ACT I

Enter stealthily Karshook, Raghib, Ayoob, and other initiated Druses, each as he enters casting off a robe that conceals his distinctive black vest and white turban; then, as giving a loose to exultation,—

Karshook. The moon is carried off in purple fire:

Day breaks at last! Break glory, with the day,

On Djabal's dread incarnate mystery

Now ready to resume its pristine shape

Of Hakeem, as the Khalif vanished erst

In what seemed death to uninstructed eyes,

On red Mokattam's verge—our Founder's flesh,

As he resumes our Founder's function!

Raghib. —Death

Sweep to the Christian Prefect that enslaved

So long us sad Druse exiles o'er the sea!

Ayoob.—Most joy be thine, O Mother-mount! Thy brood

Returns to thee, no outcasts as we left,

But thus—but thus! Behind, our Prefect's corse;

Before, a presence like the morning—thine,

Absolute Djabal late,—God Hakeem now

That day breaks!

Kar. Off then, with disguise at last!

As from our forms this hateful garb we strip,

Lose every tongue its glozing accent too,

Discard each limb the ignoble gesture! Cry,

'Tis the Druse Nation, warders on our Mount

Of the world's secret, since the birth of time,

—No kindred slips, no offsets from thy stock,

No spawn of Christians are we, Prefect, we

Who rise ...

Ay. Who shout ...

Ragh. Who seize, a first-fruits, ha—

Spoil of the spoiler! Brave!

[They begin to tear down, and to dispute for, the decorations of the hall.

Kar. Hold!

Ay. —Mine, I say;

And mine shall it continue!

Kar. Just this fringe!

Take anything beside! Lo, spire on spire,

Curl serpentwise wreathed columns to the top

O' the roof, and hide themselves mysteriously

Among the twinkling lights and darks that haunt

Yon cornice! Where the huge veil, they suspend

Before the Prefect's chamber of delight,

Floats wide, then falls again as if its slave,

The scented air, took heart now, and anon

Lost heart to buoy its breadths of gorgeousness

Above the gloom they droop in—all the porch

Is jewelled o'er with frostwork charactery;

And, see, yon eight-point cross of white flame, winking

Hoar-silvery like some fresh-broke marble stone:

Raze out the Rhodian cross there, so thou leav'st me

This single fringe!

Ay. Ha, wouldst thou, dog-fox? Help!

—Three hand-breadths of gold fringe, my son was set

To twist, the night he died!

Kar. Nay, hear the knave!

And I could witness my one daughter borne,

A week since, to the Prefect's couch, yet fold

These arms, be mute, lest word of mine should mar

Our Master's work, delay the Prefect here

A day, prevent his sailing hence for Rhodes—

How know I else?—Hear me denied my right

By such a knave!

Ragh. [Interposing.] Each ravage for himself!

Booty enough! On, Druses! Be there found

Blood and a heap behind us; with us, Djabal

Turned Hakeem; and before us, Lebanon!

Yields the porch? Spare not! There his minions dragged

Thy daughter, Karshook, to the Prefect's couch!

Ayoob! Thy son, to soothe the Prefect's pride,

Bent o'er that task, the death-sweat on his brow,

Carving the spice-tree's heart in scroll-work there!

Onward in Djabal's name!

(As the tumult is at height, enter Khalil. A pause and silence.)

Khalil. Was it for this,

Djabal hath summoned you? Deserve you thus

A portion in to-day's event? What, here—

When most behoves your feet fall soft, your eyes

Sink low, your tongues lie still,—at Djabal's side,

Close in his very hearing, who, perchance,

Assumes e'en now God Hakeem's dreaded shape,—

Dispute you for these gauds?

Ay. How say'st thou, Khalil?

Doubtless our Master prompts thee! Take the fringe,

Old Karshook! I supposed it was a day ...

Kha. For pillage?

Kar. Hearken, Khalil! Never spoke

A boy so like a song-bird; we avouch thee

Prettiest of all our Master's instruments

Except thy bright twin-sister; thou and Anael

Challenge his prime regard: but we may crave

(Such nothings as we be) a portion too

Of Djabal's favor; in him we believed,

His bound ourselves, him moon by moon obeyed,

Kept silence till this daybreak—so, may claim

Reward: who grudges me my claim?

Ay. To-day

Is not as yesterday!

Ragh. Stand off!

Kha. Rebel you?

Must I, the delegate of Djabal, draw

His wrath on you, the day of our Return?

