Luc. Pray, then, carry him the news of his good success. Adieu, sweet prince!
Fred. Adieu, dear madam.
Asca. Hey day! what will this come to? They have cozened one another into a quarrel; just like friends in fencing, a chance thrust comes, and then they fall to it in earnest.
Hip. You and I, brother, shall never meet upon even terms, if this be not pieced.—Face about, madam; turn quickly to your man, or, by all that's virtuous, I'll call the abbess.
Asca. I must not be so bold with you, sir; but, if you please, you may turn towards the lady: and, I suppose, you would be glad I durst speak to you with more authority, to save the credit of your willingness.
Fred. Well, I'll shew her I dare stay, if it be but to confront her malice.
Luc. I am sure I have done nothing to be ashamed of, that I should need to run away.
Asca. Pray give me leave, sir, to ask you but one question; Why were you so unwilling that she should be married to your father?
Fred. Because then her friendship must wholly cease.
Asca. But you may have her friendship, when she is married to him.
Fred. What! when another has enjoyed her?
Asca. Victoria, Victoria! he loves you, madam; let him deny it, if he can.
Luc. Fye, fye, loves me, Ascanio! I hope he would not forswear himself, when he has railed so much against it.
Fred. I hope I may love your mind, madam; I may love spiritually.
Hip. That's enough, that's enough: Let him love the mind without the body, if he can.
Asca. Ay, ay, when the love is once come so far, that spiritual mind will never leave pulling, and pulling, till it has drawn the beastly body after it.
Fred. Well, madam, since I must confess it,—though I expect to be laughed at, after my railing against love,—I do love you all over, both soul and body.
Asca. Lord, sir, what a tigress have you provoked! you may see she takes it to the death, that you have made this declaration.
Hip. I thought where all her anger was: Why do you not rail, madam? Why do you not banish him? the prince expects it; he has dealt honestly, he has told you his mind, and you may make your worst on't.
Luc. Because he does expect it, I am resolved, I'll neither satisfy him nor you: I will neither rail nor laugh: Let him make his worst of that, now.
Fred. If I understand you right, madam, I am happy beyond either my deserts or expectation.
Luc. You may give my words what interpretation you please, sir; I shall not envy you their meaning in the kindest sense. But we are near the jessamine walk, there we may talk with greater freedom, because 'tis farther from the house.
Fred. I wait you, madam. [Exeunt.
SCENE V.
Aurelian, with a dark lanthorn. Camillo and Benito.
Cam. So, we are safe got over into the nunnery-garden; for what's to come, trust love and fortune.
Aur. This must needs be the walk she mentioned; yet, to be sure, I'll hold the lanthorn while you read the ticket.
Cam. [Reads.] I prepared this ticket, hoping to see you in the chapel: Come this evening over the garden wall, on the right hand, next the Tiber.
Aur. We are right, I see.
Cam. Bring only your discreet Benito with you, and I will meet you attended by my faithful Beatrix.
Violetta.
Ben. Discreet Benito! Did you hear, sir?
Aur. Mortify thyself for that vain thought; and, without enquiring into the mystery of these words, which I assure thee were not meant to thee, plant thyself by that ladder without motion, to secure our retreat; and be sure to make no noise.
Ben. But, sir, in case that—
Aur. Honest Benito, no more questions: Basta is the word. Remember, thou art only taken with us, because thou hast a certain evil dæmon, who conducts thy actions, and would have been sure, by some damned accident or other, to have brought thee hither to disturb us.
Cam. I hear whispering not far from us, and I think 'tis Violetta's voice.
Aur. [To Ben.] Retire to your post; avoid, good Satan. [Exit Ben.
Enter Laura, with a dark lanthorn hid, and Violetta.
Cam. Ours is the honour of the field, madam; we are here before you.
Vio. Softly, dear friend; I think I hear some walking in the garden.
Cam. Rather, let us take this opportunity for your escape from hence; all things are here in readiness.
Vio. This is the second time we ever have met; let us discourse, and know each other better first; that's the way to make sure of some love beforehand; for, as the world goes, we know not how little we may have when we are married.
Cam. Losses of opportunity are fatal in war, you know, and love's a kind of warfare.
Vio. I shall keep you yet a while from close fighting.
Cam. But, do you know what an hour in love is worth? 'Tis more precious than an age of ordinary life; 'tis the very quintessence and extract of it.
Vio. I do not like your chemical preparation of
love; yours is all spirit, and will fly too soon; I
must see it fixed, before I trust you. But we are
near the arbour: Now our out-guards are set, let us
retire a little, if you please; there we may walk
more freely.
[Exit.
