ACT IV.

SCENE: The House of MIRIAM, the “Witch of Endor,” by Mount Gilboa—where Saul is encamped against the Philistines. It is of one story, built rectangularly about an inner court, which is dimly lighted.Under the gallery which ranges around the court are doors leading to the sleeping and other apartments; before one of these, a lattice. On the left is the gate opening to the street. In the back to one side, the teraphim, or image of divination; on the other side a stairway mounts to the roof. Above is the night, and vague lightning amid a moan of wind. During the act comes dawn.Forward on a divan sits MIRIAM alone, in blind restlessness.

SCENE: The House of MIRIAM, the “Witch of Endor,” by Mount Gilboa—where Saul is encamped against the Philistines. It is of one story, built rectangularly about an inner court, which is dimly lighted.

Under the gallery which ranges around the court are doors leading to the sleeping and other apartments; before one of these, a lattice. On the left is the gate opening to the street. In the back to one side, the teraphim, or image of divination; on the other side a stairway mounts to the roof. Above is the night, and vague lightning amid a moan of wind. During the act comes dawn.

Forward on a divan sits MIRIAM alone, in blind restlessness.

MIRIAMAdah!The child is sunken in a sleep.Yet would I have her near me in this night,And hear again the boding of her tale.Unto the blind the vision and the aweOf the invisible sway ever in,The shadow of nativities that leadUpon fatality.Girl! Adah! girl![The wind passes.Adahenters from a chamber, rubbing her eyes.]Thou art awake?ADAHI slumbered.MIRIAMStand you whereFathoming I may feel within you. Now,Again—you’ve hither fled your mistress Merab,In fear of her?ADAHYes.MIRIAMAt Engeddi MichalBy Saul was apprehended? Merab nowPlotteth against her—she and Doeg?ADAHStill.MIRIAMAnd ’twas in Merab’s tent you heard, the kingDespairing of to-morrow’s battle, comesHither to-night to bid me lift the spiritOf Samuel out of the dead and learnThe issue?ADAHDoeg said it.MIRIAMAnd—you hear?—Many within the army urge for David,Would cry him king, if Saul were slain?ADAHO many.[A knock at the gate. They start up fearful.]MIRIAMWho seeks blind Miriam of Endor’s roof,Under the night and unextinguished storm?Come you a friend?DAVID [Without.]A friend.MIRIAMAs knows my soul![Breathless she opens the gate.DavidandAbiatharenter cloaked.]Thy voice again!—this blindness of my eyes—If it be David, speak.DAVIDYes, Miriam.MIRIAMDavid of Jesse, Israel’s desire!Let me behold thee [Her hands go over him.] with my fingers’ sight,And gather in them touch of thee again!Thy voice is as dream-dulcimers that stirQuivering myrrh of memory and joy—But, aie! why are you here? You have beenthere?DAVIDYes—in the camp of Saul.MIRIAMIn spite of death!Do you not know——?DAVIDI know—that Saul would ratherO’ertrample me than a multitude of foes.That it is told him I who shun his ire—Though death were easier, if dutiful—Am come up with the Philistines to winThe kingdom. That he would slay me though I foughtFor Israel!—But, Michal!——MIRIAMAie——DAVIDWhat brews?She was not in the camp.MIRIAMMen all are mad!And you who should be never.DAVIDShe is inSome peril.MIRIAMYou, in more! And must from hereSwiftly away, for Saul is——DAVIDI must see her.MIRIAMUnholy!DAVIDYet unholier were flight.MIRIAMYou are the anointed![A heavy knock at the gate.] Ah, calamity!You would not heed—’tis Saul!DAVIDHere?MIRIAMHe is comeThat I shall call up Samuel.DAVIDYou, you—The awful dead?SAUL [Calls.]Woman of Endor!MIRIAMHide!The lattice yonder!SAULWoman of Endor! woman![DavidandAbiatharconceal themselves behind the lattice. The knocking, hastier.]Woman of Endor! Woman of Endor! Woman!MIRIAMWho crieth at my gate?SAULUnbar and learn.MIRIAMTo danger?SAULNone.MIRIAMTo thieves?SAULTo rueing ifYou tarry![She opens the gate.Adahcowers down.Saul,Ishui, andAdrielenter.]MIRIAMWhom seek you?SAULWitch of Endor, you,Who of the fate-revealing dead divine.Out of the Pit you call them!MIRIAMWhat is this?SAULI say that you can lift them!MIRIAMYou are comeWith snaring! knowing well that Saul the kingIs woe and bitterness to all who moveWith incantation.SAULHe is not.MIRIAMDepart!SAULI must have up out of the AwfulnessHim I would question.MIRIAMPerilous!SAULPrepareBefore thy teraphim. No harm, I swear,Shall come of it. Bid Samuel appear.The battle! its event!MIRIAM[With a cry.] I know thee now!Saul! thou art Saul! the Terror!SAULCall him up.Ready is it, the battle—but I amForsaken of all prophecy and dream,Of voices and of priest and oracle,To augur it.MIRIAMA doom in this!SAULHe mustHold comfort, and the torrent of despairWithin me stay and hush.MIRIAMThen must it be.