The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chastelard, a Tragedy

This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.

Title: Chastelard, a Tragedy

Author: Algernon Charles Swinburne

Release date: November 1, 2000 [eBook #2379]
Most recently updated: January 1, 2021

Language: English

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHASTELARD, A TRAGEDY ***

Produced by Tony Adam

Chastelard, a tragedy.

Algernon Charles Swinburne

Boston: E.P. Dutton, 1866.

(author's edition)

PERSONS.

MARY STUART. MARY BEATON. MARY SEYTON. MARY CARMICHAEL. MARY HAMILTON. PIERRE DE BOSCOSEL DE CHASTELARD. DARNLEY. MURRAY. RANDOLPH. MORTON. LINDSAY. FATHER BLACK.

Guards, Burgesses, a Preacher, Citizens, &c.

Another Yle is there toward the Northe, in the See Occean, where that ben fulle cruele and ful evele Wommen of Nature: and thei han precious Stones in hire Eyen; and their ben of that kynde, that zif they beholden ony man, thei slen him anon with the beholdynge, as dothe the Basilisk.

MAUNDEVILE'S Voiage and Travaile, Ch. xxviii.

I DEDICATE THIS PLAY, AS A PARTIAL EXPRESSION OF REVERENCE AND GRATITUDE, TO THE CHIEF OF LIVING POETS; TO THE FIRST DRAMATIST OF HIS AGE; TO THE GREATEST EXILE, AND THEREFORE TO THE GREATEST MAN OF FRANCE; TO VICTOR HUGO.

ACT I.

MARY BEATON.

SCENE I.—The Upper Chamber in Holyrood.

The four MARIES.

MARY BEATON (sings):—

  1.
  Le navire
  Est a l'eau;
  Entends rire
  Ce gros flot
  Que fait luire
  Et bruire
  Le vieux sire
  Aquilo.

  2.
  Dans l'espace
  Du grand air
  Le vent passe
  Comme un fer;
  Siffle et sonne,
  Tombe et tonne,
  Prend et donne
  A la mer.

  3.
  Vois, la brise
  Tourne au nord,
  Et la bise
  Souffle et mord
  Sur ta pure
  Chevelure
  Qui murmure
  Et se tord.

MARY HAMILTON.
  You never sing now but it makes you sad;
  Why do you sing?

MARY BEATON.
  I hardly know well why;
  It makes me sad to sing, and very sad
  To hold my peace.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  I know what saddens you.

MARY BEATON.
  Prithee, what? what?

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Why, since we came from France,
  You have no lover to make stuff for songs.

MARY BEATON.
  You are wise; for there my pain begins indeed,
  Because I have no lovers out of France.

MARY SEYTON.
  I mind me of one Olivier de Pesme,
  (You knew him, sweet,) a pale man with short hair,
  Wore tied at sleeve the Beaton color.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Blue—
  I know, blue scarfs. I never liked that knight.

MARY HAMILTON.
  Me? I know him? I hardly knew his name.
  Black, was his hair? no, brown.

MARY SEYTON.
  Light pleases you:
  I have seen the time brown served you well enough.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Lord Darnley's is a mere maid's yellow.

MARY HAMILTON.
  No,
  A man's, good color.

MARY SEYTON.
  Ah, does that burn your blood?
  Why, what a bitter color is this read
  That fills your face! if you be not in love,
  I am no maiden.

MARY HAMILTON.
  Nay, God help true hearts!
  I must be stabbed with love then, to the bone,
  Yea to the spirit, past cure.

MARY SEYTON.
  What were you saying?
  I see some jest run up and down your lips.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Finish your song; I know you have more of it;
  Good sweet, I pray you do.

MARY BEATON.
  I am too sad.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  This will not sadden you to sing; your song
  Tastes sharp of sea and the sea's bitterness,
  But small pain sticks on it.

MARY BEATON.
  Nay, it is sad;
  For either sorrow with the beaten lips
  Sings not at all, or if it does get breath
  Sings quick and sharp like a hard sort of mirth:
  And so this song does; or I would it did,
  That it might please me better than it does.

MARY SEYTON.
  Well, as you choose then. What a sort of men
  Crowd all about the squares!

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Ay, hateful men;
  For look how many talking mouths be there,
  So many angers show their teeth at us.
  Which one is that, stooped somewhat in the neck,
  That walks so with his chin against the wind,
  Lips sideways shut? a keen-faced man—lo there,
  He that walks midmost.

MARY SEYTON.
  That is Master Knox.
  He carries all these folk within his skin,
  Bound up as 't were between the brows of him
  Like a bad thought; their hearts beat inside his;
  They gather at his lips like flies in the sun,
  Thrust sides to catch his face.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Look forth; so—push
  The window—further—see you anything?

MARY HAMILTON.
  They are well gone; but pull the lattice in,
  The wind is like a blade aslant. Would God
  I could get back one day I think upon:
  The day we four and some six after us
  Sat in that Louvre garden and plucked fruits
  To cast love-lots with in the gathered grapes;
  This way: you shut your eyes and reach and pluck,
  And catch a lover for each grape you get.
  I got but one, a green one, and it broke
  Between my fingers and it ran down through them.

MARY SEYTON.
  Ay, and the queen fell in a little wrath
  Because she got so many, and tore off
  Some of them she had plucked unwittingly—
  She said, against her will. What fell to you?

MARY BEATON.
  Me? nothing but the stalk of a stripped bunch
  With clammy grape-juice leavings at the tip.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Ay, true, the queen came first and she won all;
  It was her bunch we took to cheat you with.
  What, will you weep for that now? for you seem
  As one that means to weep. God pardon me!
  I think your throat is choking up with tears.
  You are not well, sweet, for a lying jest
  To shake you thus much.

MARY BEATON.
  I am well enough:
  Give not your pity trouble for my sake.

MARY SEYTON.
  If you be well sing out your song and laugh,
  Though it were but to fret the fellows there.—
  Now shall we catch her secret washed and wet
  In the middle of her song; for she must weep
  If she sing through.

MARY HAMILTON.
  I told you it was love;
  I watched her eyes all through the masquing time
  Feed on his face by morsels; she must weep.

MARY BEATON.

  4.
  Le navire
  Passe et luit,
  Puis chavire
  A grand bruit;
  Et sur l'onde
  La plus blonde
  Tete au monde
  Flotte et fuit.

  5.
  Moi, je rame,
  Et l'amour,
  C'est ma flamme,
  Mon grand jour,
  Ma chandelle
  Blanche et belle,
  Ma chapelle

De sejour.

  6.
  Toi, mon ame
  Et ma foi,
  Sois, ma dame;
  Et ma loi;
  Sois ma mie,
  Sois Marie,
  Sois ma vie,
  Toute a moi!

MARY SEYTON.
  I know the song; a song of Chastelard's,
  He made in coming over with the queen.
  How hard it rained! he played that over twice
  Sitting before her, singing each word soft,
  As if he loved the least she listened to.

MARY HAMILTON.
  No marvel if he loved it for her sake;
  She is the choice of women in the world;
  Is she not, sweet?

MARY BEATON.
  I have seen no fairer one.

MARY SEYTON.
  And the most loving: did you note last night
  How long she held him with her hands and eyes,
  Looking a little sadly, and at last
  Kissed him below the chin and parted so
  As the dance ended?

MARY HAMILTON.
  This was courtesy;
  So might I kiss my singing-bird's red bill
  After some song, till he bit short my lip.

MARY SEYTON.
  But if a lady hold her bird anights
  To sing to her between her fingers-ha?
  I have seen such birds.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  O, you talk emptily;
  She is full of grace; and marriage in good time
  Will wash the fool called scandal off men's lips.

MARY HAMILTON.
  I know not that; I know how folk would gibe
  If one of us pushed courtesy so far.
  She has always loved love's fashions well; you wot,
  The marshal, head friend of this Chastelard's,
  She used to talk with ere he brought her here
  And sow their talk with little kisses thick
  As roses in rose-harvest. For myself,
  I cannot see which side of her that lurks,
  Which snares in such wise all the sense of men;
  What special beauty, subtle as man's eye
  And tender as the inside of the eyelid is,
  There grows about her.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  I think her cunning speech—
  The soft and rapid shudder of her breath
  In talking—the rare tender little laugh—
  The pitiful sweet sound like a bird's sigh
  When her voice breaks; her talking does it all.

MARY SEYTON.
  I say, her eyes with those clear perfect brows:
  It is the playing of those eyelashes,
  The lure of amorous looks as sad as love,
  Plucks all souls toward her like a net.

MARY HAMILTON.
  What, what!
  You praise her in too lover-like a wise
  For women that praise women; such report
  Is like robes worn the rough side next the skin,
  Frets where it warms.

MARY SEYTON.
  You think too much in French.

Enter DARNLEY.

Here comes your thorn; what glove against it now?

MARY HAMILTON.
  O, God's good pity! this a thorn of mine?
  It has not run deep in yet.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  I am not sure:
  The red runs over to your face's edge.

DARNLEY.
  Give me one word; nay, lady, for love's sake;
  Here, come this way; I will not keep you; no.
  —O my sweet soul, why do you wrong me thus?

MARY HAMILTON.
  Why will you give me for men's eyes to burn?

DARNLEY.
  What, sweet, I love you as mine own soul loves me;
  They shall divide when we do.

MARY HAMILTON.
  I cannot say.

DARNLEY.
  Why, look you, I am broken with the queen;
  This is the rancor and the bitter heart
  That grows in you; by God it is nought else.
  Why, this last night she held me for a fool—
  Ay, God wot, for a thing of stripe and bell.
  I bade her make me marshal in her masque—
  I had the dress here painted, gold and gray
  (That is, not gray but a blue-green like this)—
  She tells me she had chosen her marshal, she,
  The best o' the world for cunning and sweet wit;
  And what sweet fool but her sweet knight, God help!
  To serve her with that three-inch wit of his?
  She is all fool and fiddling now; for me,
  I am well-pleased; God knows, if I might choose
  I would not be more troubled with her love.
  Her love is like a briar that rasps the flesh,
  And yours is soft like flowers. Come this way, love;
  So, further in this window; hark you here.

Enter CHASTELARD.

MARY BEATON.
  Good morrow, sir.

CHASTELARD.
  Good morrow, noble lady.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  You have heard no news? what news?

CHASTELARD.
  Nay, I have none.
  That maiden-tongued male-faced Elizabeth
  Hath eyes unlike our queen's, hair not so soft,
  And lips no kiss of love's could bring to flower
  In such red wise as our queen's; save this news,
  I know none English.

MARY SEYTON.
  Come, no news of her;
  For God's love talk still rather of our queen.

MARY BEATON.
  God give us grace then to speak well of her.
  You did right joyfully in our masque last night'
  I saw you when the queen lost breath (her head
  Bent back, her chin and lips catching the air—
  A goodly thing to see her) how you smiled
  Across her head, between your lips-no doubt
  You had great joy, sir. Did you not take note
  Once how one lock fell? that was good to see.

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, good enough to live for.

MARY BEATON.
  Nay, but sweet
  Enough to die. When she broke off the dance,
  Turning round short and soft-I never saw
  Such supple ways of walking as she has.

CHASTLELARD.
  Why do you praise her gracious looks to me?

MARY BEATON.
  Sir, for mere sport: but tell me even for love
  How much you love her.

CHASTELARD.
  I know not: it may be
  If I had set mine eyes to find that out,
  I should not know it. She hath fair eyes: may be
  I love her for sweet eyes or brows or hair,
  For the smooth temples, where God touching her
  Made blue with sweeter veins the flower-sweet white
  Or for the tender turning of her wrist,
  Or marriage of the eyelid with the cheek;
  I cannot tell; or flush of lifting throat,
  I know not if the color get a name
  This side of heaven-no man knows; or her mouth,
  A flower's lip with a snake's lip, stinging sweet,
  And sweet to sting with: face that one would see
  And then fall blind and die with sight of it
  Held fast between the eyelids-oh, all these
  And all her body and the soul to that,
  The speech and shape and hand and foot and heart
  That I would die of-yea, her name that turns
  My face to fire being written-I know no whit
  How much I love them.

MARY BEATON.
  Nor how she loves you back?

CHASTELARD.
  I know her ways of loving, all of them:
  A sweet soft way the first is; afterward
  It burns and bites like fire; the end of that,
  Charred dust, and eyelids bitten through with smoke.

MARY BEATON.
  What has she done for you to gird at her?

CHASTELARD.
  Nothing. You do not greatly love her, you,
  Who do not-gird, you call it. I am bound to France;
  Shall I take word from you to any one?
  So it be harmless, not a gird, I will.

MARY BEATON.
  I doubt you will not go hence with your life.

CHASTELARD.
  Why, who should slay me? No man northwards born,
  In my poor mind; my sword's lip is no maid's
  To fear the iron biting of their own,
  Though they kiss hard for hate's sake.

MARY BEATON.
  Lo you, sir,
  How sharp he whispers, what close breath and eyes—
  And here are fast upon him, do you see?

CHASTELARD.
  Well, which of these must take my life in hand?
  Pray God it be the better: nay, which hand?

MARY BEATON.
  I think, none such. The man is goodly made;
  She is tender-hearted toward his courtesies,
  And would not have them fall too low to find.
  Look, they slip forth.

[Exeunt DARNLEY and MARY HAMILTON.]

MARY SEYTON.
  For love's sake, after them,
  And soft as love can.

[Exeunt MARY CARMICHAEL and MARY SEYTON.]

CHASTELARD.
  True, a goodly man.
  What shapeliness and state he hath, what eyes,
  Brave brow and lordly lip! Were it not fit
  Great queens should love him?

MARY BEATON.
  See how now, fair lord,
  I have but scant breath's time to help myself,
  And I must cast my heart out on a chance;
  So bear with me. That we twain have loved well,
  I have no heart nor wit to say; God wot
  We had never made good lovers, you and I.
  Look you, I would not have you love me, sir,
  For all the love's sake in the world. I say,
  You love the queen, and loving burns you up,
  And mars the grace and joyous wit you had,
  Turning your speech to sad, your face to strange,
  Your mirth to nothing: and I am piteous, I,
  Even as the queen is, and such women are;
  And if I helped you to your love-longing,
  Meseems some grain of love might fall my way
  And love's god help me when I came to love;
  I have read tales of men that won their loves
  On some such wise.

CHASTELARD.
  If you mean mercifully,
  I am bound to you past thought and thank; if worse
  I will but thank your lips and not your heart.

MARY BEATON.
  Nay, let love wait and praise me, in God's name,
  Some day when he shall find me; yet, God wot,
  My lips are of one color with my heart.
  Withdraw now from me, and about midnight
  In some close chamber without light or noise
  It may be I shall get you speech of her:
  She loves you well: it may be she will speak,
  I wot not what; she loves you at her heart.
  Let her not see that I have given you word,
  Lest she take shame and hate her love. Till night
  Let her not see it.

CHASTLELARD.
  I will not thank you now,
  And then I'll die what sort of death you will.
  Farewell.

[Exit.]

MARY BEATON.
  And by God's mercy and my love's
  I will find ways to earn such thank of you.

[Exit.]

ACT I. SCENE II. A Hall in the same.

The QUEEN, DARNLEY, MURRAY, RANDOLPH, the MARIES, CHASTELARD, &c.

