The Ladies of Castile/Act IV
ACT IV
[edit]Scene I
[edit](Don Juan and Don Francis in Chains, led by the Guards across the Stage.---Pass off)
(Don Velasco and Conde Haro)
Conde Haro
- To see my country bleed, distracts my soul;
- But suffering virtue moves the gods themselves.
- I must implore my father's lenient hand
- To hold suspended yet the prisoner's fate,
- Until the emperor himself arrives:---
- His clemency may fix his royal power,
- And make him worthy of the crown he wears,
- A pardon granted to the good and brave
- Will bind their faith by gratitude and grace.
Don Velasco
- The laws have fix'd their signet on their fate;
- Nor wilI I pause, or hesitate between,
- The wide extremes of pity and revenge.
- Did conscience melt, and bid me spare their lives,
- I'd spurn her back---bid the rude phantom fly,
- And cease to check me in my fix'd design;
- They die tomorrow ere the sun retires.
Conde Haro
- I plight my sword, my honour, faith and life,
- Those sacred sanctions that bind men of worth,
- That Francis' pardon, or Don Juan's life,
- Shall not impede the glory of the king,
- Nor cause new ruptures, or disturb the realm.
Don Velasco
- The block's prepar'd---by justice' hand they die.
Conde Haro
- Let pity touch thy breast---let innocence---
- Let infant tears---let virgin sorrow plead---
- And let the matron's grief torn bosom urge
- A husband's cause:---O spare Padilla's life!---
Don Velasco
- And does my son---the glory of his house,
- Stand half dissolv'd by pity's softening tear?
Conde Haro
- There is a secret cause I dare not name.
- That yet might soften a fond father's heart.
Don Velasco
- This cursed cause---alas! too long conceal'd,
- Unbends thy purpose, and unmans thy arm.
- Louisa knows her secret guilt's betray'd;
- Her trembling steps too weak to bear her there,
- I yesterday confin'd her to her room;
- Bade her prepare to pay her nuptial vows
- To one I'd chosen for her rightful lord,
- To save her honour from a wanton love.
Conde Haro
- Do not precipitate the lovely maid,
- But gently lead with a paternal hand;
- And let time heal her agitated breast.
Don Velasco
- Stay not to prattle here for pardoning grace.
- Though weeping maids, or aged fires combin'd,
- Or lisping infants join the matron's tears
- To plead their cause, my resolution's fix'd:
- These outcasts of the world shall be cut off,
- As nature's shreds, and blotted out of time.
Conde Haro
- Then I repair to visit and console
- Afflicted worth in its extreme distress.
Don Velasco
- Go, take thy leave---salute thy treacherous friends,
- Ere my right hand shall send them to the shades.
(Exeunt)
Scene II
[edit](Don Juan De Padilla, solus)
(in prison)
Don Juan De Padilla
- True dignity may acquiess in ills,
- None can foresee, nor value can repel;
- Meekness becomes the Christian and the man,
- Not less the hero, when his God decrees,
- The palm of victory to a stronger hand.
- Here mimic justice rears his scaffold high---
- I feel the knife already at my throat;
- Death is the certain doom of all mankind---
- To learn to die is an heroic work:---
- But thus to die an ignominious death---
- Without a trial, or the forms of law,
- Pronounc'd a traitor---hurry'd from the stage---
- Torn from existence as an useless worm,
- By a base, vile, assassinating hand,
- Fires all my soul with fury and revenge.
- Had I have met my fate at Villabar,
- And as a soldier fell, and mix'd my blood
- With the rich stream that yesterday pour'd off,
- (While freedom's genius stoop'd and drop'd a tear,
- And held a golden urn in her right hand,
- To catch the fluid from each gaping wound,
- And rear'd her altar on the field of fame;)
- I'd died content, and spurn'd this nether world,
- And glori'd in the deathless name I left:---
- But, though tomorrow severs me from time,
- My soul is firm:---I view this little globe
- Hung on a single, half extinguish'd point:---
- That's not the sting which barbs the hand of death,
- But my Maria---my lov'd, my virtuous wife:---
- Oh! could oblivion wrap her from my thoughts
- Until we meet where souls are free indeed.
(Enter Conde Haro)
- Hah! who bends this way?---the Conde Haro---
- Rank cowardice in guilt's gigantic garb!---
- Has victory eras'd the noble flame
- Of sympathy in thine heroic breast,
- That thou can'st wish, mid'st glory and applause,
- To taste the triumph of infernal minds,
- And thus insult e'en in the pangs of death?---
Conde Haro
- Far other thoughts pervade my friendly breast.
