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Poems, Dialogues in Verse and Epigrams

By Walter Savage Landor: Edited with notes by Charles G. Crump

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THIRD SCENE.
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THIRD SCENE.

Opas and Sisabert.
Opas.
The royal threat still sounds along these halls:
Hardly his foot hath past them, and he flees
From his own treachery; all his pride, his hopes,
Are scatter'd at a breath; even courage fails
Now falsehood sinks from under him. Behold,
Again art thou where reign'd thy ancestors;
Behold the chapel of thy earliest prayers,
Where I, whose chains are sunder'd at thy sight
Ere they could close around these aged limbs,
Received and blest thee, when thy mother's arm
Was doubtful if it loost thee! with delight
Have I observed the promises we made
Deeply impressed and manfully perform'd.

36

Now, to thyself beneficent, O prince,
Never henceforth renew those weak complaints
Against Covilla's vows and Julian's faith,
His honour broken, and her heart estranged.
O, if thou holdest peace or glory dear,
Away with jealousy; brave Sisabert,
Smite from thy bosom, smite that scorpion down:
It swells and hardens amid mildew'd hopes,
O'erspreads and blackens whate'er most delights,
And renders us, haters of loveliness,
The lowest of the fiends; ambition led
The higher on, furious to dispossess,
From admiration sprung and frenzied love.
This disengenuous soul-debasing passion,
Rising from abject and most sordid fear,
Consumes the vitals, pines, and never dies.
For Julian's truth have I not pledged my own?
Have I not sworn Covilla weds no other?

Sisabert.
Her persecutor have not I chastised?
Have not I fought for Julian, won the town,
And liberated thee?

Opas.
But left for him
The dangers of pursuit, of ambuscade,
Of absence from thy high and splendid name.

Sisabert.
Do probity and truth want such supports?

Opas.
Gryphens and eagles, ivory and gold,
Can add no clearness to the lamp above,

37

But many look for them in palaces
Who have them not, and want them not, at home.
Virtue and valour and experience
Are never trusted by themselves alone
Further than infancy and idiocy:
The men around him, not the man himself,
Are lookt at, and by these is he preferr'd.
'Tis the green mantle of the warrener
And his loud whistle that alone attract
The lofty gazes of the noble herd:
And thus, without thy countenance and help
Feeble and faint is yet our confidence,
Brief perhaps our success.

Sisabert.
Should I resign
To Abdalazis her I once adored?
He truly, he must wed a Spanish queen!
He rule in Spain! ah! whom could any land
Obey so gladly as the meek, the humble,
The friend of all who have no friend beside,
Covilla! could he choose or could he find
Another who might so confirm his power?
And now indeed from long domestic wars
Who else survives of all our ancient house?

Opas.
But Egilona.

Sisabert.
Vainly she upbraids
Roderigo.

Opas.
She divorces him, abjures,
And carries vengeance to that hideous highth
Which piety and chastity would shrink
To look from, on the world or on themselves.

Sisabert.
She may forgive him yet.

Opas.
Ah, Sisabert!
Wretched are those a woman has forgiven:
With her forgiveness ne'er hath love return'd.
Ye know not till too late the filmy tie
That holds heaven's precious boon eternally
To such as fondly cherish her; once go
Driven by mad passion, strike but at her peace,
And, though she step aside from broad reproach,

38

Yet every softer virtue dies away.
Beaming with virtue inaccessible
Stood Egilona; for her lord she lived,
And for the heavens that raised her sphere so high:
All thoughts were on her, all, beside her own.
Negligent as the blossoms of the field,
Array'd in candour and simplicity,
Before her path she heard the streams of joy
Murmur her name in all their cadences,
Saw them in every scene, in light, in shade,
Reflect her image, but acknowledged them
Hers most complete when flowing from her most.
All things in want of her, herself of none,
Pomp and dominion lay beneath her feet
Unfelt and unregarded. Now behold
The earthly passions war against the heavenly!
Pride against love, ambition and revenge
Against devotion and compliancy:
Her glorious beams adversity hath blunted;
And coming nearer to our quiet view,
The original clay of coarse mortality
Hardens and flaws around her.

Sisabert.
Every germ
Of virtue perishes when love recedes
From those hot shifting sands, the female heart.

Opas.
His was the fault; be his the punishment.
'Tis not their own crimes only, men commit,
They harrow them into another's breast,
And they shall reap the bitter growth with pain.

Sisabert.
Yes, blooming royalty will first attract
These creatures of the desert. Now I breathe
More freely. She is theirs if I pursue
The fugitive again. He well deserves
The death he flies from. Stay! Don Julian twice
Call'd him aloud, and he, methinks, replied.
Could not I have remain'd a moment more
And seen the end? although with hurried voice
He bade me intercept the scattered foes,
And hold the city barr'd to their return.

