<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ACT II. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SCENE I. </h2>
<p>London, a Hall in the Palace of Westminster. The EARL OF KENT<br/>
and SIR WILLIAM DAVISON meeting.<br/>
<br/>
DAVISON.<br/>
Is that my Lord of Kent? So soon returned?<br/>
Is then the tourney, the carousal over?<br/>
<br/>
KENT.<br/>
How now? Were you not present at the tilt?<br/>
<br/>
DAVISON.<br/>
My office kept me here.<br/>
<br/>
KENT.<br/>
Believe me, sir,<br/>
You've lost the fairest show which ever state<br/>
Devised, or graceful dignity performed:<br/>
For beauty's virgin fortress was presented<br/>
As by desire invested; the Earl-Marshal,<br/>
The Lord-High Admiral, and ten other knights<br/>
Belonging to the queen defended it,<br/>
And France's cavaliers led the attack.<br/>
A herald marched before the gallant troop,<br/>
And summoned, in a madrigal, the fortress;<br/>
And from the walls the chancellor replied;<br/>
And then the artillery was played, and nosegays<br/>
Breathing delicious fragrance were discharged<br/>
From neat field-pieces; but in vain, the storm<br/>
Was valiantly resisted, and desire<br/>
Was forced, unwillingly, to raise the siege.<br/>
<br/>
DAVISON.<br/>
A sign of evil-boding, good my lord,<br/>
For the French Suitors.<br/>
<br/>
KENT.<br/>
Why, you know that this<br/>
Was but in sport; when the attack's in earnest<br/>
The fortress will, no doubt, capitulate.<br/>
<br/>
DAVISON.<br/>
Ha! think you so? I never can believe it.<br/>
<br/>
KENT.<br/>
The hardest article of all is now<br/>
Adjusted and acceded to by France;<br/>
The Duke of Anjou is content to hold<br/>
His holy worship in a private chapel;<br/>
And openly he promises to honor<br/>
And to protect the realm's established faith.<br/>
Had ye but heard the people's joyful shouts<br/>
Where'er the tidings spread, for it has been<br/>
The country's constant fear the queen might die<br/>
Without immediate issue of her body;<br/>
And England bear again the Romish chains<br/>
If Mary Stuart should ascend the throne.<br/>
<br/>
DAVISON.<br/>
This fear appears superfluous; she goes<br/>
Into the bridal chamber; Mary Stuart<br/>
Enters the gates of death.<br/>
<br/>
KENT.<br/>
The queen approaches.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SCENE II. </h2>
<p>Enter ELIZABETH, led in by LEICESTER, COUNT AUBESPINE,<br/>
BELLIEVRE, LORDS SHREWSBURY and BURLEIGH, with other<br/>
French and English gentlemen.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH (to AUBESPINE).<br/>
Count, I am sorry for these noblemen<br/>
Whose gallant zeal hath brought them over sea<br/>
To visit these our shores, that they, with us,<br/>
Must miss the splendor of St. Germain's court.<br/>
Such pompous festivals of godlike state<br/>
I cannot furnish as the royal court<br/>
Of France. A sober and contented people,<br/>
Which crowd around me with a thousand blessings<br/>
Whene'er in public I present myself:<br/>
This is the spectacle which I can show,<br/>
And not without some pride, to foreign eyes.<br/>
The splendor of the noble dames who bloom<br/>
In Catherine's beauteous garden would, I know,<br/>
Eclipse myself, and my more modest merits.<br/>
<br/>
AUBESPINE.<br/>
The court of England has one lady only<br/>
To show the wondering foreigner; but all<br/>
That charms our hearts in the accomplished sex<br/>
Is seen united in her single person.<br/>
<br/>
BELLIEVRE.<br/>
Great majesty of England, suffer us<br/>
To take our leave, and to our royal master,<br/>
The Duke of Anjou, bring the happy news.<br/>
The hot impatience of his heart would not<br/>
Permit him to remain at Paris; he<br/>
At Amiens awaits the joyful tidings;<br/>
And thence to Calais reach his posts to bring<br/>
With winged swiftness to his tranced ear<br/>
The sweet consent which, still we humbly hope,<br/>
Your royal lips will graciously pronounce.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Press me no further now, Count Bellievre.<br/>
It is not now a time, I must repeat,<br/>
To kindle here the joyful marriage torch.<br/>
The heavens lower black and heavy o'er this land;<br/>
And weeds of mourning would become me better<br/>
Than the magnificence of bridal robes.<br/>
A fatal blow is aimed against my heart;<br/>
A blow which threatens to oppress my house.<br/>
<br/>
BELLIEVRE.<br/>
We only ask your majesty to promise<br/>
Your royal hand when brighter days shall come.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Monarchs are but the slaves of their condition;<br/>
They dare not hear the dictates of their hearts;<br/>
My wish was ever to remain unmarried,<br/>
And I had placed my greatest pride in this,<br/>
That men hereafter on my tomb might read,<br/>
"Here rests the virgin queen." But my good subjects<br/>
Are not content that this should be: they think,<br/>
E'en now they often think upon the time<br/>
When I shall be no more. 'Tis not enough<br/>
That blessings now are showered upon this land;<br/>
They ask a sacrifice for future welfare,<br/>
And I must offer up my liberty,<br/>
My virgin liberty, my greatest good,<br/>
To satisfy my people. Thus they'd force<br/>
A lord and master on me. 'Tis by this<br/>
I see that I am nothing but a woman<br/>
In their regard; and yet methought that I<br/>
Had governed like a man, and like a king.<br/>
Well wot I that it is not serving God<br/>
To quit the laws of nature; and that those<br/>
Who here have ruled before me merit praise,<br/>
That they have oped the cloister gates, and given<br/>
Thousands of victims of ill-taught devotion<br/>
Back to the duties of humanity.<br/>
But yet a queen who hath not spent her days<br/>
In fruitless, idle contemplation; who,<br/>
Without murmur, indefatigably<br/>
Performs the hardest of all duties; she<br/>
Should be exempted from that natural law<br/>
Which doth ordain one half of human kind<br/>
Shall ever be subservient to the other.<br/>
<br/>
AUBESPINE.<br/>
Great queen, you have upon your throne done honor<br/>
To every virtue; nothing now remains<br/>
But to the sex, whose greatest boast you are<br/>
To be the leading star, and give the great<br/>
Example of its most consistent duties.<br/>
'Tis true, the man exists not who deserves<br/>
That you to him should sacrifice your freedom;<br/>
Yet if a hero's soul, descent, and rank,<br/>
And manly beauty can make mortal man<br/>
Deserving of this honor——<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Without doubt,<br/>
My lord ambassador, a marriage union<br/>
With France's royal son would do me honor;<br/>
Yes, I acknowledge it without disguise,<br/>
If it must be, if I cannot prevent it,<br/>
If I must yield unto my people's prayers,<br/>
And much I fear they will o'erpower me,<br/>
I do not know in Europe any prince<br/>
To whom with less reluctance I would yield<br/>
My greatest treasure, my dear liberty.<br/>
Let this confession satisfy your master.<br/>
<br/>
BELLIEVRE.<br/>
It gives the fairest hope, and yet it gives<br/>
Nothing but hope; my master wishes more.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
What wishes he?<br/>
[She takes a ring from her finger, and thoughtfully examines it.<br/>
In this a queen has not<br/>
One privilege above all other women.<br/>
This common token marks one common duty,<br/>
One common servitude; the ring denotes<br/>
Marriage, and 'tis of rings a chain is formed.<br/>
Convey this present to his highness; 'tis<br/>
As yet no chain, it binds me not as yet,<br/>
But out of it may grow a link to bind me.<br/>
<br/>
BELLIEVRE (kneeling).<br/>
This present, in his name, upon my knees,<br/>
I do receive, great queen, and press the kiss<br/>
Of homage on the hand of her who is<br/>
Henceforth my princess.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH (to the EARL OF LEICESTER, whom she, during the last speeches,<br/>
had continually regarded).<br/>
By your leave, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