Aur. [To Lau.] My lady's woman, methinks you are very reserved to-night: Pray, advance into the lists; though I have seen your countenance by day, I can endure to hear you talk by night. Be cunning, and set your wit to show, which is your best commodity: It will help the better to put off that drug, your face.
Lau. The coarsest ware will serve such customers as you are: Let it suffice, Mr Serving-man, that I have seen you too. Your face is the original of the ugliest vizors about town; and for wit, I would advise you to speak reverently of it, as a thing you are never like to understand.
Aur. Sure, Beatrix, you came lately from looking in your glass, and that has given you a bad opinion of all faces; but since when am I become so notorious a fool?
Lau. Since yesterday; for t'other night you talked like a man of sense: I think your wit comes to you, as the sight of owls does, only in the dark.
Aur. Why, when did you discourse by day with me?
Lau. You have a short memory. This afternoon in the great street. Do you remember when you talked with Laura?
Aur. But what was that to Beatrix?
Lau. [Aside.] 'Slife, I had forgot that I am Beatrix. But pray, when did you find me out to be so ugly?
Aur. This afternoon, in the chapel.
Lau. That cannot be; for I well remember you were not there, Benito: I saw none but Camillo, and his friend, the handsome stranger.
Aur. [Aside] Curse on't, I have betrayed myself.
Lau. I find you are an impostor: you are not the same Benito: your language has nothing of the serving-man.
Aur. And yours, methinks, has not much of the waiting-woman.
Lau. My lady is abused, and betrayed by you: But I am resolved, I'll discover who you are. [Holds out a lanthorn to him.] How! the stranger?
Aur. Nay, madam, if you are good at that, I'll match you there too. [Holds out his lanthorn.] O prodigy! Is Beatrix turned to Laura?
Lau. Now the question is, which of us two is the greatest cheat?
Aur. That's hardly to be tried, at so short warning: Let's marry one another, and then, twenty to one, in a twelvemonth we shall know.
Lau. Marry! Are you at that so soon, signior? Benito and Beatrix, I confess, had some acquaintance; but Aurelian and Laura are mere strangers.
Aur. That ground I have gotten as Benito, I am resolved I'll keep as Aurelian. If you will take state upon you, I have treated you with ceremony already; for I have wooed you by proxy.
Lau. But you would not be contented to bed me so; or give me leave to put the sword betwixt us.
Aur. Yes, upon condition you'll remove it.
Lau. Pray let our friends be judge of it; if you please, we'll find them in the arbour.
Aur. Content; I am then sure of the verdict, because the jury is bribed already. [Exeunt.
SCENE VI.
Benito meeting Frederick, Ascanio, Lucretia, and Hippolita.
Ben. Knowing my own merits, as I do, 'tis not impossible, but some of these harlotry nuns may love me. Oh, here's my master! now if I could but put this into civil terms, so as to ask his leave, and not displease him—
Asca. I hear one talking, sir, just by us.
Ben. I am stolen from my post, sir, but for one minute only, to demand permission of you, since it is not in our articles, that if any of these nuns should cast an eye, or so—
Fred. 'Slife, we are betrayed; but I'll make this rascal sure. [Draws and runs at him.
Ben. Help! murder, murder! [Runs off.
Enter Aurelian and Camillo; Laura and Violetta after them.
Aur. That was Benito's voice: We are ruined.
Cam. O, here they are, we must make our way.
[Aur. and the Prince make a pass or two confusedly,
and fight off the stage. The Women
shriek.
Asca. Never fear, ladies.—Come on, sir; I am your man.
Cam. [Stepping back.] This is the prince's page, I know his voice.—Ascanio?
Asca. Signior Camillo?
Cam. If the prince be here, 'tis Aurelian is engaged
with him. Let us run in quickly, and prevent
the mischief.
[All go off. A little clashing within. After
which they all re-enter.
Fred. [To Aur.] I hope you are not wounded.
Aur. No, sir; but infinitely grieved, that—
Fred. No more; 'twas a mistake: But which way can we escape? the abbess is coming; I see the lights.
Luc. You cannot go by the gate, then. Ah me, unfortunate!
Cam. But over the wall you may: We have a ladder ready.—Adieu, ladies.—Curse on this ill luck, when we had just persuaded them to go with us!
Fred. Farewell, sweet Lucretia.
Lau. Good-night, Aurelian.
Aur. Ay, it might have proved a good one: Faith, shall I stay yet, and make it one, in spite of the abbess, and all her works?
Lau. The abbess is just here; you will be
Caught in the spiritual trap, if you should tarry.
Aur. That will be time enough, when we two marry. [Exeunt severally.
