We shall be friends indeed! This hour is bright

With glad presage of ever-springing love,

That in the enlivening beam shall flourish fair,

Sweet recompense of wasted years!

DON MANUEL.

The blossom

Betokens goodly fruit.

DON CAESAR.

I tear myself

Reluctant from thy arms, but think not less

If thus I break this festal hour-my heart

Thrills with a holy joy.

DON MANUEL (with manifest absence of mind).

Obey the moment!

Our lives belong to love.

DON CESAR.

What calls me hence--

DON MANUEL.

Enough! thou leav'st thy heart.

DON CAESAR.

No envious secret

Shall part us long; soon the last darkening fold

Shall vanish from my breast.

[Turning to the CHORUS.

Attend! Forever

Stilled is our strife; he is my deadliest foe,

Detested as the gates of hell, who dares

To blow the fires of discord; none may hope

To win my love, that with malicious tales

Encroach upon a brother's ear, and point

With busy zeal of false, officious friendship.

The dart of some rash, angry word, escaped

From passion's heat; it wounds not from the lips,

But, swallowed by suspicion's greedy ear,

Like a rank, poisonous weed, embittered creeps,

And hangs about her with a thousand shoots,

Perplexing nature's ties.

[He embraces his brother again, and goes away

accompanied by the Second CHORUS.

Chorus (CAJETAN).

Wondering, my prince,

I gaze, for in thy looks some mystery

Strange-seeming shows: scarce with abstracted mien

And cold thou answered'st, when with earnest heart

Thy brother poured the strain of dear affection.

As in a dream thou stand'st, and lost in thought,

As though-dissevered from its earthly frame-

Thy spirit roved afar. Not thine the breast

That deaf to nature's voice, ne'er owned the throbs

Of kindred love:-nay more-like one entranced

In bliss, thou look'st around, and smiles of rapture

Play on thy cheek.

DON MANUEL.

How shall my lips declare

The transports of my swelling heart? My brother

Revels in glad surprise, and from his breast

Instinct with strange new-felt emotions, pours

The tide of joy; but mine-no hate came with me,

Forgot the very spring of mutual strife!

High o'er this earthly sphere, on rapture's wings,

My spirit floats; and in the azure sea,

Above-beneath-no track of envious night

Disturbs the deep serene! I view these halls,

And picture to my thoughts the timid joy

Of my sweet bride, as through the palace gates,

In pride of queenly state, I lead her home.

She loved alone the loving one, the stranger,

And little deems that on her beauteous brow

Messina's prince shall 'twine the nuptial wreath.

How sweet, with unexpected pomp of greatness,

To glad the darling of my soul! too long

I brook this dull delay of crowning bliss!

Her beauty's self, that asks no borrowed charm,

Shall shine refulgent, like the diamond's blaze

That wins new lustre from the circling gold!

Chorus (CAJETAN).

Long have I marked thee, prince, with curious eye,

Foreboding of some mystery deep enshrined

Within thy laboring breast. This day, impatient,

Thy lips have burst the seal; and unconstrained

Confess a lover's joy;-the gladdening chase,

The Olympian coursers, and the falcon's flight

Вы читаете The Bride of Messina (play)
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