MELVIL.Your secretaries then have witnessed falsely.
MARY.It is as I have said;—what they have witnessedThe Lord will judge.
MELVIL.Thou mountest, then, satisfiedOf thy own innocence, the fatal scaffold?
MARY.God suffers me in mercy to atone,By undeserved death, my youth's transgressions.
MELVIL (making over her the sign of the cross).Go, then, and expiate them all by death;Sink a devoted victim on the altar,Thus shall thy blood atone the blood thou'st spilt.From female frailty were derived thy faults,Free from the weakness of mortality,The spotless spirit seeks the blest abodes.Now, then, by the authority which GodHath unto me committed, I absolve theeFrom all thy sins; be as thy faith thy welfare!
[He gives her the host.
Receive the body which for thee was offered—
[He takes the cup which stands upon the table,consecrates it with silent prayer, then presentsit to her; she hesitates to take it, and makessigns to him to withdraw it.
Receive the blood which for thy sins was shed,Receive it; 'tis allowed thee by the popeTo exercise in death the highest officeOf kings, the holy office of the priesthood.
[She takes the cup.
And as thou now, in this his earthly bodyHast held with God mysterious communion,So may'st thou henceforth, in his realm of joy,Where sin no more exists, nor tears of woe,A fair, transfigured spirit, join thyselfForever with the Godhead, and forever.
[He sets down the cup; hearing a noise,he covers his head, and goes to the door;MARY remains in silent devotion on her knees.
MELVIL (returning).A painful conflict is in store for thee.Feel'st thou within thee strength enough to smotherEach impulse of malignity and hate?
MARY.I fear not a relapse. I have to GodDevoted both my hatred and my love.
MELVIL.Well, then, prepare thee to receive my LordsOf Leicester and of Burleigh. They are here.
Enter BURLEIGH, LEICESTER, and PAULET.
[LEICESTER remains in the background, without raisinghis eyes; BURLEIGH, who remarks his confusion, stepsbetween him and the QUEEN.
BURLEIGH.I come, my Lady Stuart, to receiveYour last commands and wishes.
MARY.Thanks, my lord.
BURLEIGH.It is the pleasure of my royal mistressThat nothing reasonable be denied you.
MARY.My will, my lord, declares my last desires;I've placed it in the hand of Sir Amias,And humbly beg that it may be fulfilled.
PAULET.You may rely on this.
MARY.I beg that allMy servants unmolested may returnTo France, or Scotland, as their wishes lead.
BURLEIGH.It shall be as you wish.
MARY.And since my bodyIs not to rest in consecrated ground,I pray you suffer this my faithful servantTo bear my heart to France, to my relations—Alas! 'twas ever there.
BURLEIGH.It shall be done.What wishes else?
MARY.Unto her majestyOf England bear a sister's salutation;Tell her that from the bottom of my heartI pardon her my death; most humbly, too,I crave her to forgive me for the passionWith which I spoke to her. May God preserve herAnd bless her with a long and prosperous reign.
BURLEIGH.Say, do you still adhere to your resolve,And still refuse assistance from the dean?
MARY.My lord, I've made my peace with God.
[To PAULET.
Good sir,I have unwittingly caused you much sorrow,Bereft you of your age's only stay.Oh, let me hope you do not hate my name.
PAULET (giving her his hand).The Lord be with you! Go your way in peace.
HANNAH KENNEDY, and the other women of the QUEEN crowdinto the room with marks of horror. The SHERIFF followsthem, a white staff in his hand; behind are seen, throughthe open doors, men under arms.
MARY.What ails thee, Hannah? Yes, my hour is come.The sheriff comes to lead me to my fate,And part we must. Farewell!
KENNEDY and CURL.We will not leave thee,We will not part from thee.
MARY (to MELVIL).You, worthy sir,And my dear, faithful Hannah, shall attend meIn my last moments. I am sure, my lordWill not refuse my heart this consolation.
BURLEIGH.For this I have no warrant.
MARY.How, my lord;Can you deny me, then, this small petition?Respect my sex; who shall attend me else,And yield me the last service? Sure, it neverCan be my sister's pleasure that in meMy sex should be insulted; that these menWith their rude hands should touch my royal person.
BURLEIGH.'Tis ordered that no woman shall ascendThe scaffold steps with you. Their tears and moans——
MARY.She shall not weep, my lord; she shall not moan;I answer for my Hannah's resolution;Be merciful; divide me not so soonFrom my true foster-mother, from my friend.She bore me on her arms into this life;Let her then gently lead me to my death.
PAULET (to BURLEIGH).Yield to her wishes.
BURLEIGH.Be it so.
MARY.I nowHave nothing in this world to wish for more.
[She takes the crucifix, and kisses it.
My God! My Comforter! My blest Redeemer!As once thy arms were stretched upon the cross,Let them be now extended to receive me!
[She turns round to go; at the same moment her eyes fall upon LEICESTER, who, on her going, starts involuntarily, and turns his eyes towards her; at this sight MARY trembles, her knees fail her, she is about to fall, when LEICESTER catches at her, and receives her in his arms; she regards him for some time earnestly, and in silence; he cannot support her looks; at length she speaks.
You keep your word, my Lord of Leicester: forYou promised me your arm to lead me forthFrom prison, and you lend it to me now.At length the wished-for day is come, and whatWas oft the object of my fondest dreamsIs now accomplished: and the Earl of Leicester,The long-expected, the long-wished-for friend,Appears at length in Fotheringay Castle.I see him standing in my prison; allIs ready for the journey; all the gatesStand open, and at length I cross the threshold,Conducted by his hand; and now I leaveThese dismal walls behind me, and forever.All is fulfilled, and you have saved your honor.
[He stands as if annihilated; she continues,with a gentle voice.
Yes, Leicester; not for liberty aloneI wished to be indebted to your hands.You should have made me bless that liberty.Led by your hand, and happy in your love,I hoped once more to taste the joys of life.Yes; now that I'm prepared from all the worldTo part, and to become a happy spirit,Whom earthly inclinations tempt no more!Now, Leicester, I may venture to confessWithout a blush the frailty I have conquered;Farewell, my lord; and, if you can, be happy!To woo two queens has been your daring aim;You have disdained a tender, loving heart,Betrayed it in the hope to win a proud one:Kneel at the feet of Queen Elizabeth!May your reward not prove your punishment.Farewell; I now have nothing more on earth.
