The Tent of Cleombrotus. Cleombrotus ſurrounded by Generals, &c.
CLEOMBROTUS.
(riſing.)
To the north baſtion, Perdicas, lead you
Th' Iberian troops; and Menecrates, you,
Support the Thracians at the eaſtern gate.
I will myſelf lead on my loyal Spartans;
Then if I fall, I fall 'midſt thoſe, whoſe rights
I ſhould too cheaply purchaſe with my life;—
If I am conqueror, with them to conquer,
Will add to victory a ſweeter ſenſe,
And make my laurels dearer than my crown.
COREX.
Live, prince!—live ever on the throne of Sparta!
CLEOMBROTUS.
He only lives a prince, who lives a patriot;
And he who loves not thoſe, he's rais'd to govern,
Is not their monarch, but their ſcourge.
MEZENTIUS.
The night wears on, and thy devoted army
Demand to place thee, ere its noon be paſt,
Upon that ſeat, thou know'ſt ſo well to fill.
CLEOMBROTUS.
[16]Inſtant I'll join, and lead them to the battle.
Their force ſuperior, and their honeſt cauſe
Muſt doubly act upon our fear-ſtruck foes,
And bid them ſpare the horrors of a carnage.
Enter Officer.
Thy face hath tidings!
Officer.
From the town a prieſteſs,
With haſty ſteps, and accents that breathe muſic
Sweet, and reſiſtleſs as the golden lyre
Of beamy-hair'd Apollo, ſeeks thy tent
Royal Cleombrotus!
CLEOMBROTUS.
A prieſteſs! ſay'ſt thou?
Surely of magnitude muſt be the errand
Which aſks a meſſenger ſo pure, and holy.
Retire, my friends; 'tis due to rank like her's.
In a few moments he who bids you go,
Shall bid ye follow!
Nor will he ſtop, 'till his glad voice ſhall hail you
Victors, in Sparta.
(they go).
Now attend the virgin.
(The officer goes out and re-enters with CHELONICE.)
Thus, holy maid! lowly and wondering,
I greet your preſence.—Oh what great beheſt,
Can have impell'd thee from thy hallow'd couch,
To ſeek amidſt the hurry of a camp
A care-worn ſoldier?
CHELONICE.
[17]Couch, Cleombrotus?
Doſt thou then think within the mournful walls
Theſe feet have left, that one unfeeling wretch
Can ſeek a couch, or meditate repoſe?
Thou haſt our ſleep.—Our balmly reſt lies tenter'd,
On the ſharp points thou'ſt levell'd at our hearts.
Reſtore our reſt! bid the ſoft God of ſleep
Again reviſit our long watchful lids!
It is for this I ſeek thee in thy camp;
For this that humbly in the duſt I bend,
Aſking thy pity, for our wretched Sparta.
CLEOMBROTUS.
But that I dare not touch thy ſacred form,
Thou ſhould'ſt not humbly bend.—Oh, Prieſteſs, riſe!
[She riſes.
If this thy errand to our martial plain,
'T were well the fire that burns within your temple,
Yet felt your feeding hand.—Your altars, virgin!
They are the places for your prayers to riſe from;
There, mix'd with incenſe, they might reach Olympus,
But here, alas! they fall on ſterile earth—
Or muſt return, unanſwer'd, to your boſom.
CHELONICE.
Oh, is it poſſible! Canſt thou who own'ſt
A ſoldier's gen'rous feelings, think a moment
On the dread horrors of this waning night,
And yet reſolve to pull thoſe horrors on us?
CLEOMBROTUS.
[18]Bid your own ſov'reign ſave ye! Oh, Leonidas,
How wretched is this art! Yield me my crown!
And not deſcend to ſeek the aid of women
To deprecate the vengeance thou provok'ſt!
CHELONICE.
Oh, by the flame that burns to chaſte Minerva,
Leonidas ſtoops not to ſupplicate;
Knows not the ſtep that I unprompted take!
Well doſt thou know his haughty, princely ſoul,
That lighter holds the heavy ills thou'rt charg'd with,
Than to ſubmit and invocate thy pity.
CLEOMBROTUS.
'Tis well; his firmneſs ſhall be firmly met.
Return then, prieſteſs! let your king prepare
His rougheſt welcome for unbidden gueſts.
His rougheſt welcome we have ſworn to merit;
And not a heart within this banner'd field,
But will ſuſtain the arm his oath hath bound.
CHELONICE.
Oh! for a voice to perjure them—
'Twere a celeſtial crime! Cleombrotus,
Is there not one voice—Stubborn! aſk thy heart,
Is there not one could move thee? Chelonice!
CLEOMBROTUS.
Oh, name her not; her image ruins me!
Her form, her ſupplicating look—reſiſt her!
Oh, ſhe could drag me from the arms of glory,
And bid me ſtop, with vict'ry on my ſword.
