<h2> ACT II </h2>
<p>SCENE I<br/>
ARICIA, ISMENE<br/></p>
<p>ARICIA<br/>
Hippolytus request to see me here!<br/>
Hippolytus desire to bid farewell!<br/>
Is't true, Ismene? Are you not deceived?<br/>
<br/>
ISMENE<br/>
This is the first result of Theseus' death.<br/>
Prepare yourself to see from every side.<br/>
Hearts turn towards you that were kept away<br/>
By Theseus. Mistress of her lot at last,<br/>
Aricia soon shall find all Greece fall low,<br/>
To do her homage.<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
'Tis not then, Ismene,<br/>
An idle tale? Am I no more a slave?<br/>
Have I no enemies?<br/>
<br/>
ISMENE<br/>
The gods oppose<br/>
Your peace no longer, and the soul of Theseus<br/>
Is with your brothers.<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
Does the voice of fame<br/>
Tell how he died?<br/>
<br/>
ISMENE<br/>
Rumours incredible<br/>
Are spread. Some say that, seizing a new bride,<br/>
The faithless husband by the waves was swallow'd.<br/>
Others affirm, and this report prevails,<br/>
That with Pirithous to the world below<br/>
He went, and saw the shores of dark Cocytus,<br/>
Showing himself alive to the pale ghosts;<br/>
But that he could not leave those gloomy realms,<br/>
Which whoso enters there abides for ever.<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
Shall I believe that ere his destined hour<br/>
A mortal may descend into the gulf<br/>
Of Hades? What attraction could o'ercome<br/>
Its terrors?<br/>
<br/>
ISMENE<br/>
He is dead, and you alone<br/>
Doubt it. The men of Athens mourn his loss.<br/>
Troezen already hails Hippolytus<br/>
As King. And Phaedra, fearing for her son,<br/>
Asks counsel of the friends who share her trouble,<br/>
Here in this palace.<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
Will Hippolytus,<br/>
Think you, prove kinder than his sire, make light<br/>
My chains, and pity my misfortunes?<br/>
<br/>
ISMENE<br/>
Yes,<br/>
I think so, Madam.<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
Ah, you know him not<br/>
Or you would never deem so hard a heart<br/>
Can pity feel, or me alone except<br/>
From the contempt in which he holds our sex.<br/>
Has he not long avoided every spot<br/>
Where we resort?<br/>
<br/>
ISMENE<br/>
I know what tales are told<br/>
Of proud Hippolytus, but I have seen<br/>
Him near you, and have watch'd with curious eye<br/>
How one esteem'd so cold would bear himself.<br/>
Little did his behavior correspond<br/>
With what I look'd for; in his face confusion<br/>
Appear'd at your first glance, he could not turn<br/>
His languid eyes away, but gazed on you.<br/>
Love is a word that may offend his pride,<br/>
But what the tongue disowns, looks can betray.<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
How eagerly my heart hears what you say,<br/>
Tho' it may be delusion, dear Ismene!<br/>
Did it seem possible to you, who know me,<br/>
That I, sad sport of a relentless Fate,<br/>
Fed upon bitter tears by night and day,<br/>
Could ever taste the maddening draught of love?<br/>
The last frail offspring of a royal race,<br/>
Children of Earth, I only have survived<br/>
War's fury. Cut off in the flow'r of youth,<br/>
Mown by the sword, six brothers have I lost,<br/>
The hope of an illustrious house, whose blood<br/>
Earth drank with sorrow, near akin to his<br/>
Whom she herself produced. Since then, you know<br/>
How thro' all Greece no heart has been allow'd<br/>
To sigh for me, lest by a sister's flame<br/>
The brothers' ashes be perchance rekindled.<br/>
You know, besides, with what disdain I view'd<br/>
My conqueror's suspicions and precautions,<br/>
And how, oppos'd as I have ever been<br/>
To love, I often thank'd the King's injustice<br/>
Which happily confirm'd my inclination.<br/>
But then I never had beheld his son.<br/>
Not that, attracted merely by the eye, I<br/>
love him for his beauty and his grace,<br/>
Endowments which he owes to Nature's bounty,<br/>
Charms which he seems to know not or to scorn.<br/>
I love and prize in him riches more rare,<br/>
