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SCENE II
A garden at the town-house of Count Beltran.
Antonio, Basil.
BASIL
I am abashed of¹ you. What, make a lady
Woo you, and she a face so excellent,
Of an address so admirably lovely
It shows a goddess in her — at each sentence
Let pause to give you opportunity
Then shame with the dead silence of the hall
For her continual answer. Fie, you're not
Antonio, you are not Beltran's issue. Seek
Your kindred in the snowdrifts of the Alps
Or call a post your father.
ANTONIO
I deserve
Your censure, Basil. Yet were it done again,
I know I should again be dumb. My tongue
Teems in imagination but is barren
In actuality. When I am from her,
I woo her with the accent of a god,
My mind o'erflows with words as the wide Nile
With waters. Let her but appear and I
Am her poor mute. She may do her will with me
And O remember but her words. When she,
Ah she, my white divinity with that kindness
Celestial in the smiling of her eyes
And in her voice the world's great music, rose
Of blushing frankness, half woman and half angel,
Crowned me unwooed, lavished on me her heart
In her prodigious liberality,
Could I then speak? O to have language then
Had been the index to a shallow love.
¹for
Page – 843
BASIL
Away! You modest lovers are the blot
Of manhood, traitors to our sovereignty.
I'd have you banished, all of you, and kept
In desert islands, where no petticoat
Should enter, so the brood of you might perish.
ANTONIO
You speak against the very sense of love
Which lives by service.
BASIL
Flat treason! Was not man made
Woman's superior that he might control her,
In strength to exact obedience and in wisdom
To guide her will, in wit to keep her silent,
Three Herculean labours. O were women
Once loose, they would new-deluge earth with words,
Sapiently base creation on its apex,
Logic would be new-modelled, arithmetic
Grow drunk and reason despairing abdicate.
No thunderbolt could stop a woman's will
Once it is started.
ANTONIO
O you speak at ease,
Loved you, you would recant this without small
Torture to quicken you.
BASIL
I? I recant?
I wish, Antonio, I had known your case
Earlier. I would have taught you how to love.
ANTONIO
Come, will you woo a woman? Teach me at least
Page – 844
By diagram, upon a blackboard.
BASIL
Well,
I will so, if it should hearten your weak spirits.
And now I thin-k of it, I am resolved
I'll publish a new Art of Love, shall be
The only Ovid memorable.
ANTONIO
On, on! Let's hear you.
BASIL
First, I would kiss her.
ANTONIO
What, without leave asked ?
BASIL
Leave? Ask a woman leave to kiss her! Why
What was she made for else ?
ANTONIO
If she is angry?
BASIL
So much the better. Then you by repetition
Convince her of your manly strength, which is
A great point gained at the outset and moreover
Your duty, comfortable to yourself.
Besides she likes it. On the same occasion
When she will scold, I'll silence her with wit.
Laughter breaks down impregnable battlements.
Let me but make her smile and there is conquest
Won by the triple strength, horse, foot, artillery,
Of eloquence, wit and muscle. Then but remains
Pacification, with or else without
Page – 845
The Church's help, that's a mere form and makes
No difference to the principle.
ANTONIO
There should be
Inquisitions for such as you. What after ?
BASIL
Nothing unless you wish to assure the conquest,
Not plunder it merely like a Tamerlane.
I'll teach that also. 'Tis but making her
Realise her inferiority.
Unanswerably and o'erwhelmingly
Show her how fortunate she is to get you
And all her life too short for gratitude;
That you have robbed her merely for her good,
To civilize her or to train her up:
Punish each word that shows want of affection.
Plague her to death and make her thank you for it.
Accustom her to sing hosannas to you
When you beat her. All this is ordinary,
And every wise benevolent conqueror
Has learnt the trick of it. Then she'll love you for ever.
ANTONIO
You are a Pagan and would burn for this
If Love still kept his Holy Office.
BASIL
Am safe from him.
ANTONIO
And therefore boast securely
Conducting in imagination wars
That others have the burden of. I've seen
The critical civilian in his chair
Win famous victories with wordy carnage,
Page – 846
Guide his strategic finger o'er a map,
Cry "Eugene's fault! here Marlboro' was to blame,
And look, a child might see it, Villars' plain error
That lost him Malplaquet!" I think you are
Just such a pen-and-paper strategist.
A wooer!
BASIL
Death, I will have pity on you,
Antonio. You shall see my great example
And learn by me.
ANTONIO
Good, I'm your pupil. But hear,
A pretty face or I'll not enter for her,
Wellborn or I shall much discount your prowess.
