Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works. Knowledge house

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Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works - Knowledge house

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not the Duke show thee sufficient honour?

      guido

      Your Grace, I lack no favours from the Duke,

      Whom my soul loathes as I loathe wickedness,

      But come to proffer on my bended knees,

      My loyal service to thee unto death.

      duchess

      Alas! I am so fallen in estate

      I can but give thee a poor meed of thanks.

      ·54· guido [seizing her hand]

      Hast thou no love to give me?

      [The Duchess starts, and Guido falls at her feet.]

      O dear saint,

      If I have been too daring, pardon me!

      Thy beauty sets my boyish blood aflame,

      And, when my reverent lips touch thy white hand,

      Each little nerve with such wild passion thrills

      That there is nothing which I would not do

      To gain thy love. [Leaps up.]

      Bid me reach forth and pluck

      Perilous honour from the lion’s jaws,

      And I will wrestle with the Nemean beast

      On the bare desert! Fling to the cave of War

      A gaud, a ribbon, a dead flower, something

      That once has touched thee, and I’ll bring it back

      Though all the hosts of Christendom were there,

      Inviolate again! ay, more than this,

      Set me to scale the pallid white-faced cliffs

      Of mighty England, and from that arrogant shield

      Will I raze out the lilies of your France

      ·55· Which England, that sea-lion of the sea,

      Hath taken from her!

      O dear Beatrice,

      Drive me not from thy presence! without thee

      The heavy minutes crawl with feet of lead,

      But, while I look upon thy loveliness,

      The hours fly like winged Mercuries

      And leave existence golden.

      duchess

      I did not think

      I should be ever loved: do you indeed

      Love me so much as now you say you do?

      guido

      Ask of the sea-bird if it loves the sea,

      Ask of the roses if they love the rain,

      Ask of the little lark, that will not sing

      Till day break, if it loves to see the day:—

      And yet, these are but empty images,

      Mere shadows of my love, which is a fire

      So great that all the waters of the main

      Can not avail to quench it. Will you not speak?

      duchess

      I hardly know what I should say to you.

      ·56· guido

      Will you not say you love me?

      duchess

      Is that my lesson?

      Must I say all at once? ’Twere a good lesson

      If I did love you, sir; but, if I do not,

      What shall I say then?

      guido

      If you do not love me,

      Say, none the less, you do, for on your tongue

      Falsehood for very shame would turn to truth.

      duchess

      What if I do not speak at all? They say

      Lovers are happiest when they are in doubt.

      guido

      Nay, doubt would kill me, and if I must die,

      Why, let me die for joy and not for doubt.

      Oh, tell me may I stay, or must I go?

      duchess

      I would not have you either stay or go;

      For if you stay you steal my love from me,

      And if you go you take my love away.

      ·57· Guido, though all the morning stars could sing

      They could not tell the measure of my love.

      I love you, Guido.

      guido [stretching out his hands]

      Oh, do not cease at all;

      I thought the nightingale sang but at night;

      Or if thou needst must cease, then let my lips

      Touch the sweet lips that can such music make.

      duchess

      To touch my lips is not to touch my heart.

      guido

      Do you close that against me?

      duchess

      Alas! my lord,

      I have it not: the first day that I saw you

      I let you take my heart away from me;

      Unwilling thief, that without meaning it

      Did break into my fenced treasury

      And

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