SCENE I.
A VIEW OF THE TOMBS OF THE KINGS OF PERSIA, CUT OUT OF THE ROCKS, AND A PROSPECT OF A VENERA⯑BLE MOSQUE. THE WHOLE AWFULLY MAGNIFICENT. HAMET, OMAR.
HAMET.
THOU good old man—Thou full of days and ho⯑nour,
Guide of my youth, and glory of my crown,
My boſom labours with a friend's impatience
As now I lead thee to theſe ſacred ſeats—
Theſe awful ſepulchres, where Perſia's kings,
My anceſtors, repoſe in ſolemn ſilence—
Oh, my heart throbs till I have told thee all.
OMAR.
My prince, my child! I praiſe thy tender zeal,
And though oppreſſive time upon this head
Hath heavy ſnow'd full many a winters whiteneſs,
Yet once this heart—the memory ſtill is dear—
Felt a fond paſſion, pure and warm as thine.
To all that rateth high a virgin's worth,
Senſe, beauty, ſoul, long ſince was Omar wed.
HAMET.
If thou haſt lov'd, with unfatigued ear,
Thou wilt allow the ſweet prolixity,
Love's ſoft delay, and tender repetition.
"But, oh! by what ſad ſtroke of cruel fortune
"Fell from thy reverend arms this deareſt treaſure?"
OMAR.
"Full forty years Olmana to this boſom
"Miniſter'd every balm of virtuous ſoftneſs.
[18] "Paſſion from reaſon caught the wiſh compos'd,
"The hope obedient, and the ſteady purpoſe,
"A life devote to nature and to Heaven.
"At length it pleas'd the gods to take her from me,
"And pluck this pillow from my aged head;
"Her death was ſudden, but her life prepar'd.
"In my firſt widow'd days I felt as man;
"At length her ſacred ſpirit ſeem'd to chide,
"And whiſper'd that it only went before
"To intercede the Merciful for mine.
"I left her with the gods, and wept no more."
But come, what ſays Almeida?
HAMET.
How her name
Like ſudden ſun-beams darting thro' a cloud,
Lights up an inſtant joy in Hamet's boſom.
Oh, had'ſt thou ſeen her all diſſolv'd in paſſion—
Paſſion, tho' yielding, modeſtly chaſtis'd,
"And ſhaded by a delicate reſerve,
"Only to look more lovely thro' the veil"—
Had'ſt thou but ſeen her, eloquently dumb,
Sink in her father's arms, confeſs her ſoftneſs
In all the ſweet diſorders of the heart,
Then bluſh, and ſigh, and even weep for words!—
OMAR.
When does Abdallah's daughter then conſent.—
HAMET.
Hear it, ye favouring heav'ns, and every breeze,
Bear on your viewleſs wings the tender tidings,
I ſhall to-morrow claim—
OMAR.
To-morrow!
Knows royal Almoran this ſudden purpoſe?
HAMET.
[19]Ah Omar thou haſt ſprinkled drops of ice
Cold on my heart, to freeze the flame of love.
Not all the jealous vigilance of fondneſs;
Not the ſtill waking eyes of faithful Ali
Can foil the felon arts of wily Caled.
Almoran again hath ſeen her, friend—and much,
Still much I fear leſt—
OMAR.
Oh, forbear;
Wear not a doubtful eye upon a brother,
Nor let ſuſpicion fear thy generous heart.
HAMET.
Heaven knows my fondneſs; knows the generous love,
"Reſpect ſincere, and tenderneſs I bear him,
"And the ſoft ſhade I caſt o'er all his failings;"
Dear is my brother to this faithful heart,
As the warm tide that conſtant flows to feed it.
OMAR.
The ſainted Solyman thou know'ſt decreed,
That ye ſhould wear his yet unblemiſh'd crown
In amity together, wield his ſceptre
As brothers and as friends.—Unite to bleſs,
By a well-order'd government, the land;
The ſmiling arts of peace diffuſe around,
Or give—where patriot virtue points the cauſe
To be the cauſe of heav'n—freſh nerves to war;
O'er the wide wave to ſpread the advent'rous ſail,
Lift modeſt genius from the lowly vale,
And bid it bloſſom in a warmer ſoil,
More near its native ſkies.—
HAMET.
Dear, parent ſage,
Deep are thy counſels 'grav'd upon this heart.
