SCENE III.
ALFRED, ELTRUDA, HERMIT.
HERMIT.
I have heard
Thy fond complainings, ALFRED.
ALFRED.
You have then,
Good father, heard the cauſe that wrings them from me.
HERMIT.
The human race are ſons of ſorrow born:
And each muſt have his portion. Vulgar minds
Refuſe, or crouch beneath their load: the Brave
Bear theirs without repining.
ALFRED.
Who can bear
The ſhaft that wounds him thro an infant's ſide?
When whom we love, to whom we owe protection,
Implore the hand we cannot reach to ſave them?
HERMIT.
[27]Weep not, ELTRUDA.—Yet thou art a King,
All private paſſions fall before that name.
Thy ſubjects claim thee whole.
ALFRED.
Can public truſt,
O reverend ſage! deſtroy the ſofter ties
That twine around the parent's yearning heart?
That holy paſſion heaven itſelf infus'd,
And blended with the ſtream that feeds our life.
HERMIT.
You love your children, Prince—
ALFRED.
Lives there on earth,
In air, or ocean, creature tame or wild
That has not known this univerſal love?
All nature feels it intimate and deep,
And all her ſons of inſtinct or of reaſon.
HERMIT.
Then ſhew that paſſion in its nobleſt form▪
Seaſon their tender years with every virtue,
Social or ſelf-retir'd; of public greatneſs,
Or lovely in the hour of private life;
With all that can exalt, or can adorn
Their princely rank.
ALFRED.
Alas, their hope muſt ſtoop,
Such my unhappy fate, to humbler aims:
Affliction and baſe want muſt be their teachers.
HERMIT.
Affliction is the wholeſome ſoil of virtue:
Where patience, honor, ſweet humanity,
Calm fortitude take root, and ſtrongly flouriſh.
But proſperous fortune, that allures with pleaſure,
[28] Dazles with pomp, and undermines with flattery,
Poiſons the ſoil, and its beſt product kills.
Should'ſt thou regain thy throne—
ALFRED.
My throne? What glimpſe,
What ſmalleſt ray of hope—
HERMIT.
That day may come—
What do I feel? My labouring breaſt expands
To give the glorious inſpiration room.
And now the cloud that o'er thy future fate,
Like total night, lay heavy and obſcure,
Fades into air: and all the brightening ſcene
Dawns gay before me! A long line of kings,
From thee deſcending, glorious and renown'd,
In ſhadowy pomp I ſee!
Genius of England! hovering near,
In all thy radiant charms appear.
O come and ſummon, from the world unknown,
Thoſe mighty chiefs, thoſe ſons of future fame,
Who, ages hence, this iſland ſhall renown,
And ſpread to diſtant realms her dreaded name.
Slow let the viſionary forms ariſe,
And ſolemn paſs before our wondring eyes.
[Muſic grand and awful. The Genius deſcending ſings the following
[29]
SONG.
From thoſe eternal regions bright,
Where ſuns, that never ſet in night,
Diffuſe the golden day:
Where ſpring unfading pours around,
O'er all the dew-impearled ground,
Her thouſand colors gay:
O whether on the fountain's flowery ſide,
Whence living waters glide,
Or in the fragrant grove,
Whoſe ſhade emboſoms peace and love▪
New pleaſures all your hours employ,
And rapture every ſenſe with every joy!
Great heirs of empire! yet unborn,
Who ſhall this iſland late adorn;
A monarch's drooping thought to chear,
Appear! appear! appear!
Spirits of EDWARD III. PHILIPPA his queen, and the Black Prince his ſon, ariſe.
HERMIT.
ALFRED, look; and ſay,
What ſeeſt thou yonder?
ALFRED.
Three majeſtic ſhapes:
Two habited like mighty warriors old;
A third in whoſe bright aſpect beauty ſmiles
More ſoft and feminine. A lucid veil,
From her fair neck dependent floats around,
Light-hovering in the gale.
