Where are the lords, and where the haughty kings,
Who ruled with cruel pride, and walked the earth
Adorned with crown and sceptre?
Who ruled with cruel pride, and walked the earth
Adorned with crown and sceptre?
Krasinski - The Undivine Comedy
^, r, r u
Count Henry. Oh, I'm safe enough,
I do not fear the storm. I thank thee, Jew,
For so much loving care. But back, sir, back !
I choose to see these citizens to-night.
VOICES UNDER THE TREES.
Good-night, old Sun ! Ham's children say : Good-night !
Here's to thy health, old enemy ! Hurrah !
Thou long hast driven us on to unpaid work.
Awaked us early to unceasing toil :
To-morrow thou wilt find thy slaves asleep, —
Not caring whether thou get'st up or not, —
Or eating, drinking, full of flesh and wine !
A Peasant {throwing away his glass). Off to the devil,
empty glass ! Hurrah !
Neophyte. These bands of peasants will obstruct our
way.
Count Henry. You shall not leave me ! Stand behind
this tree ;
And if you value life, be silent, Jew !
CHORUS OF PEASANTS.
On ! on ! to meet our brothers
Under the white tents' row,
Or 'neath the giant shadows
The great oaks throw below !
To pleasant sunset greetings,
To rest, to sleep, to wake ;
The girl we love is waiting
Our hand in hers to take !
We've killed the fattest cattle
With which we used to plough.
They are waiting us to eat them, —
No weary labor now !
A Voice. I drag and pull him on with all my strength ;
He will not come — he turns — defends himself.
Come on, old fool ! {strikes him. ) Down ! down among the
dead !
2 28 THE UNDIVINE COMEDY.
Voice of the dying Noble. My children, pity ! pity!
Second Voice. Why, yoic had 7ione /
Come chain me to your land, and make me work
Again for nothing, will you?
Third Voice. My only son
You lashed to death ! Now wake him from the dead.
Or die and join him !
Fourth Voice. The children of Ham drink thy health,
old Lord !
They kneel to thee, — pray for forgiveness, old Lord !
CHORUS OF PEASANTS {passing out of sight).
A vampire sucked our blood, and lived upon our strength ;
We caught him with his bloody lips, — he's ours at length !
As is a great Lord's due, we swear thou shalt swing high ;
Yes, far above us all, by the devil, thou shalt die !
To every noble, death ! the tyrants ! they must fall !
Drink, food and rest for us ; they've starved and wronged
us all !
For shelter, meat, and land, and wine we mean to have;
Though naked, we are men ! Off, vampires, to the grave !
OTHER PEASANTS.
Your bodies shall lie as thick as the sheaves
On our fields ; and the drifting wrecks
Of your castles shall fly like the chaff beneath
The flail, as we twist your necks !
They shall perish as bundles of straw in the flames,
While the children of Ham by the light
Will wnrm themselves by the great bonfire.
And merrily dance all night !
Count Henry. I cannot see the murdered noble's face.
The crowd has grown so dense!
Neophyte. Perhaps he was
A friend of yours, a cousin. Count.
Count Henry. No more !
Him I despise ; you I detest ! Bah ! Bah !
And yet, perchance, may poetry some day
Gild even this wild horror I Forward, Jew !
( TJiey disappear among the trees. )
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY. 229
Another part of the forest. A mound, upon which fires are
burning. A procession of men bearing torches.
Count Henry appears at the base of the mound with the
Neophyte.
Count Henry. The thorns have torn my scarlet cap to
tatters !
What lurid flames are those, like fires of hell,
That rise among the trees and fringe with light
The gloomy forest's long and darkening aisles?
Neophyte. We lost our way in seeking for the Pass.
We must retrace our steps into the wood,
For Leonard here will celebrate to-night
The rites of this New Faith. I pray you, back !
To advance is death !
Count Henry. I am resolved to try ;
This is precisely what I wished to see.
Fear nothing, Jew; no one will recognize us.
Neophyte. Be prudent ! here our lives hang on a breath !
Count Henry. What monstrous ruins strew the ground
about us !
There lies the dying world ; colossal form.
Which lasted centuries before it fell !
