/>
[Retires.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Why this weeping? why this sighing?<br/>
What, sir, moves thee, what unmans thee?<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. I am moved by a misfortune,<br/>
I'm unmanned by a disaster,<br/>
Greater far than tender pity<br/>
Ever wept,—the dread example<br/>
Cruelty has sworn to make<br/>
In the innocent blood of martyrs.<br/>
To the Governor of this city<br/>
Decius Caesar a strict mandate<br/>
Has despatched... I can speak no more.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA [aside]. What position e'er was harder?<br/>
Moved with pity for the Christians<br/>
Hither comes to me Lysander<br/>
The sad news to tell, not knowing<br/>
Lelius to his words may hearken,—<br/>
Lelius, the Governor's son.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. So Justina...<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Sir, no farther,<br/>
Since you feel it so acutely,<br/>
Speak upon this painful matter.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Let me, for I'll feel some solace<br/>
When to thee it is imparted.<br/>
In it he commands...<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Proceed not<br/>
Further now, when you should rather<br/>
Cheat your years with more repose.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. How? when I, to make you partner<br/>
In those lively fears whose bodings<br/>
Are sufficient to despatch me,<br/>
Would inform you of the edict,<br/>
The most cruel that the margin<br/>
Of the Tiber ever saw<br/>
Writ in blood to stain its waters,<br/>
Do you stop me? Ah, Justina,<br/>
You were wont in another manner<br/>
Once to listen to me.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Sir,<br/>
Different were the circumstances.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [at the door, aside]. I can hear but indistinctly<br/>
Half-formed words and broken accents.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XIII.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS enters.—JUSTINA and LYSANDER; LELIUS, peeping at the door<br/>
of the inner room.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside]. Licence has a jealous lover,<br/>
Who but enters to unmask here<br/>
A pretended purity,<br/>
To forego politer manners.<br/>
I come here with that intention...<br/>
But as she is with her father<br/>
I will wait a new occasion.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Who is there? Some footstep passes.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside]. Ah! 'tis now impossible<br/>
Without speaking to get back here.<br/>
Some excuse I'll try to offer:—<br/>
I am...<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. You here, sir?<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Your pardon.<br/>
I ask leave, sir, to speak with you<br/>
On a most important matter.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA [aside]. Oh! take pity on me, fortune,<br/>
For these trials are too many.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Well, sir, speak.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside, at the door]. Florus in Justina's house<br/>
Leaves and enters like a master!—<br/>
These are not unfounded jealousies,<br/>
These are real and substantial.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. You grow pale, you change your colour.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Do not wonder, be not startled,<br/>
For I came to give a warning,<br/>
To your life of utmost value,<br/>
Of an enemy that you have,<br/>
Who your swift destruction planneth.<br/>
What I've said is quite sufficient.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER [aside]. Florus, doubtless, must have gathered<br/>
Somehow that I am a Christian,<br/>
And thus comes in kindliest manner<br/>
Of my danger to apprise me.—<br/>
[Aloud.<br/>
Speak, hide nothing in this matter.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XIV.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA enters.—<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA, LYSANDER, and FLORUS; LELIUS at the door of the room.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Sir, the Governor, who is waiting<br/>
At the door of the house, commanded<br/>
Me to call you to his presence.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Best I wait for his departure:—<br/>
[Aside.<br/>
(Meantime my excuse I'll think of.)<br/>
So 'tis well that you despatch him.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. I appreciate your politeness.<br/>
Here I will return instanter.<br/>
[Exeunt LYSANDER and LIVIA.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XV.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA and FLORUS; LELIUS at the door.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Are you then that virtuous maiden,<br/>
Who, the very breeze that flatters<br/>
With its soft and sweet caresses,<br/>
You would call rude, bold, unmannered?<br/>
How then is it you surrendered<br/>
Even the very keys of the casket<br/>
Of your honour?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Hold, hold, Florus,<br/>
Do not dare to throw a shadow<br/>
On that honour which the sun<br/>
After the most strict examen<br/>
Has proved bright and pure.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Too late<br/>
Comes this idle boast. It happens<br/>
That I know to whom you have given<br/>
Free access...<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. You dare this scandal?—<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. By a balcony...<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Do not say it.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. To your honour.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Thus will you blast me?<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Yes, for hypocritical virtue<br/>
Merits something even harsher.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [at the door, aside]. Florus was not then the hero<br/>
Of the balcony; some more happy<br/>
Lover than us twain she welcomes.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Oh! defame not noble damsels,<br/>
Since you noble blood inherit.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Noble damsel, dar'st thou call thee,<br/>
