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Alfred, Lord Tennyson - Delphi Poets Series

Page 160

by Lord Tennyson Alfred


  BECKET.

  God bless you all! God redden your pale blood! But mine is human-red; and when ye shall hear it is poured out upon earth, and see it mounting to Heaven, my God bless you, that seems sweet to you now, will blast and blind you like a curse.

  1ST RETAINER.

  We hope not, my lord. Our humblest thanks for your blessing. Farewell!

  [Exeunt Retainers.

  BECKET.

  Farewell, friends! farewell, swallows! I wrong the bird; she leaves only the nest she built, they leave the builder. Why? Am I to be murdered to-night?

  [Knocking at the door.

  ATTENDANT.

  Here is a missive left at the gate by one from the castle.

  BECKET.

  Cornwall’s hand or Leicester’s: they write marvellously alike.

  [Reading.

  ‘Fly at once to France, to King Louis of France: there be those about our King who would have thy blood.’

  Was not my lord of Leicester bidden to our supper?

  ATTENDANT.

  Ay, my lord, and divers other earls and barons. But the hour is past, and our brother, Master Cook, he makes moan that all be a-getting cold.

  BECKET.

  And I make my moan along with him. Cold after warm, winter after summer, and the golden leaves, these earls and barons, that clung to me, frosted off me by the first cold frown of the King. Cold, but look how the table steams, like a heathen altar; nay, like the altar at Jerusalem. Shall God’s good gifts be wasted? None of them here! Call in the poor from the streets, and let them feast.

  HERBERT.

  That is the parable of our blessed Lord.

  BECKET.

  And why should not the parable of our blessed Lord be acted again? Call in the poor! The Church is ever at variance with the kings, and ever at one with the poor. I marked a group of lazars in the marketplace — half-rag, half-sore — beggars, poor rogues (Heaven bless ‘em) who never saw nor dreamed of such a banquet. I will amaze them. Call them in, I say. They shall henceforward be my earls and barons — our lords and masters in Christ Jesus.

  [Exit Herbert.

  If the King hold his purpose, I am myself a beggar. Forty thousand marks! forty thousand devils — and these craven bishops!

  A POOR MAN (entering) with his dog.

  My lord Archbishop, may I come in with my poor friend, my dog? The King’s verdurer caught him a-hunting in the forest, and cut off his paws. The dog followed his calling, my lord. I ha’ carried him ever so many miles in my arms, and he licks my face and moans and cries out against the King.

  BECKET.

  Better thy dog than thee. The King’s courts would use thee worse than thy dog — they are too bloody. Were the Church king, it would be otherwise. Poor beast! poor beast! set him down. I will bind up his wounds with my napkin. Give him a bone, give him a bone! Who misuses a dog would misuse a child — they cannot speak for themselves. Past help! his paws are past help. God help him!

  Enter the BEGGARS (and seat themselves at the Tables).

  BECKET and HERBERT wait upon them.

  1ST BEGGAR.

  Swine, sheep, ox — here’s a French supper. When thieves fall out, honest men ——

  2ND BEGGAR.

  Is the Archbishop a thief who gives thee thy supper?

  1ST BEGGAR.

  Well, then, how does it go? When honest men fall out, thieves — no, it can’t be that.

  2ND BEGGAR.

  Who stole the widow’s one sitting hen o’ Sunday, when she was at mass?

  1ST BEGGAR.

  Come, come! thou hadst thy share on her. Sitting hen! Our Lord Becket’s our great sitting-hen cock, and we shouldn’t ha’ been sitting here if the barons and bishops hadn’t been a-sitting on the Archbishop.

  BECKET.

  Ay, the princes sat in judgment against me, and the Lord hath prepared your table — Sederunt principes, ederunt pauperes.

  A VOICE.

  Becket, beware of the knife!

  BECKET.

  Who spoke?

  3RD BEGGAR.

  Nobody, my lord. What’s that, my lord?

  BECKET.

  Venison.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  Venison?

  BECKET.

  Buck; deer, as you call it.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  King’s meat! By the Lord, won’t we pray for your lordship!