Columns and capitals, and fretted roofs,
And slender shafts, and statues, cornices _ A
With golden bands, rose windows and stained glass,
Upturned and broken, crashing 'neath my feet !
Painting and sculpture, relics, bas-reliefs
Upheaved in ruin ! . . . Heaven ! is that the face
Of God's dear Mother shining in this gloom?
'Tis gone ! There gleams a cherub's head ; a shrine
With railing carved in bronze ; — Ha ! by yon torch
I see a knight in armor sleeping on
An upturned tomb ! Crosses and monuments
As thick as flakes of snow ! . . . Where am I, Jew?
Neophyte. We cross the grave-yard of the latest church
Of the Old Faith. For forty days and nights
We labored to destroy it ; built it seemed
To last eternal ages !
Count Henry. Ye New Men,
Your songs, your hymns, grate harshly on my ears !
230
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY.
Before me and behind, on every side,
Dark forms are moving ; fitful shadows, lights,
Are driven to and fro by soughing gusts,
And float, like clouds of spirits, midst the throng!
A Passer-by. I greet you. Citizen, in the name of Free-
dom.
Another. I greet you in the slaughter of the nobles.
Third Passer-by. The praise of Freedom's chanted by
the priests;
Why haste ye not to join the chorus?
Neophyte. Fliglit
Is now impossible ; we must advance !
Count Henry. And who is that young man who stands
in front
Upon the ruins of an ancient altar?
Three flames are burning at his feet; his face
Shines strangely through the crimsoning fire and smoke.
His gestures wild, excited, while his voice
Rings like a maniac's shriek?
Neophyte. 'Tis Leonard, young,
Inspired proj)het of our liberty. *
Philosopliers and jioets, artists, priests.
Stand round him with their daughters and their loves.
Count Henry. I understand, — your aristocracy !
Point out the man who sent to me to seek
An interview.
Neophyte. I do not see him here.
Leonard. Fly to my arms ! Come, let our burning lips
Cling to each other till our breath grows flame !
My beautiful, my love ! Come, fly to me.
Disrobed of veils, of antique prejudices, —
My chosen 'mid the daughters of the free !
Voice of a Girl. I come, I fly to thee, my well beloved !
Second Girl. Look upon me ! I stretch to thee my
hands,
But in the frenzy of the rapturing bliss,
* In Leonard is personified the impotence of a man who desires to
found a rclij;ion t>)roiigh hiinsclf JiTone". -Tht-worslitp wliicTi'lie^eaches
is a monstrous chaos. It is supiioscd the Poet intended to reunite in this
character traits common to several mo dern Ut opians. — Revue des Deux
Moiides. '
THE UN DIVINE COMEDY.
231
I faint and fall, beloved, at thy feet !
I cannot rise, — can only turn to thee !
Third Girl. Look, Prophet, look ! I have outstripped
them all,
Through cinders, ashes, flame and fire and smoke !
I clasp thy feet, beloved, to my heart 1
Count Hemy. Her long dark hair floats far upon the
wind.
With heaving breast she leaps upon the altar.
Neophyte, Thus is it every night with our young
priest.
Leonard. To me, my bliss ! Come, child of freedom,
come !
Thou tremblest with divinest inspiration.
Lend me a share that I may teach my brethren !
Prophetic words thrill through my quivering lips !
Count Henry. Her head is bowed, she falls as in con-
vulsion.
Leonard. Ye People, look on us ! We offer you
An image of the race from trammels freed.
We stand upon the ruins of the Past.
To us be honor, glory ! We have trampled
All into dust, the God of old is dead !
His limbs are torn asuTT^CTTaiKl our'mind
Is borne triumphant to his seat, whence falls
His spirit to eternal nothingness !
CHORUS OF WOMEN.
Happy and blest is the loved of the Prophet :
We stand at her feet, and we envy her lot !
Leonard. A new world give I you ; to a new God
I give the heavens, — a God of freedom, bliss,
'W\t_People'' s God I Let every tyrant's corpse
His fittiligintafl)e ! The pile would reach
The sky ! A sea of blood will flow, and sweep
Away the pangs of past humanity !
