John Keats

The Complete Works: Poetry, Plays, Letters and Extensive Biographies


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      Gersa. Your generous Father, most illustrious Otho,

      Sits in the Banquet room among his chiefs

      His wine is bitter, for you are not there

      His eyes are fix’d still on the open doors,

      And every passer in he frowns upon

      Seeing no Ludolph comes.

      Ludolph.

      I do neglect

      Gersa. And for your absence, may I guess the cause?

      Ludolph.

      Stay there! no guess? more princely you must be

      Than to make guesses at me. ’Tis enough,

      I’m sorry I can hear no more.

      Gersa.

      And I

      As griev’d to force it on you so abrupt;

      Yet one day you must know a grief whose sting

      Will sharpen more the longer ’tis concealed.

      Ludolph.

      Say it at once, sir, dead, dead, is she dead?

      Gersa.

      Mine is a cruel task : she is not dead

      And would for your sake she were innocent

      Ludolph. Thou liest! thou amazest me beyond

      All scope of thought; convulsest my heart’s blood

      To deadly churning Gersa you are young

      As I am ; let me observe you face to face ;

      Not grey-brow’d like the poisonous Ethelbert,

      No rheumed eyes, no furrowing of age,

      No wrinkles where all vices nestle in

      Like crannied vermin no, but fresh and young

      And hopeful featured. Ha! by heaven you weep

      Tears, human tears Do you repent you then

      Of a curs’d torturer’s office! Why shouldst join

      Tell me, the league of Devils? Confess confess

      The Lie.

      Gersa.

      Lie!– but begone all ceremonious points

      Of honour battailous. I could not turn

      My wrath against thee for the orbed world.

      Ludolph.

      Your wrath, weak boy? Tremble at mine unless

      Retraction follow close upon the heels

      Of that late stounding insult: why has my sword

      Not done already a sheer judgment on thee?

      Despair, or eat thy words. Why, thou wast nigh

      Whimpering away my reason: hark ye, Sir,

      It is no secret; that Erminia,

      Erminia, Sir, was hidden in your tent;

      O bless ‘d asylum! comfortable home!

      Begone, I pity thee, thou art a Gull

      Erminia’s last new puppet

      Gersa. Furious fire!

      Thou mak’st me boil as hot as thou canst flame!

      And in thy teeth I give thee back the lie!

      Thou liest! Thou, Auranthe’s fool, a wittol

      Ludolph. Look! look at this bright sword;

      There is no part of it to the very hilt

      But shall indulge itself about thine heart

      Draw but remember thou must cower thy plumes,

      As yesterday the Arab made thee stoop

      Gersa. Patience! not here, I would not spill thy blood

      Here underneath this roof where Otho breathes,

      Thy father almost mine

      Ludolph. O faltering coward

      Re-enter PAGE.

      Stay, stay, here is one I have half a word with

      Well What ails thee child?

      Page.

      My lord,

      Ludolph. Good fellow

      Page. They are fled!

      Ludolph.

      They who?

      Page.

      When anxiously

      I hasten ‘d back, your grieving messenger,

      I found the stairs all dark, the lamps extinct,

      And not a foot or whisper to be heard.

      I thought her dead, and on the lowest step

      Sat listening; when presently came by

      Two muffled up, one sighing heavily,

      The other cursing low, whose voice I knew

      For the Duke Conrad’s. Close I follow’d them

      Thro’ the dark ways they chose to the open air;

      And, as I follow’d, heard my lady speak.

      Ludolph.

      Thy life answers the truth!

      Page.

      The chamber’s empty!

      Ludolph.

      As I will be of mercy! So, at last,

      This nail is in my temples!

      Gersa.

      Be calm in this.

      Ludolph. I am.

      Gersa.

      And Albert too has disappeared;

      Ere I met you, I sought him everywhere ;

      You would not hearken.

      Ludolph.

      Which way went they, boy?

      Gersa.

      I’ll hunt with you.

      Ludolph.

      No, no, no. My senses are

      Still whole. I have surviv’d. My arm is strong

      My appetite sharp for revenge! I’ll no sharer

      In my feast; my injury is all my own,

      And so is my revenge, my lawful chattels!

      Terrier, ferret them out! Burn burn the witch!

      Trace me their footsteps! Away!

      [Exeunt.

      Act V

      Scene I

A part of the ForestEnter CONRAD and AURANTHE

      Auranthe.

      Go no further; not a step more; thou art

      A master-plague in the midst of miseries.

      Go I fear thee. I tremble every limb,

      Who