[Turning towards the teraphim amid wind and pallid lightning, and prostrating herself before it.]Prophet of Israel, who art beyondThe troubling and the terrifying grave,Th’ immeasurable moan and melancholyOf ways that win to Sheol—Rise! Arise![She waits. Only the gust. Then springing up and stretching wide her arms with wild, blind eyes.]Prophet of Israel, arise! Not inThe name of Baal, Amon, Ashtoreth,Dagon or all the deities that dreamIn trembling temples of Idolatry,But of Jehovah! of Jehovah! rise![An elemental cry is heard. Then vast wavering forms rise out of the earth, in continuous stream.Miriam, with a long curdling shriek, sinks moaning to her knees.]SAULWoman, I cannot—dare not—look upon it.Utter thy sight.[The spirit ofSamuelbegins to take shape through the phantoms.]MIRIAMI saw ascendingForms as of gods in swaying ghostliness,Dim apparitions of a dismal might,And now is one within a mantle clad,Who looketh——SAULSamuel!MIRIAMWho looketh withOmniscience in his mien, and all the chillAnd cling about him of eternity.His eyes impale me!SAULSpirit, give me word![He falls heavily to the ground.]SAMUEL[As afar.] O evil king! and wretched king! why hastThou brought me from the quietness and rest.SAULThe battle on the morrow——!SAMUELEvil thou artFor underneath this night thou hast conspiredDeath to thy daughter Michal—if at dawnThe battle shall be lost—lest she may fallInto the hands of David——DAVID [In horror.]O!ISHUIWhose cry?SAMUELI tell thee, Saul, thy sceptre shrivels fast.The battle shall be lost—it shall be lost.[The spirit ofSamueldisappears. A wail of wind.]ADRIELIshui, true? Is Michal to be slain?ISHUIThis is no hour for fools and questioning.SAUL[Struggling up.] The battle, Ishui, at once commandIt shall begin! To Jonathan and say it.[Ishuigoes.]No prophecy shall sink me and no shade.I am the king, and Israel, my own.[Frenzied he goes. A silence.]DAVID[Breaking forth.] Michal to die and Israel to fall!Prophet of prophets, Samuel, return![Adrielgoes.]The quiveringQuicksands of destiny beneath her stir.Is heaven a mocking shield which ever keepsGod from our prayers?MIRIAMDavid, contain thy heart.[A faint uproar begins afar; and dawn.]DAVIDThe battle! on the wind. Abiathar,Speed out upon the mountain-side and cullAll that befalls.[Adahopens the gate.Abiathargoes.]ADAH[Springing back.] Oh!DAVIDChild, why do you quail?ADAHMy mistress, Merab!DAVIDGirl?ADAHI saw her—sheIs coming hither! Do not let her—sheI fear—I fear her!DAVIDHither coming?[Merabthrows open the gate and enters.]ADAHOh!MERABWoman and witch, did Adriel, my husband,Come to you with the king?[She seesDavidand shrinks.]DAVIDUnnatural,Unkind, most cruel sister!MERABYou are here?DAVIDOnce me you would have poisoned, but the coilWithin your bosom I beheld. And nowMichal your sister is the victim.MERABI—Know not your meaning.DAVIDThe battle burning yonder,If it adversely veers, the king has plannedMichal is not to live, lest she may hapUnto my arms.MERABThat Michal shall be slain?[The tumult again.]DAVIDAlmighty, smite, and save to thee thy people!And save thy altars unto Israel.[He bows his head. A stir comes at the gate.]MERABDavid, ’tis Adriel!ADRIELOpe! open you!DAVIDAt last the word.MERABGirl, Adah, draw the bar.[Davidthrows a cloak over his face.Adahobeys.Adrielenters, andDoeg, who pauses in quick alarm, asDavidgoes between him and the gate.]DOEGWhat place is this? Why do you bar that gate?Merab, ’tis you? Why do you gaze, rigid?And this is the blind witch, Miriam?DAVIDIt is.[He throws off his cloak.]DOEGLured? I am snared? a trap?DAVIDWhere have you Michal?DOEG[Drawing.] No closer!DAVIDIf she is an atom harmed——!Where is she?DOEGI was the servant of the king,I but obeyed him.DAVIDAnd thy horrible heart.Then speak, or unto frenzy I am driven.DOEGI’ll drive you there with——[Breaks off with low laugh.]DAVIDTell it!DOEGUnto yourSoft sympathy—and passion? [Laughs.] She is dead.DAVID[Immovable, then repressed.]If it is so, the lightning, that is wrathWithin the veins of God, should sink its fangInto thy bosom and sear out thy heart.If it is so, this momentary calm,This silence pouring overfull the world,Would rush and in thee cry until thy bonesBroken of guilt are crumbled in thy groans.Dead, she is dead?MIRIAMNo, David, my lord, he lies![Strangely, as in a trance.]To wound you, lies!DAVIDNot dead?MIRIAMI see her eyes![All listen amazed.]I see her in a vision. She is near—Is in a cave—is bound—and is alone.I will go to her—quickly bring her.DOEGNot[Lunges at her.]If this shall reach you.DAVIDAh, to pierce a woman![Miriamfinds her way out.]You’ve plotted, false have been and bloody, foul,And as a pestilence of midnight marshHave oozed corruption into all around you.The kingdom thro’ you is in brokenness,Within its arteries you flow, poison,Incentive of irruption and unrest,Of treachery and disaffection’s sore,Till even the stars of truest ray seem taresSown hostile o’er the nightly vale of heaven.