Our tears all shed, we will inaugurate
Perpetual happiness; the Day of Freedom !
Damnation and the gallows be to him ^
)3n30jwourd~reofganizeTlie l^ast, conspire
Againstl:Tie^pertect^otlierhood~ofTiian !
232
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY.
CHORUS OF MEN.
The towers of superstition, tyranny,
Have fallen ! fallen !
Death and damnation be to him who'd save
One stone from that old, crumbling edifice !
Neophyte {aside). Blasphemers of Jehovah, thrice I
spew
You forth to swift destruction !
Count Henry. Keep but thy promise, Eagle, I will build
A temple to the glorious Son of God
On their bowed necks, and on this very spot !
A confused cry of Voices. Freedom ! Equality ! and
perfect bliss !
CHORUS OF THE NEW PRIESTS.
Where are the lords, and where the haughty kings,
Who ruled with cruel pride, and walked the earth
Adorned with crown and sceptre? Where are they ?
Voices. Gone ! Gone ! forever gone ! Hurrah !
Hurrah !
An Assassin. I killed King Alexander.
Another Assassin. I, King John.
Third Assassin. I murdered King Emmanuel. Hurrah!
Leonard. March without fear ! Murder without re-
morse !
Ye are the elect of the elect, the sons
Of that God whom the People have elected !
Martyrs and heroes of our liberties !
CHORUS OF ASSASSINS.
We glide in the darkness of niglit,
We move in the gloom of the shadow;
Dagger and sword in the clutch of our might,
We strike for the good of qur brothers !
Leonard {to the young girl). Rouse thee, my love !
(A loud clap of thunder is heard. )
{To the throng. ) Answer this living God who speaks in
thunder !
Ye vigorous sons of freedom, follow me !
Sing hymns, and let us once more trample down
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY. 233
The dead God's Church.
Awake, beloved ! lift up thy drooping head !
Girl I glow with love to thee, and to thy God !
Oh, I would share my love with all mankind,
With the great universe ! I glow ! I glow !
Count Henry. Who is that blocks the way ! He falls
upon
His knees, he lifts his hands, and, groaning, speaks.
Neophyte. He is the son of our philosopher.
Leonard. What wouldst thou, Herman?
Herman. Pontiff, I would ask
For consecration as a murderer:
27^^^^7v/nTairt-m6TTieml, the poniard, and the poison !
With this, the sacred oil once used to anoint
Earth's kings, I consecrate thee to their murder!
I put into thy hands the ancient arms
Of knights and nobles, — use them for their death!
I hang upon thy breast this flask of poison.
That where the sword can never reach, it may
Corrode, and burn the bowels of our tyrants !
Go ! thou art consecrated to destroy
Despots in every quarter of the globe !
Count Henry. He goes. He heads his bands of mur-
derers !
They climb the hill,— they surely come to us, —
Leonard is at their head. . . .
Neophyte. We must withdraw.
Count Henry. No. I will dream this dream out to
its end !
Neophyte {aside'). Jehovah, hear ! Doom him to swift
destruction !
{To Count Henry. ) Leonard will surely know me. See
you not
The dreadful knife that glitters on his breast?
Count Henry. There, hide thee, Jew, beneath my
mantle's folds.
Know you the women dancing round the man
Whom you call Leonard ?
Neophyte. All I know by name.
The Avives of princes, counts, who have forsaken
Their former lords, and then embraced our faith.
234
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY.
Count Henry. Women I once deemed angels ! idol-
ized ! . . .
The crowd surrounds and hides him from my sight,
But as the music ever fainter grows,
He must be moving from us with his train.
Jew, follow me ! We can see better here !
i^He climbs the pa7-apet of a wall. ')
Neophyte. Woe ! woe ! here every one will surely know
us !
Count Henry. I see him now ; but other female forms,
Convulsive, pale, and haggard, throng around.
I see the son of the philosopher ;
He foams and gestures, brandishes his dagger.
They reach the northern tower, dance round the wreck,
Trample the ruins, rend the Gothic shrines.
Throw fire upon the holy prostrate altars,
The sacred pictures and the broken crosses !
