Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Pierre Corneille
Polyeucte

IntraText CT - Text

Previous - Next

Click here to hide the links to concordance

Act I

 

POLYEUCTE. NEARCHUS

Nearchus.
SHALL woman’s dream of terror hurl the dart?

 

Oh, feeble weapongainst so great a heart!

 

Must courage proved a thousand times in arms

 

Bow to a peril forged by vain alarms?

 

POLY. I know that dreams are born to fade away,

5

And melt in air before the light of day;

 

I know that misty vapours of the night

 

Dissolve and fly before the morning bright.

 

The dream is naught—but the dear dreamer—all!

 

She has my soul, Nearchus, fast in thrall;

10

Who holds the marriage torchaugust, divine,

 

Bids me to her sweet voice my will resign.

 

She fears my deaththobaseless this her fright,

 

Pauline is wrung with fear—by day—by night;

 

My road to duty hampered by her fears,

15

How can I go when all undried her tears?

 

Her terror I disown—and all alarms,

 

Yet pity holds me in her loving arms:

 

No bolts or bars imprison,—yet her sighs

 

My fetters are—my conquerors, her eyes!

20

Say, kind Nearchus, is the cause you press

 

Such as to make me deaf to her distress?

 

The bonds I slacken I would not unloose

 

Nothing I yield—yet grant a timely truce.

 

 NEAR. How grant you know not what? Are you assured

25

Of constancy?—as one who has endured?

 

God claims your soul for Him!—Now! Now! To-day!

 

The fruit to-morrow yieldsoh, who shall say?

 

Our God is just, but do His grace and power

 

Descend on recreants with equal shower?

30

On darkened souls His flame of light He turns,

 

Yet flame neglected soon but faintly burns,

 

And dying embers fade to ashes cold

 

If we the heart His spirit wooes withhold.

 

Great Heaven retains the fire no longer sought,

35

While ashes turn to dust, and dust to naught.

 

His holy baptism He bids thee seek,—

 

Neglect the call, and the desire grows weak.

 

Ah! whilst from woman’s breast thou heedst the sighs,

 

The flame first flickers, then, untendeddies!

40

 POLY. You know me ill,—’tis mine, that holy fire,

 

Fed, not extinguished, by unslaked desire

 

Her tears—I view them with a lover’s eye;

 

And yet your Christ is mine—a Christian I!

 

The healing, cleansing flood oer me shall flow,

45

I would efface the stain from birth I owe;

 

I would be pure—my sealed eyes would see!

 

The birthright Adam lost restored to me—

 

This, this, the unfading crown! For this I yearn,

 

For that exhaustless fount I thirst, I burn.

50

Then, since my heart is true, Nearchus, say

 

Shall I not grant to pity this delay?

 

 NEAR. So doth the ghostly foe our souls abuse,

 

And all beyond his force he gains by ruse;

 

He hates the purpose fast he cannot foil,—

55

Then he retreatsretreats but to recoil!

 

In endless barricade obstruction piles,—

 

To-daytis tears impede, to-morrowsmiles!

 

And this poor dream—his coinage of the night

 

Gives place to other lures, all falsely bright:

60

All tricks he knows and usesthreats and prayers

 

Attacks in parley—as the Parthian dares.

 

In chain unheeded weakest link must fail,

 

So fortress yet unwon he’ll mount and scale.

 

O break his bonds! Let feeble woman weep!

65

The heart that God has touchedtis God must keep!

 

Who looks behind to dally with his choice

 

When Heaven demandsobeys another voice!

 

 POLY. Who loves thy Christsay, must he love no other?

 

 NEAR. He may—he must! ’Tis Christ says, “Love thy brother,’

70

Yet on the altar of the Heavenly King

 

No rival place, no alien incense fling!

 

Through Him—by Him—for him—all goodness know!

 

Tis from the source alone each stream must flow.

 

To please Him, wife, and wealth, and rank, and state

75

Must be forsakenstrait the heavenly gate.

 

Poor silly sheep! afar you err and stray

 

From Him who is The Life, The Truth, The Way!

 

My grief chokes utterance! I see your fate,

 

As round the fold the hungry wolves of hate

80

Closer and fiercer rage: from sword and flame

 

One shelter for His flock—one only Name!

 

The Cross alone our victor over fears,

 

Not this thy strength,—thy plea—a woman’s tears!

 

 POLY. I know thy heart! It is mine own—the tear

85

My pity drops hath neer a taint of fear!