[Drawing firmly, he coldly, skilfully approaches for attack.]DOEG[Retreating.] No further!DAVIDUnto the end![He rushes in, they engage.Doegis wounded, recovers, defends furiously, then is disarmed and forced under.]Thy villainy is done.[The gate opens andAbiatharhurries in.]ABIATHARDavid, the battle——[He seesDoegand stops.]DAVIDFetter him.ABIATHAROnly fetter? [His dagger out.] The murdererOf priestly sanctity and of my father?DAVIDAbiathar! You know obedience?[Abiatharsullenly sheathes his weapon and bindsDoeg. A dim panic is heard afar, and a lament without.David, who has sunk to a seat, springs anxiously up.]Listen! that cry!THE VOICEWoe! woe!DAVIDWhat is its wail?THE VOICEThe battle’s lost!DAVIDAbiathar——?THE VOICESaul flees!DAVIDAbiathar, is lost?ABIATHARI fear it.DAVIDThen [Pointing toDoeg.]Off with his armor for me, I will goForth and perchance may backward bend defeat.Duty to Saul is over.ADRIELYou must not.A fruitless intrepidity it were.ABIATHARRemember your anointing!ADRIELThe prophesy![Miriamenters leadingMichal. A moment’s suspense.]MERABSee!ADRIELSee!MERABShe liveth!MIRIAMDavid——MICHAL [Pleading to him.]It is I.MIRIAMThe cords were cruel, hungrily sank inHer wrists and ankles.MICHALDavid, look on me.DAVIDMy words must be alone with her—alone.ADRIELCome, all of you—the battle.[They go out the gate.Davidstands speechless.]MICHALDavid—my lord!I ask not anything but to be heard—Though once I would not hear. Has all of lifeNo glow for me!DAVIDBetrayers should have none.MICHALI was a woman—the entanglementOf duty amid love we have no skillTo loosen, but with passion.DAVIDYou too lateRemember it is so.MICHALNobilityAll unbelievable it seemed that youCould innocently watt on time to tideYou to the kingdom. Then forgive, I plead.DAVIDBut in the wilderness, your perfidy!MICHALDoubt of it welleth thro’ your voice. No, no,To save you strove I——!DAVIDMichal?MICHALNot to betray!From Saul, my father, penitent I fled,Seeking you in Engeddi’s wild.DAVIDAnd Phalti?MICHAL’Twas wedding him I loathed.DAVIDSay true!MICHALThis knifeUnfailingly into my breast had sparedMe from him, had not flight.DAVIDThis—this can be?[A great joy dawning in him.]Beyond all hope is it, even as day’sWide empery outspans our littleness.[Goes toward her.]A tithing of thy loveliness were beautyEnough for earth. Yet it is mine, is mine?MICHALDavid—forever! long as odorousCooling o’er Lebanon shall blow, long asThe swinging sapphire of the sea shall flashUp to the sun: until the soul no moreIs soul, but vapor!DAVIDMichal!MICHALEvermore![She sinks into his arms, and there is a pause. But a sudden confusion of cries is heard and they start apart. The gate is flung back andAdrielenters, shaken with awe. He looks from one to the other, silent.]DAVID [At last.]Adriel!What have you!ADRIELSaul … is slain!MICHALMy father?ADRIELSlain!And Jonathan——DAVIDNo!ADRIELFell beside him down.The fray was fast—Israel fled—the foeFierce after Saul, whom Jonathan defended.MICHALMy father!DAVIDAnd my brother Jonathan!If I believe it will not miracleAlone bring joy again unto my pain?[The wailing again without, and deeper groans.]O Israel, the Infinite has touchedThy glory and it changes to a shroud!Thy splendor is as vintage overspilt.For Saul upon the mountains low is lying,And Jonathan beside him, beautifulBeyond the mar of battle, and of death.[He bows his head in tears.]O kingly Jonathan, would I might giveThe beating of my life into your veins—Willing for it would I be drouth and die.How are the mighty fallen and the fair![With lifted arm, deeply moved.]Peaks, mountains of Gilboa, let no moreDew be upon you, and as sackcloth letClouds cover you, and ashes be your soil,Until I bring upon PhilistiaAnd Gath and Askalon extinguishing,And sorrow—and immensity of tears![Michalgoes to him and takes his hand. He folds her in his arms.]But we must calm the flowing of this grief.Though yet we cannot mind us to rememberLove will as sandal-breath and trickling balmO’erheal us in the unbegotten years,Too headlong must not be our agony.Hush now thy woundedness, my Michal, now.See, o’er the East the lifted wings of dawn.[Slowly they climb the stair to the house-top. At they look away toward the battle’s rout the clouds part, and the full brightness of the sun breaks over them.][CURTAIN.]

