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FELIX. ALBIN. CLEON.
FELIX. Caught in Severus net thy Felix see! | |
| He hates and holds meoh, the misery! | |
| |
| ALBIN. I see a generous man, who cries, Forgive, | |
| Let Pauline smile once morelet Polyeucte live! | |
| |
| FELIX. His soul thou canst not readtho noble heart he feigns. | 5 |
| The father he abhors,the daughter he disdains! | |
| What Polyeucte won he sought: his suit denied, | |
| Severus sues no more,I know his pride. | |
| His words, his prayers, his threats for Polyeucte plead, | |
| His tongue says, Listen, or be lost indeed! | 10 |
| Unskilled the fowler who his snare reveals: | |
| If at the bait I snatchmy doom is sealed: | |
| Too plain, too coarse, this web for any fly | |
| Shall I this spider hail in my fatuity? | |
| His wrath is wrath arranged, his generous fire is nursed, | 15 |
| That I, at Decius hand, may meet the doom accurst, | |
| If I should pardon grantthat grace my crime would be, | |
| For he the spoil would reap of my credulity. | |
| No simpleton am I, each promise to believe, | |
| Wordsoathsare but the tools wherewith all men deceive; | 20 |
| Too oft escaped am I to be so lightly caught; | |
| I know that words are wind. I know that wind is naught. | |
| The trapper shall be trapped,the biter shall be bit, | |
| Unravelled is the web that he, poor fool, hath knit! | |
| |
| ALBIN. Jove! What a plague to thee is this mistrust! | 25 |
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| FELIX. Nay, those at court must fence; their weapons never rust, | |
| If once thou yield the clue to thread the maze, | |
| The sequence is most plainthe man betrayed betrays; | |
| Severus, and his gifts, alike I fear! | |
| If Polyeucte still to reason close his ear, | 30 |
| Severus love is hatehis peace is strife | |
| First law of nature this, Preserve thy life! | |
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| ALBIN. Ah, let Pauline at least thy grace obtain! | |
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| FELIX. If Decius grace withhold, my pardon vain! | |
| Andfar from saving this rebellious son | 35 |
| Behold us all alike entrapped, undone! | |
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| ALBIN. Severus promise | |
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| FELIX. He can never keep! | |
| For Decius rage and hatred never sleep: | |
| If for that sect abhorred Severus plead, | 40 |
| He trebles lossso are we lost indeed! | |
| One only way is ours,that way I try: | |
| (To GUARDS) Bring Polyeucte and if he still defy, | |
| Self-doomed, insensate, this my proffered grace, | |
| He shall the death he wooes forthwith embrace! | 45 |
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| ALBIN. Ah, this is stern! | |
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| FELIX. Tis stern, tis justas fate; | |
| When justice drags a halting foot, too late, | |
| She is not justicefor the vengeful mob | |
| (Whose hearts for Polyeucte neer cease to throb), | 50 |
| Usurps her place, and, spurning curb and rein, | |
| The felon crowns, and all our work is vain. | |
| My sceptre trembles, and all insecure | |
| Totters my crown,a prey for every boor. | |
| Then, swift, Severus hears the welcome news, | 55 |
| The jaundiced mind of Decius to abuse. | |
| Shall I, the rabbles lord, obey the rabbles will? | |
| |
| ALBIN. Who ill in all around foresees,but doubles ill. | |
| Each prop thou hast is but a sword to pierce; | |
| If Polyeucte hold their heart, the people fierce | 60 |
| Will gather fiercer courage from despair. | |
| |
| FELIX. Death settles all; theyll find no helper there, | |
| And ifwithout a beadthe body should rebel, | |
| Convulsive throes I mock, and nerveless fury quell. | |
| Whateer ensues the Emperor must approve, | 65 |
| I shall have done my part, and win his love. | |
| Here comes the man | |
| |
Enter POLYEUCTE and SOLDIERS I still must try to save; | |
| If he repenttis well! If notthe grave! | |
| (To POLYEUCTE) Is life still hateful? Doth death still allure? | 70 |
| Is earth still naught? Do heavenly joys endure? | |
| Doth Christ still counsel thee to hate thy wife; | |
| To sheathe thy sword,to cast away thy life? | |
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| POLY. I never hated life, or wooed a grave, | |
| To life I am a servantnot a slave. | 75 |
| Here service free I give upon this earth below, | |
| For higher service changed when to His Home I go. | |
| Eternal life is this: to tread the path He trod; | |
| To Him your body yield! Then trust your soul to God! | |
