<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> THE WONDER-WORKING MAGICIAN </h1>
<h2> By Pedro Calderon de la Barca </h2>
<p><br/><br/>TO THE MEMORY OF<br/>
SHELLEY,<br/>
WHOSE ADMIRATION FOR<br/>
"THE LIGHT AND ODOUR OF THE FLOWERY AND STARRY AUTOS"<br/>
IS THE HIGHEST TRIBUTE TO THE BEAUTY OF<br/>
CALDERON'S POETRY,<br/>
<br/>
THIS DRAMA<br/>
IS INSCRIBED.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>PERSONS.</p>
<p>CYPRIAN.<br/>
THE DEMON.<br/>
LELIUS, The Governor of Antioch's Son.<br/>
FLORUS, friend of Lelius.<br/>
MOSCON, Servant of Cyprian.<br/>
CLARIN, Servant of Cyprian.<br/>
THE GOVERNOR OF ANTIOCH.<br/>
FABIUS, his Servant.<br/>
LYSANDER, the reputed Father of Justina.<br/>
JUSTINA.<br/>
LIVIA, her Maid.<br/>
A Servant.<br/>
A Soldier.<br/>
ATTENDANTS, Soldiers, People.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE—Antioch and its environs.<br/></p>
<h1> THE WONDER-WORKING MAGICIAN. </h1>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ACT THE FIRST. </h2>
<p>SCENE I.<br/>
<br/>
A WOOD NEAR ANTIOCH.<br/>
<br/>
Enter CYPPRIAN in a Student's gown, followed by CLARIN and MOSCON, as<br/>
poor Scholars, carrying books.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. In the pleasant solitude<br/>
Of this tranquil spot, this thicket<br/>
Formed of interlacing boughs,<br/>
Buds, and flowers, and shrubs commingled,<br/>
You may leave me, leaving also,<br/>
As my best companions, with me,<br/>
(For I need none else) those books<br/>
Which I bad you to bring hither<br/>
From the house; for while, to-day,<br/>
Antioch, the mighty city,<br/>
Celebrates with such rejoicing<br/>
The great temple newly finished<br/>
Unto Jupiter, the bearing<br/>
Thither, also, of his image<br/>
Publicly, in grant procession,<br/>
To its shrine to be uplifted;—<br/>
I, escaping the confusion<br/>
Of the streets and squares, have flitted<br/>
Hitherward, to spend in study<br/>
What of daylight yet may glimmer.<br/>
Go, enjoy the festival,<br/>
Go to Antioch and mingle<br/>
In its various sports, returning<br/>
When the sun descending sinketh<br/>
To be buried in the waves,<br/>
Which, beneath the dark clouds' fringes,<br/>
Round the royal corse of gold,<br/>
Shine like sepulchres of silver.<br/>
Here you'll find me.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Sir, although<br/>
Most decidedly my wish is<br/>
To behold the sports, yet I<br/>
Cannot go without a whisper<br/>
Of some few five thousand words,<br/>
Which I'll give you in a jiffy.<br/>
Can it be that on a day<br/>
Of such free, such unrestricted<br/>
Revelry, and mirth, and fun,<br/>
You with your old books come hither<br/>
To this country place, rejecting<br/>
All the frolic of the city?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Well, I think my master's right;<br/>
For there's nothing more insipid<br/>
Than a grand procession day,<br/>
Half fandangos, priests, and fiddles.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Clarin, from the first to last,<br/>
All your life you've been a trickster,<br/>
A smart temporizing toady,<br/>
A bold flatterer, a trimmer,<br/>
Since you praise the thoughts of others,<br/>
And ne'er speak your own.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. The civil<br/>
Way to tell a man he lies<br/>
Is to say he's wrong:—you twig me,<br/>
Now I think I speak my mind.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Moscon, Clarin, both I bid ye<br/>
Cease this silly altercation.<br/>
It is ever thus betwixt ye,<br/>
Puffed up with your little knowledge<br/>
Each maintains his own opinion.<br/>
Go, and (as I've said) here seek me<br/>
When night falls, and with the thickness<br/>
Of its shadows veils from view<br/>
This most fair and wondrous system<br/>
Of the universe.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. How comes it,<br/>
That although you have admitted<br/>
'Tis not right to see the feast,<br/>
Yet you go to see it?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Simple<br/>
Is the answer: no one follows<br/>
The advice which he has given<br/>
To another.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON [aside]. To see Livia,<br/>
Would the gods that I were winged.<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN [aside]. If the honest truth were told<br/>
Livia is the girl that gives me<br/>
Something worth the living for.<br/>
Even her very name has in it<br/>
This assurance: 'Livia', yes,<br/>
Minus 'a', I live for 'Livi'.*<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] *This, of course, is a paraphrase of the original, which,<br/>
perhaps, may be given as an explanation.<br/>
"Ilega, 'Livia'.<br/>
Al 'na', y se, Livia, 'liviana'."<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE II.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Now I am alone, and may,<br/>
If my mind can be so lifted,<br/>
Study the great problem which<br/>
Keeps my soul disturbed, bewilder'd,<br/>
Since I read in Pliny's page<br/>
The mysterious words there written.<br/>
Which define a god; because<br/>
It doth seem beyond the limits<br/>
Of my intellect to find<br/>
One who all these signs exhibits.<br/>
This mysterious hidden truth<br/>
Must I seek for.<br/>
[Reads.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE III.<br/>
<br/>
Enter the DEMON, in gala dress. CYPRIAN.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. Though thou givest<br/>
All thy thoughts to the research,<br/>
Cyprian, thou must ever miss it,<br/>
Since I'll hide it from thy mind.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. There's a rustling in this thicket.<br/>
Who is there? who art thou?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Sir,<br/>
A mere stranger, who has ridden<br/>
All this morning up and down<br/>
These dark groves, not knowing whither,<br/>
Having lost my way, my horse,<br/>
To the emerald that encircles,<br/>
With a tapestry of green,<br/>
These lone hills, I've loosed, it gives him<br/>
At the same time food and rest.<br/>
I'm to Antioch bound, on business<br/>
Of importance, my companions<br/>
I have parted from; through listless<br/>
Lapse of thought (a thing that happens<br/>
To the most of earthly pilgrims),<br/>
I have lost my way, and lost<br/>
Comrades, servants, and assistants.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I am much surprised to learn<br/>