QUEEN.
  Hath no man seen my lord of Chastelard?
  Nay, no great matter. Keep you on that side:
  Begin the purpose.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Madam, he is here.

QUEEN.
  Begin a measure now that other side.
  I will not dance; let them play soft a little.
  Fair sir, we had a dance to tread to-night,
  To teach our north folk all sweet ways of France,
  But at this time we have no heart to it.
  Sit, sir, and talk. Look, this breast-clasp is new,
  The French king sent it me.

CHASTELARD.
  A goodly thing:
  But what device? the word is ill to catch.

QUEEN.
  A Venus crowned, that eats the hearts of men:
  Below her flies a love with a bat's wings,
  And strings the hair of paramours to bind
  Live birds' feet with. Lo what small subtle work:
  The smith's name, Gian Grisostomo da—what?
  Can you read that? The sea froths underfoot;
  She stands upon the sea and it curls up
  In soft loose curls that run to one in the wind.
  But her hair is not shaken, there 's a fault;
  It lies straight down in close-cut points and tongues,
  Not like blown hair. The legend is writ small:
  Still one makes out this—*Cave*—if you look.

CHASTELARD.
  I see the Venus well enough, God wot,
  But nothing of the legend.

QUEEN.
  Come, fair lord,
  Shall we dance now? My heart is good again.

[They dance a measure.]

DARNLEY.
  I do not like this manner of a dance,
  This game of two by two; it were much better
  To meet between the changes and to mix
  Than still to keep apart and whispering
  Each lady out of earshot with her friend.

MARY BEATON.
  That 's as the lady serves her knight, I think:
  We are broken up too much.

DARNLEY.
  Nay, no such thing;
  Be not wroth, lady, I wot it was the queen
  Pricked each his friend out. Look you now—your ear—
  If love had gone by choosing—how they laugh,
  Lean lips together, and wring hands underhand!
  What, you look white too, sick of heart, ashamed,
  No marvel—for men call it—hark you though—

[They pass.]

MURRAY.
  Was the queen found no merrier in France?

MARY HAMILTON.
  Why, have you seen her sorrowful to-night?

MURRAY.
  I say not so much; blithe she seems at whiles,
  Gentle and goodly doubtless in all ways,
  But hardly with such lightness and quick heart
  As it was said.

MARY HAMILTON.
  'Tis your great care of her
  Makes you misdoubt; nought else.

MURRAY.
  Yea, may be so;
  She has no cause I know to sadden her.

[They pass.]

QUEEN.
  I am tired too soon; I could have danced down hours
  Two years gone hence and felt no wearier.
  One grows much older northwards, my fair lord;
  I wonder men die south; meseems all France
  Smells sweet with living, and bright breath of days
  That keep men far from dying. Peace; pray you now,
  No dancing more. Sing, sweet, and make us mirth;
  We have done with dancing measures: sing that song
  You call the song of love at ebb.

MARY BEATON.

[Sings.]

  1.
  Between the sunset and the sea
  My love laid hands and lips on me;
  Of sweet came sour, of day came night,
  Of long desire came brief delight:
  Ah love, and what thing came of thee
  Between the sea-downs and the sea?

  2.
  Between the sea-mark and the sea
  Joy grew to grief, grief grew to me;
  Love turned to tears, and tears to fire,
  And dead delight to new desire;
  Love's talk, love's touch there seemed to be
  Between the sea-sand and the sea.

  3.
  Between the sundown and the sea
  Love watched one hour of love with me;
  Then down the all-golden water-ways
  His feet flew after yesterday's;
   I saw them come and saw them flee
  Between the sea-foam and the sea.

  4.
  Between the sea-strand and the sea
  Love fell on sleep, sleep fell on me;
  The first star saw twain turn to one
  Between the moonrise and the sun;
  The next, that saw not love, saw me
  Between the sea-banks and the sea.

QUEEN.
  Lo, sirs,
  What mirth is here! Some song of yours, fair lord;
  You know glad ways of rhyming—no such tunes
  As go to tears.

CHASTELARD.
  I made this yesterday;
  For its love's sake I pray you let it live.

  1.
  Apres tant de jours, apres tant de pleurs,
  Soyez secourable a mon ame en peine.
  Voyez comme Avril fait l'amour aux fleurs;
  Dame d'amour, dame aux belles couleurs,
  Dieu vous a fait belle, Amour vous fait reine.

  2.
  Rions, je t'en prie; aimons, je le veux.
  Le temps fuit et rit et ne revient guere
  Pour baiser le bout de tes blonds cheveux,
  Pour baiser tes cils, ta bouche et tes yeux;
  L'amour n'a qu'un jour aupres de sa mere.

QUEEN.
  'T is a true song; love shall not pluck time back
  Nor time lie down with love. For me, I am old;
  Have you no hair changed since you changed to Scot?
  I look each day to see my face drawn up
  About the eyes, as if they sucked the cheeks.
  I think this air and face of things here north
  Puts snow at flower-time in the blood, and tears
  Between the sad eyes and the merry mouth
  In their youth-days.

CHASTELARD.
  It is a bitter air.

QUEEN.
  Faith, if I might be gone, sir, would I stay?
  I think, for no man's love's sake.

CHASTELARD.
  I think not.

QUEEN.
  Do you yet mind at landing how the quay
  Looked like a blind wet face in waste of wind
  And washing of wan waves? how the hard mist
  Made the hills ache? your songs lied loud, my knight,
  They said my face would burn off cloud and rain
  Seen once, and fill the crannied land with fire,
  Kindle the capes in their blind black-gray hoods—
  I know not what. You praise me past all loves;
  And these men love me little; 't is some fault,
  I think, to love me: even a fool's sweet fault.
  I have your verse still beating in my head
  Of how the swallow got a wing broken
  In the spring time, and lay upon his side
  Watching the rest fly off i' the red leaf-time,
  And broke his heart with grieving at himself
  Before the snow came. Do you know that lord
  With sharp-set eyes? and him with huge thewed throat?
  Good friends to me; I had need love them well.
  Why do you look one way? I will not have you
  Keep your eyes here: 't is no great wit in me
  To care much now for old French friends of mine.—
  Come, a fresh measure; come, play well for me,
  Fair sirs, your playing puts life in foot and heart.—

DARNLEY.
  Lo you again, sirs, how she laughs and leans,
  Holding him fast—the supple way she hath!
  Your queen hath none such; better as she is
  For all her measures, a grave English maid,
  Than queen of snakes and Scots.

RANDOLPH.
  She is over fair
  To be so sweet and hurt not. A good knight;
  Goodly to look on.

MURRAY.
  Yea, a good sword too,
  And of good kin; too light of loving though;
  These jangling song-smiths are keen love-mongers,
  They snap at all meats.

DARNLEY.
  What! by God I think,
  For all his soft French face and bright boy's sword,
  There be folks fairer: and for knightliness,
  These hot-lipped brawls of Paris breed sweet knights—
  Mere stabbers for a laugh across the wine.—

QUEEN.
  There, I have danced you down for once, fair lord;
  You look pale now. Nay then for courtesy
  I must needs help you; do not bow your head,
  I am tall enough to reach close under it.

[Kisses him.]

Now come, we'll sit and see this passage through.—

DARNLEY.
  A courtesy, God help us! courtesy—
  Pray God it wound not where it should heal wounds.
  Why, there was here last year some lord of France
  (Priest on the wrong side as some folk are prince)
  Told tales of Paris ladies—nay, by God,
  No jest for queen's lips to catch laughter of
  That would keep clean; I wot he made good mirth,
  But she laughed over sweetly, and in such wise—
  But she laughed over sweetly, and in such wise—
  Nay, I laughed too, but lothly.—

QUEEN.
  How they look!
  The least thing courteous galls them to the bone.
  What would one say now I were thinking of?

CHASTELARD.
  It seems, some sweet thing.

QUEEN.
  True, a sweet one, sir—
  That madrigal you made Alys de Saulx
  Of the three ways of love: the first kiss honor,
  The second pity, and the last kiss love.
  Which think you now was that I kissed you with?

CHASTELARD.
  It should be pity, if you be pitiful;
  For I am past all honoring that keep
  Outside the eye of battle, where my kin
  Fallen overseas have found this many a day
  No helm of mine between them; and for love,
  I think of that as dead men of good days
  Ere the wrong side of death was theirs, when God
  Was friends with them.

QUEEN.
  Good; call it pity then.
  You have a subtle riddling skill at love
  Which is not like a lover. For my part,
  I am resolved to be well done with love,
  Though I were fairer-faced than all the world;
  As there be fairer. Think you, fair my knight,
  Love shall live after life in any man?
  I have given you stuff for riddles.

CHASTELARD.
  Most sweet queen,
  They say men dying remember, with sharp joy
  And rapid reluctation of desire,
  Some old thin, some swift breath of wind, some word,
  Some sword-stroke or dead lute-strain, some lost sight,
  Some sea-blossom stripped to the sun and burned
  At naked ebb—some river-flower that breathes
  Against the stream like a swooned swimmer's mouth—
  Some tear or laugh ere lip and eye were man's—
  Sweet stings that struck the blood in riding—nay,
  Some garment or sky-color or spice-smell,
  And die with heart and face shut fast on it,
  And know not why, and weep not; it may be
  Men shall hold love fast always in such wise
  In new fair lives where all are new things else,
  And know not why, and weep not.

QUEEN.
  A right rhyme,
  And right a thyme's worth: nay, a sweet song, though.
  What, shall my cousin hold fast that love of his,
  Her face and talk, when life ends? as God grant
  His life end late and sweet; I love him well.
  She is fair enough, his lover; a fair-faced maid,
  With gray sweet eyes and tender touch of talk;
  And that, God wot, I wist not. See you, sir,
  Men say I needs must get wed hastily;
  Do none point lips at him?

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, guessingly.

QUEEN.
  God help such lips! and get me leave to laugh!
  What should I do but paint and put him up
  Like a gilt god, a saintship in a shrine,
  For all fools' feast? God's mercy on men's wits!
  Tall as a housetop and as bare of brain—
  I'll have no staffs with fool-faced carven heads
  To hang my life on. Nay, for love, no more,
  For fear I laugh and set their eyes on edge
  To find out why I laugh. Good-night, fair lords;
  Bid them cease playing. Give me your hand; good-night.

SCENE III.—MARY BEATON'S chamber: night.

[Enter CHASTELARD.]

CHASTELARD.
  I am not certain yet she will not come;
  For I can feel her hand's heat still in mine,
  Past doubting of, and see her brows half draw,
  And half a light in the eyes. If she come not,
  I am no worse than he that dies to-night.
  This two years' patience gets an end at least,
  Whichever way I am well done with it.
  How hard the thin sweet moon is, split and laced
  And latticed over, just a stray of it
  Catching and clinging at a strip of wall,
  Hardly a hand's breadth. Did she turn indeed
  In going out? not to catch up her gown
  The page let slip, but to keep sight of me?
  There was a soft small stir beneath her eyes
  Hard to put on, a quivering of her blood
  That knew of the old nights watched out wakefully.
  Those measures of her dancing too were changed—
  More swift and with more eager stops at whiles
  And rapid pauses where breath failed her lips.

[Enter MARY BEATON.]

  O, she is come: if you be she indeed
  Let me but hold your hand; what, no word yet?
  You turn and kiss me without word; O sweet,
  If you will slay me be not over quick,
  Kill me with some slow heavy kiss that plucks
  The heart out at the lips. Alas! Sweet love,
  Give me some old sweet word to kiss away.
  Is it a jest? for I can feel your hair
  Touch me—I may embrace your body too?
  I know you well enough without sweet words.
  How should one make you speak? This is not she.
  Come in the light; nay, let me see your eyes.
  Ah, you it is? what have I done to you?
  And do you look now to be slain for this
  That you twist back and shudder like one stabbed?

MARY BEATON.
  Yea, kill me now and do not look at me:
  God knows I meant to die. Sir, for God's love,
  Kill me now quick ere I go mad with shame.

CHASTELARD.
  Cling not upon my wrists: let go the hilt:
  Nay, you will bruise your hand with it: stand up:
  You shall not have my sword forth.

MARY BEATON.
  Kill me now,
  I will not rise: there, I am patient, see,
  I will not strive, but kill me for God's sake.

CHASTELARD.
  Pray you rise up and be not shaken so:
  Forgive me my rash words, my heart was gone
  After the thing you were: be not ashamed;
  Give me the shame, you have no part in it;
  Can I not say a word shall do you good?
  Forgive that too.

MARY BEATON.
  I shall run crazed with shame;
  But when I felt your lips catch hold on mine
  It stopped my breath: I would have told you all;
  Let me go out: you see I lied to you,
  Am I am shamed; I pray you loose me, sir,
  Let me go out.

CHASTELARD.
  Think no base things of me:
  I were most base to let you go ashamed.
  Think my heart's love and honor go with you:
  Yea, while I live, for your love's noble sake,
  I am your servant in what wise may be,
  To love and serve you with right thankful heart.

MARY BEATON.
  I have given men leave to mock me, and must bear
  What shame they please: you have good cause to mock.
  Let me pass now.

CHASTELARD.
  You know I mock you not.
  If ever I leave off to honor you,
  God give me shame! I were the worst churl born.

MARY BEATON.
  No marvel though the queen should love you too,
  Being such a knight. I pray you for her love,
  Lord Chastelard, of your great courtesy,
  Think now no scorn to give me my last kiss
  That I shall have of man before I die.
  Even the same lips you kissed and knew not of
  Will you kiss now, knowing the shame of them,
  And say no one word to me afterwards,
  That I may see I have loved the best lover
  And man most courteous of all men alive?

MARY SEYTON.

[Within.]

Here, fetch the light: nay, this way; enter all.

MARY BEATON.
  I am twice undone. Fly, get some hiding, sir;
  They have spied upon me somehow.

CHASTELARD.
  Nay, fear not;
  Stand by my side.

[Enter MARY SEYTON and MARY HAMILTON.]

MARY HAMILTON.
  Give me that light: this way.

CHASTELARD.
  What jest is here, fair ladies? it walks late,
  Something too late for laughing.

MARY SEYTON.
  Nay, fair sir,
  What jest is this of yours? Look to your lady:
  She is nigh swooned. The queen shall know all this.

MARY HAMILTON.
  A grievous shame it is we are fallen upon;
  Hold forth the light. Is this your care of us?
  Nay, come, look up: this is no game, God wot.

CHASTELARD.
  Shame shall befall them that speak shamefully:
  I swear this lady is as pure and good
  As any maiden, and who believes me not
  Shall keep the shame for his part and the lie.
  To them that come in honor and not in hate
  I will make answer. Lady, have good heart.
  Give me the light there: I will see you forth.

END OF THE FIRST ACT.

ACT II.

DARNLEY.

SCENE I.—The great Chamber in Holyrood.

The QUEEN and MARY SEYTON.

QUEEN.
  But will you swear it?

MARY SEYTON.
  Swear it, madam?

QUEEN.
  Ay—
  Swear it.

MARY SEYTON.
  Madam, I am not friends with them.

QUEEN.
  Swear then against them if you are not friends.

MARY SEYTON.
  Indeed I saw them kiss.

QUEEN.
  So lovers use—
  What, their mouths close? a goodly way of love!
  Or but the hands? or on her throat? Prithee—
  You have sworn that.

