Nathan the Wise; a dramatic poem in five acts. Gotthold Ephraim Lessing

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style="font-size:15px;">      But in vain. Deaf to our warmest prayers,

       On me he flung such bitter mockery—

      NATHAN.

      That hence rebuffed—

      DAYA.

      Oh, no, oh, no, indeed not,

       Daily I forced myself upon him, daily

       Afresh encountered his dry taunting speeches.

       Much I have borne, and would have borne much more:

       But he of late forbears his lonely walk

       Under the scattered palms, which stand about

       Our holy sepulchre: nor have I learnt

       Where he now is. You seem astonished—thoughtful—

      NATHAN.

      I was imagining what strange impressions

       This conduct makes on such a mind as Recha’s.

       Disdained by one whom she must feel compelled

       To venerate and to esteem so highly.

       At once attracted and repelled—the combat

       Between her head and heart must yet endure,

       Regret, Resentment, in unusual struggle.

       Neither, perhaps, obtains the upper hand,

       And busy fancy, meddling in the fray,

       Weaves wild enthusiasms to her dazzled spirit,

       Now clothing Passion in the garb of Reason,

       And Reason now in Passion’s—do I err?

       This last is Recha’s fate—Romantic notions—

      DAYA.

      Aye; but such pious, lovely, sweet, illusions.

      NATHAN.

      Illusions though.

      DAYA.

      Yes: and the one, her bosom

       Clings to most fondly, is, that the brave templar

       Was but a transient inmate of the earth,

       A guardian angel, such as from her childhood

       She loved to fancy kindly hovering round her,

       Who from his veiling cloud amid the fire

       Stepped forth in her preserver’s form. You smile—

       Who knows? At least beware of banishing

       So pleasing an illusion—if deceitful

       Christian, Jew, Mussulman, agree to own it,

       And ’tis—at least to her—a dear illusion.

      NATHAN.

      Also to me. Go, my good Daya, go,

       See what she’s after. Can’t I speak with her?

       Then I’ll find out our untamed guardian angel,

       Bring him to sojourn here awhile among us—

       We’ll pinion his wild wing, when once he’s taken.

      DAYA.

      You undertake too much.

      NATHAN.

      And when, my Daya,

       This sweet illusion yields to sweeter truth,

       (For to a man a man is ever dearer

       Than any angel) you must not be angry

       To see our loved enthusiast exercised.

      DAYA.

      You are so good—and yet so sly. I’ll seek her,

       But listen—yes! she’s coming of herself.

      Nathan, Daya, and Recha.

      RECHA.

      And you are here, your very self, my father,

       I thought you’d only sent your voice before you.

       Where are you then? What mountains, deserts, torrents,

       Divide us now? You see me, face to face,

       And do not hasten to embrace your Recha.

       Poor Recha! she was almost burnt alive,

       But only—only—almost. Do not shudder!

       O ’tis a horrid end to die in fire!

      NATHAN (embracing her).

      My child, my darling child!

      RECHA.

      You had to cross

       The Jordan, Tigris, and Euphrates, and

       Who knows what rivers else. I used to tremble

       And quake for you, till the fire came so nigh me;

       Since then, methinks ’twere comfort, balm, refreshment,

       To die by water. But you are not drowned—

       I am not burnt alive.—We will rejoice—

       We will praise God—the kind good God, who bore thee,

       Upon the buoyant wings of unseen angels, Across the treacherous stream—the God who bade My angel visibly on his white wing Athwart the roaring flame—

      NATHAN (aside).

      White wing?—oh, aye

       The broad white fluttering mantle of the templar.

      RECHA.

      Yes, visibly he bore me through the fire,

       O’ershadowed by his pinions.—Face to face

       I’ve seen an angel, father, my own angel.

      NATHAN.

      Recha deserves it, and would see in him

       No fairer form than he beheld in her,

      RECHA.

      Whom

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