HERMIT.
O ALFRED, man
[30] Belov'd of heaven, behold a King indeed;
Matchleſs in arms; in arts of peaceful rule,
A ſovereign's trueſt glory, yet more fam'd,
England's third EDWARD!—At his fear'd approach,
Proud France, even now, thro all her dukedoms quakes▪
Her Genius ſighs: and from th' eternal ſhore,
The ſoul of her great CHARLES, a recent gueſt,
Looks back to earth, and mourns the diſtant woes,
His realms are doom'd to feel from EDWARD'S wrath.
Beneath his ſtandard, Britain ſhall go forth,
Array'd for conqueſt, terrible in glory:
And nations ſhrink before her. O what deaths,
What deſolation ſhall her vengeance ſpread,
From engines yet unfound; whoſe lightnings flaſh,
Whoſe thunders roar, amazing, o'er the plain:
As if this King had ſummon'd from on high
Heaven's dread artillery to fight his battle!
Nor is renown in war his ſole ambition:
A nobler paſſion labours in his breaſt—
ALFRED attend—to make his people bleſt!
The ſacred rights that Reaſon loudly claims
For free-born men—theſe, ALFRED, are his care:
Oft to confirm, and fix them on the baſe
Of equal laws.—O father of mankind!
Succeſſive praiſes from a grateful land
Shall ſaint thy name for ever!
ALFRED.
Holy ſage,
Whom angels thus enlighten and inſpire,
My boſom kindles at thy heaven-born flame.
Great EDWARD! Be thy conqueſts and their praiſe
Unrival'd to thy ſelf. But O thy fame
For care paternal of the public weal;
For England bleſt at home—my rapt heart pants
[31] To equal that renown!
HERMIT.
Know farther, ALFRED;
A ſovereign's great example forms a people.
The public breaſt is noble, or is vile,
As he inſpires it. In this EDWARD'S time,
Warm'd by his courage, by his honor rais'd,
High flames the Britiſh ſpirit, like the ſun,
To ſhine o'er half the globe: and where it ſhines,
The cheriſh'd world to brighten and enrich.
Laſt ſee this monarch in his hour of leiſure;
Even ſocial on a throne, and taſting joys
To ſolitary greatneſs ſeldom known:
As friend, as huſband, and as father bleſt.
That god-like Youth remark, his eldeſt hope,
Who gives new luſtre to the name he bears;
A hero ere a man.—I ſee him now
On Creſſy's glorious plain! The father's heart,
With anxious love and wonder at his daring,
Beats high in mingled tranſport. Great himſelf,
Great above jealouſy, the guilty mark
That brands all meaner minds, ſee, he applauds
The filial excellence, and gives him ſcope
To blaze in his full brightneſs!—Lo again,
He ſends him dreadful to a nobler field:
The danger and the glory all his own!
A captive King, the rival of his arms,
I ſee adorn his triumph! Heaven! what grace
What ſplendor from his gracious temper mild
That triumph draws! As gentle Mercy kind,
He chears the hoſtile prince whoſe fall he weeps!
ALFRED.
A ſon ſo rich in virtues, and ſo grac'd
With all that gives thoſe virtues fair to ſhine,
[32] When I would aſk of heaven ſome mighty boon,
Should claim the foremoſt place.
HERMIT.
Remember then,
What to thy infant ſons from thee is due,
As parent and as prince.
ELTRUDA.
Forgive me, Hermit,
Forgive a queen and wife her anxious fondneſs.
Yon beauteous ſhade, that, as I gaze her o'er,
My wonder draws, eſcapes your graver thought.
HERMIT.
O bright ELTRUDA! thou whoſe blooming youth,
Whoſe amiable ſweetneſs promiſe bleſſings
To ALFRED and to England! ſee, and mark,
In yonder pleaſing form, the beſt of wives,
The happieſt too, repaid with all the faith,
With all the friendſhip, love and duty claim.