- Though in the field, the king commands my sword,
- My heart I give to virtue in distress.
- Though warmly urg'd thy pardon or reprieve,
- Velasco's will, inexorably stern,
- Has fix'd the moment that completes thy date.
- What can I more---to sooth thy wounded mind?
- Say---dost thou wish to see thy lov'd Maria?---
- Or pour a blessing on the infant head
- Of thy young son, and bid a last adieu?---
- But if this tender scene's too big with grief,
- Then write whate'er conjugal love inspires,
- Or the paternal heart would wish to say:---
- De haro's honour is the pledge of truth;
- I'll sacredly transmit the precious charge,
- Nor shall a mortal eye profane the seals.
Don Juan De Padilla
- Too generous De Haro!---my full heart,
- In tears of blood, shall mark my gratitude;
- And my last breath its benediction pour
- On worth---on glory---dignify'd as thine,
- With all that's noble in a human soul.
- But ah!---too flattering to such a wretch---
- To see Maria once, is fancy'd bliss
- The Deity has plac'd beyond my reach.
Conde Haro
- A faithful friend shall lead thee safely on,
- My sword---my vest---my helmet, thy defence;
- If any curious prying eye purses,
- Or asks thy errand, or demands thy name,
- Pause not, nor speak, but shew De Haro's seal.
- But on the moment that the midnight bell
- Strikes its last note, and grates thy wounded ear,
- With the severest pang thou yet hast felt,
- Thou must return---and when we meet again,
- Then say my friend------------
- If one base thought has e'er deform'd my soul.
(Hurries off Don Juan in his own habit)
(Exeunt)
Scene III
[edit](Don Velasco and Donna Louisa)
Don Velasco
- Presumptuous maid---how durst thou disobey,
- And rush abroad, amid tumultuous scenes,
- And risque the wrath of an offended sire?
Donna Louisa
- Excuse, my lord, this hasty, bold intrusion;
- The boon I ask admits of no delay.
Don Velasco
- What means this daring importuning girl?
- What brought thee to the threshold of a jail?
- Thy trembling gestures and thy frighted mein,
- Are sad presages that relieve thy tongue
- Ere it betrays some bold accurs'd request.
Donna Louisa
- All gracious fire, whose goodness I adore,
- Thus on my bended knee, my bleeding heart,
- Swell'd with its gratitude, as if 'twould burst,
- Intreats thee once to hear Don Francis speak,
- Ere thy lip dooms to death the bravest man.
Don Velasco
- What int'rest hast thou in a rebel life,
- That thus in tears---in agonies of grief---
- In weeds of woe, thou pleadest for Don Francis?
Donna Louisa
- The first impression of my early youth,
- Thine own injunction, and my insant heart,
- Taught me to love---whate'er Maria lov'd---
- Her brother.------------
Don Velasco
- ------------------dies, as her husband shall;
- Nor will thy tears retard the blow
- Due to a traitor's crimes.------------
Donna Louisa
- Oh! grant an audience ere his fate is seal'd.
Don Velasco
- Think not I am deceiv'd, audacious maid!
- 'Tis not a childish fondness for Maria
- Wakes up a zeal that misbecomes thy sex---
- 'Tis baser passions foster'd in thy soul;
- Don Francis is the object of thy love:---
- Thy quick blood flows, and loose desires now play
- About thy heart, and wanton in thy eye;
- Yet sense of shame, still burns thy redden'd cheek,
- And cinders the smooth blush of innocence;
- But I've the means to cool thy hot brain'd flame,
- And from disgrace my family retrieve.
Donna Louisa
- Oh! spare Louisa---save thy hapless child !
Don Velasco
- Think not to melt my rigid purpose down;
- Forbear to practise hackney'd female arts,
- Thy sex's tears have ruin'd half mankind.
- My heart near bursts whene'er I bend my eye
- On such a worthless fragment of my house:
- But for Zelinda's image on thy brow
- I'd spurn at once from my indignant soul
- The lying semblance of so fair a form.
Donna Louisa
- By the dear mem'ry of that sainted name
- Forgive her daughter's agony of soul.
- Zelinda, oh!---compassionate my woes---
- Look down, bless'd saint, from thy divine abode,
- And teach my sire to pity thy Louisa.
Don Velasco
- While guilt hangs on thy base degen'rate lip,
- Durst thou appeal to purity itself?---
Donna Louisa
- This keen reproach distracts my tortur'd soul---
- A thoght unworthy of Zelinda's self,
- Ne'er found a place in this my spotless heart.