The fire blazes, — clouds of smoke arise
That darken all before me !
Anathema on these blasphemers ! Woe !
Leonard. Woe ! woe to men who still bow lowly
down.
In adoration to a lifeless God !
Count Henry. The blackening masses of the People
turn —
They drive upon us now !
Neophyte. Oh, Abraham !
Count Henry. Eagle of glory ! this is not mine hour !
Neophyte. We're lost. Escape is none.
Leonard (stopping theni). Who are you, brother, with
that haughty face ?
Why are you not with us ?
Count Henry. But yesterday
I of your final revolution heard.
And hastened from afar to lend my aid.
I'm an assassin of the Spanish club.
Leofiard. Who is this man who hides his face beneath
Your ample cloak?
Count Henry. My younger brother, who
Has sworn an oath never to show his face
Until he kills a noble !
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY. 235
Leonard. Whom can j'^z^
Boast to have killed ? ^ef^rrl=,v
Count Henry. It was but yesterday
My brothers consecrated me to murder
Leonard. Whom will you strike the first ?
Count Henry. The greatest tyrant ;-
Yourself, should you prove false !
Z. ^;/a/Y/. Here, brother, take
My dagger for such use !
{Hands it to him? ,
Count Henfy {drawing his own). My own is sharp
FnniiPh to strike a traitor to the heart ! , „ , ,
Zt r«V«. Hurrah for Leonard ! for the People s
Other VoZs. ' Long live the assassin of the Spanish
Leonard Meet me to-morrow in our General's tent.
CHORUS OF PRIESTS.
We here salute thee, friend, in Freedom's name, ^
Within thy hands thou bear'st our safety s pledge ,
Who fights unceasingly, assassmates
Without misgiving, never yields to doubt
Of victory— such one is sure to conquer.
CHORUS OF PHILOSOPHERS.
We have at last awaked the human race
From long and childTsh dreams, unveiled Truth s face,
We've drLged her from the Darkness into Light ;-
Go thou to kill, to die, to exalt her might !
Son of the Philosopher {to Count Henry). Comrade and
friend, out of this hollow skull
Of ancient saint, I drink to your good health.
{He flings away the skull. )
A Girl {dancing up to Count Henry). Wilt kill King
John for me ? ^ . tt .
Another For me. Count Henry !
aZ^n. Bring us some nobles' heads : we want new
balls !
236 THE UNDIVJNE COMEDY.
Other Children. Good fortune guide your daggers to
their hearts !
CHORUS OF ARTISTS.
We'll build our church upon these Gothic ruins;
No images shall stand within its walls.
Sharp pikes and blades shall form its vaulted arch.
The pillars borne upon eight human heads,
Thick locks of hair shall form the capitals,
Seeming to gush with crimson streams of blood !
Our altar shall be white as new-fallen snow,
Our only God will rest upon the stone : —
The scarlet cap of Liberty ! Hurrah !
,Other Voices. On! on! the morning dawn already
breaks.
Neophyte. They'll surely hang us, Count, on yonder
gallows.
Count Henry. They follow Leonard ; us they heed no
longer . . .
This time, — the last, I see with my own eyes,
Embrace with my own thought the wildering future,
The chaos quickening in the womb of Time,
The black abyss that menaces destruction
To me, my brothers, all the reverend Past.
I gaze once mote — ere it engulf me !
Driven by despair, urged on by bitter grief.
My soul awakens to new energy.
O God ! give me again the fiery power
Which Thou of old wert wont not to refuse me, —
And I will in one burning word reveal.
Incorporate this new and monstrous world,
Which does not know itself, its destiny,
And this Word will become the Poetry
Of all the future years !
Voice in the air. Thou chantest a Drama !
Count Henry. Thanks for the information — friend or
foe!
The desecrated ashes of my sires
Shall be avenged ! . . .
Anathema on these new generations !
^y^
237
THE Um)IVINE COMEDY.
Their whirlpool seethes around me, but it shall
Not draw me in its ever swifter course,
The widening circles of its mad abyss.
Eagle ! my Eagle ! keep thy promise now !
