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 260

by Algernon Charles Swinburne

The secretary of the council here hath charge

  To read as their commission.

  MARY STUART.

  Let me hear

  In as brief wise as may beseem the time

  The purport of it.

  BEALE.

  Our commission here

  Given by the council under the great seal

  Pronounces on your head for present doom

  Death, by this written sentence.

  MARY STUART.

  Ay, my lords?

  May I believe this, and not hold myself

  Mocked as a child with shadows? In God’s name,

  Speak you, my lord of Shrewsbury: let me know

  If this be dream or waking.

  KENT.

  Verily,

  No dream it is, nor dreamers we that pray,

  Madam, you meetly would prepare yourself

  To stand before God’s judgment presently.

  MARY STUART.

  I had rather so than ever stand again

  Before the face of man’s. Why speak not you,

  To whom I speak, my lord earl marshal? Nay,

  Look not so heavily: by my life, he stands

  As one at point to weep. Why, good my lord,

  To know that none may swear by Mary’s life

  And hope again to find belief of man

  Upon so slight a warrant, should not bring

  This trouble on your eyes; look up, and say

  The word you have for her that never was

  Less than your friend, and prisoner.

  SHREWSBURY.

  None save this,

  Which willingly I would not speak, I may;

  That presently your time is come to die.

  MARY STUART.

  Why, then, I am well content to leave a world

  Wherein I am no more serviceable at all

  To God or man, and have therein so long

  Endured so much affliction. All my life

  I have ever earnestly desired the love

  And friendship of your queen; have warned her oft

  Of coming dangers; and have cherished long

  The wish that I but once might speak with her

  In plain-souled confidence; being well assured,

  Had we but once met, there an end had been

  Of jealousies between us: but our foes,

  With equal wrong toward either, treacherously

  Have kept us still in sunder: by whose craft

  And crooked policy hath my sister’s crown

  Fallen in great peril, and myself have been

  Imprisoned, and inveterately maligned,

  And here must now be murdered. But I know

  That only for my faith’s sake I must die,

  And this to know for truth is recompense

  As large as all my sufferings. For the crime

  Wherewith I am charged, upon this holy book

  I lay mine hand for witness of my plea,

  I am wholly ignorant of it; and solemnly

  Declare that never yet conspiracy

  Devised against the queen my sister’s life

  Took instigation or assent from me.

  KENT.

  You swear but on a popish Testament:

  Such oaths are all as worthless as the book.

  MARY STUART.

  I swear upon the book wherein I trust:

  Would you give rather credit to mine oath

  Sworn on your scriptures that I trust not in?

  KENT.

  Madam, I fain would have you heartily

  Renounce your superstition; toward which end

  With us the godly dean of Peterborough,

  Good Richard Fletcher, well approved for faith

  Of God and of the queen, is hither come

  To proffer you his prayerful ministry.

  MARY STUART.

  If you, my lords, or he will pray for me,

  I shall be thankful for your prayers; but may not

  With theirs that hold another faith mix mine.

  I pray you therefore that mine almoner may

  Have leave to attend on me, that from his hands

  I, having made confession, may receive

  The sacrament.

  KENT.

  We may not grant you this.

  MARY STUART.

  I shall not see my chaplain ere I die?

  But two months gone this grace was granted me

  By word expressly from your queen, to have

  Again his ministration: and at last

  In the utter hour and bitter strait of death

  Is this denied me?

  KENT.

  Madam, for your soul

  More meet it were to cast these mummeries out,

  And bear Christ only in your heart, than serve

  With ceremonies of ritual hand and tongue

  His mere idolatrous likeness.

  MARY STUART.

  This were strange,

  That I should bear him visible in my hand

  Or keep with lips and knees his titular rites

  And cast in heart no thought upon him. Nay,

  Put me, I pray, to no more argument:

  But if this least thing be not granted, yet

  Grant me to know the season of my death.

  SHREWSBURY.

  At eight by dawn to-morrow you must die.

  MARY STUART.

  So shall I hardly see the sun again.

  By dawn to-morrow? meanest men condemned

  Give not their lives’ breath up so suddenly:

  Howbeit, I had rather yield you thanks, who make

  Such brief end of the bitterness of death

  For me who have borne such bitter length of life,

  Than plead with protestation of appeal

  For half a piteous hour’s remission: nor

  Henceforward shall I be denied of man

  Aught, who may never now crave aught again

  But whence is no denial. Yet shall this

  Not easily be believed of men, nor find

  In foreign ears acceptance, that a queen

  Should be thrust out of life thus. Good my friend,

  Bid my physician Gorion come to me:

  I have to speak with him – sirs, with your leave –

  Of certain monies due to me in France.