She, powerful o'er the heart her charms enſlave—
O virtue rarely practis'd!—uſes nobly
That happy influence; to prompt each purpoſe
Fair honor kindles in her EDWARD'S breaſt.
Amid the pomps, the pleaſures of a court,
Humble of heart, ſeverly good: the friend
Of modeſt worth, the parent of the poor.
ELTRUDA! O tranſmit theſe nobleſt charms
To that fair daughter, that unfolding roſe,
With which, as on this day, heaven crown'd your loves.
The ſpirit of ELIZABETH ariſes.
ALFRED.
Say, who is ſhe, in whom the noble graces,
Th' engaging manner, dignity and eaſe,
Are join'd with manly ſenſe and reſolution?
HERMIT.
[33]The great ELIZA. She, amid a world
That threatning ſwells in high commotion round her;
Each dangerous ſtate her unrelenting foe,
And chief a proud enormous empire ſtretch'd
O'er half mankind; with not one friendly power,
But what her kind creating hand ſhall raiſe
From out the marſhes of the branching Rhine;
And min'd, at home, her ever-tottering throne
By reſtleſs bigots, who, beneath the maſk
Of mild religion, are to every crime
Set looſe, the faithleſs ſons of barbarous zeal:
Yet ſhe ſhall crown this happy iſle with peace,
With arts, with riches, grandeur and renown;
And daſh, by turns, the madneſs of her foes.
As when the winds, from different quarters, urge
The tempeſt on our ſhore: ſecure, the cliffs
Repel its idle rage, and pour it back,
In broken billows, foaming to the main.
ALFRED.
How ſhall ſhe, Hermit, gain theſe glorious ends?
HERMIT.
By ſilent wiſdom, whoſe informing power
Works unperceiv'd: that ſeems in council ſlow;
But, when reſolv'd and ripe for execution,
That parts like lightning from the ſecret gloom.
By ever ſeizing the right point of view,
Her trueſt intereſt; which ſhe firm purſues,
With ſteady patience, thro the maze of ſtate,
The ſtorm of oppoſition, the mixt views,
And thwarting manag'd paſſions of mankind.
By healing the diviſions of her people,
And ſowing that fell peſt among her ſoes.
By ſaving, from the vermin of a court,
Her treaſure; which, when fair occaſion calls,
[34] She knows to laviſh, in protecting arts,
In guarding nations, and in nurſing ſtates.
By calling up to power, and public life,
Each virtue, each ability: yet ſhe,
Amid the various worthies glowing round her,
Still ſhines the firſt; the central ſun that wakes,
That rules their every motion: not the ſlave,
And paſſive property of her own creatures.
But the great ſoul that animates her reign,
That lights it to perfection, is the love,
The confidence unbounded, which her wiſdom,
Her probity and juſtice, ſhall inſpire
Into the public breaſt. Hence cordial faith,
Which nought can ſhake; hence unexhauſted treaſure:
And hence, above all mercenary force,
The hand that by the freeborn heart is rais'd,
And guards the blended weal of prince and people.
She too ſhall rouſe Britannia's naval ſoul;
Shall greatly raviſh, from inſulting Spain,
The world-commanding ſcepter of the deep.
ELTRUDA.
O matchleſs queen! O glory of her ſex!
The great idea, father, fills my ſoul,
And bids it glow beyond a woman's paſſions.
Spirit of WILLIAM III. ariſes.
HERMIT.
Once more, O ALFRED, raiſe thine eyes, and mark,
Who next adorns the ſcene, yon laurel'd ſhade.
Ere yet the age that clos'd this female reign
Hath led around its train of circling years,
Shall Britain on the verge of ruin ſtand.
A monarch, loſt to greatneſs, to renown,
The ſlave of dreaming monks, ſhall fill her throne.