  BECKET.

  And, my children, your prayers will do more for me in the day of peril that dawns darkly and drearily over the house of God — yea, and in the day of judgment also, than the swords of the craven sycophants would have done had they remained true to me whose bread they have partaken. I must leave you to your banquet. Feed, feast, and be merry. Herbert, for the sake of the Church itself, if not for my own, I must fly to France to-night. Come with me.

  [Exit with Herbert.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  Here — all of you — my lord’s health (they drink). Well — if that isn’t goodly wine —

  1ST BEGGAR.

  Then there isn’t a goodly wench to serve him with it: they were fighting for her to-day in the street.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  Peace!

  1ST BEGGAR.

  The black sheep baaed to the miller’s ewe-lamb,

  The miller’s away for to-night.

  Black sheep, quoth she, too black a sin for me.

  And what said the black sheep, my masters?

  We can make a black sin white.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  Peace!

  1ST BEGGAR.

  ‘Ewe lamb, ewe lamb, I am here by the dam.’

  But the miller came home that night,

  And so dusted his back with the meal in his sack,

  That he made the black sheep white.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  Be we not of the family? be we not a-supping with the head of the family? be we not in my lord’s own refractory? Out from among us; thou art our black sheep.

  Enter the four KNIGHTS.

  FITZURSE.

  Sheep, said he? And sheep without the shepherd, too. Where is my lord Archbishop? Thou the lustiest and lousiest of this Cain’s brotherhood, answer.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  With Cain’s answer, my lord. Am I his keeper? Thou shouldst call him Cain, not me.

  FITZURSE.

  So I do, for he would murder his brother the State.

  3RD BEGGAR (rising and advancing).

  No my lord; but because the Lord hath set his mark upon him that no man should murder him.

  FITZURSE.

  Where is he? where is he?

  3RD BEGGAR.

  With Cain belike, in the land of Nod, or in the land of France for aught I know.

  FITZURSE.

  France! Ha! De Morville, Tracy, Brito — fled is he? Cross swords all of you! swear to follow him! Remember the Queen!

  [The four KNIGHTS cross their swords.

  DE BRITO.

  They mock us; he is here.

  [All the BEGGARS rise and advance upon them.

  FITZURSE.

  Come, you filthy knaves, let us pass.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  Nay, my lord, let us pass. We be a-going home after our supper in all humbleness, my lord; for the Archbishop loves humbleness, my lord; and though we be fifty to four, we daren’t fight you with our crutches, my lord. There now, if thou hast not laid hands upon me! and my fellows know that I am all one scale like a fish. I pray God I haven’t given thee my leprosy, my lord.

  [FITZURSE shrinks from him and another presses upon DE BRITO.

  DE BRITO.

  Away, dog!

  4TH BEGGAR.

  And I was bit by a mad dog o’ Friday, an’ I be half dog already by this token, that tho’ I can drink wine I cannot bide water, my lord; and I want to bite, I want to bite, and they do say the very breath catches.

  DE BRITO.

  Insolent clown. Shall I smite him with the edge of the sword?

  DE MORVILLE.

 
; No, nor with the flat of it either. Smite the shepherd and the sheep are scattered. Smite the sheep and the shepherd will excommunicate thee.

  DE BRITO.

  Yet my fingers itch to beat him into nothing.

  5TH BEGGAR.

  So do mine, my lord. I was born with it, and sulphur won’t bring it out o’ me. But for all that the Archbishop washed my feet o’ Tuesday. He likes it, my lord.

  6TH BEGGAR.

  And see here, my lord, this rag fro’ the gangrene i’ my leg. It’s humbling — it smells o’ human natur’. Wilt thou smell it, my lord? for the Archbishop likes the smell on it, my lord; for I be his lord and master i’ Christ, my lord.

  DE MORVILLE.

  Faugh! we shall all be poisoned. Let us go.

  [They draw back, BEGGARS following.

  7TH BEGGAR.

  My lord, I ha’ three sisters a-dying at home o’ the sweating sickness. They be dead while I be a-supping.

  8TH BEGGAR.