[She goes, preceded by the SHERIFF; at her side MELVIL and her nurse; BURLEIGH and PAULET follow; the others, wailing, follow her with their eyes till she disappears; they then retire through the other two doors.
LEICESTER (remaining alone).Do I live still? Can I still bear to live?Will not this roof fall down and bury me?Yawns no abyss to swallow in its gulfThe veriest wretch on earth? What have I lost?Oh, what a pearl have I not cast away!What bliss celestial madly dashed aside!She's gone, a spirit purged from earthly stain,And the despair of hell remains for me!Where is the purpose now with which I cameTo stifle my heart's voice in callous scorn?To see her head descend upon the blockWith unaverted and indifferent eyes?How doth her presence wake my slumbering shame?Must she in death surround me with love's toils?Lost, wretched man! No more it suits thee nowTo melt away in womanly compassion:Love's golden bliss lies not upon thy path,Then arm thy breast in panoply of steel,And henceforth be thy brows of adamant!Wouldst thou not lose the guerdon of thy guilt,Thou must uphold, complete it daringly!Pity be dumb; mine eyes be petrified!I'll see—I will be witness of her fall.
[He advances with resolute steps towards the doorthrough which MARY passed; but stops suddenly half way.
No! No! The terrors of all hell possess me.I cannot look upon the dreadful deed;I cannot see her die! Hark! What was that?They are already there. Beneath my feetThe bloody business is preparing. Hark!I hear their voices. Hence! Away, awayFrom this abode of misery and death!
[He attempts to escape by another door;finds it locked, and returns.
How! Does some demon chain me to this spot?To hear what I would shudder to behold?That voice—it is the dean's, exhorting her;She interrupts him. Hark—she prays aloud;Her voice is firm—now all is still, quite still!And sobs and women's moans are all I hear.Now, they undress her; they remove the stool;She kneels upon the cushion; lays her head——
[Having spoken these last words, and paused awhile, he is seen with a convulsive motion suddenly to shrink and faint away; a confused hum of voices is heard at the same moment from below, and continues for some time.
The Second Chamber in the Fourth Act.
ELIZABETH (entering from a side door; her gait and action expressiveof the most violent uneasiness).No message yet arrived! What! no one here!Will evening never come! Stands the sun stillIn its ethereal course? I can no moreRemain upon the rack of expectation!Is it accomplished? Is it not? I shudderAt both events, and do not dare to ask.My Lord of Leicester comes not,—Burleigh too,Whom I appointed to fulfil the sentence.If they have quitted London then 'tis done,The bolt has left its rest—it cuts the air—It strikes; has struck already: were my realmAt stake I could not now arrest its course.Who's there?
Enter a PAGE.
ELIZABETH.Returned alone? Where are the lords?
PAGE.My Lord High-Treasurer and the Earl of Leicester?
ELIZABETH.Where are they?
PAGE.They are not in London.
ELIZABETH.No!Where are they then?
PAGE.That no one could inform me;Before the dawn, mysteriously, in hasteThey quitted London.
ELIZABETH (exultingly).I am Queen of England!
[Walking up and down in the greatest agitation.
Go—call me—no, remain, boy! She is dead;Now have I room upon the earth at last.Why do I shake? Whence comes this aguish dread?My fears are covered by the grave; who daresTo say I did it? I have tears enoughIn store to weep her fall. Are you still here?[To the PAGE.Command my secretary, Davison,To come to me this instant. Let the EarlOf Shrewsbury be summoned. Here he comes.
[Exit PAGE.
Enter SHREWSBURY.
ELIZABETH.Welcome, my noble lord. What tidings; sayIt cannot be a trifle which hath ledYour footsteps hither at so late an hour.
SHREWSBURY.My liege, the doubts that hung upon my heart,And dutiful concern for your fair fame,Directed me this morning to the Tower,Where Mary's secretaries, Nau and Curl,Are now confined as prisoners, for I wishedOnce more to put their evidence to proof.On my arrival the lieutenant seemedEmbarrassed and perplexed; refused to show meHis prisoners; but my threats obtained admittance.God! what a sight was there! With frantic looks,With hair dishevelled, on his pallet layThe Scot like one tormented by a fury.The miserable man no sooner saw meThan at my feet he fell, and there, with screams,Clasping my knees, and writhing like a worm,Implored, conjured me to acquaint him withHis sovereign's destiny, for vague reportsHad somehow reached the dungeons of the TowerThat she had been condemned to suffer death.When I confirmed these tidings, adding, too,That on his evidence she had been doomed,—He started wildly up,—caught by the throatHis fellow-prisoner; with the giant strengthOf madness tore him to the ground and triedTo strangle him. No sooner had we savedThe wretch from his fierce grapple than at onceHe turned his rage against himself and beatHis breast with savage fists; then cursed himselfAnd his companions to the depths of hell!His evidence was false; the fatal lettersTo Babington, which he had sworn were true,He now denounced as forgeries; for heHad set down words the queen had never spoken;The traitor Nau had led him to this treason.Then ran he to the casement, threw it wideWith frantic force, and cried into the streetSo loud that all the people gathered round:I am the man, Queen Mary's secretary,The traitor who accused his mistress falsely;I bore false witness and am cursed forever!
ELIZABETH.You said yourself that he had lost his wits;A madman's words prove nothing.
SHREWSBURY.Yet this madnessServes in itself to swell the proof. My liege,Let me conjure thee; be not over-hasty;Prithee, give order for a new inquiry!
ELIZABETH.I will, my lord, because it is your wish,Not that I can believe my noble peersHave in this case pronounced a hasty judgment.To set your mind at rest the inquiry shallBe straight renewed. Well that 'tis not too late!Upon the honor of our royal name,No, not the shadow of a doubt shall rest.
Enter DAVISON.
ELIZABETH.The sentence, sir, which I but late intrustedUnto your keeping; where is it?
DAVISON (in the utmost astonishment).The sentence!
ELIZABETH (more urgent).Which yesterday I gave into your charge.
DAVISON.Into my charge, my liege!
ELIZABETH.The people urgedAnd baited me to sign it. I perforceWas driven to yield obedience to their will.I did so; did so on extreme constraint,And in your hands deposited the paper.To gain time was my purpose; you rememberWhat then I told you. Now, the paper, sir!
SHREWSBURY.Restore it, sir, affairs have changed since then,The inquiry must be set on foot anew.