OMAR.
[20]Yet ſpare a moment to the voice of truth,
Even from the hour of panting ſoftneſs ſpare it.
Oh ne'er forget, thou noble youth, 'tis thine
To taſte with Almoran the bliſs ſupreme
That flows from all the great, the glorious virtues,
Worthy of kings, on kings alone conferr'd;
Pity that ſoftens juſtice; merit, guarded
From bolder arrogance, e'en by the ſhield,
The temper'd ſhield of royalty itſelf.
"Bleſſings deriv'd from bleſſings well beſtow'd,
"Delights like theſe—oh, may they long be thine,
"Grow greater by diviſion." Yet remember
If e'er thou'rt tempted—which the gods forbid—
Should'ſt thou, as faction or as favour urges;
Should private paſſions, or domeſtick broils,
Frauds of the ſtate, or follies of the palace,
A miſtreſs or a miniſter, e'er lead
Thine eye, thy hand, thy heart from what thou ow'ſt,
From what the laws, the land, the people claim—
Claim as a duty from the prince they ſerve,
Not Perſia's utmoſt pomp combin'd to ſoothe thee,
"Not all the graces of the lov'd Almeida,
"Nor yet the princely pledges of her faith
"Climbing thy knee and blooming round thy board,
"Not ev'n the huſband's pride, the father's tranſport,"
Can ſnatch thee from the ſhame reſerv'd for him,
Who, baſe and lawleſs, wantons with his power,
"Covers with blood his violated country,
"To an enſanguin'd ſabre turns his ſceptre,
And more than traitor deſolates the empire.
HAMET.
Oh, never, never may this breaſt, which throbs
With all a patriot's, all a parent's ardour,
To ſerve the weal of Perſia, feel a curſe
So charg'd with anguiſh, or ſo full of horrour!
[21] With my lov'd ſubjects teach me, gods, to ſhare
The plenteous glories of this fertile land,
While royal Almoran partakes the joy,
And late poſterity atteſts our virtue!
Now, then, my friend, I muſt require thy aid.
OMAR.
What would my gracious prince?
HAMET.
Engage
His ſecond father in an inſtant office
Of tender import—This letter—take it Omar.
Why trembles thus my fooliſh hand to give it?
'Tis to my brother, and contains—oh heav'ns!
OMAR.
"The tidings of to-morrow. This perchance—
"'Tis dangerous;
[aſide]
ſoft—is there no other way?
HAMET.
"Why pauſes Omar?
"Why deeply bent to earth his thoughtful eye?
OMAR.
"Thy love hath ſpoke, I doubt not, brotherly.
HAMET.
"Omar, my heart was in it. Take it then,
"O take it, friend! There, in that little ſpace
Are all my future hopes and fears inſcribed;
It is the hiſtory of a brother's love,
Writ to a brother's friendſhip—Yes, my Omar,
This is the hour which Almoran devotes
To private kindneſs, and unburthen'd freedom:
Upon his ſacred moments thou haſt claim;
And who ſo fit as thee to grace a meſſage
Where Hamet's happineſs ſo cloſes, centres?
OMAR.
Dear to this feeble boſom are ye both;
I honour, love, reſpect—do all but fear you.
The man we dread was never truly lov'd.
HAMET.
[22]Delay no Ionger then—oh think a little,
Something allow to ardent love's impatience;
No reſt ſhall Hamet know till thy return,
But trembling, anxious, wait thy coming, Omar.—
In the bleſs'd grove that ſhades Almeida's chamber,
There will I kneel, there awful bend to heaven,
That all our wiſhes may be crown'd in peace.
Exit HAMET.
OMAR alone.
I would not check his joys too far; and yet
Too plain, alas, theſe aged eyes can ſee
A train of miſchiefs gathering round our heads.
This letter notes the hour, when to the moſque
Hamet conducts his Fair Circaſſian bride.
Ye mighty Powers, who rule the royal ſoul,
And touch the maſter chords that ſway our nature,
Let kindred kindneſs ſave my kings from diſcord,
Preſerve the publick welfare, private quiet;
And theſe old eyes ſhall pour their thanks in tears.
Exit.
SCENE II.
A MAGNIFICENT APARTMENT IN THE PALACE. ALMORAN, OSMYN.
ALMORAN.
