Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works. Knowledge house

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Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works - Knowledge house

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so bent upon it, why

      Thou mightest plead unto the Churchman yonder:

      The common people call him kindly here,

      Indeed I know he has a kindly soul.

      guido

      This man, whose trade is death, hath courtesies

      More than the others.

      headsman

      Why, God love you, sir,

      I’ll do you your last service on this earth.

      guido

      My good Lord Cardinal, in a Christian land,

      With Lord Christ’s face of mercy looking down

      From the high seat of Judgment, shall a man

      Die unabsolved, unshrived? And if not so,

      May I not tell this dreadful tale of sin,

      If any sin there be upon my soul?

      ·136· duchess

      Thou dost but waste thy time.

      cardinal

      Alack, my son,

      I have no power with the secular arm.

      My task begins when justice has been done,

      To urge the wavering sinner to repent

      And to confess to Holy Church’s ear

      The dreadful secrets of a sinful mind.

      duchess

      Thou mayest speak to the confessional

      Until thy lips grow weary of their tale,

      But here thou shalt not speak.

      guido

      My reverend father,

      You bring me but cold comfort.

      cardinal

      Nay, my son,

      For the great power of our mother Church,

      Ends not with this poor bubble of a world,

      Of which we are but dust, as Jerome saith,

      For if the sinner doth repentant die,

      Our prayers and holy masses much avail

      To bring the guilty soul from purgatory.

      ·137· duchess

      And when in purgatory thou seest my Lord

      With that red star of blood upon his heart,

      Tell him I sent thee hither.

      guido

      O dear God!

      moranzone

      This is the woman, is it, whom you loved?

      cardinal

      Your Grace is very cruel to this man.

      duchess

      No more than he was cruel to her Grace.

      cardinal

      Yet mercy is the sovereign right of princes.

      duchess

      I got no mercy, and I give it not.

      He hath changed my heart into a heart of stone,

      He hath sown rank nettles in a goodly field,

      He hath poisoned the wells of pity in my breast,

      He hath withered up all kindness at the root;

      My life is as some famine murdered land,

      ·138· Whence all good things have perished utterly:

      I am what he hath made me.

      [The Duchess weeps.]

      jeppo

      Is it not strange

      That she should so have loved the wicked Duke?

      maffio

      It is most strange when women love their lords,

      And when they love them not it is most strange.

      jeppo

      What a philosopher thou art, Petrucci!

      maffio

      Ay! I can bear the ills of other men,

      Which is philosophy.

      duchess

      They tarry long,

      These greybeards and their council; bid them come;

      Bid them come quickly, else I think my heart

      Will beat itself to bursting: not indeed,

      That I here care to live; God knows my life

      Is not so full of joy, yet, for all that,

      ·139· I would not die companionless, or go

      Lonely to Hell.

      Look, my Lord Cardinal,

      Canst thou not see across my forehead here,

      In scarlet letters writ, the word Revenge?

      Fetch me some water, I will wash it off:

      ’Twas branded there last night, but in the day-time

      I need not wear it, need I, my Lord Cardinal?

      Oh, how it sears and burns into my brain:

      Give me a knife; not that one, but another,

      And I will cut it out.

      cardinal

      It is most natural

      To

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