John Dryden - Delphi Poets Series

Home > Other > John Dryden - Delphi Poets Series > Page 248
John Dryden - Delphi Poets Series Page 248

by John Dryden

Mel. I can no more —

  Can no more arguments, for comfort, find:

  Your boding words have quite o’erwhelmed my mind. [Clattering of weapons within.

  Ind. The noise increases, as the billows roar,

  When rolling from afar they threat the shore.

  She comes; and feeble nature now, I find,

  Shrinks back in danger, and forsakes my mind.

  I wish to die, yet dare not death endure;

  Detest the medicine, yet desire the cure.

  I would have death; but mild, and at command:

  I dare not trust him in another’s hand.

  In Nourmahal’s, he would not mine appear;

  But armed with terror, and disguised with fear.

  Mel. Beyond this place you can have no retreat:

  Stay here, and I the danger will repeat.

  I fear not death, because my life I hate;

  And envious death will shun the unfortunate.

  Ind. You must not venture.

  Mel. Let me: I may do

  Myself a kindness, in obliging you.

  In your loved name, I’ll seek my angry lord;

  And beg your safety from his conquering sword:

  So his protection all your fears will ease,

  And I shall see him once, and not displease.[Exit.

  Ind. O wretched queen! what power thy life can save?

  A stranger, and unfriended, and a slave!

  Enter Nourmahal, Zayda, and Abas, with Soldiers.

  Alas, she’s here![Indamora retires.

  Nour. Heartless they fought, and quitted soon their ground,

  While ours with easy victory were crowned.

  To you, Abas, my life and empire too,

  And, what’s yet dearer, my revenge, I owe.

  Abas. The vain Morat, by his own rashness wrought,

  Too soon discovered his ambitious thought;

  Believed me his, because I spoke him fair,

  And pitched his head into the ready snare:

  Hence ’twas I did his troops at first admit;

  But such, whose numbers could no fears beget:

  By them the emperor’s party first I slew,

  Then turned my arms the victors to subdue.

  Nour. Now let the head-strong boy my will controul!

  Virtue’s no slave of man; no sex confines the soul:

  I, for myself, the imperial seat will gain,

  And he shall wait my leisure for his reign. —

  But Aureng-Zebe is no where to be found,

  And now, perhaps, in death’s cold arms he lies!

  I fought, and conquered, yet have lost the prize.

  Zayd. The chance of war determined well the strife,

  That racked you, ‘twixt the lover and the wife.

  He’s dead, whose love had sullied all your reign,

  And made you empress of the world in vain.

  Nour. No; I my power and pleasure would divide:

  The drudge had quenched my flames, and then had died.

  I rage, to think without that bliss I live,

  That I could wish what fortune would not give:

  But, what love cannot, vengeance must supply;

  She, who bereaved me of his heart, shall die.

  Zayd. I’ll search: far distant hence she cannot be. [Goes in.

  Nour. This wondrous master-piece I fain would see;

  This fatal Helen, who can wars inspire,

  Make kings her slaves, and set the world on fire.

  My husband locked his jewel from my view;

  Or durst not set the false one by the true.

  Re-enter Zayda, leading Indamora.

  Zayd. Your frighted captive, ere she dies, receive;

  Her soul’s just going else, without your leave.

  Nour. A fairer creature did my eyes ne’er see!

  Sure she was formed by heaven, in spite to me!

  Some angel copied, while I slept, each grace,

  And moulded every feature from my face.

  Such majesty does from her forehead rise,

  Her cheeks such blushes cast, such rays her eyes,

  Nor I, nor envy, can a blemish find. —

  The palace is, without, too well designed:

  Conduct me in, for I will view thy mind.[To her.

  Speak, if thou hast a soul, that I may see,

  If heaven can make, throughout, another me.

  Ind. My tears and miseries must plead my cause; [Kneeling.

  My words, the terror of your presence awes:

  Mortals, in sight of angels, mute become;

  The nobler nature strikes the inferior dumb.

