<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ACT THE THIRD. </h2>
<p>SCENE I.<br/>
<br/>
A WOOD; AT THE EXTREMITY A GROTTO.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Ungrateful beauty mine,<br/>
At length the day, the happy day doth shine—<br/>
My hope's remotest range,<br/>
The limits of my love and of thy change,<br/>
Since I to-day will gain<br/>
At last my triumph over thy disdain.<br/>
This lofty mountain nigh,<br/>
Raised to the star-lit palace of the sky,<br/>
And this dark cavern's gloom,<br/>
Of two that live, so long the dismal tomb,<br/>
Are the rough school wherein<br/>
From magic art its mystic lore I win,<br/>
And such perfection reach<br/>
That I can now my mighty master teach.<br/>
Seeing, that on this day, since I came here<br/>
The sun completes its course from sphere to sphere,<br/>
I from my prison cell come forth to view<br/>
What in the light I now have power to do.<br/>
Ye skies of cloudless day<br/>
List to my magic spell-words and obey;<br/>
Swift zephyrs that rejoice<br/>
In heaven's warm light, stand still and hear my voice;<br/>
Stupendous mountain rock<br/>
Shake at my words as at an earthquake shock;<br/>
Ye trees in rough bark drest<br/>
Be frightened at the groanings of my breast;<br/>
Ye flowers so fair and frail<br/>
Faint at the echoing terror of my wail;<br/>
Ye sweet melodious birds<br/>
Hush all your songs before my awful words;<br/>
Ye cruel beasts of prey<br/>
See the first fruits of my long toil to-day;<br/>
For blinded, dazzled, dazed,<br/>
Confused, disturbed, astonished and amazed,<br/>
Ye skies and zephyrs, rocks, and trees, and flowers,<br/>
And birds, and beasts, behold my magic powers,<br/>
And thus to all make plain<br/>
Cyprian's infernal study is not vain.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE II.<br/>
<br/>
The Demon and CYPRIAN.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Cyprian!<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Wise friend and master still!<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Why, how is this, that using your free-will<br/>
More than my precept meant,<br/>
Say for what end, what object, what intent,<br/>
Through ignorance or boldness can it be,<br/>
You thus come forth the sun's bright face to see?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Seeing that now my spell<br/>
Can fill with fear, with horror even hell,<br/>
Since I, with so much care<br/>
Have studied magic and its depths laid bare,<br/>
So that yourself can scarcely tell<br/>
Whether 'tis I or you that most excel,<br/>
Seeing that now there is no place or part<br/>
That I with study, diligence and art,<br/>
have not attained,<br/>
Since necromancy's secret I have gained,<br/>
That art whose lines of gloom<br/>
Can ope to me the dark funereal tomb,<br/>
And bring before mine eyes<br/>
Each corpse that in it lies,<br/>
Regaining them, as 'twere by a new birth<br/>
From the hard avarice of the grasping earth.<br/>
The pale ghosts, one and all,<br/>
Rise and respond my call;—<br/>
And seeing that at length the sun<br/>
My goal of life had won,<br/>
Since from its innate force<br/>
Swift-speeding on its course,<br/>
Climbing the heavens each day,<br/>
It turns as 'twere reluctantly away,<br/>
And with a natural fear<br/>
Completes to-day the lifetime of a year,<br/>
I wish to attain the scope<br/>
To last of all my dreams, of all my hope.<br/>
To-day the rare, the beautiful, the divine<br/>
Justina will be mine,<br/>
Here summoned by my charms,<br/>
Here lured by love she'll come unto my arms,<br/>
For you from me no longer can require<br/>
Postponement of my hope's, my heart's desire.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Nor do I wish to do it, no,<br/>
Since thus so earnestly you wish it so.<br/>
Now trace upon the ground<br/>
Mute mystic symbols, and the deep profound<br/>
Of air, with powerful incantations move<br/>
Obedient to your hope and to your love.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. For that I will retire;<br/>
You soon shall see the heaven and earth admire.<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. I give you leave to go,<br/>
Because our science being the same, I know<br/>
That the abyss of hell<br/>
Obedient to your spell<br/>
Will yield through me, this way,<br/>
The fair Justina to your arms to-day:<br/>
For, though my mighty power<br/>
Cannot enslave free-will even for an hour,<br/>
It may present<br/>
The outward show of rapture and content,<br/>
Suggesting thoughts impure:—<br/>
If force I cannot use, at least I lure.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE III.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN and The Demon.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Ungrateful fair, who still my heart doth hold,<br/>
Not burning Libya sure, but Livia cold,<br/>
The time is come to show<br/>
Whether in love you have been true or no,<br/>
Whether, since I within this cave was placed,<br/>
Not chased by me you have yourself been chaste;<br/>
For I have studied here<br/>
At second hand some magic for a year,<br/>
Just to find out (alack! I can't but wince)<br/>
Whether with Moscon you have wronged me since:—<br/>
Ye watery skies (some people call them pure)<br/>
List to my conjurations I conjure,<br/>
Mountains....<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. How, Clarin?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Oh! my master wise!<br/>
By the concomitance of my hands and eyes,<br/>
I've learned some magic, and would know by it<br/>
If Livia, that ungrateful little chit,<br/>
Has played me false since I have been away,<br/>
Embracing that rogue Moscon on my day.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Have done with these buffooneries: leave me, go.<br/>
And 'mid these intricate rocks whose paths you know,<br/>
Assist your master, who will let you see<br/>
(If you would witness such a prodigy)<br/>
The end of all his woe.<br/>
I wish to be alone.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. And I not so.<br/>
I now perceive<br/>
Why to use magic I have not your leave,<br/>
The fault was mine, neglecting to attest<br/>
My bond, and sign it with the blood of my breast.—<br/>
[He takes out a soiled pocket-handkerchief.<br/>
Upon this linen handkerchief<br/>
(None cleaner he can have who cries for grief)<br/>
I'll sign it now, the method I propose<br/>
Is but to give myself a box on the nose,<br/>
For there is little harm<br/>
Whether the blood is drawn from nose or arm.<br/>
<br/>
[He writes with his finger on the handkerchief,<br/>
after having drawn some blood.<br/>
<br/>
I, the great Clarin, say, if I can level<br/>
Pert Livia's cruel pride, whom I give to the devil....<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Leave me, I say again,<br/>
Go seek your master and with him remain.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Yes, I will do so, don't get angry though.<br/>
The reason you reject my bond I know:<br/>
'Tis this, because you see,<br/>
Do what I will that you are sure of me.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE IV.<br/>
<br/>
The Demon.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Abyss of hell prepare!<br/>
Thyself the region of thine own despair.—<br/>
From out each dungeon's dark recess<br/>
Let loose the spirits of voluptuousness,<br/>
To rain and o'erthrow<br/>
Justina's virgin fabric pure as snow.<br/>
A thousand filthy phantoms with thee brought<br/>
So people her chaste thought<br/>
That all her maiden fancies may be filled<br/>
With their deceits; let sweetest notes be trilled<br/>
