SCENE IV
A guard-room in the palace.
ANTIOCHUS
What were Death then but wider life than earth
As he speaks, Phayllus enters.
PHAYLLUS Phayllus and thy conqueror.
ANTIOCHUS In some strange warfare then!
PHAYLLUS I came to see Before thy end the greatness that thou wert;
For thou wert great as mortals measure. Thou hast
ANTIOCHUS Shorter were better.
PHAYLLUS
An hour!
ANTIOCHUS Thinkest thou so, Phayllus ? Page – 453
PHAYLLUS I know it, and in thy fall, because thou wert great, I feel my greatness who am thy o'erthrower. I long to probe the mightiness thou art And know the thoughts that fill thee at this hour, For it must' come to me some day. The things We are, do and are done to! Let it be. Dost thou not ask to kiss thy wife ? She'ld come, Though she must leave thy brother's bed for it.
ANTIOCHUS
What a poor lie, Phayllus, for the great man
PHAYLLUS
Thou know'st not then for her
ANTIOCHUS
So didst thou work it ? Thou art a rare study,
PHAYLLUS
I am what my clay
ANTIOCHUS
What a blind owl thou art that see'st the sun
PHAYLLUS The dawn. Thou wak'st too early Page – 454 For one who shall not sleep again.
ANTIOCHUS
Yes, sleep
PHAYLLUS
That dream of fools! Thou art another man
ANTIOCHUS
Yes, didst thou think thyself a god in evil Phayllus goes.
I fear he still will loiter. Waiting
He lies down, after a pause. Theras enters.
THERAS
Phayllus' will compels me to it, Page – 455
ANTIOCHUS
Who is it? Thou art the instrument. Strike in.
THERAS I must strike suddenly or never strike. He strikes.
ANTIOCHUS I pass the barrier.
THERAS Will not this blood stop flowing?
ANTIOCHUS The blood? Let the gods have it; 'tis their portion.
THERAS A red libation, O thou royal sacrifice! I have done evil. Will sly Phayllus help me? He was a trickster ever. I have done evil.
ANTIOCHUS
Tell Parthian Rodogune I wait for her
THERAS The world's too still. Will he not speak again Upon this other side of nothingness ? O sounds, sounds, sounds! The sentries change, I think. I'll draw thy curtains, O thou mighty sleeper. - .
He draws the curtains, extinguishes the light and Page – 456
EUNICE Tread lightly, for he sleeps. The curtain's drawn.
RODOGUNE O my Antiochus, on thy hard bed In the rude camp with horses neighing round Thou well mightest slumber nor the undistant trumpet Startling unseal thy war-accustomed ears From the sweet lethargy of earned repose. But in the horrible silence of this prison How canst thou sleep ? It clamours in my brain More than could any sound, with terror laden And voices.
EUNICE I'll wake him.
RODOGUNE
Do not. He is tired
EUNICE He moves no more Than the dead might.
RODOGUNE Speak not of death, Eunice; We are too near to death to speak of him.
EUNICE
He must be waked. Cousin Antiochus,
RODOGUNE There is some awful presence in this room.
EUNICE I partly feel it. Wake, wake, Antiochus. Page – 457 She draws apart the curtain and puts in her arm, then hastily withdraws it.
O God, what is this dabbles so my hand, (tearing down the curtain) Antiochus! She falls half-swooned against the
wall. There
NICANOR Guard carefully the doors; let no
evasion
RODOGUNE Antiochus! Antiochus!
EUNICE Call him not; he will wake
RODOGUNE Antiochus! Antiochus! Nicanor enters armed with soldiers and light.
NICANOR Am I in time ? Thou, thou ? How cam'st
thou here ?
EUNICE I am going, I am going to my chamber Page – 458
NICANOR Arrest her, guards. He approaches the bed and recoils.
Awake the house! Cries and commotion outside. There enter in haste Callicrates,
Melitus,
CLEONE (to Nicanor) Thou couldst not save him then for all
my warning ?
PHAYLLUS (entering) It is done. Yet Theras came not! Do I
fail!
NICANOR Thou hast come!
PHAYLLUS In all the land who dare impugn me, if it be ?
NICANOR Thou art a villain. Thou shalt die for this.
PHAYLLUS One day I shall, for this or something
else. Page – 459
NICANOR No more a king for me
Timocles enters followed by Cleopatra.
MELITUS The Queen comes cold and white and shuddering.