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| FELIX. Yes, trust to an abyss of depth unknown! | 80 |
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| POLY. No, trust to Holy Cross! That Cross my own! | |
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| FELIX. The steep ascent, my son, I too would climb, | |
| Yes, I would Christian be,butgive me time, | |
| By Jove! Ill tread thy path! This my desire. | |
| Else at thy hand the judge may me require! | 85 |
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| POLY. Nay, laugh not, Felix! He thy Judge will be, | |
| No refuge there for impious blasphemy! | |
| Nor kings nor clowns can scape His righteous ire, | |
| His slaughtered Saints of thee will He require! | |
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| FELIX. Ill slay no more;by Hercules I swear! | 90 |
| So I a Christian crown perchance may wear; | |
| I will protect the flock! | |
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| POLY. Nay, rather be | |
| A goad, a scourge, for their felicity! | |
| Let suffering purify each Christian soul, | 95 |
| Cross, rack, and flame but lead them to their goal; | |
| What here they losein Heaven an hundredfold they find. | |
| Be cruel,persecute!and so alone be kind! | |
| My words thou canst not read; thine eyes are blinded here, | |
| Wait the unveiling There! Then understand and fear! | 100 |
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| FELIX. Nay, nay, in truth I would a Christian be! | |
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| POLY. In thy hard heart alone a bar I see. | |
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| FELIX. (whispering). This Roman knight | |
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| POLY. (aloud). Severus, thou wouldst say. | |
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| FELIX. Once let him sail, I will no more delay, | 105 |
| For this I anger feign;let him depart! | |
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| POLY. Tis thus thou wouldst reveal a Christian heart? | |
| To idols dumbto Pagans blind, thy sugared poison bear, | |
| Christs servants quaff another cup, sure refuge from despair. | |
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| FELIX. What is this deadly draught that thou wouldst drain? | 110 |
| Ill drink thy wine.Till then, from death refrain! | |
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| POLY. To swine no more my holy pearls I cast, | |
| Faith,faithnot reason, shall see light at last; | |
| Soonwhen I see my Godyes, face to face, | |
| I will implore that Felix may find grace. | 115 |
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| FELIX. O dearest son, thy loss were death to me! | |
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| POLY. This loss can be repairedthe remedy | |
| Find in Severus; he will take my place; | |
| By Decius honoured he will not disgrace | |
| Thy house: my death will an advantage win | 120 |
| For thee, for her, for me.The work begin! | |
| |
| FELIX. Such my reward! Yes, insult is the child | |
| Of injury. The grace I grant, reviled, | |
| Shall turn to swift revenge. The gods defied | |
| May do their will and speed the suicide! | 125 |
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| POLY. I thought the gods were dead, but they revive | |
| With human passion; Felix, do not strive | |
| Against thy nature; lay aside thy ruth; | |
| Who loves a lie can never follow truth. | |
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| FELIX. I humoured madness, but the mood is oer, | 130 |
| I am myself again; I did implore, | |
| Twas vain; the dark abyss that yawns for thee | |
| May hold thee now, tomb to thy constancy. | |
| The hope I cherishedfondlednow is flown | |
| Severus will be king, and I oerthrown; | 135 |
| Shall I the gods by incense pacify? | |
| Or by thy death? for thou, at last, must die! | |
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| POLY. Incense might but incense; I cannot tell: | |
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Enter PAULINE Pauline! | |
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| PAUL. That word broke from thee like a knell; | 140 |
| Who seeks my doom to-day? Thouor my sire? | |
| Who fires the brand? Who lights the funeral pyre? | |
| My father should, by nature, be my friend, | |
| And lovers heart to love an ear should lend. | |
| Who here is mine ally, and who my foe? | 145 |
| Who has a heart to feel?this would I know. | |
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| FELIX. Nay, to thy lord appeal. [PAULINE turns to POLYEUCTE | |
