Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series)

Home > Other > Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series) > Page 259
Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne (Illustrated) (Delphi Poets Series) Page 259

by Algernon Charles Swinburne


  When this was opened to me, take such care,

  Ride so fenced round about with iron guard,

  Or walk so warily as men counselled me

  For loyal fear of what thereafter might

  More prosperously be plotted: nay, God knows,

  I would not hold on such poor terms my life,

  With such a charge upon it, as to breathe

  In dread of death or treason till the day

  That they should stop my trembling breath, and ease

  The piteous heart that panted like a slave’s

  Of all vile fear for ever. So to live

  Were so much hatefuller than thus to die,

  I do not think that man or woman draws

  Base breath of life the loathsomest on earth

  Who by such purchase of perpetual fear

  And deathless doubt of all in trust of none

  Would shudderingly prolong it.

  DAVISON.

  Even too well

  Your servants know that greatness of your heart

  Which gives you yet unguarded to men’s eyes,

  And were unworthier found to serve or live

  Than is the unworthiest of them, did not this

  Make all their own hearts hotter with desire

  To be the bulwark or the price of yours

  Paid to redeem it from the arrest of death.

  ELIZABETH.

  So haply should they be whose hearts beat true

  With loyal blood: but whoso says they are

  Is but a loving liar.

  DAVISON.

  I trust your grace

  Hath in your own heart no such doubt of them

  As speaks in mockery through your lips.

  ELIZABETH.

  By God,

  I say much less than righteous truth might speak

  Of their loud loves that ring with emptiness,

  And hollow-throated loyalties whose heart

  Is wind and clamorous promise. Ye desire,

  With all your souls ye swear that ye desire

  The queen of Scots were happily removed,

  And not a knave that loves me will put hand

  To the enterprise ye look for only of me

  Who only would forbear it.

  DAVISON.

  If your grace

  Be minded yet it shall be done at all,

  The way that were most honourable and just

  Were safest, sure, and best.

  ELIZABETH.

  I dreamt last night

  Our murderess there in hold had tasted death

  By execution of the sentence done

  That was pronounced upon her; and the news

  So stung my heart with wrath to hear of it

  That had I had a sword – look to ‘t, and ‘ware! –

  I had thrust it through thy body.

  DAVISON.

  God defend!

  ’Twas well I came not in your highness’ way

  While the hot mood was on you. But indeed

  I would know soothly if your mind be changed

  From its late root of purpose.

  ELIZABETH.

  No, by God:

  But I were fain it could be somewise done

  And leave the blame not on me. And so much,

  If there were love and honesty in one

  Whom I held faithful and exact of care,

  Should easily be performed; but here I find

  This dainty fellow so precise a knave

  As will take all things dangerous on his tongue

  And nothing on his hand: hot-mouthed and large

  In zeal to stuff mine ears with promises,

  But perjurous in performance: did he not

  Set hand among you to the bond whereby

  He is bound at utmost hazard of his life

  To do me such a service? Yet I could

  Have wrought as well without him, had I wist

  Of this faint falsehood in his heart: there is

  That Wingfield whom thou wot’st of, would have done

  With glad goodwill what I required of him,

  And made no Puritan mouths on ‘t.

  DAVISON.

  Madam, yet

  Far better were it all should but be done

  By line of law and judgment.

  ELIZABETH.

  There be men

  Wiser than thou that see this otherwise.

  DAVISON.

  All is not wisdom that of wise men comes,

  Nor are all eyes that search the ways of state

  Clear as a just man’s conscience.

  ELIZABETH.

  Proverbs! ha?

  Who made thee master of these sentences,

  Prime tongue of ethics and philosophy?

  DAVISON.

  An honest heart to serve your majesty

  Nought else nor subtler in its reach of wit

  Than very simpleness of meaning.

  ELIZABETH.

  Nay,

  I do believe thee; heartily I do.

  Did my lord admiral not desire thee bring

  The warrant for her execution?

  DAVISON.

  Ay,

  Madam; here is it.

  ELIZABETH.

  I would it might not be,

  Or being so just were yet not necessary.

  Art thou not heartily sorry – wouldst thou not,

  I say, be sad – to see me sign it?

  DAVISON.

  Madam,

  I grieve at any soul’s mishap that lives,

  And specially for shipwreck of a life

  To you so near allied: but seeing this doom

  Wrung forth from justice by necessity,

  I had rather guilt should bleed than innocence.

  ELIZABETH.

