CIRCE, A TRAGEDY. As it is Acted AT HIS Royal Highness the Duke of YORK's THEATRE. By CHARLES D'AVENANT, L.L.D. Hor. Velut Aegri somnia vana. Licenced June 18, 1677, Roger L'Estrange. LONDON, Printed for Richard Tonson at his Shop under Grays-Inn-gate next Grays-Inn-lane, MDCLXXVII. THE PROLOGUE (Written by Mr. Dryden.) WEre you but half so wise as you're severe, Our youthful Poet should not need to fear; To his green years your Censures you would suit, Not blast the Blossom, but expect the Fruit. The Sex that best does pleasure understand, Will always choose to err on t'other hand. They check not him that's Awkward in delight, But clap the young Rogue's Cheek, and set him right. Thus heartened well, and fleshed upon his Prey, The youth may prove a man another day; For your own sakes, instruct him when he's out, You'll find him mend his work at every bout. When some young lusty Thief is passing by, How many of your tender Kind will cry, A proper Fellow, pity he should die. He might be saved, and thank us for our pains, There's such a stock of Love within his Veins. These Arguments the Women may persuade, But move not you, the Brothers of the Trade, Who scattering your Infection through the Pit, With aching hearts and empty Purses sit, To take your dear Five Shillings worth of Wit. The praise you give him in your kindest mood, Comes dribbling from you, just like drops of blood; And than you clap so civilly, for fear The loudness might offend your Neighbour's ear; That we suspect your Gloves are lined within, For silence sake, and Cottened next the skin. From these Usurpers we appeal to you, The only knowing, only judging few; You who in private have this Play allowed, Ought to maintain your Suffrage to the Crowd. The Captive once submitted to your Bands, You should protect from Death by Vulgar hands, The Persons. Thoas. King of Scythia. Ithacus. Circe's Son by Ulysses. Orestes. A Prince of Argos. Pylades. His Friend. Pluto. Priests. Spirits. Circe. Queen of Scythia. Osmida. Daughter to Thoas by a former Queen. Iphigenia. Priestess to Diana Taurica. Clytaemnestra's Ghost. Four Nymphs used by Circe in her Charms. SCENE. Taurica Chersonesus. CIRCE. ACT I. Scene Circe's Cave. Thoas, Iphigenia, Guards and Attendants. Iph. THIS, sure, is the sad region of despair, Where, after Death, the guilty Souls repair: Here is no promise of a blooming Spring; No cheerful light awakes the Birds to Sing. The blasted Trees no leaves or blossoms yield, On their bare tops Owls perch, and Ravens build. Tho. Those Spirits gladly in these shades obey, Who sicken at the view of brighter day. In this dark place, shut up from mortal sight, My Queen converses with the God of Night, Prepares her Poisons, mutters holy Words: Herbs for her Charms th' unwholesome soil affords; Here she has promised from their dark abodes, By her strong Art to raise th' infernal Gods, And to inquire our fate. Iph. — Can Heaven decree That any lucky Star should smile on me. How long a Captive must I here remain? How long my hands with horrid murders stain? A Goddess who in humane blood delights Ordains me to perform her impious rights. Ye Powers that rule the World, shall I no more My Country see, nor household Gods adore? Tho. Oh Iphigenia when those Prayers you make, When you beg leave this Region to forsake, So softly speak, that none but Heaven may hear, With the harsh Words wound not a Lover's ear. For freedom cruel Maid in vain you sue, The Powers above will be as deaf as you. Alas! what pity can you hope to meet, Who let poor Lovers languish at your feet? Who can behold with unrelenting Eyes A wretched King who for your Beauty dies? Iph. Where are your Oaths, how often have you sworn? Your guilty passion should in secret bourn. [Angrily. Must I by death your persecutions fly? I am not so confined but I can die. Scene Second. Enter Ithacus. Ith. ere we invoke the Gods, I hither come From Iphigenia's mouth to know my doom; From you my life or death I humbly wait; 'Tis you and not the Gods that rule my fate. The chase of Glory I no more pursue, Forgetting Arms, I languish here for you. Love may incite the Young to hunt for fame, But Beauty then must the reward prolame. I ask but Hope, it is a slender fare, But the Camelion-Love can live on Air. Iph. Like some mistaken Zealot you apply True Worship to the wrong Divinity. Adore the fair Osmida, far more bright And beautiful than first created light; More Innocent than Beauty was before It studied Wit, or costly Dresses wore. Her Mind is Noble, and her Greatness free, Her Soul, like Heaven, full of blessed Harmony: Unless unquiet Love some discord moves, Which you must pardon, since 'tis you she loves: Of all those Grace's prodigal to you, For which, in vain, the rest of Mankind sue. Tho. If we by Policy could govern Love, My Daughter's Sighs this Noble Prince might move; Since he for sudden exile must prepare, Or, marrying her, be made the Empire's Heir; Loudly the People for this Union call, And their Rebellious fury threatens all: But I the Magic of your Beauty know Too well to blame what Love compel's him to. Ith. Before I saw your Daughter, I had paid My Love's first Tribute to this charming Maid; And then the Empire vainly did enjoin, That I should give a Heart which was not mine. Iph. I'll hear no more, it is too great a fault, But to endure your Criminals assault; In virtue's Combats they that keep the Field, Almost as guilty are as they that yield: Virtue by flight secures itself. [Is going. Ith. — O stay, To my dark Hopes will you afford no day? Promise at least you will bestow your Love, As you're directed by the Powers above. Iph. What they command I never shall decline, To Heaven my will and person I resign. Scene Third. To them Osmida. Osm. I have my Sex's Passions, want their Art; For by my Eyes still I betray my Heart: Thither to gaze on him my Soul does haste, And in kind looks I all my Spirits waste. Iph. Behold the fair Osmida now appears, Her beauteous Eyes are full of Love and Tears. Tho. Poor Virgin! my commands at first did make [To Osm. Those Wounds thou didst but in obedience take. Osm. You bade me all those modest fears remove, Which guard at first a Virgin's Heart from Love. Admire not, if I yielded to his Charms, When you had taken from me all my Arms; But Ithacus, since you my Love despise, I with a just disdain will arm my Eyes, And in my Breast I shall retain no fire, But what my Anger and Revenge inspire. Ith. Madam, oppress not thus my sinking Fate, I bear already a too heavy weight: Ah rather an unhappy wretch deplore, Who dies, because he cannot love you more; My Heart's a Prisoner, if it Freedom gains, It shall but be to wear Osmida's Chains. Osm. That Iphigenia's Empire would but be As short as thou wilt find my hate of thee. Like a kind Parent I forgive, and take Any submission he is pleased to make. Scene Fourth. Enter Circe with four Women. Circ. Reproach to thy Great Father, and to me! [To Ithacus The wise Ulysses does not live in thee; Would he to Love have sacrificed a Throne? Ah Son! this weakness, or thy Race disown. Ith. Blame not my Passion, Madam! Love and hate, Are less at Man's disposal than his Fate. Cir. But let this Monarch your Example prove, [Pointing to Tho. He knows by interest how to govern Love. To me he gave his Hand with treacherous art, When Iphigenia did possess his Heart. Ungrateful King, Love on! but know I bear The Thunder that can punish you and her. Iph. His Passion I with grief and trouble see, You cannot suffer more by Jealousy. Cir. Cursed be her Eyes, cursed be that fatal day, When she at Aulis on the Altar lay. [Too Iph. Why did the cruel Gods prevent thy fall? Those Gods which for thy death before did call. No Victim, great Diana could appease, The warrior's languished in ignoble ease. No Ship could spread her Sails, for every wind Offended Heaven, did in deep Caverns bind. Troy's Genius smiled, to see the Fates oppose The Sea and Wind, against her powerful Foes. Then Calcas cried, here we must ever lie, Unless the Princess Iphigenia die. The Gods require her blood; Calchas is sent To fetch the Virgin from in the Royal Tent. From her sad Moth'rs bosom she is caught, And by her Father, to the Altar brought. Calchas prepared to give the fatal wound, When from above was heard a heavenly sound; It was Diana's voice, who from a Cloud Pronounced this Sentence to the wondering crowd. Your Princess shall not on my Altar bleed, She is for Holy Mysteries decreed: To Taurica I will the Virgin bear, Through the unbeaten Region of the Air. Now thou art come, our Empire's peace is lost, My vast designs for greatness all are crossed. Iph. Calchas! how dull and lazy was thy zeal, Would I had perished by the Sacred Steel. Would I had died at Aulis, in this place I pass a Life unworthy of my Race. My hands are ever stained in humane blood, And armed against the innocent and good. Circ. Your hands do far less mischief than your eyes, For which that poor ignoble Rebel dies. [Pointing to Itha. You, Ithacus, have by this Passion stained; All the Renown which you in Arms had gained; Give a great Victim to your Country's good, And save vast Torrent of the Scythian blood. Osm. Urge him no more, since 'tis his happiness, I wish he even my Rival may possess. And may she love the Prince! as well as I. I know my remedy must be to die; With thee no Rebel will dispute the Throne, None will constrain thy heart, when I am gone. Ith. My Constancy a barren Heart has tilled, Which to my labouring Hopes, no fruit will yield, And I refuse a passion kinder far, Than that which Deities to Mortals bear: Not Iphigenia can more charming be, Tho' partial Love makes her seem so to me. [Looking on Osmid. I'll look myself into your softer power, And now methinks I only you adore. Rebel my injured Heart! and nobly rise Against those Tyrants, Iphigenia's Eyes. Each thought does represent her now less fair, And all conspires I should your Fetters wear. Osm. Oh weak Resolves! that angry Lovers make, Which they are led insensibly to break. Safe in thy Hearts strong Fortress Love remains, And smiles to see thee struggle with thy Chains; One look your Resolutions will defeat, And make you sigh for pardon: at her feet. Ith. Your every Grace my fainting senses arms Against the Force of all her powerful Charms. I can look on, and yet her Charms despise; [Looks on Iphigenia. And thus provoke the Magic of her Eyes. Now to regain my freedom I begin. Osm. How fast he sucks the subtle poison in! Ith. Thus I her Image from my Bosom tear, And hate her now— yet she is wondrous fair. Osm. Too well this language of the Eyes I know, Each look an ecstasy of Love does show. Ith. By heavens'! when this brave Onset I would make, My Heart grows faint, and all my sinews shake. Revenge and anger, which should succour me, Like Cowards fly, when I her Beauty see. And now I melt into more tenderness, Than Artless Maids in their first Loves express. Osm. Poor Prince! I will not blame but pity thee, Thou art irreparably lost like me. With some soft pleasure, we'll delude the care And torment which we suffer by despair. I will with Tears deplore your misery, And you with gentle sighs shall pity me. Ith. I have one torment, Madam, more than you, I must despair, and be ungrateful too. Circ. By Force and Art I had a Sceptre won, Of which these Rebels will deprive my Son. They all refuse that he a Crown should wear, Which with Osmida he denies to share. Thus Love does humane Policy despise, And laughs at all the Counsels of the Wise. Ith. To pardon Criminals, and bless them too, Only belongs to Deities and you. [To Circe. You must do both, from you we hope a Cure, For all those Ills which we from Love endure. The Gods some secret Remedy may find, To cure the Wounds of each afflicted mind. Raise the infernal Powers by your