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| POLY. Severus wed! | |
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| PAUL. Ah, this is outrage! Rather strike me dead! | |
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| POLY. Oh, dearer than myself to me thy weal! | 150 |
| My love would never wound, it seeks to heal. | |
| I see thee wrestle with thy deep distress | |
| Aloneunless Severus bring redress; | |
| His merit, that once gained by maiden heart, | |
| Hath still that worth when I from thee must part, | 155 |
| Once lovedand loving stillhis honour grows. | |
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| PAUL. Thy wifes true heart another treatment owes: | |
| O base reproach! For this I crushed for thee | |
| My former love: that I disdained might be? | |
| This my reward for dearest victory won, | 160 |
| I did that love undoto be myself undone! | |
| Resolve, faith, abnegation, all were vain, | |
| For thy return is outrage heaped on pain. | |
| Oh, sunk in tomb of shame, most vile, most mean, | |
| Come back to lifeto honourto Pauline! [Holds out her arms. | 165 |
| To learn from her that loyalty and faith | |
| Religion are:and all beside but death! | |
| Once more Alcestis wrestles with the tomb, | |
| Arise, arise from thy enthralling doom! | |
| And if my invocation feeble be, | 170 |
| Regard the tearsthe sighs,shedbreathed for thee! | |
| Love is too weak a wordI thee adore! | |
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| POLY. Once have I saidyet now I say once more | |
| Live with Severus, orwith Polyeucte die! | |
| Thy tears are mine, and thy pure constancy | 175 |
| I share: ButI am soldier of the Cross! | |
| Take up thine own, and count all gain but loss! | |
| Paulineno more! (To FELIX.) Thy slumbering wrath rewake! | |
| Thy fates and furies wait! Their vengeance slake! | |
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| PAUL. His life is saved! These fetters all undo! | 180 |
| For justice never yet a madman slew; | |
| And he is mad,but, father, thou art sane, | |
| And thou, his father, must his friend remain. | |
| A father cannot less than father be, | |
| Oh, be to him what thou hast been to me! | 185 |
| But cast upon thy child a kinder eye, | |
| Slay him?Then know that I am doomed to die! | |
| But even if justly done to death were he, | |
| The sentence wrong that, with him, slayeth me. | |
| For double death would double wrong present, | 190 |
| And slay the guilty with the innocent. | |
| Twas thou didst link us closely hand in hand, | |
| To live in bliss together thy command. | |
| Oh, shall the will that both our lives did bless | |
| Doom both these lives to deathto nothingness? | 195 |
| When lips are sealed to lips, and heart to heart, | |
| Tis tyranny, not law, such love to part. | |
| Oh, not a tyrant, but a father be, | |
| Forgive,give backrestore my love to me! | |
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| FELIX. Dear child, thy father is thy father still, | 200 |
| Nothing hath parted us, and nothing will. | |
| My heart is tender, and it beats for thee: | |
| Against this madman let us joinéd be. | |
| O wretched man, hast thou no eyes to see, no heart to feel? | |
| Thy guilt, thy crime, I would efface, thy pardon I would seal, | 205 |
| For thee my daughter cannot diesay, must she die with thee? | |
| A victim to the only sin which neer can pardoned be. | |
| O sight most strange! Here at thy knees as suppliant I sue! [FELIX kneels. | |
| The evil that thyself hast wroughtthat ill thyself undo! | |
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| POLY. Arise, old man, from knees unused to bend, | 210 |
| Or to another ear petition send! | |
| This artifice befits nor me nor thee, | |
| To beg of one twice threatened!Mockery! | |
| First, by thy hand Nearchus felt the flame, | |
| Then love, forsooth, thy plea(profanéd name!) | 215 |
| The path of Christian neophyte hast thou trod, | |
| And, in Gods name, hast mocked Almighty God! | |
| Earth, heaven, and hell in turn have been thy tool, | |
| And him thou hast traduced thou wouldst befool! | |
| Go,bullyflattererliar!Every part | 220 |
| Thou playest, while delay doth break my heart! | |
| Enough of dallying! While thou dost dissolve | |
| Thy feeble soul in doubt, hear my resolve: | |
| The God who made meHim will I adore; | |
| He holds my plighted faith,and evermore | 225 |
| He works salvation for his ransomed race | |
| Who gave His Son to death that we might life embrace; | |
| And thisChrists sacrificecontinued day be day, | |
