SCENE III
Cleopatra's antechamber in the palace.
CLEOPATRA
It is their horsehooves ride into my heart.
RODOGUNE I think all fallen beings needs must keep Some dream out of their happier past, — or else How hard it would be to live!
CLEOPATRA
O, if some hope survive
RODOGUNE Hope! I have forgotten how men hope.
CLEOPATRA
Is your life hard
RODOGUNE
Not when you speak Page – 353 My fortune.
CLEOPATRA
Parthian, you have borne the hate
RODOGUNE
If our fates allow
CLEOPATRA
My life begins again,
RODOGUNE And will peace take me to my father's arms ?
CLEOPATRA Or else detain you on a kingly throne. Page – 354 There are happier fetters.
RODOGUNE If it must be so!
CLEOPATRA
Art thou insensible or fear'st to rise ?
RODOGUNE
Shall I not know
CLEOPATRA
I did not ask your choice,
RODOGUNE Shall I be given him as a slave, not wife ?
CLEOPATRA
You rise, I think, too quickly with your fate.
RODOGUNE
Speak not so harshly to me
CLEOPATRA Hop'st thou by reigning to reign over me Page – 355 Restoring on a throne thy Parthian soul?
RODOGUNE
What shall I be upon the Syrian throne
CLEOPATRA
Obey me then. Remember,
RODOGUNE I shall remember and I shall obey. She retires to her station.
CLEOPATRA
Her flashes of quick pride are quickly past. Eunice comes in swiftly.
EUNICE Am I the first to tell you they have come?
CLEOPATRA
O girl, thy tongue rain joy upon the world, Cleone enters. Page – 356
CLEONE (to Eunice) They are more beautiful than heaven and earth. (to Cleopatra) Thy children's feet are on the palace stairs.
CLEOPATRA O no! not of the palace but my heart;
I feel their tread ascending. Be still, be still,
Thoas and Melitus enter bringing
THOAS Queen, we bring her sons To Cleopatra.
CLEOPATRA
I thank you both; approach.
She motions to them to stop and
TIMOCLES This is my mother. She is what I dreamed!
EUNICE
O high inhabitants of Greek Olympus,
CLEOPATRA
Say to the Syrians they shall know their king Page – 357
THOAS
None shall grudge them to thee, Thoas and Melitus leave the chamber.
CLEOPATRA
My children, O my children, my sweet children!
TIMOCLES
Mother, my sweet mother!
CLEOPATRA
And was the dream too fair, my child ?
TIMOCLES I am your Timocles.
CLEOPATRA
You first within my arms! O right, 'tis right. I have not had that mother's happiness.
TIMOCLES
Mother, I am still your little Timocles Page – 358 In that far motherless Egypt where I pined.
CLEOPATRA
And like a child too, little one, you'ld have
RODOGUNE
He is all high and beautiful like heaven
ANTIOCHUS
Madam, I seek your blessing; let me kneel
CLEOPATRA
Kneel! O, in my bosom, son.
ANTIOCHUS
Of great Nicanor's widow and the Queen
CLEOPATRA
These are cold haughty names, Antiochus.
ANTIOCHUS
You were for me the thought of motherhood,
CLEOPATRA No more ? Are you so cold in speech, my son ? O son Antiochus, you have received Your father's face; I hope you have his heart. Page – 359 Do you not love me ?
ANTIOCHUS Surely I hope to love.
CLEOPATRA You hope!
ANTIOCHUS O madam, do not press my words.
CLEOPATRA I do press them. Your words, your lips, your heart, Your radiant body noble as a god's I, I made in my womb, to give them light Bore agony. I have a claim upon them all. You do not love me ?
ANTIOCHUS
The thought of you I have loved,
But now we meet. I trust I shall not fail
EUNICE His look is royal, but his speech is cold.
RODOGUNE
Should he debase his godhead with a lie ?
CLEOPATRA It is well. .My heart half slew me for only this! O Timocles, my little Timocles, Let me again embrace you, let me feel My child who dreamed of me for eighteen years Page – 360
In Egypt. Sit down here against my knee
TIMOCLES
I loved it well because it bore my mother,
CLEOPATRA What was your life there ? your mornings and your evenings, Your dreams at night, I must possess them all, All the sweet years my arms have lost. Did you Rising in those clear mornings see the Nile, Our father Nile, flow through the solemn azure Past the great temples in the sands of Egypt ? You have seen hundred-gated Thebes, my Thebes, And my high tower where I would sit at eve Watching your kindred sun ? And Alexandria With the white multitude of sails ? My brother, The royal Ptolemy, did he not love To clasp his sister in your little limbs ? There is so much to talk of; but not now! Eunice, take them from me for a while. Take Rodogune and call the other slaves. Let them array my sons like the great kings They should have been so long. Go, son Antiochus; Go, Timocles, my little Timocles.
ANTIOCHUS
We are the future's greatness, therefore owe Page – 361
EUNICE
This was a stab.
CLEOPATRA The great Antiochus! Of him you dreamed ? You are his nephew! Parthian, take the prince To the dead King's death-chamber, then to his own.
ANTIOCHUS She was the Parthian! Great Antiochus, Syria thou leav'st me and her and Persia afterwards To be my lovely captive. He goes out with Rodogune.
TIMOCLES (as he follows Eunice)
Tell me, cousin, —
EUNICE Phraates' daughter. Prince, your mother's slave.
TIMOCLES There are lovelier faces then than Syria owns. He goes out with Eunice.
CLEOPATRA
You gods, you gods in heaven, you give us hearts
CLEONE
Why, Madam, what a son you have in him,
CLEOPATRA But the other, O the other! Antiochus! Page – 352
He has the face that gives my husband back to me,
CLEONE
Yet he will be king.
CLEOPATRA Did I say it? I was perplexed.
CLEONE
He will be king, a man
CLEOPATRA My Timocles! my only joy! Oh, no! We will have peace henceforth and bloodless dawns. My envoys ride today.
CLEONE
He will recall them.
His hand was made to grasp a sword-hilt. Queen,
CLEOPATRA What did you say ? Have you gone mad, Cleone ? Page – 363
The gods would never bless such vile deceit.
CLEONE
It must.
CLEOPATRA
If I thought that, She goes into her chamber.
CLEONE
We must have roses, sunlight, laughter. Prince, Curtain Page – 364 |