When thy very arms received him,<br/>
And from thy balcony he departed?<br/>
Power subdued thee; from the fact<br/>
That the Governor is his father,<br/>
Vanity led thee on to show<br/>
That in Antioch he commanded...<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. Here he speaks of me.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Not seeing<br/>
Any graver defect of manner,<br/>
Than what in his birth and breeding<br/>
Rank may cover with its mantle,<br/>
But not so....<br/>
<br/>
[LELIUS enters.<br/>
LELIUS. Be silent, Florus,<br/>
Nor attack me in my absence;<br/>
For of a rival to speak ill,<br/>
Is the act but of a dastard.<br/>
'Tis to stop this I come forward,<br/>
Angry after so many passes<br/>
Which my sword has had with thine,<br/>
That I have not yet dispatched thee.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Who, not guilty, ever saw her<br/>
In such dangerous straits entangled?<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. What behind your back was spoken,<br/>
I before you will establish,<br/>
Truth is truth where'er 'tis uttered.<br/>
[They grasp their swords.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Florus! Lelius! what would you have then.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. I would have full satisfaction<br/>
Where I heard th'insulting language.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. I'll maintain what I have said<br/>
Where I said it.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. From so many<br/>
Strokes of fortune, free me, Heaven!—<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. And I'll learn to chastise your rashness.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XVI.<br/>
<br/>
The Governor enters with LYSANDER and attendants.—JUSTINA, LELIUS,<br/>
and FLORUS.<br/>
<br/>
[All who enter]. Hold! stand back!<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Unhappy me!<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. What is this? But empty scabbards,<br/>
Naked swords, are quite sufficient<br/>
To inform me what has happened.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. What misfortune!<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. What affliction!—<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Ah, my lord...<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Enough, no farther.<br/>
Lelius, thou a son of mine,<br/>
A disturber? Thou a scandal<br/>
To all Antioch through my favour?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Think, my lord...<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Arrest, disarm them,<br/>
Take them hence. Make no distinction<br/>
On account of blood or rank here.<br/>
Let them suffer both alike,<br/>
Since in guilt alike they acted.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. I came jealous, and go outraged.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside]. To my pains new pains are added.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. In distinct and separate prisons,<br/>
And with watchful eyes to guard them,<br/>
Place the two.—And you, Lysander,<br/>
Is it possible you have tarnished<br/>
Such a noble reputation,<br/>
Suffering....<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. No; let not these dazzling<br/>
False appearances mislead you,<br/>
For Justina in what happened<br/>
Was quite blameless.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. In her house here,<br/>
Would you have her live regardless<br/>
Of the fact that they were young,<br/>
And that she was fair; My anger<br/>
I restrain, lest people say,<br/>
I, an interested party,<br/>
Sentence passed as partial judge.—<br/>
But of you who caused this quarrel,<br/>
Now that maiden shame has left you,<br/>
Well I know that you will glad me<br/>
With the occasion I desire,<br/>
Of exposing, of unmasking,<br/>
In the light of actual vices,<br/>
The false virtuous part you've acted.<br/>
<br/>
[Exeunt The Governor and his attendants;<br/>
LELIUS and FLORUS follow as prisoners.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XVII.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA and LYSANDER.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. I reply but with my tears.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Tears as vain as they are tardy.<br/>
What an act was mine, Justina,<br/>
When to thee my lips imparted<br/>
Who thou art! Oh, would I never<br/>
Told thee, that upon the margin<br/>
Of a rivulet in this forest,<br/>
A dead mother's womb here cast thee!<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. I....<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Do not attempt excuses.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Heaven will make them, then, hereafter<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. When too late, perhaps.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. No limit<br/>
Can be late here while life lasteth.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. For the punishment of crimes.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Injured truth to re-establish.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. I, from what I have seen, condemn thee.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. I thee, from what thou knowest not, rather.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Leave me; I go forth to die<br/>
Where my grief will soon dispatch me.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. At thy feet I would lose my life;<br/>
But do not reject me, father.<br/>
[Exeunt.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XVIII.<br/>
<br/>
A HALL IN CYPRIAN'S HOUSE.<br/>
At the end is an open gallery, through which is seen the country.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN, the Demon, MOSCON, and CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Since the hour that I have been<br/>
In your house a guest, you ne'er<br/>
Show a gay and cheerful air.<br/>
Sadness in your face is seen.<br/>
It is wrong your cure to shun,<br/>
Seeking to mislead mine eyes,<br/>
Since I would unsphere the skies,<br/>
Shake the stars, and shroud the sun,<br/>
For the least desire you feel<br/>
That more pleasantly you might live.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Magic has no power to give<br/>