strong Charms. Cir. To your Requests I will indulgent prove, But Heaven itself has little power o'er Love. Osm. I from the Gods only to death pretend, 'Tis in that point my Miseries must end. Cir. You must retire; these Sacred Mysteries, With Reverence we conceal from common Eyes. Tho. My Soul is with some mighty Fate oppressed, My Heart does pant and struggle in my Breast. I feel, I know not what, that says I am For one that Loves, and is a King, too tame, How weakly Reason too resists desire? And like small Showers does but augment the Fire. [Ex. all but Circe and her Women. The Scene opens to the inward part of the Cave. The Infernal Priests Enter. Sung by Circe's Women at the Infernal Sacrifice. Priests join in the Chorus. WE must assemble by a Sacrifice Those Demons who do range about the Skies. Their necessary aid you use, Those poisonous Herbs and Roots to choose, Which mingled, and prepared by your strong Art, Do to your Charms, their chiefest Force impart. Your Censors to the Altar take, And with Arabian Gums sweet Odours make. The Air, with Music gently wound, Sweet smells they love, and every pleasing sound. Cir. The straggling Demons, Harmony can fix, Calls home the Senses of the Lunatics, And which is most, in Temples does prepare, And can assemble Man's wild thoughts to Prayer. They all walk up to the Altar. Priests Sing. I. COme every Daemon who o'resees The Fates of mighty Monarchies, And orders how they rise and set, All you who Love and Lust inspire, And kindle wild Ambition's Fire, The dangerous Sickness of the Great. Chor. Circe, the Daughter of the Sun obey, Or in his guilded Beams you ne'er shall play. II. You who hatch Factions in the Court, Sedition in the meaner sort, Amongst the Pious, holy Strife, Tumults in Camps, in Senate's too, Those discords which the good undo, All, all that wait on humane life. Chor. Circe, the Daughter of the Sun obey, Or in his guilded Beams you ne'er shall play. Enter four Spirits. Cir. Bring me the juice of every Plant Which grows in those infectious Shades, Where Nature hid, corrupts or fades: Of all that temperate heat, or moisture want. Bring me the lustful Motacilla's blood, And Vervain against Thunder good. The juice of baneful Aconite: The black and melancholy qualities of these, By sympathy, the God of Darkness please, Whom I must raise up to his hated light. [Exit one of the Spirits. Sung by one of Circe's Women alone. Lover's, who to their first Embraces go, Are slow and languishing, compared to you; In speed you can outdo the winged Wind, And leave, even Thought, creeping and tired behind. A Spirit rises, and lays a Jarre at Circe's feet. Sung by Circe's Women. BEhold, quick as thy thought, Th' Ingredients of thy Spells are brought, By which thy dismal Business must be wrought. Great Minister of Fate, In this deep Cave you sit in State, Famine and Pestilence about you wait; At your dread Word they fly through every Land, Whilst their fierce undiscerning rage, Does pity neither Sex nor Age. Death is as blind as Love, at your command. Chorus. Each Plant and Herb have all their poison sent; On what new mischief is your Magic bent? Cir. Whilst on the Earth this Juice I pour, [To the Magicians. And that the Priests their solemn Anthem sing, Do you tread on this holy flour, Those mystic Figures, sacred to th' Infernal King. [Magicians dance. A Priest sings alone. PLuto, arise! From those blessed shades where Kings, and Lovers are, Where those no torment have from State and Care; And these feel not the torment of Despair. The Second Part of the Dance. PLuto, arise! From thy blessed Kingdom of Equality, Where Birth, Wealth, Beauty have no tyranny, Where all Mankind are fellow-slaves to thee. Scene Fifth. The Earth opens, Pluto arises in a Chariot drawn by Black Horses. Circe, Pluto, Priests, Spirits. Plut. Why do you call me from Eternal night? Unwilling to the world's more guilty might? Cir. I do conjure thee, by her conquering Eyes Which even had power to make a God their prize, Pity those Lovers, who endure more pain, Than all the Damned thy Empire does contain. Vouchsafe in Fates mysterious Books to read, What for my Son and Husband is decreed. Plu. 'Tis destined by a power which Gods obey, That both should meet a cruel fate this day. Cir. Each word has been a thousand deaths to me, Ah take my Soul to the dark Shades with thee! Plu. Great Circe weep no more, Love shakes his Dart, The lawful terror of each noble heart, And cries aloud, what Deity can dare, Proscribe those slaves who my blessed fetters wear? I'll punish all, by fatal Styx he swears; And this he spoke with Frowns, but more with Tears. The Gods like fearful Senates, all debate, And their harsh Sentence strive to moderate. Cir. Just Heaven! Plu. — Love from the Gods at last obtained, That by one means their safety may be gained This day two Noble Youths from Argos come, Who travel hither by Apollo's doom. Let one, according to your Empire's law, Be offered to Diana Taurica. If one of these a Sacrifice be made, They may the Sentence of the Gods evade. Whom your fair Priestess chooses, let him fall, A bloody Victim to atone for all. I can no more endure this hated light, She waves her Wand, and he descends. Restore me to the peaceful arms of night. Cir. This to the King, and to my Son relate, [To the Priests. Do you th'arrival of these Strangers wait, [To the Spirits. And so contrive that by some powerful Charms, They be deprived of all defensive arms. Ex. Priests and Spirits. With anger and revenge I've played too long, Now it is time that I resent my wrong. Perfidious King, I have resolved thy Fate, Thy Iphigenia too shall share my hate. Sullen and dark the Planets all appear! As if some dismal Fate were hatching there, Some mighty ill is threatened to us all, Witness you Gods! I do not fear to fall; But I'll not die alone: At Death I'd smile, were all the world to be my Funeral Pile. [Exit. ACT II. Scene the Grecian Fleet. Orestes, Pylades. Oars. THIS is that happy place, my generous Friend; Where 'tis declared my Miseries shall end; Those miseries which had battered down this Fort, But that their shock you help me to support: I do, in our harmonious friendship, find Music to charm the frenzy of my Mind. Py. Useless is all my friendly art and care, What I would heal is festered by despair; Within yourself a solemn Court you call, And at each hour by your own Sentence fall; Condemning an unhappy Parricide, Whom all the world would have absolved beside. No more in these dark Clouds of grief appear. Orst. 'Tis, Pylades, the shape which Guilt should wear. A Mother's name should have had power to charm With sacred Reverence my guilty Arm: Ah! though she did my Royal Father kill, And stain his Bed, she was my Mother still, I should have left her to the Powers Divine, Justice was Heaven's Prerogative, not mine. Py. heavens' distant power ill men but little fear, Who must be kept in awe by what is near; They impudently sin, because they know The Good to heavens' slow Court of Justice go, And Judgements are so long in coming thence, That guilt may Weary praying Innocence: Think not the Gods, like lazy Monarchs, give To their bold Subjects their Prerogative; Heaven, had it thought that great revenge its due, Would ne'er have let it been usurped by you. Orestes. This Region is that famous Temples seat, Where men with humane blood their Goddess treat. To end my griefs it is, perhaps, decreed That on Diana's Altar I should bleed. My Pylades! this dismal place forsake; You may perhaps the Second Victim make. Ah fly! this morning Sacrifice declares That Scythia's bloody Zeal no Stranger spares. Py. Ah my dear friend! [Pylades sighs. Orestes. — What does your sorrow mean? Py. Would I had ne'er the fatal Temple seen, They had performed the holy Rites before Your thoughtful steps had reached the Temple Door. A lovely Youth did at the Altar bow, Garlands, and manly Grace adorned his Brow; When a bright Virgin with a solemn pace, All drowned in tears approached the holy place. How beauteous was her Grief! the dress she wore Declared that she the bloody office bore; She took the crooked Knife, and gave the wound; The murdered Victim panted on the ground. Whilst I did something in my Bosom feel, That wounded deeper than the sacred Steel. Orestes. Defend your Heart, that must not be a Prize To any, but your Iphigenia's Eyes. The Oracle at Delphos did declare I should recover that lost Sister here; Heaven has pronounced that she must be your Bride, Fate has the sacred Knot already tied. Py. No, no, my heart is from my Bosom flown, And I am false to you and friendship grown. Our Eyes at last, to perfect my defeat, With trembling pleasure, and confusion meet. Her lovely paleness hasty blushes died, And she with haste those blushes strove to hide: But sudden grief benighted soon her Eyes; I trembled to behold the Tempest rise. She wept, and pointed to the Temple Door, She showed her hands all stained with humane Gore, As if she meant I should that Temple fly, At whose sad Altar wretched Strangers die. Orestes. I that last action saw, and did advance To wake your senses from so deep a Trance. I saw the Priestess, and her fatal view, Did Clytaemnestra to my mind renew, I did, with wonder, in her lovely Face The well known features of my Mother trace; I then reflected on my former guilt, And on the Blood my impious rage had spilled. Py. In peace your Mother in her Urn does rest, A horrid Music in the Air. Let not her memory disturb your Breast Sung by Furies. I. THis impious Breast, you Furies fill With all that Hell of horror does contain. Gnaw, Gnaw his Heart, you Scorpions still. But from himself he feels the sharpest pain. But from himself he feels the sharpest pain. II. For any other humane Crime, Tears and Repentance may Oblations be, But nothing shall atone for him. The damned may sooner pardon find than he, The damned may sooner pardon find than he. Orestes. Hark Pylades! me every Fiend▪ of Hell With my black Parricide reproaches still: See the Adulterer Aegisthus, there, And my unhappy Mother's forms appear. Pyl. I fear his mind, inflamed by active Thought, Is to its former Rage and Fever wrought. Orestes. Oh can there be no expiation made? What have I offered to appease thy shade? Mother! and piteous Heaven! forget my crime, Or you'll more cruel than Orestes seem. Tie up your Scorpions you Eumenideses! Whom I'll with blood of pregnant Ewes appease. Pyl. You entertain yourself with shapeless Air, Nor have you any guilt but this Despair. Oars. Bankrupt is man, unless kind Heaven will take Repentance, all the payment we can make. The heavens' open, Iris appears on the Rainbow, and sings. SONG. I. CEase valiant Hero! cease to grieve; The Gods thy Prayers, and Penitence receive: You cannot sin so fast as they forgive. II. All the attempts of Hell are vain, O'er that, and grief, you shall the conquest gain, A Pardon your unwilling Crimes obtain. III. You Spirits made of Air refined, With pleasing objects cheer his clouded mind; No footsteps leave of former guilt behind. A Dance of the Winds. Oars. My thoughts are become calm, and quiet now; As first they were e'er I to guilt did bow. Pyl. Try by soft slumbers to delude your care. What pleasant sounds are these which bless the air? A pleasant Symphony. They sweeter to my ravished Sense appear, Than yielding Whispers to a Lover's ear. Orestes and Pylades seat themselves on a Rock; Sirens rise out of the Sea and sing. SONG. I. AH how happy are we! Who from business, that graver folly, are free; Let us Love, though the sober should blame us. A curse on the Wise, They need not advise, Age makes too much haste to reclaim us. II. Let us carelessly move In the riots of Wit, and follies of Love, Our age does to pleasure invite us; But when we are old And our Blood grows cold, Not