Now superstition, ignorance, and errour, LEONTIUS From ev'ry palace bursts a mingled clamour, DEMETRIUS Aspasia!-spare that lov’d, that mournful name: Dear, hapless maid-tempestuous grief o'erbears My reasoning pow'rs—Dear, hapless, lost Aspasia! LEONTIUS Suspend the thought. DEMETRIUS All thought on her is madness; Yet let me think-I see the helpless maid; Behold the monsters gaze with savage rapture, Behold how lust and rapine struggle round her! LEONTIUS Awake, Demetrius, from this dismal dream; Sink not beneath imaginary sorrows; Call to your aid your courage and your wisdom; Think on the sudden change of human scenes; Think on the various accidents of war; Think on the mighty pow'r of awful virtue; Think on that providence that guards the good. DEMETRIUS O providence! extend thy care to me; LEONTIUS Some virgin martyr, Perhaps, enamour'd of resembling virtue, With gentle hand, restrain’d the streams of life, And snatch'd her timely from her country's fate. DEMETRIUS From those bright regions of eternal day, LEONTIUS Enough of unavailing tears, Demetrius: DEMETRIUS To what I know not: But hope, yet hope, to happiness and honour; If happiness can be, without Aspasia. LEONTIUS DEMETRIUS From Cali bassa, The chief, whose wisdom guides the Turkish counsels. LEONTIUS Can he restore the state he could not save? In vain, when Turkey's troops assail'd our walls, His kind intelligence betray'd their measure; Their arms prevail'd, though Cali was our friend. DEMETRIUS When the tenth sun had set upon our sorrows, At midnight's private hour, a voice unknown Sounds in my sleeping ear, 'Awake, Demetrius, Awake, and follow me to better fortunes.' Surpris'd I start, and bless the happy dream; Then, rousing, know the fiery chief Abdalla, Whose quick impatience seiz'd my doubtful hand, And led me to the shore where Cali stood, Pensive, and list’ning to the beating surge. There, in soft hints, and in ambiguous phrase, With all the diffidence of long experience, That oft had practis'd fraud, and oft detected, The vet’ran courtier half reveal'd his project. By his command, equipp'd for speedy flight, Deep in a winding creek a galley lies, LEONTIUS But what avails DEMETRIUS SCENE II CALI Now summon all thy soul, illustrious christian! DEMETRIUS Observe him closely, with a statesman's eye, Thou, that hast long perus’d the draughts of nature, And know'st the characters of vice and virtue, Left by the hand of heav'n on human clay. CALI DEMETRIUS Sooner the trembling leaves shall find a voice, And tell the secrets of their conscious walks; Sooner the breeze shall catch the flying sounds, And shock the tyrant with a tale of treason. Your slaughter'd multitudes, that swell the shore With monuments of death, proclaim his courage; Virtue and liberty engross his soul, And leave no place for perfidy, or fear. LEONTIUS I scorn a trust unwillingly repos’d; DEMETRIUS Leontius, stay. |