DAVISON.Anew! Eternal mercy!
ELIZABETH.Why this pause,This hesitation? Where, sir, is the paper?
DAVISON.I am undone! Undone! My fate is sealed!
ELIZABETH (interrupting him violently).Let me not fancy, sir——
DAVISON.Oh, I am lost!I have it not.
ELIZABETH.How? What?
SHREWSBURY.Oh, God in heaven!
DAVISON.It is in Burleigh's hands—since yesterday.
ELIZABETH.Wretch! Is it thus you have obeyed my orders?Did I not lay my strict injunction on youTo keep it carefully?
DAVISON.No such injunctionWas laid on me, my liege.
ELIZABETH.Give me the lie?Opprobrious wretch! When did I order youTo give the paper into Burleigh's hands?
DAVISON.Never expressly in so many words.
ELIZABETH.And, paltering villain I dare you then presumeTo construe, as you list, my words—and layYour bloody meaning on them? Wo betide you,If evil come of this officious deed!Your life shall answer the event to me.Earl Shrewsbury, you see how my good nameHas been abused!
SHREWSBURY.I see! Oh, God in heaven!
ELIZABETH.What say you?
SHREWSBURY.If the knight has dared to actIn this, upon his own authority,Without the knowledge of your majesty,He must be cited to the Court of PeersTo answer there for subjecting thy nameTo the abhorrence of all after time.
Enter BURLEIGH.
BURLEIGH (bowing his knee before the QUEEN).Long life and glory to my royal mistress,And may all enemies of her dominionsEnd like this Stuart.
[SHREWSBURY hides his face. DAVIDSON wrings his hands in despair.
ELIZABETH.Speak, my lord; did youFrom me receive the warrant?
BURLEIGH.No, my queen;From Davison.
ELIZABETH.And did he in my nameDeliver it?
BURLEIGH.No, that I cannot say.
ELIZABETH.And dared you then to execute the writThus hastily, nor wait to know my pleasure?Just was the sentence—we are free from blameBefore the world; yet it behooved thee notTo intercept our natural clemency.For this, my lord, I banish you my presence;And as this forward will was yours aloneBear you alone the curse of the misdeed!
[To DAVISON.
For you, sir; who have traitorously o'ersteppedThe bounds of your commission, and betrayedA sacred pledge intrusted to your care,A more severe tribunal is prepared:Let him be straight conducted to the Tower,And capital arraignments filed against him.My honest Talbot, you alone have proved,'Mongst all my counsellors, an upright man:You shall henceforward be my guide—my friend.
SHREWSBURY.Oh! banish not the truest of your friends;Nor cast those into prison, who for youHave acted; who for you are silent now.But suffer me, great queen, to give the seal,Which, these twelve years, I've borne unworthily,Back to your royal hands, and take my leave.
ELIZABETH (surprised).No, Shrewsbury; you surely would not nowDesert me? No; not now.
SHREWSBURY.Pardon, I amToo old, and this right hand is growing too stiffTo set the seal upon your later deeds.
ELIZABETH.Will he forsake me, who has saved my life?
SHREWSBURY.'Tis little I have done: I could not saveYour nobler part. Live—govern happily!Your rival's dead! Henceforth you've nothing moreTo fear—henceforth to nothing pay regard.
[Exit.
ELIZABETH (to the EARL of KENT, who enters).Send for the Earl of Leicester.
KENT.He desiresTo be excused—he is embarked for France.
The Curtain drops.
By Frederich Schiller
CHARLES THE SEVENTH, King of France.QUEEN ISABEL, his Mother.AGNES SOREL.PHILIP THE GOOD, Duke of Burgundy.EARL DUNOIS, Bastard of Orleans.LA HIRE, DUCRATEL, French Offers.ARCHBISHOP OF RHEIMS.CRATILLON, A Burgundian Knight.RAOUL, a Lotharingian Knight.TALBOT, the English General,LIONEL, FASTOLFE, English Officers.MONTGOMERY, a Welshman.COUNCILLORS OF ORLEANS.AN ENGLISH HERALD.THIBAUT D'ARC, a wealthy Countryman.MARGOT, LOUISON, JOHANNA, his Daughters.ETIENNE, CLAUDE MARIE, RAIMOND, their Suitors.BERTRAND, another Countryman.APPARITION OF A BLACK KNIGHT.CHARCOAL-BURNER AND HIS WIFE.Soldiers and People, Officers of the Crown, Bishops, Monks, Marshals,Magistrates, Courtiers, and other mute persons in the CoronationProcession.
A rural District. To the right, a Chapel with an Image of the Virgin; to the left, an ancient Oak.
THIBAUT D'ARC. His Three Daughters. Three young Shepherds,their Suitors.
THIBAUT.Ay, my good neighbors! we at least to-dayAre Frenchmen still, free citizens and lordsOf the old soil which our forefathers tilled.Who knows whom we to-morrow must obey?For England her triumphal banner wavesFrom every wall: the blooming fields of FranceAre trampled down beneath her chargers' hoofs;Paris hath yielded to her conquering arms,And with the ancient crown of DagobertAdorns the scion of a foreign race.Our king's descendant, disinherited,Must steal in secret through his own domain;While his first peer and nearest relativeContends against him in the hostile ranks;Ay, his unnatural mother leads them on.Around us towns and peaceful hamlets burn.Near and more near the devastating fireRolls toward these vales, which yet repose in peace.Therefore, good neighbors, I have now resolved,While God still grants us safety, to provideFor my three daughters; for 'midst war's alarmsWomen require protection, and true loveHath power to render lighter every load.[To the first Shepherd.Come, Etienne! You seek my Margot's hand.Fields lying side by side and loving heartsPromise a happy union![To the second.Claude! You're silent,And my Louison looks upon the ground?How, shall I separate two loving heartsBecause you have no wealth to offer me?Who now has wealth? Our barns and homes affordSpoil to the foe, and fuel to the fires.In times like these a husband's faithful breastAffords the only shelter from the storm.
LOUISON.My father!
CLAUDE MARIE.My Louison!
LOUISON (embracing JOHANNA).My dear sister!
THIBAUT.I give to each a yard, a stall and herd,And also thirty acres; and as GodGave me his blessing, so I give you mine!
MARGOT (embracing JOHANNA).Gladden our father—follow our example!Let this day see three unions ratified!
