The Sack of Rome/Act I
Appearance
ACT I
[edit]Scene I
[edit]A Camp near Rome
(Ætius and Gaudentius)
Ætius
- A solemn stillness reigns throughout the camp;
- The hostile sound of martial musick's hush'd;
- A truce agreed, the proud Attila gives,
- Perhaps, a short liv'd peace to bleeding Rome:
- But nations pouring from their frozen dens,
- Rough, naked boors, from every northern wild,
- Untutor'd, or by nature, or by art,
- With scarce a trait that speaks the species man,
- Except the semblance of the human form,
- Must be the chosen scourge, by heaven design'd,
- To chasten Rome for that tyrannick sway
- Usurp'd and stretch'd o'er all her wide domain,
- And proudly held by her remorseless sword;
- Her insolence, her stubbornness of soul,
- That trod down nations, trampled on the necks
- Of mighty kings, and taught her weaker foes.
- To fear alike her senators and gods.
Gaudentius
- Though from each quarter of the peopled globe
- Some hostile foe, or new invader rise,
- Imperial Rome must ever awe the world.
Ætius
- With hideous shouts the northern hords retir'd
- O'er the bleak mounts to Sogdiana's wilds;
- But fierce Attila look'd indignant back
- On weaken'd Rome, by luxury undone;
- Flush'd with success, by vulgar kings ador'd,
- Who watch his nod and tremble at his frown,
- The Scythian savage left the Latian shore,
- Like some wild beast just gorg'd with human blood,
- Full glutted with his prey, to breathe awhile
- In his ferocious den---to whet his taste
- For new refreshing hecatombs of blood.
Gaudentius
- Extreme distress unites the firm and brave;
- True virtue might each obstacle surmount;
- Rome, like a phenix, from her smoking towns,
- Dissolving columns, cities wrapt in flames,
- Might vet emerge and more illustrious shine,
- If party rage and luxury should cease,
- And peace give time to make a just reform
- Through each corrupted channel of the law;
- Or if simplicity again returns,
- And government more energy assumes,
- Her ancient codes restor'd on equal terms,
- She yet might reign from Danube to the Po.
Ætius
- There's little hope from such a noble source;
- So chang'd her manners, so debas'd the mind
- By faction, pride, intemperance and lust.
- Lost in inglorious ease, all valour melts
- Beneath incrusted roofs, emboss'd with gold,
- Egyptian pearls and emeralds of the East.
- The sword alone is all that Rome can boast
- That bears affinity to former fame;
- Yet see the sons of Romulus dismay'd,
- The trembling youth of Italy alarm'd
- Whene'er the trumpet summons to the field.
- Before the vernal equinox returns
- To cheer the Hetrurian plains, war wakes anew;
- I saw the tyger gnash his hungry teeth
- When fair Honoria's ample dower was nam'd,
- On which the savage stipulated peace;
- This brings him back to claim his royal bride.
Gaudentius
- But while transported with the youthful charms
- Of beauteous Elda---taken to his bed;
- Amidst barbarick pomp---he may forget
- Both enmity and gold and his Honoria,
- Till Rome's prepar'd to meet him in the field.
(Exeunt)
Scene II
[edit](Ætius, Leo and Gaudentius)
Leo
- I come my lord with tidings on my tongue.
Ætius
- Say, what new foe has Rome? I am prepar'd.
Leo
- I come to hail the valiant friend of Rome,
- Whose arm and prowess are her best support;
- With the glad news of fierce Attila's death.
Ætius
- How did the monster fall?
Leo
- Hot from the riot of a barbarous feast;
- Sent swiftly down to Pluto's gloomy shade,
- By lewd debauch and great excess of joy
- That his rough arm had humbled haughty Rome.
Ætius
- Humbled indeed! the world's proud mistress
- Trembles at th' approach of Suevick valour;
- The harden'd lance dip'd in the Wolga's stream;
- Hurl'd in the face of her degenerate sons;
- They start appall'd e'en at a distant foe;
- The next invader seals Rome's heavy doom.