From every tuneful grove,<br/>
And all, birds, plants, and flowers, provoke to love.<br/>
Let nothing meet her eyes<br/>
But spoils of love's delicious victories,<br/>
Let nothing meet her ears<br/>
But languid sighs that listening passion hears:<br/>
That thus unguarded by the faith, and weak,<br/>
She here may Cyprian seek<br/>
Invoked by his strong spell,<br/>
And by my blinding spirit lured as well.<br/>
Begin, in silence I will here remain<br/>
Unseen, that you may now begin the strain.<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE V.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA; music within. [They sing within.]<br/>
<br/>
A VOICE. What is the glory far above,<br/>
All else that life can give?<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS OF VARIOUS VOICES. Love love.<br/>
<br/>
A VOICE. No creature lives on which love's flame<br/>
Has not impressed its burning seal,<br/>
The man feels more who love doth feel<br/>
Than when Life's breath first warmed his frame.<br/>
Love owns one universal claim,—<br/>
To Love, it only needs To Be,—<br/>
Whether a bird, a flower, a tree:<br/>
Then the chief glory, far above<br/>
All else in life must be....<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS [within]. Love, love.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA [alarmed and restless]. Fancy, flatter that thou art,<br/>
Though thou should'st be sad to-day,<br/>
When did I to thee impart,<br/>
In this strange and sudden way,<br/>
Licence to afflict my heart?<br/>
What thus makes my pulses move?<br/>
What strange fire is this I prove<br/>
Which each moment doth increase?<br/>
Ah! this pain that ends my peace,<br/>
This sweet unrest, ah, what?<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS. Love, love.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA [more composed]. 'Tis that enamoured nightingale<br/>
Who thus gives me the reply:—<br/>
To his partner in the vale<br/>
Listening on a bough hard by<br/>
Warbling thus his tuneful wail.<br/>
Cease, sweet nightingale, nor show<br/>
By thy softly witching strain<br/>
Trilling forth thy bliss and woe,<br/>
How a man might feel love's pain,<br/>
When a bird can feel his so.<br/>
No: it was that wanton vine<br/>
That in fond pursuit has sought<br/>
The tall tree it doth entwine,<br/>
Till the green weight it hath brought<br/>
Makes the noble trunk decline.<br/>
Green entwining boughs that hold<br/>
What you love in your embrace,<br/>
Make my fancy not too bold:—<br/>
Ah, if boughs thus interlace,<br/>
How would clasping arms infold!—<br/>
And if not the vine, 'twill be<br/>
That bright sunflower which we see<br/>
Turning with its tearful eyes<br/>
To its sun-god in the skies,<br/>
Whatsoe'er his movements be.<br/>
Flower thy watch no longer keep,<br/>
Drooping leaflets fold in sleep,<br/>
For the fond thought reappears,<br/>
Ah, if leaves can shed such tears,<br/>
What are those that eyes can weep!<br/>
Cease then, lyrist of the grove,<br/>
Leafy vine, unclasp thy arms,<br/>
Fickle flower, no longer move,<br/>
And declare, these poisoned charms<br/>
That you use, what yields?<br/>
<br/>
CHORUS [within]. Love, love.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Love! it cannot be. Its chain<br/>
Have I ever worn for man?<br/>
No, the fond deceit is vain.<br/>
All received a like disdain,<br/>
Lelius, Florus, Cyprian.<br/>
Lelius did I not despise?<br/>
Florus did I not detest?<br/>
Cyprian, the good and wise,<br/>
<br/>
[She pauses at Cyprian's name and<br/>
resumes for a time her unquiet manner.<br/>
<br/>
Spurn with such a haughty breast,<br/>
That he vanished from my eyes,<br/>
As if frightened by their ire?—<br/>
Where he went I do not know.<br/>
But save this, the faintest fire<br/>
Love e'er lit, ne'er dared to glow<br/>
In the depths of my desire.<br/>
Yes, for since I said that he<br/>
Should submit without appeal<br/>
Never more my face to see,<br/>
Ah, I know and what I feel!—<br/>
[She grows calmer.<br/>
Pity it must surely be,<br/>
That a man so widely known<br/>
Should through love of me be lost,<br/>
When he pays at such a cost<br/>
For the preference he has shown.<br/>
[She becomes troubled again.<br/>
Were it pity though, 'tis true,<br/>
The same pity I should give<br/>
Lelius and to Florus too,<br/>
Who in separate dungeons live,<br/>
Ah! for daring me to woo.<br/>
[She grows calmer.<br/>
But my thoughts, ye mutinous crew,<br/>
If my pity is enough<br/>
It should not be clogged by you.<br/>
Still your promptings press me so,<br/>
That I feel in my despair,<br/>
Where he is, if I could know,<br/>
I to seek him now would go.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE VI.<br/>
<br/>
The Demon and JUSTINA.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Come, and I will tell thee where.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Who art thou who has procured<br/>
Entrance to this lone retreat,<br/>
Though the entrance is secured?<br/>
Or, my senses being obscured,<br/>
Art thou but delusion's cheat?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. No, not so; but having known<br/>
How this passion pressed thee so,<br/>
I have sought thee here alone,<br/>
Having promised thee to show<br/>
Whither Cyprian has flown.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Then thou'lt reach not thy intent;<br/>
For this passion, this strange pain,<br/>
Which my thought doth so torment,<br/>
Though my fancy it may gain,<br/>
It will never my consent.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. But in thought to enter in<br/>
Shows that half the deed is done;<br/>
Since accomplished is the sin:—<br/>
Stop not halfway, ere is won<br/>
What the wish desired to win.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Even in this desponding hour,<br/>
Though to think may taint the flower,<br/>
Thy suggestion comes to nought,—<br/>
In my power is not my thought<br/>
But my act is in my power.<br/>
I can follow to the brink,<br/>
Free to pause or to pursue,<br/>
Move my foot, or backward shrink,<br/>
For it is one thing to do,<br/>
And another thing to think.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. If a stronger power than thine,<br/>
Drawn from a profounder source,<br/>
With thine own desires combine,<br/>
How resist the double force<br/>
Which with force thy steps incline?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. I will trust a safer spell:—<br/>
My free will suffices me.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. But my power will it excel.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Then the will no more were free<br/>
If a force could it compel.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Come where every bliss thou'lt meet.<br/>
[Attempts to draw her with him, but cannot move her.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Ah! the bliss were bought too dear.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. It is peace, serene and sweet.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. 'Tis a slavery most severe.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Life, 'tis joy.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. 'Tis death, deceit.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Thy defence, what can it be,<br/>
If my power thus forces thee?<br/>
[Drags her with more force.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. In my God it doth consist.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. By persisting to resist,<br/>
[Releases her.<br/>
Woman, thou has conquered me.<br/>
Thy defence to God is due,<br/>
And my counsel is disdained;<br/>
