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第4节

life is a dream-第4节

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And me; for whom the Commons of the realm

Divide themselves into two several factions;

Whether for you; the elder sister's child;

Or me; born of the younger; but; they say;

My natural prerogative of man

Outweighing your priority of birth。

Which discord growing loud and dangerous;

Our uncle; King Basilio; doubly sage

In prophesying and providing for

The future; as to deal with it when come;

Bids us here meet to…day in solemn council

Our several pretensions to compose。

And; but the martial out…burst that proclaims

His coming; makes all further parley vain;

Unless my bosom; by which only wise

I prophesy; now wrongly prophesies;

By such a happy compact as I dare

But glance at till the Royal Sage declare。



(Trumpets; etc。 Enter King Basilio with his Council。)



ALL。

The King! God save the King!



ESTRELLA (Kneeling。)

Oh; Royal Sir!



ASTOLFO (Kneeling。)

God save your Majesty



KING。

Rise both of you;

Rise to my arms; Astolfo and Estrella;

As my two sisters' children always mine;

Now more than ever; since myself and Poland

Solely to you for our succession look'd。

And now give ear; you and your several factions;

And you; the Peers and Princes of this realm;

While I reveal the purport of this meeting

In words whose necessary length I trust

No unsuccessful issue shall excuse。

You and the world who have surnamed me 〃Sage〃

Know that I owe that title; if my due;

To my long meditation on the book

Which ever lying open overhead

The book of heaven; I meanso few have read;

Whose golden letters on whose sapphire leaf;

Distinguishing the page of day and night;

And all the revolution of the year;

So with the turning volume where they lie

Still changing their prophetic syllables;

They register the destinies of men:

Until with eyes that; dim with years indeed;

Are quicker to pursue the stars than rule them;

I get the start of Time; and from his hand

The wand of tardy revelation draw。

Oh; had the self…same heaven upon his page

Inscribed my death ere I should read my life

And; by fore…casting of my own mischance;

Play not the victim but the suicide

In my own tragedy!But you shall hear。

You know how once; as kings must for their people;

And only once; as wise men for themselves;

I woo'd and wedded: know too that my Queen

In childing died; but not; as you believe;

With her; the son she died in giving life to。

For; as the hour of birth was on the stroke;

Her brain conceiving with her womb; she dream'd

A serpent tore her entrail。 And too surely

(For evil omen seldom speaks in vain)

The man…child breaking from that living tomb

That makes our birth the antitype of death;

Man…grateful; for the life she gave him paid

By killing her: and with such circumstance

As suited such unnatural tragedy;

He coming into light; if light it were

That darken'd at his very horoscope;

When heaven's two championssun and moon I mean

Suffused in blood upon each other fell

In such a raging duel of eclipse

As hath not terrified the universe

Since that which wept in blood the death of Christ:

When the dead walk'd; the waters turn'd to blood;

Earth and her cities totter'd; and the world

Seem'd shaken to its last paralysis。

In such a paroxysm of dissolution

That son of mine was born; by that first act

Heading the monstrous catalogue of crime;

I found fore…written in his horoscope;

As great a monster in man's history

As was in nature his nativity;

So savage; bloody; terrible; and impious;

Who; should he live; would tear his country's entrails;

As by his birth his mother's; with which crime

Beginning; he should clench the dreadful tale

By trampling on his father's silver head。

All which fore…reading; and his act of birth

Fate's warrant that I read his life aright;

To save his country from his mother's fate;

I gave abroad that he had died with her

His being slew; with midnight secrecy

I had him carried to a lonely tower

Hewn from the mountain…barriers of the realm;

And under strict anathema of death

Guarded from men's inquisitive approach;

Save from the trusty few one needs must trust;

Who while his fasten'd body they provide

With salutary garb and nourishment;

Instruct his soul in what no soul may miss

Of holy faith; and in such other lore

As may solace his life…imprisonment;

And tame perhaps the Savage prophesied

Toward such a trial as I aim at now;

And now demand your special hearing to。

What in this fearful business I have done;

Judge whether lightly or maliciously;

I; with my own and only flesh and blood;

And proper lineal inheritor!

