Jump to content

The Works of Sir John Suckling in prose and verse/Aglaura

From Wikisource
AGLAURA.

Presented

At the Private House in
Black-Fryers, by his Ma-
jesties Servants.

Written by

Sir JOHN SVCKLING.

LONDON,
Printed by T. W. for Humphrey Moseley, and are
to be sold at his shop, at the Signe of the
Princes Armes in St. Pauls Churchyard.
1646.

To Sir Iohn Sutlin upon his
Aglaura: First, a bloody Tragedy, then by
the said Sir Iohn turn'd to a
COMEDY

When first I read thy Book, methought each word
Seem'd a short Dagger, and each line a Sword.
Where Women, Men; Good, Bad; Rich, Poore—all dy:
That needs must prove a fatal Tragedy.
But when I find, whom I so late saw slain5
In thy first Book, in this revive again,
I cannot but with others much admire
In humane shape a more than earthly Fire.
So when Prometheus did inform this Clay,
He stole his Fire from heaven. What shall I say?10
First for to Kill, and then to life restore,
This Sutlin did: the Gods can do no more.

PROLOGUE

I've thought upon 't; and cannot tell which way
Ought I can say now should advance the play:
For plays are either good or bad: the good
(If they do beg) beg to be understood;
And, in good faith, that has as bold a sound,5
As if a beggar should ask twenty pound.
—Men have it not about them:
Then, gentlemen, if rightly understood,
The bad do need less prologue than the good;
For, if it chance the plot be lame, or blind,10
Ill-cloth'd, deform'd throughout, it needs must find
Compassion—it is a beggar without art:
But it falls out in penny-worths of wit,
As in all bargains else—men ever get
All they can in; will have London measure,15
A handful over, in their very pleasure.
And now ye have 't, he could not well deny 'ee.
And I dare swear he's scarce a saver by ye.

PROLOGUE TO THE COURT

Those common passions, hopes, and fears, that still,
The poets first, and then the prologues fill
In this our age, he that writ this, by me
Protests against as modest foolery.
He thinks it an odd thing to be in pain5
For nothing else, but to be well again.
Who writes to fear is so: had he not writ,
You ne'er had been the judges of his wit;
And, when he had, did he but then intend
To please himself, he sure might have his end10
Without th' expense of hope; and that he had
That made this play, although the play be bad.
Then, gentlemen, be thrifty: save your dooms
For the next man or the next play that comes;
For smiles are nothing where men do not care,15
And frowns as little where they need not fear.

TO THE KING

This, Sir, to them: but unto Majesty
All he has said before he does deny;
Yet not to Majesty—that were to bring
His fears to be but for the Queen and King,
Not for your selves; and that he dares not say.5
You are his sovereigns another way:
Your souls are princes, and you have as good
A title that way, as ye have by blood,
To govern; and here your power's more great
And absolute than in the royal seat.10
There men dispute, and but by law obey:
Here is no law at all, but what ye say.

Dramatis Personæ

King, in love with Aglaura.
Thersames, Prince, in love with Aglaura.
Orbella, Queen, at first mistress to Ziriff; in love with Ariaspes.
Ariaspes, brother to the King.

Ziriff, otherwise Zorannes disguised, Captain of the Guard, in love with Orbella; brother to Aglaura.
Iolas, a Lord of the Council, seeming friend to the Prince, but a traitor, in love with Semanthe.
Aglaura, in love with the Prince, but nam'd mistress to the King.

Orsames, a young lord anti-Platonic; friend to the Prince.
Philan, the same.
Semanthe, in love with Ziriff; Platonic.
Orithie, in love with Thersames.
Pasithas, a faithful servant.
Iolina, Aglaura's waiting-woman.

Courtiers.Huntsmen.Priest.Guard.

Scœna, Persia.

AGLAURA

ACT I
Scene I
Enter Iolas, Iolina

Iol. Married? and in Diana's grove?

Iolin. So was th' appointment, or my sense deceiv'd me.

Iol. Married!
Now, by those powers that tie those pretty knots,
'Tis very fine: good faith, 'tis wondrous fine.5

Iolin. What is, brother?

Iol. Why, to marry, sister;
T' enjoy 'twixt lawful and unlawful thus
A happiness, steal as it were one's own;
Diana's grove, sayest thou? [Scratcheth his head

Iolin. That is the place; the hunt once up, and all10
Engaged in the sport, they mean to leave
The company, and steal unto those thickets,
Where there's a priest attends them.

Iol. And will they lie together, think'st thou?

Iolin. Is there distinction of sex, think you,15
Or flesh and blood?

Iol. True; but the king, sister!

Iolin. But love, brother!

Iol. Thou sayest well; 'tis fine, 'tis wondrous fine!
Diana's grove?

Iolin. Yes, Diana's grove; but, brother,
If you should speak of this now.

Iol. Why, thou knowest20
A drowning man holds not a thing so fast:
Semanthe!

Enter Semanthe; she sees Iolas, and goes in again

She shuns me too!

Iolin. The wound [is] fest'red sure,
The hurt the boy gave her, when first she look'd
Abroad into the world, is not yet cur'd.

Iol. What hurt?

Iolin. Why, know you not25
She was in love long since with young Zorannes,
Aglaura's brother, and the now queen's betroth'd?

Iol. Some such slight tale I've heard.

Iolin. Slight! She yet does weep, when she but hears him nam'd,30
And tells the prettiest and the saddest stories
Of all those civil wars and those amours,
That, trust me, both my lady and myself
Turn weeping statues still.

Iol. Pish! 'tis not that.
'Tis Ziriff and his fresh glories here have robb'd35
Me of her: since he thus appear' d in court,
My love has languished worse than plants in drought.
But time's a good physician. Come, let's in:
The king and queen by this time are come forth.

[Exeunt

Scene II

Enter Serving-men to Ziriff

1 Serv. Yonder's a crowd without, as if some strange
sight were to be seen to-day here.

2 Serv. Two or three with carbonadoes afore instead
of faces mistook the door for a breach, and, at the open-
ing of it, are striving still which should enter first.5

3 Serv. Is my lord busy?[Knocks

Enter Ziriff, as in his study

1 Serv. My lord, there are some soldiers without.

Zir. Well, I will despatch them presently.

2 Serv. Th' ambassadors from the Cadusians too.

Zir. Show them the gallery.

3 Serv. One from the king.10

Zir. Again? I come, I come.

[Exeunt Serving-men

Greatness, thou vainer shadow of the prince's beams,
Begot by mere reflection, nourish'd in extremes,
First taught to creep and live upon the glance,
Poorly to fare, till thine own proper strength15
Bring thee to surfeit of thyself at last!
How dull a pageant would this states-play seem
To me now, were not my love and my revenge
Mix'd with it!—
Three tedious winters have I waited here,20
Like patient chemists, blowing still the coals,
And still expecting when the blessed hour
Would come, should make me master of
The Court Elixir, Power; for that turns all.
'Tis in projection now; down, sorrow, down,25
And swell my heart no more! and thou, wrong'd ghost
Of my dead father, to thy bed again,
And sleep securely!
It cannot be long,—for sure fate must,
As it has been cruel, so a while be just.[Exit30

Scene III

Enter King and Lords, the Lords entreating for prisoners

King. I say they shall not live: our mercy
Would turn [to] sin, should we but use it e'er.
Pity and love the bosses only be
Of government, merely for show and ornament.
Fear is the bit that man's proud will restrains,5
And makes its vice its virtue.—See it done.

Enter to them Queen, Aglaura, Ladies. The King addresses himself to Aglaura

So early and so curious in your dress, fair mistress?
These pretty ambushes and traps for hearts,
Set with such care to-day, look like design:
Speak, lady, is't a massacre resolv'd?10
Is conquering one by one grown tedious sport?
Or is the number of the taken such,
That for your safety you must kill outright?

Agl. Did none do greater mischief, sir, than I,
Heav'n would not much be troubled with sad story;15
Nor would the quarrel man has to the stars
Be kept alive so strongly.

King. When he does leave 't,
Woman must take it up, and justly too,
For robbing of the sex, and giving all to you.

Agl. Their weaknesses you mean and I confess, sir.20

King. The greatest subjects of their power or glory.
Such gentle rape thou act'st upon my soul,
And with such pleasing violence dost force it still,
That, when it should resist, it tamely yields,
Making a kind of haste to be undone,25
As if the way to victory were loss,
And conquest came by overthrow.

Enter an Express, delivering a packet upon his knee. The King reads

Queen [looking upon a flower in one of the Ladies' heads]. Pretty!
Is it the child of nature, or of some fair hand?

La. 'Tis as the beauty, madam, of some faces,30
Art's issue only.

King. Thersames, this concerns you most. Brought
you her picture?

Exp. Something made up for her in haste I have.

[Presents the picture

King. If she does owe no part of this fair dower
Unto the painter, she is rich enough.35

Agl. A kind of merry sadness in this face
Becomes it much.

King. There is indeed, Aglaura,
A pretty sullenness dress'd up in smiles,
That says this beauty can both kill and save.
How like you her, Thersames?40

Ther. As well as any man can do a house
By seeing of the portal: here's but a face;
And faces, sir, are things I have not studied.
I have my duty, and may boldly swear,
What you like best will ever please me most.45

King. Spoke like Thersames and my son!
Come: the day holds fair.
Let all the huntsmen meet us in the vale;
We will uncouple there.

[Exeunt: Ariaspes stays behind

Ari. How odd a thing a crowd is unto me!50
Sure, nature intended I should be alone.
Had not that old doting man-midwife Time
Slept when he should have brought me forth, I had
Been so too. [Studies and scratches his head

To be born near, and only near, a crown!55

Enter Iolas

Iol. How now, my lord? What, walking o' th[e] tops
Of pyramids? Whispering yourself away
Like a denied lover? come, to horse, to horse!
And I will show you straight a sight shall please you,
More than kind looks from her you dote upon60
After a falling out.

Ari. Prithee, what is't?

Iol. I'll tell you as I go.[Exeunt

Scene IV

Enter Huntsmen hallooing and whooping

Hunts. Which way, which way?

Enter Thersames, with Aglaura muffled

Ther. This is the grove, 'tis somewhere here within.

[Exeunt

Enter, dogging of them, Ariaspes, Iolas

Iol. Gently, gently!

Enter Orsames, Philan, a Huntsman, two Courtiers

Hunts. No hurt, my lord, I hope?

Ors. None, none: thou wouldst have warranted it to5
another, if I had broke my neck. What! dost think my
horse and I show tricks, that, which way soever he throws
me, like a tumbler's boy I must fall safe? Was there
a bed of roses there? would I were eunuch, if I had not
as lief ha' fallen in the state as where I did! the ground10
was as hard as if it had been paved with Platonic ladies'
hearts, and this unconscionable fellow asks whether I
have no hurt! Where's my horse?

1 Court. Making love to the next mare, I think.

2 Court. Not the next, I assure you: he's gallop'd15
away, as if all the spurs i' th' field were in his sides.

Ors. Why, there it is: the jade's in the fashion too:
now h'as done me an injury, he will not come near me!
Well, when I hunt next, may it be upon a starv'd cow,
without a saddle too; and may I fall into a sawpit, and20
not be taken up but with suspicion of having been private
with mine own beast there! Now I better consider on't
too, gentlemen, 'tis but the same thing we do at court:
here's every man striving who shall be foremost, and
hotly pursuing of what he seldom overtakes; or, if he25
does, it's no great matter.

Phi. He that's best hors'd, that is, best friended, gets
in soonest; and then all he has to do is to laugh at those
that are behind. Shall we help you, my lord?

Ors. Prithee, do. Stay! To be in view's to be in30
favour, is it not?

Phi. Right; and he that has a strong faction against him,
hunts upon a cold scent, and may in time come to a loss.

Ors. Here's one rides two miles about, while another
leaps a ditch, and is in before him.35

Phi. Where note, the indirect way's the nearest!

Ors. Good again!

Phi. And here's another puts on, and falls into a
quagmire, that is, follows the court, till he has spent all;
for your court quagmire is want of money—there a man is40
sure to stick, and then not one helps him out, if they do
not laugh at him.

1 Court. What think you of him that hunts after my
rate, and never sees the deer?

2 Court. Why, he is like some young fellow that follows45
the court, and never sees the king.

Ors. To spur a horse, till he is tired, is——

Phi. To importune a friend till he weary of you.

Ors. For then, upon the first occasion, y'are thrown
off, as I was now.50

Phi. This is nothing to the catching of your horse,
Orsames.

Ors. Thou sayest true: I think he is no transmigrated
philosopher, and therefore not likely to be taken with
morals. Gentlemen, your help! the next, I hope, will55
be yours; and then 'twill be my turn.[Exeunt

Enter again, married, Thersames and Aglaura, with Priest

Ther. Fear not, my dear! if, when love's diet was
Bare looks, and those stol'n too, he yet did thrive,
What then will he do now, when every night
Will be a feast, and every day fresh revelry?60

Agl. Will he not surfeit, when he once shall come
To grosser fare, my lord, and so grow sick?
And love once sick, how quickly it will die!

Ther. Ours cannot; 'tis as immortal as the things
That elemented it, which were our souls:65
Nor can they e'er impair in health for what
These holy rites do warrant us to do,
More than our bodies would for quenching thirst.
Come, let's to horse; we shall be miss'd; for we
Are envy's mark, and court eyes carry far.70
Your prayers and silence, sir![To the Priest

[Exeunt

Scene V

Enter Ariaspes, Iolas

Ari. If it succeed, I wear thee here, my Iolas.

Iol. If it succeed? will night succeed the day,
Or hours one to another? is not his lust
The idol of his soul, and was not she
The idol of his lust? As safely he might5
Have stol'n the diadem from off his head,
And he would less have miss'd it.
You now, my lord, must raise his jealousy:
Teach it to look through the false optic, fear,
And make it see all double. Tell him, the prince10
Would not have thus presum'd, but that he does
Intend worse yet; and that his crown and life
Will be the next attempt.

