The Dramatic Works of G. E. Lessing Part 12
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MARWOOD.
Take her away, Hannah!
MELLEFONT.
Remain here, Bella (_attempting to stop her_).
MARWOOD.
No force, Mellefont, or----
(_Exeunt_ Hannah _and_ Arabella).
Scene VII.
Mellefont, Marwood.
MARWOOD.
Now we are alone! Say now once more, whether you are determined to sacrifice me for a foolish girl?
MELLEFONT (_bitterly_).
Sacrifice you? You recall to my mind that impure animals were also sacrificed to the ancient G.o.ds.
MARWOOD (_mockingly_).
Express yourself without these learned allusions.
MELLEFONT.
I tell you, then, that I am firmly resolved never to think of you again, but with the most fearful of curses. Who are you? And who is Sara? You are a voluptuous, egoistic, shameful strumpet, who certainly can scarcely remember any longer that she ever was innocent. I have nothing to reproach myself with but that I have enjoyed with you that which otherwise you would perhaps have let the whole world enjoy. You have sought me, not I you, and if I now know who Marwood is, I have paid for this knowledge dearly enough. It has cost me my fortune, my honour, my happiness----
MARWOOD.
And I would that it might also cost you your eternal happiness.
Monster! Is the devil worse than you, when he lures feeble mortals into crimes and himself accuses them afterwards for these crimes which are his own work! What is my innocence to you? What does it matter to you when and how I lost it. If I could not sacrifice my virtue, I have at least staked my good name for you. The former is no more valuable than the latter. What do I say? More valuable? Without it the former is a silly fancy, which brings one neither happiness nor guilt. The good name alone gives it some value, and can exist quite well without it.
What did it matter what I was before I knew you, you wretch! It is enough that in the eyes of the world I was a woman without reproach.
Through you only it has learned that I am not so; solely through my readiness to accept your heart, as I then thought, without your hand.
MELLEFONT.
This very readiness condemns you, vile woman!
MARWOOD.
But do you remember to what base tricks you owed it? Was I not persuaded by you, that you could not be publicly united to me without forfeiting an inheritance which you wished to share with me only? Is it time now to renounce it? And to renounce it, not for me but for another!
MELLEFONT.
It is a real delight to me to be able to tell you that this difficulty will soon be removed. Content yourself therefore with having deprived me of my father's inheritance, and let me enjoy a far smaller one with a more worthy wife.
MARWOOD.
Ha! Now I see what it is that makes you so perverse. Well, I will lose no more words. Be it so! Be a.s.sured I shall do everything to forget you. And the first thing that I will do to this end, shall be this. You will understand me! Tremble for your Bella! Her life shall not carry the memory of my despised love down to posterity; my cruelty shall do it. Behold in me a new Medea!
MELLEFONT (_frightened_).
Marwood!----
MARWOOD.
Or, if you know a more cruel mother still, behold her cruelty doubled in me! Poison and dagger shall avenge me. But no, poison and dagger are tools too merciful for me! They would kill your child and mine too soon. I will not see it dead. I will see it dying! I will see each feature of the face which she has from you disfigured, distorted, and obliterated by slow torture. With eager hand will I part limb from limb, vein from vein, nerve from nerve, and will not cease to cut and burn the very smallest of them, even when there is nothing remaining but a senseless carca.s.s! I--I shall at least feel in it--how sweet is revenge!
MELLEFONT.
You are raving, Marwood----
MARWOOD.
You remind me that my ravings are not directed against the right person. The father must go first! He must already be in yonder world, when, through a thousand woes the spirit of his daughter follows him (_she advances towards him with a dagger which she draws from her bosom_). So die, traitor!
MELLEFONT (_seizing her arm, and s.n.a.t.c.hing the dagger from her_).
Insane woman! What hinders me now from turning the steel against you?
But live, and your punishment shall be left for a hand void of honour.
MARWOOD (_wringing her hands_).
Heaven, what have I done? Mellefont----
MELLEFONT.
Your grief shall not deceive me. I know well why you are sorry--not that you wished to stab me, but that you failed to do so.
MARWOOD.
Give me back the erring steel! Give it me back, and you shall see for whom it was sharpened! For this breast alone, which for long has been too narrow for a heart which will rather renounce life than your love.
MELLEFONT.
Hannah!
MARWOOD.
What are you doing, Mellefont?
The Dramatic Works of G. E. Lessing Part 12
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The Dramatic Works of G. E. Lessing Part 12 summary
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