The virtues of his sire, without his faults.<br/>
I love, as I must own, that generous pride<br/>
Which ne'er has stoop'd beneath the amorous yoke.<br/>
Phaedra reaps little glory from a lover<br/>
So lavish of his sighs; I am too proud<br/>
To share devotion with a thousand others,<br/>
Or enter where the door is always open.<br/>
But to make one who ne'er has stoop'd before<br/>
Bend his proud neck, to pierce a heart of stone,<br/>
To bind a captive whom his chains astonish,<br/>
Who vainly 'gainst a pleasing yoke rebels,—<br/>
That piques my ardour, and I long for that.<br/>
'Twas easier to disarm the god of strength<br/>
Than this Hippolytus, for Hercules<br/>
Yielded so often to the eyes of beauty,<br/>
As to make triumph cheap. But, dear Ismene,<br/>
I take too little heed of opposition<br/>
Beyond my pow'r to quell, and you may hear me,<br/>
Humbled by sore defeat, upbraid the pride<br/>
I now admire. What! Can he love? and I<br/>
Have had the happiness to bend—<br/>
<br/>
ISMENE<br/>
He comes<br/>
Yourself shall hear him.<br/></p>
<p>SCENE II<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS, ARICIA, ISMENE<br/></p>
<p>HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Lady, ere I go<br/>
My duty bids me tell you of your change<br/>
Of fortune. My worst fears are realized;<br/>
My sire is dead. Yes, his protracted absence<br/>
Was caused as I foreboded. Death alone,<br/>
Ending his toils, could keep him from the world<br/>
Conceal'd so long. The gods at last have doom'd<br/>
Alcides' friend, companion, and successor.<br/>
I think your hatred, tender to his virtues,<br/>
Can hear such terms of praise without resentment,<br/>
Knowing them due. One hope have I that soothes<br/>
My sorrow: I can free you from restraint.<br/>
Lo, I revoke the laws whose rigour moved<br/>
My pity; you are at your own disposal,<br/>
Both heart and hand; here, in my heritage,<br/>
In Troezen, where my grandsire Pittheus reign'd<br/>
Of yore and I am now acknowledged King,<br/>
I leave you free, free as myself,—and more.<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
Your kindness is too great, 'tis overwhelming.<br/>
Such generosity, that pays disgrace<br/>
With honour, lends more force than you can think<br/>
To those harsh laws from which you would release me.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Athens, uncertain how to fill the throne<br/>
Of Theseus, speaks of you, anon of me,<br/>
And then of Phaedra's son.<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
Of me, my lord?<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
I know myself excluded by strict law:<br/>
Greece turns to my reproach a foreign mother.<br/>
But if my brother were my only rival,<br/>
My rights prevail o'er his clearly enough<br/>
To make me careless of the law's caprice.<br/>
My forwardness is check'd by juster claims:<br/>
To you I yield my place, or, rather, own<br/>
That it is yours by right, and yours the sceptre,<br/>
As handed down from Earth's great son, Erechtheus.<br/>
Adoption placed it in the hands of Aegeus:<br/>
Athens, by him protected and increased,<br/>
Welcomed a king so generous as my sire,<br/>
And left your hapless brothers in oblivion.<br/>
Now she invites you back within her walls;<br/>
Protracted strife has cost her groans enough,<br/>
Her fields are glutted with your kinsmen's blood<br/>
Fatt'ning the furrows out of which it sprung<br/>
At first. I rule this Troezen; while the son<br/>
Of Phaedra has in Crete a rich domain.<br/>
Athens is yours. I will do all I can<br/>
To join for you the votes divided now<br/>
Between us.<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
Stunn'd at all I hear, my lord,<br/>
I fear, I almost fear a dream deceives me.<br/>
Am I indeed awake? Can I believe<br/>
Such generosity? What god has put it<br/>
Into your heart? Well is the fame deserved<br/>
That you enjoy! That fame falls short of truth!<br/>
Would you for me prove traitor to yourself?<br/>
Was it not boon enough never to hate me,<br/>
So long to have abstain'd from harbouring<br/>
