JUVENILIA THE WITCH OF ILNI A Dream of the Woodlands CHARACTERS
CORILLO
: prince of Ilm
IMELANDER
: a sylvan poet
GIRLS OF THE FOREST Page .– 1057 The Witch of Ilni
The Woodlands of Ilni.
Song
Under the darkling tree Sister, say ?
His hair is the sweet sunlight In May.
Under the leaf-wrought screen Kissing thee ?
His lips are a ruby bright, On the tree.
Under the grass-green bough On thy breast?
His voice is a swallow's flight, Dewy drest.
IAMBLICHUS
Unwind the linked rapture of the dance! Page .– 1059 We'll spin a curious weft of eerie tales.
MYRTIL
Be it so. But what occupation stays
HERMENGILD
Before the russet-hooded morn gave birth
MYRTIL
Pray God, the black-haired witch may do no harm!
MARCION Were it not wisely done to call him hither ?
IAMBLICUS
'Tis wisely urged, good Marcion, make good haste Exit Marcion. Page .– 1060 A glade in the woodlands.
ALACIEL Why wilt thou go ? Noon has not budded, sweet. Fresh-fallen dew stars yet the silvered grass, The leaves are lyrical with lisp of birds And piping voices flutter thro' the grove. Repose thyself where blue-eyed violet Is married to that bugle of pale gold We call the cowslip, and I'll chain thee here With flowery bands of rosebud-linked tales Or murmur Orphic falls to draw thy soul Upon the smoother wings of measured song. Noon has not budded, sweet. Why wilt thou go ? .
MELANDER The sylvan youths expect my lyric touch To guild their leisure: nor am I so bold To linger by thy snowy side too long Whom men call perilous. Oh thou art fair! Dawn reddens in thy vermil-tinted cheeks And on thy tresses pansy-purple night Hangs balsam-drenched with dewdrops for her stars. Thou art a flower with candid petals wide, Moon-flushed, most innocent-seeming to the eye;
But in thy cup, they say, lurks venomed wine
ALACIEL
Whom will not Envy's livid tooth assail ?
That is most true: for in my fledgeling days
Rose-rubied gardens, acorn-pelted glades. Page .– 1061 And taught the florid sensuous dialect Of simple plants. This way I learned to love The shining sisterhood of rhythmic names. Roses and lilies, honey-hiding thyme Pied gilliflowers, painted wind-blossoms, Gold crocus, milky bell, sweet marjoram Fire-coloured furze and wayside honey-suckle. Nor these alone, but all the helpful plants Gave me the liquid essence of their souls Potent to help or hurt, to cure or kill. Indeed the milky juice of pungent roots I poured you in that curious walnut cup With moderation just, were in excess More deadly than the hemlock's dooming wine.
Melander
It fused new blood into my pulsing veins
ALACIEL
'Tis margarite, the rare and pungent root,
MELANDER
From such sweet lips when poppied utterance falls,
For subtler logic drops in simple words Page .– 1062
ALACIEL Sweet youth, why should I net you with deceit? Ah yet, in truth you are too beautiful! Come, you are skilled in phrases, are you not ? You dice with women's hearts — they tell me 'tis A pastime much in vogue with idle youths. (The philtre works: his eyelids brim with dew.) You throw cogged dice with women for their souls, You barter with them and deny the price, Is it not so ? (O rare, fine margarite!) Oh you are deft at such deceits: you make Your beauty lime to cozen linnets with And bid them sing, if they'd have sustenance. Oh you will not deceive me, think it not: You are just such a fowler to my guess.
MELANDER
Dear linnet, did I lime you in my nets,
ALACIEL
Ah but when lurking faces flower the bush,
MELANDER
Nay, dear, you shall not go: I have you fast.
ALACIEL I pray you, make not earnest of my jest. You are too quick: you shall not have a stiver, No, not a coin to bless repentance with.
MELANDER Then I will pay myself, sweet: from that warm Page .– 1064
And flowering bed of kisses, I will pluck (Kisses her)
Oh I have sucked out poison from your lips! (Kisses her)
ALACIEL
You shall pluck no more roses from my tree.
MELANDER
Dear, be not angry. I did but accept
ALACIEL
Oh you have golden pieces on your tongue Page .– 1064
I'll be your fool. Come, throw me clinking coin,
MELANDER
His lips should dribble honey, who'd make out
The very stops should argue aloes fetched
ALACIEL
You trifle, sweet. Yours is no mint of coin Alaciel retires. Enter Marcion.
MARCION
Well met, Melander. Long thro' mossy paths Page .– 1065
Moist blow the breezes with the myrrhy tears Only thy voice, the pilot of our moods, Only thy thrush-lips welling facile rhymes Mar the sweet harmonies of holiday With one chord missing from the clamorous harp.
MELANDER
I thank you, Marcion, for your careful pain
MARCION
Fie, fie, Melander: when have you before Page .– 1066
MELANDER
Well, I will go with you, but not for long. Exit Mar don.
ALACIEL
There, there, I said so! you are docile,'
sir.
MELANDER
Dear, be not vexed with me. I will return
In sweetly cultured minds civility
ALACIEL
Oh words and words enough! but what's the gist,
MELANDER You do miscall sincerest courtesy, Sweet courtesy that solders our conditions Into the builded structure of a state. Page .– 1067
ALACIEL
Yes, till the winds unbuild it for worse ruin.
MELANDER
Leave wrangling, sweet, and tell me soft and kind
ALACIEL
Why, nowhere: for I'll not receive you, sir.
MELANDER
Thither I will outstrip the climbing noon.
ALACIEL
I pray you, sweet, do not break promise with me, Exeunt. Page .– 1068 The Woodlands as at first.
Foresters and Girls. -
MYRTIL
What passion, dear Melander, numbs thy voice ?
Behind green curtains woven of fibrous baize
The linnet pipes his simple pastoral,
MELANDER
Sweet friend, my spirit is too deeply hued Page .– 1069
IAMBLICHUS
Urge him no more. The rash and humorous spirit
MYRTIL
Ah no, lamblichus! when winds are hushed
IAMBLICHUS
Thy words are sweet as joy, more wise than sorrow. Exeunt all but Melander.
MELANDER
Ask me, what drug Circean wakes in me? Page .– 1070
The sweet, damp wind, so dawn the ivory moon Enter lamblichus with Myrtil in his arms.
MYRTIL
No farther drag my steps, lamblichus!
Ah me, again a sea of subtle fire Clamours about the ruby gates of Life! My soul, expanding like a Pythian seer Thrives upon torture, and the insurgent blood, Swollen as with wine, menaces mutiny. How slowly buildst thou up the spacious noon To dome thy house, O architect of day! Not from the bubbling smithy where Love works Smooth Hebe fetched thy world-revealing fires;
Nor to the foam-bound bride-bed of the sea My heart anticipates the pilot moon Who steers the cloudy-wimpled night. Pale orb, Thou art no symbol for my burning soul: Page .– 1071 Lag thou behind or lag not, I will lead.
He is going out.
MARCION
What's this, Melander ? Noon not yet has sealed
MELANDER I am bound down by iron promises, The hour named. Would I not linger else ? Even now the promise has outstript the act.
MYRTIL Melander, do not go.
MELANDER Dear child, I must.
IAMBLICHUS
Come, come, you shall not go. 'Tis most unkind,
PALLEAS
Boy, let me counsel you. This eager fit
When I was young, I ruled my dancing blood, Page .– 1072
MELANDER
Dotard, off! Exit. Page .– 1073 |