Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series)

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Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series) Page 250

by Algernon Charles Swinburne


  The least part of our office, which deserves

  Nor scorn of you nor wonder, whose own act

  Has laid it on us; wherefore with less rage

  Please you take thought now to submit yourself,

  Even for your own more honour, to the effect

  Whose cause was of your own device, that here

  Bears fruit unlooked for; which being ripe in time

  You cannot choose but taste of, nor may we

  But do the season’s bidding, and the queen’s

  Who weeps at heart to know it. – Disarm these men;

  Take you the prisoners to your present ward

  And hence again to London; here meanwhile

  Some week or twain their lady must lie close

  And with a patient or impatient heart

  Expect an end and word of judgment: I

  Must with Sir William back to Chartley straight

  And there make inquisition ere day close

  What secret serpents of what treasons hatched

  May in this lady’s papers lurk, whence we

  Must pluck the fangs forth of them yet unfleshed,

  And lay these plots like dead and strangled snakes

  Naked before the council.

  MARY STUART.

  I must go?

  GORGES.

  Madam, no help; I pray your pardon.

  MARY STUART.

  Ay?

  Had I your pardon in this hand to give,

  And here in this my vengeance – Words, and words!

  God, for thy pity! what vile thing is this

  That thou didst make of woman? even in death

  As in the extremest evil of all our lives,

  We can but curse or pray, but prate and weep,

  And all our wrath is wind that works no wreck,

  And all our fire as water. Noble sirs,

  We are servants of your servants, and obey

  The beck of your least groom; obsequiously,

  We pray you but report of us so much,

  Submit us to you. Yet would I take farewell,

  May it not displease you, for old service’ sake,

  Of one my servant here that was, and now

  Hath no word for me; yet I blame him not,

  Who am past all help of man; God witness me,

  I would not chide now, Gilbert, though my tongue

  Had strength yet left for chiding, and its edge

  Were yet a sword to smite with, or my wrath

  A thing that babes might shrink at; only this

  Take with you for your poor queen’s true last word,

  That if they let me live so long to see

  The fair wife’s face again from whose soft side,

  Now labouring with your child, by violent hands

  You are reft perforce for my sake, while I live

  I will have charge of her more carefully

  Than of mine own life’s keeping, which indeed

  I think not long to keep, nor care, God knows,

  How soon or how men take it. Nay, good friend,

  Weep not; my weeping time is wellnigh past,

  And theirs whose eyes have too much wept for me

  Should last no longer. Sirs, I give you thanks

  For thus much grace and patience shown of you,

  My gentle gaolers, towards a queen unqueened

  Who shall nor get nor crave again of man

  What grace may rest in him to give her. Come,

  Bring me to bonds again, and her with me

  That hath not stood so nigh me all these years

  To fall ere life doth from my side, or take

  Her way to death without me till I die.

  ACT II

  Walsingham

  Scene I. Windsor Castle

  Queen Elizabeth and Sir Francis Walsingham.

  ELIZABETH.

  What will ye make me? Let the council know

  I am yet their loving mistress, but they lay

  Too strange a burden on my love who send

  As to their servant word what ways to take,

  What sentence of my subjects given subscribe

  And in mine own name utter. Bid them wait;

  Have I not patience? and was never quick

  To teach my tongue the deadly word of death,

  Lest one day strange tongues blot my fame with blood;

  The red addition of my sister’s name

  Shall brand not mine.

  WALSINGHAM.

  God grant your mercy shown

  Mark not your memory like a martyr’s red

  With pure imperial heart’s-blood of your own

  Shed through your own sweet-spirited height of heart

  That held your hand from justice.

  ELIZABETH.

  I would rather

  Stand in God’s sight so signed with mine own blood

  Than with a sister’s – innocent; or indeed

  Though guilty – being a sister’s – might I choose,

  As being a queen I may not surely – no –

  I may not choose, you tell me.

  WALSINGHAM.

  Nay, no man

  Hath license of so large election given

  As once to choose, being servant called of God,

  If he will serve or no, or save the name

  And slack the service.

  ELIZABETH.

  Yea, but in his Word

  I find no word that whets for king-killing

  The sword kings bear for justice; yet I doubt,

  Being drawn, it may not choose but strike at root –

  Being drawn to cut off treason. Walsingham,

  You are more a statesman than a gospeller;

  Take for your tongue’s text now no text of God’s,

  But what the devil has put into their lips

  Who should have slain me; nay, what by God’s grace,

  Who bared their purpose to us, through pain or fear

  Hath been wrung thence of secrets writ in fire

  At bottom of their hearts. Have they confessed?

  WALSINGHAM.

  The twain trapped first in London.