ACT V. SCENE I.
Enter Sophronia, Lucretia, Laura, and Violetta.
Soph. By this, then, it appears you all are guilty;
Only your ignorance of each others crimes
Caused first that tumult, and this discovery.
Good heavens, that I should live to see this day!
Methinks these holy walls, the cells, the cloisters,
Should all have struck a secret horror on you:
And when, with unchaste thoughts,
You trod these lonely walks, you should have looked,
The venerable ghost of our first foundress
Should, with spread arms, have met you in her shroud,
And frighted you from sin.
Luc. Alas! you need not aggravate our crimes;
We know them to be great beyond excuse,
And have no hope, but only from your mercy.
Lau. Love is, indeed, no plea within these walls;
But, since we brought it hither, and were forced,
Not led by our own choice, to this strict life—
Vio. Too hard for our soft youth, and bands of love,
Which we before had knit—
Lau. Pity your blood,
Which runs within our veins; and since heav'n puts it
In your sole power to ruin or to save,
Protect us from the sordid avarice
Of our domestic tyrant, who deserves not
That we should call him uncle, or your brother.
Soph. If, as I might, with justice I should punish,
No penance could be rigorous enough;
But I am willing to be more indulgent.
None of you are professed: And, since I see
You are not fit for higher happiness,
You may have what you think the world can give you.
Luc. Let us adore you, madam!
Soph. You, Lucretia,
I shall advise within.
Vio. But for us, madam?
Soph. For you, dear nieces, I have long considered
The injuries you suffer from my brother,
And I rejoice it is in me to help you:
I will endeavour, from this very hour,
To put you both into your lovers' hands,
Who, by your own confession, have deserved you;
But so as (though 'tis done by my connivance)
It shall not seem to be with my consent.
Lau. You do an act of noble charity,
And may just heaven reward it!
Enter Hippolita, and whispers Lucretia.
Soph. Oh, you're a faithful portress of a cloister!
What is't you whisper to Lucretia?
On your obedience tell me.
Luc. Since you must know, madam,
I have received a courtship from the prince
Of Mantua. The rest Hippolita may speak.
Hip. His page, Ascanio, is at the grate,
To know, from him, how you had scaped this danger;
And brings with him those habits—
Soph. I find that here has been a long commerce. What habits?
Luc. I blush to tell you, madam; they were masking habits, in which we went abroad.
Soph. O strange impiety! Well, I conclude
You are no longer for religious clothing;
You would infect our order.
Luc. [Kneeling.] Madam, you promised us forgiveness.
Soph. I have done; for 'tis indeed too late to chide.
Hip. With Ascanio there are two gentlemen; Aurelian and Camillo, I think they call themselves, who came to me, recommended from the prince, and desired to speak with Laura and Violetta.
Soph. I think they are your lovers, nieces.
Vio. Madam, they are.
Hip. But, for fear of discovery from your uncle, Mario, whose house, you know, joins to the monastery, are both in masquerade.
Soph. This opportunity must not be lost.
[To Laura and Violetta.
You two shall take the masking habits instantly,
And, in them, scape your jealous uncle's eyes.
When you are happy, make me so, by hearing your success.
[Kisses them. Exeunt Lau. and Vio.
Luc. A sudden thought is sprung within my mind,
Which, by the same indulgence you have shown,
May make me happy too. I have not time
To tell you now, for fear I lose this opportunity.
When I return from speaking with Ascanio,
I shall declare the secrets of my love,
And crave your farther help.
Soph. In all that virtue will permit, you shall not fail to find it. [Exit Lucretia.
Hip. Madam, the foolish fellow, whom we took, grows troublesome; what shall we do with him?
Soph. Send for the magistrate; he must be punished—
Yet, hold; that would betray the other secret.
Let him be strait turned out, on this condition,
That he presume not ever to disclose
He was within these walls. I'll speak with him.
Come, and attend me to him. [Exit Sophronia.
Hip. You fit to be an abbess! We, that live out
of the world, should, at least, have the common
sense of those that live far from town; if a pedlar
comes by them once a year, they will not let him go,
without providing themselves with what they want.
[Exit after Sophronia.
SCENE II.—The Street.
Enter Aurelian, Camillo, Laura, Violetta; all in Masking-habits.
Cam. This generosity of the abbess is never to be forgot; and it is the more to be esteemed, because it was the less to be expected.
Vio. At length, my Camillo, I see myself safe within your arms; and yet, methinks, I can never be enough secure of you; for now, I have nothing else to fear, I am afraid of you; I fear your constancy. They say possession is so dangerous to lovers, that more of them die of surfeits than of fasting.
