Locrine - A Tragedy
SCENE II.--The banks of the Severn.

Algernon C

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Enter ESTRILD and SABRINA.

SABRINA.

When will my father come again?

ESTRILD.

God knows,

Sweet.

SABRINA.

Hast thou seen how wide this water flows -

How smooth it swells and shines from brim to brim,

How fair, how full? Nay, then thine eyes are dim.

Thou dost not weep for fear lest evil men

Or that more evil woman--Guendolen

Didst thou not call her yesternight by name? -

Should put my father's might in arms to shame?

What is she so to levy shameful strife

Against my sire and thee?

ESTRILD.

His wife! his wife!

SABRINA.

Why, that art thou.

ESTRILD

Woe worth me!

SABRINA.

Nay, woe worth

Her wickedness! How may the heavens and earth

Endure her?

ESTRILD.

Heaven is fire, and earth a sword,

Against us.

SABRINA.

May the wife withstand her lord

And war upon him? Nay, no wife is she -

And no true mother thou to mock at me.

ESTRILD.

Yea, no true wife or mother, child, am I.

Yet, child, thou shouldst not say it--and bid me die.

SABRINA.

I bid thee live and laugh at wicked foes

Even as my sire and I do. What! 'God knows,'

Thou sayest, and yet art fearful? Is he not

Righteous, that we should fear to take the lot

Forth of his hand that deals it? And my sire,

Kind as the sun in heaven, and strong as fire,

Hath he not God upon his side and ours,

Even all the gods and stars and all their powers?

ESTRILD.

I know not. Fate at sight of thee should break

His covenant--doom grow gentle for thy sake.

SABRINA.

Wherefore?

ESTRILD.

Because thou knowest not wherefore. Child,

My days were darkened, and the ways were wild

Wherethrough my dark doom led me toward this end,

Ere I beheld thy sire, my lord, my friend,

My king, my stay, my saviour. Let thine hand

Lie still in mine. Thou canst not understand,

Yet would I tell thee somewhat. Ere I knew

If aught of evil or good were false or true,

If aught of life were worth our hope or fear,

There fell on me the fate that sets us here.

For in my father's kingdom oversea -

SABRINA.

Thou wast not born in Britain?

ESTRILD.

Woe is me,

No: happier hap had mine perchance been then.

SABRINA.

And was not I? Are these all stranger men?

ESTRILD.

Ay, wast thou, child--a Briton born: God give

Thy name the grace on British tongues to live!

SABRINA.

Is that so good a gift of God's--to die

And leave a name alive in memory? I

Would rather live this river's life, and be

Held of no less or more account than he.

Lo, how he lives and laughs! and hath no name,

Thou sayest--or one forgotten even of fame

That lives on poor men's lips and falters down

To nothing. But thy father? and his crown?

Did he less hate the coil of it than mine,

Or love thee less--nay, then he were not thine -

Than he, my sire, loves me?

ESTRILD.

And wilt thou hear

All? Child, my child, love born of love, more dear

Than very love was ever! Hearken then.

This plague, this fire, that hunts us--Guendolen -

Was wedded to thy sire ere I and he

Cast ever eyes on either. Woe is me!

Thou canst not dream, sweet, what my soul would say

And not affright thee.

SABRINA.

Thou affright me? Nay,

Mock not. This evil woman--when he knew

Thee, this my sweet good mother, wise and true -

He cast from him and hated.

ESTRILD.

Yea--and now

For that shall haply he and I and thou

Die.

SABRINA.

What is death? I never saw his face

That I should fear it.

ESTRILD.

Whether grief or grace

Or curse or blessing breathe from it, and give

Aught worse or better than the life we live,

I know no more than thou knowest; perchance,

Less. When we sleep, they say, or fall in trance,

We die awhile. Well spake thine innocent breath -

I THINK THERE IS NO DEATH BUT FEAR OF DEATH.

SABRINA.

Did I say this? but that was long ago -

Months. Now I know not--yet I think I know -

Whether I fear or fear not it. Hard by

Men fight even now--they strike and kill and die

Red-handed; nay, we hear the roar and see

The lightning of the battle: can it be

That what no soul of all these brave men fears

Should sound so fearful save in foolish ears?

But all this while I know not where it lay,

Thy father's kingdom.

ESTRILD.

Far from here away

It lies beyond the wide waste water's bound

That clasps with bitter waves this sweet land round.

Thou hast seen the great sea never, nor canst dream

How fairer far than earth's most lordly stream

It rolls its royal waters here and there,

Most glorious born of all things anywhere,

Most fateful and most godlike; fit to make

Men love life better for the sweet sight's sake

And less fear death if death for them should be

Shrined in the sacred splendours of the sea

As God in heaven s mid mystery. Night and day

Forth of my tower-girt homestead would I stray

To gaze thereon as thou upon the bright

Soft river whence thy soul took less delight

Than mine of the outer sea, albeit I know

How great thy joy was of it. Now--for so

The high gods willed it should be--once at morn

Strange men there landing bore me thence forlorn

Across the wan wild waters in their bark,

I wist not where, through change of light and dark,

Till their fierce lord, the son of spoil and strife,

Made me by forceful marriage-rites his wife.