Other Druses. Wrench from their grasp the fringe! Hounds! must the earth

Vomit her plagues on us through thee?—and thee?

Plague me not, Khalil, for their fault!

Kha. Oh, shame!

Thus breaks to-day on you, the mystic tribe

Who, flying the approach of Osman, bore

Our faith, a merest spark, from Syria's ridge,

Its birthplace, hither! "Let the sea divide

These hunters from their prey," you said; "and safe

In this dim islet's virgin solitude

Tend we our faith, the spark, till happier time

Fan it to fire; till Hakeem rise again,

According to his word that, in the flesh

Which faded on Mokattam ages since,

He, at our extreme need, would interpose,

And, reinstating all in power and bliss,

Lead us himself to Lebanon once more."

Was't not thus you departed years ago,

Ere I was born?

Druses. 'T was even thus, years ago.

Kha. And did you call—(according to old laws

Which bid us, lest the sacred grow profane,

Assimilate ourselves in outward rites

With strangers fortune makes our lords, and live

As Christian with the Christian, Jew with Jew

Druse only with the Druses)—did you call

Or no, to stand 'twixt you and Osman's rage,

(Mad to pursue e'en hither through the sea

The remnant of our tribe,) a race self vowed

To endless warfare with his hordes and him,

The White-cross Knights of the adjacent Isle?

Kar. And why else rend we down, wrench up, rase out?

These Knights of Rhodes we thus solicited

For help, bestowed on us a fiercer pest

Than aught we fled—their Prefect; who began

His promised mere paternal governance,

By a prompt massacre of all our Sheikhs

Able to thwart the Order in its scheme

Of crushing, with our nation's memory,

Each chance of our return, and taming us

Bondslaves to Rhodes forever—all, he thinks

To end by this day's treason.

Kha. Say I not?

You, fitted to the Order's purposes,

Your Sheikhs cut off, your rights, your garb proscribed,

Must yet receive one degradation more;

The Knights at last throw off the mask—transfer,

As tributary now and appanage,

This islet they are but protectors of,

To their own ever-craving liege, the Church,

Who licenses all crimes that pay her thus.

You, from their Prefect, were to be consigned

(Pursuant of I know not what vile pact)

To the Knights' Patriarch, ardent to outvie

His predecessor in all wickedness.

When suddenly rose Djabal in the midst,

Djabal, the man in semblance, but our God

Confessed by signs and portents. Ye saw fire

Bicker round Djabal, heard strange music flit

Bird-like about his brow?

Druses. We saw—we heard!

Djabal is Hakeem, the incarnate Dread,

The phantasm Khalif, King of Prodigies!

Kha. And as he said has not our Khalif done,

And so disposed events (from land to land

Passing invisibly) that when, this morn,

The pact of villany complete, there comes

This Patriarch's Nuncio with this Master's Prefect

Their treason to consummate,—each will face

For a crouching handful, an uplifted nation;

For simulated Christians, confessed Druses;

And, for slaves past hope of the Mother-mount,

Freedmen returning there 'neath Venice' flag;

That Venice which, the Hospitallers' foe,

Grants us from Candia escort home at price

Of our relinquished isle, Rhodes counts her own—

Venice, whose promised argosies should stand

Toward harbor: is it now that you, and you,

And you, selected from the rest to bear

The burden of the Khalif's secret, further

To-day's event, entitled by your wrongs,

And witness in the Prefect's hall his fate—

That you dare clutch these gauds? Ay, drop them!

Kar. True,

Most true, all this; and yet, may one dare hint,

Thou art the youngest of us?—though employed

Abundantly as Djabal's confidant,

Transmitter of his mandates, even now.

Much less, whene'er beside him Anael graces

The cedar throne, his queen-bride, art thou like

To occupy its lowest step that day!

Now, Khalil, wert thou checked as thou aspirest,

Forbidden such or such an honor,—say,

Would silence serve so amply?

Kha. Karshook thinks

I covet honors? Well, nor idly thinks!

Honors? I have demanded of them all

The greatest!

Kar. I supposed so.

Kha. Judge, yourselves!

Turn, thus: 'tis in the alcove at the back

Of yonder columned porch, whose entrance now

The veil hides, that our Prefect holds his state,

Receives the Nuncio, when the one, from Rhodes,

The other lands from Syria; there they meet.

Now, I have sued with earnest prayers ...

Kar. For what

Shall the Bride's brother vainly sue?

Kha. That mine—

Avenging in one blow a myriad wrongs

—Might be the hand to slay the Prefect there!