Yes, but raging I'll renew<br/>
My attempt and have thee feigned,<br/>
If I cannot have thee true.<br/>
To a spirit I will give<br/>
Shape like thine though fugitive,<br/>
It will counterfeit thy form,<br/>
As with seeming life be warm,<br/>
And in it disgraced thou'lt live.<br/>
Thus two triumphs at one time<br/>
I am sure to win by this,<br/>
Be thy virtue so sublime,<br/>
Since through an ideal bliss<br/>
I will consummate a crime.<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE VII.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. 'Gainst the clouds that round me lower<br/>
I appeal to heaven's high power;<br/>
Let this spectre of my fame—<br/>
As before the wind the flame—<br/>
As before the frost the flower,<br/>
Vanish, die.... But woe is me!<br/>
Who is here to heed my moan?<br/>
Was there not a man with me?<br/>
Yes. But no: I am alone:<br/>
No. But yes: for I could see.<br/>
Where so quickly could he fly?<br/>
Was he born of my unrest?<br/>
Oh! my danger's manifest...<br/>
Father! friend! Lysander! I<br/>
Call....<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE VIII.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER and LIVIA enter from opposite doors.—JUSTINA.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. My child?<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. What means this cry?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Saw you not a man (ah, me!)<br/>
Who but left me instantly?<br/>
I can scarce express my thought.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. A man here?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. You saw him not?<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. No, senora.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. I could see.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Saw a man here? That is hard,<br/>
When the place was locked and barred.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA [aside]. Moscon sure she must have seen,<br/>
Whom I have contrived to screen<br/>
In my changer.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. I regard<br/>
What you saw but as the play<br/>
Of your fancy and your fear.<br/>
Melancholy surely may<br/>
Have, the man that you saw here,<br/>
Formed from atoms of the day.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Yes, I think my master's right.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. No, 'twas no defect of sight,<br/>
No illusion: since my heart,—<br/>
Ah! too well I feel the smart—<br/>
Has been broken by the fright.<br/>
Some strange witchery of my will<br/>
Must have been effected here.<br/>
And with such consummate skill,<br/>
That if God had not been near<br/>
I might have pursued my ill.<br/>
He who at such timely hour<br/>
Helped me to resist the power<br/>
Of this fearful violence,<br/>
Will my humble innocence<br/>
Guard, whatever dangers lower.—<br/>
Livia, my cloak: whene'er<br/>
[Exit LIVIA.<br/>
Overwhelming griefs oppress,<br/>
I to holy church repair,<br/>
Where we secretly confess<br/>
The true faith.<br/>
[LIVIA returns with the cloak, which she places on JUSTINA.<br/>
LIVIA. 'Tis this you wear.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. There perchance I may appease<br/>
This strange fire that burns me so.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. I desire with thee to go.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA [aside]. I will breathe much more at ease<br/>
When they're out of the house, I know.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Since I wholly trust to thee<br/>
Heaven, thy hold to me afford.<br/>
Save me....<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Come: so it may be.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Since the cause is thine, O Lord!<br/>
Oh, defend Thyself and me!<br/>
[Exeunt JUSTINA and LYSANDER.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE IX.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON and LIVIA.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Have they gone?<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. They're gone: all right.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Why, I'm almost dead with fright.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Were you of your sense bereft<br/>
When but now my room you left<br/>
And appeared before her sight?<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Left your room? Be seen by her?<br/>
Why, I swear it, Livia dear,<br/>
Not one moment did I stir.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Who then was it she saw here?<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Well, the devil, as I infer.<br/>
How know I? But then do not<br/>
Take it so to heart, my soul.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Oh! that's not the cause.<br/>
[She weeps.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Then what?<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Such a question, when the whole<br/>
Of a day it was his lot<br/>
With me here locked up to stay?<br/>
For his comrade far away<br/>
Must I not a tear then shed,<br/>
Though I take this day instead,<br/>
Having wept not yesterday?<br/>
Would I have him think of me<br/>
As a woman who could be<br/>
So forgetful and so frail,<br/>
As for half a year to fail<br/>
In what we did both agree?<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Half a year? It is above<br/>
One whole year since he went away.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Quite an error, as I'll prove.<br/>
Mind, I cannot count a day<br/>
When I Clarin could not love.<br/>
This being so, if I to thee<br/>
Gave up half the year (ah me!),<br/>
I would give a false amount<br/>
To place all to his account.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Ah, ungrateful! can it be<br/>
When my heart on thee depends<br/>
For its peace, that thine attends<br/>
To such trifles?<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Moscon, yes,<br/>
For I find, I must confess,<br/>
Short accounts make longest friends.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Such being then thy constancy,<br/>
Livia, I must say good-bye,<br/>
Till to-morrow. Ah! if he<br/>
Is thy two-day fever, I<br/>
Hope he's not thy syncope.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Well, my friend, from this you know<br/>
I no malice bear.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Just so.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. See me then no more to-day,<br/>
But to-morrow, sir, you may:<br/>
I'll not need to send. Heigho!<br/>
[Exeunt.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE X.<br/>
<br/>
A WOOD.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN, as frightened; CLARIN, stealthily after him.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Doubtless something must have happened<br/>
'Mong the stars; imperial clusters,*<br/>
Since I find their influences<br/>
To my wishes so repugnant.<br/>
Up from the profound abysses<br/>
Some dark caveat must be uttered,<br/>
Which prohibits the obedience<br/>
Which they owe me as my subjects.<br/>
I, a thousand times, with spell-words<br/>
Made the winds of heaven to shudder,<br/>
I, a thousand times, the bosom<br/>
Of the earth with symbols furrowed,<br/>
Yet mine eyes have not been gladdened<br/>
By the human sun refulgent<br/>
That I seek, nor in mine arms<br/>
Hold that human heaven.<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] *'Asonante' in 'u-e' to the end of Scene XV.<br/></p>
<p>CLARIN. What wonder?<br/>