THIBAUT.Now go; make all things ready; for the mornShall see the wedding. Let our village friendsBe all assembled for the festival.
[The two couples retire arm in arm.
THIBAUT.Thy sisters, Joan, will soon be happy brides;I see them gladly; they rejoice my age;But thou, my youngest, giv'st me grief and pain.
RAIMOND.What is the matter? Why upbraid thy child?
THIBAUT.Here is this noble youth, the flower and prideOf all our village; he hath fixed on theeHis fond affections, and for three long yearsHas wooed thee with respectful tenderness;But thou dost thrust him back with cold reserve.Nor is there one 'mong all our shepherd youthsWho e'er can win a gracious smile from thee.I see thee blooming in thy youthful prime;Thy spring it is, the joyous time of hope;Thy person, like a tender flower, hath nowDisclosed its beauty, but I vainly waitFor love's sweet blossom genially to blow,And ripen joyously to golden fruit!Oh, that must ever grieve me, and betraysSome sad deficiency in nature's work!The heart I like not which, severe and cold,Expands not in the genial years of youth.
RAIMOND.Forbear, good father! Cease to urge her thus!A noble, tender fruit of heavenly growthIs my Johanna's love, and time aloneBringeth the costly to maturity!Still she delights to range among the hills,And fears descending from the wild, free heath,To tarry 'neath the lowly roofs of men,Where dwell the narrow cares of humble life.From the deep vale, with silent wonder, oftI mark her, when, upon a lofty hillSurrounded by her flock, erect she stands,With noble port, and bends her earnest gazeDown on the small domains of earth. To meShe looketh then, as if from other timesShe came, foreboding things of import high.
THIBAUT.'Tis that precisely which displeases me!She shuns her sisters' gay companionship;Seeks out the desert mountains, leaves her couchBefore the crowing of the morning cock,And in the dreadful hour, when men are wontConfidingly to seek their fellow-men,She, like the solitary bird, creeps forth,And in the fearful spirit-realm of night,To yon crossway repairs, and there aloneHolds secret commune with the mountain wind.Wherefore this place precisely doth she choose?Why hither always doth she drive her flock?For hours together I have seen her sitIn dreamy musing 'neath the Druid tree,Which every happy creature shuns with awe.For 'tis not holy there; an evil spiritHath since the fearful pagan days of oldBeneath its branches fixed his dread abode.The oldest of our villagers relateStrange tales of horror of the Druid tree;Mysterious voices of unearthly soundFrom its unhallowed shade oft meet the ear.Myself, when in the gloomy twilight hourMy path once chanced to lead me near this tree,Beheld a spectral figure sitting there,Which slowly from its long and ample robeStretched forth its withered hand, and beckoned me.But on I went with speed, nor looked behind,And to the care of God consigned my soul.
RAIMOND (pointing to the image of the Virgin).Yon holy image of the Virgin blest,Whose presence heavenly peace diffuseth round,Not Satan's work, leadeth thy daughter here.
THIBAUT.No! not in vain hath it in fearful dreamsAnd apparitions strange revealed itself.For three successive nights I have beheldJohanna sitting on the throne at Rheims,A sparkling diadem of seven starsUpon her brow, the sceptre in her hand,From which three lilies sprung, and I, her sire,With her two sisters, and the noble peers,The earls, archbishops, and the king himself,Bowed down before her. In my humble homeHow could this splendor enter my poor brain?Oh, 'tis the prelude to some fearful fall!This warning dream, in pictured show, revealsThe vain and sinful longing of her heart.She looks with shame upon her lowly birth.Because with richer beauty God hath gracedHer form, and dowered her with wondrous giftsAbove the other maidens of this vale,She in her heart indulges sinful pride,And pride it is through which the angels fell,By which the fiend of hell seduces man.
RAIMOND.Who cherishes a purer, humbler mindThan doth thy pious daughter? Does she notWith cheerful spirit work her sisters' will?She is more highly gifted far than they,Yet, like a servant maiden, it is sheWho silently performs the humblest tasks.Beneath her guiding hands prosperityAttendeth still thy harvest and thy flocks;And around all she does there ceaseless flowsA blessing, rare and unaccountable.
THIBAUT.Ah truly! Unaccountable indeed!Sad horror at this blessing seizes me!But now no more; henceforth I will be silent.Shall I accuse my own beloved child?I can do naught but warn and pray for her.Yet warn I must. Oh, shun the Druid tree!Stay not alone, and in the midnight hourBreak not the ground for roots, no drinks prepare,No characters inscribe upon the sand!'Tis easy to unlock the realm of spirits;Listening each sound, beneath a film of earthThey lay in wait, ready to rush aloft.Stay not alone, for in the wildernessThe prince of darkness tempted e'en the Lord.
THIBAUT, RAIMOND, JOHANNA.BERTRAND enters, a helmet in his hand.
RAIMOND.Hush! here is Bertrand coming back from town;What bears he in his hand?
BERTRAND.You look at meWith wondering gaze; no doubt you are surprisedTo see this martial helm!
THIBAUT.We are indeed!Come, tell us how you come by it? Why bringThis fearful omen to our peaceful vale?
[JOHANNA, who has remained indifferent during the twoprevious scenes, becomes attentive, and steps nearer.
BERTRAND.I scarce can tell you how I came by it.I had procured some tools at Vaucouleurs;A crowd was gathered in the market-place,For fugitives were just arrived in hasteFrom Orleans, bringing most disastrous news.In tumult all the town together flocked,And as I forced a passage through the crowds,A brown Bohemian woman, with this helm,Approached me, eyed me narrowly, and said:"Fellow, you seek a helm; I know it well.Take this one! For a trifle it is yours.""Go with it to the soldiers," I replied,"I am a husbandman, and want no helm."She would not cease, however, and went on:"None knoweth if he may not want a helm.A roof of metal for the Head just nowIs of more value than a house of stone."Thus she pursued me closely through the streets,Still offering the helm, which I refused.I marked it well, and saw that it was bright,And fair and worthy of a knightly head;And when in doubt I weighed it in my hand,The strangeness of the incident revolving,The woman disappeared, for suddenlyThe rushing crowd had carried her away.And I was left the helmet in my hand.
JOHANNA (attempting eagerly to seize it).Give me the helmet!
BERTRAND.Why, what boots it you?It is not suited to a maiden's head.
JOHANNA (seizing it from him).Mine is the helmet—it belongs to me!
