![]() | The Monument in Arcadia | ![]() |
222
ACT II.
A RURAL SCENE.Enter LYSANDER, EUPHEMIA, DELIA, MUSIDORUS, DAPHNE, and LAURA.
As they are all advancing from the End of the Stage, DAPHNE and LAURA sing the following
DUET.
Hymen pleas'd your Faith surveys;
All his peaceful Blessings share!
Purest Friendship crown your Days!
Joy attend you, happy Pair!
LYSANDER.
Thanks, courteous Fair-ones, Thanks; I little hop'd
Such Bride-maids for my Love; but you are all
223
Shall bind us both your Debtors.—You, good Shepherd,
Who with your Daughters at the Shrine of Pan
Have witness'd to our Vows, shall see, I trust,
That they were seal'd with Truth, and only join'd
Hearts of congenial Mould.
MUSIDORUS.
May circling Years
Still firmer bind them! and the Hand of Death
Alone dissolve this Union!
EUPHEMIA.
Heav'n so grant!—
Most freely, Shepherd, I accept your Grace,
And proffer'd Services; wrapt in Delight
To meet already in this stranger Land
Such hospitable Smiles.
DAPHNE.
Nor here is seen
224
Disdains those Arts and Falshoods, which they say
Are practis'd by the Great-ones of the World.—
Ambition walks not here; nor is here known
Envy, its fell Associate.—Rural Cares
Employ the fleeting Day, and one firm Chain
Of social Harmony unites us all.—
Our temp'rate Board gives Cheerfulness and Health;
And there Contentment sits, and bids us scorn
What cheated Man calls Luxury.
LAURA.
Nor yet
Shall our calm Plains abuse your Hopes; the Eye
As well as Mind is solac'd.—Nature blooms
In youthful Beauty round us, from her Urn
Scatt'ring unnumber'd Treasures. Mark how glows
The vivid Landscape; and the burthen'd Earth
Pants with the gay Profusion.
225
A new World
Springs up before me. See, Lysander, see
What vary'd Sweets shall strew our future Paths
Beneath this better Sun.
LYSANDER.
Rooted I stand,
And lost in Admiration thank the Gods
For all their Bounty to me; chief for Thee
Their noblest Boon, thou Crown of my Desires!
Thou lovely Charmer!—O my Friends, excuse
A young Man's Transport; when you better know
This Maiden's Excellence, you will confess
My Tongue no Flatt'rer—for she wears a Heart
So pure, so spotless, that it might be shrin'd
In Crystal, and have all its Movements scann'd!
MUSIDORUS.
My Bosom shares your Transport—Gentle Lady,
226
Which shade the Margin of the azure Stream
That steals along its Side, our Dwelling stands,
Rustic and simple; thick around it shoots
The flaunting Woodbine; and each fragrant Flow'r
Adorns the verdant Scene.—There I've prepar'd
A cheerful Welcome;—All our rural Sports
My Daughters shall relate, and teach you too,
If so you like, to tend our fleecy Folds;
For all are Shepherds here.
EUPHEMIA.
Something but now,
As o'er the Lawn we pass'd, Laura discours'd
Of a grey Hermit, whose religious Life
Gain'd him such Love, that each Arcadian deem'd
His Blessing prosp'rous; fain on this Day's Act
Would I implore it.
227
Lady, he you mean
Dwells at the mossy Foot of yonder Rock,
The good Dorastus; Shepherd once himself,
And Master still of many a Flock; but he,
Long from our Plains sequester'd, mourns retir'd
A Loss that weighs his grey Hairs down.—All here
View him with filial Love; for he's to all
A Friend, a Father.—Thither I'll conduct you
As homeward now we pass.
LYSANDER.
We will attend;
Yet tarry but a Space, while from those Trees
Of clust'ring Roses, that invite the Touch,
I pluck some crimson Buds, and twist a Wreath
For my Euphemia's Brow; she has not yet
Receiv'd her bridal Garland.
[Exit.
EUPHEMIA.
On this Bank
228
And, Delia, calm the Flutt'rings of my Heart
By some soft Strain.—Give me that cheering Song
Aranthe so much lov'd.
DELIA.
'Tis well devis'd,
Nor foreign to the Moment.—I obey.
Nor foreign to the Moment.—I obey.
SONG.
All the Splendor which Wealth can display
Is so vain, that it quickly must cloy;
Like a Bubble, it soon melts away,
If Hope does not heighten the Joy.