MARY SEYTON.
  I say what I saw done.

QUEEN.
  Ay, you did see her cheeks (God smite them red!)
  Kissed either side? what, they must eat strange food
  Those singing lips of his?

MARY SEYTON.
  Sweet meat enough—
  They started at my coming five yards off,
  But there they were.

QUEEN.
  A maid may have kissed cheeks
  And no shame in them—yet one would not swear.
  You have sworn that. Pray God he be not mad:
  A sickness in his eyes. The left side love
  (I was told that) and the right courtesy.
  'T is good fools' fashion. What, no more but this?
  For me, God knows I am no whit wroth; not I;
  But, for your fame's sake that her shame will sting,
  I cannot see a way to pardon her—
  For your fame's sake, lest that be prated of.

MARY SEYTON.
  Nay, if she were not chaste—I have not said
  She was not chaste.

QUEEN.
  I know you are tender of her;
  And your sweet word will hardly turn her sweet.

MARY SEYTON.
  Indeed I would fain do her any good.
  Shall I not take some gracious word to her?

QUEEN.
  Bid her not come or wait on me to-day.

MARY SEYTON.
  Will you see him?

QUEEN.
  See—O, this Chastelard?
  He doth not well to sing maids into shame;
  And folk are sharp here; yet for sweet friends' sake
  Assuredly I 'll see him. I am not wroth.
  A goodly man, and a good sword thereto—
  It may be he shall wed her. I am not wroth.

MARY SEYTON.
  Nay, though she bore with him, she hath no great love,
  I doubt me, that way.

QUEEN.
  God mend all, I pray—
  And keep us from all wrongdoing and wild words.
  I think there is no fault men fall upon
  But I could pardon. Look you, I would swear
  She were no paramour for any man,
  So well I love her.

MARY SEYTON.
  Am I to bid him in?

QUEEN.
  As you will, sweet. But if you held me hard
  You did me grievous wrong. Doth he wait there?
  Men call me over tender; I had rather so,
  Than too ungracious. Father, what with you?

[Enter FATHER BLACK.]

  FATHER BLACK.
  God's peace and health of soul be with the queen!
  And pardon be with me though I speak truth.
  As I was going on peaceable men's wise
  Through your good town, desiring no man harm,
  A kind of shameful woman with thief's lips
  Spake somewhat to me over a thrust-out chin,
  Soliciting as I deemed an alms; which alms
  (Remembering what was writ of Magdalen)
  I gave no grudging but with pure good heart,
  When lo some scurril children that lurked near,
  Set there by Satan for my stumbling-stone,
  Fell hooting with necks thwart and eyes asquint,
  Screeched and made horns and shot out tongues at me,
  As at my Lord the Jews shot out their tongues
  And made their heads wag; I considering this
  Took up my cross in patience and passed forth:
  Nevertheless one ran between my feet
  And made me totter, using speech and signs
  I smart with shame to think of: then my blood
  Kindled, and I was moved to smite the knave,
  And the knave howled; whereat the lewd whole herd
  Brake forth upon me and cast mire and stones
  So that I ran sore risk of bruise or gash
  If they had touched; likewise I heard men say,
  (Their foul speech missed not mine ear) they cried,
  "This devil's mass-priest hankers for new flesh
  Like a dry hound; let him seek such at home,
  Snuff and smoke out the queen's French—"

QUEEN.
  They said that?

FATHER BLACK.
  "—French paramours that breed more shames than sons
  All her court through;" forgive me.

QUEEN.
  With my heart.
  Father, you see the hatefulness of these—
  They loathe us for our love. I am not moved:
  What should I do being angry? By this hand
  (Which is not big enough to bruise their lips),
  I marvel what thing should be done with me
  To make me wroth. We must have patience with us
  When we seek thank of men.

FATHER BLACK.
  Madam, farewell;
  I pray God keep you in such patient heart.

[Exit.]

QUEEN.
  Let him come now.

MARY SEYTON.
  Madam, he is at hand.

[Exit.]

[Enter CHASTELARD.]

QUEEN.
  Give me that broidery frame; how, gone so soon?
  No maid about? Reach me some skein of silk.
  What, are you come, fair lord? Now by my life
  That lives here idle, I am right glad of you;
  I have slept so well and sweet since yesternight
  It seems our dancing put me in glad heart.
  Did you sleep well?

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, as a man may sleep.

QUEEN.
  You smile as if I jested; do not men
  Sleep as we do? Had you fair dreams in the night?
  For me—but I should fret you with my dreams—
  I dreamed sweet things. You are good at soothsaying:
  Make me a sonnet of my dream.

CHASTELARD.
  I will,
  When I shall know it.

QUEEN.
  I thought I was asleep
  In Paris, lying by my lord, and knew
  In somewise he was well awake, and yet
  I could not wake too; and I seemed to know
  He hated me, and the least breath I made
  Would turn somehow to slay or stifle me.
  Then in brief time he rose and went away,
  Saying, Let her dream, but when her dream is out
  I will come back and kill her as she wakes.
  And I lay sick and trembling with sore fear,
  And still I knew that I was deep asleep;
  And thinking I must dream now, or I die,
  God send me some good dream lest I be slain,
  Fell fancying one had bound my feet with cords
  And bade me dance, and the first measure made
  I fell upon my face and wept for pain:
  And my cords broke, and I began the dance
  To a bitter tune; and he that danced with me
  Was clothed in black with long red lines and bars
  And masked down to the lips, but by the chin
  I knew you though your lips were sewn up close
  With scarlet thread all dabbled wet in blood.
  And then I knew the dream was not for good.
  And striving with sore travail to reach up
  And kiss you (you were taller in my dream)
  I missed your lips and woke.

CHASTELARD.
  Sweet dreams, you said?
  An evil dream I hold it for, sweet love.

QUEEN.
  You call love sweet; yea, what is bitter, then?
  There's nothing broken sleep could hit upon
  So bitter as the breaking down of love.
  You call me sweet; I am not sweet to you,
  Nor you-O, I would say not sweet to me,
  And if I said so I should hardly lie.
  But there have been those things between us, sir,
  That men call sweet.

CHASTELARD.
  I know not how There is
  Turns to There hath been; 't is a heavier change
  Than change of flesh to dust. Yet though years change
  And good things end and evil things grow great,
  The old love that was, or that was dreamed about,
  That sang and kissed and wept upon itself,
  Laughed and ran mad with love of its own face,
  That was a sweet thing.

QUEEN.
  Nay, I know not well.
  'T is when the man is held fast underground
  They say for sooth what manner of heart he had.
  We are alive, and cannot be well sure
  If we loved much or little: think you not
  It were convenient one of us should die?

CHASTELARD.
  Madam, your speech is harsh to understand.

QUEEN.
  Why, there could come no change then; one of us
  Would never need to fear our love might turn
  To the sad thing that it may grow to be.
  I would sometimes all things were dead asleep
  That I have loved, all buried in soft beds
  And sealed with dreams and visions, and each dawn
  Sung to by sorrows, and all night assuaged
  By short sweet kissed and by sweet long loves
  For old life's sake, lest weeping overmuch
  Should wake them in a strange new time, and arm
  Memory's blind hand to kill forgetfulness.

CHASTELARD.
  Look, you dream still, and sadly.

QUEEN.
  Sooth, a dream;
  For such things died or lied in sweet love's face,
  And I forget them not, God help my wit!
  I would the whole world were made up of sleep
  And life not fashioned out of lies and loves.
  We foolish women have such times, you know,
  When we are weary or afraid or sick
  For perfect nothing.

CHASTELARD.
  [Aside.]
  Now would one be fain
  To know what bitter or what dangerous thing
  She thinks of, softly chafing her soft lip.
  She must mean evil.

QUEEN.
  Are you sad too, sir,
  That you say nothing?

CHASTELARD.
  I? not sad a jot—
  Though this your talk might make a blithe man sad.

QUEEN.
  O me! I must not let stray sorrows out;
  They are ill to fledge, and if they feel blithe air
  They wail and chirp untunefully. Would God
  I had been a man! when I was born, men say,
  My father turned his face and wept to think
  I was no man.

CHASTELARD.
  Will you weep too?

QUEEN.
  In sooth,
  If I were a man I should be no base man;
  I could have fought; yea, I could fight now too
  If men would show me; I would I were the king!
  I should be all ways better than I am.

CHASTELARD.
  Nay, would you have more honor, having this—
  Men's hearts and loves and the sweet spoil of souls
  Given you like simple gold to bind your hair?
  Say you were king of thews, not queen of souls,
  An iron headpiece hammered to a head,
  You might fall too.

QUEEN.
  No, then I would not fall,
  Or God should make me woman back again.
  To be King James-you hear men say King James,
  The word sounds like a piece of gold thrown down,
  Rings with a round and royal note in it—
  A name to write good record of; this king
  Fought here and there, was beaten such a day,
  And came at last to a good end, his life
  Being all lived out, and for the main part well
  And like a king's life; then to have men say
  (As now they say of Flodden, here they broke
  And there they held up to the end) years back
  They saw you-yea, I saw the king's face helmed
  Red in the hot lit foreground of some fight
  Hold the whole war as it were by the bit, a horse
  Fit for his knees' grip-the great rearing war
  That frothed with lips flung up, and shook men's lives
  Off either flank of it like snow; I saw
  (You could not hear as his sword rang), saw him
  Shout, laugh, smite straight, and flaw the riven ranks,
  Move as the wind moves, and his horse's feet
  Stripe their long flags with dust. Why, if one died,
  To die so in the heart and heat of war
  Were a much goodlier thing than living soft
  And speaking sweet for fear of men. Woe's me,
  Is there no way to pluck this body off?
  Then I should never fear a man again,
  Even in my dreams I should not; no, by heaven.

CHASTELARD.
  I never thought you did fear anything.

QUEEN.
  God knows I do; I could be sick with wrath
  To think what grievous fear I have 'twixt whiles
  Of mine own self and of base men: last night
  If certain lords were glancing where I was
  Under the eyelid, with sharp lip and brow,
  I tell you, for pure shame and fear of them,
  I could have gone and slain them.

CHASTELARD.
  Verily,
  You are changed since those good days that fell in France;
  But yet I think you are not so changed at heart
  As to fear man.

QUEEN.
  I would I had no need.
  Lend me your sword a little; a fair sword;
  I see the fingers that I hold it with
  Clear in the blade, bright pink, the shell-color,
  Brighter than flesh is really, curved all round.
  Now men would mock if I should wear it here,
  Bound under bosom with a girdle, here,
  And yet I have heart enough to wear it well.
  Speak to me like a woman, let me see
  If I can play at man.

CHASTELARD.
  God save King James!

QUEEN.
  Would you could change now! Fie, this will not do;
  Unclasp your sword; nay, the hilt hurts my side;
  It sticks fast here. Unbind this knot for me:
  Stoop, and you'll see it closer; thank you: there.
  Now I can breathe, sir. Ah! it hurts me, though:
  This was fool's play.

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, you are better so,
  Without the sword; your eyes are stronger things,
  Whether to save or slay.

QUEEN.
  Alas, my side!
  It hurts right sorely. Is it not pitiful
  Our souls should be so bound about with flesh
  Even when they leap and smite with wings and feet,
  The least pain plucks them back, puts out their eyes,
  Turns them to tears and words? Ah my sweet knight,
  You have the better of us that weave and weep
  While the blithe battle blows upon your eyes
  Like rain and wind; yet I remember too
  When this last year the fight at Corrichie
  Reddened the rushes with stained fen-water,
  I rode with my good men and took delight,
  Feeling the sweet clear wind upon my eyes
  And rainy soft smells blown upon my face
  In riding: then the great fight jarred and joined,
  And the sound stung me right through heart and all;
  For I was here, see, gazing off the hills,
  In the wet air; our housings were all wet,
  And not a plume stood stiffly past the ear
  But flapped between the bridle and the neck;
  And under us we saw the battle go
  Like running water; I could see by fits
  Some helm the rain fell shining off, some flag
  Snap from the staff, shorn through or broken short
  In the man's falling: yea, one seemed to catch
  The very grasp of tumbled men at men,
  Teeth clenched in throats, hands riveted in hair,
  Tearing the life out with no help of swords.
  And all the clamor seemed to shine, the light
  Seemed to shout as a man doth; twice I laughed—
  I tell you, twice my heart swelled out with thirst
  To be into the battle; see, fair lord,
  I swear it seemed I might have made a knight,
  And yet the simple bracing of a belt
  Makes me cry out; this is too pitiful,
  This dusty half of us made up with fears.—
  Have you been ever quite so glad to fight
  As I have thought men must? pray you, speak truth.

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, when the time came, there caught hold of me
  Such pleasure in the head and hands and blood
  As may be kindled under loving lips:
  Crossing the ferry once to the Clerks' Field,
  I mind how the plashing noise of Seine
  Put fire into my face for joy, and how
  My blood kept measure with the swinging boat
  Till we touched land, all for the sake of that
  Which should be soon.

QUEEN.
  Her name, for God's love, sir;
  You slew your friend for love's sake? nay, the name.

CHASTELARD.
  Faith, I forget.

QUEEN.
  Now by the faith I have
  You have no faith to swear by.

CHASTELARD.
  A good sword:
  We left him quiet after a thrust or twain.

QUEEN.
  I would I had been at hand and marked them off
  As the maids did when we played singing games:
  You outwent me at rhyming; but for faith,
  We fight best there. I would I had seen you fight.

CHASTELARD.
  I would you had; his play was worth an eye;
  He made some gallant way before that pass
  Which made me way through him.

QUEEN.
  Would I saw that—
  How did you slay him?

CHASTELARD.
  A clean pass—this way;
  Right in the side here, where the blood has root.
  His wrist went round in pushing, see you, thus,
  Or he had pierced me.

QUEEN.
  Yea, I see, sweet knight.
  I have a mind to love you for his sake;
  Would I had seen.

CHASTELARD.
  Hugues de Marsillac—
  I have the name now; 't was a goodly one
  Before he changed it for a dusty name.

QUEEN.
  Talk not of death; I would hear living talk
  Of good live swords and good strokes struck withal,
  Brave battles and the mirth of mingling men,
  Not of cold names you greet a dead man with.
  You are yet young for fighting; but in fight
  Have you never caught a wound?

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, twice or so:
  The first time in a little outlying field
  (My first field) at the sleepy gray of dawn,
  They found us drowsy, fumbling at our girths,
  And rode us down by heaps; I took a hurt
  Here in the shoulder.

QUEEN.
  Ah, I mind well now;
  Did you not ride a day's space afterward,
  Having two wounds? yea, Dandelot it was,
  That Dandelot took word of it. I know,
  Sitting at meat when the news came to us
  I had nigh swooned but for those Florence eyes
  Slanting my way with sleek lids drawn up close—
  Yea, and she said, the Italian brokeress,
  She said such men were good for great queens' love.
  I would you might die, when you come to die,
  Like a knight slain. Pray God we make good ends.
  For love too, love dies hard or easily,
  But some way dies on some day, ere we die.

CHASTELARD.
  You made a song once of old flowers and loves,
  Will you not sing that rather? 't is long gone
  Since you sang last.

QUEEN.
  I had rather sigh than sing
  And sleep than sigh; 't is long since verily,
  But I will once more sing; ay, thus it was.