Jew, I am ready to descend the Pass,
Neophyte. Behold the dawn : I may no farther go.
Count Henry. Put me upon the path ; I will release you.
Neophyte.
Count Henry. Oh, I'm safe enough,
I do not fear the storm. I thank thee, Jew,
For so much loving care. But back, sir, back !
I choose to see these citizens to-night.
VOICES UNDER THE TREES.
Good-night, old Sun ! Ham's children say : Good-night !
Here's to thy health, old enemy ! Hurrah !
Thou long hast driven us on to unpaid work.
Awaked us early to unceasing toil :
To-morrow thou wilt find thy slaves asleep, —
Not caring whether thou get'st up or not, —
Or eating, drinking, full of flesh and wine !
A Peasant {throwing away his glass). Off to the devil,
empty glass ! Hurrah !
Neophyte. These bands of peasants will obstruct our
way.
Count Henry. You shall not leave me ! Stand behind
this tree ;
And if you value life, be silent, Jew !
CHORUS OF PEASANTS.
On ! on ! to meet our brothers
Under the white tents' row,
Or 'neath the giant shadows
The great oaks throw below !
To pleasant sunset greetings,
To rest, to sleep, to wake ;
The girl we love is waiting
Our hand in hers to take !
We've killed the fattest cattle
With which we used to plough.
They are waiting us to eat them, —
No weary labor now !
A Voice. I drag and pull him on with all my strength ;
He will not come — he turns — defends himself.
Come on, old fool ! {strikes him. ) Down ! down among the
dead !
2 28 THE UNDIVINE COMEDY.
Voice of the dying Noble. My children, pity ! pity!
Second Voice. Why, yoic had 7ione /
Come chain me to your land, and make me work
Again for nothing, will you?
Third Voice. My only son
You lashed to death ! Now wake him from the dead.
Or die and join him !
Fourth Voice. The children of Ham drink thy health,
old Lord !
They kneel to thee, — pray for forgiveness, old Lord !
CHORUS OF PEASANTS {passing out of sight).
A vampire sucked our blood, and lived upon our strength ;
We caught him with his bloody lips, — he's ours at length !
As is a great Lord's due, we swear thou shalt swing high ;
Yes, far above us all, by the devil, thou shalt die !
To every noble, death ! the tyrants ! they must fall !
Drink, food and rest for us ; they've starved and wronged
us all !
For shelter, meat, and land, and wine we mean to have;
Though naked, we are men ! Off, vampires, to the grave !
OTHER PEASANTS.
Your bodies shall lie as thick as the sheaves
On our fields ; and the drifting wrecks
Of your castles shall fly like the chaff beneath
The flail, as we twist your necks !
They shall perish as bundles of straw in the flames,
While the children of Ham by the light
Will wnrm themselves by the great bonfire.
And merrily dance all night !
Count Henry. I cannot see the murdered noble's face.
The crowd has grown so dense!
Neophyte. Perhaps he was
A friend of yours, a cousin. Count.
Count Henry. No more !
Him I despise ; you I detest ! Bah ! Bah !
And yet, perchance, may poetry some day
Gild even this wild horror I Forward, Jew !
( TJiey disappear among the trees. )
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY. 229
Another part of the forest. A mound, upon which fires are
burning. A procession of men bearing torches.
Count Henry appears at the base of the mound with the
Neophyte.
Count Henry. The thorns have torn my scarlet cap to
tatters !
What lurid flames are those, like fires of hell,
That rise among the trees and fringe with light
The gloomy forest's long and darkening aisles?
Neophyte. We lost our way in seeking for the Pass.
We must retrace our steps into the wood,
For Leonard here will celebrate to-night
The rites of this New Faith. I pray you, back !
To advance is death !
Count Henry. I am resolved to try ;
This is precisely what I wished to see.
Fear nothing, Jew; no one will recognize us.
Neophyte. Be prudent ! here our lives hang on a breath !
Count Henry. What monstrous ruins strew the ground
about us !
There lies the dying world ; colossal form.
Which lasted centuries before it fell !
Columns and capitals, and fretted roofs,
And slender shafts, and statues, cornices _ A
With golden bands, rose windows and stained glass,
Upturned and broken, crashing 'neath my feet !
