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Hast. 'Tis well, madam.

But I would see your friend.

Alicia. Oh, thou false lord!

I would be mistress of my heaving heart,
Stifle this rising rage, and learn from thee
To dress my face in easy, dull indiff'rence:
But 'twill not be; my wrongs will tear their way,
And rush at once upon thee.

Hast. Are you wise?

Have you the use of reason? Do you wake?
What means this raving, this transporting passion?
Alicia. Oh, thou cool traitor! thou insulting ty-
rant!

Dost thou behold my poor distracted heart,
Thus rent with agonizing love and rage,

And ask me what it means? Art thou not false ?
Am I not scorn'd, forsaken, and abandon'd,
Left, like a common wretch, to shame and infamy,
Giv'n up to be the sport of villain's tongues.
Of laughing parasites, and lewd buffoons;
And all because my soul has doted on thee
With love, with truth, and tenderness unutterable?

Hast. Are these the proofs of tenderness and love? These endless quarrels, discontents, and jealousies, These never-ceasing wailings and complainings, These furious starts, these whirlwinds of the soul, Which every moment rise to madness?

Alicia. What proof, alas! have I not giv'n of love? What have I not abandon'd to thy arms? Have I not set at nought my noble birth, A spotless fame, and an unblemish'd race, The peace of innocence, and pride of virtue ? My prodigality has given thee all;

And, now I've nothing left me to bestow,

You hate the wretched bankrupt you have made.
Hast. Why am I thus pursued from place to place,
Kept in the view, and cross'd at ev'ry turn?
In vain I fly, and, like a hunted deer,

A show of mummery without a meaning.
My brother, rest and pardon to his soul!
Is gone to his account; for this his minion,
The revel-rout is done-But, you were speaking
Concerning her. I have been told, that you
Are frequent in your visitations to her.

Hast. No farther, my good lord, than friendly pity,

And tender-hearted charity, allow.

Glo. Go to; I did not mean to chide you for it. For, sooth to say, I hold it noble in you

To cherish the distress'd

-On with your tale.
Hast. Thus it is, gracious sir, that certain officers
Using the warrant of your mighty name,
With insolence unjust, and lawless power,
Have seized upon the lands, which late she held
By grant from her great master Edward's bounty.
Glo. Somewhat of this, but slightly, I have heard ;
And though some counsellors of forward zeal,
Some of most ceremonious sanctity,

And bearded wisdom, often have provoked
The hand of justice to fall heavy on her,
Yet still, in kind compassion of her weakness,
And tender memory of Edward's love,

I have withheld the merciless stern law

From doing outrage on her helpless beauty.

Hast. Good Heaven, who renders mercy back for
mercy,

With open-handed bounty shall repay you:
This gentle deed shall fairly be set foremost,
To screen the wild escapes of lawless passion,
And the long train of frailties flesh is heir to.
Glo. Thus far, the voice of pity pleaded only:
Our farther and more full extent of grace
Is given to your request. Let her attend,
And to ourself deliver up her griefs;

She shall be heard with patience, and each wrong
At full redress'd. But I have other news,

Which much import us both; for still my fortunes
Go hand in hand with yours: our common foes,
The queen's relations, our new-fangled gentry,
Have fall'n their mighty crests-That for your pri-
[Exeunt.

vacy.

SCENE II.

An Apartment in JANE SHORE's House.

Enter BELMOUR and DUMONT.

Bel. How she has lived you have heard

already;

The rest your own attendance in her family,

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Where I have found the means this day to place you, And nearer observation, best will tell

you.

See, with what sad and sober cheer she comes.

Enter JANE SHORE.

Sure, or I read her visage much amiss,
Or grief besets her hard.—Save you, fair lady!
The blessings of the cheerful morn be on you,
And greet your beauty with its opening sweets.
J. Shore. My gentle neighbour, your good wishes
still

Pursue my hapless fortunes! Ah, good Belmour!
How few, like thee, inquire the wretched out,
And court the offices of soft humanity!

Like thee, reserve their raiment for the naked,
Reach out their bread to feed the crying orphan,
Or mix their pitying tears with those that weep!
Thy praise deserves a better tongue than mine,
To speak and bless thy name. Is this the gentleman,
Whose friendly service you commended to me?

[Aside.

Bel. Madam, it is.

J. Shore. A venerable aspect!

Age sits with decent grace upon his visage,
And worthily becomes his silver locks;

He wears the marks of many years well-spent,
Of virtue, truth well-tried, and wise experience;
A friend like this would suit my sorrows well.—
Fortune, I fear me, sir, has meant you ill,

[TO DUMONT.
Who pays your merit with that scanty pittance
Which my poor hand and humble roof can give.
But to supply these golden vantages,

Which elsewhere you might find, expect to meet
A just regard and value for your worth,
The welcome of a friend, and the free partnership
Of all that little good the world allows me.

answer

Dum. You over-rate me much; and all my Must be my future truth; let them speak for me, And make up my deserving.

J. Shore. Are you of England?

Dum. No, gracious lady, Flanders claims my birth;

At Antwerp has my constant biding been,

Where sometimes I have known more plenteous days Than these which now my failing age affords.

J. Shore. Alas! at Antwerp!-Oh, forgive my [Weeping.

tears!

They fall for my offences-and must fall
Long, long ere they wash my stains away.

You knew, perhaps-Oh grief! Oh shame!-my husband?

Dum. I knew him well-but stay this flood of anguish,

The senseless grave feels not your pious sorrows:
Three years and more are past, since I was bid,
With many of our common friends, to wait him
To his last peaceful mansion. I attended,
Sprinkled his clay-cold corse with holy drops,

According to our church's rev'rend rite,

And saw him laid in hallow'd ground to rest.

J. Shore. Oh, that my soul had known no joy but
him!

That I had lived within his guiltless arms,
And dying slept in innocence beside him!
But now his dust abhors the fellowship,
And scorns to mix with mine.

Enter a SERVANT.

Serv. The lady Alicia

Attends your leisure.

J. Shore. Say I wish to see her.—[Exit SERVANT. Please, gentle sir, one moment to retire; I'll wait you on the instant, and inform you Of each unhappy circumstance, in which

Your friendly aid and counsel much may stead me. [Exeunt BELMOUR and DUMONt.

Enter ALICIA.

Alicia. Still, my fair friend, still shall I find you thus?

Still shall these sighs heave after one another,
These trickling drops chase one another still,
As if the posting messengers of grief
Could overtake the hours fled far away,
And make old time come back?

J. Shore. No, my Alicia,

Heaven and his saints be witness to my thoughts,
There is no hour of all my life o'erpast,

That I could wish should take its turn again.

Alicia. And yet some of those days my friend has known,

Some of those years might pass for golden ones
At least if womankind can judge of happiness.
What could we wish, we who delight in empire,

B

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