Then by force to stop pursuit, Still from him the cause concealing.
Cosm. Some device! Then I'm your man. One suggests itself already. See, this note of introduction From a friend, shall serve our purpose.
[DON Manuel retircs to the background.
Don Luis and his servant Rodrigo enter. D. Luis. This veil'd fair I must discover, Were it only that she strives With such effort to escape me.
Rod. Follow, and you'll soon detect her.
Cosm. - (coming forward and addressing Don Luis.) Señor, though of this intrusion I'm ashamed, perhaps your highness Would be kind enough to read me How this letter is directed. D. Luis. Hence :-I have not leisure now.
Cosm. Leisure! If that's all that's wanting, I have leisure in abundance, Quite enough to spare for both.
D. Luis. Hence, my patience is exhausted. Stand aside, I say !
[Drives him to one side. D. Man. (Aside.) No longer Can I wait, let courage finish That which caution had begun. Cavalier, the man you outrage Is my servant, and I know not How he should have so offended As to merit this misusage At your hand.
D. Luis. I answer neither Accusations nor enquiries. Explanation is a lesson I have yet to learn. Farewell.
D. Man. Señor, if my honour needed Explanation for an insult, Even your arrogance may trust me I should not depart without it. When I ask'd how he had injured, Wrong'd, or troubled you, the question Merited more courteous answer. Courtesy in courts should harbour- Give not yours so poor a name, That a stranger's tongue must teach you Lessons ye yourselves should know.
D. Luis. Who shall say I could not better Teach that lesson ?
D. Man. Let the tongue be Silent, that the sword may speak. D. Luis. You
say
well. [They draw and fight. Cosm.
That men should ever Long for fighting!
Rod. (To Cosm.) Draw your sword too!
Cos. Mine's a maiden blade, and may not Venture from virgin scabbard ! Till drawn forth by marriage license.
Don Juan appears at the door of one of the houses in the
street. Dona BEATRICE endeavouring to detain him, D. Juan. Beatrice, unhand me! Beat.
Go not.
D. Juan. With my brother's life in peril ! [He breaks loose. Beat. Woe is me-alas !
[ She retires into the house. D. Juan. (advancing to Don Luis.) Behold me
D. Luis. Stop, Juan. Come not Nearer, for your coming makes me Coward rather than courageous. Stranger! he who single-handed Shrank not from your sword's encounter, If he now decline the combat With another's arm to aid him, Shuns it not through fear. Adieu ! For my
nobleness permits not Fight unequal, least of all With a foe so brave and gallant. And so, fare you well! D. Man.
I honour This high-spirit, this refinement; But should
any
doubt remaining Prompt you once again to seek me, You will find me where you will.
D. Luis. Be it so, then. D. Man.
Be it so, then ! D. Juan. What is this I see and hear, Don Manuel ?
D. Man. Don Juan? D. Juan.
Doubtful Sways my soul, and undecided What to do; at once beholding Here a friend, and there a brother (Both, indeed, are one) in quarrel ; And, until I know the cause, Thus must waver. D. Luis.
Thus it is, then : This brave knight would interfere To protect his foolish servant, Whose presumption had provoked me To chastise him. Now 'tis over And forgotten. D. Juan.
If it be so, Let your courtesy excuse me If I hurry to embrace him. 'Tis our house's long expected, Noble guest, Don Manuel. Brother, Come for two who once have measured Swords together, rest thereafter Better friends, since by the trial Each has learn'd the other's valour- Come, embrace me. D. Man.
Ere I do so, Admiration of his courage Prompts me first to pay my duty To Don Luis.
D. Luis. I am wholly Yours : and only must regret That I did not sooner know you, Since your valour should have been Your announcement. D. Man.
Yours has left me Here behind a parting token. See! this hand is hurt.
D. Luis.
A thousand Times I wish the hurt were mine!
Cos. Bless us, what a courteous quarrel !
D. Juan. Come, and let your wound be look'd to. You, Don Luis, must remain. And to Dona Beatrice, Ere she mount her coach, excuse me For this seeming show of rudeness. Come then, señor, to my mansion- Rather I should say your own Where your wound- D. Man.
My wound is nothing. D. Juan. Nay, come quickly. D. Man. (aside.)
How ill-omen'd That Madrid with bloody welcome Thus receives me !
[Exit with Don Juan into the house. D. Luis. (aside.) How provoking That my efforts to discover This veiled fair are all in vain !
Cos. (aside.) Oh! how richly does my master Merit what he got, to teach him Not to play Don Quixote here.
[E.cit, following his Master. Dona BEATRICE and Clara re-enter from the house. D. Luis. Lady, now the storm is over, Let the roses of your beauty Bloom again, which lay so lately Chill'd and wither'd by the blighting Of a swoon.
Beat. But-Don Juan Where is he?
D. Luis. He prays you, lady, To excuse him. Pressing duties Call him hence to tend the safety Of a wounded friend. Beat.
Ah, me! 'Tis himself-Don Juan ?