BASIL
Agreed. And yet they say experimentum
In corpore vili. But I take your terms
Lest you substract me for advantages.
ANTONIO
Look where the enemy comes. You are well off
If you can win her.
BASIL
A rare face, by Heaven.
Almost too costly a piece of goods for this
Mad trial.
ANTONIO
You sound retreat?
BASIL
Not I an inch.
Watch how I'll overcrow her.
Page – 847
ANTONIO
Hush, she's here.
Enter Brigida.
BRIGIDA
Senor, I was bidden to deliver this letter to you.
BASIL
To me, sweetheart?
BRIGIDA
I have the inventory of you in my books, if you be he truly. I will
study it. Hair of the ordinary poetic length, dress indefinable,
a modest address, — I think not you, Senor, — a noble manner,
— Pooh, no! — a handsome face. I am sure not to you, Senor.
BASIL
Humph.
ANTONIO
Well, cousin. All silent? Open your
batteries, open your batteries !
BASIL
Wait, wait. Ought a conqueror to be hurried? Caesar himself
must study his ground before he attempts it. You will hear my
trumpets instanter.
BRIGIDA
Will you take your letter. Sir?
ANTONIO
To me then, maiden ? A dainty-looking note, and I marvel much
from whom it can be. I do not know the handwriting. A lady's,
seemingly, yet it has a touch of the masculine too — there is
rapidity and initiative in its flow. Fair one, from whom
comes this?
Page – 848
BRIGIDA
Why, Sir, I am not her signature; which if you will look within,
there I doubt not you will find a solution of your difficulty.
BASIL
Here's a clever"1 woman, Antonio, to think of that, and she but
eighteen or a miracle.
ANTONIO
Well, cousin.
BRIGIDA
This Don Witty-pate eyes me strangely. I fear he will recognize
me.
ANTONIO
Ismenia Ostrocadiz! O my joy.
BRIGIDA
You're ill, sir, you change colour.
ANTONIO
Now, by Heaven
Were death within my heart's door or his blast
Upon my eyelids, this would exile him.
The writing swims before me.
BRIGIDA
Sir, you pale
Extremely. Is there no poison in that letter?
ANTONIO
O might I so be poisoned hourly. Let me
No longer dally with my happiness,
Let it take wings or turn a dream. Hail, letter,
Page – 849
For thou hast come from that white hand I worship.
"To Lord Antonio:
Señor, how you may deem of my bold wooing,
How cruelly I suffer in your thoughts,
I dread to think. Take the plain truth, Antonio.
I cannot live without your love. If you
From this misdoubt my nobleness or infer
A wanton haste or instability, —
As men pretend quick love is quickly spent—
Tear up this letter, and with it my heart.
And yet I hope you will not tear it. I love you
And since I saw our family variance
And your too noble tearfulness withhold me
From my heart's lord I have thrown from me shame
And the admired dalliance of women
To bridge it. Come to me, Antonio! Come,
But come in honour. I am not nor can be
So far degenerate from my house's greatness
Or my pure self to love ignobly. Dear,
I have thrown from me modesty's coy pretences
But the reality I'll grapple to me
Close as your image. I am loth to end,
Yet must, and therefore will I end with this
'Beloved, love me, respect me or forget me'."
Writing more sweet than any yet that came
From heaven to earth, O thou dear revelation.
Make my lips holy. Ah, could I imagine
Thee the white hand that wrote thee, I were blest
Utterly. Thou hast made me twice myself.
I think I am another than Antonio.
The sky seems nearer to me or the earth
Environed with a sacred light. O come!
I'll study to imprint this on my heart,
That when death comes he'll find it there and leave it,
A monument and an immortal writing.
Page – 850
BASIL
Damsel, you are of the Lady Ismenia's household?
BRIGIDA
A poor relative of hers, Señor.
BASIL
Your face seems strangely familiar to me. Have I not seen you in
some place where I constantly resort ?
BRIGIDA
O Sir, I hope you do not think so meanly of me. I am a poor girl
but an honest.
BASIL
How, how?
BRIGIDA
I know not how. I spoke only as the spirit moved me.
BASIL
You have a marvellously nimble tongue. Two words with you.
BRIGIDA
Willingly, Senor, if you exceed not measure.
BASIL
Fair one—
BRIGIDA
Oh, Sir, I am glad I listened. I like your two words extremely.
God be with you.
BASIL
Why, I have not begun yet.
BRIGIDA
The more shame to your arithmetic. If your teacher had reckoned
Page – 851
as loosely with his cane-cuts, he would have made the
carefuller scholar.
BASIL
God's wounds, will you listen to me?