Leo
- Though weaken'd Rome by furious factions torn,
- Imbitter'd by decline, sinks deep in vice---
- Yet, was the empire held in bolder hands
- The fierce barbarick rage might still be check'd:
- Within Liguria all would be secure,
- And sav'd from pillage all the Latian states;
- Then let the world beyond the towering Alps
- Be still possess'd by Goth, or Vandal tribes,
- Ravag'd by wolves, or yet more savage Huns.
Ætius
- Where is the emperor? Does he not awake
- From his soft slumbering lethargy of soul?
Leo
- Supinely sunk in dreams of wanton bliss,
- Ignoble pleasures of a splendid court,
- Or peace, or war, or truce, the same to him.
Ætius
- Yet, when he heard of the barbarian's death,
- Did he not rouse, nor dread the ill omen'd birds
- That late have brooded o'er the capitol,
- And augur'd evils round the city walls,
- That the twelve centuries were near complete,
- Since Romulus the founder of the state
- Had prophesied the measure of her guilt
- Would tempt the destinies in wrath to rise
- And shake the empire from its ancient base?
Leo
- The fair Ardelia fills the monarch's heart;
- He secret sighs for Maximus's wife.
Ætius
- Ardelia!---the good---the chaste Ardelia---
- The first and fairest matron left in Rome!
Leo
- To triumph over her superiour charms,
- He cog'd the dye at Maximus's cost:
- Long practis'd in the tercerarian art,
- Petronius is play'd a double game;
- The die was thrown while fortune turn'd the wheel
- That makes him wretched as he has been bless'd.
Ætius
- 'Mongst the long list of celebrated names,
- Matrons of ancient or of modern fame,
- None boasts a fairer claim to virtue's palm
- Than the discreet, the excellent Ardelia;
- Nor can she forfeit by a shameful fall
- That modesty, and grace, and decent pride,
- That dignifies, nor less adorns, the sex.
Leo
- Yet heavenly virtue, or angelick worth,
- May fall the victim of a wanton wish,
- When power lends its iron hand to guilt.
Ætius
- Petronius ador'd Ardelia's charms.
Leo
- As well he ought---though innocent as fair,
- Pity's too weak her anguish to express---
- Language too poor to speak one half her griefs:
- But Maximus returns---Ah, hapless man!
- I would not see him till he knows his fate,
- And time has calm'd the tumults of his soul.
(Exeunt)
Scene III
[edit](Ætius and Maximus)
Ætius
- Hah ! Maximus---
- Art thou the last to hail thy friend's success?
- Or has long absence blotted friendship out?
Maximus
- Forgive me, Ætius---
- I esteem thy virtues---nor envy thee
- The laurels, thou hast won: Absence, nor time,
- Can e'er obliterate that love, that friendship,
- Merit makes thy own, and worth commands:
- Give me thy hand---thou know'st my heart is thine,
- Nor can I more until we meet again.
Ætius
- What means this haste? Why that disturbed brow?
Maximus
- Return'd this moment from the Aquilean camp
- Where I've been sent with such impetuous speed,
- So much unlike the slowness of the emperor,
- I scarce believe that he could mean me fair.
Ætius
- What cause is there for doubt? or why suspect?
Maximus
- I think some latent mischief lies conceal'd
- Beneath the vizard of a fair pretence;
- My heart ill brook'd the errand of the day,
- Yet I obey'd---though a strange horror seiz'd
- My gloomy mind---and shook my frame
- As if the moment murder'd all my joys.
Ætius
- But what excites distrust?
Maximus
- Not like a child am I about to weave
- In piteous accents a sad tale of woe:
- But if I'm bubbled by a mean device.
- No lingering vengeance shall repair my wrongs.
Ætius
- What mean these fears? this agony of doubt?
Maximus
- Thou art a gen'rous and a valiant friend:
- I'll not conceal the anguish of my soul,
- Nor yet the secret worm that gnaws my heart.