Art nor Fifteen can incite us. [Sirens descend, and leave them asleep as enchanted. Scene Second. Enter Circe, Spirits appear. Cir. You have outdone my wish, but to your care One thing remains, than you are free as Air. The King grows wicked, and does now begin But faintly to resist th' invading sin. Assist his tottering Virtue to o'erthrow, He must with greater haste be wicked now. Bait your temptations with all cunning Arts, Which Lust insinuates when it poisons Hearts, Our Priestess he must ravish; that black crime Serves my designs to ruin her and him. One stained with Lust, my Son must needs despise, Then he may yield to fair Osmida's Eyes. Spir. Such poison to his Virtue shall be given, That it shall even be past the Cure of Heaven. Cir. Diana! We have now thy Victim here, Looking on the Strangers. How goodly and Majestic they appear! Two Godheads in that Face their Revels keep, The God of Love, and peaceful God of Sleep. Both in their gayest Robes— He's manly, as the World's first Hero's were, ere Nature was debauched by vice or care: His Eyes shut up, a kindly Spring appear, Foretelling pleasures in the opening year: Oh how I burn! he must have conquering eyes, Who in neglectful sleep can thus surprise. Ye Gods! If in this warlike shape I find A daring courage, and an active mind, One that had rather Mighty be than Just, He may supply my Anger, and my Lust. I'm of my Pageant Monarch weary grown; He fills my Bed as idly as the Throne. Scene Third. Enter Thoas, Iphigenia, Guards, who bind and disarm the Strangers▪ My dearest Lord, behold the Strangers here [Seeing the King. Enchanted lie, and we no more shall fear. It seems that they unseen amongst the crowd This day, with us, to great Diana bowed: Since, from the Temple they are hither brought, And in the Fetters of my Magic caught. Iph. As I this day the holy Rites performed, A Youth with strange success my bosom stormed. His Image busy in my Heart I feel: Guard him, you Angels, from their cruel zeal: Tho. These Strangers, like dark clouds hang o'er our Fate, Which to be safe we now must dissipate. Circe, we must resolve that one of these Shall by his fall the angry Gods appease. Iph. I'll see no more, let Death benight my Eye; [Seeing Pyl. bound. There, there, the Noble Youth enchanted lies: Why would he in this fatal Country stay? My tears and sighs did bid him haste away. Wake! wake! unhappy Strangers! who are lost On this unhospitable cruel Coast. You must no more your freedom hope to have, Than they who are Death's prisoners in the Grave. Still one of those who touch our barbarous shore, We offer to the Goddess we adore. Oars. Surprised and bound; come to the Altar lead, You do but what Heavens justice has decreed. Tho. I'm forced by Custom, that unwritten Law, By which the People keep, even Kings in awe, To give this doom, for which you calmly wait: To dies's the easiest action of the Great. Pyl. Thy Sceptre Prince extends not to this place, The shore is common to all humane Race. We're Princes too above all Laws, but those Which Heaven, and Nature's silent Powers impose. Tho. 'Tis by her Laws you are my Captives now, For Nature's Laws do all to force allow. Cir. King's must not argue what is right or wrong; Such little Scruples to the Gown belong. Tho. This beauteous Maid is Mistress of your Fate, From her fair Mouth each must his Sentence wait. One for the Sacrifice she must decree; The Rites performed, we set the other free. Pyl. If Death does in so fair a form appear, No Mortal sure can its approaches fear. I thought that Death could only beauteous show In active Battles, in its Scarlet hue. With eager toils I oft have sought it there, But find it glorious now to beg it here. Iph. Sir, can you die? does not even Virtue dread To reach the doubtful Mansions of the Dead? Pyl. Danger and Death in Camps I learned to court, In Camps, where Death's rough business is a sport. Save my brave Friend; me for the Victim take, Whom growing worth does not so useful make. Iph. But whilst you plead for him, I blush to say, Your Virtue leads my choice another way: With more success you for yourself might sue, Since my own Heart would join to plead for you. Pyl. That trifle, Life, I stoop not to desire, Th' ambition of my Prayers will mount up higher. Iph Ask, ask apace, so fast I lavish all, I shall have nothing to be liberal. Cir. No, no, let them the first advances make, [Looking on Orestes. And give kind looks whom Love and Youth forsake. If I speak first, may I become the sport Of all, and like stale Beauties of the Court Be forced unwilling Lovers to invite, Woo all young handsome Men, and buy delight. Pyl. Madam, I beg that I to Death may go, But I would fain expire beloved of you; For, Indian-like, I to the Shades below, Would with the richest of my Treasures go. Iph. The Airy part of Bliss you humbly crave, When all its richest substance you may have. You may ask all, my heart does give so fast, I fear 'twill give itself away at last. Pyl. Ah, speak again, and bless my ravished Ears. Iph. — I blush to own That you are here so soon victorious grown; But Heaven, methoughts, bade me receive the Dart, And told me 'twas a Crime to guard my Heart. When in the Temple you to day appeared, You saw how kindly I your safety feared, And bade you fly, but you shall never feel The sad effects of our tyrannic Zeal; Against their rage I will your Life defend, And grieve I cannot save your Noble Friend. Pyl. Arm, arm your Eyes with all that Lovers fear; Let me see Fierceness, Scorn and Hatred there; Love, and your Beauty, make Life seem so sweet, That I shall fear Death's horrid shape to meet; You'll make me fear him even in the Field, Where he does lasting Fame and Laurels yield. Cir. Beauty did first teach Mankind to obey, Whilst he that soft Enchanter did survey. [Looking on Orestes. The Nets of Power surprised the wondering Prey. Sir, though by Custom I am cruel grown, [To Orestes. For you I something soft and tender own. Brave Stranger! it would much my pity move, Should all the hopes of you abortive prove, And perish now, whilst yet they're in Fates Womb, Before they can to their just ripeness come. Oars. Madam, should I your pity need, 'twould be, If for the Victim she refuses me. Weary of Life, Death's sleep I long to take, And shall be froward, whilst I'm kept awake. Cir. You with the Sweets of Youth contend to die, From which, even Age, would on its crutches fly. Love, only Love has Charms enough to keep The Soul from coveting that tedious sleep. Oars. Love has been still a stranger to my Breast; Glory and Arms have all my thoughts possessed; Fame I have courted as the only good, And waded to her through vast Seas of Blood; But of the World I now am weary grown, And in Death's quiet Cell would lay me down. Tho. The bloody Queen does in this Stranger find, Observing Circe. Something that troubles her imperious mind. Of all its fierceness she disarms her Face, She languishes, and softens every Grace. Cir. They may the Power of all the World despise, [To Orestes. That bear about 'em such commanding Eyes. All that have Hearts in your defence will move Under the conduct of victorious Love. I speak too much, and fear my Eyes declare Much more: Heroic Youth, you need not fear: This tenderness I must with blushes own; My very Heart is your Defender grown: And you are safe, unless the Scythians dare Assault a Life their Queen designs to spare. Enter Ithacus. Oh! I have talked, and looked away my Heart: [Aside. His careless Graces vanquish more than Art. Ith. Princes be just enough to think I grieve, That I can only fruitless pity give. Though to this Crown Heaven has united me, I've no alliance with its cruelty. Tho. Haste to the Temple, where the people wait, In greedy expectation of their Fate. Death's solemn business, they with pleasure see, As if 'twere but a Pageant Tragedy. Cir. The fatal choice depends on the rough King, Whom I with Art must to my Party bring. Iph. 'Twere better Scythia did no Godhead know, Than by its ignorance profane it so. Me thinks Religion's Sacred Mysteries, Should never be exposed but to the Wise. [Ex. all but Circe and Thoas. Scene Fourth. Circe, Thoas. Cir. Some great Design is labouring in my mind, Which is not to proportion yet refined. One of these Strangers the blessed means shall be, To make my Son regain his Liberty. Tho. Effect that happy Cure, that Scythia may, To your great Art, eternal homage pay. Circ. You shall know all when that to form is brought, Which yet is indigested in my thought. Observed you him, who with a thoughtful brow, Appeared beneath some heavy Fate to bow; His Eyes seemed Sorrows high-Majestick Seat, Where it appears both terrible and great. Tho. How she describes him with a warm delight! [Aside. And in her thoughts, enjoys him in my sight. Cir. Your strict commands to Iphigenia give, That she should let that Noble Stranger live. His Life will much to my Designs conduce, She, for the Sacrifice; his Friend must choose. Tho. Methinks a secret sympathy I find, By which I'm rather to that Friend inclined. His open mind is apter to receive Any impression your Designs would give. Save him, an unsuspecting mind he bears, Th' other untractable, and rough appears. Cir. We like experienced Statesmen disagree, And each has Reason for his Policy. I many great and powerful Reasons have, To choose that Stranger I would have you save. Tho. You act by odd and secret means, like Heaven, To which a blind obedience must be given. I will resign our Fortunes to your care, And Iphigenia for the choice prepare. Cir. It will a height'ning to my pleasures be, That my own Husband should procure for me. Now let me hasten to prepare the place, Where I my beauteous Stranger must embrace. I hope he's innocent, unpractised yet In all the wicked and false Arts of Wit; Bashful and kind, I love to tame the Strong; Mock the Experienced, and instruct the Young. [Exit. Thoas alone. Tho. Yes lustful Queen! my Power shall rescue him; By Heaven I'm made the Pander to her crime. How insolent and careless is her Pride? She will not stoop her black Designs to hide; In all her Crimes she would be something kind, Did she, with care the jealous Husband blind. In the Election, Iphigenia's hand Obeys with humble Duty my command. Stranger thou diest; it is the fate of all, Who in the Fetters of her Beauty fall. [Exit. ACT III. Scene the Temple of Diana Taurica. Iphigenia, Osmida. Iph. WHat danger should not helpless Virgins fear From Lust, which is by Power protected here. Your Father weary of all Virtue grown, Does now aloud his guilty passion own. The Tempest of his Soul does hou'rly rise; He threatens Rapes and Murder with his Eyes. I am a wretched Thing without defence, And fly to you the Heaven of Innocence, Your Arms are persecuted Virtue's guard, You love th' oppressed, and Chastity reward. Here I will ever weep; my Honour save; [Embracing Osmida. Let me at least go spotless to the Grave. Osm. My dearest Ithigenia do not weep, Under my Wings you shall securely sleep. Tho' like your conquering Eyes your Virtue be, Unhappy Virgin! fatal still to me; Since they do both with so rich lustre shine, That they eclipse the fainter light of mine. Scene Second. Enter Ithacus. Approach my Tyrant! none does love like me; A Rivals fall others with triumph see; But I with tenderness for mine can fear, And, against all, in her defence appear. Against the oppression of my Father too, Who would the ruin of her Fame pursue. Iph. How peaceful was this place? how calm you were, Till Iphigenia's sad arrival here? Death quickly shall benight these fatal Eyes, Th' unhappy Authors of your Miseries. Ith. Rather than entertain his Love, expire; It were a Crime your safety to desire. In this long Journey I the way will lead, And trace you out the path which you must tread: A full reward for all my pains I have, If we're at last united in the Grave. Osm. Ah cruel Ithacus! 