COLLECTED PLAYS
SRI AUROBINDO
Contents
PART ONE
PERSEUS THE DELIVERER
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SCENE III
The audience chamber of the palace.
CEPHEUS
A sudden ending to our sudden evils
CASSIOPEA
And I have got
CYDONE
He has taken his payment in one small white coin
CASSIOPEA
Your name's Cydone, child? your face is strange.
CYDONE O I am!
Iolaus' slave-girl, though he calls me sometimes
ANDROMEDA
Oh, mother, you must know my sweet Cydone. Page – 182
My soul with kisses, — yes, even when the terror
CASSIOPEA
What wilt thou ask of me,
CYDONE
Nothing, unless 'tis leave to stand before you
CASSIOPEA Thou shalt be more than that, my daughter.
CYDONE I have two mothers: a double Iolaus I had already. O you girl-Iolaus, You shall not marry Perseus: you are mine now. Oh, if you have learned to blush!
ANDROMEDA (stopping her mouth)
Hush, you mad babbler! Perseus and Iolaus enter.
CEPHEUS O welcome, brilliant victor, mighty Perseus! Saviour of Syria, angel of the gods, Kind was the fate that led thee to our shores. CASSIOPEA (embracing Iolaus)
Iolaus, Iolaus, my son! Page – 183
My golden-haired delight they would have murdered!
PERSEUS
One like thee
CASSIOPEA
What can I give thee then who hast the world
CEPHEUS
And what shall I give, seed of bright Olympus ?
PERSEUS Thy kingdom falls by right to Iolaus In whom I shall enjoy it. One gift thou hadst I might have coveted, but she is mine, O monarch: I have taken her from death For my possession.
CEPHEUS
My sunny Andromeda!
IOLAUS
Father, The people's leaders and thy army's captains Page – 184
Are eager to renew an interrupted
CEPHEUS Admit them all to me: Go, Medes. As Medes goes out, Diomede enters.
ANDROMEDA
Diomede! playmate! you too have come quite safe
DIOMEDE
Oh, yes, and now you'll marry Perseus, leave me
ANDROMEDA
Therefore 'tis you look
DIOMEDE
As if your little hand could hurt!
PRAXILLA
You shall taste it then before you go. Page – 185 ANDROMEDA ,
You are well rid of us,
PRAXILLA
Princess, little Princess,
Therops and Dercetes enter with the Captains of
ALL Hail, you restored high royalties of Syria.
THEROPS O King, accept us, be the past forgotten.
CEPHEUS
It is forgotten, Therops. Welcome, Dercetes.
CASSIOPEA His blood is a deep stain on Syria's bosom.
DERCETES
On us the stain lies, queen: but we will drown it
THEROPS
Death for one's King
CASSIOPEA Therops, there are kings still in Syria? Page – 186
THEROPS Great Queen, Remember not my sins.
CASSIOPEA
They are buried deep,
THEROPS
O noble lady, you pay wrongs with favours!
CIREAS (to Diomede) This it is to be an orator! We shall hear him haranguing the people next market-day on fidelity to princes and the divine right of queens to have favourites.
IOLAUS Cireas, old bribe-taker, art thou living? Did Poseidon forget thee?
CIREAS I pray you. Prince, remind me not of past foolishness. I have grown pious. I will never speak ill again of authorities and divinities.
IOLAUS Thou art grown ascetic? thou carest no longer then for gold? I am glad, for my purse will be spared a very heavy lightening.
CIREAS
Prince, I will not suffer my young piety to make you break old
promises; for if it is perilous to sin, it is worse to be the cause of Page – 187
IOLAUS
Thou shalt have gold and farms. I will absolve
CIREAS Great Plutus! O happy Cireas!
IOLAUS Merchant Tyrnaus, art thou for Chaldea?
TYRNAUS
When I have seen these troubles' joyous end
IOLAUS
I will give thee a ship
PERSEUS
And prayers with them, O excellent Chaldean.
SMERDAS (aside)
I quake.
IOLAUS Smerdas, thou unclean treacherous coward soul!
SMERDAS Alas, I was compelled by threats of torture.
IOLAUS And tempted too with gold. Thy punishment Page – 188 Shall hit thee in thy nature. Farmer Cireas!
CIREAS Prince Plutus!
IOLAUS
Take thou this man for slave. He's strong.
SMERDAS O this is worst of all.
IOLAUS
Not worse than thy desert.
SMERDAS O speak for me, lady Andromeda!
ANDROMEDA Dear Iolaus, —
CEPHEUS My child, thou art all pity; But justice has her seat, and her fine balance Disturbed too often spoils an unripe world With ill-timed mercy. Thy brother speaks my will.
IOLAUS
Thou hast increased thy crime by pleading to her
ANDROMEDA
Grieve not too much. Page – 189
CIREAS
At thy command I will be even that Noise outside.
CEPHEUS
What other dangerous clamour Perissus enters brandishing his cleaver.
PERISSUS Pull out that sharp skewer of thine, comrade Perseus, or let me handle my cleaver.
CEPHEUS Thou art angry, butcher ? Who has disturbed thy noble serenity ?
PERISSUS King Cepheus, shall I not be angry? Art thou not again our majesty of Syria ? And shall our majesty be insulted with noses ? Shall it be prodded by a proboscis? Perseus, thou hast slaughtered yonder palaeozoic icthyosaurus; wilt thou suffer me to chop this neozoan?
PERSEUS Calmly, precisely and not so polysyllabically, my good Perissus. Tell the King what is this clamour.
PERISSUS My monarch, Phineus of Tyre has brought his long-nosed royalty to thy gates and poke it he will into thy kingly presence. His blusterings. King, have flustered my calm great heart within me.
