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SCENE III

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COUNTESS, MAX PICCOLOMINI.

Max. Aunt Tertsky? may I venture?

[Advances to the middle of the stage, and looks

around him with uneasiness.

She’s not here!

Where is she?

Countess. Look but somewhat narrowly

In yonder corner, lest perhaps she lie

Conceal’d behind that screen.

Max. There lie her gloves!

[Snatches at them, but the COUNTESS takes them herself.

You unkind Lady! You refuse me this — 5

You make it an amusement to torment me.

Countess. And this the thanks you give me for my trouble?

Max. O, if you felt the oppression at my heart!

Since we’ve been here, so to constrain myself —

With such poor stealth to hazard words and glances — 10

These, these are not my habits!

Countess. You have still

Many new habits to acquire, young friend!

But on this proof of your obedient temper

I must continue to insist; and only

On this condition can I play the agent 15

For your concerns.

Max. But wherefore comes she not?

Where is she?

Countess. Into my hands you must place it

Whole and entire. Whom could you find, indeed,

More zealously affected to your interest?

No soul on earth must know it — not your father. 20

He must not above all.

Max. Alas! what danger?

Here is no face on which I might concentre

All the enraptured soul stirs up within me.

O Lady! tell me. Is all changed around me?

Or is it only I?

I find myself, 25

As among strangers! Not a trace is left

Of all my former wishes, former joys.

Where has it vanished to? There was a time

When even, methought, with such a world as this

I was not discontented. Now how flat! 30

How stale! No life, no bloom, no flavour in it!

My comrades are intolerable to me.

My father — Even to him I can say nothing.

My arms, my military duties — O!

They are such wearying toys!

Countess. But, gentle friend! 35

I must entreat it of your condescension,

You would be pleased to sink your eye, and favour

With one short glance or two this poor stale world,

Where even now much, and of much moment,

Is on the eve of its completion.

Max. Something, 40

I can’t but know, is going forward round me.

I see it gathering, crowding, driving on,

In wild uncustomary movements. Well,

In due time, doubtless, it will reach even me.

Where think you I have been, dear lady? Nay, 45

No raillery. The turmoil of the camp,

The spring-tide of acquaintance rolling in,

The pointless jest, the empty conversation,

Oppress’d and stifled me. I gasped for air —

I could not breathe — I was constrain’d to fly, 50

To seek a silence out for my full heart;

And a pure spot wherein to feel my happiness.

No smiling, Countess! In the church was I.

There is a cloister here to the heaven’s gate,

Thither I went, there found myself alone. 55

Over the altar hung a holy mother;

A wretched painting ‘twas, yet ‘twas the friend

That I was seeking in this moment. Ah,

How oft have I beheld that glorious form

In splendour, mid ecstatic worshippers; 60

Yet, still it moved me not! and now at once

Was my devotion cloudless as my love.

Countess. Enjoy your fortune and felicity!

Forget the world around you. Meantime, friendship

Shall keep strict vigils for you, anxious, active. 65

Only be manageable when that friendship

Points you the road to full accomplishment.

How long may it be since you declared your passion?

Max. This morning did I hazard the first word.

Countess. This morning the first time in twenty days? 70

Max. ‘Twas at that hunting-castle, betwixt here

And Nepomuck, where you had joined us, and —

That was the last relay of the whole journey!

In a balcony we were standing mute,

And gazing out upon the dreary field: 75

Before us the dragoons were riding onward,

The safeguard which the Duke had sent us — heavy

The inquietude of parting lay upon me,

And trembling ventured I at length these words:

This all reminds me, noble maiden, that 80

To-day I must take leave of my good fortune.

A few hours more, and you will find a father,

Will see yourself surrounded by new friends,

And I henceforth shall be but as a stranger,

Lost in the many—’Speak with my aunt Tertsky!’ 85

With hurrying voice she interrupted me.

She faltered. I beheld a glowing red

Possess her beautiful cheeks, and from the ground

Raised slowly up her eye met mine — no longer

Did I control myself.

[The PRINCESS THEKLA appears at the door, and remains

standing, observed by the COUNTESS, but not by

PICCOLOMINI.

With instant boldness 90

I caught her in my arms, my mouth touched hers;

There was a rustling in the room close by;

It parted us—’Twas you. What since has happened,

You know.

Countess. And is it your excess of modesty;

Or are you so incurious, that you do not 95

Ask me too of my secret?

Max. Of your secret?

Countess. Why, yes! When in the instant after you

I stepped into the room, and found my niece there,

What she in this first moment of the heart

Ta’en with surprise —

Max. Well? 100

The Complete Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Illustrated Edition)

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