'tgrieve me less, Should you such kindness with your Eyes express; Enough, one look, or glance, in Love can plead; Too well your Heart she in your Eyes may read. But whilst by words your passion you declare, You wound my Soul too deeply through my Ear. What Magic can you in her Beauty see, Rather to die with her than live with me. [Weep. Iph. He must not die, but here a Prisoner stay, Till he a mighty debt of Love does pay. Osm. Alas! his Heart must now a Bankrupt be For he has lavished all that wealth on thee, And nothing, nothing does remain for me. Distressed alike we all to Death will go: We shall not in Death's blessed Dominions know The cares which mortal Lovers feel below. Iph. Thy cruel Heart cannot such goodness move; Go! for a Pardon kneel! repent, and love. You Powers! that cherish Virtue, and prepare Those dreadful Thunders which the wicked fear; Can you be never weary to forgive? Shall this ungrateful Prince for ever live? Osm. Now I must chide thy zeal that dares to move In so profane a rage against my Love. I can forgive him, let us charm our grief, And for our miseries seek some relief. With tender joy the King will hear me speak; I'll show him the black crime without disguise, Kings are but bad, because few dare advise. [A martial Music. Iph. We have new griefs, the Martial sounds we hear, Declare the sad Procession to be near. Osm. But common blood had yet our Altar fed, Which was, like that of Beasts, unpitied shed; But these brave Youths seem rather Deities, That might expect, not be a Sacrifice. Iph. The sad election is already made, Where I, the King— or rather Love obeyed. [Aside. The Priests, the Captive Strangers, and the King Into the Temples holiest part we bring; I made my choice, and bade the Pophae bind That Youth, whom for Victim I designed; We swore our Temples Laws should be fulfilled, And the Great Victim at the Altar killed. Osm. But did the Grecians with firm Virtue wait The unjust stroke of their approaching Fate? Iph. All that the Strangers did was great and brave; Each begged to die, and would the other save: My Sentence passed just as I crowned the Head Of him who to the Altar must be lead. Cold trembling ceased me, and did stop my breath; All appeared gloomy, as the Shades of Death. And in this Trance me thoughts a Sacred Voice, With dreadful words seemed to upbraid my choice; My Father's reverend Ghost did then appear, All stained with Blood, whilst I dissolved with fear; It cried aloud, mourn Iphigenia, mourn! Thou hast disturbed my Ashes in their Urn; Unhappy Maid! thou art about a Deed, At which the Earth will groan, and Nature bleed. This said, the angry Form dissolved to Air; I fear our Stars some dismal fate prepare. Osm. I'll from this dismal Scene retire, and pray In some close Shade, weeping our sins away. [Ex. Osm. Scene Fourth. Enter Circe. Cir. Death, and confusion! I am lost, betrayed, For ever lost, where is this cruel Maid? Enter four Spirits. Perfidious King! my careless Spirits appear! More than ten thousand Hells my anger fear. Weep Iphigenia! 'tis a mighty cause, That from these Eyes such Streams of Sorrow draws. Iph. Ah speak, what have I done, that I must pay So many Tears to wash the guilt away. Cir. Lust, Zeal, Ambition, never did incline The blackest Monster to a Crime like thine. Ah Iphigenia! what did guide thy hand To make that fatal choice? the King's command? Iph. In the election I the King obeyed. Cir. Curse on my Folly, we are both betrayed; Know then, Orestes, Agamemnon's Son, Who ranged about the World himself to shun. That Noble Relic of thy glorious Race, Is by the Priests conducted to this place; Crowned and prepared to die, condemned by thee. Iph. My Brother! Heavens! Cir. The wretched Victim see; The Scene opens to the inward part of the Temple; Orestes is discovered crowned, as to the Sacrifice; with him Diana's Priests bearing her Images, Pylades, Guards and Attendants. Weep till thy sorrows drown the World and me. Iph. Arise! arise you vapours of the Night: Hide me: alas! I dread that fatal sight. Oars. My Iphigenia in thy breast receive [Embracing. That joyful Soul which will my bosom leave. Iph. Dear Brother haste! from Death and me escape, Fly your ill Genius in a Sister's shape. Oars. Ah let me now expire, since I have seen Her for whose sake I have a Stranger been To Greece, and happy rest, me thinks 'tis sweet, Though we do here in Death's sad Region meet. Iph. Why did I beg of Heaven to see this hou'r? Oh! that you had been shipwrecked on our shore; You have escaped the dangers of the Sea, It's Rocks and storms, to perish here by me. Oars. Weep not for me, for I deserve no tears; I have outlived my virtue many years; 'Tis time that I should die: your sorrow keep For those whose fall 'tis Piety to weep. Thank every God that in this distant place You saw not the misfortunes of our race; In Death's cold arms our Royal parents lie. Iph. Of this confused reports did hither fly, And to their sacred shades a Tomb I made, Where the Oblations to the dead I paid. We must defraud past miseries to pay The tribute which we owe the present day: For my dead Parents I can weep no more, Brother, I must my present loss deplore. Oars. Do not the dying with such sorrow treat, For fear the World believe that Life is sweet. Iph. Cities are formed for Peace, and civil Rule; Nature in Deserts keeps a gentler School. No impious Beast preys there on his own kind: Tigers the Tigers spare, my rage is blind, All things but I her sacred Laws obey; On my own blood my hungry rage does prey; My hand will soon be armed against your life, Th' officious Priests prepare the fatal Knife. Oars. Let them come on! but e'er to death I go, The Will of dying Agamemnon know, Behold that Prince, [Pointing to Pylades. Iph. — Still be those Eyes accursed! 'Twas there, alas! my Virtu's shipwrecked first: My better Genius never ceased to sue, A thousand other things did plead for you; But from those Eyes Love shot a poisoned Dart, All that was good fled my infected heart; Nature did plead no more, or Love was there So loud, I could no other Suppliant hear, I loved your Friend. Oars. — Blessed be the Powers above, Blessed be your choice, and ever blessed be Love; Blind as he is, he did most wisely guide, Give me your hand,— receive your gentle Bride: First to Iph. then to Pyla These Nuptials Agamemnon still designed, And that last business to my care enjoined. Iph. Ay me, you Gods! Oars. — For ever happy be, My Empire, Pylades, I leave to thee; Blessed be thy Counsels, at thy Palace Gate May Victory with all her Trophies wait. Cir. Think not of Death, all Nature first shall die, And in her primitive confusion lie. Scene six. Enter Thoas and Ithacus. Tho. You must not, Iphigenia, weep alone, I from the Priests have your sad story known; Let us unite our grief, unhappy Maid! By me and Heaven to a black crime betrayed. Cir. You cheaply to these Strangers pity give, Whom you by solid bounties should relieve. My Lord, what led you to this dire mistake? Is this, alas! the choice I bade you make? Tho. His sentence now is past, and he must die, That other Strangers may your use supply. [Pointing to Pyl. Cir. Alas, he cannot! Tho. — Gods dare you proclaim To me, and all the World your guilty flame. Thou lov'st him Queen! This beauteous stranger must Serve the important business of thy lust. Cir. Old men who no strong proofs of Love can show, Fly to their last reserve, and jealous grow, As lazy Monarchs, who the main neglect, Think they are wise enough if they suspect: We from young Lovers Jealousy may bear; Those are but April storms, 'twill soon be clear: But can we bear a tempest from the old? Whose kindest season is too rough and cold. Recall thy Youth, and then presume to be Jealous of so Divine a Good as me. Iph. Ah, my dread Lord! though you deny relief, Do not refuse this privilege to grief. Goes to kneel, Thoas strives to take her up. Tho. 'Tis Love's, and my prerogative to sue, Iph. Here I must weep till I have melted you; But oh! methinks those Eyes do fiercely move, Not with the soft humility of Love: Stern Majesty sits like a Tyrant there, And threatens murder, ruin and despair. Cir. She needs must vanquish, Love her Standard bears, And Beauty's wondrous eloquent in tears. Iph. You in revenge my Brother's fall decree, 'Tis guilt enough to be allied to me: My fatal pride, and my unjust disdain, Which has beheld you sigh so long in vain, Deserves a thousand tortures; let 'em come, I'll humbly on my knees receive my doom; Yes, let me to those cruel Racks be led, Where dying Wretches envy all the dead; Where bloody Tyrants feast their Tyrant death, Amongst those torments let me yield my breath; And if those pains too mild and gentle prove, Bring in the torment of despairing Love: Call Jealousy, and all that Mortals fear, Invent a thousand more, and fix 'em here, But spare my Brother. Tho. — Ah, that power I want! This is the only thing I cannot grant. Iph. Nothing, ah! nothing his fierce heart can move, How false is the Idolatry of Love? What adoration have you paid these Eyes? You called 'em heavens', and yet their tears despise; I do conjure you by these tears, by all That we can tender, brave, or virtuous call, By your dead Mother's Ghost, some mercy show. Tho. I must be cruel; Heavn's unerring voice Bade us this day be careful in our choice, Pronouncing a most dismal fate to all, Unless that Victim at their Altar fall. Ith. Let's scorn what e'er the Oracle did say, We should no Deity, but Love obey. Cir. If he be saved the Gods have all decreed [Aside. That with the rest my dearest Son must bleed. But has a Rebel merited that name? Who dares betray his glory and my fame? My Son! by Heaven I will disown my blood, He does degenerate by being good: My high designs his virtue does defeat; The virtuous Coward never dares be great. But can a Mother's Eyes behold him dead? He is my Son, and in my bosom bred. Bold Love, against thy Life a Mother arms, And bids her save that Grecian by her charms. Tho. Double the Guards about the Temple Gate, And bring the noble Stranger to his fate. Cir. Compassion, what have I to do with thee? [Aside. Trouble the foolish, and the good, not me. Why do the Gods by halves let us be ill? Leaving some goodness to afflict us still. Iph. Here I invoke all that the world adores; [Kneels. Ye Gods of Heaven, and you Infernal Powers, thou, Sacred Image, and my Father's shade, Come and behold a poor afflicted Maid, Oppressed with crimes, she here devoutly bows, But scorn her Prayers, be deaf to all her vows, If she ask aught but death. Oars. — Ah! Sister, live, Do not the World of all that's good deprive; Be Virtu's Martyr, should the good, like thee, All covet Death, who would Examples be? Iph. The actions of the living never plead, We envy them, but still respect the Dead: I'll die, and will a great Example show Of what the erring World to Nature owe: Yes, I will leave this World, where Innocence Cannot be safe, much less be a defence. But what's that lasting home we strive to reach, Which our Religious Guides so darkly preach? [Too Pyl. Pyl. Heaven is a place where all are fair like you, All sigh for Love, the Lovers all are true. Tho. Go seek a shade dark as the Grave, and there Weep while this Tragic Pomp is acting here. [Guards force away Iph. Oars. Renown and Arms farewell; come, Priests draw near, Prepare the Sacred Knife and fix it here. Cir. Have you no mercy, Sir? Tho. — My anger fly, Dare but weep and both of you shall die. Cir. His Eyes must be eclipsed, his charming Eyes: Yes, my faint heart, thy Sacred Idol dies. Love, thou canst make all Nature bold but me, What did the great Medea do for thee? She lost her Father, young Absyrtus slew, And with bold Jason from her Country flew. I love as strongly as Medea could, And am as skilful in the trade of blood; If any kindness of the Mother rest, It shall be quickly banished from my breast. Let lust, and rage, humanity succeed, Rather than thee all humane kind shall bleed. Inspirers, and performers of each ill! Infernal Powers! be ready to my will; I will the life of my Orestes save, Or bury him and Nature in one Grave. [Exit Circe. Orestes goes up the Altar with Pylades. There is an entry of Priests. SONG. By the Priests. I. OH! Heavenly Virgin! from thy Starry Throne, Look down on Scythia, thy most holy Seat! Our Arms, with Victory, and Trophies, crown, 'Tis easy to be Good, when we are Great. II. 