Is so vain, that it quickly must cloy;
Like a Bubble, it soon melts away,
If Hope does not heighten the Joy.
Sweet Passion! without thee, the Soul
In the Midst of Fruition would tire;
Into Times yet unborn thou canst roll,
And expand on the Wings of Desire.
In the Midst of Fruition would tire;
Into Times yet unborn thou canst roll,
And expand on the Wings of Desire.
229
It was Hope that first planted my Vine,
And its Clusters luxuriously spread;
Rear'd my Fig-tree, whose Branches intwine,
And so gratefully shadow my Head.
And its Clusters luxuriously spread;
Rear'd my Fig-tree, whose Branches intwine,
And so gratefully shadow my Head.
Hope comforts the Mourner's sad State,
Sooths the Wretch who is struggling with Pain,
Bids the Captive support his hard Fate,
And to Home turns his Eyes back again.
Sooths the Wretch who is struggling with Pain,
Bids the Captive support his hard Fate,
And to Home turns his Eyes back again.
Bright Charmer! ah! live in my Breast,
Round my Temples thy Garland still bind;
Thou shalt calm all my Sorrows to rest,
And cheer with thy Sunshine my Mind.
Round my Temples thy Garland still bind;
Thou shalt calm all my Sorrows to rest,
And cheer with thy Sunshine my Mind.
EUPHEMIA.
Kind Delia, take my Thanks.—I feel the Truth
230
Who round the little Region of my Heart
Bids Hope triumphant live.
LYSANDER re-enters, with a Chaplet of Roses in his Hand.
LYSANDER.
Euphemia, wear
This blooming Wreath, in Honor of the Day,
And as an Emblem of our twin'd Affections.—
[Presents her the Chaplet.
This hath a transient Date, but they, I trust,
Shall never know Decay.—Now let us speed
To seek the Hermit's Cave; good Shepherd, on.
[Exeunt.
231
AIR.
My Woes, O Mem'ry! cease to trace;
Ah! curse no more the Spartan Race!
Come, meek-ey'd Patience, calm my Mind,
And make it to its Fate resign'd.—
This fancy'd Form, this empty Tomb
Relieves the Rigour of my Doom.
Enter MUSIDORUS, LYSANDER, EUPHEMIA, DELIA, DAPHNE, and LAURA.
MUSIDORUS.
Behold the good old Man!—On the still Air
232
This Wood he dwells, and here at setting Sun
Sings his accustom'd Dirge, as Mem'ry drops
A Sigh o'er happier Scenes that Time hath clos'd.
LYSANDER.
Say, what yon Pile which he bestrews with Flow'rs?
It seems a Tomb, and that fair sculptur'd Form
Declares it such; as does the Epitaph,
“I too was an Arcadian.”
MUSIDORUS.
He bewails
A Daughter torn away, on whom he built
The Comfort of his Age; it is for her
This mournful Pile is rear'd, these Rites perform'd.—
But soft!—A Moment ends them; let us not
Invade his Privacy.
[They keep retired on one Side of the Stage.
233
Gentle Spirit, Peace be thine!
This sad Office still be mine;
These fond Marks of Love receive,
All a drooping Sire can give.
During the Song, Lysander discourses with Musidorus; —Euphemia, with Daphne and Laura. She often fixes her Eyes on the Monument, with Marks of Emotion. The Song ended, they advance.
MUSIDORUS.
Good Ev'n, Dorastus,
And heard be all thy Orisons!—Behold
I bring with me a Pair, who even now
At yonder consecrated Altar seal'd
The Bond of wedded Faith.—Far is their Home,
Beyond the Southern Mountains; but Desire
To visit these our Plains hath urg'd their Steps
234
Your Grace and Welcome; and will prove, I judge,
Worthy your Courtesy.—Their bridal Bed
My Daughters have prepar'd; and I myself
Shall be their this Night's Host; a secret Impulse
Hath won me to their Service.
LYSANDER.
Strangers here,
Each Mark of Hospitality must charm;
And sooth to say, this our kind Patron's Care
Hath far outstrip'd my Hope.—Might we obtain
Thy Pray'rs, respected Hermit, nothing then
Remains to crown our Fortune.
DORASTUS.
If the Blessing
Of an old Man by many a Sorrow worn,
And bow'd by many a Year, can aught avail,
O take it, freely take it.—May the Act
235
Of Happiness be yours! a virtuous Race
To both endear the World! and all your Paths,
Your Ev'ning Paths of Life, be spread with Flow'rs
That never grew in mine!
