align="left">Dou. And to curse her husband!
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Raby. Ah! have a care, my lord, I'm not so old— |
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Dou. Nor I so base, that I should tamely bear it; |
Nor am I so inur'd to infamy, |
That I can say, without a burning blush, |
She lives to be my curse! |
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Raby. How's this? |
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Dou. I thought |
The lily opening to the heaven's soft dews, |
Was not so fragrant, and was not so chaste. |
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Raby. Has she prov'd otherwise? I'll not believe it, |
Who has traduc'd my sweet, my innocent child? |
Yet she's too good to 'scape calumnious tongues. |
I know that Slander loves a lofty mark: |
It saw her soar a flight above her fellows, |
And hurl'd its arrow to her glorious height, |
To reach her heart, and bring her to the ground. |
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Dou. Had the rash tongue of Slander so presum'd, |
My vengeance had not been of that slow sort |
To need a prompter; nor should any arm, |
No, not a father's, dare dispute with mine, |
The privilege to die in her defence. |
None dares accuse Elwina, but— |
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Raby. But who? |
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Dou. But Douglas. |
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Raby. [puts his hand to his sword.] |
You?—O spare my age's weakness! |
You do not know what 'tis to be a father; |
You do not know, or you would pity me, |
The thousand tender throbs, the nameless feelings, |
The dread to ask, and yet the wish to know, |
When we adore and fear; but wherefore fear? |
Does not the blood of Raby fill her veins? |
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Dou. Percy;—know'st thou that name? |
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Raby. How? What of Percy? |
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Dou. He loves Elwina, and, my curses on him! |
He is belov'd again. |
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Raby. I'm on the rack! |
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Dou. Not the two Theban brothers bore each other |
Such deep, such deadly hate as I and Percy. |
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Raby. But tell me of my child. |
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Dou. [not minding him.] As I and Percy! |
When at the marriage rites, O rites accurs'd! |
I seiz'd her trembling hand, she started back, |
Cold horror thrill'd her veins, her tears flow'd fast. |
Fool that I was, I thought 'twas maiden fear; |
Dull, doting ignorance! beneath those terrors, |
Hatred for me and love for Percy lurk'd. |
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Raby. What proof of guilt is this? |
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Dou. E'er since our marriage, |
Our days have still been cold and joyless all; |
Painful restraint, and hatred ill disguis'd, |
Her sole return for all my waste of fondness. |
This very morn I told her 'twas your will |
She should repair to court; with all those graces, |
Which first subdued my soul, and still enslave it, |
She begg'd to stay behind in Raby Castle, |
For courts and cities had no charms for her. |
Curse my blind love! I was again ensnar'd, |
And doted on the sweetness which deceiv'd me. |
Just at the hour she thought I should be absent, |
(For chance could ne'er have tim'd their guilt so well,) |
Arriv'd young Harcourt, one of Percy's knights, |
Strictly enjoin'd to speak to none but her; |
I seiz'd the miscreant: hitherto he's silent, |
But tortures soon shall force him to confess! |
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Raby. Percy is absent—They have never met. |
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Dou. At what a feeble hold you grasp for succour! |
Will it content me that her person's pure? |
No, if her alien heart dotes on another, |
She is unchaste, were not that other Percy. |
Let vulgar spirits basely wait for proof, |
She loves another—'tis enough for Douglas. |
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Raby. Be patient. |
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Dou. Be a tame convenient husband, |
And meanly wait for circumstantial guilt? |
No—I am nice as the first Cæsar was, |
And start at bare suspicion.[going. |
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Raby. [holding him.] Douglas, hear me; |
Thou hast nam'd a Roman husband; if she's false, |
I mean to prove myself a Roman father.[exit Douglas. |
This marriage was my work, and thus I'm punish'd! |
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Enter Elwina. |
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Elw. Where is my father? let me fly to meet him, |
O let me clasp his venerable knees, |
And die of joy in his belov'd embrace! |
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Raby. [avoiding her embrace.] Elwina! |
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Elw. And is that all? so cold? |
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Raby. [sternly.]
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