[Sings.]

  1.
  J'ai vu faner bien des choses,
  Mainte feuille aller au vent.
  En songeant aux vieilles roses,
       J'ai pleure souvent.

  2.
  Vois-tu dans les roses mortes
  Amour qui sourit cache?
  O mon amant, a nos portes
       L'as-tu vu couche?

  3.
  As-tu vu jamais au monde
  Venus chasser et courir?
  Fille de l'onde, avec l'onde
       Doit-elle mourir?

  4.
  Aux jours de neige et de givre
  L'amour s'effeuille et s'endort;
  Avec mai doit-il revivre,
       Ou bien est-il mort?

  5.
  Qui sait ou s'en vont les roses?
  Qui sai ou s'en va le vent?
  En songeant a telles choses,
       J'ai pleure souvent.

  I never heard yet but love made good knights,
  But for pure faith, by Mary's holiness,
  I think she lies about men's lips asleep,
  And if one kiss or pluck her by the hand
  To wake her, why God help your woman's wit,
  Faith is but dead; dig her grave deep at heart,
  And hide her face with cerecloths; farewell faith.
  Would I could tell why I talk idly. Look,
  Here come my riddle-readers. Welcome all;

[Enter MURRAY, DARNLEY, RANDOLPH, LINDSAY,
MORTON, and other LORDS.]

  Sirs, be right welcome. Stand you by my side,
  Fair cousin, I must lean on love or fall;
  You are a goodly staff, sir; tall enough,
  And fair enough to serve. My gentle lords,
  I am full glad of God that in great grace
  He hath given me such a lordly stay as this;
  There is no better friended queen alive.
  For the repealing of those banished men
  That stand in peril yet of last year's fault,
  It is our will; you have our seal to that.
  Brother, we hear harsh bruits of bad report
  Blown up and down about our almoner;
  See you to this: let him be sought into:
  They say lewd folk make ballads of their spleen,
  Strew miry ways of words with talk of him;
  If they have cause let him be spoken with.

LINDSAY.
  Madam, they charge him with so rank a life
  Were it not well this fellow were plucked out—
  Seeing this is not an eye that doth offend,
  But a blurred glass it were no harm to break;
  Yea rather it were gracious to be done?

QUEEN.
  Let him be weighed, and use him as he is;
  I am of my nature pitiful, ye know,
  And cannot turn my love unto a thorn
  In so brief space. Ye are all most virtuous;
  Yea, there is goodness grafted on this land;
  But yet compassion is some part of God.
  There is much heavier business held on hand
  Than one man's goodness: yea, as things fare here,
  A matter worth more weighing. All you wot
  I am choose a help to my weak feet,
  A lamp before my face, a lord and friend
  To walk with me in weary ways, high up
  Between the wind and rain and the hot sun.
  Now I have chosen a helper to myself,
  I wot the best a woman ever won;
  A man that loves me, and a royal man,
  A goodly love and lord for any queen.
  But for the peril and despite of men
  I have sometime tarried and withheld myself,
  Not fearful of his worthiness nor you,
  But with some lady's loathing to let out
  My whole heart's love; for truly this is hard,
  Not like a woman's fashion, shamefacedness
  And noble grave reluctance of herself
  To be the tongue and cry of her own heart.
  Nathless plain speech is better than much wit,
  So ye shall bear with me; albeit I think
  Ye have caught the mark whereat my heart is bent.
  I have kept close counsel and shut up men's lips,
  But lightly shall a woman's will slip out,
  The foolish little winged will of her,
  Through cheek or eye when tongue is charmed asleep.
  For that good lord I have good will to wed,
  I wot he knew long since which way it flew,
  Even till it lit on his right wrist and sang.
  Lo, here I take him by the hand: fair lords,
  This is my kinsman, made of mine own blood,
  I take to halve the state and services
  That bow down to me, and to be my head,
  My chief, my master, my sweet lord and king.
  Now shall I never say "sweet cousin" more
  To my dear head and husband; here, fair sir,
  I give you all the heart of love in me
  To gather off my lips. Did it like you,
  The taste of it? sir, it was whole and true.
  God save our king!

DARNLEY.
  Nay, nay, sweet love, no lord;
  No king of yours though I were lord of these.

QUEEN.
  Let word be sent to all good friends of ours
  To help us to be glad; England and France
  Shall bear great part of our rejoicings up.
  Give me your hand, dear lord; for from this time
  I must not walk alone. Lords, have good cheer:
  For you shall have a better face than mine
  To set upon your kingly gold and show
  For Scotland's forehead in the van of things.
  Go with us now, and see this news set out.

[Exeunt QUEEN, DARNLEY, and LORDS.]

[As CHASTELARD is going out, enter MARY BEATON.]

MARY BEATON.
  Have you yet heard? You knew of this?

CHASTELARD.
  I know.
  I was just thinking how such things were made
  And were so fair as this is. Do you know
  She held me here and talked—the most sweet talk
  Men ever heard of?

MARY BEATON.
  You hate me to the heart.
  What will you do?

CHASTELARD.
  I know not: die some day,
  But live as long and lightly as I can.
  Will you now love me? faith, but if you do,
  It were much better you were dead and hearsed.
  Will you do one thing for me?

MARY BEATON.
  Yea, all things.

CHASTELARD.
  Speak truth a little, for God's sake: indeed
  It were no harm to do. Come, will you, sweet?
  Though it be but to please God.

MARY BEATON.
  What will you do?

CHASTELARD.
  Ay, true, I must do somewhat. Let me see:
  To get between and tread upon his face—
  Catch both her hands and bid men look at them,
  How pure they were—I would do none of these,
  Though they got wedded all the days in the year.
  We may do well yet when all's come and gone.
  I pray you on this wedding-night of theirs
  Do but one thing that I shall ask of you,
  And Darnley will not hunger as I shall
  For that good time. Sweet, will you swear me this?

MARY BEATON.
  Yea; though to do it were mortal to my soul
  As the chief sin.

CHASTELARD.
  I thank you: let us go.

END OF THE SECOND ACT.

ACT III.

THE QUEEN.

SCENE I.—The Queen's Chamber. Night. Lights burning In front of the bed.

[Enter CHASTELARD and MARY BEATON.]

MARY BEATON.
  Be tender of your feet.

CHASTELARD.
  I shall not fail:
  These ways have light enough to help a man
  That walks with such stirred blood in him as mine.

MARY BEATON.
  I would yet plead with you to save your head:
  Nay, let this be then: sir, I chide you not.
  Nay, let all come. Do not abide her yet.

CHASTELARD.
  Have you read never in French books the song
  Called the Duke's Song, some boy made ages back,
  A song of drag-nets hauled across thwart seas
  And plucked up with rent sides, and caught therein
  A strange-haired woman with sad singing lips,
  Cold in the cheek like any stray of sea,
  And sweet to touch? so that men seeing her face,
  And how she sighed out little Ahs of pain
  And soft cries sobbing sideways from her mouth,
  Fell in hot love, and having lain with her
  Died soon? one time I could have told it through:
  Now I have kissed the sea-witch on her eyes
  And my lips ache with it; but I shall sleep
  Full soon, and a good space of sleep.

MARY BEATON.
  Alas!

CHASTELARD.
  What makes you sigh though I be found a fool?
  You have no blame: and for my death, sweet friend,
  I never could have lived long either way.
  Why, as I live, the joy I have of this
  Would make men mad that were not mad with love;
  I hear my blood sing, and my lifted heart
  Is like a springing water blown of wind
  For pleasure of this deed. Now, in God's name,
  I swear if there be danger in delight
  I must die now: if joys have deadly teeth,
  I'll have them bite my soul to death, and end
  In the old asp's way, Egyptian-wise; be killed
  In a royal purple fashion. Look, my love
  Would kill me if my body were past hurt
  Of any man's hand; and to die thereof,
  I say, is sweeter than all sorts of life.
  I would not have her love me now, for then
  I should die meanlier some time. I am safe,
  Sure of her face, my life's end in her sight,
  My blood shed out about her feet—by God,
  My heart feels drunken when I think of it.
  See you, she will not rid herself of me,
  Not though she slay me: her sweet lips and life
  Will smell of my spilt blood.

MARY BEATON.
  Give me good-night.

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, and good thanks.

[Exit MARY BEATON.]

  Here is the very place:
  Here has her body bowed the pillows in
  And here her head thrust under made the sheet
  Smell sort of her mixed hair and spice: even here
  Her arms pushed back the coverlet, pulled here
  The golden silken curtain halfway in
  It may be, and made room to lean out loose,
  Fair tender fallen arms. Now, if God would,
  Doubtless he might take pity on my soul
  To give me three clear hours, and then red hell
  Snare me forever: this were merciful:
  If I were God now I should do thus much.
  I must die next, and this were not so hard
  For him to let me eat sweet fruit and die
  With my lips sweet from it. For one shall have
  This fare for common days'-bread, which to me
  Should be a touch kept always on my sense
  To make hell soft, yea, the keen pain of hell
  Soft as the loosening of wound arms in sleep.
  Ah, love is good, and the worst part of it
  More than all things but death. She will be here
  In some small while, and see me face to face
  That am to give up life for her and go
  Where a man lies with all his loves put out
  And his lips full of earth. I think on her,
  And the old pleasure stings and makes half-tears
  Under mine eyelids. Prithee, love, come fast,
  That I may die soon: yea, some kisses through,
  I shall die joyfully enough, so God
  Keep me alive till then. I feel her feet
  Coming far off; now must I hold my heart,
  Steadying my blood to see her patiently.

[Hides himself by the bed.]

[Enter the QUEEN and DARNLEY.]

QUEEN.
  Nay, now go back: I have sent off my folk,
  Maries and all. Pray you, let be my hair;
  I cannot twist the gold thread out of it
  That you wound in so close. Look, here it clings:
  Ah! now you mar my hair unwinding it.
  Do me no hurt, sir.

DARNLEY.
  I would do you ease;
  Let me stay here.

QUEEN.
  Nay, will you go, my lord?

DARNLEY.
  Eh? would you use me as a girl does fruit,
  Touched with her mouth and pulled away for game
  To look thereon ere her lips feed? but see,
  By God, I fare the worse for you.

QUEEN.
  Fair sir,
  Give me this hour to watch with and say prayers;
  You have not faith-it needs me to say prayers,
  That with commending of this deed to God
  I may get grace for it.

DARNLEY.
  Why, lacks it grace?
  Is not all wedlock gracious of itself?

QUEEN.
  Nay, that I know not of. Come, sweet, be hence.

DARNLEY.
  You have a sort of jewel in your neck
  That's like mine here.

QUEEN.
  Keep off your hands and go:
  You have no courtesy to be a king.

DARNLEY.
  Well, I will go: nay, but I thwart you not.
  Do as you will, and get you grace; farewell,
  And for my part, grace keep this watch with me!
  For I need grace to bear with you so much.

[Exit.]

QUEEN.
  So, he is forth. Let me behold myself;
  I am too pale to be so hot; I marvel
  So little color should be bold in the face
  When the blood is not quieted. I have
  But a brief space to cool my thoughts upon.
  If one should wear the hair thus heaped and curled
  Would it look best? or this way in the neck?
  Could one ungirdle in such wise one's heart

[Taking off her girdle.]

  And ease it inwards as the waist is eased
  By slackening of the slid clasp on it!
  How soft the silk is-gracious color too;
  Violet shadows like new veins thrown up
  Each arm, and gold to fleck the faint sweet green
  Where the wrist lies thus eased. I am right glad
  I have no maids about to hasten me—
  So I will rest and see my hair shed down
  On either silk side of my woven sleeves,
  Get some new way to bind it back with-yea,
  Fair mirror-glass, I am well ware of you,
  Yea, I know that, I am quite beautiful.
  How my hair shines!-Fair face, be friends with me
  And I will sing to you; look in my face
  Now, and your mouth must help the song in mine.

        Alys la chatelaine
        Voit venir de par Seine
        Thiebault le capitaine
              Qui parle ainsi!

  Was that the wind in the casement? nay, no more
  But the comb drawn through half my hissing hair
  Laid on my arms-yet my flesh moved at it.

        Dans ma camaille
  Plus de clou qui vaille,
  Dans ma cotte-maille
  Plus de fer aussi.

  Ah, but I wrong the ballad-verse: what's good
  In such frayed fringes of old rhymes, to make
  Their broken burden lag with us? meseems
  I could be sad now if I fell to think
  The least sad thing; aye, that sweet lady's fool,
  Fool sorrow, would make merry with mine eyes
  For a small thing. Nay, but I will keep glad,
  Nor shall old sorrow be false friends with me.
  But my first wedding was not like to this—
  Fair faces then and laughter and sweet game,
  And a pale little mouth that clung on mine
  When I had kissed him by the faded eyes
  And either thin cheek beating with faint blood.
  Well, he was sure to die soon; I do think
  He would have given his body to be slain,
  Having embraced my body. Now, God knows,
  I have no man to do as much for me
  As give me but a little of his blood
  To fill my beauty from, though I go down
  Pale to my grave for want—I think not. Pale—
  I am too pale purely—Ah!

[See him in the glass, coming forward.]

CHASTELARD.
  Be not afraid.

QUEEN.
  Saint Mary! what a shaken wit have I!
  Nay, is it you? who let you through the doors?
  Where be my maidens? which way got you in?
  Nay, but stand up, kiss not my hands so hard;
  By God's fair body, if you but breathe on them
  You are just dead and slain at once. What adder
  Has bit you mirthful mad? for by this light
  A man to have his head laughed off for mirth
  Is no great jest. Lay not your eyes on me;
  What, would you not be slain?

CHASTELARD.
  I pray you, madam,
  Bear with me a brief space and let me speak.
  I will not touch your garments even, nor speak
  But in soft wise, and look some other way,
  If that it like you; for I came not here
  For pleasure of the eyes; yet, if you will,
  Let me look on you.

QUEEN.
  As you will, fair sir.
  Give me that coif to gather in my hair—
  I thank you—and my girdle-nay, that side.
  Speak, if you will; yet if you will be gone,
  Why, you shall go, because I hate you not.
  You know that I might slay you with my lips,
  With calling out? but I will hold my peace.

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, do some while. I had a thing to say;
  I know not wholly what thing. O my sweet,
  I am come here to take farewell of love
  That I have served, and life that I have lived
  Made up of love, here in the sight of you
  That all my life's time I loved more than God,
  Who quits me thus with bitter death for it.
  For you well know that I must shortly die,
  My life being wound about you as it is,
  Who love me not; yet do not hate me, sweet,
  But tell me wherein I came short of love;
  For doubtless I came short of a just love,
  And fell in some fool's fault that angered you.
  Now that I talk men dig my grave for me
  Out in the rain, and in a little while
  I shall be thrust in some sad space of earth
  Out of your eyes; and you, O you my love,
  A newly-wedded lady full of mirth
  And a queen girt with all good people's love,
  You shall be fair and merry in all your days.
  Is this so much for me to have of you?
  Do but speak, sweet: I know these are no words
  A man should say though he were now to die,
  But I am as a child for love, and have
  No strength at heart; yea, I am afraid to die,
  For the harsh dust will lie upon my face
  Too thick to see you past. Look how I love you;
  I did so love you always, that your face
  Seen through my sleep has wrung mine eyes to tears
  For pure delight in you. Why do you thus?
  You answer not, but your lips curl in twain
  And your face moves; there, I shall make you weep
  And be a coward too; it were much best
  I should be slain.