LYSANDER.
Ah! much I grieve
That your's have prov'd uneven!—For your Wishes
Count me your Debtor.—My Euphemia too,
My Bride shall thank you; for her Heart is gentle,
And grateful as the Flow'r that pays with Sweets
The genial Summer's Bounty!—
As he turns to Euphemia, he finds her looking towards
the Tomb with a melancholy Attention.
That your's have prov'd uneven!—For your Wishes
Count me your Debtor.—My Euphemia too,
My Bride shall thank you; for her Heart is gentle,
And grateful as the Flow'r that pays with Sweets
The genial Summer's Bounty!—
Ha! my Love,
Whence this Amaze? why dost thou bend thy Sight
On yonder Tomb? and wherefore on thy Brow
Sits a descriptive Sorrow, that hath drank
The Lustre of thine Eyes, and damp'd the Joy
Which sparkled there but now?—Say, why is this?
What the strange Cause?
Whence this Amaze? why dost thou bend thy Sight
On yonder Tomb? and wherefore on thy Brow
Sits a descriptive Sorrow, that hath drank
236
Which sparkled there but now?—Say, why is this?
What the strange Cause?
EUPHEMIA.
The Cause is in myself;
O my Lysander! I have fool'd my Sense
With visionary Hope, and now awake
To meet my Error.
LYSANDER.
Nay! explain, Euphemia.
EUPHEMIA.
This good Man's Sigh has op'd my Eyes; this Scene
Of Death has undeceiv'd me.—Blind to think
That there was any Ground, where Mortals tread,
On which Affliction walks not!—Ev'ry Clime
Engenders human Woe; and fam'd Arcadia
Is pregnant with the same disastrous Fortune
That other Regions know.
237
Our Life, fair Lady,
Must needs be chequer'd thus.
LYSANDER.
Alas! my Love,
Let us enjoy the Good, nor with vain Search
Anticipate Misfortune; come it will,
Though Wisdom stand as Guard; and e'en these Shade.
Must sometimes own its Pow'r.
EUPHEMIA.
Mistaken Maid!
Is this the Land where Pleasure only reign'd?
Was it for this I pac'd so long a Way?
Abandon'd Sparta? and so far allur'd
Thy wand'ring Steps, Lysander, here to meet
The Face of Sorrow?—Where is that Content
Aranthe boasted? Where that Peace, she said
Should greet our Coming?—Ah! could she delude
That Hope she so long nourish'd?
238
Heard I aright?
Or did false Sounds abuse me?—Spake you not
Of Sparta, and Aranthe, courteous Lady?
Pray you say on; for to my Ear you utter'd
A Name well known.—Aranthe! knew you her?
And lives she yet?
LYSANDER.
Ah no! she is no more!
With pious Hand these Maidens clos'd her Eyes,
Bathing her Corse with Tears.
EUPHEMIA.
In her I lost
The best of Women, whose indulgent Care
No Time shall wear away.—Her latest Wish
Was I should seek Arcadia, where herself
Had sometime known a happier Destiny
Than Sparta's Walls afforded.
239
You are then
Her daughter, doubtless; you perhaps have oft
Heard her relate—
EUPHEMIA.
Good Hermit, you mistake;
I am no Child of her's, though many a Year
Such I was deem'd, till her last Breath unveil'd
The Error, and declar'd I was a Pledge
Intrusted to her Care in infant Years,
By whom was unexplain'd, for Death's cold Grasp
Broke off th'unfinish'd Tale,—and I had walk'd
The World, a friendless Orphan, and alone,
But for this virtuous Youth, to whom I've giv'n
That Love his Merit claim'd.—But why on me
Is cast that Look of Eagerness?—Why heaves
Thy lab'ring Bosom thus?—or whence those Tears
That tremble in thine Eye?
240
O Nature!—Nature!
Who with thy pow'rful, and invisible Hand
Shak'st my whole Frame with Tumult,—can I think
This Conflict, these Forebodings of a Father
Are rais'd, or felt in vain?—The Stroke's too great!
Pray you your Arm a Moment.—Yes—it must—
Those Features wear the radiant Hue of Truth!—
There cannot be Deceit.—It is—It is
My long-lost Child restor'd.—
EUPHEMIA.
All-ruling Gods!
Have ye upheld me through the Maze of Life
Unknowing, and unknown, in this far Land
To guide me to a Parent?
LYSANDER.