[She takes the blue ribbon from his neck [1], and invests Bellievre<br/>
with it.<br/>
<br/>
Invest his highness with this ornament,<br/>
As I invest you with it, and receive you<br/>
Into the duties of my gallant order.<br/>
And, "Honi soit qui mal y pense." Thus perish<br/>
All jealousy between our several realms,<br/>
And let the bond of confidence unite<br/>
Henceforth, the crowns of Britain and of France.<br/>
<br/>
BELLIEVRE.<br/>
Most sovereign queen, this is a day of joy;<br/>
Oh that it could be so for all, and no<br/>
Afflicted heart within this island mourn.<br/>
See! mercy beams upon thy radiant brow;<br/>
Let the reflection of its cheering light<br/>
Fall on a wretched princess, who concerns<br/>
Britain and France alike.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
No further, count!<br/>
Let us not mix two inconsistent things;<br/>
If France be truly anxious for my hand,<br/>
It must partake my interests, and renounce<br/>
Alliance with my foes.<br/>
<br/>
AUBESPINE.<br/>
In thine own eyes<br/>
Would she not seem to act unworthily,<br/>
If in this joyous treaty she forgot<br/>
This hapless queen, the widow of her king;<br/>
In whose behalf her honor and her faith<br/>
Are bound to plead for grace.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Thus urged, I know<br/>
To rate this intercession at its worth;<br/>
France has discharged her duties as a friend,<br/>
I will fulfil my own as England's queen.<br/>
<br/>
[She bows to the French ambassadors, who, with the other<br/>
gentlemen, retire respectfully.<br/></p>
<p>[Till the time of Charles the First, the Knights of the Garter<br/>
wore the blue ribbon with the George about their necks, as they<br/>
still do the collars, on great days.—TRANSLATOR.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SCENE III. </h2>
<p>Enter BURLEIGH, LEICESTER, and TALBOT.<br/>
The QUEEN takes her seat.<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH.<br/>
Illustrious sovereign, thou crown'st to-day<br/>
The fervent wishes of thy people; now<br/>
We can rejoice in the propitious days<br/>
Which thou bestowest upon us; and we look<br/>
No more with fear and trembling towards the time<br/>
Which, charged with storms, futurity presented.<br/>
Now, but one only care disturbs this land;<br/>
It is a sacrifice which every voice<br/>
Demands; Oh! grant but this and England's peace<br/>
Will be established now and evermore.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
What wish they still, my lord? Speak.<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH.<br/>
They demand<br/>
The Stuart's head. If to thy people thou<br/>
Wouldst now secure the precious boon of freedom,<br/>
And the fair light of truth so dearly won,<br/>
Then she must die; if we are not to live<br/>
In endless terror for thy precious life<br/>
The enemy must fall; for well thou know'st<br/>
That all thy Britons are not true alike;<br/>
Romish idolatry has still its friends<br/>
In secret, in this island, who foment<br/>
The hatred of our enemies. Their hearts<br/>
All turn toward this Stuart; they are leagued<br/>
With the two plotting brothers of Lorrain,<br/>
The foes inveterate of thy house and name.<br/>
'Gainst thee this raging faction hath declared<br/>
A war of desolation, which they wage<br/>
With the deceitful instruments of hell.<br/>
At Rheims, the cardinal archbishop's see,<br/>
There is the arsenal from which they dart<br/>
These lightnings; there the school of regicide;<br/>
Thence, in a thousand shapes disguised, are sent<br/>
Their secret missionaries to this isle;<br/>
Their bold and daring zealots; for from thence<br/>
Have we not seen the third assassin come?<br/>
And inexhausted is the direful breed<br/>
Of secret enemies in this abyss.<br/>
While in her castle sits at Fotheringay,<br/>
The Ate <SPAN href="#linknote-1" name="linknoteref-1" id="linknoteref-1">1</SPAN> of this everlasting war,<br/>
Who, with the torch of love, spreads flames around;<br/>
For her who sheds delusive hopes on all,<br/>
Youth dedicates itself to certain death;<br/>
To set her free is the pretence—the aim<br/>
Is to establish her upon the throne.<br/>
For this accursed House of Guise denies<br/>
Thy sacred right; and in their mouths thou art<br/>
A robber of the throne, whom chance has crowned.<br/>
By them this thoughtless woman was deluded,<br/>
Proudly to style herself the Queen of England;<br/>
No peace can be with her, and with her house;<br/>
[Their hatred is too bloody, and their crimes<br/>
Too great;] thou must resolve to strike, or suffer—<br/>
Her life is death to thee, her death thy life.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
My lord, you bear a melancholy office;<br/>
I know the purity which guides your zeal,<br/>
The solid wisdom which informs your speech;<br/>
And yet I hate this wisdom, when it calls<br/>
For blood, I hate it in my inmost soul.<br/>
Think of a milder counsel—Good my Lord<br/>
Of Shrewsbury, we crave your judgment here.<br/>
<br/>
TALBOT.<br/>
[Desire you but to know, most gracious queen,<br/>
What is for your advantage, I can add<br/>
Nothing to what my lord high-treasurer<br/>
Has urged; then, for your welfare, let the sentence<br/>
Be now confirmed—this much is proved already:<br/>
There is no surer method to avert<br/>
The danger from your head and from the state.<br/>
Should you in this reject our true advice,<br/>
You can dismiss your council. We are placed<br/>
Here as your counsellors, but to consult<br/>
The welfare of this land, and with our knowledge<br/>
And our experience we are bound to serve you!<br/>
But in what's good and just, most gracious queen,<br/>
You have no need of counsellors, your conscience<br/>
Knows it full well, and it is written there.<br/>
Nay, it were overstepping our commission<br/>
If we attempted to instruct you in it.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Yet speak, my worthy Lord of Shrewsbury,<br/>
'Tis not our understanding fails alone,<br/>
Our heart too feels it wants some sage advice.]<br/>
<br/>
TALBOT.<br/>
Well did you praise the upright zeal which fires<br/>
Lord Burleigh's loyal breast; my bosom, too,<br/>
Although my tongue be not so eloquent,<br/>
Beats with no weaker, no less faithful pulse.<br/>
Long may you live, my queen, to be the joy<br/>
Of your delighted people, to prolong<br/>
Peace and its envied blessings in this realm.<br/>
Ne'er hath this isle beheld such happy days<br/>
Since it was governed by its native kings.<br/>
Oh, let it never buy its happiness<br/>
With its good name; at least, may Talbot's eyes<br/>
Be closed in death e'er this shall come to pass.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Forbid it, heaven, that our good name be stained!<br/>
<br/>
TALBOT.<br/>
Then must you find some other way than this<br/>
To save thy kingdom, for the sentence passed<br/>
Of death against the Stuart is unjust.<br/>
You cannot upon her pronounce a sentence<br/>
Who is not subject to you.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Then, it seems,<br/>
My council and my parliament have erred;<br/>
Each bench of justice in the land is wrong,<br/>
Which did with one accord admit this right.<br/>
<br/>
TALBOT (after a pause).<br/>
The proof of justice lies not in the voice<br/>
Of numbers; England's not the world, nor is<br/>
Thy parliament the focus, which collects<br/>
The vast opinion of the human race.<br/>
This present England is no more the future<br/>
Than 'tis the past; as inclination changes,<br/>
Thus ever ebbs and flows the unstable tide<br/>
Of public judgment. Say not, then, that thou<br/>
Must act as stern necessity compels,<br/>
That thou must yield to the importunate<br/>
Petitions of thy people; every hour<br/>
Thou canst experience that thy will is free.<br/>
Make trial, and declare thou hatest blood,<br/>
And that thou wilt protect thy sister's life;<br/>
Show those who wish to give thee other counsels,<br/>