(Enter Don Pedro)
Don Velasco
- Then will I now bestow thee caste and pure,
- And bless the noble Pedro with thy hand;
- Thou art his bride---bound by my solemn oath,
- A just reward for loyalty and faith.
Donna Louisa
- Now all ye powers of earth and heaven, save
- From this last stroke---this worst of human ills!---
Don Pedro Ghiron
- I am too bless'd, by such an heavenly gift.
Donna Louisa
- Revoke thy sentence---snatch me from perdition---
- Or let me die with him my heart adores.
(sinks on her knee before her father, and faints)
Don Velasco
- I've gone too far---yet there's some curs'd design,
- Some mystery conceal'd---that neither she,
- Nor yet De Haro's bold and dauntless tongue,
- Dare ope before an injur'd father's eye.
- Poor lifeless maid---sure she's not dead;---
(Lays his hand on her forehead)
- She almost wakes compassion in my breast:
- But let my ear be deaf---my heart be fear'd
- To every soft sensation of the soul,
- 'Till infamy is wip'd from off my house.
Don Pedro Ghiron
- Spare her awhile, and let the storm subside;
- The mind that's soften'd thus by love and grief,
- Must, like the babe of innocence, be lull'd
- And gently sooth'd, and fondled into peace.
(Raises, and holds Louisa in his arms)
- See, she revives---speak soft and kindly
- To the charming maid.---------
Donna Louisa
- The tardy hand of death still lengthens out
- A life of woe------Hah! where am I---
(Opens her eyes and finds herself in Pedro's arms---shricks, and starts from him)
- On earth---the grave---in hades---or in hell?---
- Art thou the fiend chain'd to my frighted soul,
- To add new tortures to the shades below?---
Don Velasco
- Be calm, thou frantic girl---
(Stops, and holds her)
- Nor thus enrag'd fly from thy husband's arms.
Donna Louisa
- Was I the price, for which at Villabar,
- That perjur'd wight, betray'd and sold his friends!
- Go, minion! traitor! hide thy guilty head,
- Thy country blushes that she gave thee birth.
Don Velasco
- Respect becomes thy lip---he is thy lord.------
Donna Louisa
- As much as does my soul abhor his name,
- If possible, I more despise than hate,
- The infamous---the cowardly Don Pedro.
Don Velasco
- Pedro, retire---I'll bend her to thy will---
- She shall be thine---thou art my son---
- By all the saints and angels I adore,
- This eve shall solemnize the nuptial rights;
- Ere Francis dies---let consummation crown
- Don Pedro's wish, and wake full vengeance up.
(Exit Pedro)
Donna Louisa
- Alas! my sire---Oh! let religion plead:---
- Forgive thy child, and bless me ere I die.
- Pardon the purpose of my daring soul:
- But ere I yield, I'll bare my filial breast,
- Meet the drawn dagger's point, and kiss the poignard
- In my father's hand---uplift in wrath,
- Its edge to bury in this spotless breast---
- A breast replete with duty and respect---
- With every sentiment that heaven requires,
- Or to paternal or conjugal love---
- From thy fond daughter, or Don Francis' wife.
Don Velasco
- Don Francis' wife!---Heaven blast my cars!---
Donna Louisa
- His wife---his wedded wife---
- Nor let the grave, the sacred tie dissolve:
- By the same sanction let us perish both,
- Or both be bless'd, and by thy pardon live.
Don Velasco
- Could my Louisa prostitute her fame;
- In a mad fit of wanton love, entail
- Disgrace eternal, on the illustrious name
- Of Don Velasco!---abandon'd girl!---
- Then take my sword, and use it as ye list;
- Thy paramour this moment meets the death
- Thy perfidy extorts and his deserves.
(Exit Velasco)
Scene IV
[edit]Street before Don Juan's House
(Don Juan De Padilla and Don Francis)
Don Juan De Padilla
- Friend of my early youth---my brave Don Francis---
- Unlike the world---a friend in fortune's wane;
- Thou hast a soul that dares to mix with grief,
- And kindly seek'st thy wretched sister out
- To sooth the anguish of extreme distress.
- But how did'st thou escape thy gloomy cell?---
- Or by what means elude the watchful guard?---
Don Francis
- In sables clad, my face bedew'd with tears,
- The guards suppos'd I was thy noble sire,
- Who had permission to embrace his son,
- Ere death had seal'd an heirless father's woe.
- But on parole, I have De Haro's leave
- To fly to Charles, and in Velasco's name,
- To sue for pardon from the emperor's hand,
- And claim my bride by his Zelinda's ring:---
- He gave me both his signet and command,
- And bade me on the moment haste away;
- The next he said perhaps betray'd to death.