When a thousand times have I<br/>
Scraped the earth as if for nuggets,<br/>
When a thousand times the wind<br/>
By my screeching was perturbed,<br/>
And yet Livia was oblivious.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Once again then I am humbled<br/>
To invoke her thus. Oh, listen,<br/>
Beautiful Justina....<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XI.<br/>
<br/>
A phantom Figure of JUSTINA appears.<br/>
<br/>
The Figure, CYPRIAN, and CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
FIGURE. Summoned,<br/>
As I wander through these mountains,<br/>
I obey a call so urgent.<br/>
What, then, wouldst thou? what, then, wouldst thou,<br/>
Cyprian, with me?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Oh, I shudder!<br/>
<br/>
FIGURE. And since now....<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I am astonished!<br/>
<br/>
FIGURE. I have come....<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What thus disturbs me?<br/>
<br/>
FIGURE. To this place....<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What makes me tremble?<br/>
<br/>
FIGURE. Where....<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Oh! whence this doubt that numbs me?<br/>
<br/>
FIGURE. Love doth call me....<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Why, this terror?<br/>
<br/>
FIGURE. And the powerful spell thou workest<br/>
Thus complied with, to this forest's<br/>
Deepest depths I fly to shun thee.<br/>
[Exit, covering her face with the cloak.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Listen, hear me, stay, Justina!<br/>
But why linger spell-bound, stunned here?<br/>
I'll pursue her, and this forest,<br/>
Whither by my spells conducted<br/>
She has flown, will be the leafy<br/>
Theatre, the rude-constructed<br/>
Bride-bed of the strangest bridal<br/>
Heaven e'er witnessed.<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XII.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Stop: Renuncio<br/>
Bride like this who smells of smoke<br/>
Stronger than a blacksmith's furnace.<br/>
But perhaps the incantation,<br/>
Being so extremely sudden,<br/>
Caught her leaning o'er the lye-tub,<br/>
If not cooking tripe for supper.<br/>
No. Thus cloaked and in a kitchen!<br/>
That excuse won't do: another<br/>
Let me try. (I have it now,<br/>
For an honourable woman<br/>
Never smells then any sweeter,)<br/>
She with fright must have been flustered.—<br/>
He has overtaken her now,<br/>
And from that rude vale uncultured,<br/>
Struggling in closed clasping arms,<br/>
(For I think when lovers struggle,<br/>
Open arms are not the weapon<br/>
Even for the lustiest lover,)<br/>
To this very spot they come:<br/>
I will watch them under cover,<br/>
For I wish for once to witness<br/>
How young women are abducted.<br/>
[Conceals himself.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XIII.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN embracing the Figure of JUSTINA, which he carries in his arms.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Now, O beautiful Justina,<br/>
In this sweet and secret covert,<br/>
Where no beam of sun can enter,<br/>
Nor the breeze of heaven blow roughly,<br/>
Now the trophy of thy beauty<br/>
Makes my magic toils triumphant,<br/>
For here folding thee, no longer<br/>
Have I need to fear disturbance.<br/>
Fair Justina, thou hast cost me<br/>
Even my soul. But in my judgment,<br/>
Since the gain has been so glorious,<br/>
Not so dear has been the purchase.<br/>
Oh! unveil thyself, fair goddess,<br/>
Not in the clouds obscure and murky,<br/>
Not in vapours hide the sun,<br/>
Show its golden rays refulgent.<br/>
[He draws aside the cloak and discovers a skeleton.<br/>
But, O woe! what's this I see!<br/>
Is it a cold corse, mute, pulseless,<br/>
That within its arms expects me?<br/>
Who, in one brief moment's compass,<br/>
Could upon these faded features,<br/>
Pallid, motionless, and shrunken,<br/>
Have extinguished the bright beauties<br/>
Of the blush rose and the purple?<br/>
<br/>
THE SKELETON. Cyprian, such are all the glories<br/>
Of the world that you so covet.<br/>
<br/>
[The Skeleton disappears.<br/>
CLARIN rushes in frightened, and embraces CYPRIAN.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XIV.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN and CYPRIAN.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Fear, for any one who wants it,<br/>
Wholesale or retail I'll furnish.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Stay! funereal shadow, stay!<br/>
Now for other ends I urge thee.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. I am a funereal body:—<br/>
Don't you see it by my bulk here?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Ah! who are you?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Who I am, sir,<br/>
Or am not, myself doth puzzle.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Did you in the air's void spaces,<br/>
Or earth's caverns yawning under,<br/>
See an icy corse here vanish,<br/>
See to dust and ashes turning<br/>
All the freshness and the beauty<br/>
That it promised in its coming?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Do you take me, sir, for one<br/>
Of those pitiful poor lurkers<br/>
Men call spies?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What could it be?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. And not be, in such a hurry.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Let us seek it.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Let's not seek it.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I must sift this matter further.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. I would rather not.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XV.<br/>
<br/>
The Demon, CYPRIAN, and CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. Just heavens,<br/>
If my nature, in conjunction,<br/>
Once possessed both grace and science,<br/>
When 'mongst angels I was numbered,<br/>
Grace alone is what I've lost,<br/>
Science no. Then why unjustly,<br/>
If 'tis so, deprive my science<br/>
Of its proper power and function?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Lucifer, wise master mine.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Pray don't call him: for he'll come here<br/>
In another corse, I warrant.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Speak, what would you?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. The annulling,<br/>
The redemption of those pledges,<br/>
At whose very thought I shudder.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. As I don't redeem my pledges,<br/>
I'll slip off here through the bushes.<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XVI.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN and The Demon.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Scarcely o'er earth's wounded bosom<br/>
Had I the true spell-word uttered,<br/>
When in the ensuing action,<br/>
She, of all my dreams the subject,<br/>
My adored, divine Justina....<br/>
But why take the useless trouble,<br/>
That to tell you know already?<br/>
I embraced her, would unmuffle<br/>
Her fair face, when (woe is me!)<br/>
In her beauty I discovered<br/>
A gaunt skeleton, a statue,<br/>
A pale image, a sepulchral<br/>
Show of death, which in these measured<br/>
Words thus spoke (even yet I shudder),<br/>
"Cyprian, such are all the glories<br/>
Of the world that you so covet."—<br/>
To assert, that on thy magic<br/>
As expressed by me, the burden<br/>
Of the fault should lie, is vain,<br/>
For I, point by point, so worked it,<br/>
