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26

ACT II

Scene: An audience-chamber in the old Lateran Palace, Rome.
[Enter Zacharias and Damiani.]
DAMIANI.
And so the Lombard yielded . . .?

ZACHARIAS.
Not to me,
But to my God. Each man of woman born
Is fashioned in God's outer image: few
Are so compact of Him they feel His strength
Within their body as a force that pushes
Its way and dissipates the hollow crowd
Of godless men; but from my youth I prayed
I might be like Him in my inward parts
As in my form of dust: and there was nothing
That stood against me. It was simple joy
To meet the opposition of my foes,
To meet triumphant wickedness, to meet
The deadliest torpor; for they had an end
As night and mist are ended by the sun.

DAMIANI.
You act on a dread thought.

ZACHARIAS.
The thought conceived,
Life has no terrors. It is emptiness
Alone that makes us timid and inert:
Fill up the void, we go from strength to strength
In our possession. When I worship God,
The pyx upon the altar where He dwells
Has not a closer hold on Him than I.


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DAMIANI.
No wonder that men fear you in their hearts,
And yield when you approach them!

ZACHARIAS.
But you questioned
About my recent journey to the hills,
That I might save Perugia from the craft
Of Rachis, the vile Lombard King. I went
And faced him . . . all his treachery gave way,
The town was mine again; and more than this,
All his ambition vanished—at my feet
He promised to renounce the world itself,—
Like Carloman, the Consul of the Franks,
Who left his wife, his honours and his home
To dwell on Mount Soracte.

DAMIANI.
Carloman—
His fame spreads every day.

ZACHARIAS.
I felt a warmth
Myself to see the man, and when he came
A welcome rushed out from my soul, such life
Tempered the resolution of his face.
God dwelt in him—yet fitfully it seemed,
A fever in his blood, not constant health,
Unalterable habit, as with those
To whom God is the same now, yesterday,
And always. As I blessed him I became
Disquieted—his long hands were never still.
He needed discipline, such changeless hours
As make the spirit stable. Now he seeks
Another meeting, so this letter says,
To ask me some petition for himself,
And for his friend.

DAMIANI.
He leaves a noble brother,

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Religious and undaunted, in his place,
Pepin the Mayor.

ZACHARIAS.
On whom I build my trust.
I would that Rachis left upon his throne
A brother who could stand by Carloman's:
But Astolph has a rebel's countenance,
The only eyes that never bent to mine.
He looked upon me as a robber might
Who saw in God's own altar but a setting
To jewels that he coveted. And when
Rachis knelt down and vowed to leave the world,
And there was silence in the Lombard host,
I heard a ringing laugh, and Astolph shook
His yellow hair with joy. I never saw
So mad a gesture—God will strike him down!

[Enter a Cardinal.]
CARDINAL.
The Lombard King would see you.

ZACHARIAS.
Lead him in,
We will receive our penitent.
[Exit Cardinal.]
This Rachis
Shall make your Convent famous: Mount Casino
Shall have its royal monk.

DAMIANI.
A gracious thought.

[Enter Rachis with two Cardinals.]
ZACHARIAS.
Welcome! You come to Rome to take your vow.

RACHIS.
I come to ask your counsel first. My father,
I have no trust in Astolph, he is stubborn,

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Heretical, and will bewitch my people
From all allegiance to your holy throne.
I speak of certain danger.

ZACHARIAS.
Ah!

RACHIS.
I love you,
I love the peaceful service of the cell,
And each affection tears me bitterly:
Yet for the sake of keeping my wild hordes
Your servants, I am willing to renounce
The pleasure of the cloister, if your wisdom
Absolve me from my promise and restore me
To Kingship over Astolph.

[He watches Zacharias with the utmost anxiety.]
ZACHARIAS.
What you plead
Is politic . . . but, stay, I rob the Church
Of glory if I think of what is safe;
God can protect His own—the fiercer battle,
The heavenlier triumph. He received your oath,
Not I.

RACHIS.
You are His Pope, you can remit . . .
And you would rule in peace.

ZACHARIAS.
How dare you tempt
The Lord your God, upon whose earthly throne
I sit? Get from me! One short month ago
You were yourself blaspheming in the land,
A heretic like Astolph and a slave
To your own lust. Begone! The convent walls
Alone can save you. If you drop away
There is no limit to the punishment

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God deals to such backslider; you become
Perjured for all eternity.

