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Now fuperftition, ignorance, and error,
Ufurp our temples, and profane our altars.

LEONTIUS.

From ev'ry palace burfts a mingled clamour,
The dreadful diffonance of barb'rous triumpli,
Shrieks of affright and wailings of diftrefs.
Oft when the cries of violated beauty

Arofe to Heav'n, and pierc'd my bleeding breast,
I felt thy pains, and trembled for Afpafia.

DEMETRIUS.

Afpafia! spare that lov'd, that mournful name: Dear hapless maid-tempeftuous grief o'erbears My reafoning pow'rs-Dear, haplefs, loft Afpafia!

Sufpend the thought.

LEONTIUS.

DEMETRIUS.

All thought on her is madness;

Yet let me think-I see the helpless maid,
Behold the monsters gaze with favage rapture,
Behold how luft and rapine ftruggle round her!

LEONTIUS.

wifdom;

Awake, Demetrius, from this difmal dream,
Sink not beneath imaginary forrows;
Call to your aid your courage and your
Think on the fudden change of human scenes;
Think on the various accidents of war;
Think on the mighty power of awful virtue;
Think on that Providence that guards the good.

DEME

DEMETRIUS.

O Providence! extend thy care to me,
For Courage droops unequal to the combat,
And weak Philofophy denies her fuccours.
Sure fome kind fabre in the heat of battle,
Ere yet the foe found leifure to be cruel,
Difmifs'd her to the sky.

LEONTIUS.

Some virgin-martyr,

Perhaps, enamour'd of resembling virtue,
With gentle hand reftrain'd the streams of life,
And fnatch'd her timely from her country's fate.

DEMETRIUS.

From those bright regions of eternal day,
Where now thou fhin'ft among thy fellow-faints,
Array'd in purer light, look down on me :
In pleasing visions and affuafive dreams,
O! footh my foul, and teach me how to lose thee.

LEONTIUS.

Enough of unavailing tears, Demetrius :

I came obedient to thy friendly fummons,

And hop'd to fhare thy counfels, not thy forrows :
While thus we mourn the fortune of Afpafia,
To what are we referv'd?

DEMETRIUS.

To what I know not:

But hope, yet hope, to happiness and honour;
If happiness can be without Afpafia.

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LEONTIUS.

But whence this new-fprung hope?

DEMETRIUS.

From Cali Baffa,

The chief, whose wisdom guides the Turkish counfels.
He, tir'd of flavery, though the highest flave,
Projects at once our freedom and his own;
And bids us thus disguis'd await him here.

LEONTIUS.

Can he restore the ftate he could not fave?
In vain, when Turkey's troops affail'd our walls,
His kind intelligence betray'd their measures;
Their arms prevail'd, though Cali was our friend.

DEMETRIUS.

When the tenth fun had set upon our forrows,
At midnight's private hour, a voice unknown
Sounds in my fleeping ear, Awake, Demetrius,
'Awake, and follow me to better fortunes.'
Surpriz'd I ftart, and bless the happy dream;
Then, rouzing, know the fiery chief Abdalla,
Whofe quick impatience feiz'd my doubtful hand,
And led me to the shore where Cali stood,
Penfive and lift'ning to the beating furge.
There, in foft hints and in ambiguous phrase,
With all the diffidence of long experience,
That oft' had practis'd fraud, and ofť detected,
The vet'ran courtier half reveal'd his project.
By his command, equipp'd for speedy flight,
Deep in a winding creek a galley lies,
Mann'd with the braveft of our fellow-captives,

Selected

Selected by my care, a hardy band,
That long to hail thee chief.

LEONTIUS.

But what avails

So fmall a force? or why fhould Cali fly?
Or how can Cali's flight reftore our country?

DEMETRIUS.

Referve these queftions for a fafer hour;
Or hear himself, for fee the Baffa comes.

SCENE II.

DEMETRIUS, LEONTIUS, CALI BASSA.

CALI.

Now fummon all thy foul, illuftrious Chriftian!
Awake each faculty that fleeps within thee,
The courtier's policy, the fage's firmnefs,
The warrior's ardour, and the patriot's zeal :
If, chafing paft events with vain purfuit,
Or wand'ring in the wilds of future being,
A fingle thought now rove, recall it home.
But can thy friend sustain the glorious cause,
The cause of liberty, the cause of nations?

DEMETRIUS.

Obferve him closely with a statesman's eye,
Thou that haft long perus'd the draughts of Nature,
And know'ft the characters of vice and virtue,
Left by the hand of Heav'n on human clay.

CALI.

His mien is lofty, his demeanour great;
Nor fprightly folly wantons in his air,

Nor

Nor dull ferenity becalms his eyes.
Such had I trufted once as foon as feen,
But cautious age fufpects the flatt'ring form,
And only credits what experience tells.
Has filence prefs'd her feal upon his lips?
Does adamantine faith inveft his heart?
Will he not bend beneath a tyrant's frown?
Will he not melt before ambition's fire?
Will he not foften in a friend's embrace?
Or flow diffolving in a woman's tears?

DEMETRIUS.

Sooner the trembling leaves shall find a voice,
And tell the fecrets of their confcious walks;
Sooner the breeze fhall catch the flying founds,
And fhock the tyrant with a tale of treafon.
Your flaughter'd multitudes, that fwell the shore
With monuments of death, proclaim his courage;
Virtue and liberty engrofs his foul,

And leave no place for perfidy or fear.

LEONTIUS.

I fcorn a truft unwillingly repos'd;

Demetrius will not lead me to dishonour;
Confult in private, call me when your fcheme
Is ripe for action, and demands the fword. [Going.

Leontius, ftay.

DEMETRIUS.

CALI.

Forgive an old man's weakness,

And thare the deepest fecrets of my foul,

My wrongs, my fears, my motives, my designs.When unfuccefsful wars, and civil factions,

Embroil'd

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