- I caught the letters with a rapturous hand,
- And kiss'd the seals, and dropt a grateful tear;
- I've waited but to bid my friend adieu,
- But not to see thy wife till I return.
Don Juan De Padilla
- Ah!---if thou can'st retrieve so brave a life,
- Protect Maria, and her infant son;
- Let them not languish in a servile land,
- To watch the nod of some imperious lord.
- Then tell the gazing citizens, who o'er
- My breathless corpse, before the morrow close,
- Will weep, and sigh, and curse my hapless fate,
- That they have cherish'd many valiant sons,
- Who amply may avenge my early death,
- And teach the world that fortune ne'er stands still:---
- In the routine of her uncertain wheel,
- She soon may jilt her fondled, favour'd sons.
- The sycophant and prince may both be taught,
- A sceptre's but the plaything of a day.
- Then let my father, noble Lopez, know
- Don Juan died, as Lopez' son should die,
- A dauntless martyr in his country's cause.
Don Francis
- Thy orders shall be punctually obey'd.
- I with my blood will seal the sacred charge;
- Though I could willing leave so base a world,
- And share with thee, the glory of thy death;
- Yet, for Louisa's sake, I wish to live.
Don Juan De Padilla
- Thou must away---'tis death to linger here---
- 'Tis rashness in extreme---thou can't escape
- The prying eyes that lurk for human blood:---
- Thy mein and aspect cannot be conceal'd---
- Thy soul shines through, and virtue's here a crime.
(Exeunt)
Scene V
[edit]Don Juan's house
(Donna Maria looking pensively into a garden from her apartment---thunder and lightning)
Donna Maria
- Those solemn groves---those spacious, shaded walks,
- Whose lofty tops salute the skirted clouds,
- And speak the grandeur of their ancient lords,
- Bend down their heads, responsive, to the skies,
- Which murmur thunders o'er Hesperia's fall.
- Sure nature joins to bend my spirits down,
- And rive the bolts through my distracted soul,
- That distant thunders shake the trembling dome,
- And storms irruptive tear the shatter'd skies.
(Enter Juan in the armour and habit of a royal Officer.--- Maria starting, accosts him)
- Hah!---dar'st thou come alone, thou miscreant slave!
- Think'st thou that mine is such a dastard soul
- To yield at sight of one of Charles's band?---
- My single arm shall be a match for thine.
Don Juan De Padilla
- This interview---this moment is my own---------
(Approaching)
Donna Maria
- Off, ruffian, off!---or by the powers above,
- The next shall fix a dagger in thy heart.
(Draws a poignard from under her robe)
Don Juan De Padilla
- On this last night that thy Padilla lives,
- Oh I let me clasp thee to my faithful breast.
(Throws off his disguise)
Donna Maria
- Immortal powers!---Say, do my eyes behold
- The injur'd ghost of my deceased lord?
- Or does my husband---my Don Juan live?---
Don Juan De Padilla
- He lives indeed---this one short hour he lives.
- When through the sharpest storms of life he sees
- Thee firmly stand---by fortitude secur'd,
- 'Tis worth a world to sold thee to my heart.
Donna Maria
- Did not my lord---my lov'd Padilla fall,
- Amidst the carnage of the noon tide rout?---
Don Juan De Padilla
- The faithful Socia reported thus,
- Left thou should'st perish in some rash attempt
- To see thy Juan, and neglect thy son.
- But a severer doom awaits my fate;
- I, on the morrow, as a traitor die.
Donna Maria
- Jehovah stoop, and lend thy potent arm,
- To snatch the virtuous from so vile a fate;
- Or let these curling fires, which, from the North,
- Emblazon nature's face from pole to pole,
- In mantling flames, in one devouring wreck,
- Sweep down the stars and crush this nether world.
Don Juan De Padilla
- The Deity enwraps his dark decrees
- Beyond the ken of man's presumptuous eye:---
- Yet souls sublime, serenely look abroad,
- And bid the howling tempests rage in vain.
- Though livid lightnings blaze from north to south,
- The tempests of this last tremendous night
- Are as the breeze that wafts the gentle bark
- Down the still tide, when every gale is hush'd---
- If my Maria's mind supports its poise,
- And smiles, superiour to the shocks of fate,
- They cannot reach the soul that spurns the world---
- Its tinsel'd toys---its titles, and its wealth.
- The tribute of a life, I hold but small,
- Could it repurchase liberty to Spain:---
- Yet he is free---and he alone is free---
- Who conquers passion, and subjects his will,
- When his misfortunes thicken in the skies.