Painting and sculpture, relics, bas-reliefs
Upheaved in ruin ! . . . Heaven ! is that the face
Of God's dear Mother shining in this gloom?
'Tis gone ! There gleams a cherub's head ; a shrine
With railing carved in bronze ; — Ha ! by yon torch
I see a knight in armor sleeping on
An upturned tomb ! Crosses and monuments
As thick as flakes of snow ! . . . Where am I, Jew?
Neophyte. We cross the grave-yard of the latest church
Of the Old Faith. For forty days and nights
We labored to destroy it ; built it seemed
To last eternal ages !
Count Henry. Ye New Men,
Your songs, your hymns, grate harshly on my ears !
230
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY.
Before me and behind, on every side,
Dark forms are moving ; fitful shadows, lights,
Are driven to and fro by soughing gusts,
And float, like clouds of spirits, midst the throng!
A Passer-by. I greet you. Citizen, in the name of Free-
dom.
Another. I greet you in the slaughter of the nobles.
Third Passer-by. The praise of Freedom's chanted by
the priests;
Why haste ye not to join the chorus?
Neophyte. Fliglit
Is now impossible ; we must advance !
Count Henry. And who is that young man who stands
in front
Upon the ruins of an ancient altar?
Three flames are burning at his feet; his face
Shines strangely through the crimsoning fire and smoke.
His gestures wild, excited, while his voice
Rings like a maniac's shriek?
Neophyte. 'Tis Leonard, young,
Inspired proj)het of our liberty. *
Philosopliers and jioets, artists, priests.
Stand round him with their daughters and their loves.
Count Henry. I understand, — your aristocracy !
Point out the man who sent to me to seek
An interview.
Neophyte. I do not see him here.
Leonard. Fly to my arms ! Come, let our burning lips
Cling to each other till our breath grows flame !
My beautiful, my love ! Come, fly to me.
Disrobed of veils, of antique prejudices, —
My chosen 'mid the daughters of the free !
Voice of a Girl. I come, I fly to thee, my well beloved !
Second Girl. Look upon me ! I stretch to thee my
hands,
But in the frenzy of the rapturing bliss,
* In Leonard is personified the impotence of a man who desires to
found a rclij;ion t>)roiigh hiinsclf JiTone". -Tht-worslitp wliicTi'lie^eaches
is a monstrous chaos. It is supiioscd the Poet intended to reunite in this
character traits common to several mo dern Ut opians. — Revue des Deux
Moiides. '
THE UN DIVINE COMEDY.
231
I faint and fall, beloved, at thy feet !
I cannot rise, — can only turn to thee !
Third Girl. Look, Prophet, look ! I have outstripped
them all,
Through cinders, ashes, flame and fire and smoke !
I clasp thy feet, beloved, to my heart 1
Count Hemy. Her long dark hair floats far upon the
wind.
With heaving breast she leaps upon the altar.
Neophyte, Thus is it every night with our young
priest.
Leonard. To me, my bliss ! Come, child of freedom,
come !
Thou tremblest with divinest inspiration.
Lend me a share that I may teach my brethren !
Prophetic words thrill through my quivering lips !
Count Henry. Her head is bowed, she falls as in con-
vulsion.
Leonard. Ye People, look on us ! We offer you
An image of the race from trammels freed.
We stand upon the ruins of the Past.
To us be honor, glory ! We have trampled
All into dust, the God of old is dead !
His limbs are torn asuTT^CTTaiKl our'mind
Is borne triumphant to his seat, whence falls
His spirit to eternal nothingness !
CHORUS OF WOMEN.
Happy and blest is the loved of the Prophet :
We stand at her feet, and we envy her lot !
Leonard. A new world give I you ; to a new God
I give the heavens, — a God of freedom, bliss,
'W\t_People'' s God I Let every tyrant's corpse
His fittiligintafl)e ! The pile would reach
The sky ! A sea of blood will flow, and sweep
Away the pangs of past humanity !
Our tears all shed, we will inaugurate
Perpetual happiness; the Day of Freedom !
