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    Don Carlos (play)

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      The very slave, may from a king withhold.

      Not all that to my mind seems plain is yet

      Mature enough to meet the monarch's ear.

      Would he be answered-then must I implore

      He will not question as a king.

      KING (handing the letters).

      Read these.

      ALVA (reads them, and turns to the KING with a look of terror).

      Who was the madman placed these fatal papers

      In my king's bands?

      KING.

      You know, then, who is meant?

      No name you see is mentioned in the paper.

      ALVA (stepping back confused).

      I was too hasty!

      KING.

      But you know!

      ALVA (after some consideration).

      'Tis spoken!

      The king commands,-I dare not now conceal.

      I'll not deny it-I do know the person.

      KING (starting up in violent emotion).

      God of revenge! inspire me to invent

      Some new, unheard-of torture! Is their crime

      So clear, so plain, so public to the world,

      That without e'en the trouble of inquiry

      The veriest hint suffices to reveal it?

      This is too much! I did not dream of this!

      I am the last of all, then, to discern it-

      The last in all my realm?

      ALVA (throwing himself at the KING'S feet).

      Yes, I confess

      My guilt, most gracious monarch. I'm ashamed

      A coward prudence should have tied my tongue

      When truth, and justice, and my sovereign's honor

      Urged me to speak. But since all else are silent

      And since the magic spell of beauty binds

      All other tongues, I dare to give it voice;

      Though well I know a son's warm protestations,

      A wife's seductive charms and winning tears--

      KING (suddenly with warmth).

      Rise, Alva! thou hast now my royal promise;

      Rise, and speak fearlessly!

      ALVA (rising).

      Your majesty,

      Perchance, may bear in your remembrance still

      What happened in the garden at Aranjuez.

      You found the queen deserted by her ladies,

      With looks confused-alone, within a bower,-

      KING.

      Proceed. What further have I yet to hear?

      ALVA.

      The Marchioness of Mondecar was banished

      Because she boldly sacrificed herself

      To save the queen! It has been since discovered

      She did no more than she had been commanded.

      Prince Carlos had been there.

      KING (starting).

      The prince! What more?

      ALVA.

      Upon the ground the footsteps of a man

      Were traced, till finally they disappeared

      Close to a grotto, leftward of the bower,

      Where lay a handkerchief the prince had dropped.

      This wakened our suspicions. But besides,

      The gardener met the prince upon the spot,-

      Just at the time, as near as we can guess,

      Your majesty appeared within the walk.

      KING (recovering from gloomy thought).

      And yet she wept when I but seemed to doubt!

      She made me blush before the assembled court,

      Blush to my very self! By heaven! I stood

      In presence of her virtue, like a culprit.

      [A long and deep silence. He sits down and hides his face.

      Yes, Alva, you are right! All this may lead

      To something dreadful-leave me for a moment--

      ALVA.

      But, gracious sire, all this is not enough--

      KING (snatching up the papers).

      Nor this, nor this?-nor all the harmony

      Of these most damning proofs? 'Tis clear as day-

      I knew it long ago-their heinous guilt

      Began when first I took her from your hands,

      Here in Madrid. I think I see her now,

      With look of horror, pale as midnight ghost,

      Fixing her eyes upon my hoary hair!

      'Twas then the treacherous game began!

      ALVA.

      The prince,

      In welcoming a mother-lost his bride!

      Long had they nursed a mutual passion, long

      Each other's ardent feelings understood,

      Which her new state forbade her to indulge.

      The fear which still attends love's first avowal

      Was long subdued. Seduction, bolder grown,

      Spoke in those forms of easy confidence

      Which recollections of the past allowed.

      Allied by harmony of souls and years,

      And now by similar restraints provoked,

      They readily obeyed their wild desires.

      Reasons of state opposed their early union-

      But can it, sire, be thought she ever gave

      To the state council such authority?

      That she subdued the passion of her soul

      To scrutinize with more attentive eye

      The election of the cabinet. Her heart

      Was bent on love, and won a diadem.

      KING (offended, and with bitterness).

      You are a nice observer, duke, and I

      Admire your eloquence. I thank you truly.

      [Rising coldly and haughtily.

      But you are right. The queen has deeply erred

      In keeping from me letters of such import,

      And in concealing the intrusive visit

      The prince paid in the garden:-from a false

      Mistaken honor she has deeply erred

      And I shall question further.

