Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works. Knowledge house. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

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      I like them best in steel, as they are here,

      They suit my purpose better. Tell me, sir,

      Have you no message from my father to me?

      moranzone

      Poor boy, you never saw that noble father,

      For when by his false friend he had been sold,

      Alone of all his gentlemen I escaped

      To bear the news to Parma to the Duchess.

      guido

      Speak to me of my mother.

      moranzone

      When thy mother

      Heard my black news, she fell into a swoon,

      And, being with untimely travail seized—

      Bare thee into the world before thy time,

      And then her soul went heavenward, to wait

      Thy father, at the gates of Paradise.

      guido

      A mother dead, a father sold and bartered!

      ·17· I seem to stand on some beleaguered wall,

      And messenger comes after messenger

      With a new tale of terror; give me breath,

      Mine ears are tired.

      moranzone

      When thy mother died,

      Fearing our enemies, I gave it out

      Thou wert dead also, and then privily

      Conveyed thee to an ancient servitor,

      Who by Perugia lived; the rest thou knowest.

      guido

      Saw you my father afterwards?

      moranzone

      Ay! once;

      In mean attire, like a vineyard dresser,

      I stole to Rimini.

      guido [taking his hand]

      O generous heart!

      moranzone

      One can buy everything in Rimini,

      And so I bought the gaolers! when your father

      Heard that a man child had been born to him,

      ·18· His noble face lit up beneath his helm

      Like a great fire seen far out at sea,

      And taking my two hands, he bade me, Guido,

      To rear you worthy of him; so I have reared you

      To revenge his death upon the friend who sold him.

      guido

      Thou hast done well; I for my father thank thee.

      And now his name?

      moranzone

      How you remind me of him,

      You have each gesture that your father had.

      guido

      The traitor’s name?

      moranzone

      Thou wilt hear that anon;

      The Duke and other nobles at the Court

      Are coming hither.

      guido

      What of that? his name?

      moranzone

      Do they not seem a valiant company

      Of honourable, honest gentlemen?

      ·19· guido

      His name, milord?

      [Enter the Duke of Padua with Count Bardi, Maffio, Petrucci, and other gentlemen of his Court.]

      moranzone [quickly]

      The man to whom I kneel

      Is he who sold your father! mark me well.

      guido [clutches his dagger]

      The Duke!

      moranzone

      Leave off that fingering of thy knife.

      Hast thou so soon forgotten? [Kneels to the Duke.]

      My noble Lord.

      duke

      Welcome, Count Moranzone; ’tis some time

      Since we have seen you here in Padua.

      We hunted near your castle yesterday—

      Call you it castle? that bleak house of yours

      Wherein you sit a-mumbling o’er your beads,

      Telling your vices like a good old man.

      [Catches sight of Guido and starts back.]

      Who is that?

      ·20· moranzone

      My sister’s son, your Grace,

      Who being now of age to carry arms,

      Would for a season tarry at your Court

      duke [still looking at Guido]

      What is his name?

      moranzone

      Guido Ferranti, sir.

      duke

      His city?

      moranzone

      He is Mantuan by birth.

      duke [advancing towards Guido]

      You have the eyes of one I used to know,

      But he died childless. Are you honest, boy?

      Then be not spendthrift of your honesty,

      But keep it to yourself; in Padua

      Men think that honesty is ostentatious, so

      It is not of the fashion. Look at these lords.

      count bardi [aside]

      Here is some bitter arrow for us, sure.

      ·21· duke

      Why, every man among them has his price,

      Although, to do them justice, some of them

      Are quite expensive.

      count bardi [aside]

      There it comes indeed.

      duke

      So be not honest; eccentricity

      Is not a thing should ever be encouraged,

      Although, in this dull stupid age of ours,

      The most eccentric thing a man can do

      Is to have brains, then the mob mocks at him;

      And for the mob, despise it as I do,

      I hold its bubble praise and windy favours

      In such account, that popularity

      Is the one insult I have never suffered.

      maffio [aside]

      He has enough of hate, if he needs that.

      duke

      Have prudence; in your dealings with the world

      Be