Then sailed they toward the white and flower-sweet strand

Whose free folk follow on thy father's hand,

And warred against him, slaying his brother: and he

Hurled all their force back hurtling toward the sea,

And slew my lord their king; but me he gave

Grace, and received not as a wandering slave,

But one whom seeing he loved for pity: why

Should else a sad strange woman such as I

Find in his fair sight favour? and for me

He built the bower wherein I bare him thee,

And whence but now he hath brought us westward, here

To abide the extreme of utmost hope or fear.

And come what end may ever, death or life,

I live or die, if truth be truth, his wife;

And none but I and thou, though day wax dim,

Though night grow strong, hath any part in him.

SABRINA.

What should we fear, then? whence might any

Fall on us?

ESTRILD.

Ah! Ah me! God answers here.

Enter LOCRINE, wounded.

LOCRINE.

Praised be the gods who have brought me safe--to die

Beside thee. Nay, but kneel not--rise, and fly

Ere death take hold on thee too. Bid the child

Kiss me. The ways all round are wide and wild -

Ye may win safe away. They deemed me dead -

My last friends left--who saw me fallen, and fled

No shame is theirs--they fought to the end. But ye,

Fly: not your love can keep my life in me -

Not even the sight and sense of you so near.

SABRINA.

How can we fly, father?

ESTRILD.

She would not fear -

Thy very child is she--no heart less high

Than thine sustains her--and we will not fly.

LOCRINE.

So shall their work be perfect. Yea, I know

Our fate is fallen upon us, and its woe.

Yet have we lacked not gladness--and this end

Is not so hard. We have had sweet life to friend,

And find not death our enemy. All men born

Die, and but few find evening one with morn

As I do, seeing the sun of all my life

Lighten my death in sight of child and wife.

I would not live again to lose that kiss,

And die some death not half so sweet as this.

[Dies.

ESTRILD.

Thou thought'st to cleave in twain my life and

To cast my hand away in death, Locrine?

See now if death have drawn thee far from me!

[Stabs herself.

SABRINA.

Thou diest, and hast not slain me, mother?

ESTRILD.

Thee?

Forgive me, child! and so may they forgive.

[Dies.

SABRINA.

O mother, canst thou die and bid me live?

Enter GUENDOLEN, MADAN, and Soldiers.

GUENDOLEN.

Dead? Ah! my traitor with his harlot fled

Hellward?

MADAN.

Their child is left thee.

GUENDOLEN.

She! not dead?

SABRINA.

Thou hast slain my mother and sire--thou hast slain thy lord -

Strike now, and slay me.

GUENDOLEN.

Smite her with thy sword.

MADAN.

I know not if I dare. I dare not.

GUENDOLEN.

Shame

Consume thee!--Thou--what call they, girl, thy name?

Daughter of Estrild,--daughter of Locrine, -

Daughter of death and darkness!

SABRINA.

Yet not thine.

Darkness and death are come on us, and thou,

Whose servants are they: heaven behind thee now

Stands, and withholds the thunder: yet on me

He gives thee not, who helps and comforts thee,

Power for one hour of darkness. Ere thine hand

Can put forth power to slay me where I stand

Safe shall I sleep as these that here lie slain.

GUENDOLEN.

She dares not--though the heart in her be fain,

The flesh draws back for fear. She dares not.

SABRINA.

See!

I change no more of warring words with thee

O father, O my mother, here am I:

They hurt me not who can but bid me die.

[She leaps into the river.

GUENDOLEN.

Save her! God pardon me!

MADAN.

The water whirls

Down out of sight her tender face, and hurls

Her soft light limbs to deathward. God forgive -

Thee, sayest thou, mother? Wouldst thou bid her live?

GUENDOLEN.

What have we done?

MADAN.

The work we came to do.

That God, thou said'st, should stand for judge of you

Whose judgment smote with mortal fire and sword

Troy, for such cause as bade thee slay thy lord.

Now, as between his fathers and their foes

The lord of gods dealt judgment, winged with woes

And girt about with ruin, hath he sent

On these destruction.

GUENDOLEN.

Yea.

MADAN.

Art thou content?

GUENDOLEN.

The gods are wise who lead us--now to smite,

And now to spare: we dwell but in their sigh

And work but what their will is. What hath been

Is past. But these, that once were king and queen,

The sun, that feeds on death, shall not consume

Naked. Not I would sunder tomb from tomb

Of these twain foes of mine, in death made one -

I, that when darkness hides me from the sun

Shall sleep alone, with none to rest by me.

But thou--this one time more I look on thee -

Fair face, brave hand, weak heart that wast not mine -

Sleep sound--and God be good to thee, Locrine.

I was not. She was fair as heaven in spring

Whom thou didst love indeed. Sleep, queen and king,

Forgiven; and if--God knows--being dead, ye live,

And keep remembrance yet of me--forgive.

[Exeunt.]

This book comes from:m.funovel.com。

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