BRIGIDA
Well, Sir, I will not insist upon numbers. But pray, for your own
sake, swear no more. No eloquence will long stand such draft
upon it.
BASIL
If you would listen, I would tell you a piece of news that might
please you.
BRIGIDA
Let it be good news, new news and repeatable news and I will
thank you for it.
BASIL
Sure, maiden, you are wondrous beautiful.
BRIGIDA
Senor, Queen Anne is dead. Tell me the next.
BASIL
The next is, I will kiss you.
BRIGIDA
Oh, Sir, that's a prophecy. Well, death and kissing come to all
of us, and by what disease the one or by whom the other, wise
men care not to forecast. It profits little to study calamities
beforehand. When it comes, I pray God I may learn to take it
with resignation, if I cannot do better.
BASIL
By my life, I will kiss you and without farther respite.
Page – 852
BRIGIDA
On what ground?
BASIL
Have I not told you, you are beautiful.
BRIGIDA
So has my mirror, not once but a hundred times, and never yet
offered to kiss me. When it does, I'll allow your logic. No, we
are already near enough to each other. Pray, keep your distance.
BASIL
I will establish my argument with my lips.
BRIGIDA
I will defend mine with my hand. I promise you 'twill prove the
abler dialectician of the two.
BASIL
Well.
BRIGIDA
I am glad you think so, Senor. My lord, I cannot stay. What
shall I tell my lady?
ANTONIO
Tell her my heart is at her feet, and I
Am hers, hers only until heaven ceases
And after. Tell her that I am more blest
In her sweet condescension to my humbleness
Than Ilian Anchises when Love's mother
Stooped from her golden heavens into his lap.
Tell her that as a goddess I revere her
And as a saint adore; that she and life
Are one to me, for I've no heart but her,
No atmosphere beyond her pleasure, light
But what her eyes allow me. Tell, O tell her—
Page – 853
BRIGIDA
Hold, hold, Senor. You may tell her all this yourself. I would
not remember the half of it and could not understand the other
half. Shall I tell her, you will come surely?
ANTONIO
As sure as is the sun to its fixed hour
Or midnight to its duty. I will come.
BRIGIDA
Good! there are at last three words a poor girl can understand.
Mark then, you will wait a while after nightfall, less than half a
bowshot from the place you know towards the Square Velasquez,
within sight of the Donna's windows. Then I will come to you.
Sir, if your sword be half as ready and irresistible as your tongue,
I would gladly have you there with him, though Saint Iago grant
that neither prove necessary. You look sad. Sir. God save you
for a witty and eloquent gentleman.
Exit.
ANTONIO
O cousin, I am bewitched with happiness.
Pardon me that I leave you. Solitude
Demands a god and godlike I am grown
Unto myself. This letter deifies me.
I will be sole with my felicity.
Exit.
BASIL
God grant that I am not bewitched also! Saints and angels!
How is it? How did it happen? Is the sun still in heaven? Is
that the song of a bird or a barrel-organ ? I am not drunk either.
I can still distinguish between a tree and the squirrel upon it.
What, am I not Basil? whom men call the witty and eloquent
Basil ? Did I not laugh from the womb ? Was not my first cry a
jest upon the world I came into ? Did I not invent a conceit upon
my mother's milk ere I had sucked of it? Death! And have I
age – 854
been bashed and beaten by the tongue of a girl ? silenced by a
common purveyor of impertinences ? It is so and yet it cannot
be. I begin to believe in the dogmas of the materialist. The
gastric juice rises in my estimation. Genius is after all only a form
of indigestion, a line of Shakespeare the apotheosis of a leg of
mutton and the speculations of Plato an escape of diseased tissue
arrested in the permanency of ink. What did I break my fast
with this morning? Kippered herring? Bread? Marmalade?
Tea ? O kippered herring, art thou the material form of stupidity and is marmalade an enemy of wit ? It must be so.
O mighty
gastric juice! Mother and Saviour! I bow down before thee.
Be propitious, fair goddess, to thy adorer.
Arise, Basil. Today thou shalt retrieve thy tarnished laurels
or be expunged for ever from the book of the witty. Arm thy-
self in full panoply of allusion and irony, gird on raillery like a
sword and repartee like a buckler. I will meet this girl tonight.
I will tund her with conceits, torture her with ironies, tickle her
with jests, prick her all over with epigrams. My wit shall smother
her, tear her, burst her sides, press her to death, hang her, draw
her, quarter her, and if all this fails. Death! as a last revenge,
I'll marry¹ her. Saints!
¹beat
Page – 855
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