Oſmyn, thy conduct hath been ever humble,
Wary, and watchful. Now the time is ripe
To note thy ſubject ſervices more amply;
Caled, thou know'ſt, is our obedient ſlave,
Thy preſent poſt of honour ſhall be his,
And thou to larger dignities ariſe;
'Tis Almoran that liſts thee from the duſt.
OSMYN.
[24]Dread king, and father of the eaſtern world,
Thy ſacred purpoſe ever in my view
Bounds all the hopes of thy obſervant Oſmyn;
ALMORAN. aſide.
This is another Caled at the core;
Long have I marked his hypocritick look,
Diſguiſing falſehood in the fraudful ſmile:
'Twere not amiſs to make the ſlave ſecure.
Oſmyn.—
OSMYN.
Yonder, my lord, with ſober ſtep
Old Omar, that ſage pillar of the ſtate,
Comes ſlowly onward—venerably ſweet
His reverend aſpect.—
ALMORAN
(pauſing.)
Haply that were well.
Oſmyn!
OSMYN.
Imperial ſultan.
bows.
ALMORAN.
The important office of a miniſter
Might ſuit thy vigorous years and mind mature,
That feeble pillar ſoon muſt fall. Of this
Anon.—Ere night her ſable wing ſhall ſpread
O'er day's fair boſom, ſee that thou attend,
Juſt where the cluſt'ring citrons form a ſhade
Near to our chief ſeraglio, there I'll meet thee.
Go. Thou wilt remember and obey.
Exit OSMYN.
I wou'd not raſhly loſe a ſabre, when
Haply, I may want to try its temper.
aſide.
My curſes on this dotard. Caled, now
Shall Almoran take heed t' obſerve thy counſel;
A ſmile—Yes, ſmiles are well till all be ſure;
And yet my ſoul diſdains the narrow art
Of ſeeming that I am not. But he comes;
Take me hypocriſy, awhile I'm thine.
[24] Enter OMAR (offers to kneel.)
Thou ſhalt not bend. The venerable knee
Grown feeble in the ſervice of the ſtate
Should only bow to heaven. Thy ſilver locks,
Thoſe ſacred ſignals of the experienc'd mind,
Command the reverence of the kings they honour;
Ev'n Almoran reſpects them. O the falſehood,
aſide.
Shame on my abject tongue for thus diſſembling.
OMAR.
My fears were ſurely wrong.
[aſide]
O gracious king,
This old fond boſom feels a father's joy
Thus to be welcom'd by the prince he loves.
Ev'n in the tendereſt hours of earlieſt life,
Thy mother ſent her little pride to Omar,
And ere thy tongue began to liſp its purpoſe,
The name of Omar firſt employ'd its efforts;
Then, as a preſage of thy future friendſhip—
Oh! be it heav'n prophetic—thou didſt throw
Thy infant arms around my neck—there clung'ſt
As if thou lov'dſt the ſoft repoſe I gave thee;
My boſom throbb'd as if thou wert mine own;
Upon this breaſt ſweet ſleep did viſit thee;
It was thy cradle, and thou oft haſt bleſt it.
ALMORAN.
Thou worthy ſage! Nor in maturer manhood,
Lord as I am of half the ſubject world,
Am I leſs tender of the faithful Omar,
The ſenſe, the ſoul of Perſia's blooming empire.
OMAR.
The mighty Solyman, as ſick he lay,
Upon his laſt, laſt bed, bequeath'd you to me,
Gave Almoran and Hamet to my care;
He preſs'd me as I promis'd, ſmil'd, and died:
And far, dear youth, beyond the glowing gold
Which grows beneath the wealthy breaſt of earth,
I prize the royal legacy—O ſire
[25] Forgive me—I am old, and age is tedious;
But 'tis the heart offends, and thou wilt pardon.
ALMORAN
(aſide)
Again he teaches me to be ſincere;
Nature's all-conquering language from his lip
Flows on the heart with meek ſerenity;
He cannot be ambitious—Caled wrongs him.
What welcome meſſage of fraternal love
advancing.
Brings Omar from his Hamet—Ha! a letter.
May its contents be happy!—
OMAR
(aſide.)
His motion is diſturb'd—'Twere beſt withdraw
A moment—I wait, my lord, your ſacred leiſure.
Bows and retires, Almoran not marking him.
ALMORAN.
Hell to my hopes, and horrors to my heart!