| The Christ reveals and pleadsThe LifeThe TruthThe Way! | |
| No more His mysteries to self-stopped ears | 230 |
| Will I disclose(he heedeth not nor hears.) [Pointing to FELIX. | |
| Pray then to these thy gods of wood and stone, | |
| To gods who every deed of crime enthrone, | |
| Who boast their malice, and their foul incest, | |
| Vaunt theft and murderall that we detest. | 235 |
| This, their example,Paganfollow thou! | |
| To Pluto bend, to Aphrodite bow! | |
| For this I broke their altars, rased their shrine, | |
| Yea, for those crimes that thou dost call divine! | |
| And what I did, that would I do once more | 240 |
| Before SeverusDecius,nay, before | |
| The eyes of all men;so would I proclaim | |
| One God alone adored,one Holiest Name! | |
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| FELIX. At last my bounties yield to wrath most stern, most just. | |
| Die! or the gods adore! | 245 |
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| POLY. A Christian I! | |
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| FELIX. Thou must | |
| Adore the gods I say! Adore, or die! | |
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| POLY. I am a Christian. | |
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| FELIX. This is thy reply? | 250 |
| Ye Guards, do my behestprepare the knife! | |
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| PAUL. Where goes he? | |
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| FELIX. To his death! | |
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| POLY. Ah, no to life! | |
| (To PAULINE.) Remember me! Farewell, Pauline, farewell! | 255 |
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| PAUL. Nay, I will follow theeto heaven or hell! | |
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| FELIX. Begone! For all our ills this one redress! [Exeunt PAULINE, POLYEUCTE and GUARDS. | |
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Enter ALBIN O task ungrateful to my gentle mind! | |
| Well did he say, Be cruel to be kind! | |
| The people I defy, ah, let them rage! | 260 |
| Severus may in war of words engage. | |
| Yes, I have saved myselfI mean the State, | |
| To wilful man there comes relentless fate; | |
| My conscience pure of all reproach,for I | |
| Have lied and stormed to shake his constancy. | 265 |
| To give his hot young blood due time to cool | |
| I played the cowardnay, I played the fool! | |
| Why did he thus assail the gods and me | |
| With insult, and with horrid blasphemy? | |
| But interest helped me, and resentment too. | 270 |
| Else had I found my duty hard to do! | |
| |
| ALBIN. Soon mayst thou this thy dear-bought victory rue, | |
| For thou hast done what thou canst neer undo! | |
| Unworthy deed for Roman knight! ah, me! [Aside. | |
| I would that I could add, unworthy thee! | 275 |
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| FELIX. Manlius and Brutus both a son have slain, | |
| And neither did thereby his glory stain; | |
| The part that is diseasedthat part we bleed, | |
| So is the State from knaves and caitiffs freed. | |
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| ALBIN. Revenge and pressing peril thee unman, | 280 |
| Elsecouldst thou bless a deed all men must ban? | |
| When she, thy widowed daughter, comesthe air | |
| Of heaven will echo to her deep despair! | |
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| FELIX. Thou dost remind me she with Polyeucte went | |
| I know not with what mind, with what intent: | 285 |
| But her despair awakes my fond alarm, | |
| Go, Albin, go, and guard my child from harm! | |
| She might the execution of the law | |
| Impede: I would not that his death she saw. | |
| Try to console herGo! what dost thou fear? | 290 |
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Enter PAULINE ALBIN. I need not go, for ahPauline is here! | |
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| PAUL. Tyrant, why leave thy butchery half done? | |
| Come, slay thy daughter, thou hast slain thy son! | |
| For, hear!His villainyor worthis mine! | |
| Why stay thy hand while I my neck incline? | 295 |
| Thy sword in me shall find a kindred food, | |
| I too am new baptized, baptized in blood! | |
| These drops that fell from off the murderous knife, | |
| Have made the martyrs widow a true wife. | |
| I see!I feel!I know! My darkest night | 300 |
| Is oerto break in purest heavenly light. | |
| I too, at last, am Christs: that word says all, | |
| Those hands were pierced for meI hear His call: | |
| Deathlovely deaththy beckoning hand I hail! | |
