Read Delphi Complete Works of George Eliot (Illustrated) Online
Authors: George Eliot
I understand your care. But I am brave, —
O, and so cunning ! — always I prevail.
Now, honoured Troubadour, if you will be
Your pupil’s servant, bear this casket hence.
Nay, not the necklace : it is hard to place.
Pray go before me ; Inez will be there.
(Exit JUAN with the casket)
FEDALMA (looking again at the necklace).
It is his past clings to you, not my, own.
If we have each our angels, good and bad,
Fates, separate from ourselves, who act for us
When we are blind, or sleep, then this man’s fate,
Hovering about the thing he used to wear,
Has laid its grasp on mine appealingly.
Dangerous, is he ? — well, a Spanish knight
Would have his enemy strong, — defy, not bind, him.
I can dare all things when my soul is moved
By something hidden that possesses me.
If Silva said this man must keep his chains
I should find ways to free him, — disobey
And free him as I did the birds. But no !
As soon as we are wed, I’ll put my prayer,
And he will not deny me : he is good.
O, I shall have much power as well as joy !
Duchess Fedalma may do what she will.
A Street by the Castle, JUAN leans against a parapet, in moonlight, and
touches his lute half unconsciously. PEPITA stands on tiptoe watching him,
and then advances till her shadow falls in front of him. He looks towards
her. A piece of white drapery thrown over her head catches the moon-light.
JUAN.
Ha ! my Pepfta ! see how thin and long
Your shadow is. ‘T is so your ghost will be,
When you are dead.
PEPITA (crossing herself).
Dead ! — O the blessed saints !
You would be glad, then, if Pepfta died ?
JUAN.
Glad ! why? Dead maidens are not merry.
Their ghosts are thin. I like you living better.
PEPITA.
I think you like me not. I wish you did.
Sometimes you sing to me and make me dance.
Another time you take no heed of me,
Not though I kiss my hand to you and smile.
But Andres would be glad if I kissed him.
JUAN.
My poor Pepfta, I am old.
PEPTA.
No, no.
You have no wrinkles.
JUAN.
Yes, I have — within ;
The wrinkles are within, my little bird.
Why, I have lived through twice a thousand years,
And kept the company of men whose bones
Crumbled before the blessed Virgin lived.
PEPffA (crossing herself).
Nay, God defend us, that is wicked talk !
You say it but to scorn me. (With a sob) I will go.
JUAN.
Stay, little pigeon. I am not unkind.
Come, sit upon the wall. Nay, never cry.
Give me your cheek to kiss. There, there !
(PEPITA, sitting on the low parapet, puts up her cheek to JUAN, who kisses
it, putting his hand under her chin. She takes his hand and kisses it.)
PEPITA.
I like to kiss your hand. It is so good, —
So smooth and soft.
JUAN.
Well, well, I’ll sing to you.
PEPITA.
A pretty song, loving and merry?
JUAN.
Yes
(Juan sings.)
Memory,
Tell to me
What is fair,
Past compare,
In the land of Tubal ?
Is it Spring’s
Lovely things,
Blossoms white,
Rosy dight ?
Then it is Pepita.
Summer’s crest
Red-gold tressed,
Corn-flowers peeping under ? —
Idle noons,
Lingering moons,
Sudden cloud,
LightningA’s shroud,
Sudden rain,
Quick again
Smiles where late was thunder ? —
Are all these
Made to please ?
So too is Pepita.
Autumn’s prime,
Apple-time,
Smooth cheek round,
Heart all sound ? —
Is it this
You would kiss ?
Then it is Pepita.
You can bring
No sweet thing,
But my mind
Still shall find
It is my Pepita.
Memory
Says to me
It is she, —
She is fair
Past compare
In the land of Tubal
Pepita (seizing JUAN’S hand again)
O, then, you do love me ?
JUAN.
Yes, in the song.
PEPITA (sadly).
Not out of it ? — not love me out of it ?
JUAN.
Only a little out of it, my bird.
When I was singing I was Andres, say,
Or one who loves you better still than Andres.
PEPITA.
Not yourself ?
JUAN.
No!
PEPITA (throwing his hand down pettishly).
Then take it back again !
I will not have it !
JUAN.
Listen, little one.
Juan is not a living man by himself:
His life is breathed in him by other men,
And they speak out of him. He is their voice.
Juan’s own life he gave once quite away.
It was Pepita’s lover singing then, — not Juan.
We old, old poets, if we kept our hearts,
Should hardly know them from another man’s.
They shrink to make room for the many more
We keep within us. There, now, — one more kiss,
And then go home again.
PEPITA (a little frightened, after letting JUAN kiss her).
