Abides'-the grisly train of woe

Shuns like the pest the breezy hill,

To haunt the smoky marts below.

BERENGAR, BOHEMUND, and MANFRED.

On the mountains is freedom! the breath of decay

Never sullies the fresh flowing air;

Oh, Nature is perfect wherever we stray;

'Tis man that deforms it with care.

The whole Chorus repeats.

On the mountains is freedom, etc., etc.

DON CAESAR, the Chorus.

DON CAESAR (more collected).

I use the princely rights-'tis the last time-

To give this body to the ground, and pay

Fit honors to the dead. So mark, my friends,

My bosom's firm resolve, and quick fulfil

Your lord's behest. Fresh in your memory lives

The mournful pomp, when to the tomb ye bore

So late my royal sire; scarce in these halls

Are stilled the echoes of the funeral wail;

Another corpse succeeds, and in the grave

Weighs down its fellow-dust-almost our torch

With borrowed lustre from the last, may pierce

The monumental gloom; and on the stair,

Blends in one throng confused two mourning trains.

Then in the sacred royal dome that guards

The ashes of my sire, prepare with speed

The funeral rites; unseen of mortal eye,

And noiseless be your task-let all be graced,

As then, with circumstances of kingly state.

BOHEMUND.

My prince, it shall be quickly done; for still

Upreared, the gorgeous catafalque recalls

The dread solemnity; no hand disturbed

The edifice of death.

DON CAESAR.

The yawning grave

Amid the haunts of life? No goodly sign

Was this: the rites fulfilled, why lingered yet

The trappings of the funeral show?

BOHEMUND.

Your strife

With fresh embittered hate o'er all Messina

Woke discord's maddening flames, and from the deed

Our cares withdrew-so resolute remained,

And closed the sanctuary.

DON CAESAR.

Make no delay;

This very night fulfil your task, for well

Beseems the midnight gloom! To-morrow's sun

Shall find this palace cleansed of every stain,

And light a happier race.

[Exit the Second Chorus, with the body of DON MANUEL.

CAJETAN.

Shall I invite

The brotherhood of monks, with rights ordained

By holy church of old, to celebrate

The office of departed souls, and hymn

The buried one to everlasting rest?

DON CAESAR.

Their strains above my tomb shall sound for ever

Amid the torches' blaze-no solemn rites

Beseem the day when gory murder scares

Heaven's pardoning grace.

CAJETAN.

Oh, let not wild despair

Tempt thee to impious, rash resolve. My prince

No mortal arm shall e'er avenge this deed;

And penance calms, with soft, atoning power,

The wrath on high.

DON CAESAR.

If for eternal justice

Earth has no minister, myself shall wield

The avenging sword; though heaven, with gracious ear,

Inclines to sinners' prayers, with blood alone

Atoned is murder's guilt.

CAJETAN.

Вы читаете The Bride of Messina (play)
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