All's explain'd;
This was Aranthe's Meaning, this the Cause
241
Some Chance might bring about this blest Event
Th'indulgent Gods have prosper'd.
DORASTUS.
Gen'rous Youth!
Whose Graces have endear'd thee to my Child,
Whose Truth and Friendship won her, let my Arms
Embrace thee as a Son.—A Father's Blessing,
Pour'd from a Heart with Gratitude o'ercome,
Shall now enforce the rest.—Alas! too quick
My Spirits bound!—Prithee resolve my Mind
A few fond Questions more.
[They withdraw to the Bottom of the Stage.
MUSIDORUS.
See, my Children,
The Virtuous still are happy!—This is she
So long reputed dead, for whom was rear'd
The Statue, and the Tomb; for whom these Shades
242
Sighs now repaid with Transports!
LAURA.
Nor in vain
Have we intwin'd the festive Wreath. This Night
Shall social Pleasure beam from ev'ry Eye,
And Sounds of Joy be heard along the Vale.
DAPHNE.
See where, returning from the hallow'd Grove,
The Shepherds cross the Plain. I'll be myself
Of this Event the Harbinger; 'twill prove
Most welcome to them all.
[Exit.
DORASTUS, LYSANDER, EUPHEMIA, and DELIA, come forward.
DORASTUS.
Enough, enough;
My stormy Life at last sinks to a Calm.
243
Upheld by this lov'd Pair.
LYSANDER.
Long live to see
Our mutual happiness! and be repaid,
In the bright Virtues of your new-found Daughter,
The Suff'rings you've endur'd!
DORASTUS.
Great Providence!
How just are all thy Ways!—Never let Man,
Howe'er he be distress'd, abandon Hope;
For in the Moment when the Cloud is blackest,
When the big Storm rolls loudest o'er his Head,
The Hand of Heav'n perhaps supports his Steps,
And guides him back to Peace!—'Twas but this Morn,
Stung with Remembrance of my former Woes,
I curs'd the Sons of Sparta; ere Day close
244
And quite atones the Wrongs his Country did me!
EUPHEMIA.
Justly I stand reprov'd.—Henceforth I'll own
Each Murmur is a Crime, and Discontent
Ingratitude to Heav'n.
DORASTUS.
Forbear to think
This Earth can teem Perfection; Far beyond
Those azure Rocks, that kiss the sloping Sky,
A happier Region lies, to which compar'd
Our Spot, is as the dank and tainted Gale
To th'unsully'd Breath of Morning.—There the Toils
Of lab'ring Virtue cease! and thither oft'
She turns her patient Eye, and seeks her Crown!—
'Tis there, Euphemia, and 'tis there alone
Perfection may be hop'd; on this Side, all
Is mutable and frail!
245
Yet 'tis not strange
The Mind that's tutor'd to expect too much
Should sigh at Disappointment.
DORASTUS.
That, my Child,
Is Life's grand Error;—We delude ourselves,
And charge the Cheats of Fancy to the World.—
Man in his visionary Hour conceives
Joys never destin'd for him, then sits down
In sullen Discontent, to think he loses
That which he ne'er possess'd.—Go, wiser you
My Children, curb your Wishes, taste with Thanks
That Good the Gods allot you; and remember,
Howe'er our Paths are chequer'd by Misfortune,
Life still has many Pleasures for the Virtuous.
MUSIDORUS.
The neighb'ring Swains, whom Delia has inform'd
246
To greet your happier Fortune.
A Number of Arcadians enter with Daphne, and surround Dorastus with Marks of Congratulation.
DORASTUS.
Ah! how sweet
Their Steps who speak of Peace!—I have, my Friends,
A Heart that reads your Purpose in your Eye,
And registers your Love—A Heart, the Gods
Have quite o'erwhelm'd with Mercy!—Thanks to all
Who share with me this Joy; and double Thanks
To thee, kind Musidorus, whom this Night
We all will sojourn with, and cheer the Board
Thy lib'ral Hand has spread.—Rich Flocks, and Herds,
And wide-spread Pastures, shall be giv'n to-morrow
In Dowry with this Maid.—You, Delia, too
Shall now become my Care.—Let us away,
The Ev'ning Star is ris'n,—and as we pass
247
In Notes that deep-felt Gratitude inspires.
CHORUS.
Mighty Pan! to Thee we owe
All the Happiness we know;—
Let our Lives still peaceful glide;
Give us Virtue for our Guide.
[Exeunt.
![]() | The Monument in Arcadia | ![]() |