Ari. Right; and I will urge,
How dangerous 'tis unto the present state
To have the creatures and the followers15
Of the next prince, whom all now strive to please,
Too near about him.

Iol. What if the malcontents
That use to come unto him, were discovered?

Ari. By no means; for it were in vain to give
Him discontent (which, too, must needs be done),20
If they within him gave't not nourishment.

Iol. Well, I'll away first; for the print's too big,
If we be seen together.[Exit

Ari. I have so fraught this bark with hope, that it
Dares venture now in any storm or weather;25
And, if he sink or splits, all's one to me.
'Ambition seems all things, and yet is none,
But in disguise stalks to opinion,
And fools it into faith for everything.'
'Tis not with the ascending to a throne30
As 'tis with stairs and steps that are the same:
For to a crown each humour's a degree;
And, as men change and differ, so must we.
The name of virtue doth the people please,
Not for their love to virtue, but their ease;35
And parrot-rumour I that tale have taught.
By making love I hold the woman's grace;
'Tis the court double-key, and entrance gets
To all the little plots. The fiery spirits
My love to arms hath drawn into my faction:40
All but the minion of the time is mine,
And he shall be, or shall not be at all.
He that beholds a wing in pieces torn,
And knows not that to heav'n it once did bear
The high-flown and self-lessening bird, will think45
And call them idle subjects of the wind;
When he, that has the skill to imp and bind
These in right places, will thus truth discover,
That borrowed instruments do oft convey
The soul to her propos'd intents, and where50
Our stars deny, art may supply.[Exit

Enter Semanthe, Orithie, Orsames, Philan

Sem. Think you it is not then
The little jealousies, my lord, and fears;
Joy mix'd with doubt, and doubt reviv'd with hope,
That crowns all love with pleasure? these are lost,55
When once we come to full fruition,
Like waking in the morning, when all night
Our fancy has been fed with some new strange delight.

Ors. I grant you, madam, that the fears and joys,
Hopes and desires, mix'd with despairs and doubts,60
Do make the sport in love; [and] that they are
The very dogs by which we hunt the hare;
But, as the dogs would stop and straight give o'er,
Were it not for the little thing before,
So would our passions; both alike must be65
Flesh'd in the chase.

Ori. Will you, then, place the happiness but there,
Where the dull ploughman and the ploughman's horse
Can find it out? Shall souls refin'd not know
How to preserve alive a noble flame,70
But let it die—burn out to appetite?

Sem. Love's a chameleon, and would live on air,
Physic for agues; starving is his food.

Ors. Why, there it is now! a greater epicure
Lives not on earth. My lord and I have been75
In's privy kitchen, seen his bills of fare.

Sem. And how, and how, my lord?

Ors. A mighty prince,
And full of curiosity! Hearts newly slain
Serv'd up entire, and stuck with little arrows
Instead of cloves.

Phi. Sometimes a cheek plump'd up80
With broth, with cream and claret mingled
For sauce, and round about the dish
Pomegranate kernels, strew'd on leaves of lilies!

Ors. Then will he have black eyes, for those of late
He feeds on much, and for variety85
The grey.

Phi. You forget his cover'd dishes
Of jenestrays, and marmalade of lips,
Perfum'd by breath sweet as the bean's first blossoms.

Sem. Rare!
And what's the drink to all this meat, my lord?90

Ors. Nothing but pearl dissolv'd, tears still fresh fetch'd
From lovers' eyes, which, if they come to be
Warm in the carriage, are straight cool'd with sighs.

Sem. And all this rich proportion perchance
We would allow him.

Ors. True: but therefore this95
Is but his common diet, only serves
When his chief cooks, Liking and Opportunity,
Are out of the way; for, when he feasts indeed,
'Tis there where the wise people of the world
Did place the virtues—i' th' middle, madam.100

Ori. My lord,
There is so little hope we should convert you;
And, if we should, so little got by it,
That we'll not lose so much upon't as sleep.
Your lordship's servants. [Prepare to go105

Ors. Nay, ladies, we'll wait upon you to your chambers.

Phi. Prithee, let's spare the compliment: we shall do
no good.

Ors. By this hand, I'll try:
They keep me fasting, and I must be praying.

[Exeunt

Scene VI

Aglaura undressing herself. Iolina

Agl. Undress me; is it not late, Iolina?
It was the longest day this——

Enter Thersames

Ther. Softly, as death
Itself comes on, when it does steal away
The sick man's breath, and standers-by perceive 't not.
Have I trod the way unto these lodgings. How wisely5
Do those powers, that give us happiness, order it,
Sending us still fears to bound our joys,
Which else would overflow and lose themselves.
See where she sits,
Like day retir'd into another world.10
Dear mine! where all the beauty man admires
In scattered pieces does united lie;
Where sense does feast, and yet where sweet desire
Lives in its longing, like a miser's eye,
That never knew nor saw satiety:15
Tell me, by what approaches must I come
To take in what remains of my felicity?

Agl. Needs there any new ones, where the breach
Is made already? you are enter'd here,
Long since, sir, here, and I have giv'n up all.20

Ther. All but the fort; and, in such wars as these,
Till that be yielded up, there is no peace
Nor triumph to be made—
Come,
Undo, undo; and from these envious clouds25
Slide quick into love's proper sphere, thy bed.
The weary traveller, whom the busy sun
Hath vex'd all day, and scorch'd almost to tinder,
Ne'er long'd for night as I have long'd for this.
What rude hand is that?30

[One knocks hastily. Iolina goes to the door

Go, Iolina, see, but let none enter——

Iolin. 'Tis Ziriff, sir.

Ther. O!
Something of weight hath fallen out, it seems,
Which in his zeal he could not keep till morning.35
But one short minute, dear, into that chamber!

[Exit Aglaura

Enter Ziriff

How now? thou start'st as if thy sins had met thee,
Or thy father's ghost; what news, man?

Zir. Such as will send the blood of hasty messages
Unto the heart, and make it call40
All that is man about you into council:
Where is the princess, sir?

Ther. Why, what of her?

Zir. The king must have her.

Ther. How?

Zir. The king must have her, sir.

Ther. Though fear of worse makes ill still relish better,
And this look handsome in our friendship, Ziriff,45
Yet so severe a preparation
There needed not. Come, come, what is't?

[Ziriff leads him to the door, and shows him a guard

A guard!
Thersames, thou art lost,
Betray'd by faithless and ungrateful man,
Out of a happiness.

[He steps between the door and him, and draws

The very thought of that50
Will lend my anger so much noble justice,
That, wert thou master of as much fresh life as
Thou'st been of villainy, it should not serve,
Nor stock thee out to glory or repent
The least of it!55

Zir. Put up, put up! such unbecoming anger
I have not seen you wear before. What, draw
Upon your friend![Discovers himself
Do you believe me right now?

Ther. I scarce believe mine eyes! Zorannes?

Zir. The same; but how preserv'd, or why thus long60
Disguis'd, to you a freer hour must speak.
That y'are betray'd, is certain; but by whom,
Unless the priest himself, I cannot guess,
More than the marriage though he knows not of.
If you now send her on this early summons,65
Before the sparks are grown into a flame,
You do redeem th' offence, or make it less;
And, on my life, yet his intents are fair;
And he will but besiege, not force affection:
So you gain time. If you refuse, there's but70
One way; you know his power and passion.

Ther. Into how strange a labyrinth am I
Now fall'n! what shall I do, Zorannes?

Zir. Do, sir, as seamen that have lost their light
And way: strike sail, and lie quiet a while.75
Your forces in the province are not yet
In readiness, nor is our friend Zephines
Arriv'd at Delphos; nothing is ripe. Besides——

Ther. Good heav'ns! did I but dream that she was mine?
Upon imagination did I climb80
Up to this height? Let me then wake and die!
Some courteous hand snatch me from what's to come,
And, ere my wrongs have being, give them end!

Zir. How poor and how unlike the prince is this!
This trifle, woman, does unman us all;85
Robs us so much, it makes us things of pity.
Is this a time to loose our anger in,
And vainly breathe it out, when all we have
Will hardly fill the sail of Resolution,
And make us bear up high enough for action?90

Ther. I have done, sir; pray chide no more;
The slave, whom tedious custom has inur'd,
And taught to think of misery as of food,
Counting it but a necessary of life,
And so digesting it, shall not so much as once95
Be nam'd to patience, when I am spoken of.
Mark me; for I will now undo myself
As willingly as virgins give up all
First nights to them they love.[Offers to go out

Zir. Stay, sir: 'twere fit Aglaura yet were kept100
In ignorance. I will dismiss the guard,
And be myself again.[Exit

Ther. In how much worse estate am I in now,
Than if I ne'er had known her! Privation is
A misery as much above bare wretchedness105
As that is short of happiness:
So, when the sun does not appear,
'Tis darker, 'cause it once was here.

Re-enter Ziriff. Speaks to Orsames and others half entered

Zir. Nay, gentlemen,
There needs no force where there is no resistance:110
I'll satisfy the king myself.

Ther. O! it is well y'are come.
There was within me fresh rebellion,
And reason was almost unking'd again.
But you shall have her, sir.[Goes out to fetch Aglaura115

Zir. What doubtful combats in this noble youth
Passion and reason have!

Re-enter Thersames, leading Aglaura

Ther. Here, sir.[Gives her and goes out

Agl. What means the prince, my lord?

Zir. Madam,120
His wiser fear has taught him to disguise
His love, and make it look a little rude at parting.
Affairs, that do concern all that you hope
From happiness, this night force him away;
And, lest you should have tempted him to stay,—125
Which he did doubt you would, and would prevail—
He left you thus: he does desire by me
You would this night lodge in the little tower,
Which is in my command: the reasons why
Himself will shortly tell you.130

Agl. 'Tis strange, but I am all obedience.[Exeunt

ACT II

Scene I
Enter Thersames and Iolas

Iol. I told him so, sir; urg'd 'twas no common knot,
That to the tying of it two powerful princes,
Virtue and Love, were join'd, and that a greater
Than these two was now engaged in't, Religion.
But 'twould not do; the cork of passion5
Buoy'd up all reason so, that what was said
Swam but o' th' top of th' ear, ne'er reach'd the heart.

Ther. Is there no way for kings to show their power,
But in their subjects' wrongs?—no subject neither,
But his own son?10

Iol. Right, sir!
No quarry for his lust to gorge on, but
On what you fairly had flown at and taken?
Well, wer't not the king, or wer't indeed not you,
That have such hopes, and such a crown to venture—15
And yet, 'tis but a woman.

Ther. How? that but
Again, and thou art more injurious
Than he, and wou'lt provoke me sooner!

Iol. Why, sir?
There are no altars yet addrest unto her,
Nor sacrifice. If I have made her less20
Than what she is, it was my love to you;
For in my thoughts and here within I hold her
The noblest piece Nature e'er lent our eyes,
And of the which all women else are but
Weak counterfeits, made up by her journeymen.25
But was this fit to tell you?
I know you value but too high all that;
And in a loss we should not make things more:
'Tis misery's happiness that we can make
It less by art, through a forgetfulness30
Upon our ills. Yet who can do it here,
When every voice must needs, and every face,
By shewing what she was not, shew what she was?

Ther. I'll instantly unto him.[Draws

Iol. Stay, sir!35
Though't be the utmost of my fortune's hope
To have an equal share of ill with you;
Yet I could wish we sold this trifle, life,
At a far dearer rate than we are like
To do, since 'tis a king's the merchant.

Ther. Ha!40
King? Ay, it is indeed; and there's no art
Can cancel that high bond.

Iol. [To himself] He cools again.
[Aloud] True, sir; and yet, methinks, to know a reason;
For passive nature ne'er had glorious end;
And he that states' preventions ever learn'd,45
Knows 'tis one motion to strike and to defend.

Enter Serving-man.

Serv. Some of the lords without, and from the king,
They say, wait you.

Ther. What subtle state-trick now?
But one turn here, and I am back, my lord.[Exit

Iol. This will not do: his resolution's like50
A skilful horseman; and reason is the stirrup,
Which, though a sudden shock may make it loose,
Yet does it meet it handsomely again.
Stay! it must be some sudden fear of wrong
To her, that may draw on a sudden act55
From him, and ruin from the king; for such
A spirit will not, like common ones, be rais'd
By every spell: 'tis in love's circle only
'Twill appear.

Enter Thersames

Ther. I cannot bear the burthen of my wrongs60
One minute longer.

Iol. Why! what's the matter, sir?

Ther. They do pretend the safety of the state:
Now, nothing but my marriage with Cadusia
Can secure th' adjoining country to it;
Confinement during life for me, if I65
Refuse Diana's nunnery for her:
And at that 'nunn'ry,' lolas, allegiance
In me, like the string of a watch wound up
Too high, and forc'd above the nick, ran back;
And in a moment was unravell'd all.70

Iol. Now, by the love I bear to justice, that 'nunn'ry'
Was too severe! When virtuous love's a crime,
What man can hope to 'scape a punishment,
Or who's indeed so wretched to desire it?

Ther. Right!75

Iol. What answer made you, sir!

Ther. None.
They gave me till to-morrow; and e'er that be,
Or they or I must know our destiny.
Come, friend, let's in; there is no sleeping now;80
For time is short, and we have much to do.[Exeunt

Scene II

Enter Orsames, Philan, Courtiers

Ors. Judge you, gentlemen, if I be not as unfortunate
as a gamester thinks himself upon the loss of the last stake;
this is the first she I ever swore to heartily; and, by those
eyes! I think I had continued unperjur'd a whole month;
and that's fair, you'll say.5

1 Court. Very fair.

Ors. Had she not run mad betwixt!

2 Court. How? mad? Who? Semanthe?

Ors. Yea, yea, mad; ask Philan else.
People that want clear intervals talk not10
So wildly. I'll tell you, gallants; 'tis now,
Since first I found myself a little hot
And quivering 'bout the heart, some ten days since:
A tedious ague, sirs; but what of that?
The gracious glance and little whisper past,15
Approaches made from th' hand unto the lip,
I came to visit her, and, as you know, we use,
Breathing a sigh or two by the way of prologue,
Told her that in love's physic 'twas a rule,
Where the disease had birth, to seek a cure.20
I had no sooner nam'd love to her, but she
Began to talk of flames, and flames
Neither devouring nor devour'd, of air
And of chameleons.