Djabal reserves that office for himself.

[A silence.

Thus far, as youngest of you all, I speak

—Scarce more enlightened than yourselves; since, near

As I approach him, nearer as I trust

Soon to approach our Master, he reveals

Only the God's power, not the glory yet.

Therefore I reasoned with you: now, as servant

To Djabal, bearing his authority,

Hear me appoint your several posts! Till noon

None see him save myself and Anael: once

The deed achieved, our Khalif, casting off

The embodied Awe's tremendous mystery,

The weakness of the flesh disguise, resumes

His proper glory, ne'er to fade again.

(Enter a Druse.)

The Druse. Our Prefect lands from Rhodes!—without a sign

That he suspects aught since he left our Isle;

Nor in his train a single guard beyond

The few he sailed with hence: so have we learned

From Loys.

Kar. Loys? Is not Loys gone

Forever?

Ay. Loys, the Frank Knight, returned?

The Druse. Loys, the boy, stood on the leading prow

Conspicuous in his gay attire, and leapt

Into the surf the foremost. Since day-dawn

I kept watch to the Northward; take but note

Of my poor vigilance to Djabal!

Kha. Peace!

Thou, Karshook, with thy company, receive

The Prefect as appointed: see, all keep

The wonted show of servitude: announce

His entry here by the accustomed peal

Of trumpets, then await the further pleasure

Of Djabal! (Loys back, whom Djabal sent

To Rhodes that we might spare the single Knight

Worth sparing!)

(Enter a second Druse.)

The Druse. I espied it first! Say, I

First spied the Nuncio's galley from the South!

Said'st thou a Crossed-keys' flag would flap the mast?

It nears apace! One galley and no more.

If Djabal chance to ask who spied the flag,

Forget not, I it was!

Kha. Thou, Ayoob, bring

The Nuncio and his followers hither! Break

One rule prescribed, ye wither in your blood,

Die at your fault!

(Enter a third Druse.)

The Druse. I shall see home, see home!

—Shall banquet in the sombre groves again!

Hail to thee, Khalil! Venice looms afar;

The argosies of Venice, like a cloud,

Bear up from Candia in the distance!

Kha. Joy!

Summon our people, Raghib! Bid all forth!

Tell them the long-kept secret, old and young!

Set free the captive, let the trampled raise

Their faces from the dust, because at length

The cycle is complete, God Hakeem's reign

Begins anew! Say, Venice for our guard,

Ere night we steer for Syria! Hear you, Druses?

Hear you this crowning witness to the claims

Of Djabal? Oh, I spoke of hope and fear,

Reward and punishment, because he bade

Who has the right: for me, what should I say

But, mar not those imperial lineaments,

No majesty of all that rapt regard

Vex by the least omission! Let him rise

Without a check from you!

Druses. Let Djabal rise!

(Enter Loys.—The Druses are silent.)

Loys. Who speaks of Djabal?—for I seek him, friends!

[Aside.] Tu Dieu! 'T is as our Isle broke out in song

For joy, its Prefect-incubus drops off

To-day, and I succeed him in his rule!

But no—they cannot dream of their good fortune!

[Aloud.] Peace to you, Druses! I have tidings for you,

But first for Djabal: where 's your tall bewitcher,

With that small Arab thin-lipped silver-mouth?

Kha. [Aside to Kar.] Loys, in truth! Yet Djabal cannot err!

Kar. [To Kha.] And who takes charge of Loys? That 's forgotten,

Despite thy wariness! Will Loys stand

And see his comrades slaughtered?

Loys. [Aside.] How they shrink

And whisper, with those rapid faces! What?

The sight of me in their oppressors' garb

Strikes terror to the simple tribe? God's shame

On those that bring our Order ill repute!

But all's at end now; better days begin

For these mild mountaineers from over-sea:

The timidest shall have in me no Prefect

To cower at thus! [Aloud.] I asked for Djabal—

Kar. [Aside.] Better

One lured him, ere he can suspect, inside

The corridor; 't were easy to dispatch

A youngster. [To Loys.] Djabal passed some minutes since

Through yonder porch, and ...

Kha. [Aside.] Hold! What, him dispatch?

The only Christian of them all we charge

No tyranny upon? Who,—noblest Knight

Of all that learned from time to time their trade

Of lust and cruelty among us,—heir

To Europe's pomp, a truest child of pride,—

Yet stood between the Prefect and ourselves

From the beginning? Loys, Djabal makes

Account of, and precisely sent to Rhodes

For safety? I take charge of him! [To Loys.] Sir Loys,—

Loys. There, cousins! Does Sir Loys strike you dead?