THIBAUT.What whim is this?
RAIMOND.Nay, let her have her way!This warlike ornament becomes her well,For in her bosom beats a manly heart.Remember how she once subdued the wolf,The savage monster which destroyed our herds,And filled the neighb'ring shepherds with dismay.She all alone—the lion-hearted maidFought with the wolf, and from him snatched the lambWhich he was bearing in his bloody jaws.How brave soe'er the head this helm adorned,It cannot grace a worthier one than hers!
THIBAUT (to BERTRAND).Relate what new disasters have occurred.What tidings brought the fugitives?
BERTRAND.May GodHave pity on our land, and save the king!In two great battles we have lost the day;Our foes are stationed in the heart of France,Far as the river Loire our lands are theirs—Now their whole force they have combined, and layClose siege to Orleans.
THIBAUT.God protect the king!
BERTRAND.Artillery is brought from every side,And as the dusky squadrons of the beesSwarm round the hive upon a summer day,As clouds of locusts from the sultry airDescend and shroud the country round for miles,So doth the cloud of war, o'er Orleans' fields,Pour forth its many-nationed multitudes,Whose varied speech, in wild confusion blent,With strange and hollow murmurs fill the air.For Burgundy, the mighty potentate,Conducts his motley host; the Hennegarians,The men of Liege and of Luxemburg,The people of Namur, and those who dwellIn fair Brabant; the wealthy men of Ghent,Who boast their velvets, and their costly silks;The Zealanders, whose cleanly towns appearEmerging from the ocean; HollandersWho milk the lowing herds; men from Utrecht,And even from West Friesland's distant realm,Who look towards the ice-pole—all combine,Beneath the banner of the powerful duke,Together to accomplish Orleans' fall.
THIBAUT.Oh, the unblest, the lamentable strife,Which turns the arms of France against itself!
BERTRAND.E'en she, the mother-queen, proud IsabelBavaria's haughty princess—may be seen,Arrayed in armor, riding through the camp;With poisonous words of irony she firesThe hostile troops to fury 'gainst her son,Whom she hath clasped to her maternal breast.
THIBAUT.A curse upon her, and may God prepareFor her a death like haughty Jezebel's!
BERTRAND.The fearful Salisbury conducts the siege,The town-destroyer; with him Lionel,The brother of the lion; Talbot, too,Who, with his murd'rous weapon, moweth downThe people in the battle: they have sworn,With ruthless insolence to doom to shameThe hapless maidens, and to sacrificeAll who the sword have wielded, with the sword.Four lofty watch-towers, to o'ertop the town,They have upreared; Earl Salisbury from on highCasteth abroad his cruel, murd'rous glance,And marks the rapid wanderers in the streets.Thousands of cannon-balls, of pond'rous weight,Are hurled into the city. Churches lieIn ruined heaps, and Notre Dame's royal towerBegins at length to bow its lofty head.They also have formed powder-vaults below,And thus, above a subterranean hell,The timid city every hour expects,'Midst crashing thunder, to break forth in flames.
[JOHANNA listens with close attention, and placesthe helmet on her head.
THIBAUT.But where were then our heroes? Where the swordsOf Saintrailles, and La Hire, and brave Dunois,Of France the bulwark, that the haughty foeWith such impetuous force thus onward rushed?Where is the king? Can he supinely seeHis kingdom's peril and his cities' fall?
BERTRAND.The king at Chinon holds his court; he lacksSoldiers to keep the field. Of what availThe leader's courage, and the hero's arm,When pallid fear doth paralyze the host?A sudden panic, as if sent from God,Unnerves the courage of the bravest men.In vain the summons of the king resoundsAs when the howling of the wolf is heard,The sheep in terror gather side by side,So Frenchmen, careless of their ancient fame,Seek only now the shelter of the towns.One knight alone, I have been told, has broughtA feeble company, and joins the kingWith sixteen banners.
JOHANNA (quickly).What's the hero's name?
BERTRAND.'Tis Baudricour. But much I fear the knightWill not be able to elude the foe,Who track him closely with too numerous hosts.
JOHANNA.Where halts the knight? Pray tell me, if you know.
BERTRAND.About a one day's march from Vaucouleurs.
THIBAUT (to JOHANNA).Why, what is that to thee? Thou dost inquireConcerning matters which become thee not.
BERTRAND.The foe being now so strong, and from the kingNo safety to be hoped, at VaucouleursThey have with unanimity resolvedTo yield them to the Duke of Burgundy.Thus we avoid the foreign yoke, and stillContinue by our ancient royal line;Ay, to the ancient crown we may fall backShould France and Burgundy be reconciled.
JOHANNA (as if inspired).Speak not of treaty! Speak not of surrender!The savior comes, he arms him for the fight.The fortunes of the foe before the wallsOf Orleans shall be wrecked! His hour is come,He now is ready for the reaper's hand,And with her sickle will the maid appear,And mow to earth the harvest of his pride.She from the heavens will tear his glory down,Which he had hung aloft among the stars;Despair not! Fly not! for ere yonder cornAssumes its golden hue, or ere the moonDisplays her perfect orb, no English horseShall drink the rolling waters of the Loire.
BERTRAND.Alas! no miracle will happen now!
JOHANNA.Yes, there shall yet be one—a snow-white doveShall fly, and with the eagle's boldness, tearThe birds of prey which rend her fatherland.She shall o'erthrow this haughty Burgundy,Betrayer of the kingdom; Talbot, too,The hundred-handed, heaven-defying scourge;This Salisbury, who violates our fanes,And all these island robbers shall she driveBefore her like a flock of timid lambs.The Lord will be with her, the God of battle;A weak and trembling creature he will choose,And through a tender maid proclaim his power,For he is the Almighty!
THIBAULT.What strange powerHath seized the maiden?
RAIMOND.Doubtless 'tis the helmetWhich doth inspire her with such martial thoughts.Look at your daughter. Mark her flashing eye,Her glowing cheek, which kindles as with fire.
JOHANNA.This realm shall fall! This ancient land of fame,The fairest that, in his majestic course,The eternal sun surveys—this paradise,Which, as the apple of his eye, God loves—Endure the fetters of a foreign yoke?Here were the heathen scattered, and the crossAnd holy image first were planted here;Here rest St. Louis' ashes, and from henceThe troops went forth who set Jerusalem free.