  Nour. The palm is, by the foe’s confession, mine;

  But I disdain what basely you resign.

  Heaven did, by me, the outward model build;

  Its inward work, the soul, with rubbish filled.

  Yet, oh! the imperfect piece moves more delight;

  ’Tis gilded o’er with youth, to catch the sight.

  The gods have poorly robbed my virgin bloom,

  And what I am, by what I was, o’ercome.

  Traitress! restore my beauty and my charms,

  Nor steal my conquest with my proper arms.

  Ind. What have I done thus to inflame your hate?

  I am not guilty, but unfortunate.

  Nour. Not guilty, when thy looks my power betray,

  Seduce mankind, my subject, from my sway,

  Take all my hearts and all my eyes away?

  My husband first; but that I could forgive;

  He only moved, and talked, but did not live.

  My Aureng-Zebe! — for I dare own the name,

  The glorious sin, and the more glorious flame, —

  Him from my beauty have thy eyes misled,

  And starved the joys of my expected bed.

  Ind. His love so sought, he’s happy that he’s dead.

  O had I courage but to meet my fate,

  That short dark passage to a future state,

  That melancholy riddle of a breath!

  Nour. That something, or that nothing, after death:

  Take this, and teach thyself.[Giving a Dagger.

  Ind. Alas!

  Nour. Why dost thou shake?

  Dishonour not the vengeance I designed:

  A queen, and own a base Plebeian mind!

  Let it drink deep in thy most vital part;

  Strike home, and do me reason in thy heart.

  Ind. I dare not.

  Nour. Do’t, while I stand by and see,

  At my full gust, without the drudgery.

  I love a foe, who dares my stroke prevent,

  Who gives me the full scene of my content;

  Shows me the flying soul’s convulsive strife,

  And all the anguish of departing life.

  Disdain my mercy, and my rage defy;

  Curse me with thy last breath, and make me see

  A spirit, worthy to have rivalled me.

  Ind. Oh, I desire to die, but dare not yet!

  Give me some respite, I’ll discharge the debt.

  Without my Aureng-Zebe I would not live.

  Nour. Thine, traitress! thine! that word has winged thy fate,

  And put me past the tedious forms of hate:

  I’ll kill thee with such eagerness and haste,

  As fiends, let loose, would lay all nature waste. [Indamora runs back: As Nourmahal is running to her, clashing of swords is heard within.

  Sold. Yield, you’re o’erpowered: Resistance is in vain. [Within.

  Mor. Then death’s my choice: Submission I disdain. [Within.

  Nour. Retire, ye slaves! Ah, whither does he run [At the door.

  On pointed swords? Disarm, but save my son.

  Enter Morat staggering, and upheld by Soldiers.

  Mor. She lives! and I shall see her once again!

  I have not thrown away my life in vain. [Catches hold of Indamora’s gown, and falls by her: She sits.

  I can
no more; yet even in death I find

  My fainting body biassed by my mind:

  I fall toward you; still my contending soul

  Points to your breast, and trembles to its pole.

  To them Melesinda, hastily casting herself on the other side of Morat.

  Mel. Ah woe, woe, woe! the worst of woes I find!

  Live still; Oh live; live e’en to be unkind! —

  With half-shut eyes he seeks the doubtful day;

  But, ah! he bends his sight another way.

  He faints! and in that sigh his soul is gone;

  Yet heaven’s unmoved, yet heaven looks careless on.

  Nour. Where are those powers which monarchs should defend?

  Or do they vain authority pretend

  O’er human fates, and their weak empire show,

  Which cannot guard their images below?

  If, as their image, he was not divine,

  They ought to have respected him as mine.

  I’ll waken them with my revenge; and she,

  Their Indamora, shall my victim be,

  And helpless heaven shall mourn in vain, like me. [As she is going to stab Indamora, Morat raises himself, and holds her hand.

  Mor. Ah, what are we,

  Who dare maintain with heaven this wretched strife,

  Puft with the pride of heaven’s own gift, frail life?