That in view of the uplifted<br/>
Towers of Antioch, you thus<br/>
Lost your way. There's not a single<br/>
Path that on this mountain side,<br/>
More or less by feet imprinted,<br/>
But doth lead unto its walls,<br/>
As to its one central limit.<br/>
By whatever path you take,<br/>
You'll go right.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. It is an instance<br/>
Of that ignorance which in sight<br/>
Even of truth the true goal misses.<br/>
And as it appears not wise<br/>
Thus to enter a strange city<br/>
Unattended and unknown,<br/>
Asking even my way, 'tis fitter<br/>
That 'till night doth conquer day,<br/>
Here while light doth last, to linger;<br/>
By your dress and by these books<br/>
Round you, like a learned circle<br/>
Of wise friends, I see you are<br/>
A great student, and the instinct<br/>
Of my soul doth ever draw me<br/>
Unto men to books addicted.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Have you studied much?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Well, no;<br/>
But I've knowledge quite sufficient<br/>
Not to be deemed ignorant.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Then, what sciences know you?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Many.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Why, we cannot reach even one<br/>
After years of studious vigil,<br/>
And can you (what vanity!)<br/>
Without study know so many?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Yes; for I am of a country<br/>
Where the most exalted science<br/>
Needs no study to be known.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Would I were a happy inmate<br/>
Of that country! Here our studies<br/>
Prove our ignorance more.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. No figment<br/>
Is the fact that without study,<br/>
I had the superb ambition<br/>
For the first Professor's chair<br/>
To compete, and thought to win it,<br/>
Having very numerous votes.<br/>
And although I failed, sufficient<br/>
Glory is it to have tried.<br/>
For not always to the winner<br/>
Is the fame. If this you doubt,<br/>
Name the subject of your study,<br/>
And then let us argue on it;<br/>
I not knowing your opinion,<br/>
Even although it be the right,<br/>
Shall the opposite view insist on.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I am greatly gratified<br/>
That you make this proposition.<br/>
Here in Plinius is a passage<br/>
Which much anxious thought doth give me<br/>
How to understand, to know<br/>
Who's the God of whom he has written.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. 'Tis that passage which declares<br/>
(Well I know the words) this dictum:<br/>
"God is one supremest good,<br/>
One pure essence, one existence,<br/>
Self-sustained, all sight, all hands."<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Yes, 'tis true.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. And what is in it<br/>
So abstruse?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I cannot find<br/>
Such a god as Plinius figures.<br/>
If he be the highest good,<br/>
Then is Jupiter deficient<br/>
In that attribute; we see him<br/>
Acting like a mortal sinner<br/>
Many a time,—this, Danae,<br/>
This, Europa, too, doth witness.<br/>
Can then, by the Highest Good,<br/>
All whose actions, all whose instincts,<br/>
Should be sacred and divine,<br/>
Human frailty be committed?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. These are fables which the learned<br/>
First made use of, to exhibit<br/>
Underneath the names of gods<br/>
What in truth was but a hidden<br/>
System of philosophy.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. This reply is not sufficient,<br/>
Since such awe is due to God,<br/>
None should dare to Him attribute,<br/>
None should stain His name with sins,<br/>
Though these sins should be fictitious.<br/>
And considering well the case,<br/>
If the highest good is figured<br/>
By the gods, of course, they must<br/>
Will what is the best and fittest;<br/>
How, then, can some gods wish one thing,<br/>
Some another? This we witness<br/>
In the dubious responses<br/>
Which are by their statues given.<br/>
Here you cannot say I speak of<br/>
Learned abstractions of the ideal.<br/>
To two armies, if two shrines<br/>
Promise give of being victors,<br/>
One, of course, must lose the battle:<br/>
The conclusion is so simple,—<br/>
Need I say it? that two wills,<br/>
Mutually antagonistic,<br/>
Cannot lead unto one end.<br/>
They being thus in opposition,<br/>
One we must consider good,<br/>
One as bad we must consider.<br/>
But an evil will in God<br/>
Would imply a contradiction:<br/>
Then the highest good can dwell not<br/>
Among gods who know division.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. I deny your major, since<br/>
These responses may be given,<br/>
By the oracles, for ends<br/>
Which our intellectual vision<br/>
Cannot reach: 'tis providence.<br/>
Thus more good may have arisen<br/>
To the loser in that battle<br/>
Than its gain could bring the winner.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Granted; but that god ought not,<br/>
For the gods are not malicious,<br/>
To have promised victory;—<br/>
It would have been quite sufficient,<br/>
Without this most false assurance,<br/>
The defeat to have permitted.<br/>
Then if God must be all sight,<br/>
Every god should see distinctly<br/>
With clear vision to the end;<br/>
Seeing THAT, he erred in fixing<br/>
On a false conclusion; then<br/>
Though the deity may with fitness<br/>
Be divided into persons,<br/>
Yet His essence must be single<br/>
In the smallest circumstance.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. It was needful for this business,<br/>
That the oracle should rouse<br/>
The two hosts alike.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. If fitting,<br/>
There were genii that could rouse them<br/>
(Good and bad, as they're distinguished<br/>
By the learned), who are, in fact,<br/>
Spirits who among us mingle,<br/>
And who good and evil acts,<br/>
Evil thoughts, suggest and whisper,<br/>
A convincing argument<br/>
For the immortal soul's existence:<br/>
Of these ministers could God<br/>
Have made use, nor thus exhibit<br/>
He was capable of a lie<br/>
To effect his ends?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Consider,<br/>