The impossible I conceal,<br/>
Though the misery I betray.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Come, confess the longed-for bliss.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I love a woman.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. And is this<br/>
The impossible that you say?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. If you knew her, you'd agree.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Well, describe her, I'm resigned;<br/>
Though I can't but smile to find<br/>
What a coward you must be.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. The fair cradle of the skies,<br/>
Where the infant sun reposes,<br/>
Ere he rises, decked with roses,<br/>
Robed in snow, to dry heaven's eyes.<br/>
The green prison-bud that tries<br/>
To restrain the conscious rose,<br/>
When the crimson captive knows<br/>
April treads its gardens near,<br/>
Turning dawn's half frozen tear<br/>
To a smile where sunshine glows.<br/>
The sweet streamlet gliding by,<br/>
Though it scarcely dares to breathe<br/>
Softest murmurs through its teeth,<br/>
From the frosts that on it lie.<br/>
The bright pink, in its small sky<br/>
Shining like a coral star.<br/>
The blithe bird that flies afar,<br/>
Drest in shifting shades and blooms—<br/>
Soaring cithern of plumes<br/>
Harping high o'er heaven's blue bar.<br/>
The white rock that cheats the sun<br/>
When it tries to melt it down,<br/>
What it melts is but the crown<br/>
Which from winter's snow it won.<br/>
The green bay that will not shun,<br/>
Though the heavens are all aglow,<br/>
For its feet a bath of snow,—<br/>
Green Narcissus of the brook,<br/>
Fearless leaning o'er to look,<br/>
Though the stream runs chill below<br/>
In a word, the crimson dawn,<br/>
Sun, mead, streamlet, rosebud, May<br/>
Bird that sings his amorous lay,<br/>
April's laugh that gems the lawn,<br/>
Pink that sips the dews up-drawn,<br/>
Rock that stands in storm and shine,<br/>
Bay-tree that delights to twine<br/>
Round its fadeless leaves the sun,<br/>
All are parts which met in one<br/>
Form this woman most divine.<br/>
For myself, in blind unrest,<br/>
(Guess my madness if you can)<br/>
I, to seem another man,<br/>
In these courtly robes am drest,<br/>
Studious calm I now detest,<br/>
Fame no longer fires my mind,<br/>
Passion reigns where thought refined,<br/>
I my firmness fling to tears,<br/>
Courage I resign to fears,<br/>
And my hopes I give the wind.<br/>
I have said, and so will do,<br/>
That to some infernal sprite<br/>
I would offer with delight<br/>
(And the pledge I now renew)<br/>
Even my soul for her I woo.<br/>
But my offer is in vain,<br/>
Hell rejects it with disdain,<br/>
For my soul, it may allege,<br/>
Is a disproportionate pledge<br/>
For the interest I would gain.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Is this, then your boasted courage,<br/>
In the footsteps of dejected*<br/>
Swains to follow, who grow timid<br/>
When their first assault's rejected?<br/>
Are examples then so distant<br/>
Of fair ladies who surrender<br/>
All their vanities to entreaties,<br/>
All their pride to fond addresses?<br/>
Would you make your breast the prison<br/>
Of your love, your arms her fetters?<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] *Asonante in e-e to the end of the Act.<br/></p>
<p>CYPRIAN. Can you doubt it?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Then command them<br/>
To retire, those two, your servants,<br/>
So that we remain here only.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Go: both leave me for the present.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. I obey.<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. And I as well.—<br/>
[Aside, concealing himself.<br/>
Such a guest must be the devil.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. They are gone.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. That Clarin's hiding,<br/>
Is to me of small concernment.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What more wish you now?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. First fasten<br/>
Well this door.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Yes; none can enter.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. For the possession of this woman,<br/>
With your lips you have asserted<br/>
You would give your soul.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. 'Tis so.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Then the contract is accepted.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What do you say?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. That I accept it.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. How?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. So much have I effected<br/>
By my science, that I will teach you<br/>
How by it to get possession<br/>
Of the woman that you worship;<br/>
For I (though so wise and learned)<br/>
Have no other means to win her.<br/>
Let us now in writing settle<br/>
What we have resolved between us.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Do you wish by new pretences<br/>
To prolong the pains I suffer?<br/>
In my hand is what I tender,<br/>
But in yours is not the offer<br/>
That you make me; no, for never<br/>
Conjurations or enchantments<br/>
Can free will control or fetter.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Give me, on the terms you spoke of,<br/>
Your signed bond.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. [peeping]. The deuce! This fellow<br/>
Is no fool, I see. No greenhorn<br/>
In his business is this devil.<br/>
I give him my bond! No, truly,<br/>
Though my lodgings wanted a tenant<br/>
For the space of twenty ages,<br/>
I wouldn't do it.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Sir, much jesting<br/>
May with merry friends be pastime,<br/>
Not with those who are dejected.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. I, in proof of what I am able<br/>
To effect, will now present you<br/>
With an example, though it faintly<br/>
Shows the power my art possesses.<br/>
From this gallery what is seen?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Much of sky, and much of meadow,<br/>