      [Ringing the bell.

      Who waits now

      Within the antechamber? You, Duke Alva,

      I need no longer. Go.

      ALVA.

      And has my zeal

      A second time displeased your majesty?

      KING (to a page who enters).

      Summon Domingo. Duke, I pardon you

      For having made me tremble for a moment,

      With secret apprehension, lest yourself

      Might fall a victim to a foul misdeed.

      [Exit ALVA.

      SCENE IV.

      The KING, DOMINGO.

      KING walks up and down the room to collect his thoughts.

      DOMINGO (after contemplating the KING for some time with a respectful

      silence).

      How joyfully surprised I am to find

      Your majesty so tranquil and collected.

      KING.

      Surprised!

      DOMINGO.

      And heaven be thanked my fears were groundless!

      Now may I hope the best.

      KING.

      Your fears! What feared you?

      DOMINGO.

      I dare not hide it from your majesty

      That I had learned a secret--

      KING (gloomily).

      And have I

      Expressed a wish to share your secret with you?

      Who ventures to anticipate me thus?

      Too forward, by mine honor!

      DOMINGO.

      Gracious monarch!

      The place, the occasion, seal of secrecy

      'Neath which I learned it-free me from this charge.

      It was intrusted to me at the seat

      Of penitence-intrusted as a crime

      That deeply weighed upon the tender soul

      Of the fair sinner who confessed her guilt,

      And sought the pardon of offended heaven.

      Too late the princess weeps a foul misdeed

      That may involve the queen herself in ruin.

      KING.

      Indeed! Kind soul! You have correctly guessed

      The occasion of your summons. You must guide me

      Through this dark labyrinth wherein blind zeal

      Has tangled me. From
    you I hope for truth.

      Be candid with me; what must I believe,

      And what determine? From your sacred office

      I look for strictest truth.

      DOMINGO.

      And if, my liege,

      The mildness ever incident to this

      My holy calling, did not such restraint

      Impose upon me, still I would entreat

      Your majesty, for your own peace of mind,

      To urge no further this discovery,

      And cease forever to pursue a secret

      Which never can be happily explained.

      All that is yet discovered may be pardoned.

      Let the king say the word-and then the queen

      Has never sinned. The monarch's will bestows

      Virtue and fortune, both with equal ease.

      And the king's undisturbed tranquillity

      Is, in itself, sufficient to destroy

      The rumors set on foot by calumny.

      KING.

      What! Rumors! and of me! among my subjects!

      DOMINGO.

      All falsehood, sire! Naught but the vilest falsehood!

      I'll swear 'tis false! Yet what's believed by all,

      Groundless and unconfirmed although it be,

      Works its effect, as sure as truth itself.

      KING.

      Not in this case, by heaven!

      DOMINGO.

      A virtuous name

      Is, after all, my liege, the only prize

      Which queens and peasants' wives contest together.

      KING.

      For which I surely have no need to tremble.

      [He looks doubtingly at DOMINGO. After a pause.

      Priest, thou hast something fearful to impart.

      Delay it not. I read it plainly stamped

      In thy ill-boding looks. Then out with it,

      Whate'er it be. Let me no longer tremble

      Upon the rack. What do the people say?

      DOMINGO.

      The people, sire, are liable to err,

      Nay err assuredly. What people think

      Should not alarm the king. Yet that they should

      Presume so far as to indulge such thoughts--

      KING.

      Why must I beg this poisonous draught so long?

      DOMINGO.

      The people often muse upon that month

      Which brought your majesty so near the grave,

      From that time, thirty weeks had scarce elapsed,

      Before the queen's delivery was announced.

      [The KING rises and rings the bell. DUKE ALVA

      enters. DOMINGO alarmed.

      I am amazed, your majesty!

      KING (going towards ALVA).

      Toledo!

      You are a man-defend me from this priest!

      DOMINGO (he and DUKE ALVA exchange embarrassed looks. After a pause).

      Could we have but foreseen that this occurrence

      Would be avenged upon its mere relater.

      KING.

      Said you a bastard? I had scarce, you say,

      Escaped the pangs of death when first she felt

      She should, in nature's time, become a mother.

      Explain how this occurred! 'Twas then, if I

      Remember right, that you, in every church,

      Ordered devotions to St. Dominick,

      For the especial wonder he vouchsafed.

      On one side or the other, then, you lie!