D. Luis, It is not Don Juan : were it He that had been hurt, I should not Stand so patiently beside you. Calm these terrors : 'twere unjust, Since my brother is uninjured, That your breast with anxious fears- Mine with grief_should thus be haunted: Grief, for such it is, to see you So distress'd, so overmaster'd, By the imaginary fears Which so idly cloud your mind.
Beat. Well you know, Señor Don Luis, That I value your attentions Justly, both as proofs of love, And because they come from you ; But I never can requite them, For the stars control affection; And for what the stars deny us, Who shall call them to account? If in courts we prize the dearest What in courts is found the rarest, Then be grateful for this candid Undeception ; were it only That the simple truth's a treasure Rarely to be met with there.
[Exit.
Don Luis, after Beatrice retires, expresses to his confidant Rodrigo, his surprise at his brother's thoughtlessness in introducing Don Manuel to his house.
Having Here a sister, youthful, handsome, Lately widow'd : as you know, Living there in such retirement, Searce the sun beholds her presence ; And but Beatrice alone, As her near relation, enters.
Rod. Yes, I recollect; her husband, In some port administrator Of the crown revenues, dying Deeply to the king indebted; While his widow, to the court Secretly repair'd, awaiting Till in silence and retirement She might gain his debt's acquittance. And this justifies your brother ; Since, if you reflect maturely That her widowhood affords her Neither license nor occasion For receiving guests or visits, And that, though Don Manuel dwell Here, he never need discover That the house contains a woman : Where's the harm though here he be ? All the more so, that your brother, With such prudence and precaution, Has assign'd her an apartment Opening on the street behind us ; And the passage to the house (Either to avert suspicion That it had been closed on purpose, Or that at a future time It might be with ease re-open'd) With a cabinet of glass Has conceald, so neatly fitted, That no mortal could discover There a door had ever been.
D. Luis. This, then, is my sole assurance ! And precisely this it is Which undoes me; since he places, As you say, to guard his honour, Nothing but a screen of glass, Which the slightest touch may
shiver.
[Exeunt. The reader, who has the least ac- seclusion to which she is confined; the quaintance with the machinery of the tedium of which had led her on this Spanish stage, will readily anticipate occasion to venture out in disguise, that this cabinet, concealing a door of and to mingle in the crowd which was communication between the apart- witnessing the festivities in the Palace ments of Don Manuel and those as- Square, when she had been suddenly signed to Angela, is destined to make alarmed by the appearance of her a prominent figure in the intrigue of brother, Don Luis; had fled from him,
and had only been enabled to reach The next scene takes place in the her home through the gallant interapartments of Dona Angela, who ference of Don Manuel. Scarcely enters hurriedly along with Isabel, has she completed her change of dress, throwing off the dress she had worn in when her brother Don Luis himself the street, and resuming her mourn- enters, 'and, unconscious that Angela ing attire. She inveighs against the had been the object of his pursuit, re
lates to her his adventure, and com- conscious of a growing attachment tomunicates the unexpected intelligence wards her defender, she resolves to that the cavalier whose interference pay a visit to his apartment during his had arrested his pursuit, is her bro- absence, and to leave behind some ther's expected guest, Don Manuel, token of her gratitude, without reand that he is now an inmate in their vealing how or from what quarter it mansion. Aware, through the information of Isabel, of the existence of the We are next introduced to the door entering into his apartment, and chamber of Don Manuel. concealed by the cabinet, and halfThe principal door is in the background. On the right the secret door, con.
cealed by a large press with glass doors, in which various pieces of glassware are placed on shelves. The cabinet is so contrived as to revolve on its hinges when the door is opened. On the left of the room a recess with curtains. DON MANUEL and Don Juan enter. A Servant follows with a light.
D. Juan. Beseech you, sir! lie down.
D. Man. So slight my hurt, I own I do already fear, Don Juan, that I play the weakling here, Suffering your care to go so far.
D. Juan. Thanks to the lucky fortune of my star! Wretched I should remain Were this, my pleasure, purchased with the pain To see my friend contined Within my house by sickness, and to find A brother's hand (although Unwitting whom it wounded) dealt the blow.
D. Man. He is a noble knight- I envy him his prowess in the tight, Admire his courtesy, And ever shall his friend and servant be.
[Don Luis enters, followed by a servant with a covered
basket, containing a sword. D. Luis. That I am yours no less, Let the remorse which I endure express I offer you my life ; And that the hapless instrument of strife No more with me. nain, Which cannot please me more, nor serve again, (Even as the servant's driven Forth, who offence has to nos master given,) I rid me of it so.
[Presenting the sword to Don MANUEL. This, señor, is the blade that dealt the blow, Here at your feet extended, Imploring pardon where it hath offended ; Let your just wrath with it, On me and on itself, take vengeance fit.
D. Man. In all you conquer me! Brave and discreet: mine let the weapon be, Which, ever by my side, Shall teach me to be brave. I feel with pride My life now bears a charm; For thought of danger never need alarm His breast, who feels thine honour'd weapon near,
Before which only he had cause to fear. This scene of mutual compliments portmanteaus, and grumbling at the is interrupted by the entrance of Cos- disasters he had encountered in bringme, bearing his master's trunks and ing them from the Posada, where
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