That these seeming contradictions<br/>
Cannot our firm faith diminish<br/>
In the oneness of the gods,<br/>
If in things of higher import<br/>
They know naught of dissonance.<br/>
Take man's wondrous frame, for instance,<br/>
Surely that majestic structure<br/>
Once conception doth exhibit.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. If man's maker then were one<br/>
He some vantage must have given him<br/>
O'er the others; and if they<br/>
All are equal,—'tis admitted<br/>
That they are so, from the fact<br/>
Of their mutual opposition<br/>
To each other,—when the thought<br/>
Of creating man was hinted<br/>
By one god, another could<br/>
Say, "No, no, I do not wish it."<br/>
Then if God must be all hands,<br/>
Time might come when they would differ,<br/>
One creating, one undoing,<br/>
Ere the other's work was finished,<br/>
Since the power of each was equal,<br/>
But unequal were their wishes.<br/>
Which of these two powers would conquer?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. On impossible and false issues<br/>
There can be no argument;—<br/>
But your premises admitting,<br/>
Say what then?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. That there must be<br/>
One sole God, all hands, all vision,<br/>
Good Supreme, supreme in grace,<br/>
One who cannot err, omniscient,<br/>
One the highest, none can equal,<br/>
Not beginning, yet the Beginner,<br/>
One pure essence, one sole substance,<br/>
One wise worker, ozone sole willer;—<br/>
And though He in one or two<br/>
Or more persons be distinguished,<br/>
Yet the sovereign Deity<br/>
Must be one, sublime and single,<br/>
The first cause of every cause,<br/>
The first germ of all existence.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. How can I deny so clear,<br/>
[They rise.<br/>
So conclusive a position?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Do you feel it?<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Who would not<br/>
Feel to find another quicker<br/>
In the rivalry of wit?—<br/>
And though I am not deficient<br/>
In an answer, I restrain it,<br/>
Hearing steps approaching hither<br/>
Through the wood; besides 'tis time<br/>
I proceeded to the city.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Go in peace.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON. Remain in peace.—<br/>
[Aside.<br/>
So involved in study IS he,<br/>
That I now must wean him from it,<br/>
Weaving round him the bewitchment<br/>
Of rare beauty. Since I have leave<br/>
To attempt my fires to kindle<br/>
In Justina's breast, one stroke,<br/>
Thus, two vengeances shall give me.<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Never saw I such a man.<br/>
But since still my people linger,<br/>
I, the cause of so much doubt,<br/>
Will now strive to reconsider.<br/>
<br/>
[He resumes his reading, without perceiving<br/>
the approach of those who enter.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE IV.<br/>
<br/>
Enter LELIUS and FLORUS.—CYPRIAN.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Further let us not proceed;<br/>
For these rocks, these boughs so thickly<br/>
Interwoven, that the sun<br/>
Cannot even find admittance,<br/>
Shall be the sole witnesses<br/>
Of our duel.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Then, this instant<br/>
Draw your sword; for here are deeds,<br/>
If in words elsewhere we've striven.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Yes, I know that in the field,<br/>
While the tongue is mute, the glitter<br/>
Of the sword speaks thus.<br/>
[They fight.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What's this?<br/>
Hold, good Florus! Lelius, listen!—<br/>
Here until your rage is calmed,<br/>
Even unarmed I stand betwixt ye.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Thus to interrupt my vengeance,<br/>
Whence, O Cyprian, have you risen<br/>
Like a spectre?<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. A wild wood-god,<br/>
Have you from these tree-trunks issued?<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE V.<br/>
<br/>
Enter MOSCON and CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Yonder, where we left our master,<br/>
I hear sword-strokes; run, run quickly.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Well, except to run away,<br/>
I am anything but nimble;—<br/>
Truly a retiring person.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON and CLARIN. Sir....<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. No more: your gabble irks me.—<br/>
How? What's this? Two noble friends,<br/>
Who in blood, in birth, in lineage,<br/>
Are to-day of Antioch all<br/>
Its expectancy, the city's<br/>
Eye of fashion, one the son<br/>
Of the Governor, of the princely<br/>
House Colalto, one the heir,<br/>
Thus to peril, as of little<br/>
Value, two such precious lives<br/>
To their country and their kindred?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Cyprian, although respect<br/>
Which on many grounds I give thee,<br/>
Holds my sword suspended thus<br/>
In due deference for an instant,—<br/>
To the scabbard's calm repose<br/>
It hath got no power to win it.<br/>
Thou of science knowest more,<br/>
Than the duel, pretermitting<br/>
This, that when two nobles meet<br/>
In the field, no power can link them<br/>
Friends again, save this, that one<br/>
Must his life give as a victim.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. This I also say, and ask thee,<br/>
With thy people, that thou quittest,<br/>
Leaving us to end our quarrel<br/>
Without any help or hindrance.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Though it seems to you my calling<br/>
Makes me know the laws but little<br/>
Of the duel—that strict code<br/>
Valour and vain pride have written,<br/>
You are wrong, for I was born<br/>
With the obligations fitting<br/>
Rank like yours, to know in truth<br/>
Infamy and honour's limits.<br/>
The devotion to my studies<br/>
Has my courage not diminished,<br/>
For they oftentimes shake hands<br/>
Arms and letters as though kinsmen.<br/>
If to meet here in the field<br/>
Was the quarrel's first condition,<br/>
Having met and fought, its lies<br/>
Calumny can never whisper.<br/>
And the cause you thus can tell me<br/>
Of the feud that brings you hither;<br/>
For I promise, if, on hearing<br/>