That here thy royal anger is not feigned,<br/>
And thou shalt see how stern necessity<br/>
Can vanish, and what once was titled justice<br/>
Into injustice be converted: thou<br/>
Thyself must pass the sentence, thou alone<br/>
Trust not to this unsteady, trembling reed,<br/>
But hear the gracious dictates of thy heart.<br/>
God hath not planted rigor in the frame<br/>
Of woman; and the founders of this realm,<br/>
Who to the female hand have not denied<br/>
The reins of government, intend by this<br/>
To show that mercy, not severity,<br/>
Is the best virtue to adorn a crown.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Lord Shrewsbury is a fervent advocate<br/>
For mine and England's enemy; I must<br/>
Prefer those counsellors who wish my welfare.<br/>
<br/>
TALBOT.<br/>
Her advocates have an invidious task!<br/>
None will, by speaking in her favor, dare<br/>
To meet thy anger: stiffer, then, an old<br/>
And faithful counsellor (whom naught on earth<br/>
Can tempt on the grave's brink) to exercise<br/>
The pious duty of humanity.<br/>
It never shall be said that, in thy council,<br/>
Passion and interest could find a tongue,<br/>
While mercy's pleading voice alone was mute,<br/>
All circumstances have conspired against her;<br/>
Thou ne'er hast seen her face, and nothing speaks<br/>
Within thy breast for one that's stranger to thee.<br/>
I do not take the part of her misdeeds;<br/>
They say 'twas she who planned her husband's murder:<br/>
'Tis true that she espoused his murderer.<br/>
A grievous crime, no doubt; but then it happened<br/>
In darksome days of trouble and dismay,<br/>
In the stern agony of civil war,<br/>
When she, a woman, helpless and hemmed in<br/>
By a rude crowd of rebel vassals, sought<br/>
Protection in a powerful chieftain's arms.<br/>
God knows what arts were used to overcome her!<br/>
For woman is a weak and fragile thing.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Woman's not weak; there are heroic souls<br/>
Among the sex; and, in my presence, sir,<br/>
I do forbid to speak of woman's weakness.<br/>
<br/>
TALBOT.<br/>
Misfortune was for thee a rigid school;<br/>
Thou wast not stationed on the sunny side<br/>
Of life; thou sawest no throne, from far, before thee;<br/>
The grave was gaping for thee at thy feet.<br/>
At Woodstock, and in London's gloomy tower,<br/>
'Twas there the gracious father of this land<br/>
Taught thee to know thy duty, by misfortune.<br/>
No flatterer sought thee there: there learned thy soul,<br/>
Far from the noisy world and its distractions,<br/>
To commune with itself, to think apart,<br/>
And estimate the real goods of life.<br/>
No God protected this poor sufferer:<br/>
Transplanted in her early youth to France,<br/>
The court of levity and thoughtless joys,<br/>
There, in the round of constant dissipation,<br/>
She never heard the earnest voice of truth;<br/>
She was deluded by the glare of vice,<br/>
And driven onward by the stream of ruin.<br/>
Hers was the vain possession of a face,<br/>
And she outshone all others of her sex<br/>
As far in beauty, as in noble birth.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Collect yourself, my Lord of Shrewsbury;<br/>
Bethink you we are met in solemn council.<br/>
Those charms must surely be without compare,<br/>
Which can engender, in an elder's blood,<br/>
Such fire. My Lord of Leicester, you alone<br/>
Are silent; does the subject which has made<br/>
Him eloquent, deprive you of your speech?<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Amazement ties my tongue, my queen, to think<br/>
That they should fill thy soul with such alarms,<br/>
And that the idle tales, which, in the streets,<br/>
Of London, terrify the people's ears,<br/>
Should reach the enlightened circle of thy council,<br/>
And gravely occupy our statesmen's minds.<br/>
Astonishment possesses me, I own,<br/>
To think this lackland Queen of Scotland, she<br/>
Who could not save her own poor throne, the jest<br/>
Of her own vassals, and her country's refuse,<br/>
[Who in her fairest days of freedom, was<br/>
But thy despised puppet,] should become<br/>
At once thy terror when a prisoner.<br/>
What, in Heaven's name, can make her formidable?<br/>
That she lays claim to England? that the Guises<br/>
Will not acknowledge thee as queen?<br/>
[Did then Thy people's loyal fealty await<br/>
These Guises' approbation?] Can these Guises,<br/>
With their objections, ever shake the right<br/>
Which birth hath given thee; which, with one consent,<br/>
The votes of parliament have ratified?<br/>
And is not she, by Henry's will, passed o'er<br/>
In silence? Is it probable that England,<br/>
As yet so blessed in the new light's enjoyment,<br/>
Should throw itself into this papist's arms?<br/>
From thee, the sovereign it adores, desert<br/>
To Darnley's murderess? What will they then,<br/>
These restless men, who even in thy lifetime<br/>
Torment thee with a successor; who cannot<br/>
Dispose of thee in marriage soon enough<br/>
To rescue church and state from fancied peril?<br/>
Stand'st thou not blooming there in youthful prime<br/>
While each step leads her towards the expecting tomb?<br/>
By Heavens, I hope thou wilt full many a year<br/>
Walk o'er the Stuart's grave, and ne'er become<br/>
Thyself the instrument of her sad end.<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH.<br/>
Lord Leicester hath not always held this tone.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
'Tis true, I in the court of justice gave<br/>
My verdict for her death; here, in the council,<br/>
I may consistently speak otherwise<br/>
Here, right is not the question, but advantage.<br/>
Is this a time to fear her power, when France,<br/>
Her only succor, has abandoned her?<br/>
When thou preparest with thy hand to bless<br/>
The royal son of France, when the fair hope<br/>
Of a new, glorious stem of sovereigns<br/>
Begins again to blossom in this land?<br/>
Why hasten then her death? She's dead already.<br/>
Contempt and scorn are death to her; take heed<br/>
Lest ill-timed pity call her into life.<br/>
'Tis therefore my advice to leave the sentence,<br/>
By which her life is forfeit, in full force.<br/>
Let her live on; but let her live beneath<br/>
The headsman's axe, and, from the very hour<br/>
One arm is lifted for her, let it fall.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH (rises).<br/>
My lords, I now have heard your several thoughts,<br/>
And give my ardent thanks for this your zeal.<br/>
With God's assistance, who the hearts of kings<br/>
Illumines, I will weigh your arguments,<br/>
And choose what best my judgment shall approve.<br/>
<br/>
[To BURLEIGH.<br/>
<br/>
[Lord Burleigh's honest fears, I know it well,<br/>
Are but the offspring of his faithful care;<br/>
But yet, Lord Leicester has most truly said,<br/>
There is no need of haste; our enemy<br/>
Hath lost already her most dangerous sting—<br/>
The mighty arm of France: the fear that she<br/>
Might quickly be the victim of their zeal<br/>
Will curb the blind impatience of her friends.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#linknoteref-1" name="linknote-1" id="linknote-1">1</SPAN> The picture of Ate, the goddess of mischief, we are acquainted<br/>
with from Homer, II. v. 91, 130. I. 501. She is a daughter of<br/>
Jupiter, and eager to prejudice every one, even the immortal gods.<br/>
She counteracted Jupiter himself, on which account he seized her by<br/>
her beautiful hair, and hurled her from heaven to the earth, where<br/>
she now, striding over the heads of men, excites them to evil in<br/>
order to involve them in calamity.—HERDER.<br/>
<br/>
Shakspeare has, in Julius Caesar, made a fine use of this image:—<br/>
<br/>
"And Caesar's spirit ranging for revenge<br/>
with Ate by his side, come hot from hell,<br/>
Shall in these confines, with a monarch's voice,<br/>
Cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of war."<br/>