 

Who dreads not torture, yet—to give relief

 

To her he loves, perforce must ease her grief!

 

If Heaven should claim my life, my death, my all,—

 

Then Heaven will give the strength to heed the call.

90

The shepherd guides me surely to the fold,

 

There, safe with Him, ’tis He will make me bold!

 

 NEAR. Be bold! O come!

 

 POLY. Yes, let thy faith be mine!

 

There—at his feet—do I my life resign

95

If but Pauline—my love—would give consent!

 

Else heaven were hell, and home but banishment!

 

 NEAR. Come!—to return. Thrice welcome to her sight,

 

To see thee safe will double her delight:

 

As the pierced cloud unveils a brighter sun,—

100

So is her joy enhanced—thy glory won!

 

O come, they wait!

 

 POLY.Appease her fear! Ah, this

 

Alone will give her rest—her lover bliss.

 

She comes!

105

 NEAR.Then fly!

 

 POLY.I cannot!

 

 NEAR.To deny

 

Would yield thine enemy the victory!

 

He loves to kill, and knows his deadliest dart

110

Finds friend within the fort—thy traitor heart!

 

Enter PAULINE and STRATONICE


 POLY. I needs must go, Pauline! My love, good-bye!

 

I go but to return—for thine am I!

 

 PAUL. Oh, why this haste to leave a loving wife?

 

Doth honour call?—or fearst thou for thy life?

115

 POLY. For more, a thousandfold!

 

 PAUL.Great Gods above!

 

 POLY. Thou hast my heart! Let this content thy love!

 

 PAUL. You love and yet you leave me. What am I?

 

Not mine to solve the dreary mystery!

120

 POLY. I love thee more than self—than life—than fame

 

But——

 

 PAUL. There is something that thou darst not name.

 

Oh, on my knees I supplicate, I pray,

 

Remove my darkness!—turn my night to day!

125

 POLY. Oh, dreams are naught!

 

 PAUL.Yet, when they tell of thee,

 

I needs must listen, for I love! Ah, me!

 

 POLY. Take courage, dear one, ’tis but for an hour,

 

Thy love must draw me back, for love hath power

130

Oer all in earth and heaven. My soul’s delight,

 

I can no more! My only safety-flight! [Exeunt POLYEUCTE and NEARCHUS.

 

 PAUL. Yes, go, despise my prayer—my agony;

 

Go, ruthlessmeet thy fateforewarned by me;

 

Chase thy pursuer, herald thine own doom;

135

Go, kiss the murderer’s hand, and hail the tomb!

 

Ah, Stratonice! for our boasted power

 

As sovereigns oer man’s heart! Poor regents of an hour!

 

Faint, helpless, moonbeam-light was all I gave,

 

The sun breaks forth—his queen becomes his slave!

140

Wooed? Yes; as other queens I held my court

 

Won—but to lose my crown, and be the sport

 

Of proud, absorbing and imperious man!

 

 STRAT. Ah, man does what he wills—we, what we can;

 

He loves thee, lady!

145

 PAUL.Love should mate with trusts;

 

He leaves me!

 

 STRAT.Lady, ’tis because he must!

 

He loves thee with a love will never die,

 

Then, if he leave thee, reason not the why:

150

Give him thy trust! Oh, thou shalt have reward,

 

For thee he hides the secret! Let him guard

 

Thy life beloved—in fullest liberty.

 

The wife who wholly trusts alone in free!

 

One heart for thee and him—one purpose sure,

155

Yet this heart beats to dare—and to endure.

 

The wife’s true heart must oer the peril sigh

 

Which meets his heart moved but to purpose high;

 

Thy pain his pain, but not his terror thine:

 

He is Armenian, thou of Roman line.

160

We, of Armenia, mock thy dreams to scorn,

 

For they are born of night, as truth of morn;

 

While Romans hold that dreams are heaven-sent,

 

And spring from Jove for man’s admonishment.

 

 PAUL. Though this thy faith—if thou my dream shouldst hear

165

My grief must needs be thine, thy fear my fear,

 

And, that the horror thou mayst fully prove,

 

Know that I—his dear wife—did once another love!

 

Nay, start not, shrink not, ’tis no tale of shame,

 

For though in other years the heavenly flame

170

Descended, kindled, scorched—it left me pure

 

With courage to resign—with strength to endure.

 

He touched my heart, but never stained the soul

 

That gained this hardest conquestself-control.

 

At Rome—where I was born—a soldier’s eye

175

Marked this poor face, from which must Polyeucte fly;

 

Severus was his name:—Ah! memory

 

May spare love linked with death a tear, a sigh!

