If I have any knowledge of you, sir,
I think, nay I am sure, you will grieve much
To hear my story. O be gentle to me,
For I am sick and faint with many wrongs,
Tir’d out, and weary-worn with contumelies.
Gersa.
Poor lady!
Erminia.
Gentle Prince, ’tis false indeed.
Good morrow, holy father! I have had
Your prayers, though I look’d for you in vain.
Ethelbert. Blessings upon you, daughter! Sure you look
Too cheerful for these foul pernicious days.
Young man, you heard this virgin say ’twas false,
’Tis false, I say. What! can you not employ
Your temper elsewhere, ‘mong these burly tents,
But you must taunt this dove, for she hath lost
The Eagle Otho to beat off assault?
Fie! fie! But I will be her guard myself;
In the Emperor’s name. I here demand of you
Herself, and all her sisterhood. She false!
Gersa. Peace! peace, old man! I cannot think she is.
Ethelbert.
Whom I have known from her first infancy,
Baptized her in the bosom of the Church,
Watch’d her, as anxious husbandmen the grain,
From the first shoot till the unripe mid-May,
Then to the tender ear of her June days,
Which, lifting sweet abroad its timid green,
Is blighted by the touch of calumny;
You cannot credit such a monstrous tale.
Gersa.
I cannot. Take her. Fair Erminia,
I follow you to Friedburg, is’t not so?
Erminia.
Aye, so we purpose.
Ethelbert.
Daughter, do you so?
How’s this? I marvel! Yet you look not mad.
Erminia.
I have good news to tell you, Ethelbert.
Gersa.
Ho! ho, there! Guards!
Your blessing, father! Sweet Erminia,
Believe me, I am well nigh sure
Erminia . Farewell!
Short time will show. [Enter Chiefs.
Yes, father Ethelbert,
I have news precious as we pass along.
Ethelbert.
Dear daughter, you shall guide me.
Erminia. To no ill.
Gersa.
Command an escort to the Friedburg lines.
[Exeunt Chiefs.
Pray let me lead. Fair lady, forget not
Gersa, how he believ’d you innocent.
I follow you to Friedburg with all speed. [Exeunt.
Act III
Scene I
Albert.
O that the earth were empty, as when Cain
Had no perplexity to hide his head!
Or that the sword of some brave enemy
Had put a sudden stop to my hot breath,
And hurl’d me down the illimitable gulph
Of times past, unremember’d! Better so
Than thus fast-limed in a cursed snare,
The white limbs of a wanton. This the end
Of an aspiring life! My boyhood past
In feud with wolves and bears, when no eye saw
The solitary warfare, fought for love
Of honour ‘mid the growling wilderness.
My sturdier youth, maturing to the sword,
Won by the syren-trumpets, and the ring
Of shields upon the pavement, when bright-mail’d
Henry the Fowler pass’d the streets of Prague,
Was’t to this end I louted and became
The menial of Mars, and held a spear
Sway’d by command, as corn is by the wind?
Is it for this, I now am lifted up
By Europe’s throned Emperor, to see
My honour be my executioner,
My love of fame, my prided honesty
Put to the torture for confessional?
Then the damn’d crime of blurting to the world
A woman’s secret! Though a fiend she be,
Too tender of my ignominious life;
But then to wrong the generous Emperor
In such a searching point, were to give up
My soul for football at Hell’s holiday!
I must confess, and cut my throat, to-day?
Tomorrow? Ho! some wine!
Sigifred.
A fine humour
Albert. Who goes there? Count Sigifred? Ha! Ha!
Sigifred.
What, man, do you mistake the hollow sky
For a throng ‘d tavern, and these stubbed trees
For old serge hangings, me, your humble friend,
For a poor waiter? Why, man, how you stare!
What gipsies have you been carousing with?
No, no more wine; methinks you’ve had enough.
Albert.
You well may laugh and banter. What a fool
An injury may make of a staid man!
You shall know all anon.
Sigifred.
Some tavern brawl?
Albert.
’Twas with some people out of common reach;
Revenge is difficult.
Sigifred.
I am your friend;
We meet again to-day, and can confer
Upon it. For the present I’m in haste.
Albert.
Whither?
Sigifred.
To