University of Virginia Library

SCENE I.

Enter Orestes and Pylades.
Orestes.
O Pylades! What's Life without a Friend!
At Sight of thee my gloomy Soul clears up;
My Hopes revive, and Gladness dawns within me.
After an Absence of six tedious Moons,
How could I hope to find my Pylades;
My Joy, my Comfort! on this fatal Shore?
Even in the Court of Pyrrhus? in these Realms,
These hated Realms, so cross to all my Wishes.
Oh, my brave Friend! may no blind Stroke of Fate
Divide us more, and tear me from my self.

Pyl.
O Prince! O, my Orestes! O, my Friend—!
Thus let me speak the Welcome of my Heart.
[Embracing.
Since I have gain'd this unexpected Meeting,
Blest be the Powers, who barr'd my Way to Greece,
And kept me here! e'er since th'unhappy Day,

2

When warring Winds (Epirus full in View)
Sunder'd our Barks on the loud, stormy Main.

Orest.
It was, indeed, a Morning full of Horror!

Pyl.
A Thousand boading Cares have rack'd my Soul
In your behalf. Often, with Tears, I mourn'd
The fatal Ills, in which your Life's involv'd;
And grudg'd you Dangers, which I could not share.
I fear'd, to what Extreams the black Despair,
That prey'd upon your Mind, might have betray'd you;
And lest the Gods, in Pity to your Woes,
Should hear your Pray'rs, and take the Life you loath'd.
But now with Joy I see you!—The Retinue
And numerous Followers, that surround you here,
Speak better Fortunes, and a Mind dispos'd
To relish Life.

Orest.
Alas! my Friend, who knows
The Destiny, to which I stand reserv'd!
I come in search of an inhuman Fair;
And live or dye, as she decrees my Fate.

Pyl.
You much surprize me, Prince!—I thought you cur'd
Of your unpity'd, unsuccessful Passion.
Why, in Epirus, shou'd you hope to find
Hermione less cruel, than at Sparta?
I thought her Pride, and the disdainful manner,
In which she treated all your constant Suff'rings,
Had broke your Fetters, and assur'd your Freedom:
Asham'd of your Repulse, and slighted Vows,
You hated her; you talk'd of her no more.
Prince you deceiv'd me.

Orest.
I deceiv'd my self.
Do not upbraid the Unhappy Man, that loves thee.
Thou know'st, I never hid my Passion from thee:
Thou saw'st it in its Birth, and in its Progress.
And when at last the hoary King, her Father,
Great Menelaus, gave away his Daughter,
His lovely Daughter, to this happy Pyrrhus,
The Avenger of his Wrongs; thou saw'st my Grief,

3

My Torture, my Despair; and how I dragg'd,
From Sea to Sea, a heavy Chain of Woes.
O, Pylades! my Heart has bled within me,
To see thee, prest with Sorrows not thy own,
Still wandring with me, like a banish'd Man;
Watchful, and anxious for thy wretched Friend,
To temper the wild Transports of my Mind,
And save me from my self.

Pyl.
Why thus unkind?
Why will you envy me the pleasing Tasks
Of generous Love and sympathizing Friendship?

Orest.
Thou Miracle of Truth!—But hear me on.
When, in the midst of my disastrous Fate,
I thought, how the Divine Hermione,
Deaf to my Vows, regardless of my Plaints,
Gave up her self, in all her Charms, to Pyrrhus;
Thou may'st remember, I abhorr'd her Name,
Strove to forget her, and repay her Scorn
I made my Friends, and even my self, believe
My Soul was freed. Alas! I did not see,
That all the Malice of my Heart was Love.
Triumphing thus, and yet a Captive still,
In Greece I landed: And in Greece I found
The assembled Princes all alarm'd with Fears,
In which their common Safety seem'd concern'd.
I join'd them: For I hoped that War and Glory
Might fill my Mind, and take up all my Thoughts;
And, that my shatter'd Soul, impair'd with Grief,
Once more would reassume its wanted Vigour,
And ev'ry idle Passion quit my Breast.

Pyl.
The Thought was worthy Agamemnon's Son.