What to me is thus committed,<br/>
I perceive that satisfaction<br/>
Must on either side be given,<br/>
Here to leave you both alone,<br/>
Unobserved by any witness.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Then on this condition solely,<br/>
That you leave us, when the bitter<br/>
Truth is told, to end our quarrel,<br/>
I to tell the cause am willing.<br/>
I a certain lady love,<br/>
The same lady as his mistress<br/>
Florus also loves; now see,<br/>
How incompatible are our wishes!—<br/>
Since betwixt two jealous nobles<br/>
No mediation is admitted.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. I this lady love so much,<br/>
That the sunlight I would hinder<br/>
From beholding her sweet face.<br/>
Since then all interposition<br/>
Is in vain, pray stand aside,<br/>
And our quarrel let us finish.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Stay, for one more thing I'd know.<br/>
Tell me this of your fair mistress,<br/>
Is she possible to your hopes,<br/>
Or impossible to your wishes?—<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Oh: she is so good and wise,<br/>
That if even the sun enkindled<br/>
Jealousy in the heart of Florus,<br/>
It was jealousy pure and simple,<br/>
Without cause, for even the sun<br/>
Dare not look upon her visage.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Would you marry with her, then?<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. This is all my heart's ambition.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. And would you?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Ah, would to heaven,<br/>
I were destined for such blisses!—<br/>
For although she's very poor,<br/>
Virtue dowers her with its riches.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. If you both aspire to wed her,<br/>
Is it not an act most wicked,<br/>
Most unworthy, thus beforehand<br/>
Her unspotted fame to injure?<br/>
What will say the world, if one<br/>
Of you two shall marry with her<br/>
After having killed the other<br/>
For her sake? The supposition<br/>
Is not probable in fact,<br/>
To imagine it is sufficient.<br/>
I by no means say you should<br/>
Each your chances try to win her<br/>
At one time, for I would blush<br/>
Such a craven proposition<br/>
Came from me, because the lover<br/>
Who could keep his jealousy hidden,<br/>
Would condone even shame thereafter,<br/>
Were the opportunity given;<br/>
But I say that you should learn<br/>
Which of you it is your mistress<br/>
Gives the preference to, then....<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Stay!—<br/>
For it were an act too timid,<br/>
Too faint-hearted thus to ask<br/>
Of a lady such admission<br/>
As the choosing him or me.<br/>
For if me she chose, more fixed<br/>
Is my call for satisfaction;<br/>
For his fault has this addition,<br/>
He loves one who loves but me.<br/>
If to him the choice is given,<br/>
This intensifies my anger<br/>
All the more, that she, my mistress,<br/>
Whom I love, should love another.<br/>
Her selection could do little<br/>
In the matter, which at last<br/>
To our swords should be committed,—<br/>
The accepted for his honour,<br/>
The refused for his dismissal.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. I confess that I adopt<br/>
Altogether that opinion,<br/>
Still the privilege of selection<br/>
May to ladies be permitted;<br/>
So to-day I mean to ask her<br/>
Of her father. 'Tis sufficient<br/>
To have come here to the field,<br/>
And my naked sword uplifted,<br/>
(Specially as one is by<br/>
Who the further fight resisteth,)<br/>
For my honour;—so to sheathe,<br/>
Lelius, my sword I'm willing.<br/>
[Sheathes his sword.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. By your argument and action,<br/>
Florus, you have half convinced me;<br/>
I forego the remaining half—<br/>
True or false, I thus act with you.<br/>
[Sheathes his sword.<br/>
I to-day will seek her father.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. On, of course, the supposition,<br/>
That this lady you pay court to<br/>
Suffers naught by the admission,<br/>
Since you both have spoken proudly<br/>
Of her virtue and her strictness,<br/>
Tell me who she is; for I,<br/>
Who am held throughout the city<br/>
In esteem, would for you both<br/>
Speak to her at first a little<br/>
That she thus may be prepared<br/>
When her father tells your wishes.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. You are right.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Her name?<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Justina,<br/>
Daughter of Lysander.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Little,<br/>
Now that I have heard her name,<br/>
Seem the praises you have given her;<br/>
She is virtuous as she's noble.<br/>
Instantly I'll pay my visit.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside]. May heaven grant that in my favour<br/>
Her cold heart be moved to pity!<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Love, my hopes with laurels crown<br/>
When they are to her submitted!<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Further mischief or misfortune,<br/>
Grant me, heaven, that I may hinder!<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE VI.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON, CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Has your worship heard our master<br/>
Now is gone to pay a visit<br/>
To Justina?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Yes, my lord.<br/>
But what matter if he didn't?<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Matter quite enough, your worship;<br/>
He has no business there.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Why, prithee?<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Why? because I die for Livia,<br/>
Who is maid to this Justina,<br/>
And I wouldn't have even the sun<br/>
Get a glimpse of her through the window.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Well, that's good; but, for a lady,<br/>
To contend were worse than silly,<br/>
Whom I mean to make my wife.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Excellent, faith! the fancy tickles<br/>
Quite my fancy. Let her say<br/>
Who it is that annoys or nicks her<br/>
To a nicety. Let's go see her,<br/>