Wed her! ſo ſoon! to-morrow! wed Almeida!
Oh, dire confuſion—ſome protecting God
Deſcend, deſcend to ward the fatal blow;
May rolling thunders, light'nings intercept it!
But curſe on invocation, what avails it?
Even while I ſupplicate the hour draws nigh,
The fatal hour that is to cruſh my hopes,
As I this murd'rous ſcroll—away with prayer;
The tardy ſtriking gods deny their ſuccour.
What muſt be done? Ye powers of darkneſs riſe!
Spirits infernal leave your flaming beds—
Omar re-enters ſuddenly.
OMAR.
My lord.
ALMORAN.
Ha! dotard, traitor, trembling hoary traitor,
Dare not to think I wiſh it were conceal'd;
My rage, my grief, my ruin—Dotard, no!
Tho' thou haſt ſtol'n the ſecret from my lips,
The ſoul of Almoran by fear unaw'd
[26] Smiles on thy powerleſs perfidy.—The world,
The vaſſal univerſe, is mine—Away—
Begone with life—I give it thee—I ſcorn
To ſtain my arm, but leave thee thus deſpis'd.
Going, Omar catches his robe and kneels.
OMAR.
Bow'd as I am already to the earth
By time's oppreſſive hand—with all the weight
Of fourſcore winters on my aged head,
I fall ſtill lower, with ſubmiſſion fall,
To claſp theſe ſacred knees and beg an audience.
Ah, dear, unhappy prince, repreſs theſe ſtarts;
Subdue the unmanly rage that checks thy virtue;
Conquer thy ſury, and reſume the king.
There is no cauſe, my ſoul diſdains to liſten,
Affection brought me back.—
ALMORAN.
And what art thou,
That Almoran ſhould care, or clear, or guilty?
OMAR
(riſes.)
And what am I? A long-try'd faithful ſubject;
A man who honours and a friend who loves thee.
If theſe white hairs, grown ſilver in thy ſervice;
If age, if truth, no kind attentions warrant,
Still Omar's duty dictates to his tongue.
ALMORAN.
Hah!
OMAR.
The pride of health now blooms upon thy cheek,
High bounds each fervid pulſe with vigorous life;
Unbounded power, unbounded wealth are thine;
Beauty has thrown her manly graces round thee,
And laviſh nature hath done all ſhe can:
Yet miſery and grief, and rage unſeemly
Blot every bleſſing, wither every joy,
"Rob of its radiance thy imperial crown,
[27] "From the ſoft pillow rudely tear repoſe,"
And make thee, Almoran, ſupremely wretched.
ALMORAN.
"And if I were; thou like a meddling fool,
"Like the dark raven on the blaſted branch,
"Art come officiouſly to croak deſpair,
"And ſpread more gloom upon the troubled mind:
"I thank thee for't.—
OMAR.
Heav'n knows thou doſt me wrong.
"That heav'n can tell, I pity, love, revere thee.
"My very heart now bleeds to ſee the prince;
"To ſee the youth, who, from the prattling hour
"Of unoffending infancy, theſe eyes
"Have view'd with all the fondneſs of a father,
"Thus ſink to earth, the victim of the paſſions.
"But oh! th' abode of bliſs is ſtill before thee;
"The flow'rs of peace, and joy, and ſoft content,
"Smile beautiful around—plain lies the path,
"Nor is it difficult to keep the track,
"Mark'd by the cherub hand of truth to man,
"Purſue it—oh, purſue it, and be happy."
ALMORAN.
Doſt thou preſume with a bold pedant's tongue
To ſchool the ſon of Solyman—thy maſter?
Bold monitor, I am my own adviſer;
Think, ſpeak, act, dictate, only for myſelf,
Nor will I brook a vaſſal's interuption.
OMAR.
Ev'n Solyman himſelf, thou cruel prince,
That ſcepter'd ſaint, who from the King of Kings
Now takes the crown of virtue—He diſdain'd not
To catch inſtruction from the voice of Omar;
Nor did he weigh in pride's too partial balance
The ſtation or deſcent of uſeſul wiſdom.
[28] But this avails not: Tho' my lord thou ſcorn'ſt
The honeſt cautions of my zeal to ſerve thee,
I muſt not ſee thee—for thy ſire is dead;
The oath I gave is with him in the ſkies,
And all the parent ſits upon this boſom—
I will not ſee thee ruſh on ſhame and ruin.