Weak and aſpiring; fond of lawleſs rule,
[35] The lawleſs rule his mean ambition covets
Unequal to acquire. Yon prince thou ſaw'ſt,
To glory tutor'd by the hand ſevere
Of ſharp Adverſity, ſhall heaven upraiſe,
And injur'd nations with joint call invoke,
Their laſt, their only refuge. Lo! he comes:
Wide o'er the billows of the boundleſs deep
His navy rides triumphant: and the ſhores
Of ſhouting Albion echo with his name.
Immortal WILLIAM! from before his face,
Flies Superſtition, flies oppreſſive Power,
With vile Servility that crouch'd and kiſs'd
The whip he trembled at. From this great hour
Shall Britain date her rights and laws reſtor'd:
And one high purpoſe rule her ſovereign's heart;
To ſcourge the pride of France, that foe profeſs'd
To England and to freedom. Yet I ſee,
From diſtant climes in peaceful triumph borne,
Another KING ariſe! His early youth
With living laurel crown'd, for deeds of arms
That Reaſon's voice approves; for courage, rais'd
Beyond all aid from paſſion, greatly calm!
Intrepidly ſerene!—In days of peace,
Around his throne the human virtues wait,
And fair adorn him with their mildeſt beams;
Good without ſhow, above ambition great;
Wiſe, equal, merciful, the friend of man!
O ALFRED! ſhould thy fate, long ages hence,
In meaning ſcenes recall'd, exalt the joy
Of ſome glad feſtal day, before a prince
Sprung from that king belov'd—Hear, gracious heaven!
Thy ſoft humanity, thy patriot heart,
Thy manly virtue, ſteddy, great, reſolv'd,
Be his ſupreme ambition! and with theſe,
[36] The happineſs, the glory, that await
Thy better days—be ſhower'd upon his head!
ALFRED.
O Hermit! thou haſt rais'd me to new life!
New hopes, new triumphs ſwell my bounding heart—
HERMIT.
It comes! it comes!—The promis'd ſcene diſcloſes!
Already the great work of fate begins!
The mighty wheels are turning, whence will ſpread,
Beyond the limits of our narrow world,
The fair dominions, ALFRED, of thy ſons.
Behold the warrior bright with Daniſh ſpoils!—
The raven droops his wings—and hark! the trumpet,
Exulting, ſpeaks the reſt.
SCENE IV.
Symphony of martial muſic.
ALFRED, ELTRUDA, HERMIT, Earl of DEVON, followed by ſoldiers.
ALFRED.
Welcome, my lord
I ſee true courage lags not in its courſe;
It ſtands not weighing actions, with cold wiſdom
That borders near on cowardice.
DEVON.
My Liege,
Your troops have been ſucceſsful.—But to heaven
Aſcend the praiſe! For ſure th'event exceeds
The hand of man.
ALFRED.
[37]How was it, noble DEVON?
DEVON.
You know my caſtle is not hence far-diſtant,
Thither I ſped: and in a Daniſh habit
The trenches paſſing, by a ſecret way,
Known to myſelf alone, emerg'd at once
Amid my joyful ſoldiers. There I found
A generous few, the veteran, hardy gleanings
Of many a hapleſs fight. They with a fierce
And gloomy joy inſpirited each other;
Reſolv'd on death, diſdaining to ſurvive
Their deareſt country.—"If we fall, I cry'd,
"Let us not tamely fall like paſſive cowards!
"No: let us live—or let us die, like men!
"Come on, my friends: to ALFRED we will cut
"Our glorious way; or, as we nobly periſh,
"Will offer to the genius of our country
"Whole hecatombs of Danes."—As if one ſoul
Had mov'd them all, around their heads they flaſh'd
Their flaming faulchions—"Lead us to theſe Danes!—
"Our country!—vengeance!" was the general cry.
Strait on the careleſs drouſy camp we ruſh'd:
And rapid, as the flame devours the ſtubble,
Bore down the heartleſs Danes. With this ſucceſs
Our enterprize encreas'd. Not now contented
To hew a paſſage thro the flying herd;
We, unremitting, urg'd a total rout.