Wood, a rivulet, and a mountain.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Which to you doth seem most pleasant?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. The proud mountain, for in it<br/>
Is my adored one represented.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Proud competitor of time,<br/>
Rival of the years for ever,<br/>
Who as king of fields and plains<br/>
Crown'st thee with the cloud and tempest,<br/>
Move thyself, change earth and air;<br/>
Look, see who I am that tell thee.—<br/>
And, look thou, too, since a mountain<br/>
I can move, thou mayest a maiden.<br/>
<br/>
[The mountain moves from one side to the other in the perspective of<br/>
the theatre.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Never saw I such a wonder!<br/>
Ne'er a sight of so much terror!<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN [peeping]. With the fright and with the fear,<br/>
I enjoy a twofold tremble.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Mighty mountain bird that fliest,<br/>
Trees for wings replacing feathers,<br/>
Boat, whose rocks supply the tackle,<br/>
As thou furrowest through the zephyr,<br/>
To thy centre back return thee,<br/>
And so end this fear, this terror.<br/>
<br/>
[The mountain returns to its original position.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. If one proof is not sufficient,<br/>
I will give you then a second.<br/>
Do you wish to see the woman<br/>
You adore?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Yes.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Then, thy entrails<br/>
Ope, thou monster, to whose being<br/>
The four elements are servants.<br/>
Show to us the perfect beauty<br/>
That thou hidest in thy centre.<br/>
[A rock opens and JUSTINA is seen sleeping.<br/>
Is this she whom you adore?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Whom I idolize beyond measure.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. But since I have power to give her,<br/>
I can take her too, remember.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Now impossible dream of mine,<br/>
Now thy arms will be the centre<br/>
Of my love, thy lips the sun,<br/>
Burning, brimming as with nectar.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Stay; for till the word you gave me<br/>
Is affirmed, and well attested,<br/>
You can touch her not.<br/>
<br/>
[CYPRIAN rushes towards the rock, which closes.<br/>
CYPRIAN. Oh, stay<br/>
Cloud that hides the most resplendent<br/>
Sun, that on my bliss e'er dawned!—<br/>
But 'tis air my void arm presses.—<br/>
I believe your art, acknowledge<br/>
Now I am your slave for ever.<br/>
What do you wish I do for thee?<br/>
What do you ask?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. To be protected<br/>
By your signature here written<br/>
In your blood, at the foot of a letter.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN [peeping]. Oh! I'd give my soul that I<br/>
To stay here had not been tempted.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. For my pen I use this dagger,<br/>
Paper let this white cloth serve for,<br/>
And the ink wherewith I write it,<br/>
Be the blood my arm presents me.<br/>
[He writes with the point of a dagger upon a piece of linen, having<br/>
drawn blood from one of his arms.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN [Aside]. Oh! I freeze with fear, with horror!<br/>
I, great Cyprian, say expressly<br/>
I will give my immortal soul,<br/>
(Oh! what lethargy, what frenzy!)<br/>
Unto him whose art will teach me<br/>
(What confusion! what strange terror!)<br/>
How I may of fair Justina,<br/>
Haughty mistress mine, possess me.<br/>
I have signed it with my name.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. Now to my deceits is rendered<br/>
Valid homage, when such reason,<br/>
When discourse like his must tremble<br/>
Even when my help is sought for.—<br/>
Have you written?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. And signed the letter.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Then the sun you adore is thine.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Thine too, for the years eternal,<br/>
Is the soul I offer thee.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Soul for soul I pay my debtors,<br/>
Then for thine I give to thee<br/>
Thy Justina's<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. In what term then,<br/>
Think you you can teach to me<br/>
All your magic art?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. A twelvemonth;<br/>
But on this condition....<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Speak.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. That within a cavern buried,<br/>
Without any other study,<br/>
We may live there both together,<br/>
In our service having no one<br/>
For us two but this attendant,<br/>
[Drags out CLARIN.<br/>
Who being curious hid him here;—<br/>
By securing thus his person<br/>
That our secret is well kept,<br/>
We, I think, may be quite certain.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN [aside]. Oh, that I had never waited!<br/>
How does it happen though, so many<br/>
Neighbours prone to pry, as I am,<br/>
Are not caught thus by the devil?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. So far well. My love, my genius<br/>
Have this happy end effected:<br/>
First Justina will be mine,<br/>
Then by my new lights, new learning,<br/>
I will wake the world's surprise.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. I have gained what I intended.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. I not so.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. You come with us.—<br/>
[Aside.<br/>
O'er my great foe I've got the better.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Ah, how happy my desires,<br/>
If I reach to such possession!—<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. Never will my envy rest<br/>
Till I gain both souls to serve me.—<br/>
Let us go, and in the deepest<br/>
Cavern this wild world presenteth<br/>
You to-day will learn in magic<br/>
Your first lesson.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Let us enter,<br/>
For my mind with such a master,<br/>
For my love with such incentive,<br/>
Will the sorcerer Cyprian's name<br/>
Live before the world for ever.<br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />