A Blot in the 'Scutcheon
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A BLOT IN THE 'SCUTCHEON


By Robert Browning





Contents

Transcriber's comments

INTRODUCTORY NOTE

A BLOT IN THE 'SCUTCHEON

ACT I

ACT II

ACT III





Transcriber's comments on the preparation of this e-text:

Closing brackets i.e. "]" have been added to some of the stage directions.

Leading blanks are reproduced from the printed text. Eg.:

     GUENDOLEN.  Where are you taking me?

     TRESHAM.                              He fell just here.





INTRODUCTORY NOTE

ROBERT BROWNING stands, in respect to his origin and his career, in marked contrast to the two aristocratic poets beside whose dramas his "Blot in the 'Scutcheon" is here printed. His father was a bank clerk and a dissenter at a time when dissent meant exclusion from Society; the poet went neither to one of the great public schools nor to Oxford or Cambridge; and no breath of scandal touched his name. Born in London in 1812, he was educated largely by private tutors, and spent two years at London University, but the influence of his father, a man of wide reading and cultivated tastes, was probably the most important element in his early training. He drew well, was something of a musician, and wrote verses from an early age, though it was the accidental reading of a volume of Shelley which first kindled his real inspiration. This indebtedness is beautifully acknowledged in his first published poem, "Pauline" (1833).

Apart from frequent visits to Italy, there is little of incident to chronicle in Browning's life, with the one great exception of his more than fortunate marriage in 1846 to Elizabeth Barrett, the greatest of English poetesses.

Browning's dramatic period extended from 1835 to the time of his marriage, and produced some nine plays, not all of which, however, were intended for the stage. "Paracelsus," the first of the series, has been fairly described as a "conversational drama," and "Pippa Passes," though it has been staged, is essentially a poem to read. The historical tragedy of "Strafford" has been impressively performed, but "King Victor and King Charles," "The Return of the Druses," "Colombe's Birthday," "A Soul's Tragedy," and "Luria," while interesting in many ways, can hardly be regarded as successful stage-plays. "A Blot in the 'Scutcheon" was performed at Drury Lane, but its chances of a successful run were spoiled by the jealousy of Macready, the manager.

The main cause of Browning's weakness as a playwright lay in the fact that he was so much more interested in psychology than in action. But in the present tragedy this defect is less prominent than usual, and in spite of flaws in construction, it reaches a high pitch of emotional intensity, the characters are drawn with vividness, and the lines are rich in poetry.





A BLOT IN THE 'SCUTCHEON

A TRAGEDY

(1843)

     DRAMATIS PERSONAE

     MILDRED TRESHAM.

     GUENDOLEN TRESHAM.

     THOROLD, Earl Tresham.

     AUSTIN TRESHAM.

     HENRY, Earl Mertoun.

     GERARD, and other retainers of Lord Tresham.

     Time, 17—

ACT I

          SCENE I.—The Interior of a Lodge in Lord Tresham's Park.

          Many Retainers crowded at the window, supposed to command

          a view of the entrance to his Mansion.

          GERARD, the Warrener, his back to a table on which are flagons,

          etc.

     FIRST RETAINER.  Ay, do! push, friends, and then you'll push down me!

     —What for?  Does any hear a runner's foot

     Or a steed's trample or a coach-wheel's cry?

     Is the Earl come or his least poursuivant?

     But there's no breeding in a man of you

     Save Gerard yonder:  here's a half-place yet,

     Old Gerard!

     GERARD.  Save your courtesies, my friend.  Here is my place.

     SECOND RETAINER.  Now, Gerard, out with it!

     What makes you sullen, this of all the days

     I' the year?  To-day that young rich bountiful

     Handsome Earl Mertoun, whom alone they match

     With our Lord Tresham through the country-side,

     Is coming here in utmost bravery

     To ask our master's sister's hand?

     GERARD.                             What then?

     SECOND RETAINER.  What then?  Why, you, she speaks to, if she meets

     Your worship, smiles on as you hold apart

     The boughs to let her through her forest walks,

     You, always favourite for your no-deserts,

     You've heard, these three days, how Earl Mertoun sues

     To lay his heart and house and broad lands too

     At Lady Mildred's feet:  and while we squeeze

     Ourselves into a mousehole lest we miss

     One congee of the least page in his train,

     You sit o' one side—"there's the Earl," say I—

     "What then?" say you!

     THIRD RETAINER.        I'll wager he has let

     Both swans he tamed for Lady Mildred swim

     Over the falls and gain the river!

     GERARD.                             Ralph,

     Is not to-morrow my inspecting-day

     For you and for your hawks?

     FOURTH RETAINER.             Let Gerard be!

     He's coarse-grained, like his carved black cross-bow stock.

     Ha, look now, while we squabble with him, look!

     Well done, now—is not this beginning, now,

     To purpose?

     FIRST RETAINER.  Our retainers look as fine—

     That's comfort.  Lord, how Richard holds himself

     With his white staff!  Will not a knave behind

     Prick him upright?

     FOURTH RETAINER.  He's only bowing, fool!

     The Earl's man bent us lower by this much.

     FIRST RETAINER.  That's comfort.  Here's a very cavalcade!

     THIRD RETAINER.  I don't see wherefore Richard, and his troop

     Of silk and silver varlets there, should find

     Their perfumed selves so indispensable

     On high days, holidays!  Would it so disgrace

     Our family, if I, for instance, stood—

     In my right hand a cast of Swedish hawks,

     A leash of greyhounds in my left?—

     GERARD.                              —With Hugh

     The logman for supporter, in his right

     The bill-hook, in his left the brushwood-shears!

     THIRD RETAINER.  Out on you, crab!  What next, what next?  The Earl!

     FIRST RETAINER.  Oh Walter, groom, our horses, do they match

     The Earl's?  Alas, that first pair of the six—

     They paw the ground—Ah Walter! and that brute

     Just on his haunches by the wheel!

     SIXTH RETAINER.                     Ay—ay!

     You, Philip, are a special hand, I hear,

     At soups and sauces:  what's a horse to you?

     D'ye mark that beast they've slid into the midst

     So cunningly?—then, Philip, mark this further;

     No leg has he to stand on!

     FIRST RETAINER.             No? that's comfort.

     SECOND RETAINER.  Peace, Cook!  The Earl descends.  Well, Gerard, see

     The Earl at least!  Come, there's a proper man,

     I hope!  Why, Ralph, no falcon, Pole or Swede,

     Has got a starrier eye.

     THIRD RETAINER.          His eyes are blue:

     But leave my hawks alone!

     FOURTH RETAINER.           So young, and yet

     So tall and shapely!

     FIFTH RETAINER.  Here's Lord Tresham's self!

     There now—there's what a nobleman should be!

     He's older, graver, loftier, he's more like

     A House's head.

     SECOND RETAINER.  But you'd not have a boy

     —And what's the Earl beside?—possess too soon

     That stateliness?

     FIRST RETAINER.  Our master takes his hand—

     Richard and his white staff are on the move—

     Back fall our people—(tsh!—there's Timothy

     Sure to get tangled in his ribbon-ties,

     And Peter's cursed rosette's a-coming off!)

     —At last I see our lord's back and his friend's;

     And the whole beautiful bright company

     Close round them—in they go!

          [Jumping down from the window-bench, and making for

           the table and its jugs.]

                                    Good health, long life,

     Great joy to our Lord Tresham and his House!

     SIXTH RETAINER.  My father drove his father first to court,

     After his marriage-day—ay, did he!

     SECOND RETAINER.                     God bless

     Lord Tresham, Lady Mildred, and the Earl!

     Here, Gerard, reach your beaker!

     GERARD.                           Drink, my boys!

     Don't mind me—all's not right about me—drink!

     SECOND RETAINER [aside].

     He's vexed, now, that he let the show escape!

          [To GERARD.]

     Remember that the Earl returns this way.

     GERARD.  That way?

     SECOND RETAINER.    Just so.

     GERARD.                       Then my way's here.

          [Goes.]

     SECOND RETAINER.                                   Old Gerard

     Will die soon—mind, I said it!  He was used

     To care about the pitifullest thing

     That touched the House's honour, not an eye

     But his could see wherein:  and on a cause

     Of scarce a quarter this importance, Gerard

     Fairly had fretted flesh and bone away

     In cares that this was right, nor that was wrong,

     Such point decorous, and such square by rule—

     He knew such niceties, no herald more:

     And now—you see his humour:  die he will!

     SECOND RETAINER.  God help him!  Who's for the great servants' hall

     To hear what's going on inside!  They'd follow

     Lord Tresham into the saloon.

     THIRD RETAINER.                I!—

     FOURTH RETAINER.                     I!—

     Leave Frank alone for catching, at the door,

     Some hint of how the parley goes inside!

     Prosperity to the great House once more!

     Here's the last drop!

     FIRST RETAINER.        Have at you!  Boys, hurrah!

          SCENE II.—A Saloon in the Mansion

          Enter LORD TRESHAM, LORD MERTOUN, AUSTIN, and GUENDOLEN

     TRESHAM.  I welcome you, Lord Mertoun, yet once more,

     To this ancestral roof of mine.  Your name

     —Noble among the noblest in itself,

     Yet taking in your person, fame avers,

     New price and lustre,—(as that gem you wear,

     Transmitted from a hundred knightly breasts,

     Fresh chased and set and fixed by its last lord,

     Seems to re-kindle at the core)—your name

     Would win you welcome!—

     MERTOUN.                  Thanks!

     TRESHAM.                           —But add to that,

     The worthiness and grace and dignity

     Of your proposal for uniting both

     Our Houses even closer than respect

     Unites them now—add these, and you must grant

     One favour more, nor that the least,—to think

     The welcome I should give;—'tis given!  My lord,

     My only brother, Austin:  he's the king's.

     Our cousin, Lady Guendolen—betrothed

     To Austin:  all are yours.

     MERTOUN.                    I thank you—less

     For the expressed commendings which your seal,

     And only that, authenticates—forbids

     My putting from me... to my heart I take

     Your praise... but praise less claims my gratitude,

     Than the indulgent insight it implies

     Of what must needs be uppermost with one

     Who comes, like me, with the bare leave to ask,

     In weighed and measured unimpassioned words,

     A gift, which, if as calmly 'tis denied,

     He must withdraw, content upon his cheek,

     Despair within his soul.  That I dare ask

     Firmly, near boldly, near with confidence

     That gift, I have to thank you.  Yes, Lord Tresham,

     I love your sister—as you'd have one love

     That lady... oh more, more I love her!  Wealth,

     Rank, all the world thinks me, they're yours, you know,

     To hold or part with, at your choice—but grant

     My true self, me without a rood of land,

     A piece of gold, a name of yesterday,

     Grant me that lady, and you... Death or life?

     GUENDOLEN.  [apart to AUSTIN].  Why, this is loving,

     Austin!

     AUSTIN.    He's so young!

     GUENDOLEN.  Young?  Old enough, I think, to half surmise

     He never had obtained an entrance here,

     Were all this fear and trembling needed.

     AUSTIN.                                   Hush!

     He reddens.

     GUENDOLEN.  Mark him, Austin; that's true love!

     Ours must begin again.

     TRESHAM.                We'll sit, my lord.

     Ever with best desert goes diffidence.

     I may speak plainly nor be misconceived

     That I am wholly satisfied with you

     On this occasion, when a falcon's eye

     Were dull compared with mine to search out faults,

     Is somewhat.  Mildred's hand is hers to give

     Or to refuse.

     MERTOUN.     But you, you grant my suit?

     I have your word if hers?

     TRESHAM.                   My best of words

     If hers encourage you.  I trust it will.

     Have you seen Lady Mildred, by the way?

     MERTOUN.  I... I... our two demesnes, remember, touch,

     I have beer used to wander carelessly

     After my stricken game:  the heron roused

     Deep in my woods, has trailed its broken wing

     Thro' thicks and glades a mile in yours,—or else

     Some eyass ill-reclaimed has taken flight

     And lured me after her from tree to tree,

     I marked not whither.  I have come upon

     The lady's wondrous beauty unaware,

     And—and then... I have seen her.

     GUENDOLEN [aside to AUSTIN].  Note that mode

     Of faltering out that, when a lady passed,

     He, having eyes, did see her!  You had said—

     "On such a day I scanned her, head to foot;

     Observed a red, where red should not have been,

     Outside her elbow; but was pleased enough

     Upon the whole."  Let such irreverent talk

     Be lessoned for the future!

     TRESHAM.                     What's to say

     May be said briefly.  She has never known

     A mother's care; I stand for father too.

     Her beauty is not strange to you, it seems—

     You cannot know the good and tender heart,

     Its girl's trust and its woman's constancy,

     How pure yet passionate, how calm yet kind,

     How grave yet joyous, how reserved yet free

     As light where friends are—how imbued with lore

     The world most prizes, yet the simplest, yet

     The... one might know I talked of Mildred—thus

     We brothers talk!

     MERTOUN.           I thank you.

     TRESHAM.                         In a word,

     Control's not for this lady; but her wish

     To please me outstrips in its subtlety

     My power of being pleased:  herself creates

     The want she means to satisfy.  My heart

     Prefers your suit to her as 'twere its own.

     Can I say more?

     MERTOUN.         No more—thanks, thanks—no more!

     TRESHAM.  This matter then discussed...

     MERTOUN.                                 —We'll waste no breath

     On aught less precious.  I'm beneath the roof

     Which holds her:  while I thought of that, my speech

     To you would wander—as it must not do,

     Since as you favour me I stand or fall.

     I pray you suffer that I take my leave!

     TRESHAM.  With less regret 'tis suffered, that again

     We meet, I hope, so shortly.

     MERTOUN.                      We? again?—

     Ah yes, forgive me—when shall... you will crown

     Your goodness by forthwith apprising me

     When... if... the lady will appoint a day

     For me to wait on you—and her.

     TRESHAM.                         So soon

     As I am made acquainted with her thoughts

     On your proposal—howsoe'er they lean—

     A messenger shall bring you the result.

     MERTOUN.  You cannot bind me more to you, my lord.

     Farewell till we renew... I trust, renew

     A converse ne'er to disunite again.

     TRESHAM.  So may it prove!

     MERTOUN.                    You, lady, you, sir, take

     My humble salutation!

     GUENDOLEN and AUSTIN.    Thanks!

     TRESHAM.                          Within there!

          [Servants enter.  TRESHAM conducts MERTOUN to the door.

           Meantime AUSTIN remarks,]

                                                      Well,

     Here I have an advantage of the Earl,

     Confess now!  I'd not think that all was safe

     Because my lady's brother stood my friend!

     Why, he makes sure of her—"do you say yes—

     She'll not say, no,"—what comes it to beside?

     I should have prayed the brother, "speak this speech,

     For Heaven's sake urge this on her—put in this—

     Forget not, as you'd save me, t'other thing,—

     Then set down what she says, and how she looks,

     And if she smiles, and" (in an under breath)

     "Only let her accept me, and do you

     And all the world refuse me, if you dare!"

     GUENDOLEN.  That way you'd take, friend Austin?  What a shame

     I was your cousin, tamely from the first

     Your bride, and all this fervour's run to waste!

     Do you know you speak sensibly to-day?

     The Earl's a fool.

     AUSTIN.             Here's Thorold.  Tell him so!

     TRESHAM [returning].  Now, voices, voices!  'St! the lady's first!

     How seems he?—seems he not... come, faith give fraud

     The mercy-stroke whenever they engage!

     Down with fraud, up with faith!  How seems the Earl?

     A name! a blazon! if you knew their worth,

     As you will never! come—the Earl?

     GUENDOLEN.                          He's young.

     TRESHAM.  What's she? an infant save in heart and brain.

     Young!  Mildred is fourteen, remark!  And you...

     Austin, how old is she?

     GUENDOLEN.               There's tact for you!

     I meant that being young was good excuse

     If one should tax him...

     TRESHAM.                  Well?

     GUENDOLEN.                       —With lacking wit.

     TRESHAM.  He lacked wit?  Where might he lack wit, so please you?

     GUENDOLEN.  In standing straighter than the steward's rod

     And making you the tiresomest harangue,

     Instead of slipping over to my side

     And softly whispering in my ear, "Sweet lady,

     Your cousin there will do me detriment

     He little dreams of:  he's absorbed, I see,

     In my old name and fame—be sure he'll leave

     My Mildred, when his best account of me

     Is ended, in full confidence I wear

     My grandsire's periwig down either cheek.

     I'm lost unless your gentleness vouchsafes"...

     TRESHAM... "To give a best of best accounts, yourself,

     Of me and my demerits."  You are right!

     He should have said what now I say for him.

     Yon golden creature, will you help us all?

     Here's Austin means to vouch for much, but you

     —You are... what Austin only knows!  Come up,

     All three of us:  she's in the library

     No doubt, for the day's wearing fast.  Precede!

     GUENDOLEN.  Austin, how we must—!

     TRESHAM.                            Must what?  Must speak truth,

     Malignant tongue!  Detect one fault in him!

     I challenge you!

     GUENDOLEN.        Witchcraft's a fault in him,

     For you're bewitched.

     TRESHAM.               What's urgent we obtain

     Is, that she soon receive him—say, to-morrow—,

     Next day at furthest.

     GUENDOLEN.             Ne'er instruct me!

     TRESHAM.                                   Come!

     —He's out of your good graces, since forsooth,

     He stood not as he'd carry us by storm

     With his perfections!  You're for the composed

     Manly assured becoming confidence!

     —Get her to say, "to-morrow," and I'll give you...

     I'll give you black Urganda, to be spoiled

     With petting and snail-paces.  Will you?  Come!

          SCENE III.

          —MILDRED'S Chamber.  A Painted Window overlooks the Park

          MILDRED and GUENDOLEN

     GUENDOLEN.  Now, Mildred, spare those pains.  I have not left

     Our talkers in the library, and climbed

     The wearisome ascent to this your bower

     In company with you,—I have not dared...

     Nay, worked such prodigies as sparing you

     Lord Mertoun's pedigree before the flood,

     Which Thorold seemed in very act to tell

     —Or bringing Austin to pluck up that most

     Firm-rooted heresy—your suitor's eyes,

     He would maintain, were grey instead of blue—

     I think I brought him to contrition!—Well,

     I have not done such things, (all to deserve

     A minute's quiet cousin's talk with you,)

     To be dismissed so coolly.

     MILDRED.                    Guendolen!

     What have I done? what could suggest...

     GUENDOLEN.                               There, there!

     Do I not comprehend you'd be alone

     To throw those testimonies in a heap,

     Thorold's enlargings, Austin's brevities,

     With that poor silly heartless Guendolen's

     Ill-time misplaced attempted smartnesses—

     And sift their sense out? now, I come to spare you

     Nearly a whole night's labour.  Ask and have!

     Demand, he answered!  Lack I ears and eyes?

     Am I perplexed which side of the rock-table

     The Conqueror dined on when he landed first,

     Lord Mertoun's ancestor was bidden take—

     The bow-hand or the arrow-hand's great meed?

     Mildred, the Earl has soft blue eyes!

     MILDRED.                               My brother—

     Did he... you said that he received him well?

     GUENDOLEN.  If I said only "well" I said not much.

     Oh, stay—which brother?

     MILDRED.                  Thorold! who—Who else?

     GUENDOLEN.  Thorold (a secret) is too proud by half,—

     Nay, hear me out—with us he's even gentler

     Than we are with our birds.  Of this great House

     The least retainer that e'er caught his glance

     Would die for him, real dying—no mere talk:

     And in the world, the court, if men would cite

     The perfect spirit of honour, Thorold's name

     Rises of its clear nature to their lips.

     But he should take men's homage, trust in it,

     And care no more about what drew it down.

     He has desert, and that, acknowledgment;

     Is he content?

     MILDRED.        You wrong him, Guendolen.

     GUENDOLEN.  He's proud, confess; so proud with brooding o'er

     The light of his interminable line,

     An ancestry with men all paladins,

     And women all...

     MILDRED.          Dear Guendolen, 'tis late!

     When yonder purple pane the climbing moon

     Pierces, I know 'tis midnight.

     GUENDOLEN.                      Well, that Thorold

     Should rise up from such musings, and receive

     One come audaciously to graft himself

     Into this peerless stock, yet find no flaw,

     No slightest spot in such an one...

     MILDRED.                             Who finds

     A spot in Mertoun?

     GUENDOLEN.          Not your brother; therefore,

     Not the whole world.

     MILDRED.              I am weary, Guendolen.

     Bear with me!

     GUENDOLEN.     I am foolish.

     MILDRED.                      Oh no, kind!

     But I would rest.

     GUENDOLEN.         Good night and rest to you!

     I said how gracefully his mantle lay

     Beneath the rings of his light hair?

     MILDRED.                              Brown hair.

     GUENDOLEN.  Brown? why, it IS brown:  how could you know that?

     MILDRED.  How? did not you—Oh, Austin 'twas, declared

     His hair was light, not brown—my head!—and look,

     The moon-beam purpling the dark chamber!  Sweet,

     Good night!

     GUENDOLEN.  Forgive me—sleep the soundlier for me!

          [Going, she turns suddenly.]

                                                          Mildred!

     Perdition! all's discovered!  Thorold finds

     —That the Earl's greatest of all grandmothers

     Was grander daughter still—to that fair dame

     Whose garter slipped down at the famous dance!

          [Goes.]

     MILDRED.  Is she—can she be really gone at last?

     My heart!  I shall not reach the window.  Needs

     Must I have sinned much, so to suffer.

          [She lifts the small lamp which is suspended before the Virgin's

           image in the window, and places it by the purple pane.]

                                             There!

          [She returns to the seat in front.]

     Mildred and Mertoun!  Mildred, with consent

     Of all the world and Thorold, Mertoun's bride!

     Too late!  'Tis sweet to think of, sweeter still

     To hope for, that this blessed end soothes up

     The curse of the beginning; but I know

     It comes too late:  'twill sweetest be of all

     To dream my soul away and die upon.

          [A noise without.]

     The voice!  Oh why, why glided sin the snake

     Into the paradise Heaven meant us both?

          [The window opens softly.  A low voice sings.]

       There's a woman like a dew-drop, she's so purer than the purest;

       And her noble heart's the noblest, yes, and her sure faith's the

         surest:

       And her eyes are dark and humid, like the depth on depth of lustre

       Hid i' the harebell, while her tresses, sunnier than the wild-grape

         cluster,

       Gush in golden tinted plenty down her neck's rose-misted marble:

       Then her voice's music... call it the well's bubbling, the bird's

         warble!

          [A figure wrapped in a mantle appears at the window.]

       And this woman says, "My days were sunless and my nights were

         moonless,

       Parched the pleasant April herbage, and the lark's heart's outbreak

         tuneless,

       If you loved me not!"  And I who—(ah, for words of flame!) adore

         her,

       Who am mad to lay my spirit prostrate palpably before her—

          [He enters, approaches her seat, and bends over her.]

       I may enter at her portal soon, as now her lattice takes me,

       And by noontide as by midnight make her mine, as hers she makes me!

          [The EARL throws off his slouched hat and long cloak.]

     My very heart sings, so I sing, Beloved!

     MILDRED.  Sit, Henry—do not take my hand!

     MERTOUN.                                    'Tis mine.

     The meeting that appalled us both so much

     Is ended.

     MILDRED.   What begins now?

     MERTOUN.                     Happiness

     Such as the world contains not.

     MILDRED.                         That is it.

     Our happiness would, as you say, exceed

     The whole world's best of blisses:  we—do we

     Deserve that?  Utter to your soul, what mine

     Long since, Beloved, has grown used to hear,

     Like a death-knell, so much regarded once,

     And so familiar now; this will not be!

     MERTOUN.  Oh, Mildred, have I met your brother's face?

     Compelled myself—if not to speak untruth,

     Yet to disguise, to shun, to put aside

     The truth, as—what had e'er prevailed on me

     Save you to venture?  Have I gained at last

     Your brother, the one scarer of your dreams,

     And waking thoughts' sole apprehension too?

     Does a new life, like a young sunrise, break

     On the strange unrest of our night, confused

     With rain and stormy flaw—and will you see

     No dripping blossoms, no fire-tinted drops

     On each live spray, no vapour steaming up,

     And no expressless glory in the East?

     When I am by you, to be ever by you,

     When I have won you and may worship you,

     Oh, Mildred, can you say "this will not be"?

     MILDRED.  Sin has surprised us, so will punishment.

     MERTOUN.  No—me alone, who sinned alone!

     MILDRED.                                   The night

     You likened our past life to—was it storm

     Throughout to you then, Henry?

     MERTOUN.                        Of your life

     I spoke—what am I, what my life, to waste

     A thought about when you are by me?—you

     It was, I said my folly called the storm

     And pulled the night upon.  'Twas day with me—

     Perpetual dawn with me.

     MILDRED.                 Come what, come will,

     You have been happy:  take my hand!

     MERTOUN [after a pause].             How good

     Your brother is!  I figured him a cold—

     Shall I say, haughty man?

     MILDRED.                   They told me all.

     I know all.

     MERTOUN.     It will soon be over.

     MILDRED.                            Over?

     Oh, what is over? what must I live through

     And say, "'tis over"?  Is our meeting over?

     Have I received in presence of them all

     The partner of my guilty love—with brow

     Trying to seem a maiden's brow—with lips

     Which make believe that when they strive to form

     Replies to you and tremble as they strive,

     It is the nearest ever they approached

     A stranger's... Henry, yours that stranger's... lip—

     With cheek that looks a virgin's, and that is...

     Ah God, some prodigy of thine will stop

     This planned piece of deliberate wickedness

     In its birth even! some fierce leprous spot

     Will mar the brow's dissimulating!  I

     Shall murmur no smooth speeches got by heart,

     But, frenzied, pour forth all our woeful story,

     The love, the shame, and the despair—with them

     Round me aghast as round some cursed fount

     That should spirt water, and spouts blood.  I'll not

    ...Henry, you do not wish that I should draw

     This vengeance down?  I'll not affect a grace

     That's gone from me—gone once, and gone for ever!

     MERTOUN.  Mildred, my honour is your own.  I'll share

     Disgrace I cannot suffer by myself.

     A word informs your brother I retract

     This morning's offer; time will yet bring forth

     Some better way of saving both of us.

     MILDRED.  I'll meet their faces, Henry!

     MERTOUN.                                 When? to-morrow!

     Get done with it!

     MILDRED.           Oh, Henry, not to-morrow!

     Next day!  I never shall prepare my words

     And looks and gestures sooner.—How you must

     Despise me!

     MERTOUN.     Mildred, break it if you choose,

     A heart the love of you uplifted—still

     Uplifts, thro' this protracted agony,

     To heaven! but Mildred, answer me,—first pace

     The chamber with me—once again—now, say

     Calmly the part, the... what it is of me

     You see contempt (for you did say contempt)

     —Contempt for you in!  I would pluck it off

     And cast it from me!—but no—no, you'll not

     Repeat that?—will you, Mildred, repeat that?

     MILDRED.  Dear Henry!

     MERTOUN.               I was scarce a boy—e'en now

     What am I more?  And you were infantine

     When first I met you; why, your hair fell loose

     On either side!  My fool's-cheek reddens now

     Only in the recalling how it burned

     That morn to see the shape of many a dream

     —You know we boys are prodigal of charms

     To her we dream of—I had heard of one,

     Had dreamed of her, and I was close to her,

     Might speak to her, might live and die her own,

     Who knew?  I spoke.  Oh, Mildred, feel you not

     That now, while I remember every glance

     Of yours, each word of yours, with power to test

     And weigh them in the diamond scales of pride,

     Resolved the treasure of a first and last

     Heart's love shall have been bartered at its worth,

     —That now I think upon your purity

     And utter ignorance of guilt—your own

     Or other's guilt—the girlish undisguised

     Delight at a strange novel prize—(I talk

     A silly language, but interpret, you!)

     If I, with fancy at its full, and reason

     Scarce in its germ, enjoined you secrecy,

     If you had pity on my passion, pity

     On my protested sickness of the soul

     To sit beside you, hear you breathe, and watch

     Your eyelids and the eyes beneath—if you

     Accorded gifts and knew not they were gifts—

     If I grew mad at last with enterprise

     And must behold my beauty in her bower

     Or perish—(I was ignorant of even

     My own desires—what then were you?) if sorrow—

     Sin—if the end came—must I now renounce

     My reason, blind myself to light, say truth

     Is false and lie to God and my own soul?

     Contempt were all of this!

     MILDRED.                    Do you believe...

     Or, Henry, I'll not wrong you—you believe

     That I was ignorant.  I scarce grieve o'er

     The past.  We'll love on; you will love me still.

     MERTOUN.  Oh, to love less what one has injured!  Dove,

     Whose pinion I have rashly hurt, my breast—

     Shall my heart's warmth not nurse thee into strength?

     Flower I have crushed, shall I not care for thee?

     Bloom o'er my crest, my fight-mark and device!

     Mildred, I love you and you love me.

     MILDRED.                              Go!

     Be that your last word.  I shall sleep to-night.

     MERTOUN.  This is not our last meeting?

     MILDRED.                                 One night more.

     MERTOUN.  And then—think, then!

     MILDRED.                          Then, no sweet courtship-days,

     No dawning consciousness of love for us,

     No strange and palpitating births of sense

     From words and looks, no innocent fears and hopes,

     Reserves and confidences:  morning's over!

     MERTOUN.  How else should love's perfected noontide follow?

     All the dawn promised shall the day perform.

     MILDRED.  So may it be! but—

                                    You are cautious, Love?

     Are sure that unobserved you scaled the walls?

     MERTOUN.  Oh, trust me!  Then our final meeting's fixed

     To-morrow night?

     MILDRED.          Farewell! stay, Henry... wherefore?

     His foot is on the yew-tree bough; the turf

     Receives him:  now the moonlight as he runs

     Embraces him—but he must go—is gone.

     Ah, once again he turns—thanks, thanks, my Love!

     He's gone.  Oh, I'll believe him every word!

     I was so young, I loved him so, I had

     No mother, God forgot me, and I fell.

     There may be pardon yet:  all's doubt beyond!

     Surely the bitterness of death is past.

ACT II

          SCENE.—The Library

          Enter LORD TRESHAM, hastily

     TRESHAM.  This way!  In, Gerard, quick!

          [As GERARD enters, TRESHAM secures the door.]

                                              Now speak! or, wait—

     I'll bid you speak directly.

          [Seats himself.]

                                   Now repeat

     Firmly and circumstantially the tale

     You just now told me; it eludes me; either

     I did not listen, or the half is gone

     Away from me.  How long have you lived here?

     Here in my house, your father kept our woods

     Before you?

     GERARD.      —As his father did, my lord.

     I have been eating, sixty years almost,

     Your bread.

     TRESHAM.  Yes, yes.  You ever were of all

     The servants in my father's house, I know,

     The trusted one.  You'll speak the truth.

     GERARD.                                    I'll speak

     God's truth.  Night after night...

     TRESHAM.                            Since when?

     GERARD.                                          At least

     A month—each midnight has some man access

     To Lady Mildred's chamber.

     TRESHAM.                    Tush, "access"—

     No wide words like "access" to me!

     GERARD.                             He runs

     Along the woodside, crosses to the South,

     Takes the left tree that ends the avenue...

     TRESHAM.  The last great yew-tree?

     GERARD.                             You might stand upon

     The main boughs like a platform.  Then he...

     TRESHAM.                                      Quick!

     GERARD.  Climbs up, and, where they lessen at the top,

     —I cannot see distinctly, but he throws,

     I think—for this I do not vouch—a line

     That reaches to the lady's casement—

     TRESHAM.                               —Which

     He enters not!  Gerard, some wretched fool

     Dares pry into my sister's privacy!

     When such are young, it seems a precious thing

     To have approached,—to merely have approached,

     Got sight of the abode of her they set

     Their frantic thoughts upon.  Ha does not enter?

     Gerard?

     GERARD.  There is a lamp that's full i' the midst.

     Under a red square in the painted glass

     Of Lady Mildred's...

     TRESHAM.              Leave that name out!  Well?

     That lamp?

     GERARD.  Is moved at midnight higher up

     To one pane—a small dark-blue pane; he waits

     For that among the boughs:  at sight of that,

     I see him, plain as I see you, my lord,

     Open the lady's casement, enter there...

     TRESHAM.  —And stay?

     GERARD.                An hour, two hours.

     TRESHAM.                                    And this you saw

     Once?—twice?—quick!

     GERARD.                Twenty times.

     TRESHAM.                              And what brings you

     Under the yew-trees?

     GERARD.               The first night I left

     My range so far, to track the stranger stag

     That broke the pale, I saw the man.

     TRESHAM.                             Yet sent

     No cross-bow shaft through the marauder?

     GERARD.                                   But

     He came, my lord, the first time he was seen,

     In a great moonlight, light as any day,

     FROM Lady Mildred's chamber.

     TRESHAM [after a pause].      You have no cause

     —Who could have cause to do my sister wrong?

     GERARD.  Oh, my lord, only once—let me this once

     Speak what is on my mind!  Since first I noted

     All this, I've groaned as if a fiery net

     Plucked me this way and that—fire if I turned

     To her, fire if I turned to you, and fire

     If down I flung myself and strove to die.

     The lady could not have been seven years old

     When I was trusted to conduct her safe

     Through the deer-herd to stroke the snow-white fawn

     I brought to eat bread from her tiny hand

     Within a month.  She ever had a smile

     To greet me with—she... if it could undo

     What's done, to lop each limb from off this trunk...

     All that is foolish talk, not fit for you—

     I mean, I could not speak and bring her hurt

     For Heaven's compelling.  But when I was fixed

     To hold my peace, each morsel of your food

     Eaten beneath your roof, my birth-place too,

     Choked me.  I wish I had grown mad in doubts

     What it behoved me do.  This morn it seemed

     Either I must confess to you or die:

     Now it is done, I seem the vilest worm

     That crawls, to have betrayed my lady.

     TRESHAM.                                No—

     No, Gerard!

     GERARD.      Let me go!

     TRESHAM.                 A man, you say:

     What man?  Young?  Not a vulgar hind?  What dress?

     GERARD.  A slouched hat and a large dark foreign cloak

     Wraps his whole form; even his face is hid;

     But I should judge him young:  no hind, be sure!

     TRESHAM.  Why?

     GERARD.         He is ever armed:  his sword projects

     Beneath the cloak.

     TRESHAM.            Gerard,—I will not say

     No word, no breath of this!

     GERARD.                      Thank, thanks, my lord!

          [Goes.]

     TRESHAM [paces the room.  After a pause].

     Oh, thoughts absurd!—as with some monstrous fact

     Which, when ill thoughts beset us, seems to give

     Merciful God that made the sun and stars,

     The waters and the green delights of earth,

     The lie!  I apprehend the monstrous fact—

     Yet know the maker of all worlds is good,

     And yield my reason up, inadequate

     To reconcile what yet I do behold—

     Blasting my sense!  There's cheerful day outside:

     This is my library, and this the chair

     My father used to sit in carelessly

     After his soldier-fashion, while I stood

     Between his knees to question him:  and here

     Gerard our grey retainer,—as he says,

     Fed with our food, from sire to son, an age,—

     Has told a story—I am to believe!

     That Mildred... oh, no, no! both tales are true,

     Her pure cheek's story and the forester's!

     Would she, or could she, err—much less, confound

     All guilts of treachery, of craft, of... Heaven

     Keep me within its hand!—I will sit here

     Until thought settle and I see my course.

     Avert, oh God, only this woe from me!

          [As he sinks his head between his arms on the table,

           GUENDOLEN'S voice is heard at the door.]

     Lord Tresham!

           [She knocks.]

                    Is Lord Tresham there?

          [TRESHAM, hastily turning, pulls down the first book

           above him and opens it.]

     TRESHAM.                               Come in!

          [She enters.]

     Ha, Guendolen!—good morning.

     GUENDOLEN.                     Nothing more?

     TRESHAM.  What should I say more?

     GUENDOLEN.  Pleasant question! more?

     This more.  Did I besiege poor Mildred's brain

     Last night till close on morning with "the Earl,"

     "The Earl"—whose worth did I asseverate

     Till I am very fain to hope that... Thorold,

     What is all this?  You are not well!

     TRESHAM.                              Who, I?

     You laugh at me.

     GUENDOLEN.        Has what I'm fain to hope,

     Arrived then?  Does that huge tome show some blot

     In the Earl's 'scutcheon come no longer back

     Than Arthur's time?

     TRESHAM.             When left you Mildred's chamber?

     GUENDOLEN.  Oh, late enough, I told you!  The main thing

     To ask is, how I left her chamber,—sure,

     Content yourself, she'll grant this paragon

     Of Earls no such ungracious...

     TRESHAM.                        Send her here!

     GUENDOLEN.  Thorold?

     TRESHAM.              I mean—acquaint her, Guendolen,

     —But mildly!

     GUENDOLEN.     Mildly?

     TRESHAM.                Ah, you guessed aright!

     I am not well:  there is no hiding it.

     But tell her I would see her at her leisure—

     That is, at once! here in the library!

     The passage in that old Italian book

     We hunted for so long is found, say, found—

     And if I let it slip again... you see,

     That she must come—and instantly!

     GUENDOLEN.                          I'll die

     Piecemeal, record that, if there have not gloomed

     Some blot i' the 'scutcheon!

     TRESHAM.                      Go! or, Guendolen,

     Be you at call,—With Austin, if you choose,—

     In the adjoining gallery!  There go!

          [GUENDOLEN goes.]

     Another lesson to me!  You might bid

     A child disguise his heart's sore, and conduct

     Some sly investigation point by point

     With a smooth brow, as well as bid me catch

     The inquisitorial cleverness some praise.

     If you had told me yesterday, "There's one

     You needs must circumvent and practise with,

     Entrap by policies, if you would worm

     The truth out:  and that one is—Mildred!"  There,

     There—reasoning is thrown away on it!

     Prove she's unchaste... why, you may after prove

     That she's a poisoner, traitress, what you will!

     Where I can comprehend nought, nought's to say,

     Or do, or think.  Force on me but the first

     Abomination,—then outpour all plagues,

     And I shall ne'er make count of them.

          Enter MILDRED

     MILDRED.                               What book

     Is it I wanted, Thorold?  Guendolen

     Thought you were pale; you are not pale.  That book?

     That's Latin surely.

     TRESHAM.              Mildred, here's a line,

     (Don't lean on me:  I'll English it for you)

     "Love conquers all things."  What love conquers them?

     What love should you esteem—best love?

     MILDRED.                                 True love.

     TRESHAM.  I mean, and should have said, whose love is best

     Of all that love or that profess to love?

     MILDRED.

     The list's so long:  there's father's, mother's, husband's...

     TRESHAM.  Mildred, I do believe a brother's love

     For a sole sister must exceed them all.

     For see now, only see! there's no alloy

     Of earth that creeps into the perfect'st gold

     Of other loves—no gratitude to claim;

     You never gave her life, not even aught

     That keeps life—never tended her, instructed,

     Enriched her—so, your love can claim no right

     O'er her save pure love's claim:  that's what I call

     Freedom from earthliness.  You'll never hope

     To be such friends, for instance, she and you,

     As when you hunted cowslips in the woods,

     Or played together in the meadow hay.

     Oh yes—with age, respect comes, and your worth

     Is felt, there's growing sympathy of tastes,

     There's ripened friendship, there's confirmed esteem:

     —Much head these make against the newcomer!

     The startling apparition, the strange youth—

     Whom one half-hour's conversing with, or, say,

     Mere gazing at, shall change (beyond all change

     This Ovid ever sang about) your soul

    ...Her soul, that is,—the sister's soul!  With her

     'Twas winter yesterday; now, all is warmth,

     The green leaf's springing and the turtle's voice,

     "Arise and come away!"  Come whither?—far

     Enough from the esteem, respect, and all

     The brother's somewhat insignificant

     Array of rights!  All which he knows before,

     Has calculated on so long ago!

     I think such love, (apart from yours and mine,)

     Contented with its little term of life,

     Intending to retire betimes, aware

     How soon the background must be placed for it,

     —I think, am sure, a brother's love exceeds

     All the world's love in its unworldliness.

     MILDRED.  What is this for?

     TRESHAM.                     This, Mildred, is it for!

     Or, no, I cannot go to it so soon!

     That's one of many points my haste left out—

     Each day, each hour throws forth its silk-slight film

     Between the being tied to you by birth,

     And you, until those slender threads compose

     A web that shrouds her daily life of hopes

     And fears and fancies, all her life, from yours:

     So close you live and yet so far apart!

     And must I rend this web, tear up, break down

     The sweet and palpitating mystery

     That makes her sacred?  You—for you I mean,

     Shall I speak, shall I not speak?

     MILDRED.                           Speak!

     TRESHAM.                                   I will.

     Is there a story men could—any man

     Could tell of you, you would conceal from me?

     I'll never think there's falsehood on that lip.

     Say "There is no such story men could tell,"

     And I'll believe you, though I disbelieve

     The world—the world of better men than I,

     And women such as I suppose you.  Speak!

          [After a pause.]

     Not speak?  Explain then!  Clear it up then!  Move

     Some of the miserable weight away

     That presses lower than the grave.  Not speak?

     Some of the dead weight, Mildred!  Ah, if I

     Could bring myself to plainly make their charge

     Against you!  Must I, Mildred?  Silent still?

          [After a pause.]

     Is there a gallant that has night by night

     Admittance to your chamber?

          [After a pause.]

                                  Then, his name!

     Till now, I only had a thought for you:

     But now,—his name!

     MILDRED.  Thorold, do you devise

     Fit expiation for my guilt, if fit

     There be!  'Tis nought to say that I'll endure

     And bless you,—that my spirit yearns to purge

     Her stains off in the fierce renewing fire:

     But do not plunge me into other guilt!

     Oh, guilt enough!  I cannot tell his name.

     TRESHAM.  Then judge yourself!  How should I act?  Pronounce!

     MILDRED.  Oh, Thorold, you must never tempt me thus!

     To die here in this chamber by that sword

     Would seem like punishment:  so should I glide,

     Like an arch-cheat, into extremest bliss!

     'Twere easily arranged for me:  but you—

     What would become of you?

     TRESHAM.                   And what will now

     Become of me?  I'll hide your shame and mine

     From every eye; the dead must heave their hearts

     Under the marble of our chapel-floor;

     They cannot rise and blast you.  You may wed

     Your paramour above our mother's tomb;

     Our mother cannot move from 'neath your foot.

     We too will somehow wear this one day out:

     But with to-morrow hastens here—the Earl!

     The youth without suspicion.  Face can come

     From Heaven and heart from... whence proceed such hearts?

     I have dispatched last night at your command

     A missive bidding him present himself

     To-morrow—here—thus much is said; the rest

     Is understood as if 'twere written down—

     "His suit finds favor in your eyes."  Now dictate

     This morning's letter that shall countermand

     Last night's—do dictate that!

     MILDRED.                        But, Thorold—if

     I will receive him as I said?

     TRESHAM.                       The Earl?

     MILDRED.  I will receive him.

     TRESHAM [starting up].         Ho there!  Guendolen!

          GUENDOLEN and AUSTIN enter

     And, Austin, you are welcome, too!  Look there!

     The woman there!

     AUSTIN and GUENDOLEN.  How?  Mildred?

     TRESHAM.                               Mildred once!

     Now the receiver night by night, when sleep

     Blesses the inmates of her father's house,

     —I say, the soft sly wanton that receives

     Her guilt's accomplice 'neath this roof which holds

     You, Guendolen, you, Austin, and has held

     A thousand Treshams—never one like her!

     No lighter of the signal-lamp her quick

     Foul breath near quenches in hot eagerness

     To mix with breath as foul! no loosener

     O' the lattice, practised in the stealthy tread,

     The low voice and the noiseless come-and-go!

     Not one composer of the bacchant's mien

     Into—what you thought Mildred's, in a word!

     Know her!

     GUENDOLEN.  Oh, Mildred, look to me, at least!

     Thorold—she's dead, I'd say, but that she stands

     Rigid as stone and whiter!

     TRESHAM.                    You have heard...

     GUENDOLEN.  Too much!  You must proceed no further.

     MILDRED.                                             Yes—

     Proceed!  All's truth.  Go from me!

     TRESHAM.                             All is truth,

     She tells you!  Well, you know, or ought to know,

     All this I would forgive in her.  I'd con

     Each precept the harsh world enjoins, I'd take

     Our ancestors' stern verdicts one by one,

     I'd bind myself before then to exact

     The prescribed vengeance—and one word of hers,

     The sight of her, the bare least memory

     Of Mildred, my one sister, my heart's pride

     Above all prides, my all in all so long,

     Would scatter every trace of my resolve.

     What were it silently to waste away

     And see her waste away from this day forth,

     Two scathed things with leisure to repent,

     And grow acquainted with the grave, and die

     Tired out if not at peace, and be forgotten?

     It were not so impossible to bear.

     But this—that, fresh from last night's pledge renewed

     Of love with the successful gallant there,

     She calmly bids me help her to entice,

     Inveigle an unconscious trusting youth

     Who thinks her all that's chaste and good and pure,

     —Invites me to betray him... who so fit

     As honour's self to cover shame's arch-deed?

     —That she'll receive Lord Mertoun—(her own phrase)—

     This, who could bear?  Why, you have heard of thieves,

     Stabbers, the earth's disgrace, who yet have laughed,

     "Talk not to me of torture—I'll betray

     No comrade I've pledged faith to!"—you have heard

     Of wretched women—all but Mildreds—tied

     By wild illicit ties to losels vile

     You'd tempt them to forsake; and they'll reply

     "Gold, friends, repute, I left for him, I find

     In him, why should I leave him then, for gold,

     Repute or friends?"—and you have felt your heart

     Respond to such poor outcasts of the world

     As to so many friends; bad as you please,

     You've felt they were God's men and women still,

     So, not to be disowned by you.  But she

     That stands there, calmly gives her lover up

     As means to wed the Earl that she may hide

     Their intercourse the surelier:  and, for this,

     I curse her to her face before you all.

     Shame hunt her from the earth!  Then Heaven do right

     To both!  It hears me now—shall judge her then!

          [AS MILDRED faints and falls, TRESHAM rushes out.]

     AUSTIN.  Stay, Tresham, we'll accompany you!

     GUENDOLEN.                                    We?

     What, and leave Mildred?  We?  Why, where's my place

     But by her side, and where yours but by mine?

     Mildred—one word!  Only look at me, then!

     AUSTIN.  No, Guendolen!  I echo Thorold's voice.

     She is unworthy to behold...

     GUENDOLEN.                    Us two?

     If you spoke on reflection, and if I

     Approved your speech—if you (to put the thing

     At lowest) you the soldier, bound to make

     The king's cause yours and fight for it, and throw

     Regard to others of its right or wrong,

     —If with a death-white woman you can help,

     Let alone sister, let alone a Mildred,

     You left her—or if I, her cousin, friend

     This morning, playfellow but yesterday,

     Who said, or thought at least a thousand times,

     "I'd serve you if I could," should now face round

     And say, "Ah, that's to only signify

     I'd serve you while you're fit to serve yourself:

     So long as fifty eyes await the turn

     Of yours to forestall its yet half-formed wish,

     I'll proffer my assistance you'll not need—

     When every tongue is praising you, I'll join

     The praisers' chorus—when you're hemmed about

     With lives between you and detraction—lives

     To be laid down if a rude voice, rash eye,

     Rough hand should violate the sacred ring

     Their worship throws about you,—then indeed,

     Who'll stand up for you stout as I?"  If so

     We said, and so we did,—not Mildred there

     Would be unworthy to behold us both,

     But we should be unworthy, both of us.

     To be beheld by—by—your meanest dog,

     Which, if that sword were broken in your face

     Before a crowd, that badge torn off your breast,

     And you cast out with hooting and contempt,

     —Would push his way thro' all the hooters, gain

     Your side, go off with you and all your shame

     To the next ditch you choose to die in!  Austin,

     Do you love me?  Here's Austin, Mildred,—here's

     Your brother says he does not believe half—

     No, nor half that—of all he heard!  He says,

     Look up and take his hand!

     AUSTIN.                     Look up and take

     My hand, dear Mildred!

     MILDRED.                I—I was so young!

     Beside, I loved him, Thorold—and I had

     No mother; God forgot me:  so, I fell.

     GUENDOLEN.  Mildred!

     MILDRED.              Require no further!  Did I dream

     That I could palliate what is done?  All's true.

     Now, punish me!  A woman takes my hand?

     Let go my hand!  You do not know, I see.

     I thought that Thorold told you.

     GUENDOLEN.                        What is this?

     Where start you to?

     MILDRED.             Oh, Austin, loosen me!

     You heard the whole of it—your eyes were worse,

     In their surprise, than Thorold's!  Oh, unless

     You stay to execute his sentence, loose

     My hand!  Has Thorold gone, and are you here?

     GUENDOLEN.  Here, Mildred, we two friends of yours will wait

     Your bidding; be you silent, sleep or muse!

     Only, when you shall want your bidding done,

     How can we do it if we are not by?

     Here's Austin waiting patiently your will!

     One spirit to command, and one to love

     And to believe in it and do its best,

     Poor as that is, to help it—why, the world

     Has been won many a time, its length and breadth,

     By just such a beginning!

     MILDRED.                   I believe

     If once I threw my arms about your neck

     And sunk my head upon your breast, that I

     Should weep again.

     GUENDOLEN.          Let go her hand now, Austin!

     Wait for me.  Pace the gallery and think

     On the world's seemings and realities,

     Until I call you.

          [AUSTIN goes.]

     MILDRED.  No—I cannot weep.

     No more tears from this brain—no sleep—no tears!

     O Guendolen, I love you!

     GUENDOLEN.                Yes:  and "love"

     Is a short word that says so very much!

     It says that you confide in me.

     MILDRED.                         Confide!

     GUENDOLEN.  Your lover's name, then!  I've so much to learn,

     Ere I can work in your behalf!

     MILDRED.                        My friend,

     You know I cannot tell his name.

     GUENDOLEN.                        At least

     He is your lover? and you love him too?

     MILDRED.  Ah, do you ask me that,—but I am fallen

     So low!

     GUENDOLEN.  You love him still, then?

     MILDRED.                               My sole prop

     Against the guilt that crushes me!  I say,

     Each night ere I lie down, "I was so young—

     I had no mother, and I loved him so!"

     And then God seems indulgent, and I dare

     Trust him my soul in sleep.

     GUENDOLEN.                   How could you let us

     E'en talk to you about Lord Mertoun then?

     MILDRED.  There is a cloud around me.

     GUENDOLEN.                             But you said

     You would receive his suit in spite of this?

     MILDRED.  I say there is a cloud...

     GUENDOLEN.                           No cloud to me!

     Lord Mertoun and your lover are the same!

     MILDRED.  What maddest fancy...

     GUENDOLEN [calling aloud.] Austin! (spare your pains—

     When I have got a truth, that truth I keep)—

     MILDRED.  By all you love, sweet Guendolen, forbear!

     Have I confided in you...

     GUENDOLEN.                 Just for this!

     Austin!—Oh, not to guess it at the first!

     But I did guess it—that is, I divined,

     Felt by an instinct how it was:  why else

     Should I pronounce you free from all that heap

     Of sins which had been irredeemable?

     I felt they were not yours—what other way

     Than this, not yours?  The secret's wholly mine!

     MILDRED.  If you would see me die before his face...

     GUENDOLEN.  I'd hold my peace!  And if the Earl returns

     To-night?

     MILDRED.    Ah Heaven, he's lost!

     GUENDOLEN.                         I thought so.  Austin!

          Enter AUSTIN

     Oh, where have you been hiding?

     AUSTIN.                          Thorold's gone,

     I know not how, across the meadow-land.

     I watched him till I lost him in the skirts

     O' the beech-wood.

     GUENDOLEN.          Gone?  All thwarts us.

     MILDRED.                                    Thorold too?

     GUENDOLEN.  I have thought.  First lead this Mildred to her room.

     Go on the other side; and then we'll seek

     Your brother:  and I'll tell you, by the way,

     The greatest comfort in the world.  You said

     There was a clue to all.  Remember, Sweet,

     He said there was a clue!  I hold it.  Come!

ACT III

          SCENE I.—The end of the Yew-tree Avenue under MILDRED'S Window.

          A light seen through a central red pane

          Enter TRESHAM through the trees

     Again here!  But I cannot lose myself.

     The heath—the orchard—I have traversed glades

     And dells and bosky paths which used to lead

     Into green wild-wood depths, bewildering

     My boy's adventurous step.  And now they tend

     Hither or soon or late; the blackest shade

     Breaks up, the thronged trunks of the trees ope wide,

     And the dim turret I have fled from, fronts

     Again my step; the very river put

     Its arm about me and conducted me

     To this detested spot.  Why then, I'll shun

     Their will no longer:  do your will with me!

     Oh, bitter!  To have reared a towering scheme

     Of happiness, and to behold it razed,

     Were nothing:  all men hope, and see their hopes

     Frustrate, and grieve awhile, and hope anew.

     But I... to hope that from a line like ours

     No horrid prodigy like this would spring,

     Were just as though I hoped that from these old

     Confederates against the sovereign day,

     Children of older and yet older sires,

     Whose living coral berries dropped, as now

     On me, on many a baron's surcoat once,

     On many a beauty's whimple—would proceed

     No poison-tree, to thrust, from hell its root,

     Hither and thither its strange snaky arms.

     Why came I here?  What must I do?

          [A bell strikes.]

                                        A bell?

     Midnight! and 'tis at midnight... Ah, I catch

     —Woods, river, plains, I catch your meaning now,

     And I obey you!  Hist!  This tree will serve.

          [He retires behind one of the trees.  After a pause,

           enter MERTOUN cloaked as before.]

     MERTOUN.  Not time!  Beat out thy last voluptuous beat

     Of hope and fear, my heart!  I thought the clock

     I' the chapel struck as I was pushing through

     The ferns.  And so I shall no more see rise

     My love-star!  Oh, no matter for the past!

     So much the more delicious task to watch

     Mildred revive:  to pluck out, thorn by thorn,

     All traces of the rough forbidden path

     My rash love lured her to!  Each day must see

     Some fear of hers effaced, some hope renewed:

     Then there will be surprises, unforeseen

     Delights in store.  I'll not regret the past.

          [The light is placed above in the purple pane.]

     And see, my signal rises, Mildred's star!

     I never saw it lovelier than now

     It rises for the last time.  If it sets,

     'Tis that the re-assuring sun may dawn.

          [As he prepares to ascend the last tree of the avenue,

           TRESHAM arrests his arm.]

     Unhand me—peasant, by your grasp!  Here's gold.

     'Twas a mad freak of mine.  I said I'd pluck

     A branch from the white-blossomed shrub beneath

     The casement there.  Take this, and hold your peace.

     TRESHAM.  Into the moonlight yonder, come with me!

     Out of the shadow!

     MERTOUN.            I am armed, fool!

     TRESHAM.                               Yes,

     Or no?  You'll come into the light, or no?

     My hand is on your throat—refuse!—

     MERTOUN.                              That voice!

     Where have I heard... no—that was mild and slow.

     I'll come with you.

          [They advance.]

     TRESHAM.             You're armed:  that's well.  Declare

     Your name:  who are you?

     MERTOUN.                  (Tresham!—she is lost!)

     TRESHAM.  Oh, silent?  Do you know, you bear yourself

     Exactly as, in curious dreams I've had

     How felons, this wild earth is full of, look

     When they're detected, still your kind has looked!

     The bravo holds an assured countenance,

     The thief is voluble and plausible,

     But silently the slave of lust has crouched

     When I have fancied it before a man.

     Your name!

     MERTOUN.    I do conjure Lord Tresham—ay,

     Kissing his foot, if so I might prevail—

     That he for his own sake forbear to ask

     My name!  As heaven's above, his future weal

     Or woe depends upon my silence!  Vain!

     I read your white inexorable face.

     Know me, Lord Tresham!

          [He throws off his disguises.]

     TRESHAM.                Mertoun!

          [After a pause.]

                                       Draw now!

     MERTOUN.                                     Hear me

     But speak first!

     TRESHAM.          Not one least word on your life!

     Be sure that I will strangle in your throat

     The least word that informs me how you live

     And yet seem what you seem!  No doubt 'twas you

     Taught Mildred still to keep that face and sin.

     We should join hands in frantic sympathy

     If you once taught me the unteachable,

     Explained how you can live so and so lie.

     With God's help I retain, despite my sense,

     The old belief—a life like yours is still

     Impossible.  Now draw!

     MERTOUN.                Not for my sake,

     Do I entreat a hearing—for your sake,

     And most, for her sake!

     TRESHAM.                 Ha, ha, what should I

     Know of your ways?  A miscreant like yourself,

     How must one rouse his ire?  A blow?—that's pride

     No doubt, to him!  One spurns him, does one not?

     Or sets the foot upon his mouth, or spits

     Into his face!  Come!  Which, or all of these?

     MERTOUN.  'Twixt him and me and Mildred, Heaven be judge!

     Can I avoid this?  Have your will, my lord!

          [He draws and, after a few passes, falls.]

     TRESHAM.  You are not hurt?

     MERTOUN.                     You'll hear me now!

     TRESHAM.                                          But rise!

     MERTOUN.  Ah, Tresham, say I not "you'll hear me now!"

     And what procures a man the right to speak

     In his defence before his fellow man,

     But—I suppose—the thought that presently

     He may have leave to speak before his God

     His whole defence?

     TRESHAM.            Not hurt?  It cannot be!

     You made no effort to resist me.  Where

     Did my sword reach you?  Why not have returned

     My thrusts?  Hurt where?

     MERTOUN.  My lord—

     TRESHAM.             How young he is!

     MERTOUN.  Lord Tresham, I am very young, and yet

     I have entangled other lives with mine.

     Do let me speak, and do believe my speech!

     That when I die before you presently,—

     TRESHAM.  Can you stay here till I return with help?

     MERTOUN.  Oh, stay by me!  When I was less than boy

     I did you grievous wrong and knew it not—

     Upon my honour, knew it not!  Once known,

     I could not find what seemed a better way

     To right you than I took:  my life—you feel

     How less than nothing were the giving you

     The life you've taken!  But I thought my way

     The better—only for your sake and hers:

     And as you have decided otherwise,

     Would I had an infinity of lives

     To offer you!  Now say—instruct me—think!

     Can you, from the brief minutes I have left,

     Eke out my reparation?  Oh think—think!

     For I must wring a partial—dare I say,

     Forgiveness from you, ere I die?

     TRESHAM.                          I do

     Forgive you.

     MERTOUN.      Wait and ponder that great word!

     Because, if you forgive me, I shall hope

     To speak to you of—Mildred!

     TRESHAM.                      Mertoun, haste

     And anger have undone us.  'Tis not you

     Should tell me for a novelty you're young,

     Thoughtless, unable to recall the past.

     Be but your pardon ample as my own!

     MERTOUN.  Ah, Tresham, that a sword-stroke and a drop

     Of blood or two, should bring all this about

     Why, 'twas my very fear of you, my love

     Of you—(what passion like a boy's for one

     Like you?)—that ruined me!  I dreamed of you—

     You, all accomplished, courted everywhere,

     The scholar and the gentleman.  I burned

     To knit myself to you:  but I was young,

     And your surpassing reputation kept me

     So far aloof!  Oh, wherefore all that love?

     With less of love, my glorious yesterday

     Of praise and gentlest words and kindest looks,

     Had taken place perchance six months ago.

     Even now, how happy we had been!  And yet

     I know the thought of this escaped you, Tresham!

     Let me look up into your face; I feel

     'Tis changed above me:  yet my eyes are glazed.

     Where? where?

          [As he endeavours to raise himself, his eye catches the lamp.]

                    Ah, Mildred!  What will Mildred do?

     Tresham, her life is bound up in the life

     That's bleeding fast away!  I'll live—must live,

     There, if you'll only turn me I shall live

     And save her!  Tresham—oh, had you but heard!

     Had you but heard!  What right was yours to set

     The thoughtless foot upon her life and mine,

     And then say, as we perish, "Had I thought,

     All had gone otherwise"?  We've sinned and die:

     Never you sin, Lord Tresham! for you'll die,

     And God will judge you.

     TRESHAM.                 Yes, be satisfied!

     That process is begun.

     MERTOUN.                And she sits there

     Waiting for me!  Now, say you this to her—

     You, not another—say, I saw him die

     As he breathed this, "I love her"—you don't know

     What those three small words mean!  Say, loving her

     Lowers me down the bloody slope to death

     With memories... I speak to her, not you,

     Who had no pity, will have no remorse,

     Perchance intend her... Die along with me,

     Dear Mildred! 'tis so easy, and you'll 'scape

     So much unkindness!  Can I lie at rest,

     With rude speech spoken to you, ruder deeds

     Done to you?—heartless men shall have my heart,

     And I tied down with grave-clothes and the worm,

     Aware, perhaps, of every blow—oh God!—

     Upon those lips—yet of no power to tear

     The felon stripe by stripe!  Die, Mildred!  Leave

     Their honourable world to them!  For God

     We're good enough, though the world casts us out.

          [A whistle is heard.]

     TRESHAM.  Ho, Gerard!

          Enter GERARD, AUSTIN and GUENDOLEN, with lights

                            No one speak!  You see what's done.

     I cannot bear another voice.

     MERTOUN.                      There's light—

     Light all about me, and I move to it.

     Tresham, did I not tell you—did you not

     Just promise to deliver words of mine

     To Mildred?

     TRESHAM.     I will bear those words to her.

     MERTOUN.  Now?

     TRESHAM.        Now.  Lift you the body, and leave me

     The head.

          [As they have half raised MERTOUN, he turns suddenly.]

     MERTOUN.  I knew they turned me:  turn me not from her!

     There! stay you! there!

          [Dies.]

     GUENDOLEN [after a pause].  Austin, remain you here

     With Thorold until Gerard comes with help:

     Then lead him to his chamber.  I must go

     To Mildred.

     TRESHAM.  Guendolen, I hear each word

     You utter.  Did you hear him bid me give

     His message?  Did you hear my promise?  I,

     And only I, see Mildred.

     GUENDOLEN.                She will die.

     TRESHAM.  Oh no, she will not die!  I dare not hope

     She'll die.  What ground have you to think she'll die?

     Why, Austin's with you!

     AUSTIN.                  Had we but arrived

     Before you fought!

     TRESHAM.            There was no fight at all.

     He let me slaughter him—the boy!  I'll trust

     The body there to you and Gerard—thus!

     Now bear him on before me.

     AUSTIN.                     Whither bear him?

     TRESHAM.  Oh, to my chamber!  When we meet there next,

     We shall be friends.

          [They bear out the body of MERTOUN.]

                           Will she die, Guendolen?

     GUENDOLEN.  Where are you taking me?

     TRESHAM.                              He fell just here.