1 Court. O, the Platonics!

2 Court. Those of the new religion in love!25
Your lordship's merry, troth! how do you like
The humour on't?

Ors. As thou would'st like red hair
Or leanness in thy mistress, scurvily!
'T does worse with handsomeness than strong desire
Could do with impotence—a mere trick30
To enhance the price of kisses!

Phi. Surely these silly women, when they feed
Our expectation so high, do but like
Ignorant conjurers, that raise a spirit,
Which handsomely they cannot lay again.35

Ors. True, 'tis like some that nourish up young lions,
till they grow so great they are afraid of themselves:
they dare not grant at last, for fear they should not
satisfy.

Phi. Who's for the town? I must take up again.40

Ors. This villainous love's as changeable as the philo-
sopher's stone, and thy mistress as hard to compass too!

Phi. The Platonic is ever so: they are as tedious before
they come to the point, as an old man fall'n into the
stories of his youth.45

2 Court. Or a widow into the praises of her first hus-
band.

Ors. Well, if she hold out but one month longer, if I
do not quite forget I e'er beleaguered there, and remove
the siege to another place, may all the curses beguil'd50
virgins loose upon their perjur'd lovers fall upon me.

Phi. And thou wou'lt deserve 'em all.

Ors. For what?

Phi. For being in the company of those
That took away the prince's mistress from him.55

Ors. Peace, that will be redeem'd.
I put but on this wildness to disguise myself;—
There are brave things in hand: hark i' thy ear.

[Whispers

1 Court. Some severe plot upon a maidenhead! These
two young lords make love, as embroiderers work against a60
mask, night and day. They think importunity a nearer
way than merit, and take women as schoolboys catch
squirrels—hunt 'em up and down, till they are weary,
and fall down before 'em.

Ors. Who loves the prince fails not——

Phi. And I am one;65
My injuries are great as thine, and do
Persuade as strongly.

Ors. I had command to bring thee:
Fail not, and in thine one disguise.

Phi. Why in disguise?

Ors. It is the prince's policy and love; for, if70
We should miscarry, some one taken might
Betray the rest, unknown to one another.
Each man is safe in his own valour.

2 Court. And what mercer's wife are you to cheapen now instead of his silks?

Ors. Troth! 'tis not so well; 'tis but a cousin of thine:75
Come, Philan, let's along.[Exeunt

Scene III

Enter Queen alone

Orb. What is it thus within whispering remorse,
And calls love tyrant? all powers but his
Their rigour and our fear have made divine;
But every creature holds of him by sense—
The sweetest tenure. Yea—but my husband's brother:5
And what of that? do harmless birds or beasts
Ask leave of curious Heraldry at all?
Does not the womb of one fair spring
Bring unto the earth many sweet rivers,
That wantonly do one another chase,10
And in one bed kiss, mingle, and embrace?
Man (Nature's heir) is not by her will tied
To shun all creatures are allied unto him;
For then she should shun all: since death and life
Doubly allies all them that live by breath.15
The air that does impart to all life's brood
Refreshment, is so near to itself, and to us all,
That all in all is individual.
But how am I sure one and the same desire
Warms Ariaspes?20
For art can keep alive a bedrid love.

Enter Ariaspes

Ari. Alone, madam, and overcast with thought!
Uncloud, uncloud; for, if we may believe
The smiles of fortune, love shall no longer pine
In prison thus, nor undelivered travail25
With throes of fear and of desire about it.
The prince, like to a valiant beast in nets,
Striving to force a freedom suddenly,
Has made himself at length the surer prey:
The king stands only now betwixt, and is30
Just like a single tree, that hinders all
The prospect: 'tis but the cutting down of him,
And we——

Orb. Why wouldst thou thus embark into strange seas,
And trouble Fate for what we have already?35
Thou art to me, what thou now seek'st, a kingdom;
And, were thy love as great as thy ambition,
I should be so to thee.

Ari. Think you you are not, madam?
As well and justly may you doubt the truths
Tortur'd or dying men do leave behind them.40
But then my fortune turns my misery,
When my addition shall but make you less:
Shall I endure that head, that wore a crown,
For my sake should wear none? First, let me lose
Th' exchequer of my wealth—your love; nay, may45
All that rich treasury you have about you
Be rifled by the man I hated, and I look on!
Though youth be full of sin, and heaven be just,
So sad a doom I hope they keep not for me.
Remember what a quick apostasy he made,50
When all his vows were up to heav'n and you.
How, ere the bridal torches were burnt out,
His flames grew weak and sicklier: think on that:
Think how unsafe you are, if she should now
Not sell her honour at a lower rate55
Than your place in his bed.

Orb. And would not you prove false, too, then?

Ari. By this—
And this—love's breakfast! [kisses her] By his feasts, too, yet
To come! by all the beauty in this face,
Divinity too great to be profan'd!60

Orb. O, do not swear by that;
Cankers may eat that flower upon the stalk
(For sickness and mischance are great devourers);
And, when there is not in these cheeks and lips
Left red enough to blush at perjury,65
When you shall make it, what shall I do then?

Ari. Our souls by that time, madam,
Will by long custom so acquainted be,
They will not need that duller trouch-man, Flesh;
But freely, and without those poorer helps,70
Converse and mingle: meantime we'll teach
Our loves to speak, not thus to live by signs;
And action is his native language, madam.

Enter Ziriff unseen

This box but open'd to the sense will do it.

Orb. I undertake I know not what.

Ari. Thine own safety,75
Dearest: let it be this night, if thou dost love
Thyself or me.[Whisper and kiss

Orb. That's very sudden.

Ari. Not
If we be so, and we must now be wise:
For when their sun sets, ours begin to rise.[Exeunt

Ziriff solus

Zir. Then all my fears are true, and she is false,80
False as a falling star or glowworm's fire.
This devil Beauty is compounded strangely:
It is a subtle point, and hard to know,
Whether it has in it more active tempting,
Or [is] more passive tempted;85
So soon it forces, and so soon it yields.
Good Gods! she seiz'd my heart, as if from you
She'd had commission to have us'd me so,
And all mankind beside. And see,
If the just ocean makes more haste to pay90
To needy rivers what is borrow'd first,
Than she to give where she ne'er took. Methinks
I feel anger, revenge's harbinger,
Chalking up all within, and thrusting out
Of doors the tame and softer passions.95
It must be so:
To love is noble frailty; but poor sin,
When we fall once to love, unlov'd again.[Exit

Scene IV

Enter King, Ariaspes, Iolas

Ari. 'Twere fit your justice did consider, sir,
What way it took. If you should apprehend
The prince for treason, which he never did,
And which, unacted, is unborn—
At least 'twill be believed so;—lookers-on5
And the loud-talking crowd will think it all
But water-colours laid on for a time,
And which, wip'd off, each common eye would see
Strange ends through stranger ways.

King. Think'st thou I will compound with treason then,10
And make one fear another's advocate?

Iol. Virtue forbid, sir! but if you would permit
Them to approach the room (yet who would advise
Treason should come so near?) there would be then
No place left for excuse.

King. How strong are they?15

Iol. Weak, considering
The enterprise; they are but few in number,
And those few, too, having nothing but
Their resolutions considerable about them:
A troop indeed design'd to suffer what20
They come to execute.

King. Who are they are thus weary of their lives?

Iol. Their names I cannot give you;
For those he sent for, he did still receive
At a back door, and so dismist them too:25
But I do think Ziriff is one.

King. Take heed!
I shall suspect thy hate to others, not
Thy love to me, begot this service;—
This treason, thou thyself dost say, has but
An hour's age; and I can give accompt30
Of him beyond that time. Brother, in the little tower,
Where now Aglaura's prisoner, you shall find him.
Bring him along:
He yet doth stand untainted in my thoughts;
And to preserve him so, he shall not stir35
Out of my eyes' command, till this great cloud
Be over.

Iol. Sir, 'twas the prince, who first——

King. I know all that.
Urge it no more! I love the man; and 'tis with pain
We do suspect, where we do not dislike.40
Thou'rt sure he will have some, and that they will come
To-night?

Iol. As sure as night will come itself.

King. Get all your guards in readiness; we will ourself
Disperse them afterwards; and both be sure
To wear your thoughts within: I'll act the rest.[Exeunt45

Scene V

Enter Philan, Orsames, Courtiers

2 Court. Well, if there be not some great storm towards,
Ne'er trust me; Whisper (Court-thunder) is in
Every corner, and there has been to-day
About the town a murmuring and buzzing,
Such as men use to make when they do fear5
To vent their fears.

1 Court. True, and all the statesmen
Hang down their heads, like full-ear'd corn; two of them,
Where I supp'd, ask'd what time of night it was,
And, when 'twas told them, started, as if they
Had been to run a race.

2 Court. The king, too (if10
You mark him), doth feign mirth and jollity;
But, through them both, flashes of discontent
And anger make escapes.

Ors. Gentlemen! 'tis pity heav'n
Design'd you not to make the almanacs.15
You guess so shrewdly by the ill aspects,
Or near conjunctions of the great ones,
At what's to come still, that without all doubt
The country had been govern'd wholly by you,
And plough'd and reap'd accordingly. For me,20
I understand this mystery as little
As the new love; and as I take it, too,
'Tis much about the time that everything
But owls and lovers take their rest. Good-night,
Philan. Away![Exit25

1 Court. 'Tis early yet; let's go on the queen's side,
And fool a little; I love to warm myself,
Before I go to bed; it does beget
Handsome and sprightly thoughts, and makes our dreams
Half-solid pleasures.30

2 Court. Agreed.[Exeunt

ACT III

Scene I

Enter Prince, Conspirators

Ther. Couldst thou not find out Ziriff?

1 Court. Not speak with him, my lord; yet I sent in
By several men.

Ors. I wonder Iolas meets us not here, too.

Ther. 'Tis strange, but let's on now howe'er;5
When fortunes, honour, life, and all's in doubt,
Bravely to dare is bravely to get out.

[Excursions. The Guard upon them

Ther. Betray'd! betray'd!

Ors. Shift for yourself, sir, and let us alone;
We will secure your way, and make our own.[Exeunt10

Enter the King and Lords

King. Follow, lords, and see quick execution done;
Leave not a man alive.
Who treads on fire, and does not put it out,
Disperses fear in many sparks of doubt.[Exeunt

Re-enter Conspirators, and the Guard upon them

Ors. Stand, friends: an equal party.15

[Fight. Three of the Conspirators fall, and three of the King's side: Orsames and Philan kill the rest. They throw off their disguises.

Phi. Brave Orsames, 'tis pleasure to die near thee.

Ors. Talk not of dying, Philan; we will live,
And serve the noble prince again.
We are alone: off, then, with thy disguise,
And throw it in the bushes——20
Quick, quick, before the torrent comes upon us!
We shall be straight good subjects; and I despair not
Of reward for this night's service. So, we two
Now kill'd our friends! 'tis hard, but 't must be so.

Enter Ariaspes, Iolas, two Courtiers, part of the Guard

Ari. Follow, follow!25

Ors. Yes, so you may now; y'are not likely to overtake.

Iol. Orsames and Philan! how came you hither?

Ors. The nearest way, it seems; you follow'd, thank you,
As if 't had been through quicksets.

Iol. 'Sdeath, have they all escap'd?30

Ors. Not all:
Two of them we made sure; but they cost dear:
Look here else.

Ari. Is the prince there?

Phi. They are both princes,
I think: they fought like princes, I am sure.

[Iolas pulls off the vizors

Iol. Stephines and Odiris.35
We trifle: which way took the rest?

Ors. Two of them are certainly hereabouts.

Ari. Upon my life, they swam the river.
Some, straight to horse, and follow o'er the bridge!
[To Iolas] You and I, my lord, will search this place a little better.40

Ors. Your highness will, I hope, remember who were the men were in——

Ari. O, fear not, your mistress shall know y'are valiant.

Ors. Philan, if thou lov'st me, let's kill them upon the place.

Phi. Fie, thou now art wild indeed! Thou taught'st
me to be wise first, and I will now keep thee so. Follow,45
follow.[Exeunt

Scene II

Enter Aglaura with a lute

The Prince comes and knocks within

Ther. Madam!

Agl. What wretch is this that thus usurps
Upon the privilege of ghosts, and walks
At midnight?

Ther. Aglaura!

Agl. Betray me not,
My willing sense, too soon; yet, if that voice
Be false——5

Ther. Open, fair saint, and let me in!

Agl. It is the prince. As willingly as those
That cannot sleep do light——
Welcome, sir. [Opens] Welcome above.

[Spies his sword drawn

Bless me!
What means this unsheath'd minister of death?10
If, sir, on me quick justice be to pass,
Why this? Absence, alas! or such strange looks
As you now bring with you, would kill as soon.

Ther. Softly! for I, like a hard-hunted deer,
Have only herded here; and, though the cry15
Reach not our ears, yet am I follow' d close:
O my heart! since I saw thee
Time has been strangely active, and begot
A monstrous issue of unheard-of story:
Sit; thou shalt have it all! nay, sigh not:20
Such blasts will hinder all the passage.
Dost thou remember how we parted last?

Agl. Can I forget it, sir?

Ther. That word of parting was ill-plac'd, I swear.
It may be ominous; but dost thou know25
Into whose hands I gave thee?

Agl. Yes, into Ziriff's, sir.

Ther. That Ziriff was thy brother, brave Zorannes,
Preserv'd by miracle in that sad day
Thy father fell, and since, thus in disguise
Waiting his just revenge.