CHELONICE.
[19]Bleſt be that form!—it is henceforth immortal—
It ſaves my country!—Now—now then, Cleombrotus
[Unveiling.
See her before thee! See her at thy feet!
CLEOMBROTUS.
Oh, Gods! Why's this? Shall I upbraid, or bleſs ye?
[gazing on her.
Oh bleſs ye ever—'tis my Chelonice!
[Raiſing her.
Now rage—rage on ye furies of the War!
Bear your bold thunders to the tyrant's gates—
My treaſure's ſafe! I hold her to my heart!
Fearleſs begin the attack; for Chelonice
Breathes not within his walls;—it is my arms
Which preſs and guard her.
[Voices without.
General! Cleombrotus!
CLEOMBROTUS.
Hear the impatient ſoldiery! Lead on!
I'll follow with an arrow's ſwiftneſs.—Spare!
Spare me one moment.—Mars! 'tis thus thou hang'ſt
(claſping her)
Upon the breath of Venus; thus anticipat'ſt
The dear reward of Victory; then dart'ſt
Amidſt thy foes, and, by her touch inſpir'd,
Hurl'ſt thy bright vengeance o'er th' inſanguin'd field!
CHELONICE.
Doſt thou deceive me? this the power of Chelonice?
[Goes to the wing.
[20] Stay your raſh ſpeed! your prince commands ye—Stop!
Stir not 'till he ſhall lead ye to your ſpoil!
Yes; lead them to their ſpoil, thou mighty General!
Guide your keen hunters where the tim'rous deer
In their incloſures herded, wait their fate;—
The conqueſt will be worthy them and thee!
CLEOMBROTUS.
Oh, my beloved, be worthy of thyſelf,
And of the fate with which the moment teems!
I wreſt this night my crown from uſurpation,
To place it on thy brow—
CHELONICE.
To decorate my bier!
Ne'er ſhall the crown, torn from Leonidas,
Circle his child.—But go! lead on your army.
Here will I patient wait your cries of victory—
The ſignal of my death!
CLEOMBROTUS
(as to himſelf).
Oh, woman!
CHELONICE.
'Tis not a woman's, but a SPARTAN's threat.
The hour in which thou vanquiſheſt Leonidas,
Prepare the pile, to flame around his daughter!
CLEOMBROTUS.
Princeſs! thou doſt miſtake thy duty.—Spartan,
And daughter of Leonidas, are titles
Deareſt to thee—
CHELONICE.
[21]Miſtake my duty, ſaid'ſt thou?
When at a huſband's feet I aſk a father's life,
Do I miſtake my duty?—If I do,
I'll ever ſo miſtake, and boaſt my error!
Yes, 'till Leonidas ſits thron'd in ſafety,
His daughter ſhall forget ſhe is a wife;—
Tear from her heart each trace of long paſt fondneſs,
And own no ties, but thoſe firſt awful ones
Stampt there by nature.
CLEOMBROTUS.
Wife of Cleombrotus!
Thy honour and thy fame's deriv'd from him;
Thy happineſs from the ſame ſource ſhould flow.
How dear thoſe hours—for ſure ſuch hours have been,
When thou diſclaim'ſt all joys, but in my love.
CHELONICE.
Hadſt thou found bliſs in love—
CLEOMBROTUS
(ſmiling).
I'd not ſought bliſs on thrones.
Thus, as a lady would you chide, and this
Let all the ſubject world receive as law.
Let them be taught that in the humble ſhade,
Far from the reach of proud ambition's eye,
Felicity has rais'd her graſſy ſeat,
And wantons there with love.
But, madam, I was born to reign!
And he ſo born, feels fires that vulgar ſouls
[22] Could not endure.—Felicity to us,
Is not a nymph in humble ruſſet clad,
Sipping the dew-drops from the ſilver thorn,
Or weaving flow'rs upon a ſtreamlet's brink—
Oh, no! ſhe's SCEPTER'D, and her gifts are CROWNS!
CHELONICE.
I have a ſoul, to taſte her gifts, like thine.
I have a mind that graſps ſublimer cares
Than cottage nymphs can know; I would be great
And bear the cares of thouſands.—But ambition,
And ev'ry lofty ſentiment it gives,
Sinks to the earth, when weigh'd againſt his life
From whom I drew my own.
CLEOMBROTUS.
Were I diſpos'd
To grant thee all, and ſink again to nothing,
Yet am I bound to lead my forces on.
It is not glory, nor the hope of ſame
The mercenary feels—his God is plunder.
Should I protract their promis'd hour of harveſt,
Diſguſt and mutiny would fill their ranks—
I cannot, dare not, yield to thee.
CHELONICE.
Farewell!
I'll be the herald of thy near approach.
