Have slept with soft content about my head, And never waked, but to a joyful morning; Yet now must fall, like a full ear of corn, Whose blossom 'scaped, yet's withered in the ripening.
Pri. Home, and be humble; study to retrench; Discharge the lazy vermin of thy hall, Those pageants of thy folly:
Reduce the glittering trappings of thy wife To humble weeds, fit for thy little state: Then, to some suburb cottage both retire; Drudge to feed loathsome life; get brats and
Pier. My friend, good-morrow. How fares the honest partner of my heart? What, melancholy! not a word to spare me? Jaf. I'm thinking, Pierre, how that damned starving quality,
Called honesty, got footing in the world.
Pier. Why, powerful villany first set it up, For its own ease and safety. Honest men Are the soft easy cushions, on which knaves Repose and fatten. Were all mankind villains, They'd starve each other; lawyers would want practice,
Cut-throats rewards: each man would kill his brother
Himself; none would be paid or hanged for murder.
Honesty! 'twas a cheat invented first
To bind the hands of bold deserving rogues, That fools and cowards might sit safe in power, And lord it uncontrouled above their betters. Jaf. Then honesty is but a notion? Pier. Nothing else;
Like wit, much talked of, not to be defined. He, that pretends to most, too, has least share in it.
'Tis a ragged virtue: Honesty! no more of it. Jaf. Sure thou art honest?
Pier. So, indeed, men think me; But they are mistaken, Jaffier: I am a rogue As well as they;
A fine, gay, bold-faced villain, as thou seest me. 'Tis true, I pay my debts, when they're contracted;
I steal from no man; would not cut a throat, To gain admission to a great man's purse, Or a whore's bed; I'd not betray my friend To get his place or fortune; I scorn to flatter A blown-up fool above me, or crush the wretch beneath me;
Yet, Jaffier, for all this, I am a villain. Jaf. A villain!
Pier. Yes, a most notorious villain; To see the sufferings of my fellow-creatures, And own myself a man: to see our senators Cheat the deluded people with a shew Of liberty, which yet they ne'er must taste of. They say, by them our hands are free from fet- ters;
Yet, whom they please, they lay in basest bonds; Bring whom they please to infamy and sorrow; Drive us, like wrecks, down the rough tide of power,
While no hold's left to save us from destruction. All that bear this are villains, and I one, Not to rouse up at the great call of nature, And check the growth of these domestic spoilers, That make us slaves, and tell us, 'tis our charter. Juf. Oh, Aquilina! Friend, to lose such beauty! The dearest purchase of thy noble labours! She was thy right by conquest, as by love. Pier. Oh! Jaffier! I had so fixed my heart upon her,
That, wheresoe'er I framed a scheme of life, For time to come, she was my only joy, With which I wished to sweeten future cares: I fancied pleasures; none but one, that loves And doats as I did, can imagine like them: When in the extremity of all these hopes, In the most charming hour of expectation, Then, when our eager wishes soared the highest, Ready to stoop and grasp the lovely game, A haggard owl, a worthless kite of prey, With his foul wings, sailed in, and spoiled my quarry.
Juf. I know the wretch, and scorn him as thou
Pier. Curse on the common good, that's so pro
Where every slave, that heaps up wealth enough To do much wrong, becomes the lord of right! I, who believed no ill could e'er come near me, Found in the embraces of my Aquilina A wretched, old, but itching senator; A wealthy fool, that had bought out my title; A rogue, that uses beauty like a lamb-skin, Barely to keep him warm; that filthy cuckoo too Was, in my absence, crept into my nest, And spoiling all my brood of noble pleasure. Jaf. Didst thou not chase him thence? Pier. I did, and drove
The rank old bearded Hirco stinking home. The matter was complained of in the senate, I summoned to appear, and censured basely, For violating something they called privilege- This was the recompence of all my service. Would I'd been rather beaten by a coward! A soldier's mistress, Jaffier, is his religion; When that's profaned, all other ties are broken: That even dissolves all former bonds of service; And from that hour I think myself as free To be the foe, as e'er the friend, of Venice- Nay, dear revenge, whene'er thou call'st, I'm ready.
Jaf. I think no safety can be here for virtue,
And grieve, my friend, as much as thou, to live In such a wretched state as this of Venice, Where all agree to spoil the public good; And villains fatten with the brave man's labours. Pier. We have neither safety, unity, nor peace, For the foundation's lost, of common good: Justice is lame, as well as blind, amongst us; The laws (corrupted to their ends that make them)
Serve but for instruments of some new tyranny, That every day starts up, to enslave us deeper. Now, could this glorious cause but find out friends To do it right, oh, Jaffier! then might'st thou Not wear these seals of woe upon thy face; The proud Priuli should be taught humanity, And learn to value such a son as thou art.