CLEOPATRA {speaking with an unnatural calmness) Why do these cries of terror shake the
house
NICANOR Behold,
O woman,
CLEOPATRA It is not true, it is not true!
TIMOCLES
O gods! Phayllus,
MELITUS Cover this death. It troubles the good King.
TIMOCLES (recovering himself) This is a piteous sight, beloved mother; Would that he lived and wore the Syrian
crown Page – 460
CLEOPATRA Timocles ? I will not credit Deny it!
TIMOCLES Mother!
CLEOPATRA Deny it!
TIMOCLES Alas, mother!
CLEOPATRA Deny it!
TIMOCLES
O mother, what shall I deny?
CLEOPATRA Call me not mother! She rushes out.
NICANOR Is this thy end,
O great
Seleucus? There enter in haste Philoctetes,
Thoas, Leosthenes Page – 461
PHILOCTETES It is true then,
THOAS
O insupportable!
LEOSTHENES Nor think thy royal title nor thy
guards
PHILOCTETES His eyes look up and seem to smile at me.
NICANOR Thoas, thy anger ranges far too wide.
THOAS See dabbled on this couch the blood of kings Page – 462 Thus by a kindred blood respected.
TIMOCLES The hearts Phayllus knows it all. Be satisfied. Lift up this royal dead. All hatred now Forgotten, I will royally inter His ashes guarding still his diadem And sword and armour. All that most he loved Shall go with him into the silent world.
RODOGUNE I come.
TIMOCLES The voice of Rodogune! That woman's
form
NICANOR We had forgotten how piteous was this
scene. All shall be sternly judged.
TIMOCLES
O Rodogune, Page – 463
LEOSTHENES Shall our swords yet sleep ? He wooes
THOAS Yet, Leosthenes.
NICANOR She totters and can hardly move.
PHILOCTETES (raising his head)
O Rodogune,
PHAYLLUS Shall it be allowed?
TIMOCLES I do not grudge this corpse her sad
farewell. But afterwards remember life and
love
THOAS Afterwards, Timocles.
There is a silence while Rodogune bends
TIMOCLES
O my Rodogune, Page – 464 Return to life, to love.
RODOGUNE (stretching out her arms) My king! My king! She falls dead at the feet of Antiochus.
EUNICE O take me also! She rushes to Rodogune and throws
NICANOR Raise the princess up; She has swooned.
THOAS Her heart has failed her: she is dead.
TIMOCLES Rise up, my Rodogune.
THOAS She is dead, Timocles; She is safe from thee. Thou goest not
alone,
CLEONE Look to the King!
TIMOCLES (speaking with difficulty) Lives she?
MELITUS No, she is dead. King Timocles. Page – 465
CLEONE Brother, the King! Timocles has been tearing at the
robe round round to support him as he falls.
NICANOR It is a fit at worst
PHAYLLUS It is not death? I live then.
NICANOR Death, thou intriguer!
PHAYLLUS You build too soon
NICANOR Not to save thee from death,
CLEONE The King revives. Save thyself, brother.
LEOSTHENES Ten kings should not avail Page – 466
NICANOR Drag hence that subtle Satan.
TIMOCLES I live And I remember!
CLEONE Sleepest thou, Phayllus?
PHAYLLUS My King, they drag me hence to murder me.
TIMOCLES {vaguely at first) Who art thou? Thou abhorred and crooked devil, Thou art the cause that she is lost to me. Slay him! And that shrewd-lipped, rose-tainted harlot, Let her be banished somewhere from men's sight Where she can be forgotten. O brother, brother, I have sent thee into the darkling shades, Myself am barred the way.
PHAYLLUS What I have done,
TIMOCLES (half-rising, furiously) Slay him with tortures! Let him feel
his death
NICANOR Take him Page – 467
PHAYLLUS And yet I loved thee, Timocles. He is taken out, guarded.
NICANOR Daughter, Eunice, rise.
EUNICE I did not know till now
NICANOR Ah, girl, this tragic drama owns in part Thy authorship! Henceforth be wise and humble. To her chamber lead her.
EUNICE Do with me what you will. I do not think that I shall long
displease you She goes, attended by Melitus.
NICANOR Follow her, Callicrates, Callicrates follows.
THOAS This cannot keep us Page – 468
NICANOR Syrians, what yet remains
TIMOCLES Something has snapped in me But thou and she will lie at ease
inarmed
PHILOCTETES We too without thee now Doomed still to live we for a while
remain Curtain Page – 469 |