316
THE PHANTOM: A DRAMA.
Stretch'd on a sick-bed—smitten by the same
Most pestilent disease that slew his mistress.
MALCOLM.
Ha! is it so! (Turning to Claude.) Then we must hold our peace.
CLAUDE.
What is there now of rivalry between us?
MALCOLM.
I've been to thee so wayward and unjust,
Thy kindness wrings the heart which it should soften.
(After a pause.) And all our fond delusion ends in this!
We've tack'd our shallow barks for the same course;
And the fair mimic isle, like Paradise,
Which seem'd to beckon us, was but a bank
Of ocean's fog, now into air dissolved!
ALICE.
As she was fair: no wily woman's art
Did e'er disgrace her worth;—believe me, Malcolm.
MALCOLM.
Thou best and loveliest friend of one so lovely!