Agl. You do amaze me, sir.30

Ther. And must do more, when I tell all the story.
The king, the jealous king, knew of the marriage;
And, when thou thought'st thyself by my direction,
Thou wert his prisoner.
Unless I would renounce all right, and cease35
To love thee—O strange and fond request!—immur'd
Thou must have been in some sad place, and lock'd
For ever from Thersames' sight, for ever!
And, that unable to endure, this night
1 did attempt his life.

Agl. Was it well done, sir?40

Ther. O no! extremely ill!
For to attempt and not to act was poor.
Here the dead-doing law (like ill-paid soldiers)
Leaves the side 'twas on to join with power.
Royal villainy now will look so like to justice,45
That the times to come and curious posterity
Will find no difference.
Weep'st thou, Aglaura? Come to bed, my love;
And we will there mock tyranny and fate:
Those softer hours of pleasure and delight50
That, like so many single pearls, should have
Adorn'd our thread of life, we will at once,
By love's mysterious power and this night's help.
Contract to one, and make but one rich draught
Of all.55

Agl. What mean you, sir?

Ther. To make myself incapable of misery,
By taking strong preservatives of happiness:
I would this night enjoy thee.

Agl. Do, sir, do what you will with me;60
For I am too much yours to deny the right,
However claim'd; but——

Ther. But what, Aglaura?

Agl. Gather
Not roses in a wet and frowning hour:
They'll lose their sweets then, trust me they will, sir.
What pleasure can love take to play his game out,65
When death must keep the stakes?——[A noise without
Hark, sir!
Grave-bringers and last minutes are at hand:
Hide, hide yourself; for love's sake, hide yourself!

Ther. As soon the sun may hide himself as I.70
The Prince of Persia hide himself!

Agl. O, talk not, sir; the sun does hide himself,
When night and blackness comes.

Ther. Never, sweet ignorance, he shines in th' other world then;
And so shall I, if I set here in glory.75
Enter, ye hasty seekers of life!

[Opens the door. Enter Ziriff

Zorannes!

Agl. My brother!
If all the joy within me come not out,
To give a welcome to so dear an object,80
Excuse it, sir; sorrow locks up all doors.

Zir. If there be such a toy about you, sister,
Keep 't for yourself, or lend it to the prince:
There is a dearth of that commodity;
And you have made it, sir.85
Now,
What is the next mad thing you mean to do?
Will you stay here? when all the court's beset,
Like to a wood at a great hunt, and busy mischief hastes
To be in view, and have you in her power——90

Ther. To me all this?
For great grief's deaf, as well as it is dumb,
And drives no trade at all with counsel. Sir,
Why do you not tutor one that has the plague,
And see if he will fear an after-ague-fit;95
Such is all mischief now to me, there is none left
Is worth a thought: death is the worst I know;
And that, compar'd to shame, does look more lovely now
Than a chaste mistress set by common woman;
And I must court it, sir?

Zir. No wonder, if100
That heav'n forsake us when we leave ourselves:
What is there done should feed such high despair?
Were you but safe——

Agl. Dear sir, be rul'd;
If love be love, and magic too,105
As sure it is, where it is true;
We then shall meet in absence, and, in spite
Of all divorce, freely enjoy together
What niggard fate thus peevishly denies.

Ther. Yea: but, if pleasures be themselves but dreams,110
What then are the dreams of these to men?
That monster, Expectation, will devour
All that is within our hope or power,
And ere we once can come to show how rich
We are, we shall be poor, shall we not, Zorannes?115

Zir. I understand not this.
In times of envious penury, such as these are,
To keep but love alive is fair; we should
Not think of feasting him. Come, sir:
Here in these lodgings is a little door,120
That leads unto another; that again
Unto a vault that has his passage under
The little river, opening into the wood;
From thence 'tis but some few minutes' easy business
Unto a servant's house of mine, who, for125
His faith and honesty, hereafter must
Look big in story. There you are safe, however;
And, when this storm has met a little calm,
What wild desire dares whisper to itself
You may enjoy, and at the worst may steal.130

Ther. What shall become of thee, Aglaura, then?
Shall I leave thee their rage's sacrifice?
And, like dull seamen threaten'd with a storm,
Throw all away I have to save myself?

Agl. Can I be safe, when you are not, my lord?135
Knows love in us divided happiness?
Am I the safer for your being here?
Can you give that you have not for yourself?
My innocence is my best guard, and that your stay,
Betraying it unto suspicion, takes away.140
If you did love me——

Ther. Grows that in question? then 'tis time to part!

[Kisses her

When we shall meet again, heaven only knows;
And, when we shall, I know we shall be old.
Love does not calculate the common way;145
Minutes are hours there, and the hours are days;
Each day's an year, and every year an age.
What will this come to, think you?

Zir. Would this were all the ill!
For these are pretty little harmless nothings.150
Time's horse runs full as fast, hard-borne and curb'd,
As in his full career, loose rein'd and spurr'd.
Come, come, let's away.

Ther. Happiness such as men, lost in misery,
Would wrong in naming, 'tis so much above them,155
All that I want of it, all you deserve,
Heaven send you in my absence!

Agl. And misery, such as witty malice would
Lay out in curses on the thing it hates,
Heaven send me in the stead, if when y'are gone160

[Leads him out, and enters up out of the vault

I welcome it but for your sake alone.[Exit

Zir. Stir not from hence, sir, till you hear from me:
So, good-night, dear prince.

Ther. Good-night, dear friend.

Zir. When next we meet, all this will but advance—
Joy never feasts so high,165
As when the first course is of misery.[Exeunt

ACT IV

Scene I

Enter three or four Courtiers

1 Court. By this light, a brave prince! He made no
more of the guard, than they would of a tailor on a
masque-night, that has refused trusting before.

2 Court. He's as active as he is valiant too. Didst
mark him how he stood like all the points o' th' compass,5
and, as good pictures, had his eyes towards every
man?

3 Court. And his sword too. All th' other side walk
up and down the court now as if they had lost their way,
and stare like greyhounds, when the hare has taken the10
furze.

1 Court. Right; and have more troubles about 'em than
a serving-man, that has forgot his message, when he's
come upon the place.

2 Court. Yonder's the king within, chafing and swear-15
ing like an old falconer upon the first flight of a young
hawk, when some clown has taken away the quarry
from her; and all the lords stand round him as if he were
to be baited, with much more fear and at much more
distance than a country gentlewoman sees the lions the20
first time. Look, he's broke loose!

Enter King and Lords

King. Find him!
Or, by Osiris' self, you are all traitors,
And equally shall pay to justice.
A single man, and guilty too, break through you all!25

Enter Ziriff

Zir. Confidence,
Thou paint of women and the statesman's wisdom,
Valour of cowards, and the guilty's innocence,
Assist me now! [To the king] Sir, send these starers off.
I have some business will deserve your privacy.30

King. Leave us.

Iol. How the villain swells upon us![Exeunt Lords

Zir. Not to punish thought,
Or keep it long upon the rack of doubt,
Know, sir, that, by corruption of the waiting-woman,35
The common key of secrets, I have found
The truth at last, and have discover'd all.
The prince, your son, was, by Aglaura's means,
Convey'd last night unto the cypress grove,
Through a close vault that opens in the lodgings.40
He does intend to join with Carimania;
But, ere he goes, resolves to finish all
The rites of love, and this night means to steal
What is behind.

King. How good is heav'n unto me,
That, when it gave me traitors for my subjects,45
Would lend me such a servant!

Zir. How just, sir, rather,
That would bestow this fortune on the poor;
And, where your bounty had made debt so infinite
That it grew desperate, their hope to pay it——

King. Enough of that! Thou dost but gently chide50
Me for a fault that I will mend; for I
Have been too poor and low in my rewards
Unto thy virtue. But to our business:
The question is, whether we shall rely
Upon our guards again?

Zir. By no means, sir.55
Hope on his future fortunes, or their love
Unto his person, has so sicklied o'er
Their resolutions, that we must not trust them.
Besides, it were but needless here:
He passes through the vault alone, and I60
Myself durst undertake that business,
If that were all; but there is something else
This accident doth prompt my zeal to serve you in.
I know you love Aglaura, sir, with passion,
And would enjoy her; I know besides65
She loves him so, that whosoe'er shall bring
The tidings of his death must carry back
The news of hers; so that your justice, sir,
Must rob your hope. But there is yet a way——

King. Here, take my heart, for I have hitherto70
Too vainly spent the treasure of my love.
I'll have it coin'd straight into friendship all,
And make a present to thee.

Zir. If any part of this rich happiness
Fortune prepares now for you, shall owe itself75
Unto my weak endeavours, I have enough.
Aglaura without doubt this night expects
The prince; and why
You should not then supply his place by stealth,
And in disguise——

King. I apprehend thee, Ziriff;80
But there's difficulty.

Zir. Who trades in love must be an adventurer, sir;
But here
Is scarce enough to make the pleasure dearer:
I know the cave: your brother and myself85
With Iolas (for those, w'are sure, do hate him),
With some few chosen more, betimes will wait
The prince's passing through the vault: if he
Comes first, he's dead; and, if it be yourself,
We will conduct you to the chamber door,90
And stand 'twixt you and danger afterwards.

King. I have conceiv'd of joy, and am grown great;
Till I have safe deliverance, time's a cripple
And goes on crutches. As for thee, my Ziriff,
I do here entertain a friendship with thee,95
Shall drown the memory of all patterns past.
We will oblige by turns, and that so thick
And fast, that curious studiers of it
Shall not once dare to cast it up, or say
By way of guess, whether thou or I100
Remain the debtors when we come to die.[Exeunt

Scene II

Enter Semanthe, Orithie, Philan, Orsames, Lords and Ladies

Ori. Is the Queen ready to come out?

Phi. Not yet:
Sure, the king's brother is but newly enter'd.

Sem. Come, my lord, the song then.

Ori. The song.

Ors. A vengeance take this love! it spoils a voice5
Worse than the losing of a maidenhead.
I have got such a cold with rising and walking in my shirt
a-nights, that a bittern whooping in a reed is better music.

Ori. This modesty becomes you as ill, my lord,
As wooing would us women:10
Pray, put's not to't.

Ors. Nay, ladies, you shall find me
As free as the musicians of the woods
Themselves: what I have, you shall not need to call for;
Nor shall it cost you anything.

Song

Why so pale and wan, fond lover?15
Prithee, why so pale?
Will, when looking well can't move her,
Looking ill prevail?
Prithee, why so pale?

Why so dull and mute, young sinner?20
Prithee, why so mute?
Will, when speaking well can't win her,
Saying nothing do't?
Prithee, why so mute?

Quit, quit, for shame, this will not move:25
This cannot take her.
If of herself she will not love,
Nothing can make her:
The devil take her!

Ori. I should have guess'd, it had been the issue of30
Your brain, if I had not been told so.

Ors. A little foolish counsel, madam, I gave
A friend of mine four or five years ago,
When he was falling into a consumption.

Enter Queen

Orb. Which of all you have seen the fair prisoner,35
Since she was confin'd?

Sem. I have, madam.

Orb. And how behaves she now herself?

Sem. As one that had intrench'd so deep in innocence,
She fear'd no enemies, bears all quietly,40
And smiles at Fortune whilst she frowns on her.

Orb. So gallant?
I wonder where the beauty lies, that thus
Inflames the royal blood.

Ori. Faces, madam, are
Like books; those that do study them know best;45
And, to say truth, 'tis still much as it pleases
The Courteous Reader.

Orb. These lovers sure are like astronomers,
That, when the vulgar eye discovers but
A sky above, studded with some few stars,50
Find out, besides, strange fishes, birds, and beasts.

Sem. As men in sickness, scorch'd into a raving,
Do see the devil in all shapes and forms,
When standers-by, wondering, ask where and when,
So they in love; for all's but fever there,55
And madness too.

Orb. That's too severe, Semanthe;
But we will have your reasons in the park:
Are the doors open through the gardens?

Lord. The king has newly led the way.[Exeunt

Scene III

Enter Ariaspes, and Ziriff with a warrant sealed

Ari. Thou art a tyrant, Ziriff: I shall die
With joy.

Zir. I must confess, my lord, had but
The prince's ills proved slight, and not thus dangerous
He should have ow'd to me—at least I would5
Have laid a claim unto his safety; and,
Like physicians that do challenge right
In nature's cures, look'd for reward and thanks;
But, since 'twas otherwise, I thought it best
To save myself, and then to save the state.10

Ari. 'Twas wisely done.

Zir. Safely, I'm sure, my lord! you know 'tis not
Our custom, where the king's dislike once swells
To hate, there to engage ourselves. Court friendship
Is a cable, that in storms is ever cut;15
And I made bold with it. Here is the warrant seal'd;
And, for the execution of it, if
You think we are not strong enough, we may
Have Iolas; for him the king did name.

Ari. And him I would have nam'd.20

Zir. But is he not too much the prince's, sir?

Ari. He is as lights in scenes at masques:
What glorious show soe'er he makes without,
I, that set him there, know why and how.
But here he is.25

Enter Iolas.

Come, Iolas; and since the heav'ns decreed
The man, whom thou shouldst envy, should be such
That all men else must do't, be not asham'd
Thou once wert guilty of it;
But bless them, that they give thee now a means30
To make a friendship with him, and vouchsafe
To find thee out a way to love, where well
Thou couldst not hate.

Iol. What means my lord?

Ari. Here, here he stands that has preserv'd us all;35
That sacrific'd unto a public good
The dearest private good we mortals have,
Friendship; gave into our arms the prince,
When nothing but the sword, perchance a ruin,
Was left to do it.40

Iol. How could I chide my love and my ambition now,
That thrust me upon such a quarrel?
Here I do vow——

Zir. Hold, do not vow, my lord!
Let it deserve it first, and yet (if Heav'n45
Bless honest men's intents) 'tis not impossible.
My lord,
You will be pleas'd to inform him in particulars.
I must be gone.
The King, I fear, already has been left50
Too long alone.

Ari. Stay: the hour and place.

