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The Complete Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge Volume II Part 12

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[330] all is] all as MS. III, Remorse.

[332] MS. III erased.

[332 foll.]

ALHADRA (_aside_).

I must reserve all knowledge of this Table Till I can pierce the mystery of the slander-- Form, Look, Features,--the scar below the Temple All, all are Isidore's--and the whole Picture-- (_then to ALVAR._) On matter of concerning Import . .

. . . I would discourse with you: Thou hast ta'en up thy sojourn in the Dell, Where Zagri liv'd--who dar'd avow the Prophet, And died like one of the Faithful--there expect me.

Addition on margin of MS. III.

[332] om. Remorse.

[340] While] Whilst Remorse.

[359] Interpolated by S. T. C. MS. III.

[363] Could she walk here, if she had been a traitress Remorse.

ACT THE SECOND

SCENE THE FIRST.--_A wild and mountainous country. OSORIO and FERDINAND are discovered at a little distance from a house, which stands under the brow of a slate rock, the rock covered with vines._

_FERDINAND and OSORIO._

_Ferdinand._ Thrice you have sav'd my life. Once in the battle You gave it me, next rescued me from suicide, When for my follies I was made to wander With mouths to feed, and not a morsel for them.

Now, but for you, a dungeon's slimy stones 5 Had pillow'd my snapt joints.

_Osorio._ Good Ferdinand!

Why this to me? It is enough you know it.

_Ferdinand._ A common trick of grat.i.tude, my lord!

Seeking to ease her own full heart.

_Osorio._ Enough.

A debt repay'd ceases to be a debt. 10 You have it in your power to serve me greatly.

_Ferdinand._ As how, my lord? I pray you name the thing!

I would climb up an ice-glaz'd precipice To pluck a weed you fancied.

_Osorio (with embarra.s.sment and hesitation)._ Why--that--lady--

_Ferdinand._ 'Tis now three years, my lord! since last I saw you. 15 Have you a son, my lord?

_Osorio._ O miserable! [_Aside._ Ferdinand! you are a man, and know this world.

I told you what I wish'd--now for the truth!

She lov'd the man you kill'd!

_Ferdinand (looking as suddenly alarmed)._ You jest, my lord?

_Osorio._ And till his death is proved, she will not wed me. 20

_Ferdinand._ You sport with me, my lord?

_Osorio._ Come, come, this foolery Lives only in thy looks--thy heart disowns it.

_Ferdinand._ I can bear this, and anything more grievous From you, my lord!--but how can I serve you here?

_Osorio._ Why, you can mouth set speeches solemnly, 25 Wear a quaint garment, make mysterious antics.

[_Ferdinand._ I am dull, my lord! I do not comprehend you.

_Osorio._ In blunt terms] you can play the sorcerer.

She has no faith in Holy Church, 'tis true.

Her lover school'd her in some newer nonsense: 30 Yet still a tale of spirits works on her.

She is a lone enthusiast, sensitive, s.h.i.+vers, and cannot keep the tears in her eye.

Such ones do love the marvellous too well Not to believe it. We will wind her up 35 With a strange music, that she knows not of, With fumes of frankincense, and mummery-- Then leave, as one sure token of his death, That portrait, which from off the dead man's neck I bade thee take, the trophy of thy conquest. 40

_Ferdinand (with hesitation)._ Just now I should have cursed the man who told me You could ask aught, my lord! and I refuse.

But this I cannot do.

_Osorio._ Where lies your scruple?

_Ferdinand._ That shark Francesco.

_Osorio._ O! an o'ersiz'd gudgeon!

I baited, sir, my hook with a painted mitre, 45 And now I play with him at the end of the line.

Well--and what next?

_Ferdinand (stammering)._ Next, next--my lord!

You know you told me that the lady loved you, Had loved you with incautious tenderness.

That if the young man, her betrothed husband, 50 Return'd, yourself, and she, and an unborn babe, Must perish. Now, my lord! to be a man!

_Osorio (aloud, though to express his contempt he speaks in the third person)._ This fellow is a man! he kill'd for hire One whom he knew not--yet has tender scruples.

[_Then turning to FERDINAND._

Thy hums and ha's, thy whine and stammering. 55 Pish--fool! thou blunder'st through the devil's book, Spelling thy villany!

_Ferdinand._ My lord--my lord!

I can bear much, yes, very much from you.

But there's a point where sufferance is meanness!

I am no villain, never kill'd for hire. 60 My grat.i.tude----

_Osorio._ O! aye, your grat.i.tude!

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The Complete Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge Volume II Part 12 summary

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