  What, shall I twice desire your leave, my lords,

  To live these poor last hours of mine alive

  At peace among my friends? I have much to do,

  And little time wherein to do it is left.

  SHREWSBURY.

  To Kent apart.

  I pray she may not mean worse than I would

  Against herself ere morning.

  KENT.

  Let not then

  This French knave’s drugs come near her, nor himself:

  We will take order for it.

  SHREWSBURY.

  Nay, this were but

  To exasperate more her thwarted heart, and make

  Despair more desperate than itself. Pray God

  She be not minded to compel us put

  Force at the last upon her of men’s hands

  To hale her violently to death, and make

  Judgment look foul and fierce as murder’s face

  With stain of strife and passion.

  Exeunt all but Mary Stuart and Mary Beaton.

  MARY STUART.

  So, my friend,

  The last of all our Maries are you left

  To-morrow. Strange has been my life, and now

  Strange looks my death upon me: yet, albeit

  Nor the hour nor manner of it be mine to choose,

  Ours is it yet, and all men’s in the world,

  To make death welcome in what wise we will.

  Bid you my chaplain, though he see me not,

  Watch through the night and pray for me: perchance,

  When ere the sundawn they shall bring me forth,

  I may behold him, and upon my knees
r />   Receive his blessing. Let our supper be

  Served earlier in than wont was: whereunto

  I bid my true poor servants here, to take

  Farewell and drink at parting to them all

  The cup of my last kindness, in good hope

  They shall stand alway constant in their faith

  And dwell in peace together: thereupon

  What little store is left me will I share

  Among them, and between my girls divide

  My wardrobe and my jewels severally,

  Reserving but the black robe and the red

  That shall attire me for my death: and last

  With mine own hand shall be my will writ out

  And all memorials more set down therein

  That I would leave for legacies of love

  To my next kinsmen and my household folk.

  And to the king my brother yet of France

  Must I write briefly, but a word to say

  I am innocent of the charge whereon I die

  Now for my right’s sake claimed upon this crown,

  And our true faith’s sake, but am barred from sight

  Even of mine almoner here, though hard at hand;

  And I would bid him take upon his charge

  The keeping of my servants, as I think

  He shall not for compassionate shame refuse,

  Albeit his life be softer than his heart;

  And in religion for a queen’s soul pray

  That once was styled Most Christian, and is now

  In the true faith about to die, deprived

  Of all her past possessions. But this most

  And first behoves it, that the king of Spain

  By Gorion’s word of mouth receive my heart,

  Who soon shall stand before him. Bid the leech

  Come hither, and alone, to speak with me.

  Exit Mary Beaton.

  She is dumb as death: yet never in her life

  Hath she been quick of tongue. For all the rest,

  Poor souls, how well they love me, all as well

  I think I know: and one of them or twain

  At least may surely see me to my death

  Ere twice the hours have changed again. Perchance

  Love that can weep not would the gladlier die

  For those it cannot weep on. Time wears thin:

  They should not now play laggard: nay, he comes,

  The last that ever speaks alone with me

  Before my soul shall speak alone with God.

  Enter Gorion.

  I have sent once more for you to no such end

  As sick men for physicians: no strong drug

  May put the death next morning twelve hours back

  Whose twilight overshadows me, that am

  Nor sick nor medicinable. Let me know

  If I may lay the last of all my trust

  On you that ever shall be laid on man

  To prove him kind and loyal.

  GORION.

  So may God

  Deal with me, madam, as I prove to you

  Faithful, though none but I were in the world

  That you might trust beside.

  MARY STUART.

  With equal heart

  Do I believe and thank you. I would send

  To Paris for the ambassador from Spain

  This letter with two diamonds, which your craft

  For me must cover from men’s thievish eyes

  Where they may be not looked for.

  GORION.

  Easily

  Within some molten drug may these be hid,

  And faithfully by me conveyed to him.

  MARY STUART.

  The lesser of them shall he keep in sign

  Of my good friendship toward himself: but this

  In token to King Philip shall he give

  That for the truth I die, and dying commend

  To him my friends and servants, Gilbert Curle,

  His sister, and Jane Kennedy, who shall

  To-night watch by me; and my ladies all

  That have endured my prison: let him not

  Forget from his good favour one of these

  That I remember to him: Charles Arundel,

  And either banished Paget; one whose heart

  Was better toward my service than his hand,

  Morgan: and of mine exiles for their faith,

  The prelates first of Glasgow and of Ross;

  And Liggons and Throgmorton, that have lost

  For me their leave to live on English earth;

  And Westmoreland, that lives now more forlorn

  Than died that earl who rose for me with him.

