'Twas thou who took my love away from me.
MORANZONE
[with a look of joy]
What, has he left you?
DUCHESS
Nay, you know he has.
Oh, give him back to me, give him back, I say,
Or I will tear your body limb from limb,
And to the common gibbet nail your head
Until the carrion crows have stripped it bare.
Better you had crossed a hungry lioness
Before you came between me and my love.
[With more pathos.]
Nay, give him back, you know not how I love him.
Here by this chair he knelt a half hour since;
'Twas there he stood, and there he looked at me;
This is the hand he kissed, and these the ears
Into whose open portals he did pour
A tale of love so
musical that all
The birds stopped singing! Oh, give him back to me.
MORANZONE
He does not love you, Madam.
DUCHESS
May the plague
Wither the tongue that says so! Give him back.
MORANZONE
Madam, I tell you you will never see him,
Neither to-night, nor any other night.
DUCHESS
What is your name?
MORANZONE
My name? Revenge!
[Exit.]
DUCHESS
Revenge!
I think I never harmed a little child.
What should Revenge do coming to my door?
It matters not, for Death is there already,
Waiting with his dim torch to light my way.
'Tis true men hate thee, Death, and yet I think
Thou wilt be kinder to me than my lover,
And so
dispatch the messengers at once,
Harry the lazy steeds of lingering day,
And let the night, thy sister, come instead,
And drape the world in
mourning; let the owl,
Who is thy
minister,
scream from his tower
And wake the toad with hooting, and the bat,
That is the slave of dim Persephone,
Wheel through the sombre air on wandering wing!
Tear up the shrieking mandrakes from the earth
And bid them make us music, and tell the mole
To dig deep down thy cold and narrow bed,
For I shall lie within thine arms to-night.
END OF ACT II.
ACT III
SCENE
A large
corridor in the Ducal Palace: a window (L.C.) looks out on
a view of Padua by
moonlight: a
staircase (R.C.) leads up to a
door with a portiere of
crimsonvelvet, with the Duke's arms
embroidered in gold on it: on the lowest step of the
staircase a
figure draped in black is sitting: the hall is lit by an iron
cresset filled with burning tow:
thunder and
lightning outside:
the time is night.
[Enter GUIDO through the window.]
GUIDO
The wind is rising: how my
ladder shook!
I thought that every gust would break the cords!
[Looks out at the city.]
Christ! What a night:
Great
thunder in the heavens, and wild
lightnings
Striking from
pinnacle to
pinnacleAcross the city, till the dim houses seem
To
shudder and to shake as each new glare
Dashes adown the street.
[Passes across the stage to foot of
staircase.]
Ah! who art thou
That sittest on the stair, like unto Death
Waiting a
guilty soul? [A pause.]
Canst thou not speak?
Or has this storm laid palsy on thy tongue,
And chilled thy utterance?
[The figure rises and takes off his mask.]
MORANZONE
Guido Ferranti,
Thy murdered father laughs for joy to-night.
GUIDO
[confusedly]
What, art thou here?
MORANZONE
Ay,
waiting for your coming.
GUIDO
[looking away from him]
I did not think to see you, but am glad,
That you may know the thing I mean to do.
MORANZONE
First, I would have you know my well-laid plans;
Listen: I have set horses at the gate
Which leads to Parma: when you have done your business
We will ride hence, and by to-morrow night -
GUIDO
It cannot be.
MORANZONE
Nay, but it shall.
GUIDO
Listen, Lord Moranzone,
I am
resolved not to kill this man.
MORANZONE
Surely my ears are
traitors, speak again:
It cannot be but age has dulled my powers,
I am an old man now: what did you say?
You said that with that
dagger in your belt
You would
avenge your father's
bloody murder;
Did you not say that?
GUIDO
No, my lord, I said
I was
resolved not to kill the Duke.
MORANZONE
You said not that; it is my senses mock me;
Or else this
midnight air o'ercharged with storm
Alters your message in the giving it.
GUIDO
Nay, you heard
rightly; I'll not kill this man.
MORANZONE
What of thine oath, thou
traitor, what of thine oath?
GUIDO
I am
resolved not to keep that oath.
MORANZONE
What of thy murdered father?
GUIDO
Dost thou think
My father would be glad to see me coming,
This old man's blood still hot upon mine hands?
MORANZONE
Ay! he would laugh for joy.
GUIDO
I do not think so,
There is better knowledge in the other world;
Vengeance is God's, let God himself
revenge.
MORANZONE
Thou art God's
minister of vengeance.
GUIDO
No!
God hath no
minister but his own hand.
I will not kill this man.
MORANZONE
Why are you here,
If not to kill him, then?
GUIDO
Lord Moranzone,
I purpose to
ascend to the Duke's chamber,
And as he lies asleep lay on his breast
The
dagger and this
writing; when he awakes
Then he will know who held him in his power
And slew him not: this is the noblest vengeance
Which I can take.
MORANZONE
You will not slay him?
GUIDO
No.
MORANZONE
Ignoble son of a noble father,
Who sufferest this man who sold that father
To live an hour.
GUIDO
'Twas thou that hindered me;
I would have killed him in the open square,
The day I saw him first.
MORANZONE
It was not yet time;
Now it is time, and, like some green-faced girl,
Thou pratest of forgiveness.
GUIDO
No!
revenge:
The right
revenge my father's son should take.
MORANZONE
You are a coward,
Take out the knife, get to the Duke's chamber,
And bring me back his heart upon the blade.
When he is dead, then you can talk to me
Of noble vengeances.
GUIDO
Upon thine honour,
And by the love thou bearest my father's name,
Dost thou think my father, that great gentleman,
That
generous soldier, that most
chivalrous lord,
Would have crept at night-time, like a common thief,
And stabbed an old man
sleeping in his bed,
However he had wronged him: tell me that.
MORANZONE
[after some hesitation]
You have sworn an oath, see that you keep that oath.
Boy, do you think I do not know your secret,
Your
traffic with the Duchess?
GUIDO
Silence, liar!
The very moon in heaven is not more chaste.
Nor the white stars so pure.
MORANZONE
And yet, you love her;
Weak fool, to let love in upon your life,
Save as a
plaything.