Читать книгу Lords and Lovers, and Other Dramas - Olive Tilford Dargan - Страница 6
Scene 1. Room in the earl of Pembroke's castle. Pembroke in bed. Richford and Albemarle attending.
ОглавлениеPem. The king has come?
Alb. He waits upon your grace
As a good servant; with demeanor speaks
True sorrow you are brought so low.
Pem. [Stoutly] Ha! Low?
Alb. Sir, but in body. Pembroke's mounting mind
Can never be struck down.
Pem. He's sad, you say?
Alb. In tears, your grace. He weeps more like a son
Than sovereign.
Pem. A son! Where is the son
Would weep for Pembroke?
Rich. Here, my dearest father!
Here are the tears would water thy affliction
Till it be washed from thy endangered body.
Here is the heart would give its younger blood
To make thine leap with health. Without you, sir,
I am no more than is the gaudy bloom
Of some stout tree the axe has brought to ground.
O, wilt forgive the many pains I've cost thee?
Pem. First touch my hand and swear by highest God
That you will serve the king.
Rich. O, slight condition!
I take this noble hand that ne'er was raised
'Gainst country, throne or God, and by that God,
I vow to serve the king.
Pem. For the last time
I'll trust and pardon you. If you make black
Your soul with violation of this oath,
I, safe beyond the stars, shall know it not,
Nor die again to think on 't. Men, weep not
That ye lack sons, but weep when your wives bear them!
Alb. I'll vouch for him, your grace.
Pem. Thanks, Albemarle.
Rich. Will you, my kindest father, say a word
To bring me to the graces of the king?
Pem. Ay, son.
Rich. Now, sir?
Pem. Nay, I'm not dying yet,
And wish to keep my last words for his ears.
There's holy magic in the passing tongue
That stamps its truth unrasurable. So
Would I grave Henry's heart.
Rich. But, sir——
Pem. I'll wait
My hour. Who comes with him?
Alb. The legate, Gualo,
To-day arrived from Rome.
Pem. And I not told?
Already I am dead. These ears, that kings
Engaged, are now contracted to the worm
Permits no forfeiture. Well, well, his message?
Alb. The cardinal assures us that the pope
Will cast his power with Henry. Though he loves
This praying Louis, well he knows our right.
Pem. The pope our friend? I thank thee, Heaven!
England, take up thy heart! Thou yet mayst hope!
[Enter bishop of Winchester]
Win. God save great Pembroke!
Pem. He alone can do it.
Lord Albemarle, and my new-graced son,
Will 't please you walk within?
Alb. We are your servants.
[Exeunt Richford and Albemarle, left]
Pem. Now, Winchester?
Win. You sent for me, your grace.
I have made haste.
Pem. Ay, you'd trot fast enough
To see me die.
Win. Nay, sir, I hope you've called
Me to your service.
Pem. So I have, my lord.
A task unfinished I must leave to you.
Here is the key to yonder cabinet.
Pray you unlock it ... and take out the packet
Your eye's now on.
Win. This, sir?
Pem. Ay, that is it.
'Twas Henry Second, grandsire of this Henry,
Gave me that packet. Sir, you know the tale
Of princess Adelais who journeyed here
As the betrothed of Richard, Henry's son.
Alack, she never was his bride. Some say
That Henry loved her ... I know not ... but she
Returned to France, her reason wandering.
"If she recover," said the king to me,
"Give her this packet; should she die, break seal
And learn what you shall do." She did not die,
Nor can I say she lives, so sad her state.
Her age was bare fifteen when she left England,
Her face a lily and her eyes a flood;
She now must be midway her fifth decade,
A time, I've heard, when subtle changes work
Within the mind. A beauteous soul! O God,
Restore her now, or lift her e'en to thee!
... Take you the packet, and the king's command.
But first your oath. Deceit has sapped my faith
So oft I could believe the devil himself
Wears gown and mitre. Peter des Roches, will you
Be true?
Win. I swear by Heaven.
Pem. That is done,
As well as't can be done. Call in my son
And Albemarle.
Win. My lords!
[Re-enter Richford and Albemarle]
Pem. Now let us talk
Of England. O, this fleet, this fleet, rigged out
By warlike Constance in monk Louis' name!
I see it nearing now, leaping the waves,
On, on, and none to meet it! Cowards all.
What do ye here, ye three, loitering about
A sick man's bed? A man almost a corpse.
I would not have a servant waste himself
To give me drink while England needs his sword.
Rich. My father lord, we have our men abroad
Rousing the country for a stout defence.