'Tis just Mankind should at thy Altar bleed, Who thy small Empire, Chastity, invade, Whatever happy Lover does succeed, From chaste Diana's Province steals a Maid. Sung again. O cheated Mortals! what has Life of sweet? Who is contented with the present day, Our present joy is a vain hope we may, From the next hour, some ease and pleasure meet. That Courtier, Life, does feed Poor Mortals with a hope they shall succeed. We will be wise, and die, prepare the sacred Knife, Farewell! farewell! thou valued trifle, Life. Chorus of Priests. Wound, wound the Victim, pierce his Sacred Breast, A Dance of Combatants. And give his labouring Soul eternal rest. Wound, wound, etc. [It Thunders. As they go to kill Orestes, two Dragons rise out of the Earth, and bear him away; Circe appears in a Chariot drawn by Dragons. Tho. This is the Queen, oh! let me reach her heart, ere She delude our Anger by her art. How feeble is thy rage! I am above All hurts, but those which I receive from Love. Tho. I'll find thee Sorceress, though thou fliest to Hell, Though you should both, with death and darkness dwell. Cir. No Kings do ever at bold ills connive, And what they dare not punish they forgive. I'll fly to my enchanted Palace, where I'll lose no bliss, for any thought of fear. [Flies away. Tho. You Gods revenge me, Clouds swell big and break, Why does not Heaven in its loud Thunder speak? Meet her you Light'ning, in her Magic flight; But Heaven denies to do the injured right; My swelling rage, in privacy I'll shroud, And not un-King my self before the Crowd. [Exeunt omnes. ACT IU. Scene, Circe's Enchanted Palace, with a beautiful Garden, in the middle is seen the Hill Parnassus, on which Orpheus is discovered playing on his Lute, while Orestes is sleeping on a Bed of Flowers, with Circe's Women singing about him. SONG. Sung by Circe's Women. I. SIgh Lovers, sigh! The God of Love inspires Kind gentle thoughts, and warm desires, See! the Winds blow, the Flowers move: 'Tis Nature that does sigh for Love. II. Hark! hark! the Birds! Alas, they do not sing To welcome in the beauteous Spring, But in their untaught Notes complain Of Love, our Universal pain. Oars. The dreams of Trophies, and victorious Arms, Of future Fame, have not such pleasing charms. [Waking Why did you, Sacred Choir, the happy wake? This gentle sleep let me for ever take. How was I from the fatal Altar caught, And by what Magic was I hither brought? This is the Region of the Spring, and here It forms the beauties of a kindly year; Sure I am dead, and these delicious things Are the divine rewards which Virtue brings: In the cool shades of this eternal Grove The Hero rests from all the pains of Love. Scene Second. Enter Circe. Cir. This sweets of youth, and ever blooming Spring, The joys of Plenty, Peace and Health I bring; For Love, and all his soft delights prepare; Be kind as unexperienced Virgins are. Orestes. Sure I have seen before that lovely Face, Bright fair! are you the Goddess of this place? Or some dead Lover doomed to wander here, For Death's calm Mansion these fresh shades appear. Cir. I am a Mortal by the Powers above, Placed here to teach the gentle arts of Love. Orestes. That Tyrant needs to choose no other Eyes; When he would triumph o'er the brave and wise. She's killing fair. Cir. — Hero! I come to blame Thy wild ambition, and thy thirst of fame; Nature did Youth for softer things design, For love and pleasures, and in Courts to shine. Your Warlike Trumpets still so loud have blown, The gentle voice of Love was heard by none. Fold up your Ensigns, rest from toils of War; Come slumber in the bosom of the fair. Oars. But must not Youth aspire to that renown, With which the War does daring Valour crown? Cir. Young Soldier! go, o'errun the World with War, Seek every place where Death and dangers are; A brave Destroyer you at last return, Whose fatal courage makes whole Empires mourn. Oars. What Sacred Powers this tenderness inspire? Kind amorous thoughts damp all my Warlike fire. Cir. Beauty ador'nd with all its arts to please Little complaints, and tender jealousies, Prepares, Heroic Youth, delights for thee, Sweeter than Triumph after Victory. Oars. In what vain Mists all the Ambitious move! There is not any Solid good, but Love. Cir Can all the Laurels of a bloody Field, Such pleasures as a snowy bosom yield. Behold a Melting fair with dying Eyes, Who sighs, and pants, whose Breasts do gently rise; With open arms, that Spoiler, Love does meet, And bids him boldly rifle every sweet. [Embracing Orestes] SONG. By Circe's Women. I. YOung Phaon strove the bliss to taste, But Sapph still denied, He struggled long, the Youth at last Lay panting by her side. II. Vseless he lay, Love would not wait Till they could both agree, They idly languished in debate, When they should active be. III. At last come ruin me she cried And then there fell a Tear, I'll in thy Breast my blushes hide, Do all that Virgin's fear. IV. Oh! that Age could Lov'es rites perform We make old men obey, They court us long, Youth does but storm, And Plunder and away. Oars. How fast I languish! and how soon I love! More swiftly than Youths common pace I move. Armies when they begin to disobey, And fearful grow, melt not so fast away Before the Foe that pushes on the day. Cir. We should improve what does so little last, We flow (alas) but late, and ebb too fast. Orpheus sings. GIve me my Lute, in thee some ease I find, Eurydice is dead And to that dismal Country fled Where allis sad, and gloomy, as my mind. II. The world has nothing worth a Lover's care, None now by Rivers weep: Verse, and the Lute are both asleep; All women now are false, and few are fair. III. Thy Sceptre, Love, shall o'er o'er the Aged be; Lay by the useless Darts, For all our Youth will guard their hearts, And Scorn thy fading Empire taught by me. IV. Beauty the Thracian Youth no more shall move, Now they shall sigh no more, But all my noble Verse adore, It has more graces than the Queen of Love. A soft Symphony. The Heavens open, Cupid descends upon Parnassus, and sings. Cup. HOw dull is all the world! that none should move, In the cause of injured Love, The bad are safe, Hervn's idle Thunder tears Mountains, but the guilty spares. Mortal our holy Altars than shall be! Ever thus profaned by thee. If Poets beauties faithful Train rebel, Vows, and incense, all farewell. How can thy noble Art ungrateful prove, Fed by beauty and by Love? Hark, hark! these Bells and Berecinthian Pipes declare That Thrace a Feast to Bacchus does prepare; The raging Bacchanals his rites fulfil, They shall revenge me, and the Rebel kill. [Enter Bacchanals. Song by the Bacchanals. FIll all the Bowls with Sprightly Wine, And let the women drink. Men visit now, are very fine Talk much and never think. Sure these follies our sex might claim as their due Since mankind incroaches On our small Debauches, New manly delights let the women pursue. This comfort poor cuckolded Ladies did find, To drown in full Bowls, The cares of their Souls, When the husband is false and the Gallant unkind. Chorus. In empty Beds we absent Lovers mourn, There sits the man that does our Empire scorn: He makes the Thracian Youth despise Warm swelling Breasts and dying Eyes. Make ready your Darts, and valiantly fling, Let him die, to his groans w'el dance and w'el sing. They fling their darts at Orpheus▪ who falls dead, they dance, than the Mountain disappears. Oars. Arms, and all warlike toil forgotten be, Thou soft enchanter, Love, I'll follow thee; Let my luxurious Eyes survey each Grace, Devour the luscious beauties of this face, [Looking on her eagerly. Which warm my blood more than the Trumpets sound, And deeper far than Wars fierce Engines wound. Cir. Officious Love shall strew us Beds of Flowers, On which w'el sport away our golden hours; There let us still with fresh desire pursue, Whatever Youth performs, and Age would do; And when we panting lie new breath to take, Music, Love's Trumpet, shall our Courage wake. Oars. Behold the Birds vanquished with fierce desire To unfrequented shades, in pairs retire: See how they melt, whilst Youth renews with haste The Banquet, greedy Love, devours so fast: Shall we less eagerly to pleasures run? Ah! pity me, Our Eyes enough have done. Cir. But will you still be true? and cast away Those other Idols you did once obey? Oars. You shall my heart without a Rival hold, And I will be more constant than the old. Cir. To some dark Grotto let us then repair, Love and my blushes fear the open Air. Scene Third. It Thunders. Enter a Spirit. Spir. Guard you the ever gentle God of Love; The King assisted by the powers above, Aided by Vesta, has dissolved your charms, And comes to force you from your Lover's arms. Fiercer than Thunder is his jealous rage, Your life alone his fury can assuage. Fled are those Phantoms, which by your command, In dreadful shapes, did at the Entrance stand. Fly, Circe, fly! nor is your Palace now By Mists and Clouds, concealed from humane view; They all are vanished, a disordered pace Will bring him soon to this unguarded place. Cir. In vain the Tyrant does my life pursue, He cannot wound my bosom but in you, Oars. From your Sweet breast all sense of fear remove, Let naught inhabit there, but joy and Love. This Sword I but for your protection wear, [Draws] How weak whole Armies of the jealous are? Compared to Lovers when they beauty guard. Cir. This tenderness alas! excuse in me I dare not let you fight for victory. My Dear, within this secret Covert stay, Goes to put him in an Arbour. Till I have talked the Tyrant's rage away. Oars. Love be no more the passion of great minds, Beauty does counsel Valour to retreat; Should all the Universe my fall conspire, I might be vanquished, but could ne'er retire Cir. Useless, alas, will all your courage prove, Fly! I conjure you by the charms of Love; The King approaches, can you disobey? Spirits ascend! and force him then away! [Spirits appear, who force Orestes into the Arbour. From baneful Weeds gather the falling Dew; [To the Spirits. My charms are finished which I must renew. Circe, this day for mighty ills prepare, Be bold as man, cruel as Women are. Scene Fourth. Enter Thoas, his Sword drawn, Guards. Tho. Where have you placed this Lover by your charms? Or is he quite dissolved within your Arms? Tremble, your fate is written in my brow, And Hell refuses to protect you now: Prepare a Thousand torments to receive, More Hells than jealousy, or conscience give. Cir, Kill me, if you grow weary of the Throne. Or, like a deity, can rule alone; Who but the mighty Circe can oppose A rapid torrent of invading Foes? Your Coward Statesmen do all danger shun, And from the Empir'es Helm in tempests run: Their counsels Senates too so long protract, The young and valiant have no time to act; Steady in Counsels I alone can be, Am quick to act, but quicker to foresee; Kill the Protect'ress of your Life and State; I fear not, and, perhaps, deserve my Fate. Tho. I must this Victim to my honour make, Though I my Throne, and all the Empire shake. Cir. But will the Senate your revenge allow? To those