Life is a Dream by Pedro Calderon de la Barca - HTML preview

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ACT III.

 

SCENE I.--The Tower, etc., as in Act I. Scene I.

 

Segismund, as at first, and Clotaldo.

 

     CLOTALDO.

     Princes and princesses, and counsellors

     Fluster'd to right and left--my life made at--

     But that was nothing

     Even the white-hair'd, venerable King

     Seized on--Indeed, you made wild work of it;

     And so discover'd in your outward action,

     Flinging your arms about you in your sleep,

     Grinding your teeth--and, as I now remember,

     Woke mouthing out judgment and execution,

     On those about you.

 

     SEG.

     Ay, I did indeed.

 

     CLO.

     Ev'n now your eyes stare wild; your hair stands up--

     Your pulses throb and flutter, reeling still

     Under the storm of such a dream--

 

     SEG.

     A dream!

     That seem'd as swearable reality

     As what I wake in now.

 

     CLO.

     Ay--wondrous how

     Imagination in a sleeping brain

     Out of the uncontingent senses draws

     Sensations strong as from the real touch;

     That we not only laugh aloud, and drench

     With tears our pillow; but in the agony

     Of some imaginary conflict, fight

     And struggle--ev'n as you did; some, 'tis thought,

     Under the dreamt-of stroke of death have died.

 

     SEG.

     And what so very strange too--In that world

     Where place as well as people all was strange,

     Ev'n I almost as strange unto myself,

     You only, you, Clotaldo--you, as much

     And palpably yourself as now you are,

     Came in this very garb you ever wore,

     By such a token of the past, you said,

     To assure me of that seeming present.

 

     CLO.

     Ay?

 

     SEG.

     Ay; and even told me of the very stars

     You tell me here of--how in spite of them,

     I was enlarged to all that glory.

 

     CLO.

     Ay, By the false spirits' nice contrivance thus

     A little truth oft leavens all the false,

     The better to delude us.

 

     SEG.

     For you know

     'Tis nothing but a dream?

 

     CLO.

     Nay, you yourself

     Know best how lately you awoke from that

     You know you went to sleep on?--

     Why, have you never dreamt the like before?

 

     SEG.

     Never, to such reality.

 

     CLO.

     Such dreams

     Are oftentimes the sleeping exhalations

     Of that ambition that lies smouldering

     Under the ashes of the lowest fortune;

     By which, when reason slumbers, or has lost

     The reins of sensible comparison,

     We fly at something higher than we are--

     Scarce ever dive to lower--to be kings,

     Or conquerors, crown'd with laurel or with gold,

     Nay, mounting heaven itself on eagle wings.

     Which, by the way, now that I think of it,

     May furnish us the key to this high flight

     That royal Eagle we were watching, and

     Talking of as you went to sleep last night.

 

     SEG.

     Last night? Last night?

 

     CLO.

     Ay, do you not remember

     Envying his immunity of flight,

     As, rising from his throne of rock, he sail'd

     Above the mountains far into the West,

     That burn'd about him, while with poising wings

     He darkled in it as a burning brand

     Is seen to smoulder in the fire it feeds?

 

     SEG.

     Last night--last night--Oh, what a day was that

     Between that last night and this sad To-day!

 

     CLO.

     And yet, perhaps,

     Only some few dark moments, into which

     Imagination, once lit up within

     And unconditional of time and space,

     Can pour infinities.

 

     SEG.

     And I remember

     How the old man they call'd the King, who wore

     The crown of gold about his silver hair,

     And a mysterious girdle round his waist,

     Just when my rage was roaring at its height,

     And after which it all was dark again,

     Bid me beware lest all should be a dream.

 

     CLO.

     Ay--there another specialty of dreams,

     That once the dreamer 'gins to dream he dreams,

     His foot is on the very verge of waking.

 

     SEG.

     Would it had been upon the verge of death

     That knows no waking--

     Lifting me up to glory, to fall back,

     Stunn'd, crippled--wretcheder than ev'n before.

 

     CLO.

     Yet not so glorious, Segismund, if you

     Your visionary honour wore so ill

     As to work murder and revenge on those

     Who meant you well.

 

     SEG.

     Who meant me!--me! their Prince

     Chain'd like a felon--

 

     CLO.

     Stay, stay--Not so fast,

     You dream'd the Prince, remember.

 

     SEG.

     Then in dream

     Revenged it only.

 

     CLO.

