wife upon my arm! what mocking, whispering, | heaven protect your hours in bliss. pointing! Never, never, never! Baron S. Enough! As a friend I have done my duty: I now appear as Adelaide's ambassador. She requests one moment's conversation: she wishes once again to see you, and never more! You cannot deny her this only, this last request. Stra. Oh! I understand this too: she thinks my firmness will be melted by her tears: she is mistaken. She may come. Baron S. She will come, to make you feel how much you mistake her. I go for her. Stra. Another word. "Baron S. Another word! Stra. Give her this paper and these jewels; they belong to her. (Presenting them.) near. Baron S. That you may do yourself. [Exit. Stra. The last anxious moment of my life draws I shall see her once again; I shall see her on whom my soul dotes. Is this the language of an injured husband? What is this principle which we call honour? Is it a feeling of the heart, or a quibble in the brain? I must be ressolute: it cannot now be otherwise. Let me speak solemnly, yet mild: and beware that nothing of reproach escape my lips. Yes, her penitence is real. She shall not be obliged to live in mean dependence: she shall be mistress of herself, she shall (Looks round, and shudders.) Ha! they come. Awake, insulted pride! protect me, injured honour! Enter MRS. HALLER, COUNTESS WINTERSEN, and BARON STEINFORT. Mrs. H. (Advances slowly, and in a tremor: the Countess attempts to support her.) Leave me now, I beseech you. (Approaches the Stranger, who, with averted countenance, and in extreme agitation, awaits her address.) My lord! Stra. (With gentle tremulous utterance, and face still turned away.) What would you with me, Adelaide? Mrs. H. (Much agitated.) No-for heaven's sake! I was not prepared for this. Adelaide!-No, no. For heaven's sake!-Harsh tones alone are suited to a culprit's ear. Stra. Endeavouring to gwe his voice firmness.) Well, madam! Mrs. H. Oh! if you will ease my heart, if you will spare and pity me, use reproaches. Stra. Reproaches!-Here they are; here on my sallow cheek, here on my hollow eye, here in my faded form; these reproaches I could not spare you. Mrs. H. Were I a hardened sinner, this forbearance would be charity; but I am a suffering penitent, and it overpowers me, Alas! then I must be the herald of my own shame; for where shall I find peace, till I have eased my soul by my confession? Stra. No confession, madam: I release you from every humiliation. I perceive you feel that we must part for ever. Mrs. H. I know it; nor come I here to supplicate your pardon; nor has my heart contained a ray of hope that you would grant it. All I dare ask is, that you will not curse my memory. Stra. No; I do not curse you: I shall never curse you. Mrs. H. From the conviction that I am unworthy of your name, I have, during three years abandoned it. But this is not enough: you must have that redress which will enable you to choose another-another wife; in whose chaste arms may This paper will be necessary for the purpose; it contains a written acknowledgement of my guilt. (Offers it trembling.) Stra. Tearing it.) Perish the record for ever! No, Adeleide; you only have possessed my heart; and, I am not ashamed to own it, you alone will reign there for ever. Your own sensations of virtue, your resolute honour, forbid you to profit by my weakness; and even if-Now, by heaven this is beneath a man!-But never, never will another fill Adelaide's place here. Mrs. H. Then nothing now remains but that one sad, hard, just word - farewell! Stra. Stay a moment. For some months we have, without knowing it, lived near each other. I have learnt much good of you: you have a heart open to the wants of your fellow-creatures. I am happy that it is so: you shall not be without the power of gratifying your benevolence. I know you have a spirit that must shrink from a state of obligation. This paper, to which the whole remnant of my fortune is pledged, secures your independence, Adelaide; and let the only recommendation of the gift be, that it will administer to you the means of indulging in charity, the divine propensity of your nature. Mrs. H. Never! To the labour of my hands alone will I owe my sustenance. A morsel of bread, moistened with the tear of penitence, will suffice my wishes, and exceed my merits. It would be an additional reproach to think that I served myself, or even others from the bounty of a man whom I had so deeply injured. Stra. Take it, madam; take it. Mrs. H. I have deserved this. But I throw myself upon your generosity: have compassion on me! Stra. (Aside.) Villain! of what a woman hast thou robbed me! (Puts up the paper.) Well, madam, I respect your sentiments, and withdraw my request; but on condition, that if ever you shall be in want of anything, I may be the first and only person in the world to whom you will make application. Mrs. H. I promise it, my lord. Stra. And now I may, at least, desire you to take back what is your own-your jewels. (Gives her the casket.) Mrs. H. (Opens it in violent agitation, and her tears burst upon it.) How well do I recollect the sweet evening when you gave me these! That evening my father joined our hands, and joyfully 1 pronounced the oath of eternal fidelity: it is broken This locket you gave me on my birthday that was a happy day. We had a country feast: how cheerful we all were! This bracelet I received after my William was born!