And she'll choose.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. A good idea!—<br/>
Though I fear she'll pitch on you.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Have you then that wise suspicion?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Yes; for always these same Livias<br/>
Choose the worst, th'ungrateful minxes.*<br/>
[Exeunt.<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] *The 'asonante' versification in 'i-e', which has been<br/>
kept up through these six scenes, ends here. The seventh scene<br/>
commences in rhymed five-line stanzas, which change to the asonante<br/>
in e-e, at the beginning of Lysander's long speech.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE VII.<br/>
<br/>
A HALL IN THE HOUSE OF LYSANDER.<br/>
<br/>
Enter JUSTINA and LYSANDER.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Consolation, sir, is vain,<br/>
After what I've seen to-day:<br/>
The whole city, madly gay,<br/>
Error-blinded and insane,<br/>
Consecrating shrine and fane<br/>
To an image, which I know,<br/>
Cannot be a god, although<br/>
Some demoniac power may pass,<br/>
Making breathe the silent brass<br/>
As a proof that it is so.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Fair Justina, thou indeed,<br/>
Wert not who thou art, if thou<br/>
Didst not weep as thou dost now,<br/>
Didst not in thy pure heart bleed<br/>
For what Christ's divinest creed<br/>
Suffers on this sinful day.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Thus my lineage I display:—<br/>
For thy child I could not be,<br/>
Could I without weeping see<br/>
This idolatrous display.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Ah, my good, my gentle maid!<br/>
Thou art not my daughter, no,<br/>
'Twere too happy, if 'twere so.<br/>
But, O God! what's this I've said?—<br/>
My life's secret is betrayed!<br/>
'Twas my soul that spoke aloud.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. What do you say, sir?<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Oh! a crowd<br/>
Of old thoughts my heart hath stirred.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Many times methought I heard<br/>
What but now you have avowed,<br/>
And yet never wished to hear,<br/>
At the risk perchance of paining,<br/>
A more accurate explaining<br/>
Of your sorrow and my fear;<br/>
But since now it doth appear<br/>
Right that I should be possess'd<br/>
Of the whole truth half confess'd,<br/>
Let me say, though bold appearing,—<br/>
Trust your secret to my hearing,<br/>
Since it hath escaped your breast.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Ah! Justina, I have long<br/>
Kept this secret from your ears,<br/>
Fearing from your tender years<br/>
That the telling might be wrong;<br/>
But now seeing you are strong,<br/>
Firm in thought, in action brave,<br/>
Seeing too, that with this stave,<br/>
I go creeping o'er the ground,<br/>
Rapping with a hollow sound<br/>
At the portals of the grave,<br/>
Knowing that my time is brief,<br/>
I would not here leave you, no,<br/>
In your ignorance; I owe<br/>
My own peace, too, this relief:<br/>
Then attentive to my grief<br/>
Let your pleasure list.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. A fear<br/>
Struggles in my breast.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Severe<br/>
Is the test my duty pays.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. From this most perplexing maze<br/>
Oh, sir, rescue me.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Then hear.<br/>
I, most beautiful Justina,<br/>
Am Lysander.... This commencement<br/>
With my name need not surprise you;<br/>
For though known to you already,<br/>
It is right, for all that follows,<br/>
That it should be well remembered,<br/>
Since of me you know no more<br/>
Than what this my name presenteth.<br/>
Yes, I am Lysander, son<br/>
Of that city which on Seven<br/>
Hills a hydra seems of stone,<br/>
Since it seven proud heads erecteth;<br/>
Of that city now the seat<br/>
Of the mighty Roman empire,<br/>
Cradle of Christ's wider realm,—<br/>
Boon that Rome alone could merit.<br/>
There of poor and humble parents<br/>
I was born, if "poor" expresses<br/>
Well their rank who left behind them<br/>
Virtues, not vain earthly treasures.<br/>
Both of them by birth were Christians,<br/>
Joyful both to be descended<br/>
From brave sires who with their blood<br/>
Happily life's page had reddened,<br/>
Terminating the dull scroll<br/>
With death's bright emblazoned letters.<br/>
In the Christian faith well grounded<br/>
I grew up, and so well learnt it,<br/>
That I would, in its defence,<br/>
Even a thousand lives surrender.<br/>
I was young still, when to Rome,<br/>
In disguise and ill attended,<br/>
Came our good Pope Alexander,<br/>
Who then prudently directed<br/>
The high apostolic see,<br/>
Though its place there was not settled;<br/>
For, as the despotic power<br/>
Of the stern and cruel gentiles<br/>
Satisfies its thirst with blood<br/>
From the martyrs' veins that shed it,<br/>
So must still the primitive church<br/>
Keep concealed its sons and servants;<br/>
Not that they decline to die,<br/>
Not that martyrdom is dreaded<br/>
But that rebel rage should not,<br/>
At one stroke, one hour of vengeance,<br/>
Triumph o'er the ruined church,<br/>
So that no one should be left it<br/>
Who could preach and teach the word,<br/>
Who could catechise the gentile.<br/>
Alexander being in Rome,<br/>
I was secretly presented<br/>
To him there, and from his hand<br/>
Which was graciously extended,<br/>
With his blessing I received<br/>
Holy Orders, which the seraphs<br/>
Well might envy me, since man<br/>
Only such an honour merits.<br/>
Alexander, as my mission,<br/>
Unto Antioch then sent me,<br/>
Where the law of Christ in secret<br/>
I should preach. With glad contentment<br/>
I obeyed, and at their mercy,<br/>
Through so many nations wending,<br/>
Came at length to Antioch;<br/>
And when I, these hills ascending,<br/>
Saw beneath me in the valley<br/>
All its golden towers and temples,<br/>
The sun failed me, and down sinking<br/>
Drew with him the day, presenting<br/>
For my solace a companion,<br/>
And a substitute for his presence<br/>
In the light of stars, a pledge<br/>
That he'd soon return to bless me.<br/>
With the sun I lost my way,<br/>
And then wandering dejected<br/>
Through the windings of the forest,<br/>