Lau. You'll be rambling too, Aurelian; I do not doubt it, if I would let you; but I'll take care to be as little a wife, and as much a mistress to you, as is possible: I'll be sure to be always pleasant, and never suffer you to be cloyed.
Aur. You are certainly in the right: Pleasantness of humour makes a wife last in the sweetmeat, when it will no longer in the fruit. But, pray, let's make haste to the next honest priest that can say grace to us, and take our appetites while they are coming.
Cam. That way leads to the Austin-Friars; there lives a father of my acquaintance.
Lau. I have heard of him; he has a mighty stroke at matrimonies, and mumbles them over as fast, as if he were teaching us to forget them all the while.
Enter Benito, and overhears the last speech.
Ben. Cappari; that is the voice of madam Laura. Now, Benito, is the time to repair the lost honour of thy wit, and to blot out the last adventure of the nunnery.
Vio. That way I hear company; let us go about by this other street, and shun them.
Ben. That voice I know too; 'tis the younger sister's, Violetta's, Now have these two most treacherously conveyed themselves out of the nunnery, for my master and Camillo, and given up their persons to those lewd rascals in masquerade; but I'll prevent them. Help there! thieves and ravishers! villainous maskers! stop, robbers! stop, ravishers!
Cam. We are pursued that way, let's take this street.
Lau. Save yourselves, and leave us.
Cam. We'll rather die, than leave you.
Enter, at several doors, Duke of Mantua and Guards, and Don Mario and Servants, with Torches.
Aur. So, now the way is shut up on both sides.
We'll die merrily, however:—have at the fairest.
[Aurelian and Camillo fall upon the Duke's
Guards, and are seized behind by Mario's
Servants. At the drawing of Swords, Benito
runs off.
Duke. Are these insolencies usually committed in Rome by night? It has the fame of a well-governed city; and methinks, Don Mario, it does somewhat reflect on you to suffer these disorders.
Mar. They are not to be hindered in the Carnival: You see, sir, they have assumed the privilege of maskers.
Lau. [To Aur.] If my uncle know us, we are ruined; therefore be sure you do not speak.
Duke. How then can we be satisfied this was not a device of masking, rather than a design of ravishing?
Mar. Their accuser is fled, I saw him run at the beginning of the scuffle; but I'll examine the ladies.
Vio. Now we are lost.
[Duke coming near Laura, takes notice of her
habit.
Duke. [Aside.] 'Tis the same, 'tis the same; I know Lucretia by her habit: I'm sure I am not mistaken.—Now, sir, you may cease your examination, I know the ladies.
Aur. [To Cam.] How the devil does he know them?
Cam. 'Tis alike to us; they are lost both ways.
Duke. [Taking Laura aside.] Madam, you may confess yourself to me. Whatever your design was in leaving the nunnery, your reputation shall be safe. I'll not discover you, provided you grant me the happiness I last requested.
Lau. I know not, sir, how you could possibly come to know me, or of my design in quitting the nunnery; but this I know, that my sister and myself are both unfortunate, except your highness be pleased to protect us from our uncle; at least, not to discover us.
Duke. His holiness, your uncle, shall never be acquainted with your flight, on condition you will wholly renounce my son, and give yourself to me.
Lau. Alas, sir, for whom do you mistake me?
Duke. I mistake you not, madam: I know you for Lucretia. You forget that your disguise betrays you.
Lau. Then, sir, I perceive I must disabuse you: If you please to withdraw a little, that I may not be seen by others, I will pull off my mask, and discover to you, that Lucretia and I have no resemblance, but only in our misfortunes.
Duke. 'Tis in vain, madam, this dissembling: I protest, if you pull off your mask, I will hide my face, and not look upon you, to convince you that I know you.
Enter Benito.
Ben. So, now the fray is over, a man may appear again with safety.—Oh, the rogues are caught, I see, and the damsels delivered. This was the effect of my valour at the second hand.
Aur. Look, look, Camillo! it was my perpetual fool that caused all this; and now he stands yonder, laughing at his mischief, as the devil is pictured, grinning behind the witch upon the gallows.
Ben. [To Mario.] I see, sir, you have got your women, and I am glad on't: I took them just flying from the nunnery.
Duke. [To Lau.] You see that fellow knows you too.
Mar. Were these women flying from a nunnery?
Ben. These women? heyday! then, it seems, you do not know they are your nieces.
Duke. His nieces, say you? Take heed, fellow, you shall he punished severely, if you mistake.
Cam. Speak to Benito in time, Aurelian.
Aur. The devil's in him; he's running down-hill full speed, and there's no stopping him.