I dare not speak, but my heart bleeds this mo
Jaf. Cursed be the cause, though I, thy friend, be part on't!
Let me partake the troubles of thy bosom, For I am used to misery, and perhaps May find a way to sweeten it to thy spirit. Pier. Too soon 'twill reach thy knowledge- Jaf. Then from thee
Let it proceed. There's virtue in thy friendship, Would make the saddest tale of sorrow pleasing, Strengthen my constancy, and welcome ruin. Pier. Then thou art ruined! Jaf. That I long since knew;
I and ill fortune have been long acquainted. Pier. I passed this very moment by thy doors, And found them guarded by a troop of villains: The sons of public rapine were destroying. They told me, by the sentence of the law, They had commission to seize all thy fortune: Nay, more, Priuli's cruel hand had signed it. Here stood a ruffian with a horrid face, Lording it o'er a pile of massy plate, Tumbled into a heap for public sale; There was another, making villainous jests At thy undoing: he had taken possession Of all thy ancient, most domestic, ornaments, Rich hangings intermixed and wrought with gold; The very bed, which on thy wedding-night Received thee to the arms of Belvidera, The scene of all thy joys, was violated By the coarse hands of filthy dungeon villains, And thrown amongst the common lumber. Jaf. Now thank heaven-
Pier. Thank heaven! for what? Jaf. That I'm not worth a ducat.
Pier. Curse thy dull stars, and the worse fate
Where brothers, friends, and fathers, are all false; Where there's no truth, no trust; where inno
Whilst two young virgins, on whose arms she
Kindly looked up, and at her grief grew sad, As if they catched the sorrows, that fell from her! Even the lewd rabble, that were gathered round To see the sight, stood mute, when they beheld her,
Governed their roaring throats, and grumbled pity.
I could have hugged the greasy rogues: they pleased me.
Jaf. I thank thee for this story, from my soul; Since now I know the worst, that can befal me. Ah, Pierre! I have a heart, that could have borne The roughest wrong, my fortune could have done
But, when I think what Belvidera feels, The bitterness her tender spirit tastes of, I own myself a coward: bear my weakness, If, throwing thus my arms about thy neck, I play the boy, and blubber in thy bosom. Oh! I shall drown thee with my sorrow. Pier. Burn,
First burn and level Venice to thy ruin! What! starve, like beggars' brats, in frosty wea- ther,
Under a hedge, and whine ourselves to death!.... Thou, or thy cause, shall never want assistance, Whilst I have blood or fortune fit to serve thee: Command my heart! thou art every way its mas
Jaf. No, there's a secret pride in bravely dying. Pier. Rats die in holes and corners; dogs run
Man knows a braver remedy for sorrowRevenge, the attribute of gods; they stamped it With their great image on our natures. Die! Consider well the cause, that calls upon thee, And, if thou'rt base enough, die then. Remember,
Thy Belvidera suffers; Belvidera!
Die-damn first-What! be decently interred In a church-yard, and mingle thy brave dust With stinking rogues, that rot in winding-sheets, Surfeit-slain fools, the common dung o' th' soil! Jaf. Oh!
Pier. Well said, out with't, swear a little— Jaf. Swear! by sea and air; by earth, by heaven and hell,
I will revenge my Belvidera's tears. Hark thee, my friend-Priuli is—a senator. Pier. A dog.
Jaf. Agreed.
Pier. Shoot him.
Jaf. With all my heart.
No more; where shall we meet at night? Pier. I'll tell thee;
On the Rialto, every night at twelve, I take my evening's walk of meditation; There we two will meet, and talk of precious Mischief- Jaf. Farewell.
Pier. At twelve.
Jaf. At any hour; my piagues
Will keep me waking,
Tell me why, good Heaven,
Thou mad'st me what I am, with all the spirit, Aspiring thoughts, and elegant desires, That fill the happiest man? Ah, rather, why Didst thou not form me sordid as my fate, Base-minded, dull, and fit to carry burthens? Why have I sense to know the curse, that's on me!
Is this just dealing, nature?-Belvidera!