39

May Egilona be another's wife
Whether he die or live! but oh! Covilla!
She never can be mine! yet she may be
Still happy . . no, Covilla, no . . not happy,
But more deserving happiness without it.
Mine never! nor another's. 'Tis enough.
The tears I shed no rival can deride;
In the fond intercourse a name once cherisht
Will never be defended by faint smiles,
Nor given up with vows of alter'd love.
And is the passion of my soul at last
Reduced to this? is this my happiness?
This my sole comfort? this the close of all
Those promises, those tears, those last adieus,
And those long vigils for the morrow's dawn?

Opas.
Arouse thee! be thyself. O Sisabert,
Awake to glory from these feverish dreams:
The enemy is in our land; two enemies;
We must quell both: shame on us if we fail.

Sisabert.
Incredible! a nation be subdued
Peopled as ours.

Opas.
Corruption may subvert
What force could never.

Sisabert.
Traitors may.

Opas.
Alas!
If traitors can, the basis is but frail.
I mean such traitors as the vacant world
Echoes most stunningly: not fur-robed knaves
Whose whispers raise the dreaming bloodhound's ear
Against benighted famisht wanderers,
While with remorseless guilt they undermine
Palace and shed, their very father's house.
O blind! their own, their children's heritage,
To leave more ample space for fearful wealth.
Plunder in some most harmless guise they swathe,
Call it some very meek and hallow'd name,
Some known and borne by their good forefathers,
And own and vaunt it thus redeem'd from sin.
These are the plagues heaven sends o'er every land

40

Before it sink . . the portents of the street,
Not of the air . . lest nations should complain
Of distance or of dimness in the signs,
Flaring from far to Wisdom's eye alone:
These are the last: these, when the sun rides high
In the forenoon of doomsday, revelling,
Make men abhor the earth, arraign the skies.
Ye who behold them spoil field after field,
Despising them in individual strength,
Not with one torrent sweeping them away
Into the ocean of eternity,
Arise! despatch! no renovating gale,
No second spring awaits you: up, begone,
If you have force and courage even for flight.
The blast of dissolution is behind.

Sisabert.
How terrible! how true! what voice like thine
Can rouse and warn the nation! If she rise,
Say, whither go, where stop we?

Opas.
God will guide.
Let us pursue the oppressor to destruction;
The rest is heaven's: must we move no step
Because we can not see the boundaries
Of our long way, and every stone between?

Sisabert.
Is not thy vengeance for the late affront,
For threats and outrage and imprisonment?

Opas.
For outrage, yes; imprisonment and threats
I pardon him, and whatsoever ill
He could do me.

Sisabert.
To hold Covilla from me!
To urge her into vows against her faith,
Against her beauty, youth, and inclination,
Without her mother's blessing, nay, without
Her father's knowledge and authority,
So that she never will behold me more,
Flying afar for refuge and for help
Where never friend but God will comfort her!

Opas.
These and more barbarous deeds were perpetrated.

Sisabert.
Yet her proud father deign'd not to inform
Me, whom he loved and taught, in peace and war,

41

Me, whom he called his son before I hoped
To merit it by marriage or by arms.
He offer'd no excuse, no plea; exprest
No sorrow; but with firm unfaltering voice
Commanded me . . I trembled as he spoke . .
To follow where he led, redress his wrongs,
And vindicate the honour of his child.
He call'd on God, the witness of his cause,
On Spain the partner of his victories;
And yet amid these animating words
Roll'd the huge tear down his unvisor'd face;
A general swell of indignation rose
Thro' the long line, sobs burst from every breast,
Hardly one voice succeeded; you might hear
The impatient hoof strike the soft sandy plain.
But when the gates flew open, and the king
In his high car came forth triumphantly,
Then was Count Julian's stature more elate;
Tremendous was the smile that smote the eyes
Of all he past. ‘Fathers, and sons, and brothers,’
He cried, ‘I fight your battles, follow me!
Soldiers we know no danger but disgrace!’
Father, and general, and king,’ they shout,
And would proclaim him: back he cast his face,
Pallid with grief, and one loud groan burst forth;
It kindled vengeance thro' the Asturian ranks,
And they soon scatter'd, as the blasts of heaven
Scatter the leaves and dust, the astonisht foe.

Opas.
And doubtest thou his truth?

Sisabert.
I love . . and doubt . .
Fight . . and believe: Roderigo spoke untruths;
In him I place no trust; but Julian holds
Truths in reserve: how should I quite confide!

Opas.
By sorrows thou beholdest him opprest;
Doubt the more prosperous. March, Sisabert,
Once more against his enemy and ours:
Much hath been done, but much there yet remains.