The valiant HUBBA bites the bloody field,
With twice ſix hundred Danes around him ſtrow'd.
ALFRED.
My glorious friend!—this action has reſtor'd
Our ſinking country.—What reward can equal
A deed ſo great?—Is not yon pictur'd Raven
Their famous magic ſtandard—Emblem fit
[38] To ſpeak the ſavage genius of the people—
That oft has ſcatter'd on our troops diſmay,
And feeble conſternation?
DEVON.
'Tis the ſame.
Wrought by the ſiſters of the Daniſh king,
Of furious IVAR, in a midnight hour:
While the ſick moon, at their enchanted ſong,
Wrapt in pale tempeſt, labour'd thro' the clouds.
The Demons of deſtruction then, they ſay,
Were all abroad, and mixing with the woof
Their baleful power: The ſiſters ever ſung;
"Shake, ſtandard, ſhake this ruin on our foes!"
HERMIT.
So theſe infernal powers, with rays of truth
Still deck their fables, to delude who truſt them.
ALFRED.
But where, my noble couſin, are the reſt
Of your brave troops?
DEVON.
On t'other ſide the ſtream,
That half encloſes this retreat, I left them.
Rous'd from the fear, with which it was congeal'd
As in a froſt, the country pours amain.
The ſpirit of our anceſtors is up,
The ſpirit of the Free! and with a voice
That breathes ſucceſs, they all demand their king.
ALFRED.
Quick, let us join them, and improve their ardor.
We cannot be too haſty to ſecure
The glances of occaſion.
SCENE the laſt.
[39]To them CORIN, EMMA, kneeling to ALFRED.
CORIN.
Good my Liege,
Pardon the poor unequal entertainment,
Which we, unknowing—
ALFRED.
Riſe, my honeſt ſhepherd.
I came to thee a peaſant, not a prince:
And, what exalts a king o'er other men,
Stript of the toys of royalty? Yet more,
Thy rural entertainment was ſincere,
Plain, hoſpitable, kind: ſuch as, I hope,
Will ever mark the manners of this nation.
You friendly lodg'd me, when by all deſerted:
And ſhall have ample recompenſe.
CORIN.
One boon,
Is all I crave.
ALFRED.
Good ſhepherd, ſpeak thy wiſh.
CORIN.
Permiſſion, in your wars, to ſerve your Grace:
For tho here loſt in ſolitary ſhades,
A ſimple ſwain, I bear an Engliſh heart:
A heart that burns with rage to ſee thoſe Danes,
Thoſe foreign ruffians, thoſe inhuman pirates,
Oft our inferiors prov'd, thus lord it o'er us.
ALFRED.
[40]Brave countryman, come on. 'Tis ſuch as thou,
Who from affection ſerve, and free-born zeal,
To guard whate'er is dear and ſacred to them,
That are a king's beſt honor and defence.
EMMA ſings the following ſong.
1.
If thoſe, who live in ſhepherd's bower,
Preſs not the rich and ſtately bed:
The new-mown hay and breathing flower
A ſofter couch beneath them ſpread.
2.
If thoſe, who ſit at ſhepherd's board,
Soothe not their taſte by wanton art;
They take what Nature's gifts afford,
And take it with a chearful heart.
3.
If thoſe, who drain the ſhepherd's bowl,
No high and ſparkling wines can boaſt;
With wholeſome cups they chear the ſoul,
And crown them with the village toaſt.
4.
If thoſe, who join in ſhepherd's ſport,
Gay-dancing on the daizy'd ground,
Have not the ſplendor of a court;
Yet Love adorns the merry round.
ALFRED.
[41]My lov'd ELTRUDA! thou ſhalt here remain,
With gentle EMMA, and this reverend Hermit.
Ye ſilver ſtreams, that murmuring wind around
This duſky ſpot, to you I truſt my all!