Found me in the dim recesses<br/>
Of a natural bower, wherein<br/>
Even the numerous rays that trembled<br/>
Downward from each living torch<br/>
Could in noways find an entrance,<br/>
For to black clouds turned the leaves<br/>
That by day were green with freshness.<br/>
Here arranging to await<br/>
The new sun's reviving presence,<br/>
Giving fancy that full scope,<br/>
That wide range which it possesses,<br/>
I in solitude indulged<br/>
Many and many a deep reflection.<br/>
Thus absorbed was I in thought<br/>
When there came to me the echo<br/>
Of a sigh half heard, for half<br/>
To its owner retroverted.<br/>
Then collecting in mine ear<br/>
All my senses joined together,<br/>
I again heard more distinctly<br/>
That weak cry, that faint expression,<br/>
That mute idiom of the sad,<br/>
Since by it they're comprehended.<br/>
From a woman came that groan<br/>
To whose sigh so low and gentle<br/>
Followed a man's deeper voice,<br/>
Who thus speaking low addressed her:<br/>
"Thou first stain of noblest blood<br/>
By my hands this moment perish,<br/>
Ere thou meetest with thy death<br/>
'Neath the hands of infamous headsmen."—<br/>
Then the hapless woman said<br/>
In a voice that sobbed and trembled,<br/>
"Ah, lament for thine own blood,<br/>
But for me do not lament thee!"—<br/>
I attempted then to reach them,<br/>
That the stroke might be prevented,<br/>
But I could not, since the voices<br/>
At that moment ceased and ended,<br/>
And a horseman rode away<br/>
'Mong the tree-trunks undetected.<br/>
Loadstone of my deep compassion<br/>
Was that voice which still exerted<br/>
All its failing powers to speak<br/>
Amid groans and tears this sentence,—<br/>
"Dying innocent and a Christian<br/>
I a martyr's death may merit."—<br/>
Following the polar-star<br/>
Of the voice, I came directly<br/>
Where the gloom revealed a woman,<br/>
Though I could not well observe her,<br/>
Who in life's despairing struggle,<br/>
Hand to hand with death contended.<br/>
Scarcely was I heard, when she<br/>
Summoning up her strength addressed me,—<br/>
"Blood-stained murderer mine, come back,<br/>
Nor in this last hour desert me<br/>
Of my life."—"I am," said I,<br/>
"Only one whom chance hath sent here,<br/>
Guided it may be by heaven,<br/>
To assist you in this dreadful<br/>
Hour of trial."—"Vain," she said,<br/>
"Is the favour that your mercy<br/>
Offers to my life, for see,<br/>
Drop by drop the life-stream ebbeth,<br/>
Let this hapless one enjoy it,<br/>
Who it seems that heaven intendeth,<br/>
Being born upon my grave,<br/>
All my miseries should inherit."—<br/>
So she died, and then I...<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE VIII.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA, JUSTINA, and LYSANDER.<br/>
<br/>
Enter LIVIA.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Sir,<br/>
The same tradesman who so presses<br/>
To be paid, comes here to seek you,<br/>
By the magistrate attended.<br/>
That you were not in, I told him:<br/>
By that door you have an exit.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. This untimely interruption<br/>
By their coming, how it frets me!<br/>
For upon your tragic story<br/>
Life, soul, reason, all depended!—<br/>
But retire, sir, lest the justice<br/>
Should here meet you, if he enters.<br/>
<br/>
LYSANDER. Ah! with what indignities<br/>
Poverty must be contented!<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. They are coming here, no doubt,<br/>
Outside I can hear some persons.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. No, they are not they. I see<br/>
It is Cyprian.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. How? what sendeth<br/>
Cyprian here?<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE IX.<br/>
<br/>
Enter CYPRIAN, CLARIN, and MOSCON.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. A wish to serve you<br/>
Is the sole cause of my presence.<br/>
For on seeing the officials<br/>
Issuing from your house, the friendship<br/>
Which I owe unto Lysander<br/>
Made me bold herein to enter;<br/>
But to know ([Aside.] Disturbed, bewildered<br/>
Am I.) if by chance ([Aside.] What gelid<br/>
Frost is freezing up my veins!)<br/>
I in any way could help you.<br/>
([Aside.] Ah, how badly have I spoken!—<br/>
Fire not frost my blood possesses!)<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. May heaven guard you many years,<br/>
Since in his more grave concernments,<br/>
Thus you honour my dear father<br/>
With your favours.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I shall ever<br/>
Be most gratified to serve you.<br/>
([Aside.] What disturbs me, what unnerves me?)<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. He is not just now at home.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Thus then, lady, I can better<br/>
Tell you what is the true cause<br/>
That doth bring me here at present;<br/>
For the cause that you have heard<br/>
Is not that which wholly led me<br/>
Here to see you.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Then, what is it?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. This, which craves your brief attention.—<br/>
Fair Justina, beauty's shrine,*<br/>
To whose human loveliness<br/>
Nature, with a fond excess,<br/>
Adds such marks of the divine,<br/>
'Tis your rest that doth incline<br/>
Hither my desire to-day:<br/>
But see what the tyrant sway<br/>
Of despotic fate can do,—<br/>
While I bring your rest to you,<br/>
You from me take mine away.<br/>
Lelius, of his passion proud,<br/>
(Never less was love to blame!)<br/>
Florus, burning with love's flame,<br/>
(Ne'er could flame be more allowed!)<br/>
Each of them by vows they vowed<br/>
Sought to kill his friend for you:<br/>
I for you disturbed the two,<br/>
(Woe is me!) but see the end;<br/>
While from death I saved my friend,<br/>
You my own death give in lieu.<br/>
Lest the scandal-monger's hum<br/>
Should be buzzed about your name,<br/>
Here to speak with you I came,<br/>
(Would that I had never come!)<br/>
That your choice might strike it dumb,<br/>
Being the umpire in the cause,<br/>
Being the judge in love's sweet laws;—<br/>
But behold what I endure,<br/>
While I their sick hearts may cure,<br/>
Jealousy mine own heart gnaws.<br/>
Lady, I proposed to be<br/>
Their bold spokesman here, that you<br/>
Might decide betwixt the two<br/>