QUEEN.
  Yea, best such folk were slain;
  Why should they live to cozen fools with lies?
  You would swear now you have used me faithfully;
  Shall I not make you swear? I am ware of you:
  You will not do it; nay, for the fear of God
  You will not swear. Come, I am merciful;
  God made a foolish woman, making me,
  And I have loved your mistress with whole heart;
  Say you do love her, you shall marry her
  And she give thanks: yet I could wish your love
  Had not so lightly chosen forth a face;
  For your fair sake, because I hate you not.

CHASTELARD.
  What is to say? why, you do surely know
  That since my days were counted for a man's
  I have loved you; yea, how past all help and sense,
  Whatever thing was bitter to my love,
  I have loved you; how when I rode in war
  Your face went floated in among men's helms,
  Your voice went through the shriek of slipping swords;
  Yea, and I never have loved women well,
  Seeing always in my sight I had your lips
  Curled over, red and sweet; and the soft space
  Of carven brows, and splendor of great throat
  Swayed lily-wise; what pleasure should one have
  To wind his arms about a lesser love?
  I have seen you; why, this were joy enough
  For God's eyes up in heaven, only to see
  And to come never nearer than I am.
  Why, it was in my flesh, my bone and blood,
  Bound in my brain, to love you; yea, and writ
  All my heart over: if I would lie to you
  I doubt I could not lie. Ah, you see now,
  You know now well enough; yea, there, sweet love,
  Let me kiss there.

QUEEN.
  I love you best of them.
  Clasp me quite round till your lips cleave on mine,
  False mine, that did you wrong. Forgive them dearly
  As you are sweet to them; for by love's love
  I am not that evil woman in my heart
  That laughs at a rent faith. O Chastelard,
  Since this was broken to me of your new love
  I have not seen the face of a sweet hour.
  Nay, if there be no pardon in a man,
  What shall a woman have for loving him?
  Pardon me, sweet.

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, so I pardon you,
  And this side now; the first way. Would God please
  To slay me so! who knows how he might please?
  Now I am thinking, if you know it not,
  How I might kill you, kiss your breath clean out,
  And take your soul to bring mine through to God,
  That our two souls might close and be one twain
  Or a twain one, and God himself want skill
  To set us either severally apart.
  O, you must overlive me many years.
  And many years my soul be in waste hell;
  But when some time God can no more refrain
  To lay death like a kiss across your lips,
  And great lords bear you clothed with funeral things,
  And your crown girded over deadly brows,
  Then after you shall touch me with your eyes,
  Remembering love was fellow with my flesh
  Here in sweet earth, and make me well of love
  And heal my many years with piteousness.

QUEEN.
  You talk too sadly and too feignedly.

CHASTELARD.
  Too sad, but not too feigned; I am sad
  That I shall die here without feigning thus;
  And without feigning I were fain to live.

QUEEN.
  Alas, you will be taken presently
  And then you are but dead. Pray you get hence.

CHASTELARD.
  I will not.

QUEEN.
  Nay, for God's love be away;
  You will be slain and I get shame. God's mercy!
  You were stark mad to come here; kiss me, sweet.
  Oh, I do love you more than all men! yea,
  Take my lips to you, close mine eyes up fast,
  So you leave hold a little; there, for pity,
  Abide now, and to-morrow come to me.
  Nay, lest one see red kisses in my throat—
  Dear God! what shall I give you to be gone?

CHASTELARD.
  I will not go. Look, here's full night grown up;
  Why should I seek to sleep away from here?
  The place is soft and the lights burn for sleep;
  Be not you moved; I shall lie well enough.

QUEEN.
  You are utterly undone. Sweet, by my life,
  You shall be saved with taking ship at once.
  For if you stay this foolish love's hour out
  There is not ten days' likely life in you.
  This is no choice.

CHASTELARD.
  Nay, for I will not go.

QUEEN.
  O me! this is that Bayard's blood of yours
  That makes you mad; yea, and you shall not stay.
  I do not understand. Mind, you must die.
  Alas, poor lord, you have no sense of me;
  I shall be deadly to you.

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, I saw that;
  But I saw not that when my death's day came
  You could be quite so sweet to me.

QUEEN.
  My love!
  If I could kiss my heart's root out on you
  You would taste love hid at the core of me.

CHASTELARD.
  Kiss me twice more. This beautiful bowed head
  That has such hair with kissing ripples in
  And shivering soft eyelashes and brows
  With fluttered blood! but laugh a little, sweetly,
  That I may see your sad mouth's laughing look
  I have used sweet hours in seeing. O, will you weep?
  I pray you do not weep.

QUEEN.
  Nay, dear, I have
  No tears in me; I never shall weep much,
  I think, in all my life; I have wept for wrath
  Sometimes and for mere pain, but for love's pity
  I cannot weep at all. I would to God
  You loved me less; I give you all I can
  For all this love of yours, and yet I am sure
  I shall live out the sorrow of your death
  And be glad afterwards. You know I am sorry.
  I should weep now; forgive me for your part,
  God made me hard, I think. Alas, you see
  I had fain been other than I am.

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, love.
  Comfort your heart. What way am I do die?

QUEEN.
  Ah, will you go yet, sweet?

CHASTELARD.
  No, by God's body.
  You will not see? how shall I make you see?
  Look, it may be love was a sort of curse
  Made for my plague and mixed up with my days
  Somewise in their beginning; or indeed
  A bitter birth begotten of sad stars
  At mine own body's birth, that heaven might make
  My life taste sharp where other men drank sweet;
  But whether in heavy body or broken soul,
  I know it must go on to be my death.
  There was the matter of my fate in me
  When I was fashioned first, and given such life
  As goes with a sad end; no fault but God's.
  Yea, and for all this I am not penitent:
  You see I am perfect in these sins of mine,
  I have my sins writ in a book to read;
  Now I shall die and be well done with this.
  But I am sure you cannot see such things,
  God knows I blame you not.

QUEEN.
  What shall be said?
  You know most well that I am sorrowful.
  But you should chide me. Sweet, you have seen fair wars,
  Have seen men slain and ridden red in them;
  Why will you die a chamberer's death like this?
  What, shall no praise be written of my knight,
  For my fame's sake?

CHASTELARD.
  Nay, no great praise, I think;
  I will no more; what should I do with death,
  Though I died goodly out of sight of you?
  I have gone once: here am I set now, sweet,
  Till the end come. That is your husband, hark,
  He knocks at the outer door. Kiss me just once.
  You know now all you have to say. Nay, love,
  Let him come quickly.

[Enter DARNLEY, and afterwards the MARIES.]

DARNLEY.
  Yea, what thing is here?
  Ay, this was what the doors shut fast upon—
  Ay, trust you to be fast at prayer, my sweet?
  By God I have a mind—

CHASTELARD.
  What mind then, sir?
  A liar's lewd mind, to coin sins for jest,
  Because you take me in such wise as this?
  Look you, I have to die soon, and I swear,
  That am no liar but a free knight and lord,
  I shall die clear of any sin to you,
  Save that I came for no good will of mine;
  I am no carle, I play fair games with faith,
  And by mine honor for my sake I swear
  I say but truth; for no man's sake save mine,
  Lest I die shamed. Madam, I pray you say
  I am no liar; you know me what I am,
  A sinful man and shortly to be slain,
  That in a simple insolence of love
  Have stained with a fool's eyes your holy hours
  And with a fool's words put your pity out;
  Nathless you know if I be liar or no,
  Wherefore for God's sake give me grace to swear
  (Yea, for mine too) how past all praise you are
  And stainless of all shame; and how all men
  Lie, saying you are not most good and innocent,
  Yea, the one thing good as God.

DARNLEY.
  O sir, we know
  You can swear well, being taken; you fair French
  Dare swallow God's name for a lewd love-sake
  As it were water. Nay, we know, we know;
  Save your sweet breath now lest you lack it soon:
  We are simple, we; we have not heard of you.
  Madam, by God you are well shamed in him:
  Ay, trust you to be fingering in one's face,
  Play with one's neck-chain? ah, your maiden's man,
  A relic of your people's!

CHASTELARD.
  Hold your peace,
  Or I will set an edge on your own lie
  Shall scar yourself. Madam, have out your guard;
  'T is time I were got hence.

QUEEN.
  Sweet Hamilton,
  Hold you my hand and help me to sit down.
  O Henry, I am beaten from my wits—
  Let me have time and live; call out my people—
  Bring forth some armed guard to lay hold on him:
  But see no man be slain.
  Sirs, hide your swords;
  I will not have men slain.

DARNLEY.
  What, is this true?
  Call the queen's people—help the queen there, you—
  Ho, sirs, come in.

[Enter some with the Guard.]

QUEEN.
  Lay hold upon that man;
  Bear him away, but see he have no hurt.

CHASTELARD.
  Into your hands I render up myself
  With a free heart; deal with me how you list,
  But courteously, I pray you. Take my sword.
  Farewell, great queen; the sweetness in your look
  Makes life look bitter on me. Farewell, sirs.

[He is taken out.]

DARNLEY.
  Yea, pluck him forth, and have him hanged by dawn;
  He shall find bed enow to sleep. God's love!
  That such a knave should be a knight like this!

QUEEN.
  Sir, peace awhile; this shall be as I please;
  Take patience to you. Lords, I pray you see
  All be done goodly; look they wrong him not.
  Carmichael, you shall sleep with me to-night;
  I am sorely shaken, even to the heart. Fair lords,
  I thank you for your care. Sweet, stay by me.

END OF THE THIRD ACT.

ACT IV.

MURRAY.

SCENE I.-The Queen's Lodging at St. Andrew's.

The QUEEN and the four MARIES.

QUEEN.
  Why will you break my heart with praying to me?
  You Seyton, you Carmichael, you have wits,
  You are not all run to tears; you do not think
  It is my wrath or will that whets this axe
  Against his neck?

MARY SEYTON.
  Nay, these three weeks agone
  I said the queen's wrath was not sharp enough
  To shear a neck.

QUEEN.
  Sweet, and you did me right,
  And look you, what my mercy bears to fruit,
  Danger and deadly speech and a fresh fault
  Before the first was cool in people's lips;
  A goodly mercy: and I wash hands of it.—
  Speak you, there; have you ever found me sharp?
  You weep and whisper with sloped necks and heads
  Like two sick birds; do you think shame of me?
  Nay, I thank God none can think shame of me;
  But am I bitter, think you, to men's faults?
  I think I am too merciful, too meek:
  Why if I could I would yet save this man;
  'T is just boy's madness; a soft stripe or two
  Would do to scourge the fault in his French blood.
  I would fain let him go. You, Hamilton,
  You have a heart thewed harder than my heart;
  When mine would threat it sighs, and wrath in it
  Has a bird's flight and station, starves before
  It can well feed or fly; my pulse of wrath
  Sounds tender as the running down of tears.
  You are the hardest woman I have known,
  Your blood has frost and cruel gall in it,
  You hold men off with bitter lips and eyes—
  Such maidens should serve England; now, perfay,
  I doubt you would have got him slain at once.
  Come, would you not? come, would you let him live?

MARY HAMILTON.
  Yes-I think yes; I cannot tell; maybe
  I would have seen him punished.

QUEEN.
  Look you now,
  There's maiden mercy; I would have him live—
  For all my wifehood maybe I weep too;
  Here's a mere maiden falls to slaying at once,
  Small shrift for her; God keep us from such hearts!
  I am a queen too that would have him live,
  But one that has no wrong and is no queen,
  She would-What are you saying there, you twain?

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  I said a queen's face and so fair an one's
  Would lose no grace for giving grace away;
  That gift comes back upon the mouth it left
  And makes it sweeter, and set fresh red on it.

QUEEN.
  This comes of sonnets when the dance draws breath;
  These talking times will make a dearth of grace.
  But you-what ails you that your lips are shut?
  Weep, if you will; here are four friends of yours
  To weep as fast for pity of your tears.
  Do you desire him dead? nay, but men say
  He was your friend, he fought them on your side,
  He made you songs-God knows what songs he made!
  Speak you for him a little: will you not?

MARY BEATON.
  Madam, I have no words.

QUEEN.
  No words? no pity—
  Have you no mercies for such men? God help!
  It seems I am the meekest heart on earth—
  Yea, the one tender woman left alive,
  And knew it not. I will not let him live,
  For all my pity of him.

MARY BEATON.
  Nay, but, madam,
  For God's love look a little to this thing.
  If you do slay him you are but shamed to death;
  All men will cry upon you, women weep,
  Turning your sweet name bitter with their tears;
  Red shame grow up out of your memory
  And burn his face that would speak well of you:
  You shall have no good word nor pity, none,
  Till some such end be fallen upon you: nay,
  I am but cold, I knew I had no words,
  I will keep silence.

QUEEN.
  Yea now, as I live,
  I wist not of it: troth, he shall not die.
  See you, I am pitiful, compassionate,
  I would not have men slain for my love's sake,
  But if he live to do me three times wrong,
  Why then my shame would grow up green and red
  Like any flower. I am not whole at heart;
  In faith, I wot not what such things should be;
  I doubt it is but dangerous; he must die.

MARY BEATON.
  Yea, but you will not slay him.

QUEEN.
  Swear me that,
  I'll say he shall not die for your oath's sake.
  What will you do for grief when he is dead?

MARY BEATON.
  Nothing for grief, but hold my peace and die.

QUEEN.
  Why, for your sweet sake one might let him live;
  But the first fault was a green seed of shame,
  And now the flower, and deadly fruit will come
  With apple-time in autumn. By my life,
  I would they had slain him there in Edinburgh;
  But I reprieve him; lo the thank I get,
  To set the base folk muttering like smoked bees
  Of shame and love, and how love comes to shame,
  And the queen loves shame that comes of love;
  Yet I say nought and go about my ways,
  And this mad fellow that I respited
  Being forth and free, lo now the second time
  Ye take him by my bed in wait. Now see
  If I can get good-will to pardon him;
  With what a face may I crave leave of men
  To respite him, being young and a good knight
  And mad for perfect love? shall I go say,
  Dear lords, because ye took him shamefully,
  Let him not die; because his fault is foul,
  Let him not die; because if he do live
  I shall be held a harlot of all men,
  I pray you, sweet sirs, that he may not die?

MARY BEATON.
  Madam, for me I would not have him live;
  Mine own heart's life was ended with my fame,
  And my life's breath will shortly follow them;
  So that I care not much; for you wot well
  I have lost love and shame and fame and all
  To no good end; nor while he had his life
  Have I got good of him that was my love,
  Save that for courtesy (which may God quit)
  He kissed me once as one might kiss for love
  Out of great pity for me; saving this,
  He never did me grace in all his life.
  And when you have slain him, madam, it may be
  I shall get grace of him in some new way
  In a new place, if God have care of us.

QUEEN.
  Bid you my brother to me presently.

[Exeunt MARIES.]