That of all its silent symbols<br/>
There was not a line but somewhere<br/>
Had its place, of all its spell-words<br/>
Not one word that was not uttered.<br/>
Then, 'tis plain thou has deceived me,<br/>
For though acting as instructed,<br/>
I but found an empty phantom<br/>
Where I sought a blissful substance.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Cyprian, this defect from thee,<br/>
Nor from me, in truth, resulted:<br/>
Not from thee, because the magic<br/>
Thou didst exercise with subtle<br/>
Thought and skill; and not from me,<br/>
For I could not teach thee further.<br/>
From a higher cause, believe me,<br/>
Came this injury thou hast suffered.<br/>
But be not cast down: for I,<br/>
Who in tranquil rest would lull thee,<br/>
Will to thee unite Justina,<br/>
By a different way and juster.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. That is not my intention now.<br/>
For this strange event has struck me<br/>
With such terror and confusion,<br/>
That thy ways I do not covet.<br/>
And since thou has not complied with<br/>
The conditions, the assumptions<br/>
Of my love, I only ask thee,<br/>
Now that from thy face I'm rushing,<br/>
As the contract is annulled,<br/>
That my bond thou shouldst return me.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. What I promised was to teach thee,<br/>
By a course of secret study,<br/>
How to draw to thee Justina<br/>
By the potent power impulsive<br/>
Of thy words: and since the wind<br/>
Here Justina hath conducted,<br/>
I have then fulfilled my contract,<br/>
I have kept my plighted word then.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What was offered to my love<br/>
Was that I should surely pluck here<br/>
The sweet fruit whose seeds my hope<br/>
Had to these wild wastes entrusted.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Cyprian, I was only bound<br/>
Her to bring here.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. A mere shuffle:<br/>
To my arms you swore to give her.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. In thy arms I saw her struggle.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. 'Twas a phantom.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. 'Twas a portent.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Worked by whom?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. By one who worked it<br/>
To protect her.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Who was he?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [trembling]. I don't wish the name to utter.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I will turn my magic science<br/>
'Gainst thyself. By its compulsion<br/>
Speak, inform me who he is.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Well, a god who takes this trouble<br/>
For Justina.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What's one God,<br/>
When of gods there's such a number?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. All their power in Him is centred.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Then One only, sole and sovereign,<br/>
Must He be, whose single will<br/>
Their united wills outworketh.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. I know nothing, I know nothing.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I renounce then with my utmost<br/>
Power the pact that I made with thee;<br/>
What compelled Him (this I urge thee<br/>
In that God's great name) to guard her?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [after having struggled ineffectually not to say it]. To<br/>
preserve her pure, unsullied.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Then He is the sovereign goodness<br/>
Since a wrong He will not suffer.<br/>
But if she remained here hidden<br/>
Say what loss would have resulted?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Loss of honour, if the secret<br/>
Leaked out to the gossiping vulgar.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Then that God must be all sight,<br/>
Since he could foresee these trouble.<br/>
But, why could not thy enchantment<br/>
Be as potent and consummate?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Ah! His power is ampler, fuller.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Then that God must be all hands,<br/>
Since whate'er He wills He worketh.<br/>
Tell me then who is that God,<br/>
Whom to-day I have discovered<br/>
The supreme of good to be,<br/>
The Creator, the Annuller,<br/>
The Omniscient, the All-seeing,<br/>
Whom I've sought for years unnumbered?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Him I know not.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Speak, who is He?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. As I speak it, how I shudder!<br/>
He—He is the God of the Christians.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Say what moved Him to obstruct me<br/>
In my wish?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Her Christian faith.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Does He guard so those who love Him?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Yes; but now too late, too late,<br/>
Dost thou hope to gain His succour,<br/>
Since, in being my slave, thou canst not<br/>
Claim the privilege of His subject.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I thy slave?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. In my possession<br/>
Is thy signature.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I'll struggle<br/>
To regain it from thee, since<br/>
'Twas conditional at the utmost.<br/>
I don't doubt I will get it.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. How?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. In this way.<br/>
[He draws his sword, strikes at The Demon, but cannot touch him.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Although the lunges<br/>
Of thy naked sword against me<br/>
Are well aimed, thou hast not struck me,<br/>
Fierce as were thy blows. And now,<br/>
Even in more despair to plunge thee,<br/>
I would have thee learn at least<br/>
That the Devil is thy instructor.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What do you say?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. That I am he.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Oh! to hear thee how I shudder!—<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Not alone a slave art thou,<br/>
But MY slave; be that thy comfort.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I the slave of the Devil! I<br/>
Own a master so unworthy?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Yes; for since thy soul thou gav'st me,<br/>
Thenceforth it to me was subject.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Is there then no gleam of hope,<br/>
No appeal, no aid, no succour,<br/>
By which I so great a crime<br/>
Can blot out?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. No.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Why doubt further?<br/>
Let not this sharp sword rest idly<br/>
In my hand, but swiftly cutting<br/>
Through my breast, become the willing<br/>
Instrument of mine own murder.<br/>
But what say I? He who could<br/>
Snatch Justina from thy clutches,<br/>
Can He not, too, rescue me?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. No. By choice thou wert a culprit,<br/>
And He does not favour crimes,<br/>
Virtues only.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. If the summit<br/>
Of all power He be, to pardon<br/>
Is as easy as to punish.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. He rewardeth by His power,<br/>
