Satan Absolved: A Victorian Mystery. Blunt Wilfrid Scawen. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Blunt Wilfrid Scawen
Издательство: Public Domain
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Зарубежные стихи
Год издания: 0
isbn: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/33193
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The manner and the how

      It were less safe to argue, since some frailties be.

      We take the outward act to prove conformity.

      All’s well enough with Man – most well with Christendom.

The Lord God

      Again thou sayest “enough.” How fareth it in Rome?

      Hath My vicegerent rest?

Gabriel

      He sitteth as of old

      Enthroned in Peter’s chair with glories manifold.

      He sang a mass this morning and I heard his prayer.

The Lord God

      For Peace?

Gabriel

      And Power on Earth.

The Lord God

      And were the monarchs there,

      The great ones in their place? Did a3ll pray with one breath?

Gabriel

      Some priests and poor I saw,

Satan (aside)

      The poor he always hath.

Gabriel

      His guards, his chamberlains.

The Lord God

      The mighty ones, the proud,

      Do they not kneel together daily in one crowd?

      Have they no common counsel?

Gabriel

      Kings have their own needs,

      Demanding separate service.

Satan (aside)

      Ay, and their own creeds.

      One cause alone combines them, and one service – mine.

The Lord God

      Thou sayest?

Gabriel

      Man still is Man.

The Lord God

      We did redeem his line

      And crown him with new worship. In the ancient days

      His was a stubborn neck. But now he hath found grace,

      Being born anew. His gods he hath renounced, sayest thou?

      He worshippeth the Christ? What more?

Gabriel

      Nay, ’tis enow.

      He is justified by faith. He hath no fear of Hell

      Since he hath won Thy grace. All’s well with Man, – most well.

The Lord God

      “All’s well”! The fair phrase wearieth. It hath a new false ring.

      Truce, Gabriel, to thy word fence. Mark my questioning.

      Or rather no – not thou, blest Angel of all good,

      Herald of God’s glad tidings to a world subdued,

      Thou lover tried of Man. I will not question thee,

      Lest I should tempt too sore and thou lie cravenly.

      Is there no other here, no drudge, to do that task

      And lay the secret bare, the face behind the mask?

      One with a soul less white, who loveth less, nay hates;

      One fit for a sad part, the Devil’s advocate’s;

      One who some wrong hath done, or hath been o’erborne of ill,

      And so hath his tongue loosed? O for Soul with will!

      O for one hour of Satan!

Satan

      He is here, Lord God,

      Ready to speak all truths to Thy face, even “Ichabod,

      Thy glory is departed,” were that truth.

The Lord God

      Thou? Here?

Satan

      A suppliant for Thy pardon, and in love, not fear,

      One who Thou knowest doth love Thee, ay, and more than these.

The Lord God

      That word was Peter’s once.

Satan

      I speak no flatteries;

      Nor shall I Thee deny for this man nor that maid,

      Nor for the cock that crew.

The Lord God

      Thou shalt not be gainsaid.

      I grant thee audience. Speak.

Satan

      Alone?

The Lord God

      ’Twere best alone.

      Angels, ye are dismissed. (The angels depart.) Good Satan, now say on.

Satan (alone with The Lord God)

      Omnipotent Lord God! Thou knowest all. I speak

      Only as Thy poor echo, faltering with words weak,

      A far-off broken sound, yet haply not unheard.

      Thou knowest the Worlds Thou madest, and Thine own high word

      Declaring they were good. Good were they in all sooth

      The mighty Globes Thou mouldedst in the World’s fair youth,

      Launched silent through the void, evolving force and light.

      Thou gatheredst in Thy hand’s grasp shards of the Infinite

      And churnedst them to Matter; Space concentrated,

      Great, glorious, everlasting. The Stars leaped and fled,

      As hounds, in their young strength. Yet might they not withdraw

      From Thy hand’s leash and bond. Thou chainedst them with law.

      They did not sin, those Stars, change face, wax proud, rebel.

      Nay, they were slaves to Thee, things incorruptible.

      I might not tempt them from Thee.

The Lord God

      And the reason?

Satan

      Hear.

      Thou gavest them no mind, no sensual atmosphere,

      Who wert Thyself their soul. Though thou should drowse for aye,

      They should not swerve, nor flout Thee, nor abjure Thy way,

      Not by a hair’s breadth, Lord.

The Lord God

      Thou witnessest for good.

Satan

      I testify for truth. In all that solitude

      Of spheres involved with spheres, of prodigal force set free,

      There hath been no voice untrue, no tongue to disagree,

      No traitor thought to wound with less than perfect word.

      Such was Thy first Creation. I am Thy witness, Lord.

      ’Twas worthy of Thyself.

The Lord God

      And of the second?

Satan

      Stop.

      How shall I speak of it unless Thou give me hope;

      I who its child once was, though daring to rebel;

      I who Thine outcast am, the banished thief of Hell,

      Thy too long reprobate? Thou didst create to Thee

      A