  ELIZABETH.

  What, the priest?

  Their twice-turned Ballard, ha?

  WALSINGHAM.

  Madam, not he.

  ELIZABETH.

  God’s blood! ye have spared not him the torment, knaves?

  Of all I would not spare him.

  WALSINGHAM.

  Verily, no;

  The rack hath spun his life’s thread out so fine

  There is but left for death to slit in twain

  The thickness of a spider’s.

  ELIZABETH.

  Ay, still dumb?

  WALSINGHAM.

  Dumb for all good the pains can get of him;

  Had he drunk dry the chalice of his craft

  Brewed in design abhorred of even his friends

  With poisonous purpose toward your majesty,

  He had kept scarce harder silence.

  ELIZABETH.

  Poison? ay –

  That should be still the churchman’s household sword

  Or saintly staff to bruise crowned heads from far

  And break them with his precious balms that smell

  Rank as the jaws of death, or festal fume

  When Rome yet reeked with Borgia; but the rest

  Had grace enow to grant me for goodwill

  Some death more gracious than a rat’s? God wot,

  I am bounden to them, and will charge for this

  The hangman thank them heartily; they shall not

  Lack daylight means to die by. God, meseems,

  Will have me not die darkling like a dog,

  Who hath kept my lips from poison and my heart

  From shot of English knave or Spanish, both

  Dubbed of the devil or damned his doctors, whom

  My riddance from all ills that plague man’s life

  Should
have made great in record; and for wage

  Your Ballard hath not better hap to fee

  Than Lopez had or Parry. Well, he lies

  As dumb in bonds as those dead dogs in earth,

  You say, but of his fellows newly ta’en

  There are that keep not silence: what say these?

  Pour in mine ears the poison of their plot

  Whose fangs have stung the silly snakes to death.

  WALSINGHAM.

  The first a soldier, Savage, in these wars

  That sometime serving sought a traitor’s luck

  Under the prince Farnese, then of late

  At Rheims was tempted of our traitors there,

  Of one in chief, Gifford the seminarist,

  My smock-faced spy’s good uncle, to take off

  Or the earl of Leicester or your gracious self;

  And since his passage hither, to confirm

  His hollow-hearted hardihood, hath had

  Word from this doctor more solicitous yet

  Sent by my knave his nephew, who of late

  Was in the seminary of so deadly seed

  Their reader in philosophy, that their head,

  Even Cardinal Allen, holds for just and good

  The purpose laid upon his hand; this man

  Makes yet more large confession than of this,

  Saying from our Gilbert’s trusty mouth he had

  Assurance that in Italy the Pope

  Hath levies raised against us, to set forth

  For seeming succour toward the Parmesan,

  But in their actual aim bent hither, where

  With French and Spaniards in one front of war

  They might make in upon us; but from France

  No foot shall pass for inroad on our peace

  Till – so they phrase it – by these Catholics here

  Your majesty be taken, or –

  ELIZABETH.

  No more –

  But only taken? springed but bird-like? Ha!

  They are something tender of our poor personal chance –

  Temperately tender: yet I doubt the springe

  Had haply maimed me no less deep than life

  Sits next the heart most mortal. Or – so be it

  I slip the springe – what yet may shackle France,

  Hang weights upon their purpose who should else

  Be great of heart against us? They take time

  Till I be taken – or till what signal else

  As favourable?

  WALSINGHAM.

  Till she they serve be brought

  Safe out of Paulet’s keeping.

  ELIZABETH.

  Ay? they know him

  So much my servant, and his guard so good,

  That sound of strange feet marching on our soil

  Against us in his prisoner’s name perchance

  Might from the walls wherein she sits his guest

  Raise a funereal echo? Yet I think

  He would not dare – what think’st thou might he dare

  Without my word for warrant? If I knew

  This –

  WALSINGHAM.

  It should profit not your grace to know

  What may not be conceivable for truth

  Without some stain on honour.

  ELIZABETH.

  Nay, I say not

  That I would have him take upon his hand

  More than his trust may warrant: yet have men,

  Good men, for very truth of their good hearts

  Put loyal hand to work as perilous – well,

  God wot I would not have him so transgress –

  If such be called transgressors.

  WALSINGHAM.

  Let the queen

  Rest well assured he shall not. So far forth

  Our swordsman Savage witnesses of these

  That moved him toward your murder but in trust

  Thereby to bring invasion over sea:

  Which one more gently natured of his birth,

  Tichborne, protests with very show of truth

  That he would give no ear to, knowing, he saith,

  The miseries of such conquest: nor, it seems,

  Heard this man aught of murderous purpose bent

  Against your highness.

  ELIZABETH.