Damnation and the gallows be to him ^
)3n30jwourd~reofganizeTlie l^ast, conspire
Againstl:Tie^pertect^otlierhood~ofTiian !
232
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY.
CHORUS OF MEN.
The towers of superstition, tyranny,
Have fallen ! fallen !
Death and damnation be to him who'd save
One stone from that old, crumbling edifice !
Neophyte {aside). Blasphemers of Jehovah, thrice I
spew
You forth to swift destruction !
Count Henry. Keep but thy promise, Eagle, I will build
A temple to the glorious Son of God
On their bowed necks, and on this very spot !
A confused cry of Voices. Freedom ! Equality ! and
perfect bliss !
CHORUS OF THE NEW PRIESTS.
Where are the lords, and where the haughty kings,
Who ruled with cruel pride, and walked the earth
Adorned with crown and sceptre? Where are they ?
Voices. Gone ! Gone ! forever gone ! Hurrah !
Hurrah !
An Assassin. I killed King Alexander.
Another Assassin. I, King John.
Third Assassin. I murdered King Emmanuel. Hurrah!
Leonard. March without fear ! Murder without re-
morse !
Ye are the elect of the elect, the sons
Of that God whom the People have elected !
Martyrs and heroes of our liberties !
CHORUS OF ASSASSINS.
We glide in the darkness of niglit,
We move in the gloom of the shadow;
Dagger and sword in the clutch of our might,
We strike for the good of qur brothers !
Leonard {to the young girl). Rouse thee, my love !
(A loud clap of thunder is heard. )
{To the throng. ) Answer this living God who speaks in
thunder !
Ye vigorous sons of freedom, follow me !
Sing hymns, and let us once more trample down
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY. 233
The dead God's Church.
Awake, beloved ! lift up thy drooping head !
Girl I glow with love to thee, and to thy God !
Oh, I would share my love with all mankind,
With the great universe ! I glow ! I glow !
Count Henry. Who is that blocks the way ! He falls
upon
His knees, he lifts his hands, and, groaning, speaks.
Neophyte. He is the son of our philosopher.
Leonard. What wouldst thou, Herman?
Herman. Pontiff, I would ask
For consecration as a murderer:
27^^^^7v/nTairt-m6TTieml, the poniard, and the poison !
With this, the sacred oil once used to anoint
Earth's kings, I consecrate thee to their murder!
I put into thy hands the ancient arms
Of knights and nobles, — use them for their death!
I hang upon thy breast this flask of poison.
That where the sword can never reach, it may
Corrode, and burn the bowels of our tyrants !
Go ! thou art consecrated to destroy
Despots in every quarter of the globe !
Count Henry. He goes. He heads his bands of mur-
derers !
They climb the hill,— they surely come to us, —
Leonard is at their head. . . .
Neophyte. We must withdraw.
Count Henry. No. I will dream this dream out to
its end !
Neophyte {aside'). Jehovah, hear ! Doom him to swift
destruction !
{To Count Henry. ) Leonard will surely know me. See
you not
The dreadful knife that glitters on his breast?
Count Henry. There, hide thee, Jew, beneath my
mantle's folds.
Know you the women dancing round the man
Whom you call Leonard ?
Neophyte. All I know by name.
The Avives of princes, counts, who have forsaken
Their former lords, and then embraced our faith.
234
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY.
Count Henry. Women I once deemed angels ! idol-
ized ! . . .
The crowd surrounds and hides him from my sight,
But as the music ever fainter grows,
He must be moving from us with his train.
Jew, follow me ! We can see better here !
i^He climbs the pa7-apet of a wall. ')
Neophyte. Woe ! woe ! here every one will surely know
us !
Count Henry. I see him now ; but other female forms,
Convulsive, pale, and haggard, throng around.
I see the son of the philosopher ;
He foams and gestures, brandishes his dagger.
They reach the northern tower, dance round the wreck,
Trample the ruins, rend the Gothic shrines.
Throw fire upon the holy prostrate altars,
The sacred pictures and the broken crosses !
The fire blazes, — clouds of smoke arise
That darken all before me !
Anathema on these blasphemers ! Woe !
Leonard. Woe ! woe to men who still bow lowly
down.