RACHIS.
Alas,
Is there no service that will soften God,
Except the cloister?

ZACHARIAS.
Fool and hypocrite,
There is no way to Him except the path
A man's best moment finds, and you are lost
If you regret your vow—to break from it
Is utterly impossible: a star
Can no more leave the music of its course
Than any mortal break his word to God.
Your soul is bound for ever.
[Enter Carloman and Marcomir with another Cardinal.]
Dearest son,
I greet you with God's blessing,
[to Marcomir]
And on you
Confer the same. How prospers Carloman?

CARLOMAN.
Oh, well, dear father.

ZACHARIAS.
He who keeps his knees
Is Rachis, King of Lombardy. He takes
Like you the fearful vow to be a monk.

RACHIS.
[to Carloman]
Protect me, help me, holy Carloman;

Let me return with you. I am distracted . . .
A perjured man God will destroy in hate.

CARLOMAN.
Come with me, come . . . but not to make confession,
To tabulate your crimes; come to the cloister,

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To solitude, the simple light of God.
You must not dream, because your wickedness
Has waked you to disgust, that you are called.
The trouble is not betwixt God and sin;
Sin does not shut God out, it is the lantern
Flashing across the dark void of the world—
Most penetrative pulses; use the flare
For such poor revelation as it yields.
But this new life . . . you must arise and go
Toward it as disencumbered as of old
Abraham went up to Ur, all his possessions
Kept for him in a mystery out of sight.
To dream of them is faith, and to forget
All one has touched and handled, loved or wrought
Of sin or righteousness, the perfect sign
The new man is begotten.

RACHIS.
Pray for me,
If you are in God's favour. Teach me how
To win a better throne than I have lost,
Safe from my brother, a perpetual seat
High in the heavens.

CARLOMAN.
[with a ringing laugh]
If that is your ambition,

Oh then, how clear it is that you are damned,
Wherever you may lodge!

RACHIS.
Ha—terrible!
You must not curse me; as the meanest slave
I am content to cringe . . .

CARLOMAN.
And heaven detests
A beggar's whining. God is made for Kings,
Who need no favours, come to Him for nothing
Except Himself.


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RACHIS.
But does that satisfy?
You who have borne the Convent many months—

ZACHARIAS.
Yes, you can now bear witness to this poor
Mistrusting wretch that you have no regrets.
Speak out your true experience.

CARLOMAN.
[catching his breath]
I am sad.
[to Zacharias]
I cannot speak with this petitioner

Trembling beside me: give him judgment first,
And then hear my complaint.

ZACHARIAS.
[sternly]
No: let him hear—
What have you against God?

CARLOMAN.
I have not found Him.

ZACHARIAS.
You fast? You have been diligent in prayer?

CARLOMAN.
[more excitedly]
I cannot pray—scarcely at Angelus—

The sun so flares and changes . . . in the cold
East clouds there is such witness to His strength
Ere he lay him down: the life, the passion
Arrest me and I weep.

ZACHARIAS.
You cannot pray!
But in the cloister. . . .

CARLOMAN.
Oh, those other prayers
That I am set, I say them when I must,

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I sing within the chapel, dig and plant,
And eat my portion; then there comes an hour,
For which my heart has saved itself all day,
When I can be alone—sole preparation
The spirit makes when she would be with God—
I turn from Time's small dues of speech and habit
To serve Eternity, the joy is coming
That has no moment: and a noise is made,
A monk approaches me, and I am summoned
To visitors who seek me as a marvel
To gaze upon. O father, when they look
I reel with shame.

ZACHARIAS.
What would you? Such example
As yours confounds the foolish.

CARLOMAN.
Grant my prayer—
Our prayers, for Marcomir's are joined to mine—
That we may leave Soracte and retire
To some far convent hidden in the hills.

ZACHARIAS.
Wisely you ask the natural medicine
Your state requires.
Good prior Damiani,
The brothers Carloman and Marcomir
Together with King Rachis join your rule.
Let them obey you, leading tranquil lives.
[apart to Damiani]
Firm discipline!

RACHIS.
[from the ground]
O holy pontiff, grant

That I may change with Carloman—Soracte
For me, if you are merciful.

ZACHARIAS.
Not so.
This zealous son of ours has felt the poison
Of worldly visits trouble him.


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MARCOMIR.
[sharply]
Sin needs
A tomb in which to die.