CEPHEUS Comes he alone? Page – 190
PERISSUS Damoetes and some scores more hang on to his long tail of hook-nosed Tyrians; but they are all rabble and proletariate, not a citizen butcher in the whole picking. They brandish skewers; they threaten to poke me with their dainty iron spits, — me, Perissus, me, the butcher !
CEPHEUS
Phineus in arms! This is the after-swell
PERSEUS Let the Phoenician enter, comrade.
Perissus goes out.
Phineus enters the hall with a great company,
CEPHEUS Welcome, Tyre.
CASSIOPEA
Thou breakest armed into our presence, Phineus.
PHINEUS
I am not here for welcome
CEPHEUS
Phineus, Page – 191
PHINEUS
Thou hast not?
CASSIOPEA
She was in some peril,
PHINEUS
A vain young man,
CEPHEUS
He saved her from the death to which we left her,
PHINEUS Do his deeds or thy neglect annul thy promise ?
IOLAUS
King Phineus, wilt thou take up and lay down
PRAXILLA And she was never his; she hated him.
PHINEUS
I'll hear no reasons, but with strong force have her, Page – 192 Of all her kin. Tyrians! Andromeda takes refuge with Perseus. Abandon, princess,
The stripling bosom where thou tak'st thy refuge.
IOLAUS 'Tis thou mistakest, Phineus, thinking her A bride who, touched, shall be thy doom. Get hence Unhurt.
PHINEUS
Prince Iolaus, the sword that cut
PERSEUS
Phineus of Tyre, it may be thou art wronged, Her father gave her not to me.
PHINEUS
Her mother then ?
PERSEUS Her too I asked not,
PHINEUS
Thou wooedst then the maid? Page – 193
Learn, ere thou grasp at other's goods, to ask
PERSEUS I did not ask her.
PHINEUS
Then by what right, presumptuous, hast thou her?
PERSEUS
Say, by what right, King Phineus, thou wouldst take her,
PHINEUS By my precontract.
PERSEUS
Thou gavest her to Death, that contract's broken.
PHINEUS
Then by my sword,
PERSEUS
If the sword is the sole judge, Page – 194
Whom the whole world might want. Wrest her from me, (opening his wallet)
King Phineus, art thou ready? Yet look once more
PHINEUS
Young man, thou hast done deeds I'll not belittle.
PERSEUS Not fright, but end thee;
For thou hast spoken words deserving death.
Stand in their front to lead them; I alone
PHINEUS Thou art frantic with past triumphs:
Argive, desist. I would not rob thy mother
PERSEUS Come now, lest here I slay thee.
PHINEUS
Thou art in love Page – 195
Where thou shalt see sometimes far off Andromeda,
PERSEUS
Thou compassionate man!
For thou wert a great King and famous warrior,
None shall oppose thy seizure. Behind me, captain,
Phineus goes out with the Tyrians, Damoetes and the
CEPHEUS Sunbeam, I am afraid.
ANDROMEDA I am not, father.
CEPHEUS Alone against so many!
IOLAUS
Shall I go, father,
CEPHEUS
He might be angry. Hark!
IOLAUS He cries some confident order. Page – 196
CEPHEUS The Tyrians shout for onset; he is doomed. There is a moments pause, all listening painfully.
IOLAUS The shouts are stilled; there is a sudden hush. .
CEPHEUS What can it mean ? This silence is appalling.
Dercetes returns.
DERCETES O King, thy royal court is full of monuments.
CEPHEUS What meanest thou? What happened? Where is Perseus?
DERCETES
King Phineus called to his men to take alive
But when I lifted my sealed lids, the court Page – 197 Then I, appalled, came from that place in silence.
CEPHEUS Soldier, he is a god, or else the gods Walk close to him. I hear his footsteps coming, Hail, Perseus! Perseus returns, followed by Cireas.
PERSEUS
King, the Tyrians all are dead,
CEPHEUS
O thou dreadful victor!
PERSEUS
Say nothing, King; in silence praise the Gods.
CIREAS O Zeus, I thought thou couldst juggle only with feathers and phosphorus, but I see thou canst give wrinkles in magic to Babylon and the Medes. (shaking himself) I cannot feel sure yet that I am not myself a statue. Ugh! this was a stony conjuring.
PERISSUS (who has gone out and returned) What hast thou done, comrade Perseus? Thou hast immortalised his long nose to all time in stone! This is a woeful thing for posterity; thou hadst no right to leave behind thee for its Page – 198 dismay such a fossil.
CEPHEUS
What now is left but to prepare the nuptials
PERSEUS
King, let it be soon
CASSIOPEA
Yet if thy heart consents, then three months give us,
PERSEUS They are given.
ANDROMEDA
Perseus,
PERSEUS Ask, Andromeda, and have.
ANDROMEDA
Then this I ask that thy great deeds may leave Page – 199
PERSEUS King Cepheus, thou hast heard; shall this be done?
CEPHEUS
Hero, thou earnest to change our world for us.
PERSEUS
Then let the shrine Her might shall guard your lives and save your land. In your human image of her deity A light of reason and calm celestial force And a wise tranquil government of life, Order and beauty and harmonious thoughts And, ruling the waves of impulse, high-throned will Incorporate in marble, the carved and white Ideal of a young uplifted race. For these are her gifts to those who worship her. Adore and what you adore attempt to be.
CEPHEUS Will the fiercer Grandeur that was here permit?
PERSEUS Fear not Poseidon; the strong god is free. He has withdrawn from his own darkness and is now His new great self at an Olympian height. Page – 200
CASSIOPEA How can the immortal gods and Nature change ?
PERSEUS
All alters in a world that is the same. His gods too change and live in larger light.
CEPHEUS
Then man too may arise to greater heights,
PERSEUS
Perhaps.
The day shall come when men feel close and one.
Curtain Page – 201 |