In adoration to a lifeless God !
Count Henry. The blackening masses of the People
turn —
They drive upon us now !
Neophyte. Oh, Abraham !
Count Henry. Eagle of glory ! this is not mine hour !
Neophyte. We're lost. Escape is none.
Leonard (stopping theni). Who are you, brother, with
that haughty face ?
Why are you not with us ?
Count Henry. But yesterday
I of your final revolution heard.
And hastened from afar to lend my aid.
I'm an assassin of the Spanish club.
Leofiard. Who is this man who hides his face beneath
Your ample cloak?
Count Henry. My younger brother, who
Has sworn an oath never to show his face
Until he kills a noble !
THE UNDIVINE COMEDY. 235
Leonard. Whom can j'^z^
Boast to have killed ? ^ef^rrl=,v
Count Henry. It was but yesterday
My brothers consecrated me to murder
Leonard. Whom will you strike the first ?
Count Henry. The greatest tyrant ;-
Yourself, should you prove false !
Z. ^;/a/Y/. Here, brother, take
My dagger for such use !
{Hands it to him? ,
Count Henfy {drawing his own). My own is sharp
FnniiPh to strike a traitor to the heart ! , „ , ,
Zt r«V«. Hurrah for Leonard ! for the People s
Other VoZs. ' Long live the assassin of the Spanish
Leonard Meet me to-morrow in our General's tent.
CHORUS OF PRIESTS.
We here salute thee, friend, in Freedom's name, ^
Within thy hands thou bear'st our safety s pledge ,
Who fights unceasingly, assassmates
Without misgiving, never yields to doubt
Of victory— such one is sure to conquer.
CHORUS OF PHILOSOPHERS.
We have at last awaked the human race
From long and childTsh dreams, unveiled Truth s face,
We've drLged her from the Darkness into Light ;-
Go thou to kill, to die, to exalt her might !
Son of the Philosopher {to Count Henry). Comrade and
friend, out of this hollow skull
Of ancient saint, I drink to your good health.
{He flings away the skull. )
A Girl {dancing up to Count Henry). Wilt kill King
John for me ? ^ . tt .
Another For me. Count Henry !
aZ^n. Bring us some nobles' heads : we want new
balls !
236 THE UNDIVJNE COMEDY.
Other Children. Good fortune guide your daggers to
their hearts !
CHORUS OF ARTISTS.
We'll build our church upon these Gothic ruins;
No images shall stand within its walls.
Sharp pikes and blades shall form its vaulted arch.
The pillars borne upon eight human heads,
Thick locks of hair shall form the capitals,
Seeming to gush with crimson streams of blood !
Our altar shall be white as new-fallen snow,
Our only God will rest upon the stone : —
The scarlet cap of Liberty ! Hurrah !
,Other Voices. On! on! the morning dawn already
breaks.
Neophyte. They'll surely hang us, Count, on yonder
gallows.
Count Henry. They follow Leonard ; us they heed no
longer . . .
This time, — the last, I see with my own eyes,
Embrace with my own thought the wildering future,
The chaos quickening in the womb of Time,
The black abyss that menaces destruction
To me, my brothers, all the reverend Past.
I gaze once mote — ere it engulf me !
Driven by despair, urged on by bitter grief.
My soul awakens to new energy.
O God ! give me again the fiery power
Which Thou of old wert wont not to refuse me, —
And I will in one burning word reveal.
Incorporate this new and monstrous world,
Which does not know itself, its destiny,
And this Word will become the Poetry
Of all the future years !
Voice in the air. Thou chantest a Drama !
Count Henry. Thanks for the information — friend or
foe!
The desecrated ashes of my sires
Shall be avenged ! . . .
Anathema on these new generations !
^y^
237
THE Um)IVINE COMEDY.
Their whirlpool seethes around me, but it shall
Not draw me in its ever swifter course,
The widening circles of its mad abyss.
Eagle ! my Eagle ! keep thy promise now !
Jew, I am ready to descend the Pass,
Neophyte. Behold the dawn : I may no farther go.
Count Henry. Put me upon the path ; I will release you.
Neophyte.