Zir. Eleven, under the Terrace Walk;
I will not fail you there.[Goes out, returns back again
I had forgot: 't may be, the small remainder55
Of those lost men, that were of the conspiracy,
Will come along with him: 'twere best to have
Some chosen of the guard within our call.[Exit Ziriff

Ari. Honest and careful Ziriff![Iolas stands musing
How now, planet-struck?

Iol. This Ziriff will grow great with all the world.60

Ari. Shallow man,
Short-sighteder than travellers in mists,
Or women that outlive themselves, dost thou
Not see that whilst he does prepare a tomb
With one hand for his friend, he digs a grave65
With th' other for himself?

Iol. How so?

Ari. Dost think he shall not feel the weight of this,
As well as poor Thersames?

Iol. Shall we then kill him, too, at the same instant?70

Ari. And say the prince made an unlucky thrust.

Iol. Right.

Ari. Dull, dull, he must not die so uselessly.
As when we wipe off filth from any place,
We throw away the thing that made it clean;75
So, this once done, he's gone.
Thou know'st
The people love the prince: to their rage something
The state must offer up. Who fitter than
Thy rival and my enemy?80

Iol. Rare!
Our witness will be taken.

Ari. Pish! let me
Alone. The giants that made mountains ladders,
And thought to take great love by force, were fools:
Not hill on hill, but plot on plot, does make85
Us sit above, and laugh at all below us.[Exeunt

Scene IV

Enter Aglaura and a Singing Boy

Boy. Madam, 'twill make you melancholy,
I'll sing the prince's song; that's sad enough.

Agl. What you will, sir.

Song

No, no, fair heretic, it needs must be
But an ill love in me,5
And worse for thee.

For were it in my power,
To love thee now this hour
More than I did the last;

'Twould then so fall,10
I might not love at all.
Love that can flow, and can admit increase,
Admits as well an ebb, and may grow less.

True love is still the same: the torrid zones,
And those more frigid ones,15
It must not know;

For love, grown cold or hot,
Is lust or friendship, not
The thing we have:

For that's a flame would die,20
Held down or up too high.

Then think I love more than I can express,
And would love more, could I but love thee less.

Agl. Leave me, for to a soul so out of tune,
As mine is now, nothing is harmony:25
When once the mainspring, Hope, is fall'n into
Disorder; no wonder if the lesser wheels,
Desire and Joy, stand still: my thoughts, like bees,
When they have lost their king, wander
Confusedly up and down, and settle nowhere.30

Enter Orithie

Orithie, fly, fly the room,
As thou wouldst shun the habitations
Which spirits haunt, or where thy nearer friends
Walk after death! Here is not only love,
But love's plague too, misfortune; and so high,35
That it is sure infectious.

Ori. Madam,
So much more miserable am I this way
Than you, that, should I pity you, I should
Forget myself: my sufferings are such,40
That with less patience you may endure
Your own, than give mine audience.
There is that difference, that you may make
Yours none at all, but by considering mine.

Agl. O, speak them quickly then: the marriage-day45
To passionate lovers never was more welcome,
Than any kind of ease would be to me now.

Ori. Could they be spoke, they were not then so great.
I love, and dare not say I love; dare not hope
What I desire, yet still too must desire;50
And, like a starving man brought to a feast,
And made say grace to what he ne'er shall taste,
Be thankful after all, and kiss the hand,
That made the wound thus deep.

Agl. 'Tis hard indeed;
But, with what unjust scales thou took'st the weight55
Of our misfortunes, be thine own judge now.
Thou mourn'st for loss of that thou never hadst;
Or, if thou hadst a loss, it never was
Of a Thersames.
Wouldst thou not think a merchant mad, Orithie,60
If thou shouldst see him weep and tear his hair,
Because he brought not both the Indies home?
And wouldst not think his sorrows very just,
If, having fraught his ship with some rich treasure,
He sunk i' th' very port? This is our case.65

Ori. And do you think there is such odds in it?
Would heaven we women could as easily change
Our fortunes as, 'tis said, we can our minds.
I cannot, madam, think them miserable,
That have the prince's love.

Agl. He is the man, then.70
Blush not, Orithie: 'tis a sin to blush
For loving him, though none at all to love him.
I can admit of rivalship without
A jealousy, nay, shall be glad of it:
We two will sit, and think, and sigh,75
And sigh, and talk of love and of Thersames.
Thou shalt be praising of his wit, while I
Admire he governs it so well;
Like this thing said thus, th' other thing thus done;
And in good language him for these adore,80
While I want words to do't, yet do it more.
Thus will we do till death itself shall us
Divide; and then whose fate't shall be to die
First of the two, by legacy shall all
Her love bequeath, and give her stock to her85
That shall survive; for no one stock can serve
To love Thersames so as he'll deserve.

Enter King and Ziriff

King. What, have we here impossibility?
A constant night, and yet within the room
That, that can make the day before the sun!90
Silent, Aglaura, too?

Agl. I know not what you say.
Is't to your pity or your scorn I owe
The favour of this visit, sir? for such
My fortune is, it doth deserve them both.95

King. And such thy beauty is, that it makes good
All fortunes: sorrow looks lovely here;
And there's no man that would not entertain
His griefs as friends, were he but sure they'd shew
No worse upon him.100
But I forget myself: I came to chide.

Agl. If I have sinn'd so high,
That yet my punishment equals not my crime,
Do, sir.
I should be loth to die in debt to justice,105
How ill soe'er I paid the scores of love.

King. And those indeed thou hast but paid indifferently
To me. I did deserve at least fair death,
Not to be murthered thus in private.
That was too cruel, mistress.110
And I do know thou dost repent, and wilt
Yet make me satisfaction.

Agl. What satisfaction, sir?
I am no monster, never had two hearts:
One is by holy vows another's now;115
And, could I give it you, you would not take it:
For 'tis alike impossible for me
To love again, as you love perjury.
O sir, consider what a flame love is!
If by rude means you think to force a light,120
That of itself it would not freely give,
You blow it out, and leave yourself i' th' dark.
The prince once gone, you may as well persuade
The light to stay behind, when the sun posts
To th' other world, as me. Alas! we two125
Have mingled souls more than two meeting brooks;
And, whosoever is design'd to be
The murtherer of my lord (as sure there is
Has anger'd heav'n so far, that 't has decreed
Him to increase his punishment that way),130
Would he but search the heart, when he has done,
He there would find Aglaura murther'd too.

King. Thou hast o'ercome me, mov'd so handsomely
For pity, that I will disinherit
The elder brother, and from this hour be135
Thy convert, not thy lover.
Ziriff, despatch! Away! And he that brings
News of the prince's weliare, look that he have
The same reward we had decreed to him
Brought tidings of his death.140
'T must be a busy and bold hand, that would
Unlink a chain the gods themselves have made:
Peace to thy thoughts, Aglaura.[Exit

Zir. [steps back and speaks]. Whate'er he says, believe him not, Aglaura;
For lust and rage ride high within him now:145
He knows Thersames made th' escape from hence,
And does conceal it only for his ends;
For, by the favour of mistake and night,
He hopes t' enjoy thee in the prince's room.
I shall be miss'd, else I would tell thee more;150
But thou mayest guess, for our condition
Admits no middle ways: either we must
Send them to graves, or lie ourselves in dust.

[Exit. Aglaura stands still and studies

Agl. Ha!
'Tis a strange act thought puts me now upon;155
Yet sure my brother meant the self-same thing,
And my Thersames would have done't for me:
To take his life, that seeks to take away
The life of life—honour—from me, and from
The world the life of honour—Thersames,160
Must needs be something, sure, of kin to justice.
If I do fail, th' attempt howe'er was brave;
And I shall have at worst a handsome grave.[Exit

Scene V

Enter Iolas on one side, Semanthe on the other: she steps back, Iolas stays her

Iol. What! are we grown, Semanthe, night and day?
Must one still vanish, when the other comes?
Of all that ever love did yet bring forth
(And 't has been fruitful too) this is
The strangest issue.5

Sem. What, my lord?

Iol. Hate, Semanthe.

Sem. You do mistake; if I do shun you, 'tis
As bashful debtors shun their creditors.
I cannot pay you in the self-same coin,10
And am asham'd to offer any other.

Iol. It is ill done, Semanthe, to plead bankrupt,
When with such ease you may be out of debt.
In love's dominions native commodity
Is current payment: change is all the trade,15
And heart for heart the richest merchandise.

Sem. 'Twould here be mean, my lord, since mine would prove
In your hands but a counterfeit, and yours in mine
Worth nothing. Sympathy, not greatness, makes
Those jewels rise in value.20

Iol. Sympathy? O, teach but yours to love, then;
And two so rich no mortal ever knew.

Sem. That heart would love but ill that must be taught:
Such fires as these still kindle of themselves.

Iol. In such a cold and frozen place as is25
Thy breast, how should they kindle of themselves,
Semanthe?

Sem. Ask how the flint can carry fire within!
'Tis the least miracle that love can do.

Iol. Thou art thyself the greatest miracle;30
For thou art fair to all perfection,
And yet dost want the greatest part of beauty—
Kindness. Thy cruelty (next to thyself)
Above all things on earth takes up my wonder.

Sem. Call not that cruelty, which is our fate.35
Believe me, Iolas, the honest swain,
That from the brow of some steep cliff far off
Beholds a ship labouring in vain against
The boisterous and unruly elements, ne'er had
Less power or more desire to help than I.40
At every sigh I die; and every look
Does move; and any passion you will have
But love, I have in store. I will be angry,
Quarrel with destiny and with myself,
That it is no better: be melancholy;45
And (though mine own disasters well might plead
To be in chief) yours only shall have place.
I'll pity, and (if that's too low) I'll grieve,
As for my sins, I cannot give you ease.
All this I do; and this I hope will prove,50
'Tis greater torment not to love than love.[Exit

Iol. So perishing sailors pray to storms, and so
They hear again. So men, with death about them,
Look on physicians, that have given them o'er;
And so they turn away. Two fixed stars,55
That keep a constant distance, and, by laws
Made with themselves, must know no motion
Eccentric, may meet as soon as we.
The anger that the foolish sea does show,
When it does brave it out, and roar against60
A stubborn rock that still denies it passage,
Is not so vain and fruitless as my prayers.
Ye mighty powers of love and fate, where is
Your justice here? It is thy part, fond boy,
When thou dost find one wounded heart, to make65
The other so; but, if thy tyranny
Be such, that thou wilt leave one breast to hate;
If we must live, and this survive,
How much more cruel's fate?[Exit

ACT V

Scene I

Enter Ziriff, Ariaspes, Iolas

Iol. A glorious night!

Ari. Pray heav'n it prove so! Are we not there yet?

Zir. 'Tis about this hollow.[Enter the cave

Ari. How now! what region are we got into?
Th' inheritance of night!5
Are we not mistaken a turning, Ziriff,
And stept into some melancholy devil's territory?
Sure 'tis a part of the first Chaos, that would
Endure no change.

Zir. No matter, sir: 'tis as proper for our purpose,10
As the lobby for the waiting-woman's.
Stay you here: I'll move a little backward;
And so we shall be sure to put him past
Retreat. You know the word, if't be the prince.

[Goes to the mouth of the cave

Enter King

Here, sir, follow me, all's quiet yet.15

King. He's not come, then?

Zir. No.

King. Where's Ariaspes?

Zir. Waiting within.

[He leads him on: steps behind him, gives the false word: they kill the King
Iol. I do not like this waiting,

Nor this fellow's leaving us.

Ari. This place does put odd thoughts into thee. Then,
Thou art in thine own nature, too, as jealous20
As either love or honour.
Come, wear thy sword in readiness, and think
How near we are a crown.

Zir. Revenge! So,
Let's drag him to the light, and search his pockets:25
There may be papers there, that will discover
The rest of the conspirators. Iolas,
Your hand![Draws out the King's body

Iol. Whom have we here? the king?

Zir. Yes, and Zorannes
Too. Hallo, ho![Enter Pasithas and others30
Unarm them.
D'ye stare?
This for my father's injuries and mine!

[Points to the King's dead body

Half love, half duty's sacrifice! this for
The noble prince, an offering to friendship!35

[Runs at Iolas

Iol. Basely! and tamely——[Dies

Ari. What hast thou done?

Zir. Nothing! kill'd a traitor.
So, away with them, and leave us. Pasithas,
Be only you in call.

Ari. What, dost thou pause?40
Hast thou remorse already, murtherer?

Zir. No, fool: 'tis but a difference I put
Betwixt the crimes: Orbella is our quarrel;
And I do hold it fit, that love should have
A nobler way of justice than revenge45
Or treason. Follow me out of the wood,
And thou shalt be master of this again:
And then best arm and title take.