ALMORAN.
Ha! traitor, dar'ſt thou—
OMAR.
In a cauſe like this,
Tho' death ſtood ready with the bloody bowſtring,
Omar dare ſhew the firmneſs of his virtue:
Nay, if his duty urges, dare do more.
ALMORAN.
What more, inſulting miniſter, what more?
OMAR.
Unaw'd, undaunted, like a faithful ſubject—
Dare, unappall'd, tell Almoran he's guilty—
Tell him—whene'er he deviates into vice,
Preſumes that kings are left to range at large
O'er the heaven-guarded property of others,
And treſpaſs on the ſovereign rights of man;
Or yield to paſſions that debaſe his ſtation,
Kindle inteſtine ſlames, embroil the ſtate—
Then tell him that he merits well the ſcorn
Of every loyal heart—A king no more—
A king, the public father, born to bleſs,
And court the ſmiles of all his ſubject children.
ALMORAN.
Loquacious babbler—ceaſe thy rude upbraidings,
Leſt I be tempted to deſtroy the web
Wove with ſuch waſte of toil—Away thou fool:
Go ſchool thy Hamet—we diſdain preſcription.
OMAR.
My duty is diſcharg'd and I have done.
Farewell—There is an hour on wing—Oh heavens!
[29] I tremble for thee—Prince, there is an hour
That will, alas, when thou art all unfriended,
When the proud monarch, like the ſlave he ſpurns,
Shall drop the lofty eye, the ſultan's creſt,
"And fell diſeaſe unſmoothe the chearleſs pillow,"
Thunder conviction on thee—Oh, expect it—
'Tis terrible—a pang without a name—
To meet it unawares or unprepared.
Exit.
ALMORAN
(alone, greatly agitated.)
Thunder conviction!
—Curſe upon the ſlave,
He ſtarts a thought that quite diſarms my ſoul.
—But wherefore pauſe I thus, the fool of fancy?
Grey ſteals the dawn upon me, and to-morrow,
That mountain to my hopes, is near at hand,
Veil'd only by the tranſient ſhades of night.
Hamet, Almeida, Omar, all oppoſe me:
No more delays—the meaſures muſt be ſwift.
Enter CALED. (Haſtily)
Again! Audacious villain die.—Ha, Caled!
Almoran draws a ſabre,
CALED.
How! ſovereign of the world, have I offended?
ALMORAN.
Riſe, Caled, riſe: I thought thee that vile Omar—
Wherefore this haſte?
CALED.
Paſſing the weſtern gate
That opens on the eye the gliding barks,
I ſaw but now the lovers arm in arm
Purſue the tender walk, and ſighing ſay
To-morrow—oh! to-morrow.—
ALMORAN.
I've heard it all,
That Omar brought the tidings, fretted, chid me;
[30] Prated cold maxims to my burning rage,
And tho' he ſaw my very ſoul diſorder'd
Perſiſted ſtill to preach me into patience:
At length the pent-up tempeſt tore its way
Thro' this indignant boſom, and all wild
With anguiſh and deſpair, I ſpurn'd him from me.
CALED.
Short is the time my lord—If inſtant acts]
Prevent not the ſolemnity, all's foil'd.
What may be done?
ALMORAN.
Be quick then, tardy thinker,
Diſpatch, determine, execute at once:
And let a moment do the work of ages.
CALED.
Suſpecting ſomewhat of love's forward zeal,
And from the faithful Ali gathering more,
I am not wholly unprepar'd, my lord;
Ali, 'tis true, is ſomewhat ſtubborn, thoughtful,
Of temper oft reſiſting; but a prieſt, my lord,
Open to great aſpirings, wary, plauſible:
We have conferr'd of late.
ALMORAN.
Ha! light breaks in upon me.
I have it all—Haſte, Caled, then to Ali,
The night is far advanced—the time moſt precious.
Loſe not a moment to bring Ali with thee,
Ev'n to my ſecret chamber thou conduct him:
The blow we have to ſtrike ſhall—but away—
'Tis unexpected thunder ſtuns us moſt,
And terror doubles when the flaſh is ſudden—
Let Oſmyn too be ſummon'd; all combine—
Sure of immortal honour—to defend
The throne, the heart of the inſulted Almoran.
END OF ACT THE SECOND.