MIRIAMAdah!The child is sunken in a sleep.Yet would I have her near me in this night,And hear again the boding of her tale.Unto the blind the vision and the aweOf the invisible sway ever in,The shadow of nativities that leadUpon fatality.Girl! Adah! girl![The wind passes.Adahenters from a chamber, rubbing her eyes.]Thou art awake?ADAHI slumbered.MIRIAMStand you whereFathoming I may feel within you. Now,Again—you’ve hither fled your mistress Merab,In fear of her?ADAHYes.MIRIAMAt Engeddi MichalBy Saul was apprehended? Merab nowPlotteth against her—she and Doeg?ADAHStill.MIRIAMAnd ’twas in Merab’s tent you heard, the kingDespairing of to-morrow’s battle, comesHither to-night to bid me lift the spiritOf Samuel out of the dead and learnThe issue?ADAHDoeg said it.MIRIAMAnd—you hear?—Many within the army urge for David,Would cry him king, if Saul were slain?ADAHO many.[A knock at the gate. They start up fearful.]MIRIAMWho seeks blind Miriam of Endor’s roof,Under the night and unextinguished storm?Come you a friend?DAVID [Without.]A friend.MIRIAMAs knows my soul![Breathless she opens the gate.DavidandAbiatharenter cloaked.]Thy voice again!—this blindness of my eyes—If it be David, speak.DAVIDYes, Miriam.MIRIAMDavid of Jesse, Israel’s desire!Let me behold thee [Her hands go over him.] with my fingers’ sight,And gather in them touch of thee again!Thy voice is as dream-dulcimers that stirQuivering myrrh of memory and joy—But, aie! why are you here? You have beenthere?DAVIDYes—in the camp of Saul.MIRIAMIn spite of death!Do you not know——?DAVIDI know—that Saul would ratherO’ertrample me than a multitude of foes.That it is told him I who shun his ire—Though death were easier, if dutiful—Am come up with the Philistines to winThe kingdom. That he would slay me though I foughtFor Israel!—But, Michal!——MIRIAMAie——DAVIDWhat brews?She was not in the camp.MIRIAMMen all are mad!And you who should be never.DAVIDShe is inSome peril.MIRIAMYou, in more! And must from hereSwiftly away, for Saul is——DAVIDI must see her.MIRIAMUnholy!DAVIDYet unholier were flight.MIRIAMYou are the anointed![A heavy knock at the gate.] Ah, calamity!You would not heed—’tis Saul!DAVIDHere?MIRIAMHe is comeThat I shall call up Samuel.DAVIDYou, you—The awful dead?SAUL [Calls.]Woman of Endor!MIRIAMHide!The lattice yonder!SAULWoman of Endor! woman![DavidandAbiatharconceal themselves behind the lattice. The knocking, hastier.]Woman of Endor! Woman of Endor! Woman!MIRIAMWho crieth at my gate?SAULUnbar and learn.MIRIAMTo danger?SAULNone.MIRIAMTo thieves?SAULTo rueing ifYou tarry![She opens the gate.Adahcowers down.Saul,Ishui, andAdrielenter.]MIRIAMWhom seek you?SAULWitch of Endor, you,Who of the fate-revealing dead divine.Out of the Pit you call them!MIRIAMWhat is this?SAULI say that you can lift them!MIRIAMYou are comeWith snaring! knowing well that Saul the kingIs woe and bitterness to all who moveWith incantation.SAULHe is not.MIRIAMDepart!SAULI must have up out of the AwfulnessHim I would question.MIRIAMPerilous!SAULPrepareBefore thy teraphim. No harm, I swear,Shall come of it. Bid Samuel appear.The battle! its event!MIRIAM[With a cry.] I know thee now!Saul! thou art Saul! the Terror!SAULCall him up.Ready is it, the battle—but I amForsaken of all prophecy and dream,Of voices and of priest and oracle,To augur it.MIRIAMA doom in this!SAULHe mustHold comfort, and the torrent of despairWithin me stay and hush.MIRIAMThen must it be.[Turning towards the teraphim amid wind and pallid lightning, and prostrating herself before it.]Prophet of Israel, who art beyondThe troubling and the terrifying grave,Th’ immeasurable moan and melancholyOf ways that win to Sheol—Rise! Arise![She waits. Only the gust. Then springing up and stretching wide her arms with wild, blind eyes.]Prophet of Israel, arise! Not inThe name of Baal, Amon, Ashtoreth,Dagon or all the deities that dreamIn trembling temples of Idolatry,But of Jehovah! of Jehovah! rise![An elemental cry is heard. Then vast wavering forms rise out of the earth, in continuous stream.Miriam, with a long curdling shriek, sinks moaning to her knees.]SAULWoman, I cannot—dare not—look upon it.Utter thy sight.[The spirit ofSamuelbegins to take shape through the phantoms.]MIRIAMI saw ascendingForms as of gods in swaying ghostliness,Dim apparitions of a dismal might,And now is one within a mantle clad,Who looketh——SAULSamuel!MIRIAMWho looketh withOmniscience in his mien, and all the chillAnd cling about him of eternity.His eyes impale me!SAULSpirit, give me word![He falls heavily to the ground.]SAMUEL[As afar.] O evil king! and wretched king! why hastThou brought me from the quietness and rest.SAULThe battle on the morrow——!SAMUELEvil thou artFor underneath this night thou hast conspiredDeath to thy daughter Michal—if at dawnThe battle shall be lost—lest she may fallInto the hands of David——DAVID [In horror.]O!ISHUIWhose cry?SAMUELI tell thee, Saul, thy sceptre shrivels fast.The battle shall be lost—it shall be lost.[The spirit ofSamueldisappears. A wail of wind.]ADRIELIshui, true? Is Michal to be slain?ISHUIThis is no hour for fools and questioning.SAUL[Struggling up.] The battle, Ishui, at once commandIt shall begin! To Jonathan and say it.[Ishuigoes.]No prophecy shall sink me and no shade.I am the king, and Israel, my own.[Frenzied he goes. A silence.]DAVID[Breaking forth.] Michal to die and Israel to fall!Prophet of prophets, Samuel, return![Adrielgoes.]The quiveringQuicksands of destiny beneath her stir.Is heaven a mocking shield which ever keepsGod from our prayers?MIRIAMDavid, contain thy heart.[A faint uproar begins afar; and dawn.]DAVIDThe battle! on the wind. Abiathar,Speed out upon the mountain-side and cullAll that befalls.[Adahopens the gate.Abiathargoes.]ADAH[Springing back.] Oh!DAVIDChild, why do you quail?ADAHMy mistress, Merab!DAVIDGirl?ADAHI saw her—sheIs coming hither! Do not let her—sheI fear—I fear her!DAVIDHither coming?[Merabthrows open the gate and enters.]ADAHOh!MERABWoman and witch, did Adriel, my husband,Come to you with the king?[She seesDavidand shrinks.]DAVIDUnnatural,Unkind, most cruel sister!MERABYou are here?DAVIDOnce me you would have poisoned, but the coilWithin your bosom I beheld. And nowMichal your sister is the victim.MERABI—Know not your meaning.DAVIDThe battle burning yonder,If it adversely veers, the king has plannedMichal is not to live, lest she may hapUnto my arms.MERABThat Michal shall be slain?