Page images
PDF
EPUB

Boab. I'll rather call my death.

Go, and bring up my guards to my defence:
I'll punish this outrageous insolence.

Aben. Since blind opinion does their reason sway, You must submit to cure them their own way. You to their fancies physic must apply; Give them that chief on whom they most rely. Under Almanzor prosperously they fought; Almanzor, therefore, must with prayers be brought. Enter a second Messenger.

2 Mess. Haste all you can their fury to assuage: You are not safe from their rebellious rage.

Enter a third Messenger.

3 Mess. This minute, if you grant not their desire, They'll seize your person, and your palace fire. Abdelm. Your danger, sir, admits of no delay. Boab. Intumults people reign, and kings obey.Go and appease them with the vow I make, That they shall have their loved Almanzor back. [Exit ABDEL. Almanzor has the ascendant o'er my fate; I'm forced to stoop to one I fear and hate: Disgraced, distress'd, in exile, and alone, He's greater than a monarch on his throne: Without a realm, a royalty he gains; Kings are the subjects over whom he reigns.

[A shout of acclamation within. Aben. These shouts proclaim the people satisfied. Boab. We for another tempest must provide.

To promise his return as I was loth,

So I want power now to perform my oath.
Ere this, for Afric he is sail'd from Spain.

Aben. The adverse winds his passage yet detain ;
I heard, last night, his equipage did stay
At a small village, short of Malaga.

Boab. Abenamar, this evening thither haste; Desire him to forget his usage past:

Use all your rhetoric, promise, flatter, pray.

To them ALMAHIDE, attended.

Aben. Good fortune shews you yet a surer way: Nor prayers nor promises his mind will move; 'Tis inaccessible to all, but love..

Boab. Oh, thou hast roused a thought within my
breast,

That will for ever rob me of my rest.
Ah jealousy, how cruel is thy sting!
I, in Almanzor, a loved rival bring!
And now, I think, it is an equal strife,
If I my crown should hazard, or my wife.
Where, marriage, is thy cure, which husbands boast,
That in possession their desire is lost?

Or why have I alone that wretched taste,
Which, gorged and glutted, does with hunger last?
Custom and duty cannot set me free,
Even sin itself has not a charm for me.
Of married lovers I am sure the first,
And nothing but a king could be so curst.
Almah. What sadness sits upon your royal heart?
Have you a grief, and must not I have part?
All creatures else a time of love possess;
Man only clogs with cares his happiness:
And, while he should enjoy his part of bliss,
With thoughts of what may be, destroys what is.
Boab. You guess aright; I am oppress'd with
grief,

And 'tis from you that I must seek relief.

[To the company. Leave us; to sorrow there's a reverence due: Sad kings, like suns eclipsed, withdraw from view. [The Attendants go off, and chairs are set for the King and Queen.

Almah. So, two kind turtles, when a storm is nigh, Look up, and see it gathering in the sky: Each calls his mate, to shelter in the groves, Leaving, in murmur, their unfinish'd loves: Perch'd on some drooping branch, they sit alone, And coo, and hearken to each other's moan. Boab. Since, Almahide, you seem so kind a wife, [Taking her by the hand.

What would you do to save a husband's life? Almah. When fate calls on that hard necessity, I'll suffer death, rather than you shall die.

Boab. Suppose your country should in danger be; What would you undertake to set it free?

Almah. It were too little to resign my breath: My own free hand should give me nobler death. Boab. That hand, which would so much for glory do,

Must yet do more; for it must kill me too.
You must kill me, for that dear country's sake;
Or, what's all one, must call Almanzor back.

Almah. I see to what your speech you now direct;
Either my love or virtue you suspect.
But know, that, when my person I resign'd,
I was too noble not to give my mind.
No more the shadow of Almanzor fear;

I have no room, but for your image, here.

Boab. This, Almahide, would make me cease to
mourn,

Were that Almanzor never to return:
But now my fearful people mutiny;
Their clamours call Almanzor back, not I.
Their safety, through my ruin, I pursue;
He must return, and must be brought by you.
Almah. That hour, when I my faith to you did
plight,

I banish'd him for ever from my sight.

His banishment was to my virtue due;
Not that I fear'd him for myself, but you.
My honour had preserved me innocent:
But I would, your suspicion to prevent;
Which, since I see augmented in your mind,
I yet more reason for his exile find.

Boab. To your entreaties he will yield alone,
And on your doom depend my life and throne.
No longer, therefore, my desires withstand;
Or, if desires prevail not, my command.

Almah. In his return, too sadly I foresee
The effects of your returning jealousy.
But your command I prize above my life;
"Tis sacred to a subject and a wife :
If I have power, Almanzor shall return.

Boab. Cursed be that fatal hour when I was born!
[Letting go her hand, and starting up.
You love, you love him; and that love reveal,
By your too quick consent to his repeal.
My jealousy had but too just a ground;
And now you stab into my former wound.
Almah. This sudden change I do not understand.
Have you so soon forgot your own command?
Boab. Grant that I did the unjust injunction lay,
You should have loved me more than to obey.
I know you did this mutiny design;

But I'll your love-plot quickly countermine.
Let my crown go; he never shall return;
I, like a phoenix, in my nest will burn.

Almah. You please me well, that in one common fate

You wrap yourself, and me, and all your state.
Let us no more of proud Almanzor hear :
"Tis better once to die, than still to fear;
And better many times to die, than be
Obliged, past payment, to an enemy.

Boab. 'Tis better; but you wives have still one

way:

Whene'er your husbands are obliged, you pay. Almah. Thou, heaven, who know'st it, judge my innocence !

You, sir, deserve not I should make defence.
Yet, judge my virtue by that proof I gave,
When I submitted to be made your slave.

Boab. If I have been suspicious or unkind,
Forgive me; many cares distract my mind:
Love, and a crown!

Two such excuses no one man e'er had;

And each of them enough to make me mad:
But now my reason reassumes its throne,
And finds no safety when Almanzor's gone.
Send for him then; I'll be obliged, and sue;
'Tis a less evil than to part with you.

I leave you to your thoughts; but love me still!
Forgive my passion, and obey my will.

[Exit BOABDELIN.

ALMAHIDE solus.

My jealous lord will soon to rage return ;
That fire, his fear rakes up, does inward burn.
But heaven, which made me great, has chose for me,
I must the oblation for my people be.

I'll cherish honour, then, and life despise ;
What is not pure, is not for sacrifice.
Yet for Almanzor I in secret mourn!
Can virtue, then, admit of his return?
Yes; for my love I will by virtue square;
My heart's not mine, but all my actions are.
I'll like Almanzor act; and dare to be
As haughty, and as wretched too, as he.
What will he think is in my message meant?
I scarcely understand my own intent:

« PreviousContinue »