     True. But as they say

     Dreams are rough copies of the waking soul

     Yet uncorrected of the higher Will,

     So that men sometimes in their dreams confess

     An unsuspected, or forgotten, self;

     One must beware to check--ay, if one may,

     Stifle ere born, such passion in ourselves

     As makes, we see, such havoc with our sleep,

     And ill reacts upon the waking day.

     And, by the bye, for one test, Segismund,

     Between such swearable realities--

     Since Dreaming, Madness, Passion, are akin

     In missing each that salutary rein

     Of reason, and the guiding will of man:

     One test, I think, of waking sanity

     Shall be that conscious power of self-control,

     To curb all passion, but much most of all

     That evil and vindictive, that ill squares

     With human, and with holy canon less,

     Which bids us pardon ev'n our enemies,

     And much more those who, out of no ill will,

     Mistakenly have taken up the rod

     Which heaven, they think, has put into their hands.

 

     SEG.

     I think I soon shall have to try again--

     Sleep has not yet done with me.

 

     CLO.

     Such a sleep.

     Take my advice--'tis early yet--the sun

     Scarce up above the mountain; go within,

     And if the night deceived you, try anew

     With morning; morning dreams they say come true.

 

     SEG.

     Oh, rather pray for me a sleep so fast

     As shall obliterate dream and waking too.

 

     (Exit into the tower.)

 

     CLO.

     So sleep; sleep fast: and sleep away those two

     Night-potions, and the waking dream between

     Which dream thou must believe; and, if to see

     Again, poor Segismund! that dream must be.--

     And yet, and yet, in these our ghostly lives,

     Half night, half day, half sleeping, half awake,

     How if our waking life, like that of sleep,

     Be all a dream in that eternal life

     To which we wake not till we sleep in death?

     How if, I say, the senses we now trust

     For date of sensible comparison,--

     Ay, ev'n the Reason's self that dates with them,

     Should be in essence or intensity

     Hereafter so transcended, and awake

     To a perceptive subtlety so keen

     As to confess themselves befool'd before,

     In all that now they will avouch for most?

     One man--like this--but only so much longer

     As life is longer than a summer's day,

     Believed himself a king upon his throne,

     And play'd at hazard with his fellows' lives,

     Who cheaply dream'd away their lives to him.

     The sailor dream'd of tossing on the flood:

     The soldier of his laurels grown in blood:

     The lover of the beauty that he knew

     Must yet dissolve to dusty residue:

     The merchant and the miser of his bags

     Of finger'd gold; the beggar of his rags:

     And all this stage of earth on which we seem

     Such busy actors, and the parts we play'd,

     Substantial as the shadow of a shade,

     And Dreaming but a dream within a dream!

 

     FIFE.

     Was it not said, sir,

     By some philosopher as yet unborn,

     That any chimney-sweep who for twelve hours

     Dreams himself king is happy as the king

     Who dreams himself twelve hours a chimney-sweep?

 

     CLO.

     A theme indeed for wiser heads than yours

     To moralize upon--How came you here?--

 

     FIFE.

     Not of my own will, I assure you, sir.

     No matter for myself: but I would know

     About my mistress--I mean, master--

 

     CLO.

     Oh, Now I remember--Well, your master-mistress

     Is well, and deftly on its errand speeds,

     As you shall--if you can but hold your tongue.

     Can you?

 

     FIFE.

     I'd rather be at home again.

 

     CLO.

     Where you shall be the quicker if while here

     You can keep silence.

 

     FIFE.

     I may whistle, then?

     Which by the virtue of my name I do,

     And also as a reasonable test

     Of waking sanity--

 

     CLO.

     Well, whistle then;

     And for another reason you forgot,

     That while you whistle, you can chatter not.

     Only remember--if you quit this pass--

 

     FIFE.

     (His rhymes are out, or he had call'd it spot)--

 

     CLO.

     A bullet brings you to.

     I must forthwith to court to tell the King

     The issue of this lamentable day,

     That buries all his hope in night.

     (To FIFE.)

     Farewell. Remember.

 

     FIFE.

     But a moment--but a word!

     When shall I see my mis--mas--

 

     CLO.

     Be content:

     All in good time; and then, and not before,

     Never to miss your master any more.

     (Exit.)

 

     FIFE.

     Such talk of dreaming--dreaming--I begin

     To doubt if I be dreaming I am Fife,

     Who with a lad who call'd herself a boy

     Because--I doubt there's some confusion here--

     He wore no petticoat, came on a time

     Riding from Muscovy on half a horse,

     Who must have dreamt she was a horse entire,

     To cant me off upon my hinder face

     Under this tower, wall-eyed and musket-tongued,

     With sentinels a-pacing up and down,

     Crying All's well when all is far from well,

     All the day long, and all the night, until

     I dream--if what is dreaming be not waking--

     Of bells a-tolling and processions rolling

     With candles, crosses, banners, San-benitos,

     Of which I wear the flamy-finingest,

     Through streets and places throng'd with fiery faces

     To some back platform--

     Oh, I shall take a fire into my hand

     With thinking of my own dear Muscovy--

     Only just over that Sierra there,

     By which we tumbled headlong into--No-land.

