Was oft the object of my fondest dreams

Is now accomplished: and the Earl of Leicester,

The long-expected, the long-wished-for friend,

Appears at length in Fotheringay Castle.

I see him standing in my prison; all

Is ready for the journey; all the gates

Stand open, and at length I cross the threshold,

Conducted by his hand; and now I leave

These dismal walls behind me, and forever.

All is fulfilled, and you have saved your honor.

[He stands as if annihilated; she continues,

with a gentle voice.

Yes, Leicester; not for liberty alone

I wished to be indebted to your hands.

You should have made me bless that liberty.

Led by your hand, and happy in your love,

I hoped once more to taste the joys of life.

Yes; now that I'm prepared from all the world

To part, and to become a happy spirit,

Whom earthly inclinations tempt no more!

Now, Leicester, I may venture to confess

Without a blush the frailty I have conquered;

Farewell, my lord; and, if you can, be happy!

To woo two queens has been your daring aim;

You have disdained a tender, loving heart,

Betrayed it in the hope to win a proud one:

Kneel at the feet of Queen Elizabeth!

May your reward not prove your punishment.

Farewell; I now have nothing more on earth.

[She goes, preceded by the SHERIFF; at her side

MELVIL and her nurse; BURLEIGH and PAULET follow;

the others, wailing, follow her with their eyes

till she disappears; they then retire through the

other two doors.

SCENE X.

LEICESTER (remaining alone).

Do I live still? Can I still bear to live?

Will not this roof fall down and bury me?

Yawns no abyss to swallow in its gulf

The veriest wretch on earth? What have I lost?

Oh, what a pearl have I not cast away!

What bliss celestial madly dashed aside!

She's gone, a spirit purged from earthly stain,

And the despair of hell remains for me!

Where is the purpose now with which I came

To stifle my heart's voice in callous scorn?

To see her head descend upon the block

With unaverted and indifferent eyes?

How doth her presence wake my slumbering shame?

Must she in death surround me with love's toils?

Lost, wretched man! No more it suits thee now

To melt away in womanly compassion:

Love's golden bliss lies not upon thy path,

Then arm thy breast in panoply of steel,

And henceforth be thy brows of adamant!

Wouldst thou not lose the guerdon of thy guilt,

Thou must uphold, complete it daringly!

Pity be dumb; mine eyes be petrified!

I'll see-I will be witness of her fall.

[He advances with resolute steps towards the door

through which MARY passed; but stops suddenly half way.

No! No! The terrors of all hell possess me.

I cannot look upon the dreadful deed;

I cannot see her die! Hark! What was that?

They are already there. Beneath my feet

The bloody business is preparing. Hark!

I hear their voices. Hence! Away, away

From this abode of misery and death!

[He attempts to escape by another door;

finds it locked, and returns.

How! Does some demon chain me to this spot?

To hear what I would shudder to behold?

That voice-it is the dean's, exhorting her;

She interrupts him. Hark-she prays aloud;

Her voice is firm-now all is still, quite still!

And sobs and women's moans are all I hear.

Now, they undress her; they remove the stool;

She kneels upon the cushion; lays her head--

[Having spoken these last words, and paused awhile,

he is seen with a convulsive motion suddenly to shrink

and faint away; a confused hum of voices is heard at

the same moment from below, and continues for some time.

SCENE XI.

The Second Chamber in the Fourth Act.

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