The enmity—<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
To hate you? I, to hate you?<br/>
However darkly my fierce pride was painted,<br/>
Do you suppose a monster gave me birth?<br/>
What savage temper, what envenom'd hatred<br/>
Would not be mollified at sight of you?<br/>
Could I resist the soul-bewitching charm—<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
Why, what is this, Sir?<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
I have said too much<br/>
Not to say more. Prudence in vain resists<br/>
The violence of passion. I have broken<br/>
Silence at last, and I must tell you now<br/>
The secret that my heart can hold no longer.<br/>
You see before you an unhappy instance<br/>
Of hasty pride, a prince who claims compassion<br/>
I, who, so long the enemy of Love,<br/>
Mock'd at his fetters and despised his captives,<br/>
Who, pitying poor mortals that were shipwreck'd,<br/>
In seeming safety view'd the storms from land,<br/>
Now find myself to the same fate exposed,<br/>
Toss'd to and fro upon a sea of troubles!<br/>
My boldness has been vanquish'd in a moment,<br/>
And humbled is the pride wherein I boasted.<br/>
For nearly six months past, ashamed, despairing,<br/>
Bearing where'er I go the shaft that rends<br/>
My heart, I struggle vainly to be free<br/>
From you and from myself; I shun you, present;<br/>
Absent, I find you near; I see your form<br/>
In the dark forest depths; the shades of night,<br/>
Nor less broad daylight, bring back to my view<br/>
The charms that I avoid; all things conspire<br/>
To make Hippolytus your slave. For fruit<br/>
Of all my bootless sighs, I fail to find<br/>
My former self. My bow and javelins<br/>
Please me no more, my chariot is forgotten,<br/>
With all the Sea God's lessons; and the woods<br/>
Echo my groans instead of joyous shouts<br/>
Urging my fiery steeds.<br/>
<br/>
Hearing this tale<br/>
Of passion so uncouth, you blush perchance<br/>
At your own handiwork. With what wild words<br/>
I offer you my heart, strange captive held<br/>
By silken jess! But dearer in your eyes<br/>
Should be the offering, that this language comes<br/>
Strange to my lips; reject not vows express'd<br/>
So ill, which but for you had ne'er been form'd.<br/></p>
<p>SCENE III<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS, ARICIA, THERAMENES, ISMENE<br/></p>
<p>THERAMENES<br/>
Prince, the Queen comes. I herald her approach.<br/>
'Tis you she seeks.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Me?<br/>
<br/>
THERAMENES<br/>
What her thought may be<br/>
I know not. But I speak on her behalf.<br/>
She would converse with you ere you go hence.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
What shall I say to her? Can she expect—<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
You cannot, noble Prince, refuse to hear her,<br/>
Howe'er convinced she is your enemy,<br/>
Some shade of pity to her tears is due.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Shall we part thus? and will you let me go,<br/>
Not knowing if my boldness has offended<br/>
The goddess I adore? Whether this heart,<br/>
Left in your hands—<br/>
<br/>
ARICIA<br/>
Go, Prince, pursue the schemes<br/>
Your generous soul dictates, make Athens own<br/>
My sceptre. All the gifts you offer me<br/>
Will I accept, but this high throne of empire<br/>
Is not the one most precious in my sight.<br/></p>
<p>SCENE IV<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS, THERAMENES<br/></p>
<p>HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Friend, is all ready?<br/>
But the Queen approaches.<br/>
Go, see the vessel in fit trim to sail.<br/>
Haste, bid the crew aboard, and hoist the signal:<br/>
Then soon return, and so deliver me<br/>
From interview most irksome.<br/></p>
<p>SCENE V<br/>
PHAEDRA, HIPPOLYTUS, OENONE<br/></p>
<p>PHAEDRA (to OENONE)<br/>
There I see him!<br/>
My blood forgets to flow, my tongue to speak<br/>
What I am come to say.<br/>
<br/>
OENONE<br/>
Think of your son,<br/>
How all his hopes depend on you.<br/>
<br/>
PHAEDRA<br/>
I hear<br/>
You leave us, and in haste. I come to add<br/>