<br/>
I need not point out to the reader the beautiful propriety of<br/>
introducing the evil spirit on this occasion.—TRANSLATOR.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SCENE IV. </h2>
<p>Enter SIR AMIAS PAULET and MORTIMER.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
There's Sir Amias Paulet; noble sir,<br/>
What tidings bring you?<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
Gracious sovereign,<br/>
My nephew, who but lately is returned<br/>
From foreign travel, kneels before thy feet,<br/>
And offers thee his first and earliest homage,<br/>
Grant him thy royal grace, and let him grow<br/>
And flourish in the sunshine of thy favor.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER (kneeling on one knee).<br/>
Long live my royal mistress! Happiness<br/>
And glory from a crown to grace her brows!<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Arise, sir knight; and welcome here in England;<br/>
You've made, I hear, the tour, have been in France<br/>
And Rome, and tarried, too, some time at Rheims:<br/>
Tell me what plots our enemies are hatching?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
May God confound them all! And may the darts<br/>
Which they shall aim against my sovereign,<br/>
Recoiling, strike their own perfidious breasts!<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Did you see Morgan, and the wily Bishop<br/>
Of Ross?<br/></p>
<p>MORTIMER.<br/>
I saw, my queen, all Scottish exiles<br/>
Who forge at Rheims their plots against this realm.<br/>
I stole into their confidence in hopes<br/>
To learn some hint of their conspiracies.<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
Private despatches they intrusted to him,<br/>
In cyphers, for the Queen of Scots, which he,<br/>
With loyal hand, hath given up to us.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Say, what are then their latest plans of treason?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
It struck them all as 'twere a thunderbolt,<br/>
That France should leave them, and with England close<br/>
This firm alliance; now they turn their hopes<br/>
Towards Spain——<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
This, Walsingham hath written us.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Besides, a bull, which from the Vatican<br/>
Pope Sixtus lately levelled at thy throne,<br/>
Arrived at Rheims, as I was leaving it;<br/>
With the next ship we may expect it here.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
England no more is frightened by such arms.<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH.<br/>
They're always dangerous in bigots' hands.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH (looking steadfastly at MORTIMER).<br/>
Your enemies have said that you frequented<br/>
The schools at Rheims, and have abjured your faith.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
So I pretended, that I must confess;<br/>
Such was my anxious wish to serve my queen.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH (to PAULET, who presents papers to her).<br/>
What have you there?<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
'Tis from the Queen of Scots.<br/>
'Tis a petition, and to thee addressed.<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH (hastily catching at it).<br/>
Give me the paper.<br/>
<br/>
PAULET (giving it to the QUEEN).<br/>
By your leave, my lord<br/>
High-treasurer; the lady ordered me<br/>
To bring it to her majesty's own hands.<br/>
She says I am her enemy; I am<br/>
The enemy of her offences only,<br/>
And that which is consistent with my duty<br/>
I will, and readily, oblige her in.<br/>
<br/>
[The QUEEN takes the letter: as she reads it MORTIMER<br/>
and LEICESTER speak some words in private.<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH (to PAULET).<br/>
What may the purport of the letter be?<br/>
Idle complaints, from which one ought to screen<br/>
The queen's too tender heart.<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
What it contains<br/>
She did not hide from me; she asks a boon;<br/>
She begs to be admitted to the grace<br/>
Of speaking with the queen.<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH.<br/>
It cannot be.<br/>
<br/>
TALBOT.<br/>
Why not? Her supplication's not unjust.<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH.<br/>
For her, the base encourager of murder;<br/>
Her, who hath thirsted for our sovereign's blood,<br/>
The privilege to see the royal presence<br/>
Is forfeited: a faithful counsellor<br/>
Can never give this treacherous advice.<br/>
<br/>
TALBOT.<br/>
And if the queen is gracious, sir, are you<br/>
The man to hinder pity's soft emotions?<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH.<br/>
She is condemned to death; her head is laid<br/>
Beneath the axe, and it would ill become<br/>
The queen to see a death-devoted head.<br/>
The sentence cannot have its execution<br/>
If the queen's majesty approaches her,<br/>
For pardon still attends the royal presence,<br/>
As sickness flies the health-dispensing hand.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH (having read the letter, dries her tears).<br/>
Oh, what is man! What is the bliss of earth!<br/>
To what extremities is she reduced<br/>
Who with such proud and splendid hopes began!<br/>
Who, called to sit on the most ancient throne<br/>
Of Christendom, misled by vain ambition,<br/>
Hoped with a triple crown to deck her brows!<br/>
How is her language altered, since the time<br/>
When she assumed the arms of England's crown,<br/>
And by the flatterers of her court was styled<br/>
Sole monarch of the two Britannic isles!<br/>
Forgive me, lords, my heart is cleft in twain,<br/>
Anguish possesses me, and my soul bleeds<br/>
To think that earthly goods are so unstable,<br/>
And that the dreadful fate which rules mankind<br/>
Should threaten mine own house, and scowl so near me.<br/>
<br/>
TALBOT.<br/>
Oh, queen! the God of mercy hath informed<br/>
Your heart; Oh! hearken to this heavenly guidance.<br/>
Most grievously, indeed, hath she atoned.<br/>
Her grievous crime, and it is time that now,<br/>
At last, her heavy penance have an end.<br/>
Stretch forth your hand to raise this abject queen,<br/>
And, like the luminous vision of an angel,<br/>
Descend into her gaol's sepulchral night.<br/>
<br/>
BURLEIGH.<br/>
Be steadfast, mighty queen; let no emotion<br/>
Of seeming laudable humanity<br/>
Mislead thee; take not from thyself the power<br/>
Of acting as necessity commands.<br/>
Thou canst not pardon her, thou canst not save her:<br/>
Then heap not on thyself the odious blame,<br/>
That thou, with cruel and contemptuous triumph,<br/>
Didst glut thyself with gazing on thy victim.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Let us, my lords, remain within our bounds;<br/>
The queen is wise, and doth not need our counsels<br/>
To lead her to the most becoming choice.<br/>
This meeting of the queens hath naught in common<br/>
With the proceedings of the court of justice.<br/>
The law of England, not the monarch's will,<br/>
Condemns the Queen of Scotland, and 'twere worthy<br/>
Of the great soul of Queen Elizabeth,<br/>
To follow the soft dictates of her heart,<br/>
Though justice swerves not from its rigid path.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Retire, my lords. We shall, perhaps, find means<br/>
To reconcile the tender claims of pity<br/>
With what necessity imposes on us.<br/>
And now retire.<br/>
[The LORDS retire; she calls SIR EDWARD MORTIMER back.<br/>
Sir Edward Mortimer!<br/></p>
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<h2> SCENE V. </h2>
<p>ELIZABETH, MORTIMER.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH (having measured him for some time with her eyes in silence).<br/>
You've shown a spirit of adventurous courage<br/>
And self-possession, far beyond your years.<br/>