  That blast which my ambitious spirit swelled,

  See by how weak a tenure it was held!

  I only stay to save the innocent;

  Oh envy not my soul its last content!

  Ind. No, let me die; I’m doubly summoned now;

  First by my Aureng-Zebe, and since by you.

  My soul grows hardy, and can death endure;

  Your convoy makes the dangerous way secure.

  Mel. Let me at least a funeral marriage crave,

  Nor grudge my cold embraces in the grave.

  I have too just a title in the strife;

  By me, unhappy me, he lost his life:

  I called him hither, ’twas my fatal breath,

  And I the screech-owl that proclaimed his death.[Shout within.

  Abas. What new alarms are these? I’ll haste and see. [Exit.

  Nour. Look up and live; an empire shall be thine.

  Mor. That I condemned, even when I thought it mine. —

  Oh, I must yield to my hard destinies,[To Ind.

  And must for ever cease to see your eyes!

  Mel. Ah turn your sight to me, my dearest lord!

  Can you not one, one parting look afford?

  Even so unkind in death: — but ’tis in vain;

  I lose my breath, and to the winds complain.

  Yet ’tis as much in vain your cruel scorn;

  Still I can love, without this last return.

  Nor fate, nor you, can my vowed faith controul;

  Dying, I follow your disdainful soul:

  A ghost, I’ll haunt your ghost; and, where you go,

  With mournful murmurs fill the plains below.

  Mor. Be happy, Melesinda; cease to grieve,

  And for a more deserving husband live: —

  Can you forgive me?

  Mel. Can I! Oh, my heart!

  Have I heard one kind word before I part?

  I can, I can forgive: Is that a task

  To love like mine? Are you so good to ask!

  One kiss — Oh, ’tis too great a blessing this![Kisses him.

  I would not live to violate the bliss,

  Re-enter Abas.

  Abas. Some envious devil has ruined us yet more:

  The fort’s revolted to the emperor;

  The gates are opened, the portcullis drawn,

  And deluges of armies from the town

  Come pouring in: I heard the mighty flaw,

  When first it broke; the crowding ensigns saw,

  Which choked the passage; and, what least I feared,

  The waving arms of Aureng-Zebe appeared,

  Displayed with your Morat’s:

  In either’s flag the golden serpents bear

  Erected crests alike, like volumes rear,

  And mingle friendly hissings in the air.

  Their troops are joined, and our destruction nigh.

  Neur. ’Tis vain to fight, and I disdain to fly.

  I’ll mock the triumphs which our foes intend,

  And spite of fortune, make a glorious end.

  In poisonous draughts my liberty I’ll find,

  And from the nauseous world set free my mind.[Exit.

  At the other end of the Stage enter Aureng-Zebe, Dianet, and Attendants. Aureng-Zebe turns back, and speaks entering.

  Aur. The lives of all, who cease from combat, spare;

  My brother’s be your most peculiar care:

  Our impious use no longer shall obtain;

  Brothers no more by brothers shall be slain. — [Seeing Indamora and Morat.

  Ha! do I dream? Is this my hoped success?

  I grow a statue, stiff and motionless.

  Look, Dianet; for I dare not trust these eyes;

  They dance in mists, and dazzle with surprise.

  Dia. Sir, ’tis Morat; dying he seems, or dead;

  And Indamora’s hand —

  Aur. Supports his head.[Sighing.

  Thou shalt not break yet, heart, nor shall she know

  My inward torments by my outward show:

  To let her see my weakness were too base;

  Dissembled quiet sit upon my face:

  My sorrow to my eyes no passage find,

  But let it inward sink, and drown my mind.

  Falsehood shall want its triumph: I begin

  To stagger, but I’ll prop myself within.

  The specious tower no ruin shall disclose,

  Till down at once the mighty fabric goes,

  Mor. In sign that I die yours, reward my love,[To Ind.

  And seal my passport to the blessed above.[Kissing her hand.

  Ind. Oh stay; or take me with you when you go;

  There’s nothing now worth living for below.

