King Lear's Wife; The Crier by Night; The Riding to Lithend; Midsummer-Eve Part 34
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Do not forget the cheris.h.i.+ng of a queen: I could not catch your Sophron for you, child.
DANAe.
I did not want him: he is better gone.
LAODICE.
Yet such delight to lead him to your arms: You said you looked at him almost penitently.
DANAe.
Madam, you mock me; I have pa.s.sed from him.
LAODICE.
Yes, yes; but rapture, for your mind severe, Lies in the nearness of wise and powerful men-- As once for famous high Leontion, That philosophic courtesan your mother.
Let be; but tell me of his quietest scheme.
DANAe.
I know him not: I never knew his mind.
_Several women appear dimly at the latticed windows and the gallery._
LAODICE.
Ah, well ... I am tired, and it is your dear turn To open your arms. Hold me and I will nestle, Will murmur for you to hear along your neck.
What shall we do to-morrow, Danae?
DANAe.
Fair mistress, I can dance for you to-morrow.
LAODICE.
Yes, but my dainty cannot dance all day-- She must have long, long quiet for her thoughts.
DANAe.
Then shall I wing the bright and silken birds About the border of your Persian mantle?
LAODICE.
How should I do without you so many hours?
DANAe.
Your Parthian has a witch of snakes for you--
LAODICE.
I can charm snakes and even pith their fangs.
DANAe.
This is a rare one and, if she is drunken, Does uncouth things delicious to the senses.
Steep in her wine the herb that makes insane--
LAODICE.
The herb....?
DANAe.
The viscous plant that grows i' your chamber: Strange longer serpents shall be swiftly snared And mixt untamed with hers, for you to read Her gaping and ridiculous tragedy As the cold perils sober her to pallor.
LAODICE.
It is not novel: with a secret call I have turned snakes upon such things before.
I am learned and I need some graver pang-- Something as unsuspected as to tell you That I had poisoned you three hours ago, And see you disbelieve--begin to believe.
DANAe.
But you did not.
LAODICE. There is the disbelief.
_A pause._
If I had done so I should here avouch I could not do it--then await a sign.
DANAe.
Ah, I am yours.... You have not doomed me yet.
Queen with the wells of night for human eyes, Let us descend upon the sea to-morrow, Rule your own kingdom by your cedarn barge: We will recline together, hushed as here-- Save for the waters' converse just beneath, Permeant as my pulse veiled by your cheek.
LAODICE.
I am uneasy now and should disturb you-- And thence your restlessness would chafe me more.
I must make sure that you will lie quite still: May I so still you? Then you shall to sea.
We'll sail about the limit of the lands Until you reach the river of Babylon.
DANAe.
So much in one rapt day?
The days of life can never compa.s.s that.
LAODICE.
Not in a day, but in a day and night: Conceive the night, my Danae, the night-- It is the natural state of being and s.p.a.ce, Briefly interrupted by casual suns.
Much unknown empires are attained in night-- Perhaps not Babylon, yet far enough.
One night can be a very proper length.
DANAe.
You mean that I am poisoned after all.
LAODICE.
Indeed, my Danae, it is not so.
In this barbaric land, this bright harsh dye-pot, Peopled by camels and cynocephali And hairy men of soiled uncertain hue, O, do you not remember nights of Athens Built well about with marbles and clear skies, Wherein your mother and such n.o.ble women Conversed with poets and heroes in lit groves, And life subtled? Have you not longed for them?
I am sending you to such a farther country, Away from this shrunk mummy of live earth.
DANAe.
Madam, I know you not--when must I leave you?
LAODICE, _clapping her hands._ It is the hour, and you shall launch to-night.
Women, women, come hither every woman.
_The faces disappear from the upper windows: eleven women appear on the colonnade, some from each side, and descend the stair rapidly._
Get to your knees about us--both knees.
King Lear's Wife; The Crier by Night; The Riding to Lithend; Midsummer-Eve Part 34
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King Lear's Wife; The Crier by Night; The Riding to Lithend; Midsummer-Eve Part 34 summary
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