He who has timely learnt to play so well<br/>
The difficult dissembler's needful task<br/>
Becomes a perfect man before his time,<br/>
And shortens his probationary years.<br/>
Fate calls you to a lofty scene of action;<br/>
I prophesy it, and can, happily<br/>
For you, fulfil, myself, my own prediction.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Illustrious mistress, what I am, and all<br/>
I can accomplish, is devoted to you.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
You've made acquaintance with the foes of England.<br/>
Their hate against me is implacable;<br/>
Their fell designs are inexhaustible.<br/>
As yet, indeed, Almighty Providence<br/>
Hath shielded me; but on my brows the crown<br/>
Forever trembles, while she lives who fans<br/>
Their bigot-zeal, and animates their hopes.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
She lives no more, as soon as you command it.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Oh, sir! I thought I saw my labors end,<br/>
And I am come no further than at first,<br/>
I wished to let the laws of England act,<br/>
And keep my own hands pure from blood's defilement.<br/>
The sentence is pronounced—what gain I by it?<br/>
It must be executed, Mortimer,<br/>
And I must authorize the execution.<br/>
The blame will ever light on me, I must<br/>
Avow it, nor can save appearances.<br/>
That is the worst——<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
But can appearances<br/>
Disturb your conscience where the cause is just?<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
You are unpractised in the world, sir knight;<br/>
What we appear, is subject to the judgment<br/>
Of all mankind, and what we are, of no man.<br/>
No one will be convinced that I am right:<br/>
I must take care that my connivance in<br/>
Her death be wrapped in everlasting doubt.<br/>
In deeds of such uncertain double visage<br/>
Safety lies only in obscurity.<br/>
Those measures are the worst that stand avowed;<br/>
What's not abandoned, is not wholly lost.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER (seeking to learn her meaning).<br/>
Then it perhaps were best——<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH (quick).<br/>
Ay, surely 'twere<br/>
The best; Oh, sir, my better angel speaks<br/>
Through you;—go on then, worthy sir, conclude<br/>
You are in earnest, you examine deep,<br/>
Have quite a different spirit from your uncle.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER (surprised).<br/>
Have you imparted then your wishes to him?<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
I am sorry that I have.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Excuse his age,<br/>
The old man is grown scrupulous; such bold<br/>
Adventures ask the enterprising heart<br/>
Of youth——<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
And may I venture then on you——<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
My hand I'll lend thee; save then as thou canst<br/>
Thy reputation——<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Yes, sir; if you could<br/>
But waken me some morning with this news<br/>
"Maria Stuart, your bloodthirsty foe,<br/>
Breathed yesternight her last"——<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Depend on me.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
When shall my head lie calmly down to sleep?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
The next new moon will terminate thy fears.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
And be the selfsame happy day the dawn<br/>
Of your preferment—so God speed you, sir;<br/>
And be not hurt, if, chance, my thankfulness<br/>
Should wear the mask of darkness. Silence is<br/>
The happy suitor's god. The closest bonds,<br/>
The dearest, are the works of secrecy.<br/>
<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
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<h2> SCENE VI. </h2>
<p>MORTIMER (alone).<br/>
<br/>
Go, false, deceitful queen! As thou deludest<br/>
The world, e'en so I cozen thee; 'tis right,<br/>
Thus to betray thee; 'tis a worthy deed.<br/>
Look I then like a murderer? Hast thou read<br/>
Upon my brow such base dexterity?<br/>
Trust only to my arm, and keep thine own<br/>
Concealed—assume the pious outward show<br/>
Of mercy 'fore the world, while reckoning<br/>
In secret on my murderous aid; and thus<br/>
By gaining time we shall insure her rescue.<br/>
Thou wilt exalt me!—show'st me from afar<br/>
The costly recompense: but even were<br/>
Thyself the prize, and all thy woman's favor,<br/>
What art thou, poor one, and what canst thou proffer?<br/>
I scorn ambition's avaricious strife,<br/>
With her alone is all the charm of life,<br/>
O'er her, in rounds of endless glory, hover<br/>
Spirits with grace, and youth eternal blessed,<br/>
Celestial joy is throned upon her breast.<br/>
Thou hast but earthly, mortal goods to offer—<br/>
That sovereign good, for which all else be slighted,<br/>
When heart in heart, delighting and delighted;<br/>
Together flow in sweet forgetfulness;—<br/>
Ne'er didst thou woman's fairest crown possess,<br/>
Ne'er hast thou with thy hand a lover's heart requited.<br/>
I must attend Lord Leicester, and deliver<br/>
Her letter to him—'tis a hateful charge—<br/>
I have no confidence in this court puppet—<br/>
I can effect her rescue, I alone;<br/>
Be danger, honor, and the prize my own.<br/>
<br/>
[As he is going, PAULET meets him.<br/></p>
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<h2> SCENE VII. </h2>
<p>MORTIMER, PAULET.<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
What said the queen to you?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
'Twas nothing, sir;<br/>
Nothing of consequence——<br/>
<br/>
PAULET (looking at him earnestly).<br/>
Hear, Mortimer!<br/>
It is a false and slippery ground on which<br/>
You tread. The grace of princes is alluring,<br/>
Youth loves ambition—let not yours betray you.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Was it not yourself that brought me to the court?<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
Oh, would to God I had not done as much!<br/>
The honor of our house was never reaped<br/>
In courts—stand fast, my nephew—purchase not<br/>
Too dear, nor stain your conscience with a crime.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
What are these fears? What are you dreaming of?<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
How high soever the queen may pledge herself<br/>
To raise you, trust not her alluring words.<br/>
[The spirit of the world's a lying spirit,<br/>
And vice is a deceitful, treacherous friend.]<br/>
She will deny you, if you listen to her;<br/>
And, to preserve her own good name, will punish<br/>
The bloody deed, which she herself enjoined.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
The bloody deed!——<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
Away, dissimulation!—<br/>
I know the deed the queen proposed to you.<br/>
She hopes that your ambitious youth will prove<br/>
More docile than my rigid age. But say,<br/>
Have you then pledged your promise, have you?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Uncle!<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
If you have done so, I abandon you,<br/>
And lay my curse upon you——<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER (entering).<br/>
Worthy sir!<br/>
I with your nephew wish a word. The queen<br/>
Is graciously inclined to him; she wills<br/>
That to his custody the Scottish queen<br/>
Be with full powers intrusted. She relies<br/>
On his fidelity.<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
Relies!—'tis well——<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
What say you, sir?<br/>
<br/>
PAULET.<br/>
Her majesty relies<br/>
On him; and I, my noble lord, rely<br/>
Upon myself, and my two open eyes.<br/>
<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