The child ſhall bid the father bare his boſom
To her lord's ſword;—ſhall bid the citizens
Throw wide their portals to admit the conqueror.
[23] Then, whilſt my Spartans bow their necks beneath thee,
And from a parricide receive their chains,
Then ſhall the laſt ſad ſighs of Chelonice,
Mix'd with the ſhouts of victory, proclaim
Her murd'rous huſband, Lacedemon's king!
[going.
CLEOMBROTUS.
The laſt ſad ſighs of Chelonice—Oh!
[following, and leading her back.
Sweet, cruel tyrant, who is victor now?
Nature! in mockery thou ſtil'ſt us LORDS,
And bidſt us govern, in this turbid world.
Th' hiſtoric page, recording all the acts
That ſtand the loftieſt in an empire's annals,
Reports but WOMAN's will!
CHELONICE.
Then thou doſt yield!
How my ſoul thanks thee, peaceful hours ſhall tell.
Now, on joy's ſwifteſt pinions let me bear
The grateful tidings to the gates of Sparta.
Oh filial duties, be ye ever crown'd
With joy as pure, as bleſſeth Chelonice!
[Exit, led by Cleombrotus.
Enter MEZENTIUS and COREX.
MEZENTIUS.
The conf'rence thou haſt heard.—Where now the hopes,
The high rais'd hopes, we brought with us from Thrace?
COREX.
[24]They muſt exiſt no more.—She who could win him,
To ſpare her Lacedemon but an hour,
Now when th' impatient ſoldiery pant for conqueſt,
And ev'ry breaſt glows with portentous ardor,
Next, may like Omphale transform her Hercules
To ſtory in the loom his bloodleſs ſiege.
MEZENTIUS.
But Thrace boaſts warriors of more ſtubborn nerves;
They neither know to yield to woman's threats,
Or man's defiance. The laconic prince
Entic'd us from our native fields, to curb
Thoſe rebel citizens, who yet diſown
His rights in Lacedemon; our reward
Their herds, their jewels, and their treaſur'd wealth;
Muſt we forego the riches he affianc'd,
Becauſe his Chelonice begs forbearance?
COREX.
No—
The wages of our labour are at hand;
Our troops obedient; why then not aſſault
The city we came hither to reduce,
And gather for ourſelves the promis'd bleſſings?
MEZENTIUS.
Our country's genius, Corex, ſpeaks in thee!
Aſtrea, throw thy uſeleſs balance by,
Thy ſword is all we aſk;—he who bears that,
Can right himſelf, and puniſh his deceivers.
COREX.
[25]Let caution guard her ſword! Cleombrotus,
Supported by th' Iberians, may prevent
The glorious perfidy we meditate.
Revolt ſeems ripe.—See how reſentment burns
[Looking thro' the wing.
Amongſt the troops, whilſt he unfolds his will
To ſpare Leonidas for this one night,
The pain to be unking'd.
[Contemptuouſly.
MEZENTIUS.
Let us aſſiſt,
Fanning with ſecret breath the ſtruggling flame;
And then this woman's ſoldier ſhall be taught,
Thoſe grand events which mark the fate of empires,
And ſtand, protruded, to inſtruct the world,
Are not the coin of female artifice,
But ſtruck by genius, from a bolder dye!
[Exeunt.
Scene changes to the Palace.
Enter LEONIDAS and AMPHARES.
LEONIDAS.
Forſaken by my child! It ſhould be ſo.
This is an hour of congregated woes,
And the barb'd point of that ſhould not be wanting.
Doth the enemy advance?—Left by my daughter!
Left for a rebel huſband!—They are too tardy.
Deſtruction! ſlow of foot, to thoſe who'd meet thee,
Quicken thy pace!
AMPHARES.
[26]Deſtruction haſtens on.
The princeſs fled, and longing for thy crown,
Urges her huſband to th' unnatural conqueſt.
LEONIDAS.
I do not curſe—mark me! I do not curſe them.
Leonidas and cruelty are ſounds
That in the mind of Greece combine, and live,
Like peſtilence, and its funereal urns.
Am I now cruel? Thoſe late turbid veins,
In which ſuch raging fires have cours'd each other,
Have now no pulſe for cruelty. Yet ſhould I—
Oh, the thought rouſes all my latent fury—
Should I, amidſt the battle, meet thoſe pelicans!
Gods! grant me ſuch a moment, that my life
In that laſt cloſing act, may end more bleſt,
Than crowns, and vengeance ever made its progreſs!
NICRATES.
(without.)
Where is the king?
(enters.)
LEONIDAS.
Here's he, who in an hour
Shall be the king no more.
NICRATES.
Not ſo, Leonidas!
The enemy, whoſe late deſerted camp
Pour'd all its eager troops upon the plain,
Are hous'd again beneath their tented roofs;
Their banners clos'd; their ſpears' bright gleams ex⯑tinguiſh'd.