Bei. Lead me, lead me, my virgins,
To that kind voice. My lord, my love, my refuge! Happy my eyes, when they behold thy face! My heavy heart will leave its doleful beating At sight of thee, and bound with sprightly joys. Oh smile! as when our loves were in the spring, And cheer my fainting soul.
Barren as our misfortunes, where my soul May have its vent, where I may tell aloud To the high heavens, and every list'ning planet, With what a boundless stock my bosom's fraught; Where I may throw my eager arms about thee, Give loose to love, with kisses kindling joy, And let off all the fire that's in my heart.
Jaf. Oh, Belvidera! doubly I'm a beggar; Undone by fortune, and in debt to thee. Want, worldly want, that hungry meagre fiend, Is at my heels, and chaces me in view. Canst thou bear cold and hunger? Can these limbs, Framed for the tender offices of love, Endure the bitter gripes of smarting poverty? When banished by our miseries abroad (As suddenly we shall be), to seek out In some far climate, where our names are stran- gers,
For charitable succour; wilt thou then, When in a bed of straw we shrink together,
Were in the spring! Has then our fortune chang- And the bleak winds shall whistle round our
Art thou not Belvidera, still the same,
Kind, good, and tender, as my arms first found thee?
If thou art altered, where shall I have harbour? Where ease my loaded heart? Oh! where complain?
Bel. Does this appear like change, or love decaying,
When thus I throw myself into thy bosom, With all the resolution of strong truth! Beats not my heart, as 'twould alarum thine To a new charge of bliss?-I joy more in thee, Than did thy mother, when she hugged thee first, And blessed the gods for all her travail past. Jaf. Can there in woman be such glorious faith?
Sure all ill stories of thy sex are false!
Oh woman! lovely woman! Nature made thee To temper man; we had been brutes without you!
Angels are painted fair to look like you; There's in you all, that we believe of heaven; Amazing brightness, purity and truth, Eternal joy, and everlasting love.
Bel. If love be treasure, we'll be wondrous rich;
I have so much, my heart will surely break with it: Vows can't express it. When I would declare How great's my joy, I'm dumb with the big thought;
I swell, and sigh, and labour with my longing. O! lead me to some desert wide and wild,
Wilt thou then talk thus to me? Wilt thou then Hush my cares thus, and shelter me with love? Bel. Oh! I will love thee, even in madness
Though my distracted senses should forsake me, I'd find some intervals, when my poor heart Should 'swage itself, and be let loose to thine. Though the bare earth be all our resting-place, Its roots our food, some clift our habitation, I'll make this arm a pillow for thine head; And, as thou sighing liest, and swelled with sor-
Creep to thy bosom, pour the balm of love Into thy soul, and kiss thee to thy rest; Then praise our God, and watch thee till the morning.
Jaf. Hear this, you heavens, and wonder how you made her!
Reign, reign, ye monarchs, that divide the world; Busy rebellion ne'er will let you know Tranquillity and happiness like mine! Like gaudy ships the obsequious billows fall, And rise again, to lift you in your pride; They wait but for a storm, and then devour you I, in my private bark already wrecked, Like a poor merchant driven to unknown land, That had by chance packed up his choicest trea
In one dear casket, and saved only that; Since I must wander further on the shore, Thus hug my little, but my precious store, Resolved to scorn and trust my fate no more. [Exeunt
Enter PIERRE and AQUILINA. Aqui. By all thy wrongs, thou'rt dearer to my arms Than all the wealth of Venice. Prithee stay,
And let us love to-night.
Pier. No: there's fool,
There's fool about thee. When a woman sells Her flesh to fools, her beauty's lost to me; They leave a taint, a sully, where they have passed;
Or more than thou canst; but the beast has gold, That makes him necessary; power too, To qualify my character, and poise me Equal with peevish virtue, that beholds My liberty with envy. In their hearts They're loose as I am; but an ugly power Sits in their faces, and frights pleasure from them. Pier. Much good may't do you, madam, with your senator.