advising Tyrants you must bow. They, like the crowd, are managed by the wise; Backed with their Factions, I thy rage despise. Tho. I have no rage, your Eyes about 'em bear Such powerful Guards, you need no danger fear. Your Crimes— Would weary a forgiving God, but you Can all my anger with a look subdue. Now you my weakness, and your Empire know, Brave all my rage, and still more guilty grow. Injure your King, but not what we adore, Orestes to the Sacrifice restore. Cir. Those servile Flatterers who to Thrones resort, To catch at empty bounties of a Court, Are less the Slaves to interest and Gain, Fawn, and dissemble less than you who reign. Leave to your guilty Ministers of State, That servile cunning to dissemble hate; As boldly as a God revenge pursue, In that revenge be as impartial too. Tho. No, no, false Queen, I own your Eyes have charms That soften all my rage, and blunt its Arms, Though than the Wind you more unconstant are, Though you're unkind, and false, you still are fair. Cir. How weak your passion is? how rash your fears? My Lord, I am not false, believe these Tears. I can, (though you are Criminal) appear Spotless as first created Angels were. I saw you did to Iphigenia give The Tribute which my Beauty should receive, And then would punish you by Jealousy, For all the Tempests you had raised in me; And did preserve the Grecian Prince by Charms, Not to have Him, but You within my Arms. Tho. We think it merit blindly to believe Those pious falsehoods we from Priest receive. Faith is Religion's happy Lethargy, The doubting Wi●e we brand with Heresy; Husbands should more than the Religious strive, Blindly to trust, and blindly to believe. Be false till you have wearied Humane kind, I'll think you true, and still be safely blind. Cir. If you an humble sufferer are grown, I all my Love and Innocence disown. The impotent and jealous I prefer To the insipid Husband that can bear; That blood injurious to your honour spill, If you believe her false, your Circe kill; But witness chaster Powers! I am not so, I could not bad by your example grow. Tho. How blindly we believe when Beauty pleads, Which to its snares the rough and cautious leads. To his just Fate the Grecian Prince restore; You shall be true, for I'll suspect no more. Cir. My Lord, I will, and the next rising Sun Shall see that Sacrifice of horror done: Oh Sacred Bower! unfold thy leafy Arms, And be no more protected by my Charms. The Bower opens, Orestes comes out, who is▪ seized by the Guards. Tho. Go lead the guilty Traitor to his Fate, [To the Guards. But e'er you give the blow my signal wait; [Orestes▪ is led out. Empire has taught me many Arts, but you Have polished what the Throne but roughly drew; Falser than Cowards when for life they sue. I'm false as Beauty's snares, as false as you. Where is your boasted Art whom smiles deceive? The wise and guilty never should believe. From Love, at least, you might have learned the art To have preserved that Idol of your Heart; Under the Wings of Love he safely lay, Revealed all night, and sported all the day, But now lies naked to each stormy Wind, Of which Ten Thousand wrack the jealous mind. Cir. This noble jealousy for ever show, It stirs Love's dying Embers till they glow; Love would without it dull, and lazy grow, As Churches, whom no Heretics oppose, Rust into ignorance for want of Foes. The Region of your Bosom pleases me, Though rough, and stormy, like the North it be. Tho. Damn your false smiles! I'll from their poison fly; Under those Flowers, Adders and Scorpions lie. What kindness in my Bosom can there be, For such an open Prostitute as Thee? Cir. Alas! you men are artful to deceive: And our week sex is easy to believe The instruments of your tyrannic Power, Possess him now, what would your fury more? Tho. His blood, his blood! triumph my Fury! now, Exalt with joy thy bold victorious brow; And, by the Gods! he shall not fall alone, You shall for all your mighty ills atone. Death does not deal with more of humane kind, You kiss ' and breath no more thrn every Wind. Your Charms and Persons lay whole Kingdoms waste, New Autumn Plagues do not destroy so fast. Come every Ghost! whose bloods for vengeance call, My murdered Honour, see thy Victim fall! Cir. Nay then 'tis time to throw off all disguise, Thy pointless Rage, weak Monarch, I despise. Know that I yet have Magic spells, which you, With all the force of Heaven, shall ne'er undo. I saw thy arts, and did the Prince restore, To mock thy anger, and torment thee more. Tho. Oh Insolence! my Guards, where are you? fly! Bring back the Stranger, she shall see him die. [Exeunt Guards. Cir. How like the Love of thy declining age! How boasting! but how feeble is thy rage? Prince without Power! go languish in despair, Ridden by all— Thy Favourites, and imposed on by the fair, Braved by the guilty, all my Crimes I own; He shall succeed thee in my Bed, and Throne: Enter Guards with Orestes. Thou shalt by Treason's fall. Tho. — Furies ascend! And to my rage your flames and Scorpions lend. Cir. Appear all my infernal Guards! appear! And let no mortal Power invade us here. It Thunders, her Spirits appear. Tho. Die, die! Adulterer! to torments go, See if these Treasons you can act below. [Offers to kill Orestes. SCENE Fifth. Enter Ithacus, who thrusts himself before the King just as he has reached Orestes. Thunder and Spirits. Ith. Hold, Thoas, hold! let not your Sword destroy All that the World should covet to enjoy. Mankind, and Heaven this Bosom must defend, Your Daughter's Life does on his Fate depend: Divine Osmida is a Captive made To the fierce Greeks, and their revenge betrayed; They traced her to that solitude, where she Sought peaceful hou'rs, from noise and greatness free; Her Guards were few, and those but slightly armed; They yielded soon, and soon the Town alarmed: With all the Wings of gratitude I flew, And from the Citadel your Forces drew. But Oh too late, ere I could reach the shore; The Royal Virgin to their Fleet they bore. SCENE Sixth. To them Iphigenia and Pylades. Iph. Heaven does Force and Tyranny declare, Against poor Virtue, making open War. Die, Princess! Or Osmida's death prevent. Brother! Your Grecians have a Herald sent; [To Oars. Who from his Bark, to the expecting Crowd These words of horror did pronounce aloud: Know cruel Scythians, if our Prince must bleed, A black Revenge the Grecians have decreed. To our sad Country we at least will boast, To have appeased her murdered Hero's Ghost. This said, he hastily forsook the shore: The Princess all with silent grief deplore. Oars. Have I not taught that Love is our reward, And that all Warriors are but Beauty's Guard: Go chide their impious rage, and bid 'em be Careful of their renown, and not of me: Bid 'em the Princess to this place convey, But at her feet first weep their crime away. SCENE Seventh. To them a Priest. Priest. Thoas! your Daughter will not fall alone, The rapid Storm threatens your Life and Throne. Haste! haste! the Grecian Captives to restore; Their Warlike Troops cover our frighted shore; The Crowd, to whom long Power does hateful grow; Fly your soft Yoke, revolting to the Foe. [Shouts of Soldiers. Ah save yourself! hither the torrent flows, O'erthrowing all, and gathering as it goes. The King stands fixed in a Melancholy Posture. Cir. Ha! motionless, as Death! as silent too! Rouse thy faint Spirits, th' enemy's in view. See! a cold fear sits trembling in his Eyes: You're brave in peace, and after danger wise, Stout against Innocence. Your anger show In its most dreadful shape before the Foe. Dead, dead with fear, come, humbly creep to me, I must the Guardian of your Empire be. Tho. Let me be wafted to that happy Shore, Where cares for Empire vex the mind no more, Noiseless, as Planets, there we move in peace, The pains of wounded Honour there shall cease. In storms of Jealousy we are not tossed, No Empire there, no Daughter can be lost. Ith. He needs must sink beneath this mighty weight; Pity a King at the last Ebb of Fate. [To Circe. Swiftly my Tears, as his Misfortunes, flow, Some grief to Tyrants, in distress we owe; [Weeps. Apply soft cures to his afflicted mind; Gentler than heavens', let him your anger find. Priest. Unless the Gods a Kingdom do unite, In vain the wise consult, and valiant fight. While these sad discords do her Entrails tear, A Foreign Yoke poor Scythia needs must bear. Ith. Madam, Will you behold your Country fall? To you, our Gods, and we, for succour call, Our Gods, and us, the Grecians Captive make; Rash and luxurious Princes cannot shake A Throne so much, but you can fix it straight; Forgive the King, pity the sinking State. Cir. I am your Heaven when you your safety doubt, And your afflictions make you all devout. His Freedom, let the Grecian Prince receive, The rest to Fate, and my wise conduct leave. Tho. Curse on thy Arts! and doubly cursed he be, Who first debased the World to Policy; Revenge, the Gods do not the Beasts deny, Tigers, and Wolves, are greater Kings than I. Go to his Grecians, let the Prince be led, I will go find some ease among the dead. [Exit Thoas. SCENE Eighth. Guards go to lead off Orestes, Circe stops him. Cir. My Dear, I must accuse your guilty haste, Love to enjoyment does not fly so fast. No Sigh, no Tear, not any tender word, Not one kind look at parting you afford. Oars. I dare not look, such weakness I betray, At every killing glance I melt away: Ill-natured Wisdom proudly sits above, And censures all the tenderness of Love. In secret I can weep and sigh aloud, And be of all Love's little follies proud, But would not show my weakness to the Crowd. Cir. The censures of the Envious World despise, It is beneath a Lover to be wise. Oars. Let us ourselves in some vast Desert hide, Where Love shall triumph over all my Pride. There I'll chastise each glorious manly thought, Naked, and bound they shall to Love be brought. Cir. No, in that Desert I alone must mourn. For you are going, and will ne'er return. To the embraces of some other fly, I never will complain, but gently die. Oars. Here I can stay and at your feet expire, But my fierce Soldiers carry Sword and fire. To all your Cities, by their fury lead, And Desolation through your Empire spread. Cir. Go calm their rage— [Weeps. There's an ill bodeing Omen in my Tears, Love has a Thousand vain and idle fears. Like little Statesmen ever-troublesome, Uneasy, and suspecting all to come. When you your Ships and Warlike Grecians see, Alas, you will no more remember me. Oh hear not Fame nor your Ambition plead, Perhaps they would again your Youth misled. You are Love's Convert now, and must be good, Taste soft delights, and thirst no more for blood. Oars. I'll rest from War, but sometimes we must fight To purchase ease, and to secure delight; A flying Camp must hover still, about▪ Where Lovers dwell, to keep the jealous out. When Nature is wound up. Expecting Bliss none should her hopes destroy, Fierce torments follow interrupted Joy. Cir. Fear not the Jealous, you will be secure From foreign Foes, if all at home be sure. Be you but faithful still, and trust my care; I will an undisturbed retreat prepare. Of purer Clouds Love shall a Palace build, Which the bright Sun with Morning Beams shall guild About it Groves, where Nature shall be seen Still charged with Sweets, and ever dressed in Green; There we'll taste silent Joys and calm delight. [Shouting within. Oars. Farewell, alas I must no longer stay, The Tyrant business hastens me away [Circe weeps. Who linger still behind, ah do not mourn, I'll take the Wings of Love and straight return. Cir. Alas you will not. Oars. By those Eyes I will. Cir. A Thousand tender fears afflict me still, Ruin and Death the sullen Stars foretell, And this appears to be a last farewell. Your Greeks will force you from the Scythian Shore, And I shall never, never see you more. But fear no storms, for though you prove unkind, And leave sad me to languish here behind, I'll court the Seas, and flatter every Wind. To the Sea Gods I will devoutly pray, That to safe Ports they may your Fleet convey To flowery Coasts, where you shall happy be, Unless sometimes you sigh and mourn for me. [Exeunt severally. ACT Fifth. SCENE, Some public Place of the City. Circe's Four Maids. 