     Now, if without a bullet after me,

     I could but get a peep of my old home

     Perhaps of my own mule to take me there--

     All's still--perhaps the gentlemen within

     Are dreaming it is night behind their masks--

     God send 'em a good nightmare!--Now then--Hark!

     Voices--and up the rocks--and armed men

     Climbing like cats--Puss in the corner then.

 

     (He hides.)

 

     (Enter Soldiers cautiously up the rocks.)

 

     CAPTAIN.

     This is the frontier pass, at any rate,

     Where Poland ends and Muscovy begins.

 

     SOLDIER.

     We must be close upon the tower, I know,

     That half way up the mountain lies ensconced.

 

     CAPT.

     How know you that?

 

     SOL.

     He told me so--the Page

     Who put us on the scent.

 

     SOL. 2.

     And, as I think,

     Will soon be here to run it down with us.

 

     CAPT.

     Meantime, our horses on these ugly rocks

     Useless, and worse than useless with their clatter--

     Leave them behind, with one or two in charge,

     And softly, softly, softly.

 

     SOLDIERS.

     --There it is!

     --There what?

     --The tower--the fortress--

     --That the tower!--

     --That mouse-trap! We could pitch it down the rocks

     With our own hands.

     --The rocks it hangs among

     Dwarf its proportions and conceal its strength;

     Larger and stronger than you think.

     --No matter;

     No place for Poland's Prince to be shut up in.

     At it at once!

 

     CAPT.

     No--no--I tell you wait--

     Till those within give signal. For as yet

     We know not who side with us, and the fort

     Is strong in man and musket.

 

     SOL.

     Shame to wait

     For odds with such a cause at stake.

 

     CAPT.

     Because

     Of such a cause at stake we wait for odds--

     For if not won at once, for ever lost:

     For any long resistance on their part

     Would bring Basilio's force to succour them

     Ere we had rescued him we come to rescue.

     So softly, softly, softly, still--

 

     A SOLDIER (discovering Fife).

     Hilloa!

 

     SOLDIERS.

     --Hilloa! Here's some one skulking--

     --Seize and gag him!

     --Stab him at once, say I: the only way

     To make all sure.

     --Hold, every man of you!

     And down upon your knees!--Why, 'tis the Prince!

     --The Prince!--

     --Oh, I should know him anywhere,

     And anyhow disguised.

     --But the Prince is chain'd.

     --And of a loftier presence--

     --'Tis he, I tell you;

     Only bewilder'd as he was before.

     God save your Royal Highness! On our knees

     Beseech you answer us!

 

     FIFE.

     Just as you please.

     Well--'tis this country's custom, I suppose,

     To take a poor man every now and then

     And set him ON the throne; just for the fun

     Of tumbling him again into the dirt.

     And now my turn is come. 'Tis very pretty.

 

     SOL.

     His wits have been distemper'd with their drugs.

     But do you ask him, Captain.

 

     CAPT.

     On my knees,

     And in the name of all who kneel with me,

     I do beseech your Highness answer to

     Your royal title.

 

     FIFE.

     Still, just as you please.

     In my own poor opinion of myself--

     But that may all be dreaming, which it seems

     Is very much the fashion in this country

     No Polish prince at all, but a poor lad

     From Muscovy; where only help me back,

     I promise never to contest the crown

     Of Poland with whatever gentleman

     You fancy to set up.

 

     SOLDIERS.

     --From Muscovy?

     --A spy then--

     --Of Astolfo's--

     --Spy! a spy

     --Hang him at once!

 

     FIFE.

     No, pray don't dream of that!

 

     SOL.

     How dared you then set yourself up for our Prince Segismund?

 

     FIFE.

     _I_ set up!--_I_ like that

     When 'twas yourselves be-siegesmunded me.

 

     CAPT.

     No matter--Look!--The signal from the tower.

     Prince Segismund!

 

     SOL. (from the tower).

     Prince Segismund!

 

     CAPT.

     All's well. Clotaldo safe secured?--

 

     SOL. (from the tower).

     No--by ill luck,

     Instead of coming in, as we had look'd for,

     He sprang on horse at once, and off at gallop.