Aqui. My senator! Why, canst thou think that wretch
E'er filled thy Aquilina's arms with pleasure? Think'st thou, because I sometimes give him leave
To foil himself at what he is unfit for; Because I force myself to endure and suffer him, Think'st thou, I love him? No; by all the joys Thou ever gav'st me, his presence is my penance. The worst thing an old man can be's a lover, A mere memento mori to poor woman. I never lay by his decrepid side, But all that night I ponder on my grave. Pier. Would he were well sent thither! Aqui. That's my wish too;
For then, my Pierre, I might have cause, with pleasure,
To play the hypocrite. Oh! how I could weep Over the dying dotard, and kiss him too,
In hopes to smother him quite; then, when the time
Was come to pay my sorrows at his funeral, (For he has already made me heir to treasures Would make me out-act a real widow's whin- ing)
How could I frame my face to fit my mourning! With wringing hands attend him to his grave; Fall swooning on his hearse; take mad possession Even of the dismal vault, where he lay buried; There, like the Ephesian matron, dwell, till thou, My lovely soldier, com'st to my deliverance; Then, throwing up my veil, with open arms And laughing eyes, run to new-dawning joy.
Pier. No more: I've friends to meet me here to-night,
And must be private. As you prize my friendship,
Keep up your coxcomb; let him not pry, nor lis
Jaf. I am here; and thus, the shades of nigh around me,
I look as if all hell were in my heart, And I in hell. Nay surely 'tis so with me! For every step I tread, methinks some fiend Knocks at my breast, and bids me not be quiet. I've heard how desperate wretches, like myself, Have wandered out at this dead time of night, To meet the foe of mankind in his walk. Sure I'm so cursed, that, though of Heaven for- saken,
No minister of darkness cares to tempt me. Hell, hell! why sleepest thou?
Pier. Not name her? May be I wish her well, Juf. Whom well?
Pier. Thy wife; thy lovely Belvidera.
I hope a man may wish his friend's wife well, And no harm done.
Jaf. You are merry, Pierre.
Pier. I am so:
Thou shalt smile too, and Belvidera smile:
We'll all rejoice. Here's something to buy pins; Marriage is chargeable. [Gives him a purse.
To see the devil, and he's here already. Well! What must this buy? Rebellion, murder, treason? Tell me, which way I must be damned for this. Pier. When last we parted, we had no qualms like these,
But entertained each other's thoughts like men, Whose souls were well acquainted. Is the world Reformed, since our last meeting? What new miracles
Have happened? Has Priuli's heart relented? Can he be honest ?
Jaf. Kind Heaven, let heavy curses
Gall his old age; cramps, aches, rack his bones, And bitterest disquiet wring his heart!
Oh! let him live, till life become his burden! Let him groan under it long, linger an age In the worst agonies and pangs of death, And find its ease, but late!
Pier. Nay, couldst thou not
As well, my friend, have stretched the curse to all
The senate round, as to one single villain?
Jaf. But curses stick not: Could I kill with cursing,
By Heaven I know not thirty heads in Venice Should not be blasted. Senators should rot, Like dogs on dunghills: But their wives and daughters
Die of their own diseases. Oh! for a curse To kill with!
Pier. Daggers, daggers, are much better. Jaf. Ha!
Pier. Daggers.
Jaf. But where are they?
Pier. Oh, a thousand
May be disposed of, in honest hands, in Venice. Jaf. Thou talk'st in clouds.
Pier. But yet a heart, half wronged
As thine has been, would find the meaning, Jaf
Is coward, fool, or villain in my face? If I seem none of these, I dare believe Thou wouldst not use me in a little cause, For I am fit for honour's toughest task, Nor ever yet found fooling was my province; And for a villainous inglorious enterprize, I know thy heart so well, I dare lay mine Before thee, set it to what point thou wilt. Pier. Nay, 'tis a cause thou wilt be fond of, Jaffier;
For it is founded on the noblest basis; Our liberties, our natural inheritance. There's no religion, no hypocrisy in it; We'll do the business, and ne'er fast and pray for it;
Openly act a deed, the world shall gaze With wonder at; and envy, when 'tis done. Jaf. For liberty!
Pier. For liberty, my friend.
Thou shalt be freed from base Priuli's tyranny, And thy sequestered fortunes healed again: I shall be free from those opprobrious wrongs, That press me now, and bend my spirit downward All Venice free, and every growing merit Succeed to its just right: fools shall be pulled From wisdom's seat: those baleful unclean birds, Those lazy owls, who, perched near fortune's top, Sit only watchful with their heavy wings To cuff down new-fledged virtues, that would rise To nobler heights, and make the grove harmo
For herding with that nest of fools and knaves. By all my wrongs, thou talk'st as if revenge Were to be had; and the brave story warms me. Pier. Swear, then!
Jaf. I do, by all those glittering stars, And yon great ruling planet of the night; By all good powers above, and ill below; By love and friendship, dearer than my life, No power, or death, shall make me false to thee. Pier. Here we embrace, and I'll unlock my
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