  When I shall sign, take thou this instantly

  To the lord chancellor; see it straight be sealed

  As quietly as he may, not saying a word,

  That no man come to know it untimely: then

  Send it to the earls of Kent and Shrewsbury

  Who are here set down to see this justice done:

  I would no more be troubled with this coil

  Till all be through. But, for the place of doom,

  The hall there of the castle, in my mind,

  Were fitter than the court or open green.

  And as thou goest betake thee on thy way

  To Walsingham, where he lies sick at home,

  And let him know what hath of us been done:

  Whereof the grief, I fear me, shall go near

  To kill his heart outright.

  DAVISON.

  Your majesty

  Hath yet not signed the warrant.

  ELIZABETH.

  Ha! God’s blood!

  Art thou from tutor of philosophy late

  Grown counsellor too and more than counsellor, thou

  To appoint me where and what this hand of mine

  Shall at thy beck obsequiously subscribe

  And follow on thy finger? By God’s death,

  What if it please me now not sign at all?

  This letter of my kinswoman’s last writ

  Hath more compulsion in it, and more power

  To enforce my pity, than a thousand tongues

  Dictating death against her in mine ear

  Of mine own vassal subjects. Here but now

  She writes me she thanks God with all her heart

  That it hath pleased him by the mean of me

  To make an end of her life’s pilgrimage,

  Which hath been weary to her: and doth not ask

  To see its length drawn longer, having had

  Too much experience of its bitterness:

  But only doth entreat me, since she may

  Look for no favour at their zealous hands

  Who are first in councils of my ministry,

  That only I myself will grant her prayers;

  Whereof the first is, since she cannot hope
/>
  For English burial with such Catholic rites

  As here were used in time of the ancient kings,

  Mine ancestors and hers, and since the tombs

  Lie violated in Scotland of her sires,

  That so soon ever as her enemies

  Shall with her innocent blood be satiated,

  Her body by her servants may be borne

  To some ground consecrated, there to be

  Interred: and rather, she desires, in France,

  Where sleep her honoured mother’s ashes; so

  At length may her poor body find the rest

  Which living it has never known: thereto,

  She prays me, from the fears she hath of those

  To whose harsh hand I have abandoned her,

  She may not secretly be done to death,

  But in her servants’ sight and others’, who

  May witness her obedience kept and faith

  To the true church, and guard her memory safe

  From slanders haply to be blown abroad

  Concerning her by mouths of enemies: last,

  She asks that her attendants, who so well

  And faithfully through all her miseries past

  Have served her, may go freely where they please,

  And lose not those small legacies of hers

  Which poverty can yet bequeath to them.

  This she conjures me by the blood of Christ,

  Our kinship, and my grandsire’s memory,

  Who was her father’s grandsire and a king,

  And by the name of queen she bears with her

  Even to the death, that I will not refuse,

  And that a word in mine own hand may thus

  Assure her, who will then as she hath lived

  Die mine affectionate sister and prisoner. See,

  Howe’er she have sinned, what heart were mine, if this

  Drew no tears from me: not the meanest soul

  That lives most miserable but with such words

  Must needs draw down men’s pity.

  DAVISON.

  Sure it is,

  This queen hath skill of writing: and her hand

  Hath manifold eloquence with various voice

  To express discourse of sirens or of snakes,

  A mermaid’s or a monster’s, uttering best

  All music or all malice. Here is come

  A letter writ long since of hers to you

  From Sheffield Castle, which for shame or fear

  She durst not or she would not thence despatch,

  Sent secretly to me from Fotheringay,

  Not from her hand, but with her own hand writ,

  So foul of import and malignity

  I durst not for your majesty’s respect

  With its fierce infamies afire from hell

  Offend your gracious eyesight: but because

  Your justice by your mercy’s ignorant hand

  Hath her fair eyes put out, and walks now blind

  Even by the pit’s edge deathward, pardon me

  If what you never should have seen be shown

  By hands that rather would take fire in hand

  Than lay in yours this writing.

  Gives her a letter.

  ELIZABETH.

  By this light,

  Whate’er be here, thou hadst done presumptuously,

  And Walsingham thy principal, to keep

  Aught from mine eyes that being to me designed

  Might even with most offence enlighten them.

  Here is her hand indeed; and she takes up

  Reading.

  In gracious wise enough the charge imposed

  By promise on her and desire of ours,

  How loth soe’er she be, regretfully

  To bring such things in question of discourse,

  Yet with no passion but sincerity,

  As God shall witness her, declares to us

  What our good lady of Shrewsbury said to her

  Touching ourself in terms ensuing; whereto

  Answering she chid this dame for such belief,

  And reprehended for licentious tongue,

  To speak so lewdly of us: which herself

  Believes not, knowing the woman’s natural heart

  And evil will as then to usward. Here

  She writes no more than I would well believe

  Of her as of the countess. Ha!