O cloſe around her, woods! for her, ye vales,
Throw forth your flowers, your ſofteſt lap diffuſe!
And Thou! whoſe ſecret and expanſive hand
Moves all the ſprings of this vaſt univerſe:
Whoſe government aſtoniſhes; who here,
In a few hours, beyond our utmoſt hope,
Beyond our thought, yet doubting, haſt clear'd up
The ſtorm of fate: preſerve what thy kind will,
Thy bountiful appointment, makes ſo dear
To human hearts! preſerve my queen and children!
Preſerve the hopes of England! while I go
To finiſh thy great work, and ſave my country.
ELTRUDA.
Go, pay the debt of honor to the public.
If ever woman, ALFRED, lov'd her huſband
More fondly than herſelf, I claim that virtue,
That heart-felt happineſs. Yet, by our loves
I ſwear, that in a glorious death with thee
I rather would be wrapt, than live long years
To charm thee from the rugged paths of honor:
So much I think thee born for beauteous deeds,
And the bright courſe of glory.
ALFRED.
Matchleſs woman!
Love, at thy voice, is kindled to ambition.
Be this my deareſt triumph, to approve me
A huſband worthy of the beſt ELTRUDA!
HERMIT.
Behold, my Lord, our venerable Bard,
[42] Aged and blind, him whom the Muſes favour.
Yet ere you go, in our lov'd country's praiſe,
That nobleſt theme, hear what his rapture breathes.
An ODE.
1.
When Britain firſt, at heaven's command,
Aroſe from out the azure main;
This was the charter of the land,
And guardian Angels ſung this ſtrain:
"Rule Britannia, rule the waves;
"Britons never will be ſlaves."
2.
The nations, not ſo bleſt as thee,
Muſt, in their turns, to tyrants fall:
While thou ſhalt flouriſh great and free,
The dread and envy of them all.
"Rule, &c.
3.
Still more majeſtic ſhalt thou riſe,
More dreadful, from each foreign ſtroke:
As the loud blaſt that tears the ſkies,
Serves but to root thy native oak.
"Rule, &c.
4.
Thee haughty tyrants ne'er ſhall tame:
All their attempts to bend thee down,
Will but arrouſe thy generous flame;
But work their woe, and thy renown.
"Rule, &c.
[43]5.
To thee belongs the rural reign;
Thy cities ſhall with commerce ſhine:
All thine ſhall be the ſubject main,
And every ſhore it circles thine.
"Rule, &c.
6.
The Muſes, ſtill with freedom found,
Shall to thy happy coaſt repair:
Bleſt iſle! with matchleſs beauty crown'd,
And manly hearts to guard the fair.
"Rule, Britannia, rule the waves:
"Britons never will be ſlaves.
HERMIT.
ALFRED, go forth! lead on the radiant years,
To thee reveal'd in viſion.—Lo! they riſe!
Lo! patriots, heroes, ſages, croud to birth:
And bards to ſing them in immortal verſe!
I ſee thy commerce, Britain, graſp the world:
All nations ſerve thee; every foreign flood,
Subjected, pays its tribute to the Thames.
Thither the golden South obedient pours
His ſunny treaſures: thither the ſoft Eaſt
Her ſpices, delicacies, gentle gifts:
And thither his rough trade the ſtormy North.
See, where beyond the vaſt Atlantic ſurge,
By boldeſt keels untouch'd, a dreadful ſpace!
Shores, yet unfound, ariſe! in youthful prime,
With towering foreſts, mighty rivers crown'd!
Theſe ſtoop to Britain's thunder. This new world,
Shook to its centre, trembles at her name:
[44] And there, her ſons, with aim exalted, ſow
The ſeeds of riſing empire, arts, and arms.
Britons, proceed, the ſubject Deep command,
Awe with your navies every hoſtile land.
In vain their threats, their armies all in vain:
They rule the balanc'd world, who rule the main.