Mar. My nieces?
Ben. Your nieces? Why, do you doubt it? I praise heaven I never met but with two half-wits in my life, and my master's one of them; I will not name the other at this time.
Duke. I say, they are not they.
Ben. I am sure they are Laura and Violetta; and that those two rogues were running away with them, and that, I believe, with their consent.
Vio. Sister, 'tis in vain to deny ourselves; you see our ill fortune pursues us unavoidably. [Turning up her mask.] Yes, sir, we are Laura and Violetta, whom you have made unhappy by your tyranny.
Lau. [Turning up her mask.] And these two gentlemen are no ravishers, but—
Ben. How, no ravishers? Yes, to my knowledge
they are—[As he speaks, Aurelian pulls off his
mask.] No ravishers, as madam Laura was saying;
but two as honest gentlemen as e'er broke bread.
My own dear master, and so forth!
[Runs to Aur.
who thrusts him back.
Enter Valerio, and whispers the Duke, giving him a paper; which he reads, and seems pleased.
Mar. Aurelian and Camillo! I'll see you in safe custody; and, for these fugitives, go, carry them to my sister, and desire her to have a better care of her kinswomen.
Vio. We shall live yet to make you refund our portions. Farewell, Camillo; comfort yourself; remember there's but a wall betwixt us.
Lau. And I'll cut through that wall with vinegar, but I'll come to you, Aurelian.
Aur. I'll cut through the grates with aquafortis,
but I'll meet you. Think of these things, and despair,
and die, old gentleman.
[Aurelian and Camillo are carried off on
one side, and Laura and Violetta on the
other.
Ben. All things go cross to men of sense: Would
I had been born with the brains of a shop-keeper,
that I might have thriven without knowing why I
did so. Now, must I follow my master to the prison,
and, like an ignorant customer that comes to
buy, must offer him my backside, tell him I trust to
his honesty, and desire him to please himself, and
so be satisfied.
[Exit.
Duke. [To Val.] I am overjoyed; I'll see her immediately: Now my business with Don Mario is at an end, I need not desire his company to introduce me to the abbess; this assignation from Lucretia shows me a nearer way.—Noble Don Mario, it was my business, when this accident happened in the street, to have made you a visit; but now I am prevented by an occasion which calls me another way.
Mar. I receive the intention of that honour as the greatest happiness that could befal me: In the meantime, if my attendance—
Duke. By no means, sir, I must of necessity go in private; and therefore, if you please, you shall omit the ceremony.
Mar. A happy even to your highness.—Now
will I go to my sister, the abbess, before I sleep,
and desire her to take more care of her flock, or,
for all our relation, I shall make complaint, and endeavour
to ease her of her charge.
[Exit.
Duke. So, now we are alone, what said Lucretia?
Val. When first I pressed her to this assignation,
She spoke like one in doubt what she should do;
She demurred much upon the decency of it,
And somewhat too she seemed to urge, of her
Engagement to the prince: In short, sir,
I perceived her wavering, and closed with the opportunity.
Duke. O, when women are once irresolute, betwixt the former love and the new one, they are sure to come over to the latter. The wind, their nearest likeness, seldom chops about to return into the old corner.
Val. In conclusion, she consented to the interview; and for the rest, I urged it not, for I suppose she will hear reason sooner from your mouth than mine.
Duke. Her letter is of the same tenor with her discourse, full of doubts and doubles; like a hunted hare when she is near tired. The garden, you say, is the place appointed?
Val. It is, sir; and the next half hour the time. But, sir, I fear the prince your son will never bear the loss of her with patience.
Duke. 'Tis no matter; let the young gallant storm to-night, to-morrow he departs from Rome.
Val. That, sir, will be severe.
Duke. He has already received my commands to
travel into Germany. I know it stung him to the
quick, but he's too dangerous a rival: the soldiers
love him too; when he's absent they will respect
me more. But I defer my happiness too long; dismiss
my guards there.
[Exeunt Guards.
The pleasures of old age brook no delay;
Seldom they come, and soon they fly away. [Exeunt.
SCENE III.
Enter Frederick and Ascanio.
Fred. 'Tis true, he is my father; but when nature
Is dead in him, why should it live in me?
What have I done that I am banished Rome,
The world's delight, and my soul's joy, Lucretia,
And sent to reel with midnight beasts in Almain!
I cannot, will not, bear it.
Asca. I'm sure you need not, sir; the army is all yours; they wish a youthful monarch, and will resent your injuries.
Fred. Heaven forbid it! and yet I cannot lose Lucretia.
There's something I would do, and yet would shun
The ill, that must attend it.