BERTRAND (in astonishment).Hark how she speaks! Why, whence can she obtainThis glorious revelation? Father Arc!A wondrous daughter God hath given you!
JOHANNA.We shall no longer serve a native prince!The king, who never dies, shall pass away—The guardian of the sacred plough, who fillsThe earth with plenty, who protects our herds,Who frees the bondmen from captivity,Who gathers all his cities round his throne—Who aids the helpless, and appals the base,Who envies no one, for he reigns supreme;Who is a mortal, yet an angel too,Dispensing mercy on the hostile earth.For the king's throne, which glitters o'er with gold,Affords a shelter for the destitute;Power and compassion meet together there,The guilty tremble, but the just draw near,And with the guardian lion fearless sport!The stranger king, who cometh from afar,Whose fathers' sacred ashes do not lieInterred among us; can he love our land?Who was not young among our youth, whose heartRespondeth not to our familiar words,Can he be as a father to our sons?
THIBAUT.God save the king and France! We're peaceful folk,Who neither wield the sword, nor rein the steed.—Let us await the king whom victory crowns;The fate of battle is the voice of God.He is our lord who crowns himself at Rheims,And on his head receives the holy oil.—Come, now to work! come! and let every oneThink only of the duty of the hour!Let the earth's great ones for the earth contend,Untroubled we may view the desolation,For steadfast stand the acres which we till.The flames consume our villages, our cornIs trampled 'neath the tread of warlike steeds;With the new spring new harvests reappear,And our light huts are quickly reared again!
[They all retire except the maiden.
JOHANNA (alone).
Farewell ye mountains, ye beloved glades,Ye lone and peaceful valleys, fare ye well!Through you Johanna never more may stray!For, ay, Johanna bids you now farewell.Ye meads which I have watered, and ye treesWhich I have planted, still in beauty bloom!Farewell ye grottos, and ye crystal springs!Sweet echo, vocal spirit of the vale.Who sang'st responsive to my simple strain,Johanna goes, and ne'er returns again.
Ye scenes where all my tranquil joysI knew, Forever now I leave you far behind!Poor foldless lambs, no shepherd now have you!O'er the wide heath stray henceforth unconfined!For I to danger's field, of crimson hue,Am summoned hence another flock to find.Such is to me the spirit's high behest;No earthly, vain ambition fires my breast.
For who in glory did on Horeb's heightDescend to Moses in the bush of flame,And bade him go and stand in Pharaoh's sight—Who once to Israel's pious shepherd came,And sent him forth, his champion in the fight,—Who aye hath loved the lowly shepherd train,—He, from these leafy boughs, thus spake to me,"Go forth! Thou shalt on earth my witness be.
"Thou in rude armor must thy limbs invest,A plate of steel upon thy bosom wear;Vain earthly love may never stir thy breast,Nor passion's sinful glow be kindled there.Ne'er with the bride-wreath shall thy locks be dressed,Nor on thy bosom bloom an infant fair;But war's triumphant glory shall be thine;Thy martial fame all women's shall outshine.
"For when in fight the stoutest hearts despair,When direful ruin threatens France, forlorn,Then thou aloft my oriflamme shalt bear,And swiftly as the reaper mows the corn,Thou shalt lay low the haughty conqueror;His fortune's wheel thou rapidly shalt turn,To Gaul's heroic sons deliverance bring,Relieve beleaguered Rheims, and crown thy king!"
The heavenly spirit promised me a sign;He sends the helmet, it hath come from him.Its iron filleth me with strength divine,I feel the courage of the cherubim;As with the rushing of a mighty windIt drives me forth to join the battles din;The clanging trumpets sound, the chargers rear,And the loud war-cry thunders in mine ear.
[She goes out.
The royal residence at Chinon.DUNOIS and DUCHATEL.
DUNOIS.No longer I'll endure it. I renounceThis recreant monarch who forsakes himself.My valiant heart doth bleed, and I could rainHot tear-drops from mine eyes, that robber-swordsPartition thus the royal realm of France;That cities, ancient as the monarchy,Deliver to the foe the rusty keys,While here in idle and inglorious easeWe lose the precious season of redemption.Tidings of Orleans' peril reach mine ear,Hither I sped from distant Normandy,Thinking, arrayed in panoply of war,To find the monarch with his marshalled hosts;And find him—here! begirt with troubadours,And juggling knaves, engaged in solving riddles,And planning festivals in Sorel's honor,As brooded o'er the land profoundest peace!The Constable hath gone; he will not brookLonger the spectacle of shame. I, too,Depart, and leave him to his evil fate.
DUCHATEL.Here comes the king.
KING CHARLES. The same.
CHARLES.The Constable hath sent us back his swordAnd doth renounce our service. Now, by heaven!He thus hath rid us of a churlish man,Who insolently sought to lord it o'er us.
DUNOIS.A man is precious in such perilous times;I would not deal thus lightly with his loss.
CHARLES.Thou speakest thus from love of opposition;While he was here thou never wert his friend.
DUNOIS.He was a tiresome, proud, vexatious fool,Who never could resolve. For once, however,He hath resolved. Betimes he goeth hence,Where honor can no longer be achieved.
CHARLES.Thou'rt in a pleasant humor; undisturbedI'll leave thee to enjoy it. Hark, Duchatel!Ambassadors are here from old King Rene,Of tuneful songs the master, far renowned.Let them as honored guests be entertained,And unto each present a chain of gold.[To the Bastard.Why smilest thou, Dunois?
DUNOIS.That from thy mouthThou shakest golden chains.
DUCHATEL.Alas! my king!No gold existeth in thy treasury.
CHARLES.Then gold must be procured. It must not beThat bards unhonored from our court depart.'Tis they who make our barren sceptre bloom,'Tis they who wreath around our fruitless crownLife's joyous branch of never-fading green.Reigning, they justly rank themselves as kings,Of gentle wishes they erect their throne,Their harmless realm existeth not in space;Hence should the bard accompany the king,Life's higher sphere the heritage of both!
DUCHATEL.My royal liege! I sought to spare thine earSo long as aid and counsel could be found;Now dire necessity doth loose my tongue.Naught hast thou now in presents to bestow,Thou hast not wherewithal to live to-morrow!The spring-tide of thy fortune is run out,And lowest ebb is in thy treasury!The soldiers, disappointed of their pay,With sullen murmurs, threaten to retire.My counsel faileth, not with royal splendorBut meagerly, to furnish out thy household.