  These I beseech him favour for my sake

  Still: and forget not, if he come again

  To rule as king in England, one of them

  That were mine enemies here: the treasurer first,

  And Leicester, Walsingham, and Huntingdon,

  At Tutbury once my foe, fifteen years gone,

  And Wade that spied upon me three years since,

  And Paulet here my gaoler: set them down

  For him to wreak wrath’s utmost justice on,

  In my revenge remembered. Though I be

  Dead, let him not forsake his hope to reign

  Upon this people: with my last breath left

  I make this last prayer to him, that not the less

  He will maintain the invasion yet designed

  Of us before on England: let him think,

  It is God’s quarrel, and on earth a cause

  Well worthy of his greatness: which being won,

  Let him forget no man of these nor me.

  And now will I lie down, that four hours’ sleep

  May give me strength before I sleep again

  And need take never thought for waking more.

  Scene II. The Presence Chamber

  Shrewsbury, Kent, Paulet, Drury, Melville, and Attendants.

  KENT.

  The stroke is past of eight.

  SHREWSBURY.

  Not far, my lord.

  KENT.

  What stays the provost and the sheriff yet

  That went ere this to bring the prisoner forth?

  What, are her doors locked inwards? then perchance

  Our last night’s auguries of some close design

  By death contrived of her self-slaughterous hand

  To baffle death by justice hit but right

  The heart of her bad purpose.

  SHREWSBURY.

  Fear it not:

  See where she comes, a queenlier thing to see

  Than whom such thoughts take hold on.

  Enter Mary Stuart, led by two gentlemen and preceded by the Sheriff; Mary Beaton, Barbara Mowbray, and other ladies behind, who remain in the doorway.

  MELVILLE kneeling to Mary.

  Woe am I,

  Madam, that I must bear to Scotland back

  Such tidings watered with such tears as these.

  MARY STUART.

  Weep not, good Melville: rather should your heart

  Rejoice that here an end is come at last

  Of Mary Stuart’s long sorrows; for be sure

  That all this world is only vanity.

  And this record I pray you make of me,

  That a true woman to my faith I die,

  And true to Scotland and to France: but God

  Forgive them that have long desired mine end

  And with false tongues have thirsted for my blood

  As the hart thirsteth for the water-brooks.

  O God, who art truth, and the author of all truth,

  Thou knowest the extreme recesses of my heart,

  And how that I was willing all my days

  That England should with Scotland be fast friends.

  Commend me to my son: tell him that I

  Have nothing done to prejudice his rights

  As king: and now, good Melville, fare thee well.

  My lor
d of Kent, whence comes it that your charge

  Hath bidden back my women there at door

  Who fain to the end would bear me company?

  KENT.

  Madam, this were not seemly nor discreet,

  That these should so have leave to vex men’s ears

  With cries and loose lamentings: haply too

  They might in superstition seek to dip

  Their handkerchiefs for relics in your blood.

  MARY STUART.

  That will I pledge my word they shall not. Nay,

  The queen would surely not deny me this,

  The poor last thing that I shall ask on earth.

  Even a far meaner person dying I think

  She would not have so handled. Sir, you know

  I am her cousin, of her grandsire’s blood,

  A queen of France by marriage, and by birth

  Anointed queen of Scotland. My poor girls

  Desire no more than but to see me die.

  SHREWSBURY.

  Madam, you have leave to elect of this your train

  Two ladies with four men to go with you.

  MARY STUART.

  I choose from forth my Scottish following here

  Jane Kennedy, with Elspeth Curle: of men,

  Bourgoin and Gorion shall attend on me,

  Gervais and Didier. Come then, let us go.

  Exeunt: manent Mary Beaton and Barbara Mowbray.

  BARBARA.

  I wist I was not worthy, though my child

  It is that her own hands made Christian: but

  I deemed she should have bid you go with her.

  Alas, and would not all we die with her?

  MARY BEATON.

  Why, from the gallery here at hand your eyes

  May go with her along the hall beneath

  Even to the scaffold: and I fain would hear

  What fain I would not look on. Pray you, then,

  If you may bear to see it as those below,

  Do me that sad good service of your eyes

  For mine to look upon it, and declare

  All that till all be done I will not see;

  I pray you of your pity.

  BARBARA.

  Though mine heart

  Break, it shall not for fear forsake the sight

  That may be faithful yet in following her,

  Nor yet for grief refuse your prayer, being fain

  To give your love such bitter comfort, who

  So long have never left her.

 

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