Asca. You must resolve, for the time presses. She told me, this hour, she had sent for your father: what she means I know not, for she seemed doubtful, and would not tell me her intention.
Fred. If she be false—yet, why should I suspect her? Yet why should I not? She's a woman; that includes ambition and inconstancy; then, she's tempted high: 'twere unreasonable to expect she should be faithful: Well, something I have resolved, and will about it instantly; and if my friends prove faithful, I shall prevent the worst.
Enter Aurelian and Camillo, guarded.
Aurelian and Camillo? How came you thus attended?
Cam. You may guess at the occasion, sir; pursuing the adventure which brought us to meet you in the garden, we were taken by Don Mario.
Aur. And, as the devil would have it, when both we and our mistresses were in expectation of a more pleasing lodging.
Fred. Faith, that's very hard, when a man has charged and primed, and taken aim, to be hindered of his shoot.—Soldiers, release these gentlemen, I'll answer it.
Cap. Sir, we dare not disobey our orders.
Fred. I'll stand betwixt you and danger. In the mean time take this, as an acknowledgment of the kindness you do me.
Cap. Ay, marry, there's rhetoric in gold: who can deny these arguments: Sir, you may dispose of our prisoners as you please; we'll use your name, if we are called in question.
Fred. Do so. Goodnight, good soldiers. [Exeunt soldiers.] Now, gentlemen, no thanks; you'll find occasion instantly to reimburse me of my kindness.
Cam. Nothing but want of liberty could have hindered us from serving you.
Fred. Meet me within this half hour, at our monastery; and if, in the mean time, you can pick up a dozen of good fellows, who dare venture their lives bravely, bring them with you.
Aur. I hope the cause is bad too, otherwise we shall not deserve your thanks. May it be for demolishing that cursed monastery!
Fred. Come, Ascanio, follow me. [Exeunt severally.
SCENE IV.—The Nunnery Garden.
Enter Duke and Lucretia.
Luc. In making this appointment,
I go too far, for one of my profession;
But I have a divining soul within me,
Which tells me, trust reposed in noble natures
Obliges them the more.
Duke. I come to be commanded, not to govern:
Those few soft words, you sent me, have quite altered
My rugged nature; if it still be violent,
'Tis only fierce and eager to obey you;
Like some impetuous flood, which, mastered once,
With double force bends backward.
The place of treaty shows you strongest here;
For still the vanquished sues for peace abroad,
While the proud victor makes his terms at home.
Luc. That peace, I see, will not be hard to make,
When either side shows confidence of noble dealing
From the other.
Duke. And this, sure, is our case, since both are met alone.
Luc. 'Tis mine, sir, more than yours.
To meet you single, shows I trust your virtue;
But you appear distrustful of my love.
Duke. You wrong me much; I am not.
Luc. Excuse me, sir, you keep a curb upon me;
You awe me with a letter, which you hold
As hostage of my love; and hostages
Are ne'er required but from suspected faith.
Duke. We are not yet in terms of perfect peace;
Whene'er you please to seal the articles,
Your pledge shall be restored.
Luc. That were the way to keep us still at distance;
For what we fear, we cannot truly love.
Duke. But how can I be then secure, that, when
Your fear is o'er, your love will still continue?
Luc. Make trial of my gratitude; you'll find
I can acknowledge kindness.
Duke. But that were to forego the faster hold,
To take a loose, and weaker.
Would you not judge him mad, who held a lion
In chains of steel, and changed them for a twine?
Luc. But love is soft,
Not of the lion's nature, but the dove's;
An iron chain would hang too heavy on a tender neck.
Duke. Since on one side there must be confidence,
Why may not I expect, as well as you,
To have it plac'd in me? Repose your trust
Upon my royal word.
Luc. As 'tis the privilege of womankind,
That men should court our love,
And make the first advances; so it follows,
That you should first oblige; for 'tis our weakness
Gives us more cause of fear, and therefore you,
Who are the stronger sex, should first secure it.
Duke. But, madam, as you talk of fear from me,
I may as well suspect design from you.
Luc. Design! of giving you my love more freely;
Of making you a title to my heart,
Where you by force would reign.
Duke. O that I could believe you! But your words
Are not enough disorder'd for true love;
They are not plain, and hearty, as are mine;
But full of art, and close insinuation:
You promise all, but give me not one proof
Of love before; not the least earnest of it.
Luc. And what is then this midnight conversation?
These silent hours divided from my sleep?
Nay, more, stolen from my prayers with sacrilege,
And here transferred to you? This guilty hand,
Which should be used in dropping holy beads,
But now bequeathed to yours? This heaving heart,
Which only should be throbbing for my sins,
But which now beats uneven time for you?