Which you would select (ah, me!)<br/>
That I might (oh, misery!)<br/>
Ask you of your father: vain<br/>
This pretence. No more I'll feign:—<br/>
For you see while I am speaking<br/>
About them, my heart is seeking<br/>
But a vent for its own pain.<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] * The five-lined rhymed stanza here recommences, and<br/>
continues to the end of the scene.<br/></p>
<p>JUSTINA. Half in wonder and dismay<br/>
At the vile address you make me,<br/>
Reason, speech, alike forsake me,<br/>
And I know not what to say.<br/>
Never in the slightest way<br/>
Have your clients had from me<br/>
Encouragement for this embassy—<br/>
Florus never—Lelius no:—<br/>
Of the scorn that I can show<br/>
Let then this a warning be.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. If I, knowing that you loved<br/>
Some one else, would dare to seek<br/>
Your regard, my love were weak,<br/>
And could justly be reproved.<br/>
But here seeing you stand unmoved,<br/>
Like a rock mid raging seas,<br/>
No extraneous miseries<br/>
Make me say I love you now.<br/>
'Tis not for my friends I bow,<br/>
So your warning hear with ease.—<br/>
To Lelius what shall I say?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. That he<br/>
Well may trust the boding fears<br/>
Of his love of many years.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. To Florus?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Not my face to see.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. And to myself?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Your love should be<br/>
Not so bold.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Though a god should woo?<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Will a god do more for you<br/>
Than for those I have denied?<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Yes.<br/>
<br/>
JUSTINA. Well then, I have replied<br/>
To Lelius, Florus, and to you.<br/>
[Exeunt JUSTINA and CYPRIAN at opposite sides.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE X.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN, MOSCON, and LIVIA.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Livia, heigh!<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. And Livia, ho!—<br/>
List good lass.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. We're here, we two.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Well, what WANT you, sir? and YOU,<br/>
What do you want?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. We both would show,<br/>
If perchance you do not know,<br/>
That we love you to distraction.<br/>
On a murderous transaction<br/>
We came here, to kill each other:—<br/>
So to put an end to the bother,<br/>
Just choose one for satisfaction.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. Why the thing that you're demanding<br/>
Is so great, it hath bereft me<br/>
Of my wits. My grief hath left me<br/>
Without sense or understanding.<br/>
Choose but one! My heart expanding,<br/>
Beats so hard a strait to shun!<br/>
I one only! 'Tis for fun<br/>
That you ask me so to do.<br/>
For with heart enough for two,<br/>
Why require that I choose one?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Two at once would you have to woo?<br/>
Would not two embarrass you, pray?<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. No, we women have a way<br/>
To dispose of them two by two.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. What's the way? do tell us, do;—<br/>
What is it? speak.<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. You put one out!—<br/>
I would love them, do not doubt....<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. How?<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. ALTERNATIVELY.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Eh,<br/>
What's ALTERNATIVELY?<br/>
<br/>
LIVIA. 'Tis to say,<br/>
That I would love them day about.<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Well, I choose to-day: good-bye.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. I, to-morrow, the better part.<br/>
So I give it with all my heart.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Livia, in fine, for whom I die,<br/>
To-day love me, and to-day love I.<br/>
Happy is he who so much can say.<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Hearken, my friend: you know my way.<br/>
<br/>
MOSCON. Why this speech? Does a threat lie in it?<br/>
<br/>
CLARIN. Mind, she is not yours a minute<br/>
After the clock strikes twelve to-day.<br/>
[Exeunt.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XI.<br/>
<br/>
THE STREET BEFORE LYSANDER'S HOUSE: NIGHT<br/>
<br/>
Enter FLORUS and LELIUS at opposite sides, not seeing each other.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. Scarcely has the darksome night<br/>
O'er the brow of heaven extended*<br/>
Its black veil, when I come hither<br/>
To adore this sacred threshold;<br/>
For although at Cyprian's prayer,<br/>
I my sharp sword have suspended,<br/>
I have not my love, for love<br/>
Cannot be suspended ever.<br/></p>
<p>[footnote] *Asonante in e-e, to the end of the Act.<br/></p>
<p>FLORUS [aside]. Here the dawn will find me waiting:—<br/>
Here, because 'tis force compels me<br/>
To go hence, for I, elsewhere,<br/>
Am away from my true centre.<br/>
Would to love the day had come,<br/>
And with it the dear, expected<br/>
Answer Cyprian may bring me,<br/>
Risking all upon that venture.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. I have surely in that window<br/>
Heard a noise.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside]. Some sound descends here<br/>
From that balcony.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XII.<br/>
<br/>
The Demon appears at a window in the house of LYSANDER.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. A figure<br/>
Issues from it, whose dim presence<br/>
I distinguish.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside]. Through the darkness<br/>
I can there perceive some person.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. For the many persecutions<br/>
O'er Justina's head impending,<br/>
Her pure honour to defame<br/>
Thus I make a bold commencement.<br/>