RACHIS.
Fool! I am lost!

[He throws himself again on the ground in despair.]
CARLOMAN.
We thank you, father, for we bound our hearts
And brains and bodies with the fearful oath
To live in God, and the great Tempter—Time—
Has thwarted us persistently with bondage
Of interruption. Claims and trifles hinder
Our worship of what passes not away;
[vehemently]
And I am chafed, my father.

ZACHARIAS.
There is something
Terribly painful in your eyes—pray much,
And think but seldom.

[Enter another Cardinal.]
CARDINAL.
Saintly Boniface
Comes from the Frankish Court.

[He ushers Boniface in.]
ZACHARIAS.
A triple blessing
On this most reverend head. You come from Pepin
Or Chilperic? Here is Carloman.

BONIFACE.
Beloved,
Why have you left Soracte?


35

CARLOMAN.
Visitors
Wasted my leisure: I became a sight,
Like some caged animal.

ZACHARIAS.
He leaves to-day
For Mount Casino.

BONIFACE.
[to Carloman]
You are happy?


CARLOMAN.
Yes . . .
Oh, no, not happy; it is different:
Not as you feel when you have won the goal,
But as you feel when racing.

BONIFACE.
Do you care
To ask no news of Pepin or . . . of . . .?

CARLOMAN.
No. [he turns away.]


ZACHARIAS.
What is your mission, good Archbishop?

BONIFACE.
Pepin
Sends me to ask your blessing and to pray
That you would place upon his head the crown
That Chilperic seems to wear, but which, in truth,
He, Pepin, owns unworn!

ZACHARIAS.
We have considered
This matter on our knees before our God,
And questioned what the power He lodged with us

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Might in such case attempt: we have been taught
A glorious lesson—that as Samuel made
And unmade Kings, because God ruled in him,
So we can put away the fainéant,
Disgraceful Chilperic, and proclaim as King
Pepin, our doughty servant.

CARLOMAN.
[starting]
Pepin—King!
[turning aside again]
Why should this news so knock to enter—why?
It seems to make me open a shut door:
I see the Rhone, I see my father's roof,
The gay French faces!—Pepin, King!

BONIFACE.
I hear
Your will with joy. It is a deadly peril
To France that she is governed by a man
No better than an image, golden-haired
But lifeless as a stone. The very people
Laugh at the word, a King. But all will change
When Pepin's bulk of character extends
The meaning of his office.

CARLOMAN.
Pepin, King!
O Marcomir, you have heard it?

MARCOMIR.
Yes, I heard . . .
No matter! He has ruled so long, the title
Will fall on him as new years follow old.

ZACHARIAS.
[to Boniface.]
We bid you see he is proclaimed; ourself
Have hope to crown him when occasion brings
Either the Frank to us or us to him.
Although he want our oil, we give him grace

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To exercise all sovereignty, immuring
Chilperic within the cloister where he dwells.

CARLOMAN.
[suddenly to Zacharias.]
Oh, you can act for God, and I must pray;
There is a distance from Him in my life
Since I can only pray: while there is nearness
Between your life and His creative Be!

ZACHARIAS.
[astonished]
My son, what do you mean?


BONIFACE.
O Carloman!

CARLOMAN.
Pardon. I spoke aloud a scudding thought
That filled my head one moment. So divine
It is to act God's Counsel.

ZACHARIAS.
We can serve Him
Only if stable, for the life of life
Is calm as the untroubled sea and changeless.
Go, follow Damiani, dearest son!

BONIFACE
Peace be to you, belovèd Carloman.
My prayers, though often offered on the earth
Of heathen lands, are yours at morn and night.
I never can forget you.

CARLOMAN.
Pepin, King!—
O Boniface, I think you said farewell.
You journey far and far; you see strange faces,
And woods where idols live in solitude,
Hamlets and forges, feasts, the glare of arms,

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And great unpeopled plains so full of wind
It seems the owner, while the little trees
And grass are slaves: and thus you wander on
God's messenger . . . Ha, ha! The little trees
And grass! . . . Good-bye!

BONIFACE.
My child—

CARLOMAN.
[gently]
Yes, Boniface?

BONIFACE.
Nothing. I can but bless you. Go, in peace.

[As Carloman moves away, Marcomir bends forward.]
MARCOMIR.
Is the Queen well?

BONIFACE.
Ask not; he has not asked.