ACT V.

SCENE I.—The interior of Orsino's hermitage.

Alfonso is discovered sleeping.

Enter Orsino and Ricardo.

Orsi. Come they in force?
Ricar. At least five thousand strong,
But stronger far in loyalty than numbers.
Scarce heard my tale, clamours of rage and pity
Burst from the croud, and every peasant swore,
He'd perish or preserve that sovereign's rights,
Who used them ever for the poor man's good.
Orsi. Honest Ricardo: When to serve thy king
I judged thee truest of the true, I erred not.
The lords to whom I sent thee, what reception
Found'st thou from them?
Ricar. Such as almost would prove,
Ingratitude is not the vice of courts:
But when I said, Orsino was to head them,
Their zeal, their joy——-
Orsi. No more.—Are they at hand?
Ricar. An hour will bring them here.
Orsi. We'll then tow'rds Burgos,
And ere the swarth Castilian sees the sun
Pour on his rip'ning vines meridian beams,
Cæsario's royal dream shall close forever.
—[Looking on Alfonso.]—-He sleeps—Oh! come all ye who envy monarchs,
Look on yon bed of leaves, and thank heaven's kindness,
Which saved ye from the sorrows of a throne.
Ricar. My dear, my injured master.
Orsi. Go, Ricardo,
Watch for your friends; and when from yonder rock
Thou see'st their forces, warn me. [Exit Ricardo.
Orsi. [To Alfonso,] Canst thou sleep,
And sleep thus soundly on so rude a pallet?
There's many a prince, whose couch is strown with roses,
Finds their sweet leaves but serve to harbour aspies:
There's many a conqueror stretched on down, who passes
The live-long night to woo repose in vain,
And view with aching, restless, sated eyes,
The trophies which nod round his crimson bed.
But fraud, ambition, treachery, plots, and murder,
In vain would banish his repose who sleeps,
Watched by his prospering kingdom's anxious angel;
And lull'd to slumber by his people's prayers.
But see,—He wakes.—(Lowering his vizor.)
Alfon. (Waking.) Do what thou wilt, Cæsario,
But harm not my poor child.—How now!—--Where am I?
—What place—I see it all.—Lo!—where he stands,
Whose well-timed warning snatched me from the flames,
And led me hither.—Say, thou dread preserver,
Mysterious stranger, ease a father's anguish:
How fares it with my child? What news from Burgos?
Orsi. Burgos believes thee dead. Cæsario fills
Thy vacant throne.
Alfon. I ask not of my throne.
My child! Oh! say, my child?——
Orsi. Is safe, is well,
And hopes ere long to see her sire once more
Adorned, with regal pomp, and lord of Burgos.
Alfon. Alas! vain hope.
Orsi. Not so: thy faithful nobles,
By me apprized, now haste to give thee succour.
Ere night, Cæsario falls; and piercing his,
Thy just revenge shall print a mortal wound
On his proud father's heart.
Alfon. His father's?
Orsi. Ay,
On his, who paid thy love this morn with curses,
Spurning thy proffered friendship—Know'st thou not
Cæsario is Orsino's son?
Alfon. Just Heaven!
And does Orsino love him?
Orsi. Dearly, dearly,
Loves him to madness; loves him with like fury.
As hates he thee.—Oh! glorious field for vengeance:
Think how 'twill writhe his haughty soul to hear,
This son, this darling, perished on the scaffold,
Branded, disgraced, a traitor, a foiled traitor.
Joy, joy, Alfonso; ere 'tis night thy wrath
Shall gorge itself with blood.
Alfon. Now blessings on thee,
Who giv'st me more than all my foes can take.
Come, come, my friend; where are these troops? Away,
Forward to Burgos.
Orsi. (Detaining him.) Whither now?
Alfon. To Burgos.
Down with the walls: make once Cæsario mine—
Orsi. And then——?
Alfon. I'll seek his father, grasp his hand,
And say,—"This stripling stole my darling daughter,
Betrayed my confidence, usurped my throne,
Aimed at my life, and almost broke my heart:
But he's Orsino's son; Orsino loves him,
And all's forgiven."——(Orsino kneels, takes the
king's hand, and presses it to his lips.
)—How now?
Orsi. (Raising his vizor.) All is forgiven.
Alfon. 'Tis he:—Orsino's self.
Orsi. My pride is vanquished:
My king—Thy hand, my king.
Alfon. My heart, my heart;
There find thy place, and never leave it more.
Oh, from my joy again to name thee friend,
Judge of my grief to think thou wert my foe;
How could I doubt thee? how commit an error
So gross.
Orsi. No more; e'en now thou pay'st its penance:
In this long chain of present woes, that error
(Which seems at first so light) was the first link.
It tore me from my son: else, reared by me,
Formed in thy court, and schooled by my example,
My son must sure have proved thy truest subject,
Oh! learn from this, how weighty is the charge,
A monarch bears; how nice a task to guide
His power aright, to guide it wrong, how fatal.
If subjects sin, with them the crime remains,
With them the penance; but when monarchs err,
The mischief spreads swift as their kingdom's rivers,
Strong as their power, and wide as their domains.

Enter Ricardo.

Orsi. Now friend?
Ricar. From yonder height I caught distinctly
The gleam of arms.
Orsi. 'Tis well—Away, my sovereign,
And join your troops; then shape your march tow'rds Burgos,
Nor doubt the event, for who that loves his country.
To save his king shall fear to die himself?
None, surely none! The patriot glow shall catch
From heart to heart throughout Castile, as swiftly
As sparks of fire disperse through summer forests;
Till all in care of thee forget themselves,
And every good man's bosom bucklers thine!
Forward, my king!—Lead on! [Exeunt.

Scene II.—A chamber in the palace.