CHARLES.My royal customs pledge, and borrow goldFrom the Lombardians.
DUCHATEL.Sire, thy revenues,Thy royal customs are for three years pledged.
DUNOIS.And pledge meanwhile and kingdom both are lost.
CHARLES.Still many rich and beauteous lands are ours.
DUNOIS.So long as God and Talbot's sword permit!When Orleans falleth into English handsThen with King Rene thou may'st tend thy sheep!
CHARLES.Still at this king thou lov'st to point thy jest;Yet 'tis this lackland monarch who to-dayHath with a princely crown invested me.
DUNOIS.Not, in the name of heaven, with that of Naples,Which is for sale, I hear, since he kept sheep.
CHARLES.It is a sportive festival, a jest,Wherein he giveth to his fancy play,To found a world all innocent and pureIn this barbaric, rude reality.Yet noble—ay, right royal is his aim!He will again restore the golden age,When gentle manners reigned, when faithful loveThe heroic hearts of valiant knights inspired,And noble women, whose accomplished tasteDiffuseth grace around, in judgment sat.The old man dwelleth in those bygone times,And in our workday world would realizeThe dreams of ancient bards, who picture life'Mid bowers celestial, throned on golden clouds.He hath established hence a court of loveWhere valiant knights may dwell, and homage yieldTo noble women, who are there enthroned,And where pure love and true may find a home.Me he hath chosen as the prince of love.
DUNOIS.I am not such a base, degenerate churlAs love's dominion rudely to assail.I am her son, from her derive my name,And in her kingdom lies my heritage.The Prince of Orleans was my sire, and whileNo woman's heart was proof against his love,No hostile fortress could withstand his shock!Wilt thou, indeed, with honor name thyselfThe prince of love—be bravest of the brave!As I have read in those old chronicles,Love aye went coupled with heroic deeds,And valiant heroes, not inglorious shepherds,So legends tell us, graced King Arthur's board.The man whose valor is not beauty's shieldIs all unworthy of her golden prize.Here the arena! combat for the crown,Thy royal heritage! With knightly swordThy lady's honor and thy realm defend—And hast thou with hot valor snatched the crownFrom streams of hostile blood,—then is the time,And it would well become thee as a prince,Love's myrtle chaplet round thy brows to wreathe.
CHARLES (to a PAGE, who enters).What is the matter?
PAGE.Senators from OrleansEntreat an audience, sire.
CHARLES.Conduct them hither![PAGE retires.Doubtless they succor need; what can I do,Myself all-succorless!
The same. Three SENATORS.
CHARLES.Welcome, my trusty citizens of Orleans!What tidings bring ye from my faithful town?Doth she continue with her wonted zealStill bravely to withstand the leaguering foe?
SENATOR.Ah, sire! the city's peril is extreme;And giant ruin, waxing hour by hour,Still onward strides. The bulwarks are destroyed—The foe at each assault advantage gains;Bare of defenders are the city walls,For with rash valor forth our soldiers rush,While few, alas! return to view their homes,And famine's scourge impendeth o'er the town.In this extremity the noble CountOf Rochepierre, commander of the town,Hath made a compact with the enemy,According to old custom, to yield up,On the twelfth day, the city to the foe,Unless, meanwhile, before the town appearA host of magnitude to raise the siege.
[DUNOIS manifests the strongest indignation.
CHARLES.The interval is brief.
SENATOR.We hither come,Attended by a hostile retinue,To implore thee, sire, to pity thy poor town,And to send succor ere the appointed day,When, if still unrelieved, she must surrender.
DUNOIS.And could Saintrailles consent to give his voiceTo such a shameful compact?
SENATOR.Never, sir!Long as the hero lived, none dared to breatheA single word of treaty or surrender.
DUNOIS.He then is dead?
SENATOR.The noble hero fell,His monarch's cause defending on our walls.
CHARLES.What! Saintrailles dead! Oh, in that single manA host is foundered!
[A Knight enters and speaks apart with DUNOIS,who starts with surprise.
DUNOIS.That too!
CHARLES.Well? What is it?
DUNOIS.Count Douglass sendeth here. The Scottish troopsRevolt, and threaten to retire at once.Unless their full arrears are paid to-day.
CHARLES.Duchatel!
DUCHATEL (shrugs his shoulders).Sire! I know not what to counsel.
CHARLES.Pledge, promise all, even unto half my realm.
DUCHATEL.'Tis vain! They have been fed with hope too often.
CHARLES.They are the finest troops of all my hosts!They must not now, not now abandon me!
SENATOR (throwing himself at the KING'S feet).Oh, king, assist us! Think of our distress!
CHARLES (in despair).How! Can I summon armies from the earth?Or grow a cornfield on my open palm?Rend me in pieces! Pluck my bleeding heartForth from my breast, and coin it 'stead of gold!I've blood for you, but neither gold nor troops.
[He sees SOREL approach, and hastens towards herwith outstretched arms.
The same. AGNES SOREL, a casket in her hand.
CHARLES.My Agnes! Oh, my love! My dearest life!Thou comest here to snatch me from despair!Refuge I take within thy loving arms!Possessing thee I feel that nothing is lost.
SOREL.My king, beloved![looking round with an anxious, inquiring gaze.Dunois! Say, is it true,Duchatel?
DUCHATEL.'Tis, alas!
SOREL.So great the need?No treasure left? The soldiers will disband?
DUCHATEL.Alas! It is too true!
SOREL (giving him the casket).Here-here is gold,Here too are jewels! Melt my silver down!Sell, pledge my castles—on my fair domainsIn Provence—treasure raise, turn all to gold,Appease the troops! No time to be lost!
[She urges him to depart.
CHARLES.Well now, Dunois! Duchatel! Do ye stillAccount me poor, when I possess the crownOf womankind? She's nobly born as I;The royal blood of Valois not more pure;The most exalted throne she would adorn—Yet she rejects it with disdain, and claimsNo other title than to be my love.No gift more costly will she e'er receiveThan early flower in winter, or rare fruit!No sacrifice on my part she permits,Yet sacrificeth all she had to me!With generous spirit she doth venture allHer wealth and fortune in my sinking bark.
DUNOIS.Ay, she is mad indeed, my king, as thou;She throws her all into a burning house,And draweth water in the leaky vesselOf the Danaides. Thee she will not save,And in thy ruin but involve herself.