[The tumult again.]DAVIDAlmighty, smite, and save to thee thy people!And save thy altars unto Israel.[He bows his head. A stir comes at the gate.]MERABDavid, ’tis Adriel!ADRIELOpe! open you!DAVIDAt last the word.MERABGirl, Adah, draw the bar.[Davidthrows a cloak over his face.Adahobeys.Adrielenters, andDoeg, who pauses in quick alarm, asDavidgoes between him and the gate.]DOEGWhat place is this? Why do you bar that gate?Merab, ’tis you? Why do you gaze, rigid?And this is the blind witch, Miriam?DAVIDIt is.[He throws off his cloak.]DOEGLured? I am snared? a trap?DAVIDWhere have you Michal?DOEG[Drawing.] No closer!DAVIDIf she is an atom harmed——!Where is she?DOEGI was the servant of the king,I but obeyed him.DAVIDAnd thy horrible heart.Then speak, or unto frenzy I am driven.DOEGI’ll drive you there with——[Breaks off with low laugh.]DAVIDTell it!DOEGUnto yourSoft sympathy—and passion? [Laughs.] She is dead.DAVID[Immovable, then repressed.]If it is so, the lightning, that is wrathWithin the veins of God, should sink its fangInto thy bosom and sear out thy heart.If it is so, this momentary calm,This silence pouring overfull the world,Would rush and in thee cry until thy bonesBroken of guilt are crumbled in thy groans.Dead, she is dead?MIRIAMNo, David, my lord, he lies![Strangely, as in a trance.]To wound you, lies!DAVIDNot dead?MIRIAMI see her eyes![All listen amazed.]I see her in a vision. She is near—Is in a cave—is bound—and is alone.I will go to her—quickly bring her.DOEGNot[Lunges at her.]If this shall reach you.DAVIDAh, to pierce a woman![Miriamfinds her way out.]You’ve plotted, false have been and bloody, foul,And as a pestilence of midnight marshHave oozed corruption into all around you.The kingdom thro’ you is in brokenness,Within its arteries you flow, poison,Incentive of irruption and unrest,Of treachery and disaffection’s sore,Till even the stars of truest ray seem taresSown hostile o’er the nightly vale of heaven.[Drawing firmly, he coldly, skilfully approaches for attack.]DOEG[Retreating.] No further!DAVIDUnto the end![He rushes in, they engage.Doegis wounded, recovers, defends furiously, then is disarmed and forced under.]Thy villainy is done.[The gate opens andAbiatharhurries in.]ABIATHARDavid, the battle——[He seesDoegand stops.]DAVIDFetter him.ABIATHAROnly fetter? [His dagger out.] The murdererOf priestly sanctity and of my father?DAVIDAbiathar! You know obedience?[Abiatharsullenly sheathes his weapon and bindsDoeg. A dim panic is heard afar, and a lament without.David, who has sunk to a seat, springs anxiously up.]Listen! that cry!THE VOICEWoe! woe!DAVIDWhat is its wail?THE VOICEThe battle’s lost!DAVIDAbiathar——?THE VOICESaul flees!DAVIDAbiathar, is lost?ABIATHARI fear it.DAVIDThen [Pointing toDoeg.]Off with his armor for me, I will goForth and perchance may backward bend defeat.Duty to Saul is over.ADRIELYou must not.A fruitless intrepidity it were.ABIATHARRemember your anointing!ADRIELThe prophesy![Miriamenters leadingMichal. A moment’s suspense.]MERABSee!ADRIELSee!MERABShe liveth!MIRIAMDavid——MICHAL [Pleading to him.]It is I.MIRIAMThe cords were cruel, hungrily sank inHer wrists and ankles.MICHALDavid, look on me.DAVIDMy words must be alone with her—alone.ADRIELCome, all of you—the battle.[They go out the gate.Davidstands speechless.]MICHALDavid—my lord!I ask not anything but to be heard—Though once I would not hear. Has all of lifeNo glow for me!DAVIDBetrayers should have none.MICHALI was a woman—the entanglementOf duty amid love we have no skillTo loosen, but with passion.DAVIDYou too lateRemember it is so.MICHALNobilityAll unbelievable it seemed that youCould innocently watt on time to tideYou to the kingdom. Then forgive, I plead.DAVIDBut in the wilderness, your perfidy!MICHALDoubt of it welleth thro’ your voice. No, no,To save you strove I——!DAVIDMichal?MICHALNot to betray!From Saul, my father, penitent I fled,Seeking you in Engeddi’s wild.DAVIDAnd Phalti?MICHAL’Twas wedding him I loathed.DAVIDSay true!MICHALThis knifeUnfailingly into my breast had sparedMe from him, had not flight.DAVIDThis—this can be?[A great joy dawning in him.]Beyond all hope is it, even as day’sWide empery outspans our littleness.[Goes toward her.]A tithing of thy loveliness were beautyEnough for earth. Yet it is mine, is mine?MICHALDavid—forever! long as odorousCooling o’er Lebanon shall blow, long asThe swinging sapphire of the sea shall flashUp to the sun: until the soul no moreIs soul, but vapor!DAVIDMichal!MICHALEvermore![She sinks into his arms, and there is a pause. But a sudden confusion of cries is heard and they start apart. The gate is flung back andAdrielenters, shaken with awe. He looks from one to the other, silent.]DAVID [At last.]Adriel!What have you!ADRIELSaul … is slain!MICHALMy father?ADRIELSlain!And Jonathan——DAVIDNo!ADRIELFell beside him down.The fray was fast—Israel fled—the foeFierce after Saul, whom Jonathan defended.MICHALMy father!DAVIDAnd my brother Jonathan!If I believe it will not miracleAlone bring joy again unto my pain?[The wailing again without, and deeper groans.]O Israel, the Infinite has touchedThy glory and it changes to a shroud!Thy splendor is as vintage overspilt.For Saul upon the mountains low is lying,And Jonathan beside him, beautifulBeyond the mar of battle, and of death.[He bows his head in tears.]O kingly Jonathan, would I might giveThe beating of my life into your veins—Willing for it would I be drouth and die.How are the mighty fallen and the fair![With lifted arm, deeply moved.]Peaks, mountains of Gilboa, let no moreDew be upon you, and as sackcloth letClouds cover you, and ashes be your soil,Until I bring upon PhilistiaAnd Gath and Askalon extinguishing,And sorrow—and immensity of tears![Michalgoes to him and takes his hand. He folds her in his arms.]But we must calm the flowing of this grief.Though yet we cannot mind us to rememberLove will as sandal-breath and trickling balmO’erheal us in the unbegotten years,Too headlong must not be our agony.Hush now thy woundedness, my Michal, now.See, o’er the East the lifted wings of dawn.[Slowly they climb the stair to the house-top. At they look away toward the battle’s rout the clouds part, and the full brightness of the sun breaks over them.][CURTAIN.]