  Naught? why then, again,

  To him I am yet more bounden, who may think,

  Being found but half my traitor, at my hands

  To find but half a hangman.

  WALSINGHAM.

  Nay, the man

  Herein seems all but half his own man, being

  Made merely out of stranger hearts and brains

  Their engine of conspiracy; for thus

  Forsooth he pleads, that Babington his friend

  First showed him how himself was wrought upon

  By one man’s counsel and persuasion, one

  Held of great judgment, Ballard, on whose head

  All these lay all their forfeit.

  ELIZABETH.

  Yet shall each

  Pay for himself red coin of ransom down

  In costlier drops than gold is. But of these

  Why take we thought? their natural-subject blood

  Can wash not out their sanguine-sealed attempt,

  Nor leave us marked as tyrant: only she

  That is the head and heart of all your fears

  Whose hope or fear is England’s, quick or dead,

  Leaves or imperilled or impeached of blood

  Me that with all but hazard of mine own,

  God knows, would yet redeem her. I will write

  With mine own hand to her privily, – what else? –

  Saying, if by word as privy from her hand

  She will confess her treasonous practices,

  They shall be wrapped in silence up, and she

  By judgment live unscathed.

  WALSINGHAM.

  Being that she is,

  So surely will she deem of your great grace,

  And see it but as a snare set wide, or net

  Spread in the bird’s sight vainly.

  ELIZABETH.

  Why, then, well:

  She, casting off my grace, from all men’s grace

  Cuts off herself, and even aloud avows

  By silence and suspect of jealous heart

  Her manifest foul conscience: on which proof

  I will proclaim her to the parliament

  So self-convicted. Yet I would not have

  Her name and life by mortal evidence

  Touched at the trial of them that now shall die

  Or by their charge attainted: lest myself

  Fall in more peril of her friends than she

  Stands yet in shot of judgment.

  WALSINGHAM.

  Be assured,

  Madam, the process of their treasons judged

  Shall tax not her before her trial-time

  With public note of clear complicity

  Even for that danger’s sake which moves you.

  ELIZABETH.

  Me

  So much it moves not for my mere life’s sake

  Which I would never buy with fear of death

  As for the general danger’s and the shame’s

  Thence cast on queenship and on womanhood

  By mean of such a murderess. But, for them,

  I would the merited manner of their death

  Might for more note of terror be referred

  To me and to my council: these at least

  Shall hang for warning in the world’s wide eye

  More high than common traitors, with more pains

  Being ravished forth of their more villainous lives

  Than feed the general throat of justice. Her

  Shall this too touch, whom none that serves henceforth

  But shall be sure of hire more terrible

  Than all past wage of treason.

  WALSINGHAM.

  Why, so far

  As law gives
leave –

  ELIZABETH.

  What prat’st thou me of law?

  God’s blood! is law for man’s sake made, or man

  For law’s sake only, to be held in bonds,

  Led lovingly like hound in huntsman’s leash

  Or child by finger, not for help or stay,

  But hurt and hindrance? Is not all this land

  And all its hope and surety given to time

  Of sovereignty and freedom, all the fame

  And all the fruit of manhood hence to be,

  More than one rag or relic of its law

  Wherewith all these lie shackled? as too sure

  Have states no less than ours been done to death

  With gentle counsel and soft-handed rule

  For fear to snap one thread of ordinance

  Though thence the state were strangled.

  WALSINGHAM.

  Madam, yet

  There need no need be here of law’s least breach,

  That of all else is worst necessity –

  Being such a mortal medicine to the state

  As poison drunk to expel a feverish taint

  Which air or sleep might purge as easily.

  ELIZABETH.

  Ay, but if air be poison-struck with plague

  Or sleep to death lie palsied, fools were they,

  Faint hearts and faithless, who for health’s fair sake

  Should fear to cleanse air, pierce and probe the trance,

  With purging fire or iron. Have your way.

  God send good end of all this, and procure

  Some mean whereby mine enemies’ craft and his

  May take no feet but theirs in their own toils,

  And no blood shed be innocent as mine.

  Scene II. Chartley

  Mary Beaton and Sir Amyas Paulet.

  PAULET.

  You should do well to bid her less be moved

  Who needs fear less of evil. Since we came

  Again from Tixall this wild mood of hers

  Hath vexed her more than all men’s enmities

  Should move a heart more constant. Verily,

  I thought she had held more rule upon herself

  Than to call out on beggars at the gate

  When she rode forth, crying she had nought to give,

  Being all as much a beggar too as they,

  With all things taken from her.

  MARY BEATON.

  Being so served,

  In sooth she should not show nor shame nor spleen:

 

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