You are not wicked ?
JUAN.
Ask your confessor, — tell him what I said.
(PEP^A goes, while JUAN thrums his lute again, and sings.)
Came a pretty maid
By the moon’s pure light,
Loved me well, she said,
Eyes with tears all bright,
A pretty maid!
But too late she strayed,
Moonlight pure was there ;
She was nought but shade
Hiding the more fair,
The heavenly maid !
A vaulted room all stone. The light shed from a high lamp. Wooden chairs, a
desk, book-shelves. The PRIOR, in white frock, a black rosary with a
crucifix of ebony and ivory at his side, is walking up and down, holding a
written paper in his hands, which are clasped behind him.
What if this witness lies ? he says he heard her
Counting her blasphemies on a rosary,
And in a bold discourse with Salomo,
Say that the Host was naught but ill-mixed flour,
That it was mean to pray, — she never prayed.
I know the man who wrote this for a cur,
Who follows Don Diego, sees life’s good
In scraps my nephew flings to him. What then ?
Particular lies may speak a general truth.
I guess him false, but know her heretic, —
Know her for Satan’s instrument, bedecked
With heathenish charms, luring the souls of men
To damning trust in good unsanctified.
Let her be prisoned, — questioned, — she will give
Witness against herself, that were this false . . . .
(He looks at the paper again and reads, then again thrusts it behind him.)
The matter and the colour are not false :
The form concerns the witness not the judge ;
For proof is gathered by the sifting mind,
Not given in crude and formal circumstance.
Suspicion is a heaven-sent lamp, and I, —
I, watchman of the Holy Office, bear
That lamp in trust. I will keep faithful watch.
The Holy Inquisition’s discipline
Is mercy, saving her, if penitent, —
God grant it ! — else, — root up the poison-plant,
Though ‘t were a lily with a golden heart !
This spotless maiden with her pagan soul
Is the arch-enemy’s trap : he turns his back
On all the prostitutes, and watches her
To see her poison men with false belief
In rebel virtues. She has poisoned Silva ;
His shifting mind, dangerous in fitfulness,
Strong in the contradiction of itself,
Carries his young ambitions wearily,
As holy vows regretted. Once he seemed
The fresh-oped flower of Christian knighthood, born
For feats of holy daring ; and I said :
“ That half of life which I, as monk, renounce,
Shall be fulfilled in him : Silva will be
That saintly noble, that wise warrior,
That blameless excellence in worldly gifts
I would have been, had I not asked to live
The higher life of man impersonal
Who reigns o’er all things by refusing all.
What is his promise now? Apostasy
From every high intent : — languid, nay, gone,
The prompt devoutness of a generous heart,
The strong obedience of a reverent will,
That breathes the Church’s air and sees her light,
He peers and strains with feeble questioning,
Or else he jests. He thinks I know it not, —
I who have read the history of his lapse,
As clear as it is writ in the angel’s book.
He will defy me, — flings great words at me, —
Me who have governed all our house’s acts,
Since I, a stripling, ruled his stripling father.
This maiden is the cause, and if they wed,
The Holy War may count a captain lost.
For better he were dead than keep his place,
And fill it infamously : in God’s war
Slackness is infamy. Shall I stand by
And let the tempter win ? defraud Christ’s cause,
And blot his banner ? — all for scruples weak
Of pity towards their young and frolicsome blood ;
Or nice discrimination of the tool
By which my hand shall work a sacred rescue ?
The fence of rules is for the purblind crowd ;
They walk by averaged precepts ; sovereign men,
Seeing by God’s light, see the general
By seeing all the special, — own no rule
But their full vision of the moment’s worth.
‘T is so God governs, using wicked men, —
Nay, scheming fiends, to work his purposes.
Evil that good may come ? Measure the good
Before you say what’s evil. Perjury ?
I scorn the purjurer, but I will use him
To serve the truth. There is no lie
Save in his soul, and let his soul be judged.
I know the truth, and act upon the truth.
O God, thou knowest that my will is pure.
Thy servant owns naught for himself, his wealth
Is but obedience. And I have sinned
In keeping small respects of human love, —
Calling it mercy. Mercy ? Where evil is
True mercy must be terrible. Mercy would save.
Save whom ? Save serpents, locusts, wolves ?
Or out of pity let the idiots gorge
Within a famished town ? Or save the gains
Of men who trade in poison lest they starve ?
Save all things mean and foul that clog the earth
Stifling the better ? Save the fools who cling
For refuge round their hideous idol’s limbs,
So leave the idol grinning unconsumed,
And save the fools to breed idolaters ?
O mercy worthy of the licking hound