1 Maid. THe Moon and Stars give but a sickly light. 2 Ma. Birds of ill Omen hither make their flight. 3 Ma. Much blood the fiery Queen designs to shed. 4 Ma. Orestes from her lustful arms is fled. 1 Ma. Her bright allurements did his Youth betray. 2 Ma. Careless in her enchanted Groves he lay. 3 Ma. From thence his Grecians did their Leaders force. 4 Ma. And now they all to Argos steer their Course. 1 Ma. She with the Ocean and the Winds does treat. 2 Ma. To raise up storms and wrack the Grecian Fleet. 3 Ma. Where e'er she moves, infectious vapours rise. 4 Ma. She breathes destruction blasting with her Eyes. Scene Second, Enter Circe. Cir. He's gone, he's gone! See with what sullen pride His mighty Ships on the smooth Ocean ride: The quiet Waves an awful silence keep; The dreadful Winds in their deep Caverns sleep: All crimes are safe, how calm the Seas appear: And yet there is a perjured Lover there: False Men come learn of the unconstant Wind: Learn of the Seas, nay learn of Woman kind; We and the Winds can boast that we are true: Fixed as the Poles compared to faithless You. 1 Ma. She to eternal ruin sinks apace: 2 Ma. We shall this day with mighty mischiefs grace: 3 Ma. End, end as nobly as thou hast begun: 4 Ma. Things of deep horror shall this night be done. Cir. Sink him ye Winds, his Ships ye Lightning burn; Orestes, my Orestes, ah return! Ruin! Eternal plagues I love him yet. Repent a little, I can all forget. Why do I speak to him that cannot hear, Nor will the Winds my sorrows to him bear: Cruel Orestes whither dost thou fly? False Man return, stay, stay, and see me die. 1 Maid. Do not th'infernal Powers your quarrel own. 2 Ma. Think you their malice is unactive grown. 3 Ma. Dread Queen, what vengeance are you pleased to take. 4 Ma. Speak, and the frighted Universe shall shake. All. Speak, and the frighted Universe shall shake. Cir. I can no more my Spells or Magic boast, My mystic Drugs have all their virtue lost: I see the Gods have now decreed my fall; I am forsaken and betrayed by all: Even my own Son was wounded at the Head Of Troops which he against his Country led. The Rebel on the adverse side did fight, Aiding that faithless Grecian in his flight. Scene Third. Enter Ithacus brought in wounded with several Soldiers. 1 Ma. Here he is come your pardon to entreat. 2 Ma. And then expire contented at your feet. Cir. Ah why must I that fatal object see! I have no leisure now to weep for thee. Ith. Forgive me, Madam, that my Sword I drew To fight for them, who were condemned by you: But all that I have done was in defence, Of Virtue and afflicted Innocence. Her fears did wretched Iphigenia bring To me for aid against the lustful King. The bloody Tyrant had designed that she The Victim to his dire revenge should be: His boasting rage proclaimed th'intended Rape, Then I did fight to purchase her escape. Cir. Afflicted Beauty, you did bravely aid, But by your virtue we are all betrayed. That Traitor helped his Enemies, and you, Turning to the Soldiers. By your base Cowardice betrayed me too. Which of you all Renown with danger sought, Like gaudy Warriors of the Court you fought. We all are ruined by your base retreat; The death you feared you shall in torments meet, And Rebel I will smile to see thee bleed. May'st thou thenceforth only the Factious lead, And may thy Counsels ever be betrayed; Give still good Orders, and be ne'er obeyed. And in thy age— May all the Laurels thou hast roiled for long, Be ravished from thee to adorn the young. Ith. Death, death has blasted all my Laurels now, And they begin to wither on my Brow. Victorious Death seizes on every part, Weak Nature flies for refuge to the Heart, The Spirits there a while maintain the Field, Struggle a little, but at last must yield. [Faints away. Cir. Oh, stay brave Youth! See how my anger dies, And Nature is triumphant in my Eyes: [Weeps. Alas! he's gone— He set out early, and did nobly run Honour's great Race, Oh! that the World were done: My Magic prospers, hark! the heavens' perform Storm within, Thunder, etc. A dreadful Justice, Grecian, dread this Storm; Tremble to hear the angry Billows roar; Revenge and Death attend thee on the Shore. [To one of the Nymphs. Fly to Orestes, mount the swiftest Wind, With frenzy and wild rage infect his mind: Torment him still afresh— [Thunder again. Work on my charms, let's to my Cave retire, And there against the World and Man conspire. Exeunt Circe. and the Maids. SCENE Fourth. Enter Osmida, led in by two Women. Osm. Do we then all a fruitfuless homage pay? Heaven will not hear a harmless Virgin pray. There was no Saint among the blessed above, Whom in thy cause I did not hourly move. I hoped the Idol of my heart to see, And moved the Greeks by Tears to set me free: From them and Death how gladly did I fly? But I must here do something more than die. His Eyes are shut by Death's Eternal sleep. Wake! wake to see wretched Osmida weep. Ah let thy Soul but one short moment stay, I have a Thousand tender things to say. [Ithacus revives. Ith. My Soul has been through many wonders lead; Who is so envious to disturb the dead? Who art thou? Osm. — One long tossed in storms of Love, But to Death's quiet home at last I move. Ith. Osmida here she some good Angel seems Waiting about me with Celestial Dreams; Such and so fair as you from Heaven descend, And on the thoughts of dying Saints attend, Peace and Forgiveness in their looks they bring, And round their dwellings Hymns of triumph sing. Osm. No, no, I come like a Religious Spy To dive into your thoughts before you die. When Death approaches, men begin to fear, And will the preaching of Religion hear: Come, your vain Idol you must cast away, To me and Truth your last devotion pay: On faithless Iphigenia think no more, Ith. With how unkind a haste she left the shore Flying, unhappy Me, she sighed indeed, And wept a little when she saw me bleed. Osm. How ill is all my tenderness repaid; Your dying thoughts court that ungrateful Maid; Forgetting wretched me, is nothing due To one who kindly comes to die with you. Ith. Oh fair Osmida here I humbly own Your goodness is at last victorious grown. If Nature could my lease of Breath renew, I would employ it all in sighs for you. All my devotion has till now been blind: In you Love's true Divinity I find. Osm. Now you are kind, nor have I vainly prayed; All my past miseries are more than paid, And I am happy, Lovers think they gain, To have an hour of Joy for years of pain. We have no need of life, come let us go, And seek the melancholy shades below: Here cruel discord, noise, and business reign; Poor Lovers have no leisure to complain, No time to sigh; we'll choose some silent Grove, There tell sad Tales of unsuccessful Love: But, oh! amongst those Stories there is none Will prove so full of sorrow as our own. Ith. A long farewell, oh may you freshly bloom, When I shall lie and wither in the Tomb. I hope the blood in chase of Glory shed, Will rest and never plead against the dead. [Dies. Osm. Who shall be mourners, when such Virtue dies, I cannot weep, for Love has drained my Eyes. I need no Poison, nor no Sword, for Grief, To all my pains has brought a kind relief. Death's leaden hand about my heart I feel, From these pale Lips some kisses I will steal; For Death is silent, and the Theft will hide: I courted Heaven with Prayers to be thy Bride, And so I am, the Tombs our Bridal Bed; Our Nuptial Feast we keep among the dead. [Osmida dies. SCENE Fifth. Enter the Four Maids. 1 Ma. Sure now the World will be afraid of light; And wish to mourn in everlasting Night: Dire things are done, the Grecian Fleet is lost, Shipwrecked by Magic on the Scythian Coast. 2 Ma. Revenge and Love the lustful Queen divide; Her tender thoughts she strives in vain to hide: Amidst her rage, revenge and melting tears, In all his Spoils triumphant Love appears. 3 Ma. Yet her great Mind does for revenge prepare; Here we must wait, her charms have seized the air, Their force Orestes does already find, Hither he moves, mad as the Northern Wind. SCENE Sixth. Enter Orestes mad. [Storm here. Oars. By Heaven my Prayers shall ne'er this storm appease, Fight, fight ye Clouds against the foaming Seas. Storm and Lightning. Blow on, blow on, why should the senseless Wind, Or the Wild Ocean be to Virtue kind, The Cave of the God of sleep arises with him, Phobetor and Morpheus. Whom many rougher Storms at Land pursue, Where she, alas, is without shelter too. Be loud thou Tempest and disturb the deep, [Loud storm. I will be calm as Infants when they sleep. [Sits down. 1 Ma. Begin the deadly charm, so Planets move. They walk round Orestes. 2 Ma. And thus the ill events conspire above. 3 Ma. prayer's and odd Number's words of Mystick found, 4 Ma. Devoutly we pronounce, and walk around. All. Ascend, ascend, ascend! thou God of sleep; 1 Ma. Thy leaden Wand in juice of Poppy steep. 2 Ma. Bring slumber from those little quiet Cells; Where lazy Virtue in retirement dwells, Shunning the cares of Courts. 4 Ma. — And in thy Train, 1 Ma. Bring the Fantastic offsprings of the Brain. 2 Ma. Dreams of all sorts. 1 Ma. — Some in a pleasing Dress. 3 Ma. Such as glad Lovers full of hope possess. The pleasant Dreams rises. 4 Ma. Some dreadful, such as to the guilty come And tell sad Stories of their future doom. God of Sleep Sings. THe Noise of humane life forsake, Where Love and Business keep the World awake, Some quiet Mansion seek, Where Fame's loud call shall not our slumbers break. But happy Ignorance upon thy careless breast Methinks we take the gentlest rest. Chorus. Sleep, sleep! within a drowsy Cave, Dark, dark, and silent as the Grave. [Dance. Fancy enters with the pleasant Dreams, Fancy Dances, the pleasant Dreams sing and dance an Entry to the Song, to which Music there is an Echo in the Clouds. Three Spirits reply to the Dancers below. Song for the Dreams. Maid's in Wishes stretch and pant; Wives the Nightly blessing want. Chorus. Careful Love their torment sees, Sends 'em Dreams, and they have ease. Women can be chaste in spite. Gallants must retire to Night. Chor. Careful Love, etc. As Morpheus sings the Two first lines, the Scene changes into a place of Horror. Phobetor Sings. Begun fair Visions, to the Court remove. Whose business is to dream of Love; And you black terrors of the Night appear; You wild Creations of our Wilder fear; You dismal Visions that on guilt attend. Furies and Fiends from Hell ascend; Religion finds you better far than Law, To rule Mankind and keep the World in awe: Oh horror, horror from Death's gloomy shade, Arise, arise! the frighted World invade. An Entry of the frightful Dreams, Clytimnestra's Ghost ascends. Gho. Awake, awake, thy Mother's Ghost is come, From Death's abode, her Urn, and quiet Tomb; To visit Nature, holy things I shun, And haunt the Dreams of my inhuman Son. Thy Sword did send me to Eternal Night; My angry Ghost shall still thy slumbers fright; Now humane kind in sleep their cares forsake, Even Guilt itself some little rest does take, And none but the revengeful are awake. A mighty Vengeance Circe does prepare, In this deep silence her winged Chariots bear. The dire enchantress through th'unwholesome air. Brooding ill Fate she sits upon a Cloud: Thrice the bad Genius of the World has bowed, And thrice has owned her Power, the Charm is done, And now the dismal business is begun. It Thunders. You flying Plagues seize, seize this impious Son. 1 Maid. Her beauty scorned, Circe resolves to prove Cruel as the first thoughts of injured Love. Oh tremble, tremble, and resist no more: Beauty's a Tyrant jealous of its Power. 