 

 STRAT. Say, is it he who, at the risk of life,

 

Saved Decius from his foes and endless strife?

180

Who, dying, dealt to Persia stroke of death,

 

And shoutedVictory!’ with his latest breath?

 

His whitening bones, amid the nameless brave,

 

Lie still unfound, unknown, without a grave;

 

Unburied lies his dust amid the slain,

185

While Decius rears an empty urn in vain!

 

 PAUL. Alas! ’tis he; all Rome attests his worth,—

 

Hide not his memory, kindly Mother Earth!

 

Tis but his memory that I adore

 

The past is past—and I can say no more.

190

All gifts save one had he—yes, Fortune held her hand,

 

And I, as Fortune’s slave, obeyed my sire’s command.

 

 STRAT. Ah! I must wish that love the day had won!

 

 PAUL. Which duty lost—then had I been undone;

 

Though duty gave, yet duty healed, my pain;

195

Yet say not that my love was weak or vain!

 

Our tears fell fast, yet neer bore our distress

 

The fatal fruit of strife and bitterness.

 

Then, then, I left my hero, hope and Rome,

 

And, far from him, I found another home;

 200

While he, in his despair, sought sure relief

 

In death, the only end to life’s long grief!

 

You know the rest:—you know that Polyeucte’s eye

 

Was caught,—his fancy pleased; his wife am I.

 

Once more by counsel of my father led,

 205

To Armenia’s greatest noble am I wed;

 

Ambition, prudence, policy his guide

 

Yet only duty made Pauline his bride;

 

Love might have bound me to Severusheart,

 

Had duty not enforced a sterner part.

 210

Yes, let these fears attest, all trembling for his life,

 

That I am his for aye—his faithful, loving wife.

 

 STRAT. Thy new love true and tender as the old:—

 

But this thy dream? No more thy tale withhold!

 

 PAUL. Last night I saw Severus: but his eye

 215

With anger blazed; his port was proud and high,

 

No suppliant he—no feeble, formless shade,

 

With dim, averted eye; no sword had made

 

My hero lifeless ghost. Nor wound, nor scar

 

Marked death his only conqueror in war.

 220

Nor spoil of death, nor memory’s child was he,

 

His mien triumphant, full of majesty!

 

So might victorious Caesar near his home

 

To claim the key to every heart in Rome!

 

He spoke: in nameless awe I heard his voice,—

 225

Give love, that is my due, to him—thy choice,—

 

But know, oh faithless one, ere day expires,

 

All vain these tears for him thy heart desires!’

 

Anon a Christian band (an impious horde),

 

With shameful cross in hand, attest his word;

 230

They vouch Severustruth—and, to complete

 

My doom, hurl Polyeucte beneath his feet!

 

I cried, ‘O father, timely succour bear!’

 

He heard, he came, my grief was now despair!

 

He drew his daggerplunged it in the breast

 235

Of him, my husband, late his honoured guest!

 

Relief came but from agony supreme

 

I shrieked—I writhed—I woke—it was a dream!

 

And yet my dream is true!

 

 STRAT.’Tis true your dream is sad,

 240

But now you are awake, ’tis but a dream you had!

 

For horror’s prey in darkness of the night

 

Is but our reason’s sport in morning light.

 

How can you dread a shade? How a fond father fear,

 

Who as a son regards the man you hold so dear?

 245

To phantom of the night no credence yield;

 

For him and you he chose thy strength and shield.

 

 PAUL. You say his words: at all my fears he smiles,

 

But I must dread these Christians and their wiles!

 

I dread their vengeance, wreaked upon my lord,

 250

For Christian blood my father has outpoured!

 

 STRAT. Their sect is impious, mad, absurd and vain,

 

Their rites repulsive, as their cult profane.

 

Deride their altar, their weak frenzy ban,

 

Yet do they war with gods and not with man!

 255

Relentless wills our law that they must die:

 

Their joyendurance; death—their ecstasy;

 

Judged—by decree, the foes of human race,

 

Meekly their heads they bow—to court disgrace!

 

 PAUL. My father comesoh, peace!

 260

Enter FELIX and ALBIN


FELIX.Nay, peace is flown!

 

Thy dream begets dull fears, till now unknown;

 

In part this dream is true, and for the rest——

 

 PAUL. By what new fear, say, is thy heart opprest?

 

 FELIX. Severus lives!

 265

 PAUL.Ah! this no cause for fear!