These are my arts! and these are my designs!
Duke. I love you more, Lucretia, than my soul;
Nay, than yours too; for I would venture both,
That I might now enjoy you; and if what
You ask me, did not make me fear to lose you,
Though it were even my life, you should not be denied it.
Luc. Then I will ask no more.
Keep still my letter, to upbraid me with it:
To say, when I am sullied with your lust,
And fit to be forsaken,—Go, Lucretia,
To your first love; for this, for this, I leave you.
Duke. Oh, madam, never think that day can come!
Luc. It must, it will; I read it in your looks;
You will betray me, when I'm once engaged.
Duke. If not my faith, your beauty will secure you.
Luc. My beauty is a flower upon the stalk,
Goodly to see; but, gathered for the scent,
And once with eagerness pressed to your nostrils,
The sweets drawn out, 'tis thrown with scorn away.
But I am glad I find you out so soon;
I simply loved, and meant (with shame I own it)
To trust my virgin honour in your hands.
I asked not wealth for hire; and, but by chance,
(I wonder that I thought on't) begged one trial,
And, but for form, to have pretence to yield,
And that you have denied me. Farewell! I could
Have loved you, and yet, perhaps, I—
Duke. O speak, speak out, and do not drown that word;
It seemed as if it would have been a kind one;
And yours are much too precious to be lost.
Luc. Perhaps—I cannot yet leave loving you.
There 'twas. But I recalled it in my mind,
And made it false before I gave it air.
Once more, farewell—I wo'not,—
Now I can say I wo'not, wo'not love you. [Going.
Duke. You shall; and this shall be the seal of my affection.
[Gives the letter.
There take it, my Lucretia: I give it with more joy,
Than I with grief received it.
Luc. Good night; I'll thank you for't some other time.
Duke. You'll not abuse my love?
Luc. No; but secure my honour.
Duke. I'll force it from your hands. [Lucretia runs.
Luc. Help, help, or I am ravished! help, for heaven's sake!
Hippolita, Laura, and Violetta, within, at several places.
Within. Help, help Lucretia! they bear away Lucretia by force.
Duke. I think there's a devil in every corner.
Enter Valerio.
Val. Sir, the design was laid on purpose for you, and all the women placed to cry. Make haste away; avoid the shame, for heaven's sake.
Duke. [going.] O, I could fire this monastery!
Enter Frederick and Ascanio.
[Frederick, entering, speaks as to some behind him.]
Fred. Pain of your lives, let none of you presume to enter but myself.
Duke. My son!—O, I could burst with spite, and die with shame, to be thus apprehended! this is the baseness and cowardice of guilt: an army now were not so dreadful to me as that son, o'er whom the right of nature gives me power.
Fred. Sir, I am come—
Duke. To laugh at first, and then to blaze abroad,
The weakness and the follies of your father.
Val. Sir, he has men in arms attending him.
Duke. I know my doom then. You have taken a popular occasion; I am now a ravisher of chastity, fit to be made prisoner first, and then deposed.
Fred. You will not hear me, sir.
Duke. No, I confess I have deserved my fate;
For, what had these grey hairs to do with love?
Or, if the unseemly folly would possess me,
Why should I chuse to make my son my rival?
Fred. Sir, you may add, you banished me from Rome,
And, from the light of it, Lucretia's eyes.
Duke. Nay, if thou aggravat'st my crimes, thou giv'st
Me right to justify them: thou doubly art my slave,
Both son and subject. I can do thee no wrong,
Nor hast thou right to arraign or punish me:
But thou inquir'st into thy father's years;
Thy swift ambition could not stay my death,
But must ride post to empire. Lead me now;
Thy crimes have made me guiltless to myself,
And given me face to bear the public scorn.
You have a guard without?
Fred. I have some friends.
Duke. Speak plainly your intent.
I love not a sophisticated truth,
With an allay of lie in't.
Fred. [Kneeling.]
This is not, sir, the posture of a rebel,
But of a suppliant; if the name of son
Be too much honour to me.
What first I purpos'd, I scarce know myself.
Love, anger, and revenge, then rolled within me,
And yet, even then, I was not hurried farther
Than to preserve my own.
Duke. Your own! What mean you?
Fred. My love, and my Lucretia, which I thought,
In my then boiling passion, you pursued
With some injustice, and much violence;
This led me to repel that force by force.
'Twas easy to surprise you, when I knew
Of your intended visit.
Duke. Thank my folly.
Fred. But reason now has reassumed its place,
And makes me see how black a crime it is
To use a force upon my prince and father.