Kha. [Advancing.] Djabal has intercourse with few or none

Till noontide: but, your pleasure?

Loys. "Intercourse

With few or none?"—(Ah, Khalil, when you spoke

I saw not your smooth face! All health!—and health

To Anael! How fares Anael?)—"Intercourse

With few or none?" Forget you, I've been friendly

With Djabal long ere you or any Druse?

—Enough of him at Rennes, I think, beneath

The Duke my father's roof! He'd tell by the hour,

With fixed white eyes beneath his swarthy brow,

Plausiblest stories ...

Kha. Stories, say you?—Ah,

The quaint attire!

Loys. My dress for the last time!

How sad I cannot make you understand,

This ermine, o'er a shield, betokens me

Of Bretagne, ancientest of provinces

And noblest; and, what's best and oldest there,

See, Dreux', our house's blazon, which the Nuncio

Tacks to an Hospitaller's vest to-day!

Kha. The Nuncio we await? What brings you back

From Rhodes, Sir Loys?

Loys. How you island-tribe

Forget the world's awake while here you drowse!

What brings me back? What should not bring me, rather!

Our Patriarch's Nuncio visits you to-day—

Is not my year's probation out? I come

To take the knightly vows.

Kha. What's that you wear?

Loys. This Rhodian cross? The cross your Prefect wore.

You should have seen, as I saw, the full Chapter

Rise, to a man, while they transferred this cross

From that unworthy Prefect's neck to ... (fool—

My secret will escape me!) In a word,

My year's probation passed, a Knight ere eve

Am I; bound, like the rest, to yield my wealth

To the common stock, to live in chastity,

(We Knights espouse alone our Order's fame)

—Change this gay weed for the black white-crossed gown,

And fight to death against the Infidel

—Not, therefore, against you, you Christians with

Such partial difference only as befits

The peacefullest of tribes. But Khalil, prithee,

Is not the Isle brighter than wont to-day?

Kha. Ah, the new sword!

Loys. See now! You handle sword

As 't were a camel-staff! Pull! That's my motto,

Annealed "Pro fide," on the blade in blue.

Kha. No curve in it? Surely a blade should curve.

Loys. Straight from the wrist! Loose—it should poise itself!

Kha. [Waving with irrepressible exultation the sword.]

We are a nation, Loys, of old fame

Among the mountains! Rights have we to keep

With the sword too!

[Remembering himself.] But I forget—you bid me

Seek Djabal?

Loys. What! A sword's sight scares you not?

(The People I will make of him and them!

Oh let my Prefect-sway begin at once!)

Bring Djabal—say, indeed, that come he must!

Kha. At noon seek Djabal in the Prefect's Chamber,

And find ... [Aside.] Nay, 't is thy cursed race's token,

Frank pride, no special insolence of thine!

[Aloud.] Tarry, and I will do your bidding, Loys!

[To the rest aside.] Now, forth you! I proceed to Djabal straight.

Leave this poor boy, who knows not what he says!

Oh will it not add joy to even thy joy,

Djabal, that I report all friends were true?

[Khalil goes, followed by the Druses.

Loys. Tu Dieu! How happy I shall make these Druses!

Was 't not surpassingly contrived of me

To get the long list of their wrongs by heart,

Then take the first pretence for stealing off

From these poor islanders, present myself

Sudden at Rhodes before the noble Chapter,

And (as best proof of ardor in its cause

Which ere to-night will have become, too, mine)

Acquaint it with this plague-sore in its body,

This Prefect and his villanous career?

The princely Synod! All I dared request

Was his dismissal; and they graciously

Consigned his very office to myself—

Myself may cure the Isle diseased!

And well

For them, they did so! Since I never felt

How lone a lot, though brilliant, I embrace,

Till now that, past retrieval, it is mine.

To live thus, and thus die! Yet, as I leapt

On shore, so home a feeling greeted me

That I could half believe in Djabal's story,

He used to tempt my father with, at Rennes—

And me, too, since the story brought me here—

Of some Count Dreux and ancestor of ours

Who, sick of wandering from Bouillon's war,

Left his old name in Lebanon.

Long days

At least to spend in the Isle! and, my news known

An hour hence, what if Anael turn on me

The great black eyes I must forget?

Why, fool,

Recall them, then? My business is with Djabal,

Not Anael! Djabal tarries: if I seek him?—

The Isle is brighter than its wont to-day!