2 Maid. A black revenge her fury has designed, But sighing at her feet your pardon seek, And the relenting Beauty will be kind, As the last words which dying Lovers speak. Orestes wakes, the Scene vanishes, the Dreams and Ghost sink down by degrees, the Bower vanishes. Oars. Descend to burning Lakes, hot as thy Lust, Ill boding Vision, my Revenge was just; Night through the World does solid darkness spread, The gaping Monuments restore their dead, Who range about, 'tis the last dreadful day; The Earth and heavens' begin to melt away. Darts of Lightning, Thunder. On Clouds of Fire destroying Angels fly; Must this great Frame dissolve and Nature die. SCENE Seventh. Enter Pylades and Iphigenia with the Grecian Train. Thunder and Lightning here. Pyl. Sure all the Elements our fall conspire, Loud Storms at Sea, at Land consuming Fire▪ Pursues us still. Iph. — But why should Virtue fear, When with their murdering shafts the Gods appear? Guilt tremble thou when heavens' winged Vengeance flies Through frighted Cities, or when Storms arise. Oars. From Earth's deep hollow dreadful groans are sent, Groans under the Earth. And Nature labours with some great event. Approach, approach, dire things shall be disclosed, Drawing Pyl. and Iph. near him. My Mind is wilder now than Lust opposed. Come we'll out-think young Prophets and out-dream Religion, let Ambition be our Theme. Come, the tumultuous World we'll visit now, There to successful Vice the virtuous bow, The Pious quarrel, Ignorance is loud, All is amiss, in Schools the Wise are proud. At Court they patient Modesty despise, Only the impudent are sure to rise: I'll sound a Trumpet, and the dead shall wake; The frighted Planets shall their Orbs forsake, And all with me to better Worlds retire. SCENE Eight. Enter Thoas with the Scythians. Tho. If Glory ere thy youthful blood did fire; If thy great race has taught thee to aspire, Follow where I and my revenge shall lead, That undisturbed we may together bleed: Grecian, this day thou art decreed to die, If thou dar'st fight, and Heaven stand neuter by. Oars. Ha! art not thou that hungry Monster Power, That feeds on all, then does itself devour? Tho. All things to Universal Ruin haste, Afflicted Nature seems to breathe her last. My Throne must fall by your Eternal doom; To sink with Empire! Oh you Gods I come: If I have aught deserved for every hour, In which I have groaned, beneath the weight of Power: Let me expire revenged. [Makes at Orestes, who draws. Oars. — I'll not engage, Thy clamours shall not rouse my sleeping rage: [Pyl. draws. Pyl. Awake, awake! the glorious Youth does stand With Wars swift Lightning useless in his hand. Tho. Fall on! revenge come quicken and inspire, Be thou instead of all my youthful fire. [Fight; Oars. kills Tho. they drive off the Scythian Soldiers. Oars. Bold Wretch lie there, my Courage now is warm, Bloody as womens' Lust, deaf as a Storm. SCENE Ninth, and last. Enter Circe, with her Maids, Spirits, Guards and Attendants. Circe. Unfit for Empire, I must Rule no more, Firmness I want, that strong support of Power: 'Tis Resolution makes heavens' Empire great; Like a weak Statesman in some turn of State, Wild, unresolved I stand, eternal pains! High, fierce desires are boiling in my Veins, I must enjoy him, and the fire allay. The raging flames that on my Vitals prey. But witness, Hell! I would like Lightning, blast, Burn, and consume whatever I embraced. Ore. Ha Beauty here! thy wicked Arts I know, What pains, and discord dost thou breed below! There Wisdom, and there Power, thou leadest astray, I'll from thy Poison fly.— Cir. — Orestes, stay! Oh stay! with thy enchanting presence keep These Hells, and this tormenting Rage asleep; Once you were kind, on floury Beds you lay, In Bowers, like infant Nature, fresh and gay; Wreathing the Myrtle Garlands for your Brows, Fixed on your looks, and listening to your Vows, All day I sat.— Oars. — Away bewitching fair! Fatal, expensive, ruinous as War. Shall I sit idle by my Senate awed, While Neighbouring Princes get renown abroad? No, let me lose, I should the World o'ercome, Did not ill Subjects keep me poor at home: I would be one of those the Gods did make With restless Minds, to keep the World awake, A famed Destroyer. Cir. — Then come join with me: I hate the World, and would destructive be. At our command Plagues through the Earth shall range, War, new Religion, universal change, Hot fighting zeal, ambition, all that can Bring swift destruction on Ungrateful Man, Winged with our fury through the World shall fly; The World! even loved by misery! but I Would see it lost, Nature and Order die, See all consume in Universal fire; Enjoy but him, and then myself expire. Oars. Oh noble rage! be ready Warrior! prove That my great heart stoops to the Tyrant Love. Once the soft poison did infect my Mind: Like all new Lovers, diligent, and kind; At Circe's feet I lay, but she is dead, And to the Grave by Mourning Cupid's lead: Show me the Tomb that shall her Ashes keep, There I will truest Penitence out-weep. Cir. Mad as the Winds! bring me the powerful juice Which Herbs from the Aemonian Vales produce, Gathered at sacred hours, refresh his Mind With that cool mixture, and the charm unbind; Then bring the Mighty Philters that excite The cold and tardy Lover to delight: Down fierce desires, I wish and think too high, Nature my Riots but this hour supply. Love's flowing Wealth I would at once consume, Entail not my delights on Years to come. Oars. The Moon does sicken at some dismal sight; The Stars grow dim, shroud me Eternal Night. Thou art— [To Circe. My Mother's Ghost so melting with desire, Wild breathing short her Breasts, and Eyes a fire, She met th'Adulterer go bear to Hell, That shallow plotting man, that would rebel; He that does factions in a City breed, Unfit those Factions to advise or lead; That discontented trifle burn and tear, But oh, thou sacred Ghost, Orestes spare. Cir. I am thy Mother's Ghost, but sent from Heaven With order to pronounce thy Crimes forgiven. My fatal Murder is forgotten now, Shake off your Sorrows, and uncloud your brow, Rest on my bosom, calm your noble Mind, The Powers above bad me be soft and kind. [Embraces him. Oars. Blessed shade am I forgiven? away my fear, Zeal is deceived to paint the Gods severe. Let's seek the lasting home which Heaven prepares: I am grown sick of life and mortal cares. Cir. Come, you shall be to a calm Region brought, Where Wisdom is no more disturbed with thought, Where Valour rests, we will blessed Youth remove To the forgetful careless shades of Love; In thin attire, such as may loosely fly, And hide no beauty from the Lover's Eye. Trembling I'll come, you in my looks shall read In my short sighs and blushes what I need, Then we'll retire to feast on every sweet, With which the Youthful do the Youthful meet Tired with delights— Oars. — Witness ye Powers of Hell [Starts from Circe. How justly my adulterous Mother fell: Thy Lust extends itself beyond the Tomb, And thy incestuous Ghost is hither come Circe goes to him, and offers to embrace him. To tempt the virtue of thy wretched Son. No: those Embraces Nature bids me shun. A Voice under the Earth cries, Prepare, prepare. Hark, hark! my Father groans! a dismal sound; He cries, Prepare to give the fatal wound: Kill, kill! th'adulteress. Stabs Circe. All the Stage is darkened. Cir. — Summon all my Art, She sinks in the Arms of her Women. Furies and Hell! the Sword has reached my heart: Oars. Bind me with Fate, yet I the Chains will break, Are not all Women false Immortals! Speak? Falser than Science; I to Death will run, Their falsehoods and my Wretched Self to shun. [Kills himself and dies. Pyl. and Iph. run to him. Cir. Power! Wisdom! guard me from the Tyrant Death. All Ma. No, Fate has summoned, you must yield your Breath. Cir. Is it decreed? the World, Time, Nature call! Tell 'em they must prepare to grace my fall; Such Greatness cannot, cannot sink alone. Dissolve the Earth, threaten th'Immortal Throne. To its first Chaos let the World return. This solid Mass ye darted Lightnings burn: Spirits bearing Torches fly cross the Stage. Earth's hollow Caverns let the Winds forsake; Burst their dark Prisons, and the Centre shake. My flaming Guard unfix the Poles, and tear Each fatal Planet from his shining sphere. Horrid Music▪ It Thunders. The Stage is wholly darkened, and the City of a sudden is a fire. Iph. Why does my glass of life so slowly run, The Miserable even Death does shun: Grief kills as slow as Age; break stubborn heart, Oh happy death, how still and calm thou art, How toilsome Life. Pyl. Move swiftly Heaven with thy avenging fire, Whilst in the flame we and the World expire. Cir. Destroy, destroy, the Starry Thrones invade, It Thunders. ay, like good peaceful Kings, am ill obeyed: Must I put Nature off, and be refined? Become all spirit, thought, immortal Mind: Can thought, our only torment here on Earth, Afford such pleasure at our Second Birth: When we're in Heaven, I fear the Pious boast, In Death's dark Mist let all of me be lost. [Dies. The End. THE EPILOGUE, By the Earl of ROCHESTER. SOme few from Wit have this true Maxim got, That 'tis still better to be pleased then not, And therefore never their own Torment plot. While the Malicious Critics still agree To loathe each Play they come and pay to see; The first know 'tis a Meaner part of sense To find a fault, then taste an Excellence, Therefore they praise and strive to like, while these Are dully vain of being hard to please. Poets and Women have an Equal Right To hate the Dull, who Dead to all Delight Feel pain alone, and have no Joy but spite. 'Twas Impotence did first this Vice begin, Fools censure Wit, as Old men rail of Sin, Who Envy Pleasure, which they cannot taste, And good for nothing, would be wise at last. Since therefore to the Women it appears, That all these Enemies of Wit are theirs, Our Poet the Dull herd no longer fears. What e'er his fate may prove, 'twill be his pride To stand or fall, with Beauty on his side. Books lately Published. THE Courtiers Calling: Showing the ways of making a Fortune, and the Art of living at Court, according to Polity and Morality. In Two Parts. The First concerning Noblemen; The Second, concerning Gentlemen. By a Person of Honour▪ Price bound 1 s. 6 d. Don Carlos, Prince of Spain, a Tragedy, as it is Acted at the Duke's Theatre. Written by Thomas Otway. Price 1 s. Titus and Berenice, a Tragedy, as it is Acted at the Duke's Theatre, with a Farce, called The Cheats of Scapin. Written by Tho. Otway. Price 1 s. The Portugal History; or, A Relation of the Troubles that happened in the Court of Portugal, in the Years 1667, and 1668; In which is to be seen that great Transaction of the Renunciation of the Crown, by Alphonso the Sixth; The Dissolution of his Marriage with the Princes Maria Frances Isabel of Savoy; The Marriage of the same Princess to his Brother the Prince Don Pedro now Regent of the Realm of Portugal; And the Reasons alleged at Rome for the Dispensation thereof. By S. P. Esquire. Price bound 1 s. 6 d. The Art of making Love; or, Rules for the Conduct of Ladies and Gallants in their Amours. Price bound 1 s. Antony and Cleopatra, a Tragedy, as it is Acted at the Duke's Theatre. Written by the Honourable Sir Charles Sedley, Baronet, in 4 to. Price 1 s. A Treatise concerning Statutes, or Acts of Parliament: And the Exposition thereof. Written by Sir Christopher Hatton, late Lord Chancellor of England. Price bound 1 s. All sold by R. Tonson, at his Shop under Grayes-Inne-Gate, next Grayes-Inne-Lane.