Duke. You give me hope you will resign Lucretia.
Fred. Ah no; I never can resign her to you:
But, sir, I can my life; which, on my knees,
I tender, as the atoning sacrifice:
Or if your hand (because you are a father)
Be loth to take away that life you gave,
I will redeem your crime, by making it
My own: So you shall still be innocent, and I
Die blessed, and unindebted for my being.
Duke. O Frederick, you are too much a son,
[Embracing him.
And I too little am a father: you,
And you alone, have merited Lucretia;
'Tis now my only grief,
I can do nothing to requite this virtue:
For to restore her to you,
Is not an act of generosity,
But a scant, niggard justice; yet I love her
So much, that even this little, which I do,
Is like the bounty of an usurer;
High to be priz'd from me,
Because 'tis drawn from such a wretched mind.
Fred. You give me now a second, better life;
[Kissing his hand.
But,—that the gift may be more easy to you,—
Consider, sir, Lucretia did not love you,—
I fear to say, ne'er would.
Duke. You do well to help me to o'ercome that difficulty:
I'll weigh that, too, hereafter. For a love,
So violent as mine, will ask long time,
And much of reason, to effect the cure.
My present care shall be to make you happy;
For that will make my wish impossible,
And then the remedies will be more easy.
Enter Sophronia, Lucretia, Violetta, Laura, Hippolita.
Soph. I have, with joy, o'erheard this happy change,
And come with blessings to applaud your conquest
Over the greatest of mankind, yourself.
Duke. I hope 'twill be a full and lasting one.
Luc. Thus, let me kneel, and pay my thanks and duty,
[Kneeling.
Both to my prince and father.
Duke. Rise, rise, too charming maid, for yet I cannot
Call you my daughter: that first name, Lucretia,
Hangs on my lips, and would be still pronounced.
Look not too kindly on me; one sweet glance,
Perhaps, would ruin both: therefore, I'll go
And try to get new strength to bear your eyes.
'Till then, farewell. Be sure you love my Frederick,
And do not hate his father. [Exeunt Duke and Valerio.
Fred. [At the door.] Now, friends, you may appear.
Enter Aurelian, Camillo, Benito.
Your pardon, madam, that we thus intrude
On holy ground: yourself best know it could not
Be avoided, and it shall be my care it be excused.
Soph. Though sovereign princes bear a privilege
Of entering when they please within our walls,
In others 'tis a crime past dispensation;
And therefore, to avoid a public scandal,
Be pleased, sir, to retire, and quit this garden.
Aur. We shall obey you, madam; but that we may do it with less regret, we hope you will give these ladies leave to accompany us.
Soph. They shall.
And, nieces, for myself, I only ask you
To justify my conduct to the world,
That none may think I have betrayed a trust,
But freed you from a tyranny.
Lau. Our duty binds us to acknowledge it.
Cam. And our gratitude to witness it.
Vio. With a holy and lasting remembrance of your favour.
Fred. And it shall be my care, either by reason to bend your uncle's will, or, by my father's interest, to force your dowry from his hands.
Ben. [To Aur.] Pray, sir, let us make haste over these walls again; these gardens are unlucky to me; I have lost my reputation of music in one of them, and of wit in the other.
Aur. [To Lau.] Now, Laura, you may take your choice betwixt the two Benito's, and consider whether you had rather he should serenade you in the garden, or I in bed to-night.
Lau. You may be sure I shall give sentence for Benito; for the effect of your serenading would be to make me pay the music nine months hence.
Hip. [To Asca.] You see, brother, here's a general gaol-delivery: there has been a great deal of bustle and disturbance in the cloister to-night; enough to distract a soul which is given up, like me, to contemplation: and therefore, if you think fit, I could even be content to retire, with you, into the world; and, by way of penance, to marry you; which, as husbands and wives go now, is a greater mortification than a nunnery.
Asca. No, sister; if you love me, keep to your monastery: I'll come now and then to the grate, and beg you a recreation. But I know myself so well, that if I had you one twelvemonth in the world, I should run myself into a cloister, to be rid of you.
Soph. Nieces, once more farewell. Adieu, Lucretia:
My wishes and my prayers attend you all.
Luc. to Fred. I am so fearful,
That, though I gladly run to your embraces,
Yet, venturing in the world a second time,
Methinks I put to sea in a rough storm,
With shipwrecks round about me.
Fred. My dear, be kinder to yourself and me,
And let not fear fright back our coming joys;
For we, at length, stand reconciled to fate:
And now to fear, when to such bliss we move,
Were not to doubt our fortune, but our love. [Exeunt.