MIRIAM

Adah!

The child is sunken in a sleep.

Yet would I have her near me in this night,

And hear again the boding of her tale.

Unto the blind the vision and the awe

Of the invisible sway ever in,

The shadow of nativities that lead

Upon fatality.

Girl! Adah! girl!

[The wind passes.Adahenters from a chamber, rubbing her eyes.]

Thou art awake?

ADAH

I slumbered.

MIRIAM

Stand you where

Fathoming I may feel within you. Now,

Again—you’ve hither fled your mistress Merab,

In fear of her?

ADAH

Yes.

MIRIAM

At Engeddi Michal

By Saul was apprehended? Merab now

Plotteth against her—she and Doeg?

ADAH

Still.

MIRIAM

And ’twas in Merab’s tent you heard, the king

Despairing of to-morrow’s battle, comes

Hither to-night to bid me lift the spirit

Of Samuel out of the dead and learn

The issue?

ADAH

Doeg said it.

MIRIAM

And—you hear?—

Many within the army urge for David,

Would cry him king, if Saul were slain?

ADAH

O many.

[A knock at the gate. They start up fearful.]

MIRIAM

Who seeks blind Miriam of Endor’s roof,

Under the night and unextinguished storm?

Come you a friend?

DAVID [Without.]

A friend.

MIRIAM

As knows my soul!

[Breathless she opens the gate.DavidandAbiatharenter cloaked.]

Thy voice again!—this blindness of my eyes—

If it be David, speak.

DAVID

Yes, Miriam.

MIRIAM

David of Jesse, Israel’s desire!

Let me behold thee [Her hands go over him.] with my fingers’ sight,

And gather in them touch of thee again!

Thy voice is as dream-dulcimers that stir

Quivering myrrh of memory and joy—

But, aie! why are you here? You have beenthere?

DAVID

Yes—in the camp of Saul.

MIRIAM

In spite of death!

Do you not know——?

DAVID

I know—that Saul would rather

O’ertrample me than a multitude of foes.

That it is told him I who shun his ire—

Though death were easier, if dutiful—

Am come up with the Philistines to win

The kingdom. That he would slay me though I fought

For Israel!—But, Michal!——

MIRIAM

Aie——

DAVID

What brews?

She was not in the camp.

MIRIAM

Men all are mad!

And you who should be never.

DAVID

She is in

Some peril.

MIRIAM

You, in more! And must from here

Swiftly away, for Saul is——

DAVID

I must see her.

MIRIAM

Unholy!

DAVID

Yet unholier were flight.

MIRIAM

You are the anointed!

[A heavy knock at the gate.] Ah, calamity!

You would not heed—’tis Saul!

DAVID

Here?

MIRIAM

He is come

That I shall call up Samuel.

DAVID

You, you—

The awful dead?

SAUL [Calls.]

Woman of Endor!

MIRIAM

Hide!

The lattice yonder!

SAUL

Woman of Endor! woman!

[DavidandAbiatharconceal themselves behind the lattice. The knocking, hastier.]

Woman of Endor! Woman of Endor! Woman!

MIRIAM

Who crieth at my gate?

SAUL

Unbar and learn.

MIRIAM

To danger?

SAUL

None.

MIRIAM

To thieves?

SAUL

To rueing if

You tarry!

[She opens the gate.Adahcowers down.Saul,Ishui, andAdrielenter.]

MIRIAM

Whom seek you?

SAUL

Witch of Endor, you,

Who of the fate-revealing dead divine.

Out of the Pit you call them!

MIRIAM

What is this?

SAUL

I say that you can lift them!

MIRIAM

You are come

With snaring! knowing well that Saul the king

Is woe and bitterness to all who move

With incantation.

SAUL

He is not.

MIRIAM

Depart!

SAUL

I must have up out of the Awfulness

Him I would question.

MIRIAM

Perilous!

SAUL

Prepare

Before thy teraphim. No harm, I swear,

Shall come of it. Bid Samuel appear.

The battle! its event!

MIRIAM

[With a cry.] I know thee now!

Saul! thou art Saul! the Terror!

SAUL

Call him up.