  And yet the thing is pitiful; I would
  There were some way. To send him overseas,
  Out past the long firths to the cold keen sea
  Where the sharp sound is that one hears up here—
  Or hold him in strong prison till he died—
  He would die shortly—or to set him free
  And use him softly till his brains were healed—
  There is no way. Now never while I live
  Shall we twain love together any more
  Nor sit at rhyme as we were used to do,
  Nor each kiss other only with the eyes
  A great way off ere hand or lip could reach;
  There is no way.

[Enter MURRAY.]

  O, you are welcome, sir;
  You know what need I have; but I praise heaven,
  Having such need, I have such help of you.
  I do believe no queen God ever made
  Was better holpen than I look to be.
  What, if two brethren love not heartily,
  Who shall be good to either one of them?

MURRAY.
  Madam, I have great joy of your good will.

QUEEN.
  I pray you, brother, use no courtesies:
  I have some fear you will not suffer me
  When I shall speak. Fear is a fool, I think,
  Yet hath he wit enow to fool my wits,
  Being but a woman's. Do not answer me
  Till you shall know; yet if you have a word
  I shall be fain to heart it; but I think
  There is no word to help me; no man's word:
  There be two things yet that should do me good,
  A speeding arm and a great heart. My lord,
  I am soft-spirited as women are,
  And ye wot well I have no harder heart:
  Yea, with all my will I would not slay a thing,
  But all should live right sweetly if I might;
  So that man's blood-spilling lies hard on me.
  I have a work yet for mine honor's sake,
  A thing to do, God wot I know not how,
  Nor how to crave it of you: nay, by heaven,
  I will not shame myself to show it you:
  I have not heart.

MURRAY.
  Why, if it may be done
  With any honor, or with good men's excuse,
  I shall well do it.

QUEEN.
  I would I wist that well.
  Sir, do you love me?

MURRAY.
  Yea, you know I do.

QUEEN.
  In faith, you should well love me, for I love
  The least man in your following for your sake
  With a whole sister's heart.

MURRAY.
  Speak simply, madam;
  I must obey you, being your bounden man.

QUEEN.
  Sir, so it is you know what things have been,
  Even to the endangering of mine innocent name,
  And by no fault, but by men's evil will;
  If Chastelard have trial openly,
  I am but shamed.

MURRAY.
  This were a wound indeed,
  If your good name should lie upon his lip.

QUEEN.
  I will the judges put him not to plead,
  For my fame's sake; he shall not answer them.

MURRAY.
  What, think you he will speak against your fame?

QUEEN.
  I know not; men might feign belief of him
  For hate of me; it may be he will speak;
  In brief, I will not have him held to proof.

MURRAY.
  Well, if this be, what good is to be done?

QUEEN.
  Is there no way but he must speak to them,
  Being had to trial plainly?

MURRAY.
  I think, none.

QUEEN.
  Now mark, my lord; I swear he will not speak.

MURRAY.
  It were the best if you could make that sure.

QUEEN.
  There is one way. Look, sir, he shall not do it:
  Shall not, or will not, either is one way;
  I speak as I would have you understand.

MURRAY.
  Let me not guess at you; speak certainly.

QUEEN.
  You will not mind me: let him be removed;
  Take means to get me surety; there be means.

MURRAY.
  So, in your mind, I have to slay the man?

QUEEN.
  Is there a mean for me to save the man?

MURRAY.
  Truly I see no mean except your love.

QUEEN.
  What love is that, my lord? what think you of,
  Talking of love and of love's mean in me
  And of your guesses and of slaying him?
  Why, I say nought, have nought to say: God help me!
  I bid you but take surety of the man,
  Get him removed.

MURRAY.
  Come, come, be clear with me;
  You bid me to despatch him privily.

QUEEN.
  God send me sufferance! I bid you, sir?
  Nay, do not go; what matter if I did?
  Nathless I never bade you; no, by God.
  Be not so wroth; you are my brother born;
  Why do you dwell upon me with such eyes?
  For love of God you should not bear me hard.

MURRAY.
  What, are you made of flesh?

QUEEN.
  O, now I see
  You had rather lose your wits to do me harm
  Than keep sound wits to help me.

MURRAY.
  It is right strange;
  The worst man living hath some fear, some love,
  Holds somewhat dear a little for life's sake,
  Keeps fast to some compassion; you have none;
  You know of nothing that remembrance knows
  To make you tender. I must slay the man?
  Nay, I will do it.

QUEEN.
  Do, if you be not mad.
  I am sorry for him; and he must needs die.
  I would I were assured you hate me not:
  I have no heart to slay him by my will.
  I pray you think not bitterly of me.

MURRAY.
  Is it your pleasure such a thing were done?

QUEEN.
  Yea, by God's body is it, certainly.

MURRAY.
  Nay, for your love then, and for honor's sake,
  This thing must be.

QUEEN.
  Yea, should I set you on?
  Even for my love then, I beseech you, sir,
  To seek him out, and lest he prate of me
  To put your knife into him ere he come forth:
  Meseems this were not such wild work to do.

MURRAY.
  I'll have him in the prison taken off.

QUEEN.
  I am bounden to you, even for my name's sake,
  When that is done.

MURRAY.
  I pray you fear me not.
  Farewell. I would such things were not to do,
  Or not for me; yea, not for any man.

[Exit.]

QUEEN.
  Alas, what honor have I to give thanks?
  I would he had denied me: I had held my peace
  Thenceforth forever; but he wrung out the word,
  Caught it before my lip, was fain of it—
  It was his fault to put it in my mind,
  Yea, and to feign a loathing of his fault.
  Now is he about devising my love's death,
  And nothing loth. Nay, since he must needs die,
  Would he were dead and come alive again
  And I might keep him safe. He doth live now
  And I may do what love I will to him;
  But by to-morrow he will be stark dead,
  Stark slain and dead; and for no sort of love
  Will he so much as kiss me half a kiss.
  Were this to do I would not do it again.

[Reenter MURRAY.]

  What, have you taken order? is it done?
  It were impossible to do so soon.
  Nay, answer me.

MURRAY.
  Madam, I will not do it.

QUEEN.
  How did you say? I pray, sir, speak again:
  I know not what you said.

MURRAY.
  I say I will not;
  I have thought thereof, and have made up my heart
  To have no part in this: look you to it.

QUEEN.
  O, for God's sake! you will not have me shamed?

MURRAY.
  I will not dip my hand into your sin.

QUEEN.
  It were a good deed to deliver me;
  I am but a woman, of one blood with you,
  A feeble woman; put me not to shame;
  I pray you of your pity do me right.
  Yea, and no fleck of blood shall cleave to you
  For a just deed.

MURRAY.
  I know not; I will none.

QUEEN.
  O, you will never let him speak to them
  To put me in such shame? why, I should die
  Out of pure shame and mine own burning blood;
  Yea, my face feels the shame lay hold on it,
  I am half burnt already in my thought;
  Take pity of me. Think how shame slays a man;
  How shall I live then? would you have me dead?
  I pray you for our dead dear father's sake,
  Let not men mock at me. Nay, if he speak,
  I shall be sung in mine own towns. Have pity.
  What, will you let men stone me in the ways?

MURRAY.
  Madam, I shall take pains the best I may
  To save your honor, and what thing lieth in me
  That will I do, but no close manslayings.
  I will not have God's judgment gripe my throat
  When I am dead, to hale me into hell
  For a man's sake slain on this wise. Take heed.
  See you to that.

[Exit.]

QUEEN.
  One of you maidens there
  Bid my lord hither. Now by Mary's soul,
  He shall not die and bring me into shame.
  There's treason in you like a fever, hot,
  My holy-natured brother, cheek and eye;
  You look red through with it: sick, honor-sick,
  Specked with the blain of treason, leper-like—
  A scrupulous fair traitor with clean lips—
  If one should sue to hell to do him good
  He were as brotherly holpen as I am.
  This man must live and say no harm of me;
  I may reprieve and cast him forth; yea, so—
  This were the best; or if he die midway—
  Yea, anything, so that he die not here.

[To the MARIES within.]

  Fetch hither Darnley. Nay, ye gape on me—
  What, doth he sleep, or feeds, or plays at games?
  Why, I would see him; I am weary for his sake;
  Bid my lord in.-Nathless he will but chide;
  Nay, fleer and laugh: what should one say to him?
  There were some word if one could hit on it;
  Some way to close with him: I wot not.-Sir,

[Enter DARNLEY.]

Please it your love I have a suit to you.

DARNLEY.
  What sort of suit?

QUEEN.
  Nay, if you be not friends—
  I have no suit towards mine enemies.

DARNLEY.
  Eh, do I look now like your enemy?

QUEEN.
  You have a way of peering under brow
  I do not like. If you see anything
  In me that irks you I will painfully
  Labor to lose it: do but show me favor,
  And as I am your faithful humble wife
  This foolishness shall be removed in me.

DARNLEY.
  Why do you laugh and mock me with stretched hands?
  Faith, I see no such thing.

QUEEN.
  That is well seen.
  Come, I will take my heart between my lips,
  Use it not hardly. Sir, my suit begins;
  That you would please to make me that I am,
  (In sooth I think I am) mistress and queen
  Of mine own people.

DARNLEY.
  Why, this is no suit;
  This is a simple matter, and your own.

QUEEN.
  It was, before God made you king of me.

DARNLEY.
  No king, by God's grace; were I such a king
  I'd sell my kingdom for six roods of rye.

QUEEN.
  You are too sharp upon my words; I would
  Have leave of you to free a man condemned.

DARNLEY.
  What man is that, sweet?

QUEEN.
  Such a mad poor man
  As God desires us use not cruelly.

DARNLEY.
  Is there no name a man may call him by?

QUEEN.
  Nay, my fair master, what fair game is this?
  Why, you do know him, it is Chastelard.

DARNLEY.
  Ay, is it soothly?

QUEEN.
  By my life, it is;
  Sweet, as you tender me, so pardon him.

DARNLEY.
  As he doth tender you, so pardon me;
  For if it were the mean to save my life
  He should not live a day.

QUEEN.
  Nay, shall not he?

DARNLEY.
  Look what an evil wit old Fortune hath:
  Why, I came here to get his time cut off.
  This second fault is meat for lewd men's mouths;
  You were best have him slain at once: 'tis hot.

QUEEN.
  Give me the warrant, and sit down, my lord.
  Why, I will sign it; what, I understand
  How this must be. Should not my name stand here?

DARNLEY.
  Yea, there, and here the seal.

QUEEN.
  Ay, so you say.
  Shall I say too what I am thinking of?

DARNLEY.
  Do, if you will.

QUEEN.
  I do not like your suit.

DARNLEY.
  'Tis of no Frenchman fashion.

QUEEN.
  No, God wot;
  'Tis nowise great men's fashion in French land
  To clap a headsman's taberd on their backs.

DARNLEY.
  No, madam?

QUEEN.
  No; I never wist of that.
  Is it a month gone I did call you lord?
  I chose you by no straying stroke of sight,
  But with my heart to love you heartily.
  Did I wrong then? did mine eye draw my heart?
  I know not; sir, it may be I did wrong:
  And yet to love you; and would choose again,
  Against to choose you.

DARNLEY.
  There, I love you too;
  Take that for sooth, and let me take this hence.

QUEEN.
  O, do you think I hold you off with words?
  Why, take it then; there is my handwriting,
  And here the hand that you shall slay him with.
  'Tis a fair hand, a maiden-colored one:
  I doubt yet it has never slain a man.
  You never fought yet save for game, I wis.
  Nay, thank me not, but have it from my sight;
  Go and make haste for fear he be got forth:
  It may be such a man is dangerous;
  Who knows what friends he hath? and by my faith
  I doubt he hath seen some fighting, I do fear
  He hath fought and shed men's blood; ye are wise men
  That will not leave such dangerous things alive;
  'T were well he died the sooner for your sakes.
  Pray you make haste; it is not fit he live.

DARNLEY.
  What, will you let him die so easily?

QUEEN.
  Why, God have mercy! what way should one take
  To please such people? there's some cunning way,
  Something I miss, out of my simple soul.
  What, must one say "Beseech you do no harm,"
  Or "for my love, sweet cousins, be not hard,"
  Or "let him live but till the vane come round"—
  Will such things please you? well then, have your way;
  Sir, I desire you, kneeling down with tears,
  With sighs and tears, fair sir, require of you,
  Considering of my love I bear this man,
  Just for my love's sake let him not be hanged
  Before the sundown; do thus much for me,
  To have a queen's prayers follow after you.

DARNLEY.
  I know no need for you to gibe at me.

QUEEN.
  Alack, what heart then shall I have to jest?
  There is no woman jests in such a wise—
  For the shame's sake I pray you hang him not,
  Seeing how I love him, save indeed in silk,
  Sweet twisted silk of my sad handiwork.
  Nay, and you will not do so much for me;
  You vex your lip, biting the blood and all:
  Were this so hard, and you compassionate?
  I am in sore case then, and will weep indeed.

DARNLEY.
  What do you mean to cast such gibes at me?

QUEEN.
  Woe's me, and will you turn my tears to thorns?
  Nay, set your eyes a little in my face;
  See, do I weep? what will you make of me?
  Will you not swear I love this prisoner?
  Ye are wise, and ye will have it; yet for me
  I wist not of it. We are but feeble fools,
  And love may catch us when we lie asleep
  And yet God knows we know not this a whit.
  Come, look on me, swear you believe it not:
  It may be I will take your word for that.

DARNLEY.
  Do you not love him? nay, but verily?

QUEEN.
  Now then, make answer to me verily,
  Which of us twain is wiser? for my part
  I will not swear I love not, if you will;
  Ye be wise men and many men, my lords,
  And ye will have me love him, ye will swear
  That I do love him; who shall say ye lie?
  Look on your paper; maybe I have wept:
  Doubtless I love your hanged man in my heart.
  What, is the writing smutched or gone awry?
  Or blurred-ay, surely so much-with one tear,
  One little sharp tear strayed on it by chance?
  Come, come, the man is deadly dangerous;
  Let him die presently.

DARNLEY.
  You do not love him;
  Well, yet he need not die; it were right hard
  To hang the fool because you love him not.

QUEEN.
  You have keen wits and thereto courtesy
  To catch me with. No, let this man not die;
  It were no such perpetual praise to you
  To be his doomsman and in doglike wise
  Bite his brief life in twain.

DARNLEY.
  Truly it were not.

QUEEN.
  Then for your honor and my love of you
  (Oh, I do love you! but you know not, sweet,
  You shall see how much), think you for their sake
  He may go free?

DARNLEY.
  How, freely forth of us?
  But yet he loves you, and being mad with love
  Makes matter for base mouths to chew upon:
  'T were best he live not yet.

QUEEN.
  Will you say that?

DARNLEY.
  Why should he live to breed you bad reports?
  Let him die first.

QUEEN.
  Sweet, for your sake, not so.

DARNLEY.
  Fret not yourself to pity; let him die.

QUEEN.
  Come, let him live a little; it shall be
  A grace to us.

DARNLEY.
  By God he dies at once.

QUEEN.
  Now, by God's mother, if I respite him,
  Though you were all the race of you in one
  And had more tongues than hairs to cry on me
  He should not lose a hair.

DARNLEY.
  This is mere mercy—
  But you thank God you love him not a whit?

QUEEN.
  It shall be what it please; and if I please
  It shall be anything. Give me the warrant.

DARNLEY.
  Nay, for your sake and love of you, not I,
  To make it dangerous.

