Page:Representative American plays.pdf/54

Rh . (Waking.) I come, ye lovely shades—Ha! am I here?

Still in the tyrant's palace? Ye bright pow'rs!

Are all my blessings then but vis'onary?

Methought I was arriv'd on that blest shore

Where happy souls for ever dwell, crown'd with

Immortal bliss; Arsaces led me through

The flow'ry groves, while all around me gleam'd

Thousand and thousand shades, who welcom'd me

With pleasing songs of joy—Vardanes, ha!—

. Why beams the angry lightning of thine eye

Against thy sighing slave? Is love a crime?

Oh! if to dote, with such excess of passion

As rises e'en to mad extravagance

Is criminal, I then am so, indeed.

. Away! vile man!—

. If to pursue thee e'er

With all the humblest offices of love,

If ne'er to know one single thought that does

Not bear thy bright idea, merits scorn—

. Hence from my sight—nor let me, thus, pollute

Mine eyes, with looking on a wretch like thee,

Thou cause of all my ills; I sicken at

Thy loathsome presence—

. 'T is not always thus,

Nor dost thou ever meet the sounds of love

With rage and fierce disdain: Arsaces, soon,

Could smooth thy brow, and melt thy icy breast.

. Ha! does it gall thee? Yes, he could, he could;

Oh! when he speaks, such sweetness dwells upon

His accents, all my soul dissolves to love,

And warm desire; such truth and beauty join'd!

His looks are soft and kind, such gentleness

Such virtue swells his bosom! in his eye

Sits majesty, commanding ev'ry heart.

Strait as the pine, the pride of all the grove,

More blooming than the spring, and sweeter far,

Than asphodels or roses infant sweets.

Oh! I could dwell forever on his praise,

Yet think eternity was scarce enough

To tell the mighty theme; here in my breast

His image dwells, but one dear thought of him,

When fancy paints his Person to my eye,

As he was wont in tenderness dissolv'd,

Sighing his vows, or kneeling at my feet,

Wipes off all mem'ry of my wretchedness.

. I know this brav'ry is affected, yet

It gives me joy, to think my rival only

Can in imagination taste thy beauties.

Let him,—'t will ease him in his solitude,

And gild the horrors of his prison-house,

Till death shall—

. Ha! what was that? till death—ye Gods!

Ah, now I feel distress's tort'ring pang—

Thou canst not, villain—darst not think his death—

O mis'ry!—

. Naught but your kindness saves him,

Yet bless me, with your love, and he is safe;

But the same frown which kills my growing hopes,

Gives him to death.

. O horror, I could die

Ten thousand times to save the lov'd Arsaces.

Teach me the means, ye pow'rs, how to save him!

Then lead me to what ever is my fate.

. Not only shall he die, but to thy view

I 'll bring the scene, those eyes that take delight

In cruelty, shall have enough of death.

E'en here, before thy sight, he shall expire,

Not sudden, but by ling'ring torments; all

That mischief can invent shall be practis'd

To give him pain; to lengthen out his woe

I'll search around the realm for skillful men,

To find new tortures.

. Oh! wrack not thus my soul!

. The sex o'erflows with various humours, he

Who catches not their smiles the very moment,

Will lose the blessing—I 'll improve this softness.—