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<h2> SCENE VIII. </h2>
<p>LEICESTER, MORTIMER.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER (surprised).<br/>
What ailed the knight?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
My lord, I cannot tell<br/>
What angers him: the confidence, perhaps,<br/>
The queen so suddenly confers on me.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Are you deserving then of confidence?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
This would I ask of you, my Lord of Leicester.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
You said you wished to speak with me in private.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Assure me first that I may safely venture.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Who gives me an assurance on your side?<br/>
Let not my want of confidence offend you;<br/>
I see you, sir, exhibit at this court<br/>
Two different aspects; one of them must be<br/>
A borrowed one; but which of them is real?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
The selfsame doubts I have concerning you.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Which, then, shall pave the way to confidence?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
He, who by doing it, is least in danger.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Well, that are you——<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
No, you; the evidence<br/>
Of such a weighty, powerful peer as you<br/>
Can overwhelm my voice. My accusation<br/>
Is weak against your rank and influence.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Sir, you mistake. In everything but this<br/>
I'm powerful here; but in this tender point<br/>
Which I am called upon to trust you with,<br/>
I am the weakest man of all the court,<br/>
The poorest testimony can undo me.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
If the all-powerful Earl of Leicester deign<br/>
To stoop so low to meet me, and to make<br/>
Such a confession to me, I may venture<br/>
To think a little better of myself,<br/>
And lead the way in magnanimity.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Lead you the way of confidence, I'll follow.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER (producing suddenly the letter).<br/>
Here is a letter from the Queen of Scotland.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER (alarmed, catches hastily at the letter).<br/>
Speak softly, sir! what see I? Oh, it is<br/>
Her picture!<br/>
<br/>
[Kisses and examines it with speechless joy—a pause.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER (who has watched him closely the whole tine).<br/>
Now, my lord, I can believe you.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER (having hastily run through the letter).<br/>
You know the purport of this letter, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Not I.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Indeed! She surely hath informed you.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Nothing hath she informed me of. She said<br/>
You would explain this riddle to me—'tis<br/>
To me a riddle, that the Earl of Leicester,<br/>
The far-famed favorite of Elizabeth,<br/>
The open, bitter enemy of Mary,<br/>
And one of those who spoke her mortal sentence,<br/>
Should be the man from whom the queen expects<br/>
Deliverance from her woes; and yet it must be;<br/>
Your eyes express too plainly what your heart<br/>
Feels for the hapless lady.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Tell me, Sir,<br/>
First, how it comes that you should take so warm<br/>
An interest in her fate; and what it was<br/>
Gained you her confidence?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
My lord, I can,<br/>
And in few words, explain this mystery.<br/>
I lately have at Rome abjured my creed,<br/>
And stand in correspondence with the Guises.<br/>
A letter from the cardinal archbishop<br/>
Was my credential with the Queen of Scots.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
I am acquainted, sir, with your conversion;<br/>
'Twas that which waked my confidence towards you.<br/>
[Each remnant of distrust be henceforth banished;]<br/>
Your hand, sir, pardon me these idle doubts,<br/>
I cannot use too much precaution here.<br/>
Knowing how Walsingham and Burleigh hate me,<br/>
And, watching me, in secret spread their snares;<br/>
You might have been their instrument, their creature<br/>
To lure me to their toils.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
How poor a part<br/>
So great a nobleman is forced to play<br/>
At court! My lord, I pity you.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
With joy<br/>
I rest upon the faithful breast of friendship,<br/>
Where I can ease me of this long constraint.<br/>
You seem surprised, sir, that my heart is turned<br/>
So suddenly towards the captive queen.<br/>
In truth, I never hated her; the times<br/>
Have forced me to be her enemy.<br/>
She was, as you well know, my destined bride,<br/>
Long since, ere she bestowed her hand on Darnley,<br/>
While yet the beams of glory round her smiled,<br/>
Coldly I then refused the proffered boon.<br/>
Now in confinement, at the gates of death,<br/>
I claim her at the hazard of my life.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
True magnanimity, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
The state<br/>
Of circumstances since that time is changed.<br/>
Ambition made me all insensible<br/>
To youth and beauty. Mary's hand I held<br/>
Too insignificant for me; I hoped<br/>
To be the husband of the Queen of England.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
It is well known she gave you preference<br/>
Before all others.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
So, indeed, it seemed.<br/>
Now, after ten lost years of tedious courtship<br/>
And hateful self-constraint—oh, sir, my heart<br/>
Must ease itself of this long agony.<br/>
They call me happy! Did they only know<br/>
What the chains are, for which they envy me!<br/>
When I had sacrificed ten bitter years<br/>
To the proud idol of her vanity;<br/>
Submitted with a slave's humility<br/>
To every change of her despotic fancies<br/>
The plaything of each little wayward whim.<br/>
At times by seeming tenderness caressed,<br/>
As oft repulsed with proud and cold disdain;<br/>
Alike tormented by her grace and rigor:<br/>
Watched like a prisoner by the Argus eyes<br/>
Of jealousy; examined like a schoolboy,<br/>
And railed at like a servant. Oh, no tongue<br/>
Can paint this hell.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
My lord, I feel for you.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
To lose, and at the very goal, the prize<br/>
Another comes to rob me of the fruits<br/>
Of my so anxious wooing. I must lose<br/>
To her young blooming husband all those rights<br/>
Of which I was so long in full possession;<br/>
And I must from the stage descend, where I<br/>
So long have played the most distinguished part.<br/>
'Tis not her hand alone this envious stranger<br/>
Threatens, he'd rob me of her favor too;<br/>
She is a woman, and he formed to please.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
He is the son of Catherine. He has learnt<br/>
In a good school the arts of flattery.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Thus fall my hopes; I strove to seize a plank<br/>
To bear me in this shipwreck of my fortunes,<br/>
And my eye turned itself towards the hope<br/>
Of former days once more; then Mary's image<br/>
Within me was renewed, and youth and beauty<br/>
Once more asserted all their former rights.<br/>
No more 'twas cold ambition; 'twas my heart<br/>
Which now compared, and with regret I felt<br/>
The value of the jewel I had lost.<br/>
With horror I beheld her in the depths.<br/>
Of misery, cast down by my transgression;<br/>