[They go out and enter again

There![Gives him his sword

Ari. Extremely good! Nature took pains, I swear:
The villain and the brave are mingled handsomely.50

Zir. 'Twas fate that took it, when it decreed
We two should meet, nor shall they mingle now:
We are brought together straight to part.[They fight

Ari. Some devil, sure, has borrowed this shape.[Pause
My sword ne'er stay'd thus long to find an entrance.55

Zir. To guilty men all that appears is devil;
Come, trifler, come.[Fight again. Ariaspes falls

Ari. Whither, whither,
Thou fleeting coward life? Bubble of time,
Nature's shame, stay a little, stay, till I60
Have look'd myself into revenge, and star'd
This traitor to a carcass first!
It will not be——[Falls
The crown,
The crown, too,65
Now is lost, for ever lost.
O! ambition's but an ignis fatuus,
I see, misleading fond mortality,
That hurries us about, and sets us down
Just—where—we—first—begun——[Dies70

Zir. What a great spreading mighty thing this was,
And what a nothing now! how soon poor man
Vanishes into his noontide shadow!
But hopes o'erfed have seldom better done.[Halloes

Re-enter Pasithas

Take up this lump of vanity and honour,75
And carry it the back way to my lodging;
There may be use of statesmen when they're dead:
So. For the Citadel now; for in such times
As these, when the unruly multitude
Is up in swarms, and no man knows which way80
They'll take, 'tis good to have retreat.[Exeunt

Enter Thersames

Ther. The dog-star's got up high: it should be late;
And sure by this time every waking ear
And watchful eye is charm'd; and yet methought
A noise of weapons struck my ear just now!85
'Twas but my fancy, sure; and, were it more,
I would not tread one step that did not lead
To my Aglaura, stood all his guard betwixt,
With lightning in their hands.
Danger! thou dwarf dress'd up in giant's clothes,90
That shew'st far off still greater than thou art,
Go, terrify the simple and the guilty, such
As with false optics still do look upon thee.
But fright not lovers: we dare look on thee
In thy worst shape, and meet thee in them too.95
Stay.
These trees I made my mark; 'tis hereabouts.
Love, guide me but right this night,
And lovers shall restore thee back again
Those eyes the poets took so boldly from thee.[Exit100

Scene II

Aglaura discovered, with a torch in one hand, and a dagger in the other

Agl. How ill
This does become this hand: how much the worse
This suits with this! one of the two should go.
The she within me says, it must be this:
Honour says this; and honour is Thersames' friend.5
What is that she then? it is not a thing
That sets a price, not upon me, but on
Life in my name, leading me into doubt,
Which, when't has done, it cannot light me out.
For fear does drive to fate; or fate, if we10
Do fly, o'ertakes, and holds us, till or death
Or infamy, or both, doth seize us.[Puts out the light
Ha! would 'twere in again!
Antics and strange misshapes,
Such as the porter to my soul, mine eye,15
Was ne'er acquainted with, fancy lets in,
Like a distracted multitude, by some
Strange accident piec'd together!
Fear now afresh comes on, and charges love
Too home. He comes! he comes!20
Woman,
If thou wouldst be the subject of man's wonder,
Not his scorn hereafter, now show thyself.

Enter Prince, rising from the vault; she stabs him two or three times; he falls; she goes back to her chamber

Sudden and fortunate!
My better angel, sure, did both infuse25
A strength, and did direct it.

Enter Ziriff

Zir. Aglaura!

Agl. Brother!

Zir. The same.
So slow to let in such a long'd-for guest?30
Must joy stand knocking, sister? come, prepare,
Prepare;
The king of Persia's coming to you straight—
The king! mark that.

Agl. I thought how poor the joys you brought with you,35
Were in respect of those that were with me.
Joys are our hopes stript of their fears; and such
Are mine: for know, dear brother, the king is come
Already, and is gone. Mark that.

Zir. Is this instinct or riddle? what king? how gone?40

Agl. The cave will tell you more——

Zir. Some sad mistake: thou hast undone us all.

[Goes out, enters hastily again

The prince, the prince! cold as the bed of earth
He lies upon, as senseless too! death hangs
Upon his lips, like an untimely frost45
Upon an early cherry. The noble guest,
His soul, took it so ill that you should use
His old acquaintance so, that neither pray'rs
Nor tears can e'er persuade him back again.

[Aglaura swoons; he rubs her

Hold, hold! we cannot sure part thus. Sister! Aglaura!50
Thersames is not dead: it is the prince
That calls.

Agl. The prince? where?
Tell me, or I will straight
Go back again into those groves of jessamine
Thou took'st me from, and find him out, or lose55
Myself for ever.

Zir. For ever? Ay, there's it!
For in those groves thou talk'st of,
There are so many byways and odd turnings,
Leading unto such wide and dismal places,
That should we go without a guide, or stir60
Before heav'n calls, 'tis strongly to be feared,
We there should wander up and down for ever,
And be benighted to eternity.

Agl. Benighted to eternity? What's that?

Zir. Why, 'tis to be benighted to eternity,65
To sit i' th' dark, and do I know not what;
Unriddle at our own sad cost and charge
The doubts the learned here do only move.

Agl. What place have murtherers, brother, there? for, sure,
The murtherer of the prince must have a punishment70
That heav'n is yet to make.

Zir. How is religion fool'd betwixt our loves
And fears! Poor girl, for ought that thou hast done,
Thy chaplets may be fair and flourishing
As his in the Elysium.

Agl. Do you think so?75

Zir. Yes, I do think so.
The juster judges of our actions,
Would they have been severe upon our weaknesses,
Would, sure, have made us stronger. Fie! those tears
A bride upon the marriage-day as properly80
Might shed as thou:
Here widows do't, and marry next day after.
To such a funeral as this there should
Be nothing common.
We'll mourn him so that those, that are alive,85
Shall think themselves more buried far than he;
And wish to have his grave, to find his obsequies:
But stay: the body.

[Brings up Thersames' body; she swoons and dies

Again! sister, Aglaura!
O, speak once more, once more look out, fair soul.
She's gone—90
Irrevocably gone, and winging now
The air like a glad bird broken from some cage.
Poor bankrupt heart, when 't had not wherewithal
To pay to sad disaster all that was
Its due, it broke—would mine would do so too!95
My soul
Is now within me, like a well-mettled hawk
On a blind falc'ner's fist: methinks I feel
It baiting to be gone: and yet I have
A little foolish business here on earth100
I will despatch.[Exit

Scene III

Enter Pasithas, with the body of Ariaspes

Pas. Let me be like my burthen, if I had not here as
lieve kill two of the blood royal for him, as carry one of
them! these gentlemen of high actions are three times as
heavy after death, as your private retir'd ones: look if he
be not reduc'd to the state of a courtier of the second form5
now, and cannot stand upon his own legs, nor do anything
without help! Hum! and what's become of the great
prince in prison, as they call it now, the toy within us
that makes us talk and laugh and fight. Ay, why, there's
it. Well, let him be what he will, and where he will, I'll10
make bold with the old tenement here. Come, sir, come
along.[Exit

Enter Ziriff

Zir. All's fast too here—
They sleep to-night i' their winding-sheets, I think;
There's such a general quiet. O, here's light,15
I warrant;
For lust does take as little rest as care
Or age—courting her glass, I swear. Fie! that's
A flatterer, madam!
In me you shall see trulier what you are.[Knocks20

Enter the Queen

Orb. What make you up at this strange hour, my lord?

Zir. My business is my boldness' warrant, madam.
And I could well afford t' have been without
It now, had heav'n so pleas'd.

Orb. 'Tis a sad prologue.
What follows, in the name of virtue?25

Zir. The king.

Orb. Ay, what of him? is well, is he not?

Zir. Yes.
If to be free from the great load we sweat
And labour under here on earth, be to
Be well, he is.

Orb. Why, he's not dead, is he?30

Zir. Yes, madam, slain; and the prince too.

Orb. How? where?

Zir. I know not; but dead they are.

Orb. Dead?

Zir. Yes, madam.

Orb. Didst see them dead?

Zir. As I see you alive.

Orb. Dead!

Zir. Yes, dead.35

Orb. Well, we must all die;
The sisters spin no cables for us mortals;
They're Thread, and Time, and Chance.
Trust me, I could weep now;
But wat'ry distillations do but ill40
On graves: they make the lodging colder.[She knocks

Zir. What would you, madam?

Orb. Why, my friends, my lord,
I would consult, and know what's to be done.

Zir. Madam, 'tis not so safe to raise the court,
Things thus unsettled: if you please to have——45

Orb. Where's Ariaspes?

Zir. In's dead sleep by this time, I'm sure.

Orb. I know he is not! find him instantly.

Zir. I'm gone.[Turns back again
But, madam, why make you choice of him, from whom,50
If the succession meet disturbance, all
Must come of danger?

Orb. My lord, I am not yet
So wise, as to be jealous: pray, dispute
No further.

Zir. Pardon me, madam, if, before I go,55
I must unlock a secret unto you: such a one
As, while the king did breathe, durst know no air——
Zorannes lives!

Orb. Ha!

Zir. And, in the hope of such a day as this,60
Has ling'red out a life, snatching, to feed
His almost famished eyes, sights now and then
Of you, in a disguise.

Orb. Strange!
This night is big with miracle.65

Zir. If you did love him, as they say you did,
And do so still, 'tis now within your power——

Orb. I would it were, my lord; but I am now
No private woman. If I did love him once,
(And 'tis so long ago, I have forgot),70
My youth and ignorance may well excuse't.

Zir. Excuse it?

Orb. Yes, excuse it, sir.

Zir. Though I confess I lov'd his father much,
And pity him; yet, having offer'd it75
Unto your thoughts, I have discharg'd a trust;
And zeal shall stray no further. Your pardon, madam.[Exit

Orb. [Studies] Maybe 'tis
A plot to keep off Ariaspes' greatness,
Which he must fear, because he knows he hates him.80
For these are statesmen, that, when time has made bold
With the king and subject, throwing down all fence
That stood betwixt their power and others' right,
Are on a change;
Like wanton salmons coming in with floods,85
That leap o'er wires and nets, and make their way
To be at the return to every one a prey.

Enter Ziriff and Pasithas; they throw down the dead body of Ariaspes

Orb. Ha! murther'd too! Treason, treason!

Zir. But such another word, and half so loud,
And th'rt——

Orb. Why? thou wilt not murther me too,90
Wilt thou, villain?

Zir. I do not know my temper:

[Discovers himself

Look here, vain thing, and see thy sins full blown:
There's scarce a part in all this face thou hast
Not been forsworn by, and Heav'n forgive thee for't!
For thee I lost a father, country, friends,95
Myself almost; for I lay buried long:
And, when there was no use thy love could pay
Too great, thou mad'st the principal away.
Had I but staid, and not began revenge.
Till thou hadst made an end of changing, I100
Had had the kingdom to have kill'd.
As wantons, ent'ring a garden, take the first
Fair flower they meet, and treasure't in their laps;
Then, seeing more, do make fresh choice again,
Throwing in one and one, till at the length105
The first poor flower, o'ercharg'd with too much weight,
Withers and dies:
So hast thou dealt with me; and, having kill'd
Me first, I'll kill——

Orb. Hold, hold!
Not for my sake, but Orbella's, sir! a bare110
And single death is such a wrong to justice,
I must needs except against it.
Find out a way to make me long a-dying;
For death's no punishment: it is the sense,
The pains and fears afore, that makes a death.115
To think what I had had, had I had you;
What I have lost in losing of myself;
Are deaths far worse than any you can give.
Yet kill me quickly; for, if I have time,
I shall so wash this soul of mine with tears,120
Make it so fine, that you would be afresh
In love with it; and so perchance I should
Again come to deceive you.

[She rises up weeping, and hanging down her head

Zir. So rises day, blushing at night's deformity;
And so the pretty flowers, blubber'd with dew,125
And overwash'd with rain, hang down their heads.
I must not look upon her.[She goes towards him

Orb. Were but the lilies in this face as fresh
As are the roses; had I but innocence
Join'd to their blushes, I should then be bold;130
For, when they went on begging, they were ne'er denied.
'Tis but a parting kiss, sir.

Zir. I dare not grant it.

Orb. Your hand, sir, then; for that's a part I shall
Love after death (if after death we love),
'Cause it did right the wrong'd Zorannes here.135

[Steps to him, and opens the box of poison; Zorannes falls

Sleep, sleep for ever; and forgotten too,
All but thy ills, which may succeeding time
Remember, as the seaman does his marks,
To know what to avoid! May at thy name
All good men start, and bad too! may it prove140
Infection to the air, that people dying of it
May help to curse thee for me!

[Turns to the body of Ariaspes

Could I but call thee back as eas'ly now!
But that's a subject for our tears, not hopes!
There is no piecing tulips to their stalks,145
When they are once divorc'd by a rude hand;
All we can do is to preserve in water
A little life, and give, by courteous art,
What scanted nature wants commission for.
That thou shalt have; for to thy memory150
Such tribute of moist sorrow I will pay,
And that so purifi'd by love, that on
Thy grave nothing shall grow but violets
And primroses; of which, too, some shall be
Of the mysterious number, so that lovers shall155
Come hither, not as to a tomb, but to an oracle.

[She knocks, and raises the Court

Enter Orithie, Semanthe, with other Ladies and Courtiers, as out of their beds

Orb. Come, come! help me to weep myself away,
And melt into a grave! for life is but
Repentance' nurse, and will conspire with memory
To make my hours my tortures.160

Ori. What scene of sorrow's this? Both dead?

Orb. Dead? Ay,
And 'tis but half death's triumphs this: the king
And prince lie somewhere, just such empty trunks
As these.

Ori. The prince? Then in grief's burthen I
Must bear a part.

Sem. The noble Ariaspes!165
Valiant Ziriff, too![Weeps

Orb. Weep'st thou for him, fond prodigal? dost know
On whom thou spend'st thy tears? This is the man
To whom we owe our ills, the false Zorannes,
Disguis'd; not lost, but kept alive by some170

Enter Pasithas, surveys the bodies, finds his master

Incensed power, to punish Persia thus!
He would have kill'd me too; but heav'n was just,
And furnish'd me with means to make him pay
This score of vill'ny, ere he could do more.

Pas. Were you his murth'rer then?

[Runs to Orbella, kills her, and flies

Ori. Ah me! the queen!175

[They rub Orbella till she comes to herself

Sem. How do you do, madam?

Orb. Well; but I was better,
And shall——[Dies

Sem. O, she is gone for ever!

Enter Lords in their nightgowns, Orsames, Philan

Ors. What have we here?
A churchyard? Nothing but silence and grave!180

Ori. O, here has been, my lords, the blackest night
The Persian world e'er knew! The king and prince
Are not themselves exempt from this arrest;
But, pale and cold as these, have measur'd out
Their lengths.

Lords. Impossible! which way?

Sem. Of that185
We are as ignorant as you;
For, while the Queen was telling of the story,
An unknown villain here has hurt her so,
That, like a sickly taper, she but made
One flash, and so expir'd.190

[Enter some, bearing in Pasithas

Phi. Here he is; but no confession.

Ori. Torture must force him then;
Though 'twill indeed but weakly satisfy
To know, now they are dead, how they did die.

Phi. Come, take the bodies up, and let us all195
Go drown ourselves in tears. This massacre
Has left so torn a state, that 'twill be policy,
As well as debt, to weep till we are blind;
For who would see the miseries behind?

