Выбрать главу

LEICESTER.

Who gives me an assurance on your side?

Let not my want of confidence offend you;

I see you, sir, exhibit at this court

Two different aspects; one of them must be

A borrowed one; but which of them is real?

MORTIMER.

The selfsame doubts I have concerning you.

LEICESTER.

Which, then, shall pave the way to confidence?

MORTIMER.

He, who by doing it, is least in danger.

LEICESTER.

Well, that are you--

MORTIMER.

No, you; the evidence

Of such a weighty, powerful peer as you

Can overwhelm my voice. My accusation

Is weak against your rank and influence.

LEICESTER.

Sir, you mistake. In everything but this

I'm powerful here; but in this tender point

Which I am called upon to trust you with,

I am the weakest man of all the court,

The poorest testimony can undo me.

MORTIMER.

If the all-powerful Earl of Leicester deign

To stoop so low to meet me, and to make

Such a confession to me, I may venture

To think a little better of myself,

And lead the way in magnanimity.

LEICESTER.

Lead you the way of confidence, I'll follow.

MORTIMER (producing suddenly the letter).

Here is a letter from the Queen of Scotland.

LEICESTER (alarmed, catches hastily at the letter).

Speak softly, sir! what see I? Oh, it is

Her picture!

[Kisses and examines it with speechless joy-a pause.

MORTIMER (who has watched him closely the whole tine).

Now, my lord, I can believe you.

LEICESTER (having hastily run through the letter).

You know the purport of this letter, sir.

MORTIMER.

Not I.

LEICESTER.

Indeed! She surely hath informed you.

MORTIMER.

Nothing hath she informed me of. She said

You would explain this riddle to me-'tis

To me a riddle, that the Earl of Leicester,

The far-famed favorite of Elizabeth,

The open, bitter enemy of Mary,

And one of those who spoke her mortal sentence,

Should be the man from whom the queen expects

Deliverance from her woes; and yet it must be;

Your eyes express too plainly what your heart

Feels for the hapless lady.

LEICESTER.

Tell me, Sir,

First, how it comes that you should take so warm

An interest in her fate; and what it was

Gained you her confidence?

MORTIMER.

My lord, I can,

And in few words, explain this mystery.

I lately have at Rome abjured my creed,

And stand in correspondence with the Guises.

A letter from the cardinal archbishop

Was my credential with the Queen of Scots.

LEICESTER.

I am acquainted, sir, with your conversion;

'Twas that which waked my confidence towards you.

[Each remnant of distrust be henceforth banished;]

Your hand, sir, pardon me these idle doubts,

I cannot use too much precaution here.

Knowing how Walsingham and Burleigh hate me,

And, watching me, in secret spread their snares;

You might have been their instrument, their creature

To lure me to their toils.

MORTIMER.

How poor a part

So great a nobleman is forced to play

At court! My lord, I pity you.

LEICESTER.

With joy

I rest upon the faithful breast of friendship,

Where I can ease me of this long constraint.

You seem surprised, sir, that my heart is turned

So suddenly towards the captive queen.

In truth, I never hated her; the times

Have forced me to be her enemy.

She was, as you well know, my destined bride,

Long since, ere she bestowed her hand on Darnley,

While yet the beams of glory round her smiled,

Coldly I then refused the proffered boon.

Now in confinement, at the gates of death,

I claim her at the hazard of my life.

MORTIMER.

True magnanimity, my lord.

LEICESTER.

The state

Of circumstances since that time is changed.

Ambition made me all insensible

To youth and beauty. Mary's hand I held

Too insignificant for me; I hoped

To be the husband of the Queen of England.

MORTIMER.

It is well known she gave you preference

Before all others.

LEICESTER.

So, indeed, it seemed.

Now, after ten lost years of tedious courtship

And hateful self-constraint-oh, sir, my heart

Must ease itself of this long agony.

They call me happy! Did they only know

What the chains are, for which they envy me!

When I had sacrificed ten bitter years

To the proud idol of her vanity;

Submitted with a slave's humility

To every change of her despotic fancies

The plaything of each little wayward whim.

At times by seeming tenderness caressed,

As oft repulsed with proud and cold disdain;

Alike tormented by her grace and rigor:

Watched like a prisoner by the Argus eyes

Of jealousy; examined like a schoolboy,

And railed at like a servant. Oh, no tongue

Can paint this hell.

MORTIMER.

My lord, I feel for you.

LEICESTER.

To lose, and at the very goal, the prize

Another comes to rob me of the fruits

Of my so anxious wooing. I must lose

To her young blooming husband all those rights

Of which I was so long in full possession;

And I must from the stage descend, where I

So long have played the most distinguished part.

'Tis not her hand alone this envious stranger

Threatens, he'd rob me of her favor too;

She is a woman, and he formed to please.

MORTIMER.

He is the son of Catherine. He has learnt

In a good school the arts of flattery.

LEICESTER.

Thus fall my hopes; I strove to seize a plank

To bear me in this shipwreck of my fortunes,

And my eye turned itself towards the hope

Of former days once more; then Mary's image

Within me was renewed, and youth and beauty

Once more asserted all their former rights.

No more 'twas cold ambition; 'twas my heart

Which now compared, and with regret I felt

The value of the jewel I had lost.

With horror I beheld her in the depths.

Of misery, cast down by my transgression;

Then waked the hope in me that I might still

Deliver and possess her; I contrived

To send her, through a faithful hand, the news

Of my conversion to her interests;

And in this letter which you brought me, she

Assures me that she pardons me, and offers

Herself as guerdon if I rescue her.

MORTIMER.

But you attempted nothing for her rescue.

You let her be condemned without a word:

You gave, yourself, your verdict for her death;

A miracle must happen, and the light

Of truth must move me, me, her keeper's nephew,

And heaven must in the Vatican at Rome

Prepare for her an unexpected succour,

Else had she never found the way to you.