  And I ha’ nine darters i’ the spital that be dead ten times o’er i’ one day wi’ the putrid fever; and I bring the taint on it along wi’ me, for the Archbishop likes it, my lord.

  [Pressing upon the KNIGHTS till they disappear thro’ the door.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  Crutches, and itches, and leprosies, and ulcers, and gangrenes, and running sores, praise ye the Lord, for to-night ye have saved our Archbishop!

  1ST BEGGAR.

  I’ll go back again. I hain’t half done yet.

  HERBERT OF BOSHAM (entering).

  My friends, the Archbishop bids you good-night. He hath retired to rest, and being in great jeopardy of his life, he hath made his bed between the altars, from whence he sends me to bid you this night pray for him who hath fed you in the wilderness.

  3RD BEGGAR.

  So we will — so we will, I warrant thee. Becket shall be king, and the Holy Father shall be king, and the world shall live by the King’s venison and the bread o’ the Lord, and there shall be no more poor for ever. Hurrah! Vive le Roy! That’s the English of it.

  Act II

  Scene I

  ROSAMUND’S Bower. A Garden of Flowers. In the midst a bank of wild-flowers with a bench before it.

  Voices heard singing among the trees.

  Duet.

  1. Is it the wind of the dawn that I hear in the pine overhead?

  2. No; but the voice of the deep as it hollows the cliffs of the land.

  1. Is there a voice coming up with the voice of the deep from the strand,

  One coming up with a song in the flush of the glimmering red?

  2. Love that is born of the deep coming up with the sun from the sea.

  1. Love that can shape or can shatter a life till the life shall have fled?

  2. Nay, let us welcome him, Love that can lift up a life from the dead.

  1. Keep him away from the lone little isle. Let us be, let us be.

  2. Nay, let him make it his own, let him reign in it — he, it is he,

  Love that is born of the deep coming up with the sun from the sea.

  Enter HENRY and ROSAMUND.

  ROSAMUND.

  Be friends with him again — I do beseech thee.

  HENRY.

  With Becket? I have but one hour with thee —

  Sceptre and crozier clashing, and the mitre

  Grappling the crown — and when I flee from this

  For a gasp of freer air, a breathing-while

  To rest upon thy bosom and forget him —

  Why thou, my bird, thou pipest Becket, Becket —

  Yea, thou my golden dream of Love’s own bower,

  Must be the nightmare breaking on my peace

  With ‘Becket.’

  ROSAMUND.

  O my life’s life, not to smile

  Is all but death to me. My sun, no cloud!

  Let there not be one frown in this one hour.

  Out of the many thine, let this be mine!

  Look rather thou all-royal as when first

  I met thee.

  HENRY.

  Where was that?

  ROSAMUND.

  Forgetting that

  Forgets me too.

  HENRY.

  Nay, I remember it well.

  There on the moors.

  ROSAMUND.

  And in a narrow path.

  A plover flew before thee. Then I saw

  Thy high black steed among the flaming furze,

  Like sudden night in the main glare of day.

  And from that height something was said to me

  I knew not what.

  HENRY.

  I ask’d the way.

  ROSAMUND. I think so.

  So I lost mine.

  HENRY.

  Thou wast too shamed to answer.

  ROSAMUND.

  Too scared — so young!

  HENRY.

  The rosebud of my rose! —

  Well, well, no more of him — I have sent his folk,

  His kin, all his belongings, overseas;

  Age, orphans, and babe-breasting mothers — all

  By hundreds to him — there to beg, starve, die —

  So that the fool King Louis feed them not.

  The man shall feel that I can strike him yet.

  ROSAMUND.

  Babes, orphans, mothers! is that royal, Sire?

  HENRY.

  And I have been as royal with the Church.

  He shelter’d in the Abbey of Pontigny.

  There wore his time studying the canon law

  To work it against me. But since he cursed

  My friends at Veselay, I have let them know,

  That if they keep him longer as their guest,

  I scatter all their cowls to all the hells.

  ROSAMUND.

  And is that altogether royal?

  HENRY.

  Traitress!