He chastiseth from His justice.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. One who yields He'll not chastise.<br/>
I am one, since I am humbled.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Thou art mine, my slave: no master<br/>
Canst thou have but me.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I trust not.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. How, when still in my possession<br/>
Is that bond of thine, that bloody<br/>
Scroll inscribed by thine own hand?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. He who is supreme and sovereign,<br/>
And depends not on another,<br/>
Will yet bear me through triumphant.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. In what way?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. He is all sight,<br/>
And will see the fitting juncture.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. It I hold.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. He is all hands,<br/>
And will burst my bonds asunder.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Ere that comes I'll see thee dead:<br/>
Thus my clasping arms shall crush thee.<br/>
<br/>
[They struggle together.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Thou great God, the Christians' God,<br/>
Oh, assist me in this struggle!<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [flinging CYPRIAN from his arms].<br/>
It is He who has saved thy life.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. More He'll do since I seek Him humbly.<br/>
[Exeunt.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XVII.<br/>
<br/>
HALL IN THE PALACE OF THE GOVERNOR.<br/>
<br/>
The Governor, FABIUS, and Soldiers.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. How then was the capture made?<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS. In their church, as we suspected,<br/>
We discovered them collected,<br/>
Where before their God they prayed.<br/>
With an armed guard I traced them<br/>
To this secret sacred hall,<br/>
Made them prisoners one and all,<br/>
And in different prisons placed them.<br/>
But, your patience not to tire,<br/>
The chief point I may declare,—<br/>
Captured is Justina fair,<br/>
And Lysander her old sire.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. If for gold, a fair pretence,<br/>
If for rank, you would not miss,<br/>
Wherefore bring me news like this<br/>
And not claim your recompense?<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS. If you deign to value thus<br/>
My poor service you may pay it.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. How?<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS. With great respect I say it,<br/>
Florus free, and Lelius.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Though I seemed austere and cold,<br/>
Them chastising without pity<br/>
To strike terror through the city,<br/>
Yet if the whole truth were told,<br/>
Then the cause were plain why they<br/>
Have been prisoned a whole year.<br/>
It is this, a father's fear<br/>
Lelius would preserve this way.<br/>
Florus was his rival, he<br/>
Had a host of powerful friends,<br/>
Each was jealous, and his ends<br/>
Would attain whate'er might be.<br/>
I was fearful a collision<br/>
Would ensue if they should meet,<br/>
So I thought it more discreet<br/>
Not to come to a decision.<br/>
So with this intent I sought<br/>
Some pretext, Justina's face<br/>
To expel from out this place,<br/>
But I could discover nought.<br/>
But since this event to-day,<br/>
With her damaged character,<br/>
Gives a right to banish her,<br/>
Nay, to take her life away,<br/>
Let them be released. No fear<br/>
Need you have about their fate;<br/>
Go, and Lelius liberate,<br/>
Go, and Florus bring me here.<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS. Myriad times I kiss thy feet<br/>
For a favour so immense.<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XVIII.<br/>
<br/>
The Governor and Soldiers.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. And since now this fair pretence,<br/>
This hypocritical deceit,<br/>
In my power at last doth lie,<br/>
Wherefore my revenge postpone<br/>
For the sorrows I have known<br/>
Through her fault? Yes, she shall die<br/>
By the bloody headsman's hand.<br/>
[To a Soldier.<br/>
Bring her hither in my name.<br/>
Let her punishment and shame<br/>
Be a terror to the land.<br/>
Let the palace she thought sweet<br/>
But her scaffold scene present.<br/>
[Exit the Soldier with others.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XIX.<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS, LELIUS, and FLORUS.—THE SAME.<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS. Sir, the two for whom you sent<br/>
Here are kneeling at your feet.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. I, whose wish it is to be<br/>
Welcomed as thy son this time,<br/>
With no consciousness of crime<br/>
Do not see a judge in thee,<br/>
I an angry sire may see<br/>
With a son's respectful fear<br/>
And obedience.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Being here, I infer that it must be<br/>
(Though no guilt can I discern)<br/>
Thy chastising hand to feel.<br/>
See. Submissive here I kneel.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Lelius, Florus, I was stern,<br/>
Justly stern against ye two,<br/>
For as judge or father I<br/>
Could not unchastised pass by<br/>
Your offence. But then I knew<br/>
That in noble hearts the feeling<br/>
Of resentment does not last,<br/>
And as now the cause is past,<br/>
I resolved, to both appealing,<br/>
Friends to make of you once more.<br/>
So to consecrate the tie<br/>
Now embrace in amity.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. I am glad that, as of yore,<br/>
Florus is my friend to-day.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. That thou'rt mine this act may show.<br/>
Here's my hand.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. This being so,<br/>
You are free to go or stay:—<br/>
When I tell you of the sad<br/>
Fall of her you once admired,<br/>
Northing further is required.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XX.<br/>
<br/>
The Demon, a crowd of People.—THE SAME.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [within]. Ware! beware! He's mad! he's mad!<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. What is this?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. I'll go and see.<br/>
[He goes to the door, and after a pause returns.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. In this palace hall these cries,<br/>
From what cause can they arise?<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Something serious it must be.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. This confusion is occasioned<br/>
(Hear a singular adventure),<br/>
Sir, by Cyprian, who being absent<br/>
Many days again has entered*<br/>
Antioch completely mad.<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] *Asonante in e-e which continues to the end.<br/></p>
<p>FLORUS. It was doubtless the fine essence<br/>
Of his mind that thus has brought him<br/>
To this lamentable ending.<br/>
<br/>
PEOPLE [within]. Ware the madman! ware the madman!<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XXI.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN, half naked; People.—THE SAME.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Never was I more collected;<br/>
It is you yourselves are mad.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Cyprian, what is all this ferment?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Governor of Antioch,<br/>