QUEEN.
  O, God' pity, sir!
  You are tender of me; will you serve me so,
  Against mine own will, show me so much love,
  Do me good service that I loath being done,
  Out of pure pity?

DARNLEY.
  Nay, your word shall stand.

QUEEN.
  What makes you gape so beastlike after blood?
  Were you not bred up on some hangman's hire
  And dicted with fleshmeats at his hand
  And fed into a fool? Give me that paper.

DARNLEY.
  Now for that word I will not.

QUEEN.
  Nay, sweet love,
  For your own sake be just a little wise;
  Come, I beseech you.

DARNLEY.
  Pluck not at my hands.

QUEEN.
  No, that I will not: I am brain-broken, mad;
  Pity my madness for sweet marriage-sake
  And my great love's; I love you to say this;
  I would not have you cross me, out of love.
  But for true love should I not chafe indeed?
  And now I do not.

DARNLEY.
  Yea, and late you chid,
  You chafed and jested and blew soft and hard—
  No, for that "fool" you shall not fool me so.

QUEEN.
  You are no churl, sweet, will you see me weep?
  Look, I weep now; be friends with my poor tears,
  Think each of them beseeches you of love
  And hath some tongue to cry on you for love
  And speak soft things; for that which loves not you
  Is none of mine, not though they grow of grief
  And grief of you; be not too hard with them.
  You would not of your own heart slay a man;
  Nay, if you will, in God's name make me weep,
  I will not hate you; but at heart, sweet lord,
  Be not at heart my sweet heart's enemy.
  If I had many mighty men to friend
  I would not plead too lovingly with you
  To have your love.

DARNLEY.
  Why, yet you have my love.

QUEEN.
  Alas, what shall mine enemies do to me
  If he be used so hardly of my friends?
  Come, sir, you hate me; yet for all your hate
  You cannot have such heart.

DARNLEY.
  What sort of heart?
  I have no heart to be used shamefully
  If you mean that.

QUEEN.
  Would God I loved you not;
  You are too hard to be used lovingly.

DARNLEY.
  You are moved too much for such a little love
  As you bear me.

QUEEN.
  God knows you do me wrong;
  God knows the heart, sweet, that I love you with.
  Hark you, fair sir, I'd have all well with you;
  Do you not fear at sick men's time of night
  What end may come? are you so sure of heart?
  Is not your spirit surprisable in sleep?
  Have you no evil dreams? Nay, look you, love,
  I will not be flung off you heart and hand,
  I am no snake: but tell me for your love
  Have you no fancies how these things will end
  In the pit's mouth? how all life-deeds will look
  At the grave's edge that lets men into hell?
  For my part, who am weak and woman-eyed,
  It turns my soul tears: I doubt this blood
  Fallen on our faces when we twain are dead
  Will scar and burn them: yea, for heaven is sweet,
  And loves sweet deeds that smell not of split blood.
  Let us not kill: God that made mercy first
  Pities the pitiful for their deed's sake.

DARNLEY.
  Get you some painting; with a cheek like this
  You'll find no faith in listeners.

QUEEN.
  How, fair lord?

DARNLEY.
  I say that looking with this face of yours
  None shall believe you holy; what, you talk,
  Take mercy in your mouth, eat holiness,
  Put God under your tongue and feed on heaven,
  With fear and faith and-faith, I know not what—
  And look as though you stood and saw men slain
  To make you game and laughter; nay, your eyes
  Threaten as unto blood. What will you do
  To make men take your sweet word? pitiful—
  You are pitiful as he that's hired for death
  And loves the slaying yet better than the hire.

QUEEN.
  You are wise that live to threat and tell me so;
  Do you love life too much?

DARNLEY.
  O, now you are sweet,
  Right tender now: you love not blood nor death,
  You are too tender.

QUEEN.
  Yea, too weak, too soft:
  Sweet, do not mock me, for my love's sake; see
  How soft a thing I am. Will you be hard?
  The heart you have, has it no sort of fear?

DARNLEY.
  Take off your hand and let me go my way
  And do the deed, and when the doing is past
  I will come home and teach you tender things
  Out of my love till you forget my wrath.
  I will be angry when I see good need,
  And will grow gentle after, fear not that:
  You shall get no wrong of my wrongdoing.
  So I take leave.

QUEEN.
  Take what you will; take all;
  You have taken half my heart away with words:
  Take all I have, and take no leave; I have
  No leave to give: yea, shortly shall lack leave,
  I think, to live; but I crave none of you;
  I would have none: yet for the love I have,
  If I get ever a man to show it you,
  I pray God put you some day in my hand
  That you may take that too.

DARNLEY.
  Well, as he please;
  God keep you in such love; and so farewell.

[Exit.]

QUEEN.
  So fare I as your lover, but not well.—
  Ah sweet, if God be ever good to me
  To put you in my hand! I am come to shame;
  Let me think now, and let my wits not go;
  God, for dear mercy, let me not forget
  Why I should be so angry; the dull blood
  Beats at my face and blinds me-I am chafted to death,
  And I am shamed; I shall go mad and die.
  Truly I think I did kneel down, did pray,
  Yea, weep (who knows?) it may be-all for that.
  Yea, if I wept not, this was blood brake forth
  And burnt mine eyelids; I will have blood back,
  And wash them cool in the hottest of his heart,
  Or I will slay myself: I cannot tell:
  I have given gold for brass, and lo the pay
  Cleaves to my fingers: there's no way to mend—
  Not while life stays: would God that it were gone!
  The fool will feed upon my fame and laugh;
  Till one seal up his tongue and lips with blood,
  He carries half my honor and good name
  Between his teeth. Lord God, mine head will fail!
  When have I done thus since I was alive?
  And these ill times will deal but ill with me—
  My old love slain, and never a new to help,
  And my wits gone, and my blithe use of life,
  And all the grace was with me. Love-perchance
  If I save love I shall well save myself.
  I could find heart to bid him take such fellows
  And kill them to my hand. I was the fool
  To sue to these and shame myself: God knows
  I was a queen born, I will hold their heads
  Here in my hands for this. Which of you waits?

[Enter MARY BEATON and MARY CARMICHAEL.]

No maiden of them?-what, no more than this?

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Madam, the lady Seyton is gone forth;
  She is ill at heart with watching.

QUEEN.
  Ay, at heart—
  All girls must have such tender sides to the heart
  They break for one night's watching, ache to death
  For an hour's pity, for a half-hour's love—
  Wear out before the watches, die by dawn,
  And ride at noon to burial. God's my pity!
  Where's Hamilton? doth she ail too? at heart,
  I warrant her at heart.

MARY BEATON.
  I know not, madam.

QUEEN.
  What, sick or dead? I am well holpen of you:
  Come hither to me. What pale blood you have—
  Is it for fear you turn such cheeks to me?
  Why, if I were so loving, by my hand,
  I would have set my head upon the chance,
  And loosed him though I died. What will you do?
  Have you no way?

MARY BEATON.
  None but your mercy.

QUEEN.
  Ay?
  Why then the thing is piteous. Think, for God's sake—
  Is there no loving way to fetch him forth?
  Nay, what a white thin-blooded thing is love,
  To help no more than this doth! Were I in love,
  I would unbar the ways to-night and then
  Laugh death to death to-morrow, mock him dead;
  I think you love well with one half your heart,
  And let fear keep the other. Hark you now,
  You said there was some friend durst break my bars—
  Some Scotch name—faith, as if I wist of it!
  Ye have such heavy wits to help one with—
  Some man that had some mean to save him by—
  Tush, I must be at pains for you!

MARY BEATON.
  Nay, madam,
  It were no boot; he will not be let forth.

QUEEN.
  I say, the name. O, Robert Erskine-yea,
  A fellow of some heart: what saith he?

MARY BEATON.
  Madam,
  The thing was sound all through, yea, all went well,
  But for all prayers that we could make to him
  He would not fly: we cannot get him forth.

QUEEN.
  Great God! that men should have such wits as this!
  I have a mind to let him die for that;
  And yet I wot not. Said he, he loathed his life?

MARY BEATON.
  He says your grace given would scathe yourself,
  And little grace for such a grace as that
  Be with the little of his life he kept
  To cast off some time more unworthily.

QUEEN.
  God help me! what should wise folk do with him?
  These men be weaker-witted than mere fools
  When they fall mad once; yet by Mary's soul
  I am sorrier for him than for men right wise.
  God wot a fool that were more wise than he
  Would love me something worse than Chastelard,
  Ay, and his own soul better. Do you think
  (There's no such other sort of fool alive)
  That he may live?

MARY BEATON.
  Yea, by God's mercy, madam,
  To your great praise and honor from all men
  If you should keep him living.

QUEEN.
  By God's light,
  I have good will to do it. Are you sure,
  If I would pack him with a pardon hence,
  He would speak well of me-not hint and halt,
  Smile and look back, sigh and say love runs out,
  But times have been-with some loose laugh cut short,
  Bit off at lip-eh?

MARY BEATON.
  No, by heaven he would not.

QUEEN.
  You know how quickly one may be belied—
  Faith, you should know it-I never thought the worst,
  One may touch love and come with clean hands off—
  But you should know it. What, he will not fly—
  Not though I wink myself asleep, turn blind—
  Which that I will I say not?

MARY BEATON.
  Nay, not he;
  We had good hope to bring him well aboard,
  Let him slip safe down by the firths to sea,
  Out under Leith by night-setting, and thence
  Take ship for France and serve there out of sight
  In the new wars.

QUEEN.
  Ay, in the new French wars—
  You wist thereof too, madam, with good leave—
  A goodly bait to catch mine honor with
  And let me wake up with my name bit through.
  I had been much bounden to you twain, methinks,
  But for my knight's sake and his love's; by God,
  He shall not die in God's despite nor mine.
  Call in our chief lords; bid one see to it:
  Ay, and make haste.

[Exeunt MARY BEATON and MARY CARMICHAEL.]

  Now shall I try their teeth:
  I have done with fear; now nothing but pure love
  And power and pity shall have part in me;
  I will not throw them such a spirit in flesh
  To make their prey on. Though he be mad indeed,
  It is the goodliest madness ever smote
  Upon man's heart. A kingly knight-in faith,
  Meseems my face can yet make faith in men
  And break their brains with beauty: for a word,
  An eyelid's twitch, an eye's turn, tie them fast
  And make their souls cleave to me. God be thanked,
  This air has not yet curdled all the blood
  That went to make me fair. An hour agone,
  I thought I had been forgotten of men's love
  More than dead women's faces are forgot
  Of after lovers. All men are not of earth:
  For all the frost of fools and this cold land
  There be some yet catch fever of my face
  And burning for mine eyes' sake. I did think
  My time was gone when men would dance to death
  As to a music, and lie laughing down
  In the grave and take their funerals for their feasts,
  To get one kiss of me. I have some strength yet,
  Though I lack power on men that lack men's blood.
  Yea, and God wot I will be merciful;
  For all the foolish hardness round my heart
  That tender women miss of to their praise,
  They shall not say but I had grace to give
  Even for love's sake. Why, let them take their way:
  What ails it them though I be soft or hard?
  Soft hearts would weep and weep and let men die
  For very mercy and sweet-heartedness;
  I that weep little for my pity's sake,
  I have the grace to save men. Let fame go—
  I care not much what shall become of fame,
  So I save love and do mine own soul right;
  I'll have my mercy help me to revenge
  On all the crew of them. How will he look,
  Having my pardon! I shall have sweet thanks
  And love of good men for my mercy's love—
  Yea, and be quit of these I hate to death,
  With one good deed.

[Enter the MARIES.]

MARY BEATON.
  Madam, the lords are here.

QUEEN.
  Stand you about me, I will speak to them.
  I would the whole world stood up in my face
  And heard what I shall say. Bid them come in.

[Enter MURRAY, RANDOLPH, MORTON, LINDSAY, and other LORDS.]

  Hear you, fair lords, I have a word to you;
  There is one thing I would fain understand—
  If I be queen or no; for by my life
  Methinks I am growing unqueenly. No man speak?
  Pray you take note, sweet lord ambassador,
  I am no queen: I never was born queen;
  Alack, that one should fool us in this wise!
  Take up my crown, sir, I will none of it
  Till it hath bells on as a fool's cap hath.
  Nay, who will have it? no man take it up?
  Was there none worthy to be shamed but I?
  Here are enow good faces, good to crown;
  Will you be king, fair brother? or you, my lord?
  Give me a spinner's curch, a wisp of reed,
  Any mean thing; but, God's love, no more gold,
  And no more shame: let boys throw dice for it,
  Or cast it to the grooms for tennis-play,
  For I will none.

MURRAY.
  What would your highness have?

QUEEN.
  Yea, yea, I said I was no majesty;
  I shall be shortly fallen out of grace.
  What would I have? I would have leave to live;
  Perchance I shall not shortly: nay, for me
  That have no leave to respite other lives
  To keep mine own life were small praise enow.

MURRAY.
  Your majesty hath power to respite men,
  As we well wot; no man saith otherwise.

QUEEN.
  What, is this true? 't is a thing wonderful—
  So great I cannot be well sure of it.
  Strange that a queen should find such grace as this
  At such lords' hands as ye be, such great lords:
  I pray you let me get assured again,
  Lest I take jest for truth and shame myself
  And make you mirth: to make your mirth of me,
  God wot it were small pains to you, my lords,
  But much less honor. I may send reprieve—
  With your sweet leaves I may?

MURRAY.
  Assuredly.

QUEEN.
  Lo, now, what grace is this I have of you!
  I had a will to respite Chastelard,
  And would not do it for very fear of you:
  Look you, I wist not ye were merciful.

  MORTON.
  Madam—

QUEEN.
  My lord, you have a word to me?
  Doth it displease you such a man should live?

MORTON.
  'T were a mad mercy in your majesty
  To lay no hand upon his second fault
  And let him thrice offend you.

QUEEN.
  Ay, my lord?

  MORTON.
  It were well done to muffle lewd men's mouths
  By casting of his head into their laps:
  It were much best.

QUEEN.
  Yea, truly were it so?
  But if I will not, yet I will not, sir,
  For all the mouths in Scotland. Now, by heaven,
  As I am pleased he shall not die but live,
  So shall ye be. There is no man shall die,
  Except it please me; and no man shall say,
  Except it please me, if I do ill or well.
  Which of you now will set his will to mine?
  Not you, nor you I think, nor none of you,
  Nor no man living that loves living well.
  Let one stand forth and smite me with his hand,
  Wring my crown off and cast it underfoot,
  And he shall get my respite back of me,
  And no man else: he shall bid live or die,
  And no man else; and he shall be my lord,
  And no man else. What, will not one be king?
  Will not one here lay hold upon my state?
  I am queen of you for all things come and gone.
  Nay, my chief lady, and no meaner one,
  The chiefest of my maidens, shall bear this
  And give it to my prisoner for a grace;
  Who shall deny me? who shall do me wrong?
  Bear greeting to the lord of Chastelard,
  And this withal for respite of his life,
  For by my head he shall die no such way:
  Nay, sweet, no words, but hence and back again.

[Exit MARY BEATON.]

  Farewell, dear lords; ye have shown grace to me,
  And some time I will thank you as I may;
  Till when think well of me and what is done.

END OF THE FOURTH ACT.

ACT V.