LEONIDAS.
[27]How is this known?
NICRATES.
Cloudleſs, the full orb'd car
Of the nocturnal goddeſs, glides along,
Giving each object perfect and diſtinct;
The crouded ramparts bleſs'd the fav'ring light,
Which ſhew'd their foes, retiring, and unarm'd.
AMPHARES.
This is ſome ſubterfuge. The ſubtle princeſs
And her ambitious lord, have fram'd the artifice,
To lull thee, valiant prince, in falſe ſecurity.
LEONIDAS.
Well haſt thou ſpoken what thy King conceiv'd;
But who ſhall ſpeak the father's mad deſpair?
Oh, Iſis! when thou threw'ſt th' unfeeling flints,
And bade them riſe to animated man,
They diſobey'd thee;—woman's was the form
In which they ſprung to life; in which they yet
Cumber the earth—our cheriſh'd boſom'd plagues!
NICRATES.
Oh, ſir, forbear! the virtues of the princeſs—
LEONIDAS.
Mention her not! henceforth to name the rebel
But with the curſe of parricide, is fatal
To him who ſpeaks.—Fly to your ſeveral ſtations,
[28] The cred'lous citizens have loſt their fears,
But I'll reſtore and fix them in their hearts.
To live a ſov'reign but one added day,
Is worth the labour of an untir'd Hercules.
[Exit.
NICRATES.
Stay my prompt brother! you may ſnatch a moment
From duty ſo impos'd.—Your's is the ſtorm,
Which rages in his heart, againſt his daughter.
AMPHARES.
I know I rais'd the ſtorm, and there will feed it.
NICRATES.
Hah! to what end—what purpoſe?
AMPHARES.
I'll reveal it;
Not to that air of menace, which I ſcorn,
But to thy love fraternal, which inſures me
Ready attention, and if needful, help.
NICRATES.
One boſom fed us with it's lucid ſtream,
One father gave to us a dear exiſtence,
And in my heart I prize each ſacred bond.
Yet not thoſe bonds; the father whom we lov'd,
Not the chaſte mother at whoſe breaſt we clung,
Shall bribe me to forget ſuperior duties,
Or aid thee in a cauſe diſclaim'd by virtue.
AMPHARES
[29](ſneeringly).
Warm from the ſchools, and prompt in declamation!
NICRATES.
Not ſo.
The plain ſimplicity of Spartan ſchools
Diſclaims, and abrogates miſleading eloquence.
You, bred in Athens,—where the poliſh'd virtues
Luxuriantly repoſe; giving their documents
In marble palaces, and robes imbued
With ev'ry gaudy ſtain that paints their fields—
'Tis you, who boaſt th' unthrifty charms of rhetoric,
Which makes a ſhadow ſeem ſubſtantial good,
And cloaths with glowing periods crippled morals.
—Yet let me know why thou inflam'ſt the king,
Againſt the paragon of female excellence?
AMPHARES.
A Paragon I thought her; and her birth
Which call'd her dower, a kingdom, fixed me her's.
Our line, a ſcion from that root, whence ſprung
Leonidas;—which juſtified my hopes.
In Athens 'twas I learn'd Cleombrotus
Was made her huſband, and co-equal king.
Had I been here, the Hymen of that day,
Had dipp'd his ſaffron robe, in ſanguine dies.
NICRATES.
But now—
AMPHARES.
[30]But now my hatred is in youthful vigour,
And I have ſworn their ruin.
NICRATES.
Sworn their ruin?
AMPHARES.
Interrogative brother! yes—their deaths!
Were they no more, then Lacedemon's free;
And who could ſtand 'twixt me and royalty,
But a weak boy? whoſe tender bud of life,
Fatality, or accident may nip.
What! doſt thou mutter ſpells, with eyes thus fix'd?
NICRATES,
(ſteadily).
Nor ſpells, nor pray'rs, for ſurely they were loſt!
Nor ſhall I reaſon on thy wicked hopes,
Nor bid thee dread the vengeance of the Gods;
For to a mind that ſuch deſigns can cheriſh,
Reaſon, religion, urge their truths in vain!
Then fear not theſe, but fear my vigilance;
Go on! ſpread all thy toils, prepare thy ſnares,
And I will watch, obſerve, and counteract thee!
[Exit.
AMPHARES.
Oh inſolent, and vain! oppoſe me not!
Counteract him, who ſtruggles for a crown?
Him, who dares raiſe his hopes to Sparta's princeſs?
[31] Thy gentle breath might hope as well, good brother,
To puff a mountain from its ſolid baſe,
As to move me from purpoſes ſo grand.
Thou talk'ſt of virtue—I behold a THRONE!
Thou bidſt me fear—I think on CHELONICE!
END OF THE SECOND ACT.