Viceroy of great Caesar Decius,<br/>
Florus, Lelius, my young friends,<br/>
Whom I valued and respected,<br/>
Proud nobility, great people,<br/>
To my words be all attentive:<br/>
I am Cyprian, I am he<br/>
Once so studious, and so learned,<br/>
I the wonder of the schools,<br/>
Of the sciences the centre.<br/>
What I gained from all my studies<br/>
Was one doubt, a doubt that never<br/>
Left my wildered mind a moment,<br/>
Ever troubling and perplexing.<br/>
I Justina saw, and seeing,<br/>
To her charms my soul surrendered,<br/>
And for soft voluptuous Venus<br/>
Left the wise and learn'd Minerva.<br/>
Baffled by Justina's virtue,<br/>
I, pursuing though rejected,<br/>
And from one extreme to another<br/>
Passing on as passion led me,<br/>
To my guest, who from the sea<br/>
Found my feet a port of shelter,<br/>
For Justina pledged my soul,<br/>
Since at once he charmed my senses<br/>
And my intellect, by giving<br/>
Love its hopes, and thought its treasures.<br/>
From that hour, as his disciple<br/>
Lived I in these lonely deserts,<br/>
And to his laborious teaching<br/>
I am for a power indebted,<br/>
By which I can move even mountains<br/>
And in different places set them:<br/>
Yet although these mighty wonders<br/>
I can do to-day, I'm helpless<br/>
By the voice of my desire<br/>
To draw towards me one fair vestal.<br/>
And the cause why I am powerless<br/>
To subdue that beauteous virgin<br/>
Is that by a God she's guarded,<br/>
Whom, now knowing by His blessed<br/>
Grace bestowed, I come to acknowledge<br/>
As the Infinite, the Eternal.<br/>
Yes, the great God of the Christians<br/>
I now openly confess here.<br/>
And though true it is I am<br/>
Still of hell the slave and servant,<br/>
Having with my very blood<br/>
Signed a certain secret cedule,<br/>
Yet my blood that blood may blot out<br/>
In the martyrdom I'm expecting.<br/>
If you are a judge, if Christians<br/>
You pursue with bloody vengeance,<br/>
I am one: for in these mountains<br/>
A grave venerable elder<br/>
The first sacrament conferring<br/>
With its sacred sign impressed me.<br/>
This being so, why wait? Your orders<br/>
Give unto the bloody headsman,<br/>
Tell him here to strike this neck<br/>
And from it my head dissever.<br/>
Try my firmness as you will,<br/>
For I, resolute and determined,<br/>
Will endure a thousand deaths<br/>
Since this truth at last I've learned,<br/>
That without the great God, whom<br/>
Now I seek, adore, and reverence,<br/>
Human glories are but ashes,<br/>
Dust, smoke, wind, delusive, empty.<br/>
[He falls as if in a swoon, with his face to the ground.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. So absorbed, so lost in wonder,<br/>
Cyprian, has thy daring left me,<br/>
That considering modes of torture<br/>
I have yet not one selected.<br/>
Rise. Bestir thee.<br/>
[Spurns him with his foot.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. As a statue<br/>
Formed of ice he lies extended<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XXII.<br/>
<br/>
Soldiers, JUSTINA.—THE SAME.<br/>
<br/>
A SOLDIER. Here, your Highness, is Justina.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR [aside]. I must go, her face unnerves me.—<br/>
With this living corse here lying<br/>
[Aside to his retinue.<br/>
Let us leave her for the present.<br/>
For the two being here confined,<br/>
It may alter their intentions,<br/>
Seeing that they are condemned<br/>
Both to die: if not, 'tis certain,<br/>
That unless they adore our gods<br/>
Frightful torments soon shall end them.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. I remain 'twixt love and fear<br/>
Quite bewildered and suspended.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside]. So affected have I been,<br/>
I scarce know what most affects me.<br/>
<br/>
[Exeunt all, except JUSTINA.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XXIII.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA; CYPRIAN, insensible on the ground.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. What! without a word you leave me?<br/>
When I come here, calm, contented,<br/>
Even to die. Ah! wishing death,<br/>
Am I then of death prevented?—<br/>
[She perceives CYPRIAN.<br/>
But my punishment is, doubtless,<br/>
Thus locked up to face the terrors<br/>
Of a slow and lingering death,<br/>
With the body of this wretch here<br/>
Left alone, my sole companion<br/>
Being a corse. O thou, re-entered<br/>
Into thy original earth,<br/>
Happy wert thou, if thy sentence<br/>
Was passed on thee for the faith<br/>
I adore!<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN [recovering consciousness]. O proud avenger<br/>
Of your gods, why wait, the thread<br/>
Of my life to cut?...<br/>
[He perceives JUSTINA, and rises.<br/>
Heaven bless me!—<br/>
[Aside.<br/>
Can I trust my eyes? Justina!<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA [aside]. Cyprian, do I see? O Heaven!<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN [aside]. No, it is not she, my thought<br/>
Fills the void air with her presence.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA [aside]. No, it is not he, the wind<br/>
Forms this phantom to divert me.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Shadow of my fantasy...<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Of my wish, delusive spectre...<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Terror of my startled senses...<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Horror of my heart's dejection...<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What, then, wouldst thou?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. What, then, wouldst thou?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I invoked thee not. What errand<br/>
Has thou come on?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Why thus seek me?<br/>
I to thee no thought directed.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Ah! I sought thee not, Justina.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Nor here at thy call I entered.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Then why here?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. I am a prisoner.—<br/>
Thou?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I, too, have been arrested.<br/>
But, Justina, say what crime<br/>
Could thy virtue have effected?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. It is not for any crime,<br/>
It is from their deep resentment,<br/>
Their abhorrence of Christ's faith,<br/>
Whom I as my God confess here.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Thou dost owe Him that, Justina,<br/>
For thy God was thy defender,<br/>
He watched o'er thee in His goodness.<br/>
Get my prayers to Him accepted.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Pray with faith, and He will listen.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Then with that I will address Him.<br/>
Though a fear, that's not despair,<br/>
Makes me for my great sins tremble.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Oh! have confidence.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. My crimes are<br/>
So immense.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. But more immense are<br/>
His great mercies.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Then, will He<br/>
Pardon have on me?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. 'Tis certain.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. How, if my soul surrendered<br/>
To the Demon's self, as purchase<br/>