Orest.
But see the strange Perverseness of my Stars,
Which throws me on the Rock I strove to shun!
The jealous Chiefs, and all the States of Greece,
With one united Voice, complain of Pyrrhus;
That now, forgetful of the Promise given,
And mindless of his Godlike Father's Fate,

4

Astyanax he nurses in his Court;
Astyanax, the Young, surviving Hope
Of ruin'd Troy; Astyanax, descended
From a long Race of Kings; great Hector's Son.

Pyl.
A Name still dreadful in the Ears of Greece!
But, Prince, you'll cease to wonder, why the Child
Lives thus protected in the Court of Pyrrhus,
When you shall hear, the bright Andromache,
His lovely Captive, charms him from his Purpose:
The Mother's Beauty guards the helpless Son.

Orest.
Your Tale confirms what I have heard; and hence
Springs all my Hopes. Since my proud Rival woes
Another Partner to his Throne and Bed,
Hermione may still be mine. Her Father,
The injur'd Menelaus, thinks already
His Daughter slighted, and the intended Nuptials
Too long delay'd. I heard his loud Complaints
With secret Pleasure; and was glad to find
The ungrateful Maid neglected in her Turn,
And all my Wrongs avenged in her Disgrace.

Pyl.
Oh, may you keep your just Resentments warm!

Orest.
Resentments? Ah, my Friend, too soon I found
They grew not out of Hatred! I am betray'd:
I practise on my self; and fondly plot
My own Undoing. Goaded on by Love,
I canvass'd all the Suffrages of Greece;
And here I come, their sworn Ambassador,
To speak their Jealousies, and claim this Boy.

Pyl.
Pyrrhus will treat your Embassy with Scorn.
Full of Achilles, his redoubted Sire,
Pyrrhus is proud, impetuous, headstrong, fierce;
Made up of Passions: Will he then be sway'd,
And give to Death the Son of her he loves?

Orst.
Oh, would he render up Hermione,
And keep Astyanax; I should be blest!
He must; he shall: Hermione is my Life,
My Soul, my Rapture!—I'll no longer curb

5

The strong Desire, that hurries me to Madness:
I'll give a Loose to Love; I'll bear her hence;
I'll tear her from his Arms; I'll—O, ye Gods!
Give me Hermione; or let me die!—
But, tell me, Pylades; how stand my Hopes?
Is Pyrrhus still enamour'd with her Charms?
Or do'st thou think, he'll yield me up the Prize,
The dear, dear Prize, which he has ravish'd from me!

Pyl.
I dare not flatter your fond Hopes so far.
The King, indeed, cold to the Spartan Princess,
Turns all his Passion to Andromache,
Hector's afflicted Widow. But in vain,
With inter-woven Love and Rage, he sues
The charming Captive, obstinately cruel.
Oft he alarms her for her Child, confin'd
Apart; and, when her Tears begin to flow,
As soon he stops them, and recalls his Threats.
Hermione a thousand times has seen
His ill-requited Vows return to her;
And takes his Indignation all for Love.
What can be gather'd from a Man so various?
He may, in the Disorder of his Soul,
Wed her, he hates; and punish her, he loves.

Orest.
But, tell me, how the wrong'd Hermione
Brooks her slow Nuptials, and dishonour'd Charms?

Pyl.
Hermione would fain be thought to scorn
Her wavering Lover, and disdain his Falshood;
But, spight of all her Pride, and conscious Beauty,
She mourns in Secret her neglected Charms;
And oft has made me privy to her Tears:
Still threatens to be gone; yet still she stays;
And sometimes sighs, and wishes for Orestes.

Orest.
Ah, were those Wishes from her Heart, my Friend,
I'd fly in Transport—

[Flourish within.
Pyl.
Hear!—The King approaches
To give you Audience. Speak your Embassy

6

Without Reserve: Urge the Demands of Greece;
And in the Name of all her Kings require,
That Hector's Son be given into your Hands.
Pyrrhus, instead of granting what they ask,
To speed his Love, and win the Trojan Dame,
Will make it Merit to preserve her Son.
But, see; he comes!

Orest.
Mean while, my Pylades,
Go, and dispose Hermione to see
Her Lover, who is come thus far, to throw
Himself in all his Sorrows at her Feet.