Then waked the hope in me that I might still<br/>
Deliver and possess her; I contrived<br/>
To send her, through a faithful hand, the news<br/>
Of my conversion to her interests;<br/>
And in this letter which you brought me, she<br/>
Assures me that she pardons me, and offers<br/>
Herself as guerdon if I rescue her.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
But you attempted nothing for her rescue.<br/>
You let her be condemned without a word:<br/>
You gave, yourself, your verdict for her death;<br/>
A miracle must happen, and the light<br/>
Of truth must move me, me, her keeper's nephew,<br/>
And heaven must in the Vatican at Rome<br/>
Prepare for her an unexpected succour,<br/>
Else had she never found the way to you.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Oh, sir, it has tormented me enough!<br/>
About this time it was that they removed her<br/>
From Talbot's castle, and delivered her<br/>
Up to your uncle's stricter custody.<br/>
Each way to her was shut. I was obliged<br/>
Before the world to persecute her still;<br/>
But do not think that I would patiently<br/>
Have seen her led to death. No, Sir; I hoped,<br/>
And still I hope, to ward off all extremes,<br/>
Till I can find some certain means to save her.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
These are already found: my Lord of Leicester;<br/>
Your generous confidence in me deserves<br/>
A like return. I will deliver her.<br/>
That is my object here; my dispositions<br/>
Are made already, and your powerful aid<br/>
Assures us of success in our attempt.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
What say you? You alarm me! How? You would——<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
I'll open forcibly her prison-gates;<br/>
I have confederates, and all is ready.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
You have confederates, accomplices?<br/>
Alas! In what rash enterprise would you<br/>
Engage me? And these friends, know they my secret?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Fear not; our plan was laid without your help,<br/>
Without your help it would have been accomplished,<br/>
Had she not signified her resolution<br/>
To owe her liberty to you alone.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
And can you, then, with certainty assure me<br/>
That in your plot my name has not been mentioned?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
You may depend upon it. How, my lord,<br/>
So scrupulous when help is offered you?<br/>
You wish to rescue Mary, and possess her;<br/>
You find confederates; sudden, unexpected,<br/>
The readiest means fall, as it were from Heaven,<br/>
Yet you show more perplexity than joy.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
We must avoid all violence; it is<br/>
Too dangerous an enterprise.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Delay<br/>
Is also dangerous.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
I tell you, Sir,<br/>
'Tis not to be attempted——<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
My lord,<br/>
Too hazardous for you, who would possess her;<br/>
But we, who only wish to rescue her,<br/>
We are more bold.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Young man, you are too hasty<br/>
In such a thorny, dangerous attempt.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
And you too scrupulous in honor's cause.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
I see the trammels that are spread around us.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
And I feel courage to break through them all.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Foolhardiness and madness, is this courage?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
This prudence is not bravery, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
You surely wish to end like Babington.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
You not to imitate great Norfolk's virtue.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Norfolk ne'er won the bride he wooed so fondly.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
But yet he proved how truly he deserved her.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
If we are ruined, she must fall with us.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
If we risk nothing, she will ne'er be rescued.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
You will not weigh the matter, will not hear;<br/>
With blind and hasty rashness you destroy<br/>
The plans which I so happily had framed.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
And what were then the plans which you had framed?<br/>
What have you done then to deliver her?<br/>
And how, if I were miscreant enough<br/>
To murder her, as was proposed to me<br/>
This moment by Elizabeth, and which<br/>
She looks upon as certain; only name<br/>
The measures you have taken to protect her?<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Did the queen give you, then, this bloody order?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
She was deceived in me, as Mary is in you.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
And have you promised it? Say, have you?<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
That she might not engage another's hand,<br/>
I offered mine.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Well done, sir; that was right;<br/>
This gives us leisure, for she rests secure<br/>
Upon your bloody service, and the sentence<br/>
Is unfulfilled the while, and we gain time.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER (angrily).<br/>
No, we are losing time.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
The queen depends<br/>
On you, and will the readier make a show<br/>
Of mercy; and I may prevail on her<br/>
To give an audience to her adversary;<br/>
And by this stratagem we tie her hands<br/>
Yes! I will make the attempt, strain every nerve.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
And what is gained by this? When she discovers<br/>
That I am cheating her, that Mary lives;<br/>
Are we not where we were? She never will<br/>
Be free; the mildest doom which can await her<br/>
At best is but perpetual confinement.<br/>
A daring deed must one day end the matter;<br/>
Why will you not with such a deed begin?<br/>
The power is in your hands, would you but rouse<br/>
The might of your dependents round about<br/>
Your many castles, 'twere an host; and still<br/>
Has Mary many secret friends. The Howards<br/>
And Percies' noble houses, though their chiefs<br/>
Be fallen, are rich in heroes; they but wait<br/>
For the example of some potent lord.<br/>
Away with feigning—act an open part,<br/>
And, like a loyal knight, protect your fair;<br/>
Fight a good fight for her! You know you are<br/>
Lord of the person of the Queen of England,<br/>
Whene'er you will: invite her to your castle,<br/>
Oft hath she thither followed you—then show<br/>
That you're a man; then speak as master; keep her<br/>
Confined till she release the Queen of Scots.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
I am astonished—I am terrified!<br/>
Where would your giddy madness hurry you?<br/>
Are you acquainted with this country? Know you<br/>
The deeps and shallows of this court? With what<br/>
A potent spell this female sceptre binds<br/>
And rules men's spirits round her? 'Tis in vain<br/>
You seek the heroic energy which once<br/>
Was active in this land! it is subdued,<br/>
A woman holds it under lock and key,<br/>
And every spring of courage is relaxed.<br/>
Follow my counsel—venture nothing rashly.<br/>
Some one approaches-go——<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
And Mary hopes—<br/>
Shall I return to her with empty comfort?<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Bear her my vows of everlasting love.<br/>
<br/>
MORTIMER.<br/>