| Oh, help my passage, or thy schemes may fail! | 305 |
| Dread Decius! Fear Severus! Fear thy fall! | |
| Oh, speed me to my lordmy lovemy all! | |
| My husband calls me to his happier land | |
| See!there Nearchus at his side doth stand! | |
| Lead me to thesethe gods by thee confest, | 310 |
| Some shrines spared Polyeucte, I will break the rest! | |
| There, there the gods thou fearest I will brave, | |
| Oh, bare thy knife!no other gift I crave. | |
| Thou hast my master been: another Lord | |
| Claims my obedience now; yes, raise thy sword! | 315 |
| Revolt is holy when for Christ we fight, | |
| My day has dawned, the day that knows no night! | |
| Once more I cryChrist only has my heart! | |
| Thy bliss and mine secure! Let me depart! | |
| Keep thou thy kingdom! Safe its treasure hold! | 320 |
| My kingdom therewith Christwithin the fold! | |
| |
Enter SEVERUS SEV. Unnatural sire, whose craft leads to the grave, | |
| The slaves of fear themselves alone enslave. | |
| Yes, Polyeucte is slain, and slain by thee, | |
| A sacrifice to greed and treachery. | 325 |
| I offered rescue from the opening tomb, | |
| Base doubts enthralled thee, didst seal his doom; | |
| I prayed, I threatened, thou wouldst not believe, | |
| Deceiver thou, so must all men deceive. | |
| Thou thoughtst me coward, liarthou shalt see | 330 |
| All oaths Severus swears fulfilled shall be. | |
| Poor moth! I might have saved theenay, I planned to save, | |
| Thy perfidy the torch that marks thee for the grave. | |
| Drench earth in blood,for Jove pour forth malignant zeal, | |
| The strokes that thou hast dealt redoubled shalt thou feel! | 335 |
| I go: the storm shall break oer this devoted land, | |
| From Jove the bolt?maybebut I direct his hand. | |
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| FELIX. Why lags that hand? A willing victim I, | |
| I choose to suffer for my perfidy; | |
| My doubts, my fears unworthy, all I own, | 340 |
| I have offendedlet my death atone. | |
| Take thou my honours, their poor lustre thine, | |
| I kneel before another, nobler shrine. | |
| The Power that moved me, groping through the night | |
| Of wrong and darkness, wafts me to The Light! | 345 |
| I slew thee, Polyeucte, but thy pardoning hand | |
| Shall guide thy murderer to the better land! | |
| He prays for me, and by his sacrifice, | |
| New-born upon his ashes I arise. | |
| (To PAULINE.) Raised by his death from out the grave of sin, | 350 |
| Thou treadst the path thy father shall begin; | |
| By me his martyr-crown, as all my bliss | |
| By him. His Christ is mine, and I am his; | |
| O, blessed Christian vengeance! All my loss | |
| Is turned to gain by the redeeming Cross! | 355 |
| Now, Pauline, am I thine, a Christian I, | |
| That Death gives life by which alike we die! | |
| (To SEVERUS.) Then slay us both! Behold a willing prey! | |
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| PAUL. (To FELIX.) Yes, mine for ever now! Hail, glorious day, | |
| That sees earths loss transformed to endless gain! | 360 |
| |
| FELIX. The gain, the glory, Christs! By Him we reign. | |
| |
| SEV. Now am I dumb, some miracle is here; | |
| Their courage and their faith must I revere; | |
| We slay them; yet, like Cadmus seed, new-born | |
| They sprout afresh, and laugh our scythe to scorn. | 365 |
| We give them cord and flame, they torture hail; | |
| Friends fail them, but themselves they never fail. | |
| We mow them down, fresh nurslings to unbare, | |
| What moves the seed lies hid, but it is there. | |
| They bless the world, though by the world accurst, | 370 |
| Their shield am Ilet Decius do his worst. | |
| I yet may own their power, though now my will | |
| That each to his own gods be faithful still, | |
| Let each still search for truth, and truth adore. | |
| (To FELIX.) A Christian thou? Then fear my wrath no more, | 375 |
| Thy sect I cherish; this their awful cult | |
| Severus will protect, but neer insult. | |
| Keep thou thy power from Roman sword secure, | |
| So long as loyalty with faith endure; | |
| I swear it: ay, the Emperor shall learn | 380 |
| The guiltless from the traitor to discern; | |
| His persecution baseless as his fear. | |
| |
| FELIX. Severusthou who hast the hearing ear, | |
| Freeman of RomeGods Spirit grant thee grace | |
| To be Christs Freeman, and behold His face: | 385 |
| To theseChrists martyrsearths last rites be given, | |
| Earth, guard their ashes as a trust for Heaven! | |
| Earth hides their dust. When envious time is oer, | |
| That dust shall wake to life for evermore! | |
| |