      What would you have me credit? Oh, I see

      Full plainly through you now! If this dark plot

      Had then been ripe your saint had lost his fame.

      ALVA.

      This plot?

      KING.

      How can you with a harmony

      So unexampled in your very thoughts

      Concur, and not have first conspired together?

      Would you persuade me thus? Think you that I

      Perceived not with what eagerness you pounced

      Upon your prey? With what delight you fed

      Upon my pain,-my agony of grief?

      Full well I marked the ardent, burning zeal

      With which the duke forestalled the mark of grace

      I destined for my son. And how this priest

      Presumed to fortify his petty spleen

      With my wrath's giant arm! I am, forsooth,

      A bow which each of you may bend at pleasure

      But I have yet a will. And if I needs

      Must doubt-perhaps I may begin with you.

      ALVA.

      Reward like this our truth did ne'er expect.

      KING.

      Your truth! Truth warns of apprehended danger.

      'Tis malice that speaks only of the past.

      What can I gain by your officiousness?

      Should your suspicion ripen to full truth,

      What follows but the pangs of separation,

      The melancholy triumphs of revenge?

      But no: you only fear-you feed me with

      Conjectures vague. To hell's profound abyss

      You lead me on, then flee yourself away.

      DOMINGO.

      What other proofs than these are possible,

      When our own eyes can scarcely trust themselves?

      KING (after a long pause, turning earnestly and solemnly

      towards DOMINGO).

      The grandees of the realm shall be convened,

      And I will sit in judgment. Then step forth

      In front of all, if you have courage for it,

      And charge her as a strumpet. She shall die-

      Die without mercy-and the prince, too, with her!

      But mark me well: if she but clear herself

      That doom shall fall on you. Now, dare you show

      Honor to truth by such a sacrifice?

      Determine. No, you dare not. You are silent.

      Such is the zeal of liars!

      ALVA (who has stood at a distance, answers coldly and calmly).

      I will do it.

      KING (turns round with astonishment and looks at the DUKE for

      a long time without moving).

      That's boldly said! But thou hast risked thy life

      In stubborn conflicts for far less a prize.

      Has risked it with a gamester's recklessness-

      For honor's empty bubble. What is life

      To thee? I'll not expose the royal blood

      To such a madman's power, whose highest hope

      Must be to yield his wretched being up

      With some renown. I spurn your offer. Go;

      And wait my orders in the audience chamber.

      [Exeunt.

      SCENE V.

      The KING alone.

      Now give me, gracious Providence! a man.

      Thou'st given me much already. Now vouchsafe me

      A man! for thou alone canst grant the boon.

      Thine eye doth penetrate all hidden things

      Oh! give me but a friend: for I am not

      Omniscient like to thee. The ministers

      Whom thou hast chosen for me thou dost know-

      And their deserts: and as their merits claim,

      I value them. Their subjugated vices,

      Coerced by rein severe, serve all my ends,

      As thy storms purify this nether world.

      I thirst for truth. To reach its tranquil spring,

      Through the dark heaps of thick surrounding error,

      Is not the lot of kings. Give me the man,

      So rarely found, of pure and open heart,

      Of judgment clear, and eye unprejudiced,

      To aid me in the search. I cast the lots.

      And may I find that man, among the thousands

      Who flutter in the sunshine of a court.

      [He opens an escritoire and takes out a portfolio.

      After turning over the leaves a long time.

      Nothing but names, mere names are here:-no note

      E'en of the services to which they owe

      Their place upon the roll! Oh, what can be

      Of shorter memory
    than gratitude!

      Here, in this other list, I read each fault

      Most accurately marked. That is not well!

      Can vengeance stand in need of such a help?

      [He reads further.

      Count Egmont! What doth he here? Long ago

      The victory of St. Quentin is forgotten.

      I place him with the dead.

      [He effaces this name and writes it on the other roll

      after he has read further.

      The Marquis Posa!

      The Marquis Posa! I can scarce recall

      This person to mind. And doubly marked!

      A proof I destined him for some great purpose.

      How is it possible? This man, till now,

      Has ever shunned my presence-still has fled

      His royal debtor's eye? The only man,

      By heaven, within the compass of my realm,

      Who does not court my favor. Did he burn

      With avarice, or ambition, long ago

      He had appeared before my throne. I'll try

      This wondrous man. He who can thus dispense

      With royalty will doubtless speak the truth.

     


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