Bear them yourself! I offered my assistance<br/>
As her deliverer, not your messenger.<br/>
<br/>
[Exit.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SCENE IX. </h2>
<p>ELIZABETH, LEICESTER.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Say, who was here? I heard the sound of voices.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER (turning quickly and perplexed round on hearing the QUEEN).<br/>
It was young Mortimer——<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
How now, my lord:<br/>
Why so confused?<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER (collecting himself).<br/>
Your presence is the cause.<br/>
Ne'er did I see thy beauty so resplendent,<br/>
My sight is dazzled by thy heavenly charms.<br/>
Oh!<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Whence this sigh?<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Have I no reason, then,<br/>
To sigh? When I behold you in your glory,<br/>
I feel anew, with pain unspeakable,<br/>
The loss which threatens me.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
What loss, my lord?<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Your heart; your own inestimable self<br/>
Soon will you feel yourself within the arms<br/>
Of your young ardent husband, highly blessed;<br/>
He will possess your heart without a rival.<br/>
He is of royal blood, that am not I.<br/>
Yet, spite of all the world can say, there lives not<br/>
One on this globe who with such fervent zeal<br/>
Adores you as the man who loses you.<br/>
Anjou hath never seen you, can but love<br/>
Your glory and the splendor of your reign;<br/>
But I love you, and were you born of all<br/>
The peasant maids the poorest, I the first<br/>
Of kings, I would descend to your condition,<br/>
And lay my crown and sceptre at your feet!<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Oh, pity me, my Dudley; do not blame me;<br/>
I cannot ask my heart. Oh, that had chosen<br/>
Far otherwise! Ah, how I envy others<br/>
Who can exalt the object of their love!<br/>
But I am not so blest: 'tis not my fortune<br/>
To place upon the brows of him, the dearest<br/>
Of men to me, the royal crown of England.<br/>
The Queen of Scotland was allowed to make<br/>
Her hand the token of her inclination;<br/>
She hath had every freedom, and hath drunk,<br/>
Even to the very dregs, the cup of joy.<br/>
<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG alt="3pb064 (132K)" src="images/3pb064.jpg" width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
And now she drinks the bitter cup of sorrow.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
She never did respect the world's opinion;<br/>
Life was to her a sport; she never courted<br/>
The yoke to which I bowed my willing neck.<br/>
And yet, methinks, I had as just a claim<br/>
As she to please myself and taste the joys<br/>
Of life: but I preferred the rigid duties<br/>
Which royalty imposed on me; yet she,<br/>
She was the favorite of all the men<br/>
Because she only strove to be a woman;<br/>
And youth and age became alike her suitors.<br/>
Thus are the men voluptuaries all!<br/>
The willing slaves of levity and pleasure;<br/>
Value that least which claims their reverence.<br/>
And did not even Talbot, though gray-headed,<br/>
Grow young again when speaking of her charms?<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Forgive him, for he was her keeper once,<br/>
And she has fooled him with her cunning wiles.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
And is it really true that she's so fair?<br/>
So often have I been obliged to hear<br/>
The praises of this wonder—it were well<br/>
If I could learn on what I might depend:<br/>
Pictures are flattering, and description lies;<br/>
I will trust nothing but my own conviction.<br/>
Why gaze you at me thus?<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
I placed in thought<br/>
You and Maria Stuart side by side.<br/>
Yes! I confess I oft have felt a wish,<br/>
If it could be but secretly contrived,<br/>
To see you placed beside the Scottish queen,<br/>
Then would you feel, and not till then, the full<br/>
Enjoyment of your triumph: she deserves<br/>
To be thus humbled; she deserves to see,<br/>
With her own eyes, and envy's glance is keen,<br/>
Herself surpassed, to feel herself o'ermatched,<br/>
As much by thee in form and princely grace<br/>
As in each virtue that adorns the sex.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
In years she has the advantage——<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Has she so?<br/>
I never should have thought it. But her griefs,<br/>
Her sufferings, indeed! 'tis possible<br/>
Have brought down age upon her ere her time.<br/>
Yes, and 'twould mortify her more to see thee<br/>
As bride—she hath already turned her back<br/>
On each fair hope of life, and she would see thee<br/>
Advancing towards the open arms of joy.<br/>
See thee as bride of France's royal son,<br/>
She who hath always plumed herself so high<br/>
On her connection with the house of France,<br/>
And still depends upon its mighty aid.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH (with a careless air).<br/>
I'm teazed to grant this interview.<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
She asks it<br/>
As a favor; grant it as a punishment.<br/>
For though you should conduct her to the block,<br/>
Yet would it less torment her than to see<br/>
Herself extinguished by your beauty's splendor.<br/>
Thus can you murder her as she hath wished<br/>
To murder you. When she beholds your beauty,<br/>
Guarded by modesty, and beaming bright,<br/>
In the clear glory of unspotted fame<br/>
(Which she with thoughtless levity discarded),<br/>
Exalted by the splendor of the crown,<br/>
And blooming now with tender bridal graces—<br/>
Then is the hour of her destruction come.<br/>
Yes—when I now behold you—you were never,<br/>
No, never were you so prepared to seal<br/>
The triumph of your beauty. As but now<br/>
You entered the apartment, I was dazzled<br/>
As by a glorious vision from on high.<br/>
Could you but now, now as you are, appear<br/>
Before her, you could find no better moment.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
Now? no, not now; no, Leicester; this must be<br/>
Maturely weighed—I must with Burleigh——<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
Burleigh!<br/>
To him you are but sovereign, and as such<br/>
Alone he seeks your welfare; but your rights,<br/>
Derived from womanhood, this tender point<br/>
Must be decided by your own tribunal,<br/>
Not by the statesman; yet e'en policy<br/>
Demands that you should see her, and allure<br/>
By such a generous deed the public voice.<br/>
You can hereafter act as it may please you,<br/>
To rid you of the hateful enemy.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
But would it then become me to behold<br/>
My kinswoman in infamy and want?<br/>
They say she is not royally attended;<br/>
Would not the sight of her distress reproach me?<br/>
<br/>
LEICESTER.<br/>
You need not cross her threshold; hear my counsel.<br/>
A fortunate conjuncture favors it.<br/>
The hunt you mean to honor with your presence<br/>
Is in the neighborhood of Fotheringay;<br/>
Permission may be given to Lady Stuart<br/>
To take the air; you meet her in the park,<br/>
As if by accident; it must not seem<br/>
To have been planned, and should you not incline,<br/>
You need not speak to her.<br/>
<br/>
ELIZABETH.<br/>
If I am foolish,<br/>
Be yours the fault, not mine. I would not care<br/>
To-day to cross your wishes; for to-day<br/>
I've grieved you more than all my other subjects.<br/>
[Tenderly.<br/>
Let it then be your fancy. Leicester, hence<br/>
You see the free obsequiousness of love.<br/>
Which suffers that which it cannot approve.<br/>
<br/>
[LEICESTER prostrates himself before her, and the curtain falls.<br/></p>
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