EPILOGUE

Our play is done; and yours doth now begin:
What different fancies people now are in!
How strange and odd a mingle it would make,
If, ere they rise, 'twere possible to take
All votes!—5
But, as when an authentic watch is shown,
Each man winds up and rectifies his own;
So in our very judgments. First there sits
A grave grand jury on it of town wits;
And they give up their verdict: then again10
The other jury of the court comes in:
And that's of life and death; for each man sees;
That oft condemns, what th' other jury frees.
Some three days hence, the ladies of the town
Will come to have a judgment of their own.15
And, after them, their servants: then the city;
For that is modest, and is still last witty.
'Twill be a week at least yet, ere they have
Resolv'd to let it live, or give't a grave:
Such difficulty there is to unite20
Opinion, or bring it to be right.

EPILOGUE FOR THE COURT

Sir,
That the abusing of your ear's a crime,
Above th' excuse any six lines in rhyme
Can make, the poet knows: I am but sent
T' intreat he may not be a precedent;5
For he does think, that in this place there be
Many have done't as much and more than he.
But here's, he says, the difference of the fates:
He begs a pardon after't, they estates.

THE FIFTH ACT OF AGLAURA AS PRESENTED AT THE COURT

Aglaura. Presented at the Court by His Majesties Servants.
Written by Sir John Suckling.

PROLOGUE

'Fore love, a mighty session; and (I fear)
Though kind last 'sizes, 'twill be now severe:
For it is thought, and by judicious men,
Aglaura 'scap't only by dying then.
But 'twould be vain for me now to endear,5
Or speak unto my Lords, the Judges here:
They hold their places by condemning still,
And cannot show at once mercy and skill;
For wit's so cruel unto wit, that they
Are thought to want, that find not want i' th' play.10
But, ladies, you who never lik'd a plot,
But where the servant had his mistress got,
And whom to see a lover die it grieves,
Although 'tis in worse language that he lives,
Will like't, w' are confident, since here will be15
That, your sex ever lik'd, variety!

PROLOGUE TO THE COURT

'Tis strange, perchance you'll think, that she, that died
At Christmas, should at Easter be a bride:
But 'tis a privilege the poets have,
To take the long-since dead out of the grave.
Nor is this all; old heroes, asleep5
'Twixt marble coverlets, and six foot deep
In earth, they boldly wake, and make them do
All they did living here—sometimes more too.
They give fresh life, reverse and alter fate,
And (yet more bold) Almighty-like create,10
And out of nothing, only to deify
Reason and Reason's friend, Philosophy:
Fame, honour, valour, all that's great or good—
Or is at least 'mongst us so understood—
They give: heav'n's theirs; no handsome woman dies,15
But, if they please, is straight some star i' th' skies.
But O, how those poor men of metre do
Flatter themselves with that that is not true!
And, 'cause they can trim up a little prose,
And spoil it handsomely, vainly suppose20
They're omnipotent, can do all those things
That can be done only by Gods and kings!
Of this wild guilt he fain would be thought free,
That writ this play; and therefore (sir) by me
He humbly begs you would be pleas'd to know,25
Aglaura's but repriev'd this night; and, though
She now appears upon a poet's call,
She's not to live, unless you say she shall.

AGLAURA

PRESENTED AT THE COURT

ACT V

Scene I

Enter Ziriff, Pasithas, and Guard: he places 'em and Exit. A state set out

Enter Ziriff, Iolas, Ariaspes

Iol. A glorious night!

Ari. Pray heav'n it prove so! Are we not there yet?

Zir. 'Tis about this hollow.[They enter the cave

Ari. How now! what region are we got into,
Th' inheritance of night!5
Have we not mistaken a turning, Ziriff,
And stepp'd into the confines of
Some melancholy devil's territory?

Iol. Sure, 'tis a part of the first Chaos, that would
Not suffer any change.10

Zir. No matter, sir: 'tis as proper for our purpose,
As the lobby for the waiting-woman's.
Stay you here; I'll move a little backward;
And so we shall be sure to put him past
Retreat. You know the word, if it be the prince?15

[Ziriff goes to the door of the cave

Enter King

Zir. Here, sir, follow me: all's quiet yet.

King. Is he not come then?

Zir. No.

King. Where's Ariaspes?

Zir. Waiting within.

Iol. I do not like this waiting,
Nor this fellow's leaving of us.

Ari. This place does put odd thoughts into thee. Then20
Thou art in thine own nature, too, as jealous
As love or honour. Wear thy sword in readiness,
And think how near we are a crown.

Zir. Revenge!

[Guard seizeth on the King and Ariaspes

King. Ha! what's this?25

Zir. Bring them forth!

[The guard brings them forth

Ari. The King!

Zir. Yes, and the prince's friend.[Discovers himself
D'you know this face?

King. Zorannes!

Zor. The very same, the wrong'd Zorannes! King,30
D'you stare? Away with them, where I appointed.

King. Traitors!
Let me go, villain, thou dar'st not do this.

Zor. Poor counterfeit,
How fain thou wouldst act a king, and art not!
[To Ariaspes] Stay you. [Whispers to the guard] Unhand him.
Leave us now.

[Exeunt all but Ariaspes and Ziriff

Ari. [aside]. What does this mean?35
Sure he does intend the crown to me!

Zor. We are alone. Follow me out of the wood,
And thou shalt be master of this again;
And then best arm and title take it!

Ari. Thy offer is so noble,40
In gratitude I cannot but propound
Gentler conditions; we will divide the empire.

Zor. Now, by my father's soul,
I do almost repent my first intents,
And now could kill thee scurvily, for thinking,45
If I'd a mind to rule, I would not rule alone.
Let not thy easy faith, lost man,
Fool thee into so dull a heresy:
Orbella is our quarrel,
And I have thought it fit that love should have50
A nobler way of justice than revenge
Or treason. If thou dar'st die handsomely,
Follow me.[Exeunt, and enter both again

Zor. There![Gives him his sword

Ari. Extremely good! Nature took pains, I swear:55
The villain and the brave are mingled handsomely.

Zir. 'Twas fate that took it, when that it decreed
We two should meet; nor shall they mingle now:
We are but brought together straight to part.

[They fight

Ari. Some devil sure has borrowed this shape:60
My sword ne'er stay'd thus long to find an entrance.

Zir. To guilty men all that appears is devil;
Come, trifler, come.[They fight

Ari. Dog, thou hast it.

Zir. Why, then, it seems my star's as great as his:65
I smile at thee.

[Ariaspes pants, and runs at him to catch his sword

Thou now wouldst have me kill thee,
And 'tis a courtesy I cannot afford thee.
I have bethought myself, there will be use
Of thee. Pasithas, to the rest with him![Exit

[Enter Pasithas and two of the Guard. They seize Ariaspes and go out again

Enter Thersames

Ther. The dog-star's got up high: it should be late;70
And sure by this time every waking ear
And watchful eye is charm'd: and yet methought
A noise of weapons struck my ear just now.
'Twas but my fancy, sure; and, were it more,
I would not tread one step that did not lead75
To my Aglaura, stood all his guard betwixt,
With lightning in their hands.
Danger, thou dwarf dress'd up in giant's clothes,
That show'st far off still greater than thou art,
Go, terrify the simple and the guilty, such80
As with false optics still do look upon thee!
But fright not lovers: we dare look on thee
In thy worst shapes, and meet thee in them too.
Stay.
These trees I made my mark; 'tis hereabouts.85
Love, guide me but right this night,
And lovers shall restore thee back again
Those eyes the poets took so boldly from thee.[Exit

Scene II

A Taper. Table out

Enter Aglaura with a torch in one hand, and a dagger in the other

Agl. How ill this does become this hand! much worse
This suits with this! one of the two should go.
The she within me says, it must be this:
Honour says, this; and honour is Thersames' friend.
What is that she then? is it not a thing5
That sets a price, not upon me, but on
Life in my name, leading me into doubt,
Which, when't has done, it cannot light me out?
For fear does drive to fate; or fate, if we
Do fly, o'ertakes and holds us, till or death10
Or infamy, or both, do seize us.[Puts out the light
Ha! would 'twere in again!
Antics and strange misshapes,
Such as the porter to my soul, mine eye,
Was ne'er acquainted with, fancy lets in,15
Like a disrouted multitude, by some
Strange accident piec'd together.
Fear now afresh comes on, and charges love
Too home. He comes, he comes!

[A little noise below

Woman,20
If thou wouldst be the subject of man's wonder,
Not his scorn hereafter, now show thyself!

Enter Thersames from the vaults; she stabs him, as he riseth

Ther. Unkindly done!

Agl. The prince's voice! defend it, goodness!

Ther. What art
Thou that thus poorly hast destroy'd a life?25

Agl. O sad mistake! 'tis he.

Ther. Hast thou no voice?

Agl. I would I had not, nor a being neither.

Ther. Aglaura? it cannot be.

Agl. O still believe so, sir!
For 'twas not I indeed, but fatal love.30

Ther. Love's wounds us'd to be gentler than these were;
The pains they give us have some pleasure in them,
And that these have not.

Enter Ziriff with a taper

O do not say 'twas you; for that
Does wound again. Guard me, my better angel!35
Do I wake? my eyes (since I was man) ne'er met
With any object gave them so much trouble:
1 dare not ask neither to be satisfied,
She looks so guiltily.[Aside

Agl. [to Ziriff]. Why do you stare and wonder at a thing,40
That you yourself have made thus miserable?

Zir. Good gods, and I o' the party too![Aside

Agl. Did you not tell me, that the king this night
Meant to attempt mine honour? that our condition
Would not admit of middle ways, and that we must45
Send them to graves, or lie ourselves in dust?

Zir. Unfortunate mistake! [He knocks] I never did
Intend our safety by thy hands.

Enter Pasithas

Pasithas,
Go instantly and fetch Andrages from his bed.
How is it with you, sir?

Ther. As with the besieg'd:50
My soul is so beset, it does not know
Whether 't had best to make a desperate sally
Out by this port, or not.

Agl. Sure,
I shall turn statue here!

Ther. If thou dost love me,55
Weep not, Aglaura! All those are drops of blood,
And flow from me.

Zir. Now all the gods defend
This way of expiation!
Thinkest thou thy crime, Aglaura, would be less
By adding to it?60
Or canst thou hope to satisfy those powers,
Whom great sins do displease, by doing greater?

Agl. Discourteous courtesy!
I had no other means left me than this,
To let Thersames know I would do nothing65
To him I would not do unto myself;
And that thou tak'st away.

Ther. Friend, bring me a little nearer.
I find a kind of willingness to stay,
And find that willingness something obey'd.70
My blood, now it persuades itself you did
Not call in earnest, makes not such haste.

Agl. O my dearest lord,
This kindness is so full of cruelty,
Puts such an ugliness on what I have done,75
That, when I look upon ['t], it needs must fright
Me from myself, and (which is more insufferable)
I fear, from you.

Ther. Why should that fright thee, which most comforts me?
I glory in it, and shall smile i' th' grave,80
To think our love was such, that nothing but
Itself could e'er destroy it.

Agl. Destroy it? can it have ever end? Will you
Not be thus courteous, then, in the other world?
Shall we not be together there as here?85

Ther. I cannot tell whether I may or not.

Agl. Not tell?

Ther. No. The gods thought me unworthy of thee here;
And, when thou art more pure, why should I not
More doubt it?

Agl. Because, if I shall be more pure,90
I shall be then more fit for you. Our priests
Assure us an Elysium; and can
That be Elysium, where true lovers must
Not meet? Those powers that made our lives, did they
Intend them mortal, would sure have made them of95
A coarser stuff, would they not, my lord?

Ther. Pr'ythee, speak still:
This music gives my soul such pleasing business,
Takes it so wholly up, it finds not leisure
To attend unto the summons death does make.100
Yet they are loud and peremptory now;
And I can only——[Faints

Agl. Some pitying power
Inspire me with a way to follow him! Heart,
Wilt thou not break of thyself!

Zir. My griefs
Besot me.105
His soul will sail out with this purple tide;
And I shall here be found staring after't,
Like a man that's too short o' th' ship, and's left
Behind upon the land.[She swoons

Enter Andrages

O, welcome, welcome!
Here lies, Andrages, alas! too great110
A trial for thy art.

And. There's life in him:
From whence these wounds?

Zir. O, 'tis no time for story.

And. 'Tis not mortal, my lord: bow him gently,
And help me to infuse this into him.
The soul is but asleep, and not gone forth.115

Ther. O, O!

Zir. Hark! the prince does live.

Ther. Whate'er thou art hast given me now a life,
And with it all my cares and miseries,
Expect not a reward: no, not a thanks.120
If thou wouldst merit from me (yet who would
Be guilty of so lost an action?),
Restore me to my quietness again;
For life and that are most incompatible.

Zir. Still in despairs! I did not think till now125
'Twas in the power of fortune to have robb'd
Thersames of himself. For pity, sir,
And reason, live: if you will die, die not:
Aglaura's murther'd: that's not so handsome; at least
Die not her murther'd and her murtherer too;130
For that will surely follow. Look up, sir;
This violence of fortune cannot last ever:
Who knows
But all these clouds are shadows to set off
Your fairer days? If it grows blacker, and135
The storms do rise, this harbour's always open.

Ther. What sayest thou, Aglaura?

Agl. What says Andrages?

And. Madam, would heaven his mind would admit
As easy cure as his body will!
'Twas only want of blood; and two hours' rest140
Restores him to himself.

Zir. And, by that time,
It may be, Heav'n will give our miseries
Some ease. Come, sir, repose upon a bed;
There's time enough to-day.

Ther. Well,145
I will still obey, though I must fear it will
Be with me but as 'tis with tortured men,
Whom states preserve only to rack again.[Exeunt

Scene III

Take off table. Enter Ziriff with a taper

Zir. All fast too here!
They sleep to-night i' their winding-sheets, I think;
There's such a general quiet. O, here's light,
I warrant you;
For lust does take as little rest as care,5
Or age courting her glass, I swear!—Fie! that's
A flatterer, madam,
In me you shall see trulier what you are.[He knocks

Enter Queen

Orb. What make you up at this strange hour, my lord?