  Mor. I leave you not; for my expanded mind

  Grows up to heaven, while it to you is joined:

  Not quitting, but enlarged! A blazing fire,

  Fed from the brand.[Dies.

  Mel. Ah me! he’s gone! I die![Swoons.

  Ind. Oh, dismal day!

  Fate, thou hast ravished my last hope away! [She turns, and sees Aureng-Zebe standing by her, and starts.

  O heaven! my Aureng-Zebe — What strange surprise!

  Or does my willing mind delude my eyes,

  And shows the figure always present there?

  Or liv’st thou? am I blessed, and see thee here?

  Aur. My brother’s body see conveyed with care, [Turning from her, to her Attendants.

  Where we may royal sepulture prepare.

  With speed to Melesinda bring relief:

  Recal her spirits, and moderate her grief — [Half turning to Ind.

  I go, to take for ever from your view,

  Both the loved object, and the hated too. [Going away after the bodies, which are carried off.

  Ind. Hear me! yet think not that I beg your stay; [Laying hold of him.

  I will be heard, and, after, take your way.

  Go; but your late repentance shall be vain: [He struggles still: she lets him go.

  I’ll never, never see your face again.[Turning away.

  Aur. Madam, I know whatever you can say:

  You might be pleased not to command my stay.

  All things are yet disordered in the fort;

  I must crave leave your audience may be short.

  Ind. You need not fear I shall detain you long:

  Yet you may tell me your pretended wrong.

  Aur. Is that the business? then my stay is vain.

  Ind. How are you injured?

  Aur. When did I complain?

  Ind. Leave off your forced respect,

  And show you
r rage in its most furious form:

  I’m armed with innocence to brave the storm.

  You heard, perhaps, your brother’s last desire,

  And, after, saw him in my arms expire;

  Saw me, with tears, so great a loss, bemoan;

  Heard me complaining my last hopes were gone.

  Aur. “Oh stay, or take me with you when you go,

  There’s nothing now worth living for below.”

  Unhappy sex! whose beauty is your snare:

  Exposed to trials; made too frail to bear.

  I grow a fool, and show my rage again:

  ’Tis nature’s fault; and why should I complain?

  Ind. Will you yet hear me?

  Aur. Yes, till you relate

  What powerful motives did your change create.

  You thought me dead, and prudently did weigh

  Tears were but vain, and brought but youth’s decay.

  Then, in Morat, your hopes a crown designed;

  And all the woman worked within your mind. —

  I rave again, and to my rage return,

  To be again subjected to your scorn.

  Ind. I wait till this long storm be over-blown.

  Aur. I’m conscious of my folly: I have done. —

  I cannot rail; but silently I’ll grieve.

  How did I trust! and how did you deceive!

  Oh, Arimant, would I had died for thee!

  I dearly buy thy generosity.

  Ind. Alas, is he then dead?

  Aur. Unknown to me,

  He took my arms; and, while I forced my way

  Through troops of foes, which did our passage stay,

  My buckler o’er my aged father cast,

  Still fighting, still defending as I past,

  The noble Arimant usurped my name;

  Fought, and took from me, while he gave me, fame.

  To Aureng-Zebe, he made his soldiers cry,

  And, seeing not, where he heard danger nigh,

  Shot, like a star, through the benighted sky,

  A short, but mighty aid: At length he fell.

  My own adventures ‘twere lost time to tell;

  Or how my army, entering in the night,

  Surprised our foes; The dark disordered fight:

  How my appearance, and my father shown,

  Made peace; and all the rightful monarch own.

  I’ve summed it briefly, since it did relate

  The unwelcome safety of the man you hate.

  Ind. As briefly will I clear my innocence:

  Your altered brother died in my defence.

  Those tears you saw, that tenderness I showed,

  Were just effects of grief and gratitude.

  He died my convert.

  Aur. But your lover too:

  I heard his words, and did your actions view;

  You seemed to mourn another lover dead:

  My sighs you gave him, and my tears you shed.

 

‹ Prev