Donna Maria
- No more, my lord---the test is too severe---
- I feel my boasted fortitude will fail.
Don Juan De Padilla
- Oh! spare my heart---------
- The plaintive accents of thy voice restrain,
- Nor sharpen, by thy tears, the pangs of death.
- My heart I leave---nought else can I bestow,
- And once ye thought the world could give no more.
Donna Maria
- Ah!---every tender pang that woe can paint,
- Or for my country---or my much lov'd lord,
- Distracts and wounds my agitated breast.
Don Juan De Padilla
- Forbear to pain my tortur'd soul afresh;
- Exert thyself---magnanimously stand,
- And save thy son---the city, and thyself.
- Protect and guard the lovely smiling boy,
- The only pledge of our unspotted loves,
- 'Till he, enraptur'd, hangs upon thy lip;
- While his bright eyeballs swim in filial tears,
- To hear the accents of his dying sire,
- Tenfold enhanc'd by thy descriptive tongue.
Donna Maria
- Maternal softness weakens my resolve,
- And wakes new fears---thou dearst, best of men,
- Torn from thy side, I'm levell'd with my sex.
- The wife---the mother---make me less than woman.
(Maria opens an adjacent apartment, and shews the infant in the arms of his nurse)
Don Juan De Padilla
- Let angel innocence lie soft and still,
- Nor call the dew drops to the infant eye
- By sympathetic, fond, parental tears.
- Tell him, the last bequest his father gave,
- The only legacy that heaven has lent,
- Was this strict charge, breath'd in his latest sigh,
- Be good, and just, as thou art nobly born,
- Nor yield thy liberty but with thy life.
(Juan wipes off a tear, and attempts to withdraw in silence)
Donna Maria
- Oh! leave me not, thus wretched and forlorn!---
Don Juan De Padilla
- How like a thief has time stol'n on my wish!---
(Clock strikes one)
- Must I away---hah!---this is death---
- The bitterness of death.---------
Donna Maria
- Wilt thou return, and on the scaffold bare
- Thy yielding neck, and as a traitor die?
Don Juan De Padilla
- Though tottering on the margin of the grave,
- For Charles's fortune balanc'd in the scale,
- Or all the gold in Montezuma's realm,
- I'd not exchange my probity of soul,
- Unsulli'd honour, and unblasted fame.
Donna Maria
- Is sentence past---irrevocably past---
- Then try the courage of a female heart,
- And let me die with thee---the treasons I avow---
- The crime is mine:---I can as bravely die,
- As e'er a Grecian, or a Roman dame---
- And smile at Portia's celebrated feat,
- Who drew her blood to worm a secret out:---
- I'll kiss the glittering ax and hug the shroud
- That wraps me ever from a servile world.
Don Juan De Padilla
- Retard me not---but bid me haste away.
- Thy virtue's rais'd so far above thy sex,
- Come plight thy vow, thy sacred, faithful vow,
- That fortune's roughest blasts, blight not thy fame.
- This moment, by appointment, is my friend's,
- It is the last that time has lent to love;---
- My honour calls---her voice I must obey.
(Going)
Donna Maria
- Oh stay!---Oh stay!---'twas not the midnight toll---
- One hour more let envious time bestow.
Don Juan De Padilla
- My throbbing heart from guile was ever free:
- No breach of faith shall mark me for a knave.
- Thou dost not wish---not ev'n to purchase life,
- To stain my honour by a fraudful deed:---
- No---when I'm shrouded in my peaceful tomb,
- No impious, servile tongue shall e'er reproach
- My name---my memory---my life, or fame.
- Adieu! my love---Adieu! to life and time---
- One last embrace, and I am gone---forever.
(Embraces, and retires hastily)
Donna Maria
- Oh! harsh and cruel sound---adieu!---forever---
- He's gone------------
- And heav'n's broad eye beholds the fatal stroke,
- And thunders vengeance from the louring skies.
(A solemn pause)
- When his great soul ascends the broad expanse,
- Let angels guard him through the widen'd dome.
- But shall Maria shroud herself in grief,
- And sink beneath life's disappointed hopes,
- A feeble victim to her own despair?---
- A soul, inspir'd by freedom's genial warmth,
- Expands---grows firm---and by resistance, strong:
- The most successful prince that offers life,
- And bids me live upon ignoble terms,
- Shall learn from me that virtue seldom fears.---
- Death kindly opes a thousand friendly gates,
- And freedom waits to guard her votaries through.
(Exit)