To meet the French with our poor ships were madness;
But let them land we'll give them such a rap——
Pem. What? Land your enemy? O, fools and cowards!
... I've given my life for England. Now you'll cast
My heart-dear bargain into Louis' hand
As 'twere a snood slipped from an easy maid.
Fool man! to puff his days out jousting Fate,
Who waits but his bare death to start her mock
Of horrid pleasantries. Then does she make
Dice of the miser's bones, carousal cups
Of the ascetic's skull, a hangman's scoff
Of clerics' prayer-fed sons; and proudest sires,
Who sentried their blue blood, peer back through dust
To see all Babylon pour to their line.
And now she'll bid my war-ghost eyes behold
The land held with my life become a field
For foes at holiday!
Win. Compose yourself, your grace.
Pem. Gualo has come, but where is he will set
This power its task, and play it for this isle?
I can not say that wisdom dies with me,
But I could wish more proof of sager mind
Than e'er I've had from this small audience.
Lord Bishop, you are left custodian
Of Henry's ripening youth.
Win. Nor shall I fail
To be your worthy heir in this high duty,
For still I shall consult with your great spirit,
Praying your ghost be mover of my deeds.
Pem. I've spoken to the king. He'll give you love
For love. But who shall be lord chancellor?
There's little choice. And yet there's one, De Burgh,
If camp and field could spare him——
Alb. Sir, a man
No older than our sons?
Pem. By your good leave,
Age is no patent to respect and place
If virtue go not with it. Whitened hairs
Make honor radiant, but vice thereby
Is viler still. Ay, there are some——
Rich. Peace, father,
And save thy strength for us.
Pem. Ah, son, I've been
A careless holder all my life, and still
With my last hour play spendthrift. Well, here be
Three friends of England—Gualo makes a fourth—
And trusting you I ease my bones to death.
[Enter attendant with a letter, which he gives to Pembroke]
Pem. [After reading] De Burgh! O gallant soul!
Now am I young!
With forty ships he'll meet the fleet of France!
I live again, for courage is not dead!
[Sinking] Nay—help—ah, I am gone. I'll hasten on
And plead in Heaven for his victory.
[Seems to die]
Alb. Ah ... dead?
Rich. In truth.
Win. I'll go and tell the king.
[Aside, going] My joyful tears he will translate to grief,
And think I weep a friend's death, not a foe's
Whose only act of friendship was to die. [Exit]
Alb. How now, my lord? Does your good purpose hold?
Rich. It has the falling sickness, Albemarle,
And now lies low as earth.
Alb. Then set thy foot
Upon it that it rise no more.
Rich. 'Tis done.
Alb. What fools are they who think that dying men
Speak oracles to pivot action on,
When death's decay so blurs each fading sense
They know but darkly of the world about,
And of realities all plain to us
Build visions substanceless to gull our faith.
Grant that they do take note of things unseen,
'Tis with their faces to another world,
And what they speak is strange and ill advice
To us whose work is still 'mong men of earth.
Rich. You need not clear your way to me. I've not
A scruple in my soul would trip a gnat.
Speak out your heart.
Alb. You are great Pembroke now.
But Richford took an oath to serve the king.
Rich. And he—is Louis.
Alb. Till we find hour fit
To cast his yoke and take a sovereign
Of our election.
Rich. Royal Albemarle!
Alb. Here stand we then. De Burgh we count as dead.
Le Moine has orders to strike off his head
Soon as he's taken. Now we get the king
To Dover fort, on pretence to defend it.
There the besieging French will take him prisoner,
And ship him straight to Calais—or to Heaven.
Pem. [Half rising] Devils! dogs! beasts!
Now these devoted bones
Will never lie at peace in English earth.
My country! Must the foreign foot be set
Once more upon thy neck, and thine own sons
Pour sulphur to thy wounds? The king! the king!
What, vipers, do you hear? Call in the king!
Alb. We must not, sir.
Pem. Ho, here! The king!
[Rises from bed, starts forward and falls back speechless. Enter Henry, Gualo, Winchester, and attendants. Albemarle and Richford stand together. Pembroke dies pointing to them and gazing at the king.]
Hen. My lords, what does this mean?
Alb. This noble man
Wished much to say a word of grace for me
And his forgiven son. Alas, black death
Has stolen the balm that might have eased our way
Into your heart.
Hen. Fear not, my lords. I'll trust you,
Even as he wished. [Kneels by bed]
O, Pembroke, couldst thou leave me?
[Curtain]