- Myself forgot in an ignoble vice,
- A vice below the dignity of man,
- Without temptation but in avarice,
- A blacker passion still---fate threw the die,
- Or by superiour skill the emperor won
- My beauteous grottos---my paternal groves---
- My pleasant villas---and, meandering streams---
- The sweet cascades that gurgled o'er the dales---
- The noble busts that mark'd th' Anician name---
- My poplar walks---and my Ardelia's bower---
- (Those soft retreats of innocence and love)
- And thus for once made Maximus a slave.
- But ah! he gave a treacherous release;
- He only ask'd the signet from my hand
- To seal a promise that I'd reach the camp
- Where Accimer commands before the eve:
- But 'twas a poor, a frivolous pretence;
- Yet did I not suspect a base design,
- Till I receiv'd, without a signature,
- In characters familiar to my eye,
- A sentence like a thunderbolt from Jove.
- I kiss'd the hand---in raptures broke the seal---
- "Read---tremble---and despair---adieu, Petronius!"
- Was all the page---the solemn page, contain'd;
- And now I haste to find my lov'd Ardelia;
- If she's not wrong'd, Petronius Maximus
- May still be bless'd.
Ætius
- Though Valentinian doats on beauty's charms,
- Ardelia must be safe: True virtue checks
- A bold licentious wish, and guards the fair;
- He durst not drag an angel to his bed.
Maximus
- As truth and virtue dignifi'd my bliss,
- The gods alone who judge of spotless worth,
- Must clear her fame, and vindicate my own;
- Or let their vengeance pour in dreadful peals
- Their heated bolts---till chosen curses fall,
- In blasts distinguish'd, on the emperor's head.
(Exeunt)
Scene IV
[edit](Ætius, Gaudentius and Heraclius)
Ætius
- Heraclius !---Say, what has brought thee hither?
Heraclius
- The emperor's command---he, on the tide
- Of pleasure and success, congratulates,
- Both on the peace, and on Attila's death,
- The brave Gaudentius, and his noble sire;
- He greets with thanks, his hardy, veteran friends,
- For valour, faith, and every great exploit
- Their arms atchiev'd in the rough field of Mars.
- When Ætius finds it safe to leave the camp,
- It is his will ye both repair to Rome,
- To rest awhile from toilsome scenes of war,
- And taste the pleasures of the imperial court.
Ætius
- We shall obey---and ere tomorrow's dawn,
- I reach the city and salute my prince.
- But whence that sigh, my son? Art thou afraid
(to Gaudentius)
- To venture on the threshold of a court,
- Lest it melt down thy valour or thy fame?
- Or does soft hope present th' hymenial torch,
- Rekindle in thy breast a lover's flame.
- And bring the fair Eudocia to thine eye?
- Thy valour claims her from the emperor's hand
- Nor will he longer now protract his vow.
Gaudentius
- Nor shall he---Eudocia is my wife---
- A soldier's honour rests upon his sword,
- And mine shall claim its right.
Heraclius
- He gives Eudocia to thy longing arms,
- And bids thee haste to solemnize thy love,
- In festal joys and holy nuptial rites.
Gaudentius
- Thou art the harbinger of bliss indeed;
- Command my gratitude, it shall be thine:
- I'll hasten on, and meet thee in the forum;
- If yet thou hast one wish ungratified,
- Command my aid---it shall ensure success.
- Complete thy fortune, and fill up thy hopes.
Heraclius
- The princess waits impatiently to hear
- The happy moment of her lord's return.
(Exit Heraclius)
Ætius
- There's not a prince in Valentinian's court
- Has serv'd with more fidelity and zeal;
- Nor does he slight the services of Ætius,
- But as a prince he bounteously rewards.
- My son! the bravest, most deserving youth
- That e'er paternal love clasp'd to his breast,
- He crowns thy valour with the choicest gift
- A lover ever wish'd, or hero claim'd.
- Yet while my heart anticipates thy bliss,
- Thou must remember that thou liv'st for Rome:
- Let not ambition, avarice, or love,
- Contaminate thy patriotick worth:
- And as my sword has sav'd the commonwealth,
- Drove back her foes, and given peace to Rome,
- Let thine example teach her to be free.
Gaudentius
- Inspir'd by thee, by glory, and by fame,
- No deed of mine shall ever stain thy name.
(Exeunt)