Ready is it, the battle—but I am

Forsaken of all prophecy and dream,

Of voices and of priest and oracle,

To augur it.

MIRIAM

A doom in this!

SAUL

He must

Hold comfort, and the torrent of despair

Within me stay and hush.

MIRIAM

Then must it be.

[Turning towards the teraphim amid wind and pallid lightning, and prostrating herself before it.]

Prophet of Israel, who art beyond

The troubling and the terrifying grave,

Th’ immeasurable moan and melancholy

Of ways that win to Sheol—Rise! Arise!

[She waits. Only the gust. Then springing up and stretching wide her arms with wild, blind eyes.]

Prophet of Israel, arise! Not in

The name of Baal, Amon, Ashtoreth,

Dagon or all the deities that dream

In trembling temples of Idolatry,

But of Jehovah! of Jehovah! rise!

[An elemental cry is heard. Then vast wavering forms rise out of the earth, in continuous stream.Miriam, with a long curdling shriek, sinks moaning to her knees.]

SAUL

Woman, I cannot—dare not—look upon it.

Utter thy sight.

[The spirit ofSamuelbegins to take shape through the phantoms.]

MIRIAM

I saw ascending

Forms as of gods in swaying ghostliness,

Dim apparitions of a dismal might,

And now is one within a mantle clad,

Who looketh——

SAUL

Samuel!

MIRIAM

Who looketh with

Omniscience in his mien, and all the chill

And cling about him of eternity.

His eyes impale me!

SAUL

Spirit, give me word!

[He falls heavily to the ground.]

SAMUEL

[As afar.] O evil king! and wretched king! why hast

Thou brought me from the quietness and rest.

SAUL

The battle on the morrow——!

SAMUEL

Evil thou art

For underneath this night thou hast conspired

Death to thy daughter Michal—if at dawn

The battle shall be lost—lest she may fall

Into the hands of David——

DAVID [In horror.]

O!

ISHUI

Whose cry?

SAMUEL

I tell thee, Saul, thy sceptre shrivels fast.

The battle shall be lost—it shall be lost.

[The spirit ofSamueldisappears. A wail of wind.]

ADRIEL

Ishui, true? Is Michal to be slain?

ISHUI

This is no hour for fools and questioning.

SAUL

[Struggling up.] The battle, Ishui, at once command

It shall begin! To Jonathan and say it.

[Ishuigoes.]

No prophecy shall sink me and no shade.

I am the king, and Israel, my own.

[Frenzied he goes. A silence.]

DAVID

[Breaking forth.] Michal to die and Israel to fall!

Prophet of prophets, Samuel, return!

[Adrielgoes.]

The quivering

Quicksands of destiny beneath her stir.

Is heaven a mocking shield which ever keeps

God from our prayers?

MIRIAM

David, contain thy heart.

[A faint uproar begins afar; and dawn.]

DAVID

The battle! on the wind. Abiathar,

Speed out upon the mountain-side and cull

All that befalls.

[Adahopens the gate.Abiathargoes.]

ADAH

[Springing back.] Oh!

DAVID

Child, why do you quail?

ADAH

My mistress, Merab!

DAVID

Girl?

ADAH

I saw her—she

Is coming hither! Do not let her—she

I fear—I fear her!

DAVID

Hither coming?

[Merabthrows open the gate and enters.]

ADAH

Oh!

MERAB

Woman and witch, did Adriel, my husband,

Come to you with the king?

[She seesDavidand shrinks.]

DAVID

Unnatural,

Unkind, most cruel sister!

MERAB

You are here?

DAVID

Once me you would have poisoned, but the coil

Within your bosom I beheld. And now

Michal your sister is the victim.

MERAB

I—

Know not your meaning.

DAVID

The battle burning yonder,

If it adversely veers, the king has planned

Michal is not to live, lest she may hap

Unto my arms.

MERAB

That Michal shall be slain?

[The tumult again.]

DAVID

Almighty, smite, and save to thee thy people!

And save thy altars unto Israel.

[He bows his head. A stir comes at the gate.]

MERAB

David, ’tis Adriel!

ADRIEL

Ope! open you!

DAVID

At last the word.

MERAB

Girl, Adah, draw the bar.

[Davidthrows a cloak over his face.Adahobeys.Adrielenters, andDoeg, who pauses in quick alarm, asDavidgoes between him and the gate.]

DOEG

What place is this? Why do you bar that gate?

Merab, ’tis you? Why do you gaze, rigid?

And this is the blind witch, Miriam?

DAVID

It is.

[He throws off his cloak.]

DOEG

Lured? I am snared? a trap?

DAVID

Where have you Michal?

DOEG

[Drawing.] No closer!

DAVID

If she is an atom harmed——!

Where is she?

DOEG

I was the servant of the king,

I but obeyed him.

DAVID

And thy horrible heart.

Then speak, or unto frenzy I am driven.

DOEG

I’ll drive you there with——

[Breaks off with low laugh.]

DAVID

Tell it!

DOEG

Unto your

Soft sympathy—and passion? [Laughs.] She is dead.

DAVID

[Immovable, then repressed.]

If it is so, the lightning, that is wrath

Within the veins of God, should sink its fang

Into thy bosom and sear out thy heart.

If it is so, this momentary calm,

This silence pouring overfull the world,

Would rush and in thee cry until thy bones

Broken of guilt are crumbled in thy groans.

Dead, she is dead?

MIRIAM

No, David, my lord, he lies!

[Strangely, as in a trance.]

To wound you, lies!

DAVID

Not dead?

MIRIAM

I see her eyes!

[All listen amazed.]

I see her in a vision. She is near—

Is in a cave—is bound—and is alone.