-No! take them, take them! I cannot keep these, unless you wish that the sight of them should be an incessant reproach to my almost broken heart. (Gives them back.) Stra. (Aside.) I must go: my soul and pride will hold no longer. (Turning towards her.) Farewell! Mrs. H. Oh! but one minute more! an answer to but one more question. Feel for a mother's heart! Are my children still alive? Stra. Yes, they are alive. Mrs. H. And well? Countess, who places herself behind the Stranger; he himself walks with the boy behind Mrs. Haller.) Stranger, who is in violent agitation throughout this | scene, remains in silent contention between honour and affection.) Oh! let me behold them once again! let me once more kiss the features of their father in his babes, and I will kneel to you, and part with them for ever. (She kneel, and he raises her.) Stra. Willingly, Adelaide! This very night: I expect the children every minute. They have been brought up near this spot. I have already sent my servant for them: he might, ere this time, have returned. I pledge my word to send them to the castle, as soon as they arrive; there, if you please, they may remain till day-break to-morrow, then they must go with me, (The Countess and Bar. S., who, at a little distance, hare listened to the whole conrersation with the warmest sympathy, exchange signals. Baron S. goes into the hut, and soon returns with FRANCIS and the children: he gives the girl to the Mrs. H. In this world, then, we have no more to say-(Seizing his hand.)-Forget a wretch, who never will forget you: and when my penance shall have broken my heart; when we again meet in a better world Stra. There, Adelaide, you may be mine again. Mrs. H. and Stra. Oh! oh! (Parting. But, as they are going, she encounters the boy, and he the girl) Children. Dear father! dear mother! [They press the children in their arms with speechless affection; then tear themselves away, gaze at each other, spread their arms, and rush into an embrace. The Children run, and cling round their parents.-Exeunt. A TRAGEDY, IN FIVE ACTS.-BY THOMAS OTWAY. Bel. "I'M SACRIFICED! I'M SOLD-BETRAY'D TO SHAME!"-Act iii, scene 1. Me back so far, but I may boldly speak The honour of my house, you've done me wrong. on, By all men's eyes, a youth of expectation; I treated, trusted you, and thought you mine: In right, though proud oppression will not hear me? When, in requital of my best endeavours, Pri. Have you not wrong'd me? Jaf. Could my nature e'er Have brook'd injustice, or the doing wrongs, I need not now thus low have bent myself, To gain a hearing from a cruel father. Wrong'd you? Pri. Yes, wrong'd me! In the nicest point, You treacherously practis'd to undo me; Seduc'd the weakness of my age's darling, My only child, and stole her from my bosom. Oh, Belvidera! Jaf. 'Tis to me you owe her; Childless you had been else, and in the grave Your name extinct; no more Priuli heard of. You may remember, scarce five years are past, Pri. You stole her from me; like a thief you stole her, At dead of night! that cursed hour you chose May all your joys in her prove false, like mine: But's happier than me: for I have known Pri. Home, and be humble; study to retrench; Reduce the glitt'ring trappings of thy wife Home, home, I say. [Exit. Jaf. Yes, if my heart would let meThis proud, this swelling heart: home I would go, But that my doors are hateful to my eyes, Fill'd and damm'd up with gaping creditors, Watchful as fowlers when their game will spring. I've now not fifty ducats in the world, Yet still I am in love and pleas'd with ruin. Oh, Belvidera! Oh! she is my wife; And we will bear our wayward fate together, But ne'er know comfort more. Enter PIERRE. Pier. My friend, good-morrow; Jaf. Half of your curse you have bestow'd in How fares the honest partner of my heart? For, living here, you're but my curst remembran- Honesty! 'twas a cheat invented first cers, I once was happy. Jaf. You use me thus, because you know my soul Is fond of Belvidera. You perceive My life feeds on her, therefore thus you treat me. Jaf Indeed, my lord I dare not. My heart that awes me, is too much my master: Three years are past, since first our vows were plighted, During which time, the world must bear me witness, I've treated Belvidera like your daughter, Because (though hopeless e'er to win your nature) Pri. No more. Jaf. Yes, all: and then adieu for ever. To bind the hands of bold, deserving rogues, Like wit, much talk'd of, not to be defin'd: He that pretends to most, too, has least share in't, Pier. So, indeed, men think me; A fine, gay, bold-fac'd villain, as thou seest me. Yet, Jaffier, for all this, I'm a villain, Jaf. A villain! Pier. Yes, a most notorious villain; To see the sufferings of my fellow creatures, And own myself a man: to see our senators Cheat the deluded poople with a shew Of liberty, which yet they ne'er must taste of. There's not a wretch that lives on common charity, They say, by them our hands are free from fetters; Yet whom they please they lay in basest bonds; Whilst no hold's left to save us from destruction. I dare not speak, but my heart bleeds this mo ment. Jaf. Curs'd be the cause, though I thy friend be part on't: Let me partake the troubles of thy bosom, For I am us'd to misery, and perhaps May find a way to sweeten't to thy spirit. Pier. Too soon 'twill reach thy knowledge. Let it proceed. There's virtue in thy friendship, I and ill fortune have long been acquainted. gold; 'The very bed, which on thy wedding night Receiv'd thee to the arms of Belvidera, The scene of all thy joys, was violated with By the coarse hands of filthy, dungeon villains, Pier. Thank heaven! for what? Pier. Curse thy dull stars, and the worse fate of Where brothers, friends, and fathers, all are false; Where there's no truth, no trust; where inno cence Stoops under vile oppression, and vice lords it. But when I think what Belvidera feels, First, burn and level Venice to thy ruin. Man knows a braver remedy for sorrow: Pier. Well said, out with't, swear a little. L Jaf. Swear! By sea and air; by earth, by heav'n, and hell, I will revenge my Belvidera's tears. Hark thee, my friend-Priuli-is-a senator. Pier. A dog. Jaf. Agreed. Pier. Shoot him. Jaf. With all my heart. No more; where shall we meet at night? On the Rialto, every night at twelve, I take my evening's walk of meditation; There we two will meet, and talk of precious Mischief. Jaf. Farewell. Pier. At twelve. [Exit Pierre. Jaf. At any hour; my plagues Is this just dealing, nature?-Belvidera! Enter BELVIDERA. |