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polyuecte-第8章

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In one day can he two conversions make?

Not this the Christians' mould: they never change;

His heart is fixedpast power of man to estrange。

This is no poison quaffed all unawares;

What martyrs do and darethat Polyeucte dares;

He saw the lure by which he was enticed;

He thinks the universe well lost for Christ。

I know the breed; I know their courage high;

They love the cross;so; for the cross; they die。

We see two stakes of wood; the felon's shame;

They see a halo round one matchless Name。

To powers of earth; and hell; and torture blind;

In death; for Him they love; they rapture find。

They joy in agony;our gain their loss;

To die for Christ they count the world but dross:

Our rack their crown; our pain their highest pleasure;

And in the world's contempt they find their treasure。

Their cherished heritage ismartyrdom!



FELIX。

Let then this heir into his kingdom come! No more!



PAUL。

O father!



(Enter Albin。)



FELIX。

Albin; is it done?



ALBIN。

It is;Nearchus' frantic race is run!



FELIX。

And with what eye saw Polyeucte the sight?



ALBIN。

With envious eye;as one who sees a light

That lures him; moth…like; to devouring flame。

His heart is fixed; his mind is still the same。



PAUL。

'Tis as I saidoh; father; yet once more

If thou hast ever loved me;I implore!

Let filial duty and obedience plead

For his dear life! To my last prayer give heed!



FELIX。

Too much thou lovest an unworthy lord!



PAUL。

Thou gavest him my hand; 'twas at thy word

I gave both love and duty; what I give

I take not back; oh; Polyeucte must live!

For his dear sake I quenched another flame

Most pure。 Is he my lord alone in name?

O; by my blind and swift obedience paid

To thy commandbe thy hard words unsaid!

I gave thee all a daughter had to give;

Grant; father; this one prayerLet Polyeucte live!

By thy stern power; which now I only fear;

Make thou that power benignant; honoured; dear!

Thou gav'st that gift unsought;that gift restore!

I claim it at the giver's hand once more!



FELIX。

Importunate! Although my heart is soft;

It is not wax;and these entreaties oft

Repeated waste thy breath; and vex mine ear;

For man is deaf to what he will not hear。

/I am the master!/ This let all men know;

And if thou force that note thou'lt find 'tis so。

Prepare to see thy cursed Christian fool;

Do thou caress when I have scourged the mule;

Go! vex no more a loving father's ear;

From Polyeucte's self win what thou hold'st so dear。



PAUL。

In pity!



FELIX。

Leave me; leave me here alone!

Say moremy goaded heart will turn to stone;

Vex me no moreI will not be denied!

Go; save thy madman from his suicide!



(Exit Pauline。)



How met Nearchus death?



ALBIN。

The fiend abhorred

He hailed;embraced: 'For Christ!' his latest word;

No sigh; no tear;he passed without amaze

Adown the narrow vale with upward gaze。



FELIX。

And hehis friend?



ALBIN。

Is; as I said; unmoved

He looks on death but as a friend beloved;

He clasped the scaffold as a guide most sure;

And; in his prison; he can still endure。



FELIX。

Oh; wretched that I am!



ALBIN。

All pity thee。



FELIX。

With reason greater than they know。 Ah; me!

Thought surges upon thought; and has its will;

Care; gnawing upon care; my soul must kill;

Lovehatefearpain: I am of each the prey;

I grope for light; but never find the day!

Oh; what I suffer thou canst not conceive;

Each passion rages; but can ne'er relieve;

For I have noble thoughts that die still…born;

And I have thoughts so base my soul I scorn。

I love the foolish wretch who is my son;

I hate the folly which hath all undone;

I mourn his death;yet; if I Polyeucte save;

I see of all my hopes the cruel grave!

'Gainst Gods and Emperor too sore the strife;

For my renown I fear;fear for my life。

I must myself undo to save my son;

For; should I spare him; then am I undone!



ALBIN。

Decius a father is; and must excuse

A father's loveoh; he will not refuse!



FELIX。

His edict is most clear:'All Christians are my foes。'

The higher be their rank the more the evil grows。

If birth and state be high; their crime shows more notorious;

If he who shield be great; his fall the more inglorious;

And if I give Nearchus to the flame

Yet stoop to shield my ownthrice damned my name!



ALBIN。

If by thy fiat he cannot escape the grave;

Implore of Decius' grace the life thou canst not save。



FELIX。

So would Severus work my ruin quite

I fear his power; his wrath;for might is right

If crime with punishment I do not mate。

How high soe'er; worth what it may; I fear his hate;

For he is man; and feels as man; and I

Once spurned his suit with base indignity。

Yes; he at Decius' ear would work may woe;

He loves Pauline; thus Polyeucte is his foe:

All weapons possible to love and war;

And those who let them rust but laggards are。

I fearand fear doth give our vision scope

E'en now he cherisheth a tender hope;

He sees his rival prostrate in the dust;

So; as a man he hopesbecause he must。

Can dark despair to love and hope give place

To save the guilty from deserved disgrace?

And were his worth so matchless; so divine;

As to forbear all ill to me and mine

Still I must own the base; the coward hope;

'Gainst which my strength is all too weak to cope;

That hope whose phoenix ashes yet enthrall

The wretch who rises but once more to fall;

Ambition is my master; iron Fate;

I feel; obey; adore thee; while I hate!

Polyeucte was once my guard; my pride; my shield;

Yet can I; by Severus; weapons wield;

Should he my daughter wed; more tried; more true:

What wills Severusthat will Decius do。

Upheld by him; e'en Fortune I defy

And yet I shrink!for them; thrice base were I!



ALBIN。

Perish the word! It ne'er was made for thee;

But wilt thou deal just meed to treachery?



FELIX。

I go to Polyeucte's cell;though my poor breath

Should there be spent in vain to avert his death;

Then; then my fated child her strength shall try。



ALBIN。

What wilt thou do if both he still defy?



FELIX。

O; press me not in agony so great!

To thee alone I turnresistless Fate!







ACT IV

POLYEUCTE。 CLEON。 THREE OTHER GUARDS





POLY。

What is thy will?



CLEON。

Pauline would see my lord。



POLY。

Ah; how my heart quails at that single word!

Thee; Felix; I o'ercame within my cell;

Laughed at thy threats if death and torture fell;

Yet hast thou still one arm to rouse my fears;

The rest I scorn; but dread thy daughter's tears!

One only talisman remains; great God; 'tis mine;

Sufficient for my every need His strength divine!

O thou; dear saint; thy scars all healed; white…robed; in glory crowned;

Plead that I too may victory win; thou who hast victory found!

Nearchus; who hast clasped in Heaven that dear; that pierced hand;

Plead that thy friend; who wrestles h
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