  ROSAMUND.

  A faithful traitress to thy royal fame.

  HENRY.

  Fame! what care I for fame? Spite, ignorance, envy,

  Yea, honesty too, paint her what way they will.

  Fame of to-day is infamy to-morrow;

  Infamy of to-day is fame to-morrow;

  And round and round again. What matters? Royal — I

  mean to leave the royalty of my crown

  Unlessen’d to mine heirs.

  ROSAMUND.

  Still — thy fame too:

  I say that should be royal.

  HENRY.

  And I say,

  I care not for thy saying.

  ROSAMUND.

  And I say,

  I care not for thy saying. A greater King

  Than thou art, Love, who cares not for the word,

  Makes ‘care not’ — care. There have I spoken true?

  HENRY.

  Care dwell with me for ever, when I cease

  To care for thee as ever!

  ROSAMUND.

  No need! no need! . . .

  There is a bench. Come, wilt thou sit? . . . My bank

  Of wild-flowers [he sits]. At thy feet!

  [She sits at his feet.

  HENRY. I had them clear

  A royal pleasaunce for thee, in the wood,

  Not leave these countryfolk at court.

  ROSAMUND. I brought them

  In from the wood, and set them here. I love them

  More than the garden flowers, that seem at most

  Sweet guests, or foreign cousins, not half speaking

  The language of the land. I love them too,

  Yes. But, my liege, I am sure, of all the roses —

  Shame fall on those who gave it a dog’s name —

  This wild one (picking a briar-rose) — nay, I shall not prick myself —

  Is sweetest. Do but smell!

  HENRY.

  Thou rose of the world!

  Thou rose of all the roses!

  [Muttering.

  I am not worthy of her — this beast-body

  That G
od has plunged my soul in — I, that taking

  The Fiend’s advantage of a throne, so long

  Have wander’d among women, — a foul stream

  Thro’ fever-breeding levels, — at her side,

  Among these happy dales, run clearer, drop

  The mud I carried, like yon brook, and glass

  The faithful face of heaven —

  [Looking at her, and unconsciously aloud,

  — thine! thine!

  ROSAMUND.

  I know it.

  HENRY (muttering).

  Not hers. We have but one bond, her hate of Becket.

  ROSAMUND (half hearing).

  Nay! nay! what art thou muttering? I hate Becket?

  HENRY (muttering).

  A sane and natural loathing for a soul

  Purer, and truer and nobler than herself;

  And mine a bitterer illegitimate hate,

  A bastard hate born of a former love.

  ROSAMUND,

  My fault to name him! O let the hand of one

  To whom thy voice is all her music, stay it

  But for a breath.

  [Puts her hand before his lips.

  Speak only of thy love.

  Why there — like some loud beggar at thy gate —

  The happy boldness of this hand hath won it

  Love’s alms, thy kiss (looking at her hand) — Sacred!

  I’ll kiss it too.

  [Kissing it.

  There! wherefore dost thou so peruse it? Nay,

  There may be crosses in my line of life.

  HENRY.

  Not half her hand — no hand to mate with her,

  If it should come to that.

  ROSAMUND.

  With her? with whom?

  HENRY.

  Life on the hand is naked gipsy-stuff;

  Life on the face, the brows-clear innocence!

  Vein’d marble — not a furrow yet — and hers

  [Muttering.

  Crost and recrost, a venomous spider’s web ——

  ROSAMUND (springing up).

  Out of the cloud, my Sun — out of the eclipse

  Narrowing my golden hour!

  HENRY.

  O Rosamund,

  I would be true — would tell thee all — and something

  I had to say — I love thee none the less —

  Which will so vex thee.

  ROSAMUND.

  Something against me?

  HENRY.

  No, no, against myself.

  ROSAMUND.

  I will not hear it.

  Come, come, mine hour! I bargain for mine hour.

  I’ll call thee little Geoffrey.

  HENRY. Call him!

  ROSAMUND. Geoffrey!

  [Enter GEOFFREY.

  HENRY.

  How the boy grows!

  ROSAMUND.

  Ay, and his brows are thine;

 

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