 

 FELIX. At Deciuscourt, he, held in honour dear,

 

Risked life to save his Emperor from his foes,

 

Tis to his saviour Decius honour shows!

 

 PAUL. Thus fickle Fortune bows her head to fate,

 270

And pays the honour due, though all too late!

 

 FELIX. He comes! Is near——

 

 PAUL.The gods——

 

 FELIX.Do all things well.

 

 PAUL. My dream fulfilled! But how? O father, tell!

 275

 FELIX. Let Albin speak, who saw him face to face

 

With tribe of courtiers; all to him give place;

 

Unscathed in battle, all extol his fame,

 

Unstained, undimmed, his glory, life and name!

 

 ALBIN. You know the issue of that glorious fight:

 280

The crowning glory his—who, in despite

 

Of danger sore to life and liberty,

 

Became a slave to set his Emperor free:

 

Rome gave her honours to Severusshade,

 

Whilst he, her ransomer, in a dungeon stayed.

 285

His death they mourned above ten thousand slain,

 

While Persia held him—yes, their tears were vain,

 

But not in vain his noble sacrifice!

 

The king released him: Rome grudged not the price;

 

No Persian bribe could tempt him from his home.

 290

When Decius cried—‘Fight once again for Rome!’

 

Again he fights—he leads—all others hope resign;

 

But from despair’s deep breast he plucks a star benign,

 

This—hope’s fair fruit, contentment, plenty, ease,

 

Brings joy from grief, to crown a lasting peace.

 295

The Emperor holds him as his dearest friend,

 

And doth Severus to Armenia send

 

To offer up to Mars, and mighty Jove,

 

Mid feast and sacrifice, his thanks and love.

 

 FELIX. Ah, Fortune, turn thy wheel, else I misfortune meet!

 300

 ALBIN. This news I learnd from one of great Severussuite:

 

Thence, swiftly here, the tale to tell I sped.

 

 FELIX. He who once vainly wooed, hopes now to wed.

 

The sacrifice, the offering, all are feigned,

 

All but the suit, which lightly I disdained.

 305

 PAUL. Yes, this may be, for ah! he loved me well!

 

 FELIX. What room for hope? Such wrath is child of hell.

 

Before his righteous ire I shrink, I cower;

 

Revenge I dread—and vengeance linked with power

 

Unnerves me quite.

 310

 PAUL.Fear not, his soul is great.

 

 FELIX. Thy comfort, oh my daughter, comes too late.

 

The thought to crush me down, to turn my heart to stone,

 

This, that I prized not worth for worth’s dear sake alone!

 

Too well, Pauline, thou hast thy sire obeyed;

 315

Thy heart was fond, but duty love betrayed.

 

How surely thy revolt had safety won!

 

Tis thine obedience leaves us all undone.

 

In thee, in thee alone, one hope remains,

 

Love held him fast, relax not thou love’s chains.

 320

O Love, my sometime foe, forgive, be mine ally,

 

And let the dart that slew now bring the remedy!

 

 PAUL. Forbid it, Heaven! One good yet mine,—my will,

 

The dart that wounded has the power to kill.

 

One lesson woman learns—her feebleness;

 325

Shame is the only grief without redress.

 

The traitor heart shall still a prisoner be;

 

For freedom were disgrace to thee and me!

 

I will not see him!

 

 FELIX.But one word! Be kind!

 330

 PAUL. I will not, for I love!—and love is blind.

 

Before his kingly eye my soul to unveil

 

Were shame and failure: and I will not fail:

 

I will not see him!

 

 FELIX.One word more—‘Obey!’

 335

Wouldst thou thy father and his weal betray?

 

 PAUL. I yield! Come woe!—come shame!—come every ill!

 

My father thou!—and I thy daughter still!

 

 FELIX. I know thee pure.

 

 PAUL.And pure I will remain,

 340

But, crushed and bruised, the flower no guilt shall stain.

 

I fear the combat that I may not fly,—

 

Hard-won the fight, and dear the victory.

 

Here, love, my curse! Here, dearest friend, my foe!

 

Yet will I arm me! Father, I would go

 345

To steel my heart—all weapons to embrace!

 

 FELIX. I too will go, the conqueror’s march to grace!

 

Restore thy strength, ere yet it be too late,

 

And know that in thy hands thou holdst our fate!

 

 PAUL. Go, broken heart, to probe thy wound; cut deep and do not spare!

 350

Herself—the crowning sacrifice—the victim shall prepare!

 




Previous - Next

Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library

Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License