  DAVISON.

  Your grace

  Shall but defile and vex your eyes and heart

  To read these villainies through.

  ELIZABETH.

  God’s death, man! peace:

  Thou wert not best incense me toward thine own,

  Whose eyes have been before me in them. What!

  Was she not mad to write this? One that had

  Your promise – lay with you times numberless –

  All license and all privateness that may

  Be used of wife and husband! yea, of her

  And more dead men than shame remembers. God

  Shall stand her witness – with the devil of hell

  For sponsor to her vows, whose spirit in her

  Begot himself this issue. Ha, the duke!

  – Nay, God shall give me patience – and his knave,

  And Hatton – God have mercy! nay, but hate,

  Hate and constraint and rage have wrecked her wits,

  And continence of life cut off from lust,

  – This common stale of Scotland, that has tried

  The sins of three rank nations, and consumed

  Their veins whose life she took not – Italy,

  France that put half this poison in her blood,

  And her own kingdom that being sick therewith

  Vomited out on ours the venomous thing

  Whose head we set not foot on – but may God

  Make my fame fouler through the world than hers

  And ranker in men’s record, if I spare

  The she-wolf that I saved, the woman-beast,

  Wolf-woman – how the Latin rings we know,

  And what lewd lair first reared her, and whose hand

  Writ broad across the Louvre and Holyrood

  Lupanar – but no brothel ever bred

  Or breathed so rank a soul’s infection, spawned

  Or spat such foulness in God’s face and man’s

  Or festered in such falsehood as her breath

  Strikes honour sick with, and the spirit of shame

  Dead as her fang shall strike herself, and send

  The serpent that corruption calls her soul

  To vie strange venoms with the worm of hell

  And make the face of darkness and the grave

  Blush hotter with the fires wherein that soul

  Sinks deeper than damnation.

  DAVISON.

  Let your grace

  Think only that but now the thing is known

  And self-discovered which too long your love

  Too dangerously hath cherished; and forget

  All but that end which yet remains for her,

  That right by pity be not overcome.

  ELIZABETH.

  God pity so my soul as I do right,

  And show me no more grace alive or dead

  Than I do justice here. Give me again

  That warrant I put by, being foolish: yea,

  Thy word spake sooth – my soul’s eyes were put out –

  I could not see for pity. Thou didst well –

  I am bounden to thee heartily – to cure

  My sight of this distemper, and my soul.

  Here in God’s sight I set mine hand, who thought

  Never to take this thing upon it, nor

  Do God so bitter service. Take this hence:

  And let me see no word nor hear of her

  Till the sun see not such a soul alive.

  ACT V

  Mary Stuart

  Scene I. Mary’s Chamber in Fotheringay Castle

  Mary Stua
rt and Mary Beaton.

  MARY STUART.

  Sings.

  O Lord my God,

  I have trusted in thee;

  O Jesu my dearest one,

  Now set me free.

  In prison’s oppression,

  In sorrow’s obsession,

  I weary for thee.

  With sighing and crying

  Bowed down as dying,

  I adore thee, I implore thee, set me free!

  Free are the dead: yet fain I would have had

  Once, before all captivity find end,

  Some breath of freedom living. These that come,

  I think, with no such message, must not find,

  For all this lameness of my limbs, a heart

  As maimed in me with sickness. Three years gone,

  When last I parted from the earl marshal’s charge,

  I did not think to see his face again

  Turned on me as his prisoner. Now his wife

  Will take no jealousy more to hear of it,

  I trust, albeit we meet not as unfriends,

  If it be mortal news he brings me. Go,

  If I seem ready, as meseems I should,

  And well arrayed to bear myself indeed

  None otherwise than queenlike in their sight,

  Bid them come in.

  Exit Mary Beaton.

  I cannot tell at last

  If it be fear or hope that should expect

  Death: I have had enough of hope, and fear

  Was none of my familiars while I lived

  Such life as had more pleasant things to lose

  Than death or life may now divide me from.

  ’Tis not so much to look upon the sun

  With eyes that may not lead us where we will,

  And halt behind the footless flight of hope

  With feet that may not follow: nor were aught

  So much, of all things life may think to have,

  That one not cowardly born should find it worth

  The purchase of so base a price as this,

  To stand self-shamed as coward. I do not think

  This is mine end that comes upon me: but

  I had liefer far it were than, were it not,

  That ever I should fear it.

  Enter Kent, Shrewsbury, Beale, and Sheriff.

  Sirs, good day:

  With such good heart as prisoners have, I bid

  You and your message welcome.

  KENT.

  Madam, this

 

‹ Prev