Zir. My business is my boldness' warrant, madam;10
And I could well afford t' have been without
It now, had Heav'n so pleas'd.

Orb. 'Tis a sad prologue.
What follows, in the name of virtue?

Zir. The king——

Orb. Ay, what of him. Is well, is he not?

Zir. Yes.15
If to be on's journey to the other world
Be to be well, he is.

Orb. Why, he's not dead, is he?

Zir. Yes, madam, dead.

Orb. How? where?

Zir. I do not know particulars.

Orb. Dead!

Zir. Yes, madam.20

Orb. Art sure he's dead?

Zir. Madam, I know him as certainly dead,
As I know you too must die hereafter.

Orb. Dead!

Zir. Yes, dead.25

Orb. We must all die.
The sisters spin no cables for us mortals;
They're Thread, and Time, and Chance.
Trust me, I could weep now;
But watery distillations do but ill30
On graves, they make the lodging colder.[She knocks

Zir. What would you, madam?

Orb. Why, my friends, my lord,
I would consult, and know what's to be done.

Zir. Madam, 'tis not so safe to raise the court,
Things thus unsettled: if you please to have——35

Orb. Where's Ariaspes?

Zir. In's dead sleep by this time, sure.

Orb. I know he is not. Find him instantly.

Zir. I'm gone.[Turns back again
But, madam, why make you choice of him, from whom,40
If the succession meet disturbance, all
Must come of danger?

Orb. My lord, I am not yet
So wise as to be jealous: pray, dispute
No further.

Zir. Pardon me, madam, if, before I go,45
I must unlock a secret to you; such a one
As, while the king did breathe, durst know no air—
Zorannes lives!

Orb. Ha!

Zir. And, in the hope of such a day as this,50
Has linger'd out a life, snatching, to feed
His almost famish'd eyes, sights now and then
Of you, in a disguise.

Orb. Strange!
This night is big with miracle.55

Zir. If you did love him, as they say you did,
And do so still, 'tis now within your power——

Orb. I would it were, my lord; but I am now
No private woman. If I did love him once,
(As 'tis so long ago, I have forgot),60
My youth and ignorance may well excuse't.

Zir. Excuse it?

Orb. Yes, excuse it, sir.

Zir. Though I confess I lov'd his father much,
And pity him, yet, having offer'd it65
Unto your thoughts, I have discharg'd a trust;
And zeal shall stray no further. Your pardon, madam.

[Exit.

Orb. Maybe, 'tis but
A plot to keep off Ariaspes' greatness,
Which he must fear, because he knows he hates him.70
For these great statesmen, that, when time has made bold
With the king and subject, throwing down all fence
That stood betwixt their power and others' right,
Are on a change;
Like wanton salmons coming in with floods,75
That leap o'er wires and nets, and make their way,
To be at the return to every one a prey.

Re-enter Ziriff

Zir. Look here, vain thing, and see thy sins full blown!
There's scarce a part in all this face thou hast
Not been forsworn by, and Heav'n forgive thee for't!80
For thee I lost a father, country, friends,
Myself almost; for I lay buried long:
And, when there was no use thy love could pay
Too great, thou mad'st the principal away.
As wantons, ent'ring a garden, take the first85
Fair flower they meet, and treasure 't in their laps;
Then, seeing more, do make fresh choice again,
Throwing in one and one, till at the length
The first poor flower, overcharged with too much weight,
Withers and dies:90
So hast thou dealt with me; and, having kill'd
Me first, I will kill——

Orb. Hold, hold!
Not for my sake, but Orbella's, sir! a bare
And single death is such a wrong to justice,
I must needs except against it.95
Find out a way to make me long a-dying;
For death's no punishment: it is the sense,
The pains and fears afore, that makes a death.
To think what I had had, had I had you;
What I have lost in losing of myself;100
Are deaths far worse than any you can give.
Yet kill me quickly; for, if I have time,
I shall so wash this soul of mine with tears,
Make it so fine, that you would be afresh
In love with it; and so perchance I should105
Again come to deceive you.

[She rises up weeping, and hanging down her head

Zir. So rises day, blushing at night's deformity;
And so the pretty flowers, blubber'd with dew,
And over-wash'd with rain, hang down their heads.
I must not look upon her.[Queen goes towards him110

Orb. Were but the lilies in this face as fresh
As are the roses; had I but innocence
Join'd to these blushes, I should then be bold;
For when they went a-begging, they were ne'er denied.
'Tis but a parting kiss, sir!115

Enter Pasithas, and Two Guards

Zir. I dare not grant it.
Pasithas, away with her![Exeunt

Scene IV

A bed put out. Thersames and Aglaura on it, Andrages by

Ther. She wak'd me with a sigh,
And yet she sleeps herself, sweet innocence!
Can it be sin to love this shape? and if
It be not, why am I persecuted thus?
She sighs again!5
Sleep that drowns all cares, cannot, I see, charm love's.
Blest pillows, through whose fineness does appear
The violets, lilies, and the roses
You are stuff'd withal! to whose softness I owe
The sweet of this repose, permit me to10
Leave with you this.[Kisses them; she wakes
See, if I have not wak'd her.
Sure I was born, Aglaura, to destroy
Thy quiet!

Agl. Mine, my lord!15
Call you this drowsiness a quiet, then?
Believe me, sir, 'twas an intruder I
Much struggled with; and have to thank a dream,
Not you, that it thus left me.

Ther. A dream! What dream, my love?20

Agl. I dreamt, sir, it was day;
And the fear you should be found here——

Enter Ziriff

Zir. Awake! How is it with you, sir?

Ther. Well,
Extremely well, so well that, had I now25
No better a remembrancer than pain,
I should forget I e'er was hurt, thanks to Heav'n
And good Andrages!

Zir. And more than thanks: I hope we yet shall live
To pay him. How old's the night?

And. Far spent, I fear,30
My lord.

Zir. I have a cause that should be heard
Yet ere day break, and I must needs entreat
You, sir, to be the judge in't.

Ther. What cause, Zorannes?

Zir. When you have promis'd——

Ther. 'Twere hard I should deny thee anything.35

[Exit Ziriff

Know'st thou, Andrages, what he means?

And. Nor cannot guess, sirs.[Draw in the bed
I read a trouble in his face, when first he left you,
But understood it not.

Re-enter Ziriff, with King, Ariaspes, Iolas, Queen, and Two or Three Guards

Zir. Have I not pitch'd my nets like a good huntsman?40
Look, sir, the noblest of the herd are here.

Ther. I am astonished.

Zir. This place is yours.[Helps him up

Ther. What wouldst thou have me do?

Zir. Remember, sir, your promise.45
I could do all I have to do alone; but justice
Is not justice, unless't be justly done.
Here, then, I will begin; for here began
My wrongs. This woman, sir, was wondrous fair
And wondrous kind—ay, fair and kind; for so50
The story runs.
She gave me look for look and glance for glance;
And every sigh like Echo's, was return'd.
We sent up vow by vow, promise on promise,
So thick and strangely multiplied, that sure55
We gave the heavenly registers their business,
And other mortals' oaths then went for nothing.
We felt each other's pains, each other's joys;
Thought the same thought, and spoke the very same:
We were the same; and I have much ado60
To think she could be ill, and I not be
So too; and after this, all this, sir, she
Was false, lov'd him and him; and, had I not
Begun revenge, till she had made an end
Of changing, I had had the kingdom to have killed.65
What does this deserve?

Ther. A punishment he best can make,
That suffered the wrong.

Zir. I thank you, sir.
For him I will not trouble you: his life
Is mine—I won it fairly—and his is yours—70
He lost it foully to you. To him, sir, now!
A man so wicked that he knew no good,
But so as't made his sins the greater for't.
Those ills, which, singly acted, bred despair
In others, he acted daily, and ne'er thought75
Upon them.
The grievance each particular has against him,
I will not meddle with: it were to give him
A long life to give them hearing. I'll only speak
My own: first, then, the hopes of all my youth,80
And a reward which Heav'n hath settled on me
(If holy contracts can do anything)
He ravish'd from me, kill'd my father—
Aglaura's father, sir—would have whor'd my sister,
And murthered my friend. This is all! And now85
Your sentence, sir.

Ther. We have no punishment can reach these crimes:
Therefore 'tis justest, sure, to send him, where
They're wittier to punish than we are here;
And, 'cause repentance oft stops that proceeding,90
A sudden death is sure the greatest punishment.

Zir. I humbly thank you, sir.

King. What a strange glass th' have showed me now myself in!
Our sins, like to our shadows, when our day
Is in its glory, scarce appear'd: towards95
Our evening how great and monstrous they are!

Zir. Is this all you have to say?[Draws

Ther. Hold!
Now go you up.

Zir. What mean you, sir?

Ther. Nay, I denied not you.100
That all these accusations are just,
I must acknowledge;
And to these crimes I have but this t'oppose—
He is my father and thy sovereign!
'Tis wickedness, dear friend, we go about to punish;105
And, when we have murther'd him,
What difference is there 'twixt him and ourselves,
But that he first was wicked? Thou now wouldst kill
Him, 'cause he kill'd thy father; and when thou'st killed,
Have not I the self-same quarrel?110

Zir. Why, sir, you know you would yourself have done it.

Ther. True;
And therefore 'tis I beg his life.
There was no way for me to have redeem'd
Th' intent, but by a real saving of it.115
If he did not ravish from thee thy Orbella,
Remember that that wicked issue had
A noble parent—love.

[Be ready, Courtiers and Guard, with their swords drawn at the breasts of the prisoners

Remember how
He lov'd Zorannes, when he was Ziriff!120
There's something due to that.
If you must needs have blood for your revenge,

[Offers his breast

Take it here.
Despise it not, Zorannes.[Zorannes turns away
The gods themselves,125
Whose greatness makes the greatness of our sins,
And heightens 'em above what we can do
Unto each other, accept of sacrifice
For what we do 'gainst them. Why should not you?
And 'tis much thriftier too. You cannot let130
Out life there, but my honour goes; and all
The life you can take here, posterity
Will give me back again. See, Aglaura weeps!
That would have been ill rhetoric in me;
But, where it is, it cannot but persuade.135

Zir. Th' have thaw'd the ice about my heart: I know
Not what to do.

King. Come down, come down! I will be king again.
There's none so fit to be the judge of this
As I. The life you show'd such zeal to save140
I here could willingly return you back;
But that's the common price of all revenge.

Enter Guard, Orsames, Philan, Courtiers, Orithie, Semanthe

Iol. Ari. Ha, ha, ha! how they look now!

Zir. Death! what's this?

Ther. Betray'd again!
All th' ease our fortune gives our miseries145
Is hope; and that, still proving false, grows part of it.

King. From whence this guard?

Ari. Why, sir, I did corrupt,
While we were his prisoners, one of his own
To raise the court.
Shallow souls, that thought we could not countermine!150
Come, sir, y'are in good posture to despatch them.

King. Lay hold upon his instrument. Fond man!
Dost think I am in love with villainy?
All the service they can do me here is but
To let these see the right I do them now155
Is unconstrain'd. Then thus I do proceed:
Upon the place Zorannes lost his life
I vow to build a tomb; and on that tomb
I vow to pay three whole years' penitence.
If in that time I find that heaven and you160
Can pardon, I shall find again the way
To live amongst you.

Ther. Sir, be not
So cruel to yourself: this is an age.

King. 'Tis now irrevocable. Thy father's lands165
I give thee back again, and his commands,
And, with them, leave to wear the tiara
That man there has abus'd. To you, Orbella,
Who, it seems, are foul as well as I,
I do prescribe the self-same physic I170
Do take myself; but in another place,
And for a longer time—Diana's nunnery.

Orb. Above my hopes.[Aside

King. [To Ari.] For you, who still have been
The ready instrument of all my cruelties,
And there have cancell'd all the bonds of brother,175
Perpetual banishment! Nor should
This line expire, shall thy right have a place.

Ari. Hell and furies![Exit

King. [To Zir.] Thy crimes deserve no less; yet, 'cause
Thou wert Heaven's instrument to save my life,180
Thou only hast that time of banishment
I have of penitence.

[Comes down. Ziriff offers to kiss the King's hand

Iol. May it be plague and famine here, till I return!
No, thou shalt not
Yet forgive me.185

King. Aglaura, thus I freely part with thee,
And part with all fond flames and warm desires.
I cannot fear new agues in my blood,
Since I have overcome the charms thy beauty had:
No other ever can have so much pow'r.190
Thersames, thou look'st pale! Is't want of rest?

Ther. No, sir; but that's a story for your ear.

[They whisper

Ors. A strange and happy change.

Ori. All joys wait on you ever!

Agl. Orithie, how for thy sake now could I wish195
Love were no mathematic point, but would
Admit division, that Thersames might,
Though at my charge, pay thee the debt he owes thee.

Ori. Madam, I lov'd the prince, not myself. Since
His virtues have their full rewards, I have200
My full desires.

King. What miracles of preservation have we had!
How wisely have the stars prepar'd you for
Felicity! Nothing endears a good
More than the contemplation of the difficulty205
We had to attain to it.
But see, night's empire's out; and a more glorious
Auspiciously does begin. Let us
Go serve the gods, and then prepare for jollity.
This day210
I'll borrow from my vows; nor shall it have
A common celebration, since 't must be
A high record to all posterity.[Exeunt omnes

EPILOGUE

Plays are like feasts; and every act should be
Another course, and still variety:
But, in good faith, provision of wit
Is grown of late so difficult to get,
That, do we what we can, we are not able5
Without cold meats to furnish out the table.
Who knows but it was needless too? maybe,
'Twas here as in the coachman's trade; and he
That turns in the least compass shows most art.
Howe'er, the poet hopes, sir, for his part,10
You'll like not those so much, who shew their skill
In entertainment, as who shew their will.