I swear; had his foretold atrocities

Touch'd me alone。 I had not saved myself

At such a cost to him; but as a king;

A Christian king;I say; advisedly;

Who would devote his people to a tyrant

Worse than Caligula fore…chronicled?

But even this not without grave mis…giving;

Lest by some chance mis…reading of the stars;

Or mis…direction of what rightly read;

I wrong my son of his prerogative;

And Poland of her rightful sovereign。

For; sure and certain prophets as the stars;

Although they err not; he who reads them may;

Or rightly readingseeing there is One

Who governs them; as; under Him; they us;

We are not sure if the rough diagram

They draw in heaven and we interpret here;

Be sure of operation; if the Will

Supreme; that sometimes for some special end

The course of providential nature breaks

By miracle; may not of these same stars

Cancel his own first draft; or overrule

What else fore…written all else overrules。

As; for example; should the Will Almighty

Permit the Free…will of particular man

To break the meshes of else strangling fate

Which Free…will; fearful of foretold abuse;

I have myself from my own son fore…closed

From ever possible self…extrication;

A terrible responsibility;

Not to the conscience to be reconciled

Unless opposing almost certain evil

Against so slight contingency of good。

Wellthus perplex'd; I have resolved at last

To bring the thing to trial: whereunto

Here have I summon'd you; my Peers; and you

Whom I more dearly look to; failing him;

As witnesses to that which I propose;

And thus propose the doing it。 Clotaldo;

Who guards my son with old fidelity;

Shall bring him hither from his tower by night

Lockt in a sleep so fast as by my art

I rivet to within a link of death;

But yet from death so far; that next day's dawn

Shall wake him up upon the royal bed;

Complete in consciousness and faculty;

When with all princely pomp and retinue

My loyal Peers with due obeisance

Shall hail him Segismund; the Prince of Poland。

Then if with any show of human kindness

He fling discredit; not upon the stars;

But upon me; their misinterpreter;

With all apology mistaken age

Can make to youth it never meant to harm;

To my son's forehead will I shift the crown

I long have wish'd upon a younger brow;

And in religious humiliation;

For what of worn…out age remains to me;

Entreat my pardon both of Heaven and him

For tempting destinies beyond my reach。

But if; as I misdoubt; at his first step

The hoof of the predicted savage shows;

Before predicted mischief can be done;

The self…same sleep that loosed him from the chain

Shall re…consign him; not to loose again。

Then shall I; having lost that heir direct;

Look solely to my sisters' children twain

Each of a claim so equal as divides

The voice of Poland to their several sides;

But; as I trust; to be entwined ere long

Into one single wreath so fair and strong

As shall at once all difference atone;

And cease the realm's division with their own。

Cousins and Princes; Peers and Councillors;

Such is the purport of this invitation;

And such is my design。 Whose furtherance

If not as Sovereign; if not as Seer;

Yet one whom these white locks; if nothing else;

to patient acquiescence consecrate;

I now demand and even supplicate。



AST。

Such news; and from such lips; may well suspend

The tongue to loyal answer most attuned;

But if to me as spokesman of my faction

Your Highness looks for answer; I reply

For one and allLet Segismund; whom now

We first hear tell of as your living heir;

Appear; and but in your sufficient eye

Approve himself worthy to be your son;

Then we will hail him Poland's rightful heir。

What says my cousin?



EST。

Ay; with all my heart。

But if my youth and sex upbraid me not

That I should dare ask of so wise a king



KING。

Ask; ask; fair cousin! Nothing; I am sure;

Not well consider'd; nay; if 'twere; yet nothing

But pardonable from such lips as those。



EST。

Then; with your pardon; Sirif Segismund;

My cousin; whom I shall rejoice to hail

As Prince of Poland too; as you propose;

Be to a trial coming upon which

More; as I think; than life itself depends;

Why; Sir; with sleep…disorder'd senses brought

To this uncertain contest with his stars?



KING。

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