I will go to her—quickly bring her.

DOEG

Not

[Lunges at her.]

If this shall reach you.

DAVID

Ah, to pierce a woman!

[Miriamfinds her way out.]

You’ve plotted, false have been and bloody, foul,

And as a pestilence of midnight marsh

Have oozed corruption into all around you.

The kingdom thro’ you is in brokenness,

Within its arteries you flow, poison,

Incentive of irruption and unrest,

Of treachery and disaffection’s sore,

Till even the stars of truest ray seem tares

Sown hostile o’er the nightly vale of heaven.

[Drawing firmly, he coldly, skilfully approaches for attack.]

DOEG

[Retreating.] No further!

DAVID

Unto the end!

[He rushes in, they engage.Doegis wounded, recovers, defends furiously, then is disarmed and forced under.]

Thy villainy is done.

[The gate opens andAbiatharhurries in.]

ABIATHAR

David, the battle——

[He seesDoegand stops.]

DAVID

Fetter him.

ABIATHAR

Only fetter? [His dagger out.] The murderer

Of priestly sanctity and of my father?

DAVID

Abiathar! You know obedience?

[Abiatharsullenly sheathes his weapon and bindsDoeg. A dim panic is heard afar, and a lament without.David, who has sunk to a seat, springs anxiously up.]

Listen! that cry!

THE VOICE

Woe! woe!

DAVID

What is its wail?

THE VOICE

The battle’s lost!

DAVID

Abiathar——?

THE VOICE

Saul flees!

DAVID

Abiathar, is lost?

ABIATHAR

I fear it.

DAVID

Then [Pointing toDoeg.]

Off with his armor for me, I will go

Forth and perchance may backward bend defeat.

Duty to Saul is over.

ADRIEL

You must not.

A fruitless intrepidity it were.

ABIATHAR

Remember your anointing!

ADRIEL

The prophesy!

[Miriamenters leadingMichal. A moment’s suspense.]

MERAB

See!

ADRIEL

See!

MERAB

She liveth!

MIRIAM

David——

MICHAL [Pleading to him.]

It is I.

MIRIAM

The cords were cruel, hungrily sank in

Her wrists and ankles.

MICHAL

David, look on me.

DAVID

My words must be alone with her—alone.

ADRIEL

Come, all of you—the battle.

[They go out the gate.Davidstands speechless.]

MICHAL

David—my lord!

I ask not anything but to be heard—

Though once I would not hear. Has all of life

No glow for me!

DAVID

Betrayers should have none.

MICHAL

I was a woman—the entanglement

Of duty amid love we have no skill

To loosen, but with passion.

DAVID

You too late

Remember it is so.

MICHAL

Nobility

All unbelievable it seemed that you

Could innocently watt on time to tide

You to the kingdom. Then forgive, I plead.

DAVID

But in the wilderness, your perfidy!

MICHAL

Doubt of it welleth thro’ your voice. No, no,

To save you strove I——!

DAVID

Michal?

MICHAL

Not to betray!

From Saul, my father, penitent I fled,

Seeking you in Engeddi’s wild.

DAVID

And Phalti?

MICHAL

’Twas wedding him I loathed.

DAVID

Say true!

MICHAL

This knife

Unfailingly into my breast had spared

Me from him, had not flight.

DAVID

This—this can be?

[A great joy dawning in him.]

Beyond all hope is it, even as day’s

Wide empery outspans our littleness.

[Goes toward her.]

A tithing of thy loveliness were beauty

Enough for earth. Yet it is mine, is mine?

MICHAL

David—forever! long as odorous

Cooling o’er Lebanon shall blow, long as

The swinging sapphire of the sea shall flash

Up to the sun: until the soul no more

Is soul, but vapor!

DAVID

Michal!

MICHAL

Evermore!

[She sinks into his arms, and there is a pause. But a sudden confusion of cries is heard and they start apart. The gate is flung back andAdrielenters, shaken with awe. He looks from one to the other, silent.]

DAVID [At last.]

Adriel!

What have you!

ADRIEL

Saul … is slain!

MICHAL

My father?

ADRIEL

Slain!

And Jonathan——

DAVID

No!

ADRIEL

Fell beside him down.

The fray was fast—Israel fled—the foe

Fierce after Saul, whom Jonathan defended.

MICHAL

My father!

DAVID

And my brother Jonathan!

If I believe it will not miracle

Alone bring joy again unto my pain?

[The wailing again without, and deeper groans.]

O Israel, the Infinite has touched

Thy glory and it changes to a shroud!

Thy splendor is as vintage overspilt.

For Saul upon the mountains low is lying,

And Jonathan beside him, beautiful

Beyond the mar of battle, and of death.

[He bows his head in tears.]

O kingly Jonathan, would I might give

The beating of my life into your veins—

Willing for it would I be drouth and die.

How are the mighty fallen and the fair!

[With lifted arm, deeply moved.]

Peaks, mountains of Gilboa, let no more

Dew be upon you, and as sackcloth let

Clouds cover you, and ashes be your soil,

Until I bring upon Philistia

And Gath and Askalon extinguishing,

And sorrow—and immensity of tears!

[Michalgoes to him and takes his hand. He folds her in his arms.]

But we must calm the flowing of this grief.

Though yet we cannot mind us to remember

Love will as sandal-breath and trickling balm

O’erheal us in the unbegotten years,

Too headlong must not be our agony.

Hush now thy woundedness, my Michal, now.

See, o’er the East the lifted wings of dawn.

[Slowly they climb the stair to the house-top. At they look away toward the battle’s rout the clouds part, and the full brightness of the sun breaks over them.]

[CURTAIN.]


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