Act I

1192 Words
Subscribe for ad free access & additional features for teachers. Authors: 267, Books: 3,607, Poems & Short Stories: 4,435, Forum Members: 71,154, Forum Posts: 1,238,602, Quizzes: 344 Lydia. Ye leafy breasts and warm protecting wings Of mother trees that hatch our tender souls, And from the well of Nature in our hearts Thaw the intolerable inch of ice That bears the weight of all the stamping world. Hear ye me sing to solitude that I, Lydia Carew, the owner of these lands, Albeit most rich, most learned, and most wise, Am yet most lonely. What are riches worth When wisdom with them comes to show the purse bearer That life remains unpurchasable? Learning Learns but one lesson: doubt! To excel all Is, to be lonely. Oh, ye busy birds, Engrossed with real needs, ye shameless trees With arms outspread in welcome of the sun, Your minds, bent singly to enlarge your lives, Have given you wings and raised your delicate heads High heavens above us crawlers. [A rook sets up a great cawing; and the other birds chatter loudly as a gust of wind sets the branches swaying. She makes as though she would shew them her sleeves. Lo, the leaves That hide my drooping boughs! Mock me-poor maid!- Deride with joyous comfortable chatter These stolen feathers. Laugh at me, the clothed one. Laugh at the mind fed on foul air and books. Books! Art! And Culture! Oh, I shall go mad. Give me a mate that never heard of these, A sylvan god, tree born in heart and sap; Or else, eternal maidhood be my hap. [Another gust of wind and bird-chatter. She sits on the mossy root of an oak and buries her face in her hands.Cashel Byron, in a white singlet and breeches, comes through the trees. LYDIA. Bid you me hence? I am upon mine own ground. Who are you? I take you for a god, a sylvan god. This place is mine: I share it with the birds, The trees, the sylvan gods, the lovely company Of haunted solitudes. CASHEL. A sylvan god! A goat-eared image! Do your statues speak? Walk? heave the chest with breath? or like a feather Lift you-like this? [He sets her on her feet. CASHEL. Accursed luck! I took you for The daughter of some farmer. Well, your pardon. I came too close: I looked too deep. Farewell. CASHEL. Ask me not whence I come, nor what I am. You are the lady of the castle. I Have but this hard and blackened hand to live by. CASHEL. He is a part of what I am. What that is You must not know. It would end all between us. And yet there's no dishonor in't: your lawyer, Who let your lodge to me, will vouch me honest. I am ashamed to tell you what I am- At least, as yet. Some day, perhaps. LYDIA. His voice is nearer. Fare you well, my tenant. When next your rent falls due, come to the castle. Pay me in person. Sir: your most obedient. [She curtsies and goes. CASHEL. Lives in this castle! Owns this park! A lady Marry a prizefighter! Impossible. And yet the prizefighter must marry her. Ensanguined swine, whelped by a doggish dam, Is this thy park, that thou, with voice obscene, Fillst it with yodeled yells, and screamst my name For all the world to know that Cashel Byron Is training here for combat. MELLISH. Swine you me? I've caught you, have I? You have found a woman. Let her shew here again, I'll set the dog on her. I will. I say it. And my name's Bob Mellish. MELLISH. I'll not begone. You shall come back with me and do your duty- Your duty to your backers, do you hear? You have not punched the bag this blessed day. MELLISH [weeping]. Ingrate! O wretched lot! Who would a trainer be? O Mellish, Mellish, Trainer of heroes, builder-up of brawn, Vicarious victor, thou createst champions That quickly turn thy tyrants. But beware: Without me thou art nothing. Disobey me, And all thy boasted strength shall fall from thee. With flaccid muscles and with failing breath Facing the fist of thy more faithful foe, I'll see thee on the grass cursing the day Thou didst forswear thy training. CASHEL. Noisome quack That canst not from thine own abhorrent visage Take one carbuncle, thou contaminat'st Even with thy presence my untainted blood Preach abstinence to rascals like thyself Rotten with surfeiting. Leave me in peace. This grove is sacred: thou profanest it. Hence! I have business that concerns thee not. MELLISH. Ay, with your woman. You will lose your fight. Have you forgot your duty to your backers? Oh, what a sacred thing your duty is! What makes a man but duty? Where were we Without our duty? Think of Nelson's words: England expects that every man-- CASHEL. Shall twaddle About his duty. Mellish: at no hour Can I regard thee wholly without loathing; But when thou play'st the moralist, by Heaven, My soul flies to my fist, my fist to thee; And never did the Cyclops' hammer fall On Mars's armor-but enough of that. It does remind me of my mother. MELLISH. Ah, Byron, let it remind thee. Once I heard An old song: it ran thus. [He clears his throat.] Ahem, Ahem! CASHEL. Now, by Heaven, Some fate is pushing thee upon thy doom. Canst thou not hear thy sands as they run out? They thunder like an avalanche. Old man: Two things I hate, my duty and my mother. Why dost thou urge them both upon me now? Presume not on thine age and on thy nastiness. Vanish, and promptly. MELLISH. Can I leave thee here Thus thinly clad, exposed to vernal dews? Come back with me, my son, unto our lodge. CASHEL. Within this breast a fire is newly lit Whose glow shall sun the dew away, whose radiance Shall make the orb of night hang in the heavens Unnoticed, like a glow-worm at high noon. CASHEL. Wiltstoken's windows wandering beneath, Wiltstoken's holy bell hearkening, Wiltstoken's lady loving breathlessly. MELLISH. My boy, my son, I'd give my heart's blood for thy happiness. Thwart thee, my son! Ah, no. I'll go with thee. I'll brave the dews. I'll sacrifice my sleep. I am old-no matter: ne'er shall it be said Mellish deserted thee. CASHEL. You resolute gods That will not spare this man, upon your knees Take the disparity twixt his age and mine. Now from the ring to the high judgment seat I step at your behest. Bear you me witness This is not Victory, but Execution. [He solemnly projects his fist with colossal force against the waistcoat ofMellishwho doubles up like a folded towel, and lies without sense or motion. Art of Worldly Wisdom Daily In the 1600s, Balthasar Gracian, a jesuit priest wrote 300 aphorisms on living life called "The Art of Worldly Wisdom." Join our newsletter below and read them all, one at a time. 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