Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works. Knowledge house

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Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works - Knowledge house

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at Court at Fontainebleau, the King

      Wore such a collar.

      ·62· guido

      Will you not say you love me?

      duchess [smiling]

      He was a very royal man, King Francis,

      Yet he was not royal as you are.

      Why need I tell you, Guido, that I love you?

      [Takes his head in her hands and turns his face up to her.]

      Do you not know that I am yours for ever,

      Body and soul?

      [Kisses him, and then suddenly catches sight of Moranzone and leaps up.]

      Oh, what is that? [Moranzone disappears.]

      guido

      What, love?

      duchess

      Methought I saw a face with eyes of flame

      Look at us through the doorway.

      guido

      Nay, ’twas nothing:

      The passing shadow of the man on guard.

      [The Duchess still stands looking at the window.]

      ’Twas nothing, sweet.

      ·63· duchess

      Ay! what can harm us now,

      Who are in Love’s hand? I do not think I’d care

      Though the vile world should with its lackey Slander

      Trample and tread upon my life; why should I?

      They say the common field-flowers of the field

      Have sweeter scent when they are trodden on

      Than when they bloom alone, and that some herbs

      Which have no perfume, on being bruiséd die

      With all Arabia round them; so it is

      With the young lives this dull world seeks to crush,

      It does but bring the sweetness out of them,

      And makes them lovelier often. And besides,

      While we have love we have the best of life:

      Is it not so?

      guido

      Dear, shall we play or sing?

      I think that I could sing now.

      ·64· duchess

      Do not speak,

      For there are times when all existences

      Seem narrowed to one single ecstasy,

      And Passion sets a seal upon the lips.

      guido

      Oh, with mine own lips let me break that seal!

      You love me, Beatrice?

      duchess

      Ay! is it not strange

      I should so love mine enemy?

      guido

      Who is he?

      duchess

      Why, you: that with your shaft did pierce my heart!

      Poor heart, that lived its little lonely life

      Until it met your arrow.

      guido

      Ah, dear love,

      I am so wounded by that bolt myself

      That with untended wounds I lie a-dying,

      Unless you cure me, dear Physician.

      ·65· duchess

      I would not have you cured; for I am sick

      With the same malady.

      guido

      Oh, how I love you!

      See, I must steal the cuckoo’s voice, and tell

      The one tale over.

      duchess

      Tell no other tale!

      For, if that is the little cuckoo’s song,

      The nightingale is hoarse, and the loud lark

      Has lost its music.

      guido

      Kiss me, Beatrice!

      [She takes his face in her hands and bends down and kisses him; a loud knocking then comes at the door, and Guido leaps up; enter a Servant.]

      servant

      A package for you, sir.

      ·66· guido [carelessly]

      Ah! give it to me.

      [Servant hands package wrapped in vermilion silk, and exit; as Guido is about to open it the Duchess comes up behind, and in sport takes it from him.]

      duchess [laughing]

      Now I will wager it is from some girl

      Who would have you wear her favour; I am so jealous

      I will not give up the least part in you,

      But like a miser keep you to myself,

      And spoil you perhaps in keeping.

      guido

      It is nothing.

      duchess

      Nay, it is from some girl.

      guido

      You know ’tis not.

      duchess

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