Of thy beauty?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Oh, there are not<br/>
Stars as many in the heavens,<br/>
Sands as many on the shore,<br/>
Sparks within the fire as many,<br/>
Motes as many in the beam,<br/>
On the winds so many feathers,<br/>
As the sins He can forgive.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I believe it, and am ready<br/>
Now a thousand lives to give Him.—<br/>
But I hear some people enter.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XXIV.<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS, leading in MOSCON, CLARIN, and LIVIA, as prisoners; CYPRIAN<br/>
and JUSTINA.<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS. With your master and your mistress<br/>
Here remain confined together.<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. If THEY fancy to be Christians,<br/>
What have WE done to offend them?<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Much: 'tis crime enough for us<br/>
That we happen to be servants.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Flying peril in the mountain,<br/>
I find here a greater peril.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XXV.<br/>
<br/>
A Servant.—THE SAME.<br/>
<br/>
SERVANT. The Lord Governor Aurelius<br/>
Summons Cyprian to his presence,<br/>
And Justina.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Ah! how happy,<br/>
If 'tis for the wished-for ending.<br/>
Do not, Cyprian, be disheartened.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Faith, zeal, courage, all possess me:<br/>
For if life must be the ransom<br/>
Of my slavery to the devil,<br/>
He who gave his soul for thee,<br/>
Will he not give God his person?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. I once said that I could love thee<br/>
But in death, and since together,<br/>
Cyprian, we now must die,<br/>
What I promised I present thee.<br/>
<br/>
[They are led out by the Servant.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XXVI.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON, LIVIA, and CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. How contentedly to die<br/>
They go forth.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Much more contented<br/>
Are we three to remain alive.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Not much more; for we must settle<br/>
Our account now, though I own<br/>
The occasion might be better,<br/>
And the place too, still 'twere wrong<br/>
To neglect the time that's present.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. What account pray?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. I have been<br/>
Absent.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Speak.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. The whole of a twelvemonth,<br/>
When without my intermission<br/>
Moscon in possession held thee.<br/>
Now my quota in the business,<br/>
If we both have equal measure,<br/>
Is that I must have my year.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Can it be that I'm suspected<br/>
Of thus wronging thee so basely?<br/>
Why, I wept whole days together<br/>
When it was the day for weeping.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Yes, for I myself was present:<br/>
Every day that was not mine<br/>
She thy friendship quite respected.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. That's a bounce; for not a tear,<br/>
When this day her house I entered,<br/>
Did she shed, and there I found thee<br/>
Sitting with her quite contented.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. But this day is not a fast.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Yes, it is; for I remember<br/>
That the day I went away<br/>
Was my day.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Oh! that's an error.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Yes, I see how that arises,<br/>
This year is a year bissextile,<br/>
And our days are now the same.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Well, I'm satisfied, 'tis better<br/>
That a man should not too deeply<br/>
Pry into such things.—Good heavens!—<br/>
<br/>
[The sound of a great tempest is heard.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XXVII.<br/>
<br/>
The Governor, a crowd of People; then FABIUS, LELIUS, and FLORUS, all<br/>
astonished; afterwards The Demon.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Sure the house is tumbling down.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. How terrific! what a tempest!<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Doubtless in disastrous ruin<br/>
Topple down the walls of heaven<br/>
<br/>
[The tempest is renewed, and enter FABIUS, LELIUS, and FLORUS.<br/>
<br/>
FABIUS. Scarcely on the public scaffold<br/>
Had the headsman's hand dissevered<br/>
Cyprian and Justina's necks,<br/>
When the earth, even to its centre,<br/>
Seemed to tremble.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. And a cloud,<br/>
From whose burning womb extended<br/>
The wild lightnings, the loud thunders,<br/>
Awful embryos were projected,<br/>
Fell upon us.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. From which issued<br/>
A most horrid, most repelling<br/>
Shape, who on the scaly shells<br/>
Of a mailed and mighty serpent,<br/>
O'er the scaffold made a sign<br/>
Motioning silence and attention.<br/>
<br/>
[The Scene opens, and a scaffold with the heads and bodies of JUSTINA<br/>
and CYPRIAN is seen. Over it in the air, upon a winged serpent, is<br/>
The Demon.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Hear, O mortals, hear what I,<br/>
By the orders of high Heaven,<br/>
For Justina's exculpation,<br/>
Must declare to all here present.<br/>
I it was, who to dishonour<br/>
Her pure fame, in form dissembled<br/>
For the purpose, scaled her house,<br/>
And her very chamber entered.<br/>
And in order that her fame<br/>
Should not by that fraud be lessened,<br/>
I come here her injured honour<br/>
To exhibit pure and perfect.<br/>
Cyprian, who with her lieth<br/>
On a happy bier at rest there,<br/>
Was my slave. But he effacing,<br/>
With the blood his neck outsheddeth,<br/>
The red signature, the linen<br/>
Is now spotless and unblemished.<br/>
And the two, in spite of me,<br/>
Having to the spheres ascended<br/>
Of the sacred throne of God,<br/>
Live there in a world far better.—<br/>
This, then, is the truth, which I<br/>
Tell, because God makes me tell it,<br/>
Much against my will, my practice<br/>
Not being great as a truth-teller.<br/>
[He falls swiftly, and sinks into the earth.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Oh! what horror!<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. What confusion!<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. What a prodigy!<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. What terror!<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. These are all but the enchantments<br/>
Which this sorcerer effected<br/>
At his death.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. I am in doubt<br/>
To believe them or reject them.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. The mere thought of them confounds me.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. If magician, it is certain,<br/>
As I hold, he must have been<br/>
The magician then of heaven.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Leaving our partitioned love<br/>
In a rather odd dilemma,<br/>
For "The Wonderful Magician"<br/>
Ask the pardon of its errors.<br/></p>
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