[He descends by a ladder.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. But, O woe! what's this I witness!—<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside]. What do I see! Oh, wretched! wretched!—<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. From the balcony to the ground<br/>
The dark figure has descended.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS [aside]. From her house a man comes forth!—<br/>
Jealousy kill me not, preserve me,<br/>
'Till I discover who he is.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS [aside]. I will try to intercept him<br/>
And find out at once who thus<br/>
Tastes the bliss I've lost for ever.<br/>
<br/>
[They advance with drawn swords to recognise<br/>
the person who has descended.<br/>
<br/>
DEMON [aside]. Not alone Justina's fame<br/>
Do I by this act discredit,<br/>
But dissensions, perhaps murders,<br/>
Thus provoke. Ope, earth's dark centre,<br/>
And receive me, leaving here<br/>
This confusion<br/>
[He disappears between FLORUS and LELIUS, who meet together.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XIII.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS and LELIUS.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Sir, whoever<br/>
You may be, it doth import me<br/>
To know who you are directly;<br/>
So at every risk I come here,<br/>
On this resolute quest determined.<br/>
Say who are you.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. If the accident<br/>
Of my having been the observer<br/>
Of your secret love, compels you<br/>
To this valorous aggression,<br/>
More than it can you concern<br/>
Me to know, it doth concern me<br/>
To know you; for to be curious<br/>
Is far less than to be jealous.<br/>
Yes, by Heaven! for who is master<br/>
Of the house have I to learn here,<br/>
Who it is at such an hour,<br/>
By this balcony ascending,<br/>
Gaineth that which I lose weeping<br/>
At these gratings.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. This excelleth,<br/>
Good, in faith, is it thus to dim<br/>
The clear light of my resentment,<br/>
By attributing to me<br/>
That which solely your offence is!—<br/>
Who you are I have to know,<br/>
Death to give to him who has left me<br/>
Dead with jealousy here, by coming<br/>
From this balcony.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. How excessive<br/>
How superfluous is this caution,<br/>
Proving what it would dissemble!<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Vainly would the tongue untangle<br/>
That which the keen sword can better<br/>
Thus cut through.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. With it I answer.<br/>
[They fight.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. In this way I'll know for certain<br/>
Who is the admitted lover<br/>
Of Justina.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. My intention<br/>
Is the same. I'll die or know you.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XIV.<br/>
<br/>
Enter CYPRIAN, MOSCON, and CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Gentlemen, I pray you let me<br/>
Interpose in this your quarrel,<br/>
Since by accident I am present.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. You cannot oblige me more<br/>
Than by letting the fight be ended.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. Florus?<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Yes, for sword in hand,<br/>
I my name deny not ever<br/>
To who asks.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I'm at your side,<br/>
Death to him who would offend you.<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. You produce in me less fear,<br/>
Both of you thus joined together,<br/>
Than did he alone.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. What! Lelius?<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Yes.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. I am prevented<br/>
[To Florus.<br/>
Now from standing at your side,<br/>
Since between you I present me.<br/>
How is this? In one day twice<br/>
Have I your disputes to settle!—<br/>
<br/>
LELIUS. Then this time will be the last,<br/>
For we've settled them already;<br/>
Since in knowing who is he<br/>
Who Justina's heart possesses,<br/>
Now no more my hope remaineth,<br/>
Even the thought of it hath left me.<br/>
If you have not to Justina<br/>
Spoken yet, do not address her;<br/>
This I ask you in the name<br/>
Of my wrongs and my resentments,<br/>
Having seen her secret favours<br/>
Florus' happier fate deserveth.<br/>
From this balcony I saw him,<br/>
From my lost delight descending;<br/>
And my heart is not so base<br/>
As to meanly love, in presence<br/>
Of such jealousies so well proved,<br/>
Of disillusions, ah! so certain.<br/>
[Exit.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Stay.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XV.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN. You must not follow him,<br/>
[Aside. (Oh, this news with death o'erwhelms me!)<br/>
Since if he who is the loser<br/>
Of what you have gained, expressly<br/>
Says he would forget it, you<br/>
Should not try his patient temper.<br/>
<br/>
FLORUS. Both by you and him at once<br/>
Has mine own been too well tested.<br/>
Speak not now unto Justina<br/>
About me; for though full vengeance<br/>
I propose to take for being<br/>
Thus supplanted and rejected,<br/>
Every hope of her being mine<br/>
Now has ceased, for shameful were it,<br/>
In the face of such proved facts,<br/>
To persist in my addresses.<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>SCENE XVI.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN, MOSCON, and CLARIN.<br/>
<br/>
CYPRIAN [aside]. What is this, O heavens! I hear?<br/>
Can it be the two are jealous<br/>
Of each other at one time?<br/>
And I too of both together?—<br/>
Doubtless from some strange delusion<br/>
The two suffer, which I welcome<br/>
With a sort of satisfaction,<br/>
For to it I am indebted<br/>
For the fact of their desisting<br/>
From their suit and their pretension.—<br/>
Moscon, have for me by morning<br/>
A rich court-suit; sword and feathers,<br/>
Clarin, be thy care; for love<br/>
In a certain airy splendour<br/>
Takes delight; for now no longer<br/>
Books or studies give me pleasure;—<br/>
Love they say doth murder mind,<br/>
Learning dies when he is present.<br/>
[Exeunt.<br/></p>
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