     Now answer me.  Shall you in your whole life

     —You who have nought to do with Mertoun's fate,

     Now you have seen his breast upon the turf,

     Shall you e'er walk this way if you can help?

     When you and Austin wander arm-in-arm

     Through our ancestral grounds, will not a shade

     Be ever on the meadow and the waste—

     Another kind of shade than when the night

     Shuts the woodside with all its whispers up?

     But will you ever so forget his breast

     As carelessly to cross this bloody turf

     Under the black yew avenue?  That's well!

     You turn your head:  and I then?—

     GUENDOLEN.                          What is done

     Is done.  My care is for the living.  Thorold,

     Bear up against this burden:  more remains

     To set the neck to!

     TRESHAM.             Dear and ancient trees

     My fathers planted, and I loved so well!

     What have I done that, like some fabled crime

     Of yore, lets loose a Fury leading thus

     Her miserable dance amidst you all?

     Oh, never more for me shall winds intone

     With all your tops a vast antiphony,

     Demanding and responding in God's praise!

     Hers ye are now, not mine!  Farewell—farewell!

          SCENE II.—MILDRED'S Chamber

          MILDRED alone

     He comes not!  I have heard of those who seemed

     Resourceless in prosperity,—you thought

     Sorrow might slay them when she listed; yet

     Did they so gather up their diffused strength

     At her first menace, that they bade her strike,

     And stood and laughed her subtlest skill to scorn.

     Oh, 'tis not so with me!  The first woe fell,

     And the rest fall upon it, not on me:

     Else should I bear that Henry comes not?—fails

     Just this first night out of so many nights?

     Loving is done with.  Were he sitting now,

     As so few hours since, on that seat, we'd love

     No more—contrive no thousand happy ways

     To hide love from the loveless, any more.

     I think I might have urged some little point

     In my defence, to Thorold; he was breathless

     For the least hint of a defence:  but no,

     The first shame over, all that would might fall.

     No Henry!  Yet I merely sit and think

     The morn's deed o'er and o'er.  I must have crept

     Out of myself.  A Mildred that has lost

     Her lover—oh, I dare not look upon

     Such woe!  I crouch away from it!  'Tis she,

     Mildred, will break her heart, not I!  The world

     Forsakes me:  only Henry's left me—left?

     When I have lost him, for he does not come,

     And I sit stupidly... Oh Heaven, break up

     This worse than anguish, this mad apathy,

     By any means or any messenger!

     TRESHAM [without].  Mildred!

     MILDRED.                      Come in!  Heaven hears me!

          [Enter TRESHAM.]

                                                               You? alone?

     Oh, no more cursing!

     TRESHAM.              Mildred, I must sit.

     There—you sit!

     MILDRED.         Say it, Thorold—do not look

     The curse! deliver all you come to say!

     What must become of me?  Oh, speak that thought

     Which makes your brow and cheeks so pale!

     TRESHAM.                                   My thought?

     MILDRED.  All of it!

     TRESHAM.              How we waded years—ago—

     After those water-lilies, till the plash,

     I know not how, surprised us; and you dared

     Neither advance nor turn back:  so, we stood

     Laughing and crying until Gerard came—

     Once safe upon the turf, the loudest too,

     For once more reaching the relinquished prize!

     How idle thoughts are, some men's, dying men's!

     Mildred,—

     MILDRED.  You call me kindlier by my name

     Than even yesterday:  what is in that?

     TRESHAM.  It weighs so much upon my mind that I

     This morning took an office not my own!

     I might... of course, I must be glad or grieved,

     Content or not, at every little thing

     That touches you.  I may with a wrung heart

     Even reprove you, Mildred; I did more:

     Will you forgive me?

     MILDRED.              Thorold? do you mock?

     Oh no... and yet you bid me... say that word!

     TRESHAM.  Forgive me, Mildred!—are you silent, Sweet?

     MILDRED [starting up].  Why does not Henry Mertoun come to-night?

     Are you, too, silent?

          [Dashing his mantle aside, and pointing to his scabbard,

           which is empty.]

                            Ah, this speaks for you!

     You've murdered Henry Mertoun!  Now proceed!

     What is it I must pardon?  This and all?

     Well, I do pardon you—I think I do.

     Thorold, how very wretched you must be!

     TRESHAM.  He bade me tell you...

     MILDRED.                          What I do forbid

     Your utterance of!  So much that you may tell

     And will not—how you murdered him... but, no!

     You'll tell me that he loved me, never more

     Than bleeding out his life there:  must I say

     "Indeed," to that?  Enough!  I pardon you.

     TRESHAM.  You cannot, Mildred! for the harsh words, yes:

     Of this last deed Another's judge:  whose doom

     I wait in doubt, despondency and fear.

     MILDRED.  Oh, true!  There's nought for me to pardon!  True!

     You loose my soul of all its cares at once.

     Death makes me sure of him for ever!  You

     Tell me his last words?  He shall tell me them,

     And take my answer—not in words, but reading

     Himself the heart I had to read him late,

     Which death...

     TRESHAM.        Death?  You are dying too?  Well said

     Of Guendolen!  I dared not hope you'd die:

     But she was sure of it.

     MILDRED.                 Tell Guendolen

     I loved her, and tell Austin...

     TRESHAM.                         Him you loved:

     And me?

     MILDRED.  Ah, Thorold!  Was't not rashly done

     To quench that blood, on fire with youth and hope

     And love of me—whom you loved too, and yet

     Suffered to sit here waiting his approach

     While you were slaying him?  Oh, doubtlessly

     You let him speak his poor confused boy's-speech

     —Do his poor utmost to disarm your wrath

     And respite me!—you let him try to give

     The story of our love and ignorance,

     And the brief madness and the long despair—

     You let him plead all this, because your code

     Of honour bids you hear before you strike:

     But at the end, as he looked up for life

     Into your eyes—you struck him down!

     TRESHAM.                              No!  No!

     Had I but heard him—had I let him speak

     Half the truth—less—had I looked long on him

     I had desisted!  Why, as he lay there,

     The moon on his flushed cheek, I gathered all

     The story ere he told it:  I saw through

     The troubled surface of his crime and yours

     A depth of purity immovable,

     Had I but glanced, where all seemed turbidest

     Had gleamed some inlet to the calm beneath;

     I would not glance:  my punishment's at hand.

     There, Mildred, is the truth! and you—say on—

     You curse me?

     MILDRED.       As I dare approach that Heaven

     Which has not bade a living thing despair,

     Which needs no code to keep its grace from stain,

     But bids the vilest worm that turns on it

     Desist and be forgiven,—I—forgive not,

     But bless you, Thorold, from my soul of souls!

          [Falls on his neck.]

     There!  Do not think too much upon the past!

     The cloud that's broke was all the same a cloud

     While it stood up between my friend and you;

     You hurt him 'neath its shadow:  but is that

     So past retrieve?  I have his heart, you know;

     I may dispose of it:  I give it you!

     It loves you as mine loves!  Confirm me, Henry!

          [Dies.]

     TRESHAM.  I wish thee joy, Beloved!  I am glad

     In thy full gladness!

     GUENDOLEN [without].  Mildred!  Tresham!

          [Entering with AUSTIN.]

                                               Thorold,

     I could desist no longer.  Ah, she swoons!

     That's well.

     TRESHAM.       Oh, better far than that!

     GUENDOLEN.                                She's dead!

     Let me unlock her arms!

     TRESHAM.                 She threw them thus

     About my neck, and blessed me, and then died:

     You'll let them stay now, Guendolen!

     AUSTIN.                               Leave her

     And look to him!  What ails you, Thorold?

     GUENDOLEN.                                 White

     As she, and whiter!  Austin! quick—this side!

     AUSTIN.  A froth is oozing through his clenched teeth;

     Both lips, where they're not bitten through, are black:

     Speak, dearest Thorold!

     TRESHAM.  Something does weigh down

     My neck beside her weight:  thanks:  I should fall

     But for you, Austin, I believe!—there, there,

     'Twill pass away soon!—ah,—I had forgotten:

     I am dying.

     GUENDOLEN.  Thorold—Thorold—why was this?

     TRESHAM.  I said, just as I drank the poison off,

     The earth would be no longer earth to me,

     The life out of all life was gone from me.

     There are blind ways provided, the fore-done

     Heart-weary player in this pageant-world

     Drops out by, letting the main masque defile

     By the conspicuous portal:  I am through—

     Just through!

     GUENDOLEN.  Don't leave him, Austin!  Death is close.

     TRESHAM.  Already Mildred's face is peacefuller,

     I see you, Austin—feel you; here's my hand,

     Put yours in it—you, Guendolen, yours too!

     You're lord and lady now—you're Treshams; name

     And fame are yours:  you hold our 'scutcheon up.

     Austin, no blot on it!  You see how blood

     Must wash one blot away:  the first blot came

     And the first blood came.  To the vain world's eye

     All's gules again:  no care to the vain world,

     From whence the red was drawn!

     AUSTIN.  No blot shall come!

     TRESHAM.  I said that:  yet it did come.  Should it come,

     Vengeance is God's, not man's.  Remember me!

          [Dies.]

     GUENDOLEN [letting fall the pulseless arm].

     Ah, Thorold, we can but—remember you!

     The End