SOREL.Believe him not! Full many a time he hathPerilled his life for thee, and now, forsooth,Chafeth because I risk my worthless gold!How? Have I freely sacrificed to theeWhat is esteemed far more than gold and pearls,And shall I now hold back the gifts of fortune?Oh, come! Let my example challenge theeTo noble self-denial! Let's at onceCast off the needless ornaments of life!Thy courtiers metamorphose into soldiers;Thy gold transmute to iron; all thou hast,With resolute daring, venture for thy crown!Peril and want we will participate!Let us bestride the war-horse, and exposeOur tender person to the fiery glowOf the hot sun, take for our canopyThe clouds above, and make the stones our pillow.The rudest warrior, when he sees his kingBear hardship and privation like the meanestWill patiently endure his own hard lot!
CHARLES (laughing).Ay! now is realized an ancient wordOf prophesy, once uttered by a nunOf Clairmont, in prophetic mood, who said,That through a woman's aid I o'er my foesShould triumph, and achieve my father's crown.Far off I sought her in the English camp;I strove to reconcile a mother's heart;Here stands the heroine—my guide to Rheims!My Agnes! I shall triumph through thy love!
SOREL.Thou'lt triumph through the valiant swords of friends.
CHARLES.And from my foes' dissensions much I hopeFor sure intelligence hath reached mine ear,That 'twixt these English lords and BurgundyThings do not stand precisely as they did;Hence to the duke I have despatched La Hire,To try if he can lead my angry vassalBack to his ancient loyalty and faith:Each moment now I look for his return.
DUCHATEL (at the window).A knight e'en now dismounteth in the court.
CHARLES.A welcome messenger! We soon shall learnWhether we're doomed to conquer or to yield.
The same. LA HIRE.
CHARLES (meeting him).Hope bringest thou, or not? Be brief, La Hire,Out with thy tidings! What must we expect?
LA HIRE.Expect naught, sire, save from thine own good sword.
CHARLES.The haughty duke will not be reconciled!Speak! How did he receive my embassy?
LA HIRE.His first and unconditional demand,Ere he consent to listen to thine errand,Is that Duchatel be delivered up,Whom he doth name the murderer of his sire.
CHARLES.This base condition we reject with scorn!
LA HIRE.Then be the league dissolved ere it commence!
CHARLES.Hast thou thereon, as I commanded thee,Challenged the duke to meet him in fair fightOn Montereau's bridge, whereon his father fell?
LA HIRE.Before him on the ground I flung thy glove,And said: "Thou wouldst forget thy majesty,And like a knight do battle for thy realm."He scornfully rejoined "He needed notTo fight for that which he possessed already,But if thou wert so eager for the fray,Before the walls of Orleans thou wouldst find him,Whither he purposed going on the morrow;"Thereon he laughing turned his back upon me.
CHARLES.Say, did not justice raise her sacred voice,Within the precincts of my parliament?
LA HIRE.The rage of party, sire, hath silenced her.An edict of the parliament declaresThee and thy race excluded from the throne.
DUNOIS.These upstart burghers' haughty insolence!
CHARLES.Hast thou attempted with my mother aught?
LA HIRE.With her?
CHARLES.Ay! How did she demean herself?
LA HIRE (after a few moments' reflection).I chanced to step within St. Denis' wallsPrecisely at the royal coronation.The crowds were dressed as for a festival;Triumphal arches rose in every streetThrough which the English monarch was to pass.The way was strewed with flowers, and with huzzas,As France some brilliant conquest had achieved,The people thronged around the royal car.
SOREL.They could huzza—huzza, while trampling thusUpon a gracious sovereign's loving heart!
LA HIRE.I saw young Harry Lancaster—the boy—On good St. Lewis' regal chair enthroned;On either side his haughty uncles stood,Bedford and Gloucester, and before him kneeled,To render homage for his lands, Duke Philip.
CHARLES.Oh, peer dishonored! Oh, unworthy cousin!
LA HIRE.The child was timid, and his footing lostAs up the steps he mounted towards the throne.An evil omen! murmured forth the crowd,And scornful laughter burst on every side.Then forward stepped Queen Isabel—thy mother,And—but it angers me to utter it!
CHARLES.Say on.
LA HIRE.Within her arms she clasped the boy,And herself placed him on thy father's throne.
CHARLES.Oh, mother! mother!
LA HIRE.E'en the murderous bandsOf the Burgundians, at this spectacle,Evinced some tokens of indignant shame.The queen perceived it, and addressed the crowds,Exclaiming with loud voice: "Be grateful, Frenchmen,That I engraft upon a sickly stockA healthy scion, and redeem you fromThe misbegotten son of a mad sire!"
[The KING hides his face; AGNES hastens towards himand clasps him in her arms; all the bystanders expressaversion and horror.
DUNOIS.She-wolf of France! Rage-breathing Megara!
CHARLES (after a pause, to the SENATORS).Yourselves have heard the posture of affairs.Delay no longer, back return to Orleans,And bear this message to my faithful town;I do absolve my subjects from their oath,Their own best interests let them now consult,And yield them to the Duke of Burgundy;'Yclept the Good, he need must prove humane.
DUNOIS.What say'st thou, sire? Thou wilt abandon Orleans!
SENATOR (kneels down).My king! Abandon not thy faithful town!Consign her not to England's harsh control.She is a precious jewel in the crown,And none hath more inviolate faith maintainedTowards the kings, thy royal ancestors.
DUNOIS.Have we been routed? Is it lawful, sire,To leave the English masters of the field,Without a single stroke to save the town?And thinkest thou, with careless breath, forsooth,Ere blood hath flowed, rashly to give awayThe fairest city from the heart of France?
CHARLES.Blood hath been poured forth freely, and in vainThe hand of heaven is visibly against me;In every battle is my host o'erthrown,I am rejected of my parliament,My capital, my people, hail me foe,Those of my blood,—my nearest relatives,—Forsake me and betray—and my own motherDoth nurture at her breast the hostile brood.Beyond the Loire we will retire, and yieldTo the o'ermastering hand of destinyWhich sideth with the English.
SOREL.God forbidThat we in weak despair should quit this realm!This utterance came not from thy heart, my king,Thy noble heart, which hath been sorely rivenBy the fell deed of thy unnatural mother,Thou'lt be thyself again, right valiantlyThou'lt battle with thine adverse destiny,Which doth oppose thee with relentless ire.