My tears to your distress, and for a son<br/>
Plead my alarm. No more has he a father,<br/>
And at no distant day my son must witness<br/>
My death. Already do a thousand foes<br/>
Threaten his youth. You only can defend him<br/>
But in my secret heart remorse awakes,<br/>
And fear lest I have shut your ears against<br/>
His cries. I tremble lest your righteous anger<br/>
Visit on him ere long the hatred earn'd<br/>
By me, his mother.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
No such base resentment,<br/>
Madam, is mine.<br/>
<br/>
PHAEDRA<br/>
I could not blame you, Prince,<br/>
If you should hate me. I have injured you:<br/>
So much you know, but could not read my heart.<br/>
T' incur your enmity has been mine aim.<br/>
The self-same borders could not hold us both;<br/>
In public and in private I declared<br/>
Myself your foe, and found no peace till seas<br/>
Parted us from each other. I forbade<br/>
Your very name to be pronounced before me.<br/>
And yet if punishment should be proportion'd<br/>
To the offence, if only hatred draws<br/>
Your hatred, never woman merited<br/>
More pity, less deserved your enmity.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
A mother jealous of her children's rights<br/>
Seldom forgives the offspring of a wife<br/>
Who reign'd before her. Harassing suspicions<br/>
Are common sequels of a second marriage.<br/>
Of me would any other have been jealous<br/>
No less than you, perhaps more violent.<br/>
<br/>
PHAEDRA<br/>
Ah, Prince, how Heav'n has from the general law<br/>
Made me exempt, be that same Heav'n my witness!<br/>
Far different is the trouble that devours me!<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
This is no time for self-reproaches, Madam.<br/>
It may be that your husband still beholds<br/>
The light, and Heav'n may grant him safe return,<br/>
In answer to our prayers. His guardian god<br/>
Is Neptune, ne'er by him invoked in vain.<br/>
<br/>
PHAEDRA<br/>
He who has seen the mansions of the dead<br/>
Returns not thence. Since to those gloomy shores<br/>
Theseus is gone, 'tis vain to hope that Heav'n<br/>
May send him back. Prince, there is no release<br/>
From Acheron's greedy maw. And yet, methinks,<br/>
He lives, and breathes in you. I see him still<br/>
Before me, and to him I seem to speak;<br/>
My heart—<br/>
Oh! I am mad; do what I will,<br/>
I cannot hide my passion.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Yes, I see<br/>
The strange effects of love. Theseus, tho' dead,<br/>
Seems present to your eyes, for in your soul<br/>
There burns a constant flame.<br/>
<br/>
PHAEDRA<br/>
Ah, yes for Theseus<br/>
I languish and I long, not as the Shades<br/>
Have seen him, of a thousand different forms<br/>
The fickle lover, and of Pluto's bride<br/>
The would-be ravisher, but faithful, proud<br/>
E'en to a slight disdain, with youthful charms<br/>
Attracting every heart, as gods are painted,<br/>
Or like yourself. He had your mien, your eyes,<br/>
Spoke and could blush like you, when to the isle<br/>
Of Crete, my childhood's home, he cross'd the waves,<br/>
Worthy to win the love of Minos' daughters.<br/>
What were you doing then? Why did he gather<br/>
The flow'r of Greece, and leave Hippolytus?<br/>
Oh, why were you too young to have embark'd<br/>
On board the ship that brought thy sire to Crete?<br/>
At your hands would the monster then have perish'd,<br/>
Despite the windings of his vast retreat.<br/>
To guide your doubtful steps within the maze<br/>
My sister would have arm'd you with the clue.<br/>
But no, therein would Phaedra have forestall'd her,<br/>
Love would have first inspired me with the thought;<br/>
And I it would have been whose timely aid<br/>
Had taught you all the labyrinth's crooked ways.<br/>
What anxious care a life so dear had cost me!<br/>
No thread had satisfied your lover's fears:<br/>
I would myself have wish'd to lead the way,<br/>
And share the peril you were bound to face;<br/>
Phaedra with you would have explored the maze,<br/>