 

     CAPT.

     To Court, no doubt--a blunder that--And yet

     Perchance a blunder that may work as well

     As better forethought. Having no suspicion

     So will he carry none where his not going

     Were of itself suspicious. But of those

     Within, who side with us?

 

     SOL.

     Oh, one and all

     To the last man, persuaded or compell'd.

 

     CAPT.

     Enough: whatever be to be retrieved

     No moment to be lost. For though Clotaldo

     Have no revolt to tell of in the tower,

     The capital will soon awake to ours,

     And the King's force come blazing after us.

     Where is the Prince?

 

     SOL.

     Within; so fast asleep

     We woke him not ev'n striking off the chain

     We had so cursedly help bind him with,

     Not knowing what we did; but too ashamed

     Not to undo ourselves what we had done.

 

     CAPT.

     No matter, nor by whosesoever hands,

     Provided done. Come; we will bring him forth

     Out of that stony darkness here abroad,

     Where air and sunshine sooner shall disperse

     The sleepy fume which they have drugg'd him with.

 

     (They enter the tower, and thence bring out Segismund asleep on a      pallet, and set him in the middle of the stage.)

 

     CAPT.

     Still, still so dead asleep, the very noise

     And motion that we make in carrying him

     Stirs not a leaf in all the living tree.

 

     SOLDIERS.

     If living--But if by some inward blow

     For ever and irrevocably fell'd

     By what strikes deeper to the root than sleep?

     --He's dead! He's dead! They've kill'd him--

     --No--he breathes--

     And the heart beats--and now he breathes again

     Deeply, as one about to shake away

     The load of sleep.

 

     CAPT.

     Come, let us all kneel round,

     And with a blast of warlike instruments,

     And acclamation of all loyal hearts,

     Rouse and restore him to his royal right,

     From which no royal wrong shall drive him more.

 

     (They all kneel round his bed: trumpets, drums, etc.)

 

     SOLDIERS.

     --Segismund! Segismund! Prince Segismund!

     --King Segismund! Down with Basilio!

     --Down with Astolfo! Segismund our King! etc.

     --He stares upon us wildly. He cannot speak.

     --I said so--driv'n him mad.

     --Speak to him, Captain.

 

     CAPTAIN.

     Oh Royal Segismund, our Prince and King,

     Look on us--listen to us--answer us,

     Your faithful soldiery and subjects, now

     About you kneeling, but on fire to rise

     And cleave a passage through your enemies,

     Until we seat you on your lawful throne.

     For though your father, King Basilio,

     Now King of Poland, jealous of the stars

     That prophesy his setting with your rise,

     Here holds you ignominiously eclipsed,

     And would Astolfo, Duke of Muscovy,

     Mount to the throne of Poland after him;

     So will not we, your loyal soldiery

     And subjects; neither those of us now first

     Apprised of your existence and your right:

     Nor those that hitherto deluded by

     Allegiance false, their vizors now fling down,

     And craving pardon on their knees with us

     For that unconscious disloyalty,

     Offer with us the service of their blood;

     Not only we and they; but at our heels

     The heart, if not the bulk, of Poland follows

     To join their voices and their arms with ours,

     In vindicating with our lives our own

     Prince Segismund to Poland and her throne.

 

     SOLDIERS.

     --Segismund, Segismund, Prince Segismund!

     --Our own King Segismund, etc.

     (They all rise.)

 

     SEG.

     Again? So soon?--What, not yet done with me?

     The sun is little higher up, I think,

     Than when I last lay down,

     To bury in the depth of your own sea

     You that infest its shallows.

 

     CAPT.

     Sir!

 

     SEG.

     And now,

     Not in a palace, not in the fine clothes

     We all were in; but here, in the old place,

     And in our old accoutrement--

     Only your vizors off, and lips unlock'd

     To mock me with that idle title--

 

     CAPT.

     Nay,

     Indeed no idle title, but your own,

     Then, now, and now for ever. For, behold,

     Ev'n as I speak, the mountain passes fill

     And bristle with the advancing soldiery

     That glitters in your rising glory, sir;

     And, at our signal, echo to our cry,

     'Segismund, King of Poland!' etc.

 

     (Shouts, trumpets, etc.)

 

     SEG.

     Oh, how cheap

     The muster of a countless host of shadows,

     As impotent to do with as to keep!

     All this they said before--to softer music.

 

     CAPT.

     Soft music, sir, to what indeed were shadows,

     That, following the sunshine of a Court,

     Shall back be brought with it--if shadows still,

     Yet to substantial reckoning.