With you emerged in safety, or have perish'd.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Gods! What is this I hear? Have you forgotten<br/>
That Theseus is my father and your husband?<br/>
<br/>
PHAEDRA<br/>
Why should you fancy I have lost remembrance<br/>
Thereof, and am regardless of mine honour?<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Forgive me, Madam. With a blush I own<br/>
That I misconstrued words of innocence.<br/>
For very shame I cannot bear your sight<br/>
Longer. I go—<br/>
<br/>
PHAEDRA<br/>
Ah! cruel Prince, too well<br/>
You understood me. I have said enough<br/>
To save you from mistake. I love. But think not<br/>
That at the moment when I love you most<br/>
I do not feel my guilt; no weak compliance<br/>
Has fed the poison that infects my brain.<br/>
The ill-starr'd object of celestial vengeance,<br/>
I am not so detestable to you<br/>
As to myself. The gods will bear me witness,<br/>
Who have within my veins kindled this fire,<br/>
The gods, who take a barbarous delight<br/>
In leading a poor mortal's heart astray.<br/>
Do you yourself recall to mind the past:<br/>
'Twas not enough for me to fly, I chased you<br/>
Out of the country, wishing to appear<br/>
Inhuman, odious; to resist you better,<br/>
I sought to make you hate me. All in vain!<br/>
Hating me more I loved you none the less:<br/>
New charms were lent to you by your misfortunes.<br/>
I have been drown'd in tears, and scorch'd by fire;<br/>
Your own eyes might convince you of the truth,<br/>
If for one moment you could look at me.<br/>
What is't I say? Think you this vile confession<br/>
That I have made is what I meant to utter?<br/>
Not daring to betray a son for whom<br/>
I trembled, 'twas to beg you not to hate him<br/>
I came. Weak purpose of a heart too full<br/>
Of love for you to speak of aught besides!<br/>
Take your revenge, punish my odious passion;<br/>
Prove yourself worthy of your valiant sire,<br/>
And rid the world of an offensive monster!<br/>
Does Theseus' widow dare to love his son?<br/>
The frightful monster! Let her not escape you!<br/>
Here is my heart. This is the place to strike.<br/>
Already prompt to expiate its guilt,<br/>
I feel it leap impatiently to meet<br/>
Your arm. Strike home. Or, if it would disgrace you<br/>
To steep your hand in such polluted blood,<br/>
If that were punishment too mild to slake<br/>
Your hatred, lend me then your sword, if not<br/>
Your arm. Quick, give't.<br/>
<br/>
OENONE<br/>
What, Madam, will you do?<br/>
Just gods! But someone comes. Go, fly from shame,<br/>
You cannot 'scape if seen by any thus.<br/></p>
<p>SCENE VI<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS, THERAMENES<br/></p>
<p>THERAMENES<br/>
Is that the form of Phaedra that I see<br/>
Hurried away? What mean these signs of sorrow?<br/>
Where is your sword? Why are you pale, confused?<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Friend, let us fly. I am, indeed, confounded<br/>
With horror and astonishment extreme.<br/>
Phaedra—but no; gods, let this dreadful secret<br/>
Remain for ever buried in oblivion.<br/>
<br/>
THERAMENES<br/>
The ship is ready if you wish to sail.<br/>
But Athens has already giv'n her vote;<br/>
Their leaders have consulted all her tribes;<br/>
Your brother is elected, Phaedra wins.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Phaedra?<br/>
<br/>
THERAMENES<br/>
A herald, charged with a commission<br/>
From Athens, has arrived to place the reins<br/>
Of power in her hands. Her son is King.<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Ye gods, who know her, do ye thus reward<br/>
Her virtue?<br/>
<br/>
THERAMENES<br/>
A faint rumour meanwhile whispers<br/>
That Theseus is not dead, but in Epirus<br/>
Has shown himself. But, after all my search,<br/>
I know too well—<br/>
<br/>
HIPPOLYTUS<br/>
Let nothing be neglected.<br/>
This rumour must be traced back to its source.<br/>
If it be found unworthy of belief,<br/>
Let us set sail, and cost whate'er it may,<br/>
To hands deserving trust the sceptre's sway.<br/></p>
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