CHASTELARD.

SCENE I.-Before Holyrood. A crowd of people; among them Soldiers, Burgesses, a Preacher, &c.

1ST CITIZEN.
  They are not out yet. Have you seen the man?
  What manner of man?

2D CITIZEN.
  Shall he be hanged or no?
  There was a fellow hanged some three days gone
  Wept the whole way: think you this man shall die
  In better sort, now?

1ST CITIZEN.
  Eh, these shawm-players
  That walk before strange women and make songs!
  How should they die well?

3D CITIZEN.
  Is it sooth men say
  Our dame was wont to kiss him on the face
  In lewd folk's sight?

1ST CITIZEN.
  Yea, saith one, all day long
  He used to sit and jangle words in rhyme
  To suit with shakes of faint adulterous sound
  Some French lust in men's ears; she made songs too,
  Soft things to feed sin's amorous mouth upon—
  Delicate sounds for dancing at in hell.

4TH CITIZEN.
  Is it priest Black that he shall have by him
  When they do come?

3D CITIZEN.
  Ah! by God's leave, not so;
  If the knave show us his peeled onion's head
  And that damned flagging jowl of his—

2D CITIZEN.
  Nay, sirs,
  Take heed of words; moreover, please it you,
  This man hath no pope's part in him.

3D CITIZEN.
  I say
  That if priest whore's friend with the lewd thief's cheek
  Show his foul blinking face to shame all ours,
  It goes back fouler; well, one day hell's fire
  Will burn him black indeed.

A WOMAN.
  What kind of man?
  'T is yet great pity of him if he be
  Goodly enow for this queen's paramour.
  A French lord overseas? what doth he here,
  With Scotch folk here?

1ST CITIZEN.
  Fair mistress, I think well
  He doth so at some times that I were fain
  To do as well.

THE WOMAN.
  Nay, then he will not die.

1ST CITIZEN.
  Why, see you, if one eat a piece of bread
  Baked as it were a certain prophet's way,
  Not upon coals, now—you shall apprehend—
  If defiled bread be given a man to eat,
  Being thrust into his mouth, why he shall eat,
  And with good hap shall eat; but if now, say,
  One steal this, bread and beastliness and all,
  When scarcely for pure hunger flesh and bone
  Cleave one to other—why, if he steal to eat,
  Be it even the filthiest feeding-though the man
  Be famine-flayed of flesh and skin, I say
  He shall be hanged.

3D CITIZEN.
  Nay, stolen said you, sir?
  See, God bade eat abominable bread,
  And freely was it eaten—for a sign
  This, for a sign—and doubtless as did God,
  So may the devil; bid one eat freely and live,
  Not for a sign.

2D CITIZEN.
  Will you think thus of her?
  But wherefore should they get this fellow slain
  If he be clear toward her?

3D CITIZEN.
  Sir, one must see
  The day comes when a woman sheds her sin
  As a bird moults; and she being shifted so,
  The old mate of her old feather pecks at her
  To get the right bird back; then she being stronger
  Picks out his eyes-eh?

2D CITIZEN.
  Like enough to be;
  But if it be—Is not one preaching there
  With certain folk about him?

1ST CITIZEN.
  Yea, the same
  Who preached a month since from Ezekiel
  Concerning these twain-this our queen that is
  And her that was, and is not now so much
  As queen over hell's worm.

3D CITIZEN.
  Ay, said he not,
  This was Aholah, the first one of these,
  Called sisters only for a type—being twain,
  Twain Maries, no whit Nazarine? the first
  Bred out of Egypt like the water-worm
  With sides in wet green places baked with slime
  And festered flesh that steams against the sun;
  A plague among all people, and a type
  Set as a flake upon a leper's fell.

1ST CITIZEN.
  Yea, said he, and unto her the men went in,
  The men of Pharaoh's, beautiful with red
  And with red gold, fair foreign-footed men,
  The bountiful fair men, the courteous men,
  The delicate men with delicate feet, that went
  Curling their small beards Agag-fashion, yea
  Pruning their mouths to nibble words behind
  With pecking at God's skirts-small broken oaths
  Fretted to shreds between most dainty lips,
  And underbreath some praise of Ashtaroth
  Sighed laughingly.

2D CITIZEN.
  Was he not under guard
  For the good word?

1ST CITIZEN.
  Yea, but now forth again.—
  And of the latter said he—there being two,
  The first Aholah, which interpreted—

3D CITIZEN.
  But, of this latter?

1ST CITIZEN.
  Well, of her he said
  How she made letters for Chaldean folk
  And men that came forth of the wilderness
  And all her sister's chosen men; yea, she
  Kept not her lip from any sin of hers
  But multiplied in whoredoms toward all these
  That hate God mightily; for these, he saith,
  These are the fair French people, and these her kin
  Sought out of England with her love-letters
  To bring them to her kiss of love; and thus
  With a prayer made that God would break such love
  Ended some while; then crying out for strong wrath
  Spake with a great voice after: This is she,
  Yea the lewd woman, yea the same woman
  That gat bruised breasts in Egypt, when strange men
  Swart from great suns, foot-burnt with angry soils
  And strewn with sand of gaunt Chaldean miles,
  Poured all their love upon her: she shall drink
  The Lord's cup of derision that is filled
  With drunkenness and sorrow, great of sides
  And deep to drink in till the dreg drips out:
  Yea, and herself with the twain shards thereof
  Pluck off her breasts; so said he.

4TH CITIZEN.
  See that stir—
  Are not they come?

3D CITIZEN.
  There wants an hour of them.
  Draw near and let us hearken; he will speak
  Surely some word of this.

2D CITIZEN.
  What saith he now?

THE PREACHER.
  The mercy of a harlot is a sword;
  And her mouth sharper than a flame of fire.

SCENE II.—In Prison.

CHASTELARD.
  So here my time shuts up; and the last light
  Has made the last shade in the world for me.
  The sunbeam that was narrow like a leaf
  Has turned a hand, and the hand stretched to an arm,
  And the arm has reached the dust on the floor, and made
  A maze of motes with paddling fingers. Well,
  I knew now that a man so sure to die
  Could care so little; a bride-night's lustiness
  Leaps in my veins as light fire under a wind:
  As if I felt a kindling beyond death
  Of some new joys far outside of me yet;
  Sweet sound, sweet smell and touch of things far out
  Sure to come soon. I wonder will death be
  Even all it seems now? or the talk of hell
  And wretched changes of the worn-out soul
  Nailed to decaying flesh, shall that be true?
  Or is this like the forethought of deep sleep
  Felt by a tired man? Sleep were good enough—
  Shall sleep be all? But I shall not forget
  For any sleep this love bound upon me—
  For any sleep or quiet ways of death.
  Ah, in my weary dusty space of sight
  Her face will float with heavy scents of hair
  And fire of subtle amorous eyes, and lips
  More hot than wine, full of sweet wicked words
  Babbled against mine own lips, and long hands
  Spread out, and pale bright throat and pale bright breasts,
  Fit to make all men mad. I do believe
  This fire shall never quite burn out to the ash
  And leave no heat and flame upon my dust
  For witness where a man's heart was burnt up.
  For all Christ's work this Venus is not quelled,
  But reddens at the mouth with blood of men,
  Sucking between small teeth the sap o' the veins,
  Dabbling with death her little tender lips—
  A bitter beauty, poisonous-pearled mouth.
  I am not fit to live but for love's sake,
  So I were best die shortly. Ah, fair love,
  Fair fearful Venus made of deadly foam,
  I shall escape you somehow with my death—
  Your splendid supple body and mouth on fire
  And Paphian breath that bites the lips with heat.
  I had best die.

[Enter MARY BEATON.]

  What, is my death's time come,
  And you the friend to make death kind to me?
  'T is sweetly done; for I was sick for this.

MARY BEATON.
  Nay, but see here; nay, for you shall not die:
  She has reprieved you; look, her name to that,
  A present respite; I was sure of her:
  You are quite safe: here, take it in your hands:
  I am faint with the end of pain. Read there.

CHASTELARD.
  Reprieve?
  Wherefore reprieve? Who has done this to me?

MARY BEATON.
  I never feared but God would have you live,
  Or I knew well God must have punished me;
  But I feared nothing, had no sort of fear.
  What makes you stare upon the seal so hard?
  Will you not read now?

CHASTELARD.
  A reprieve of life—
  Reprieving me from living. Nay, by God,
  I count one death a bitter thing enough.

MARY BEATON.
  See what she writes; you love; for love of you;
  Out of her love; a word to save your life:
  But I knew this too though you love me not:
  She is your love; I knew that: yea, by heaven.

CHASTELARD.
  You knew I had to live and be reprieved:
  Say I were bent to die now?

MARY BEATON.
  Do not die,
  For her sweet love's sake; not for pity of me,
  You would not bear with life for me one hour;
  But for hers only.

CHASTELARD.
  Nay, I love you well,
  I would not hurt you for more lives than one.
  But for this fair-faced paper of reprieve,
  We'll have no riddling to make death shift sides:
  Look, here ends one of us.

[Tearing it.]

  For her I love,
  She will not anger heaven with slaying me;
  For me, I am well quit of loving her;
  For you, I pray you be well comforted,
  Seeing in my life no man gat good by me
  And by my death no hurt is any man's.

MARY BEATON.
  And I that loved you? nay, I loved you; nay,
  Why should your like be pitied when they love?
  Her hard heart is not yet so hard as yours,
  Nor God's hard heart. I care not if you die.
  These bitter madmen are not fit to live.
  I will not have you touch me, speak to me,
  Nor take farewell of you. See you die well,
  Or death will play with shame for you, and win,
  And laugh you out of life. I am right glad
  I never am to see you any more,
  For I should come to hate you easily;
  I would not have you live.

[Exit.]

CHASTELARD.
  She has cause enow.
  I would this wretched waiting had an end,
  For I wax feebler than I was: God knows
  I had a mind once to have saved this flesh
  And made life one with shame. It marvels me
  This girl that loves me should desire so much
  To have me sleep with shame for bedfellow
  A whole life's space; she would be glad to die
  To escape such life. It may be too her love
  Is but an amorous quarrel with herself,
  Not love of me but her own wilful soul;
  Then she will live and be more glad of this
  Than girls of their own will and their heart's love
  Before love mars them: so God go with her!
  For mine own love-I wonder will she come
  Sad at her mouth a little, with drawn cheeks
  And eyelids wrinkled up? or hot and quick
  To lean her head on mine and leave her lips
  Deep in my neck? For surely she must come;
  And I should fare the better to be sure
  What she will do. But as it please my sweet;
  For some sweet thing she must do if she come,
  Seeing how I have to die. Now three years since
  This had not seemed so good an end for me;
  But in some wise all things wear round betimes
  And wind up well. Yet doubtless she might take
  A will to come my way and hold my hands
  And kiss me some three kisses, throat, mouth, eyes,
  And say some soft three words to soften death:
  I do not see how this should break her ease.
  Nay, she will come to get her warrant back:
  By this no doubt she is sorely penitent,
  Her fit of angry mercy well blown out
  And her wits cool again. She must have chafed
  A great while through for anger to become
  So like pure pity; they must have fretted her
  Night mad for anger: or it may be mistrust,
  She is so false; yea, to my death I think
  She will not trust me; alas the hard sweet heart!
  As if my lips could hurt her any way
  But by too keenly kissing of her own.
  Ah false poor sweet fair lips that keep no faith,
  They shall not catch mine false or dangerous;
  They must needs kiss me one good time, albeit
  They love me not at all. Lo, here she comes,
  For the blood leaps and catches at my face;
  There go her feet and tread upon my heart;
  Now shall I see what way I am to die.

[Enter the QUEEN.]

QUEEN.
  What, is one here? Speak to me for God's sake:
  Where are you lain?

CHASTELARD.
  Here, madam, at your hand.

QUEEN.
  Sweet lord, what sore pain have I had for you
  And been most patient!—Nay, you are not bound.
  If you be gentle to me, take my hand.
  Do you not hold me the worst heart in the world?
  Nay, you must needs; but say not yet you do.
  I am worn so weak I know not how I live:
  Reach me your hand.

CHASTELARD.
  Take comfort and good heart;
  All will find end; this is some grief to you,
  But you shall overlive it. Come, fair love;
  Be of fair cheer: I say you have done no wrong.

QUEEN.
  I will not be of cheer: I have done a thing
  That will turn fire and burn me. Tell me not;
  If you will do me comfort, whet your sword.
  But if you hate me, tell me of soft things,
  For I hate these, and bitterly. Look up;
  Am I not mortal to be gazed upon?

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, mortal, and not hateful.

QUEEN.
  O lost heart!
  Give me some mean to die by.

CHASTELARD.
  Sweet, enough.
  You have made no fault; life is not worth a world
  That you should weep to take it: would mine were,
  And I might give you a world-worthier gift
  Than one poor head that love has made a spoil;
  Take it for jest, and weep not: let me go,
  And think I died of chance or malady.
  Nay, I die well; one dies not best abed.

QUEEN.
  My warrant to reprieve you—that you saw?
  That came between your hands?

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, not long since.
  It seems you have no will to let me die.

QUEEN.
  Alas, you know I wrote it with my heart,
  Out of pure love; and since you were in bonds
  I have had such grief for love's sake and my heart's—
  Yea, by my life I have—I could not choose
  But give love way a little. Take my hand;
  You know it would have pricked my heart's blood out
  To write reprieve with.

CHASTELARD.
  Sweet, your hands are kind;
  Lay them about my neck, upon my face,
  And tell me not of writing.

QUEEN.
  Nay, by heaven,
  I would have given you mine own blood to drink
  If that could heal you of your soul-sickness.
  Yea, they know that, they curse me for your sake,
  Rail at my love—would God their heads were lopped
  And we twain left together this side death!
  But look you, sweet, if this my warrant hold
  You are but dead and shamed; for you must die,
  And they will slay you shamefully by force
  Even in my sight.

CHASTELARD.
  Faith, I think so they will.

QUEEN.
  Nay, they would slay me too, cast stones at me,
  Drag me alive—they have eaten poisonous words,
  They are mad and have no shame.

CHASTELARD.
  Ay, like enough.

QUEEN.
  Would God my heart were greater; but God wot
  I have no heart to bear with fear and die.
  Yea, and I cannot help you: or I know
  I should be nobler, bear a better heart:
  But as this stands—I pray you for good love,
  As you hold honor a costlier thing than life—

CHASTELARD.
  Well?

QUEEN.
  Nay, I would not be denied for shame;
  In brief, I pray you give me that again.

CHASTELARD.
  What, my reprieve?

QUEEN.
  Even so; deny me not,
  For your sake mainly: yea, by God you know
  How fain I were to die in your death's stead.
  For your name's sake. This were no need to swear.
  Lest we be mocked to death with a reprieve,
  And so both die, being shamed. What, shall I swear?
  What, if I kiss you? must I pluck it out?
  You do not love me: no, nor honor. Come
  I know you have it about you: give it me.

CHASTELARD.
  I cannot yield you such a thing again;
  Not as I had it.

QUEEN.
  A coward? what shift now?
  Do such men make such cravens?

CHASTELARD.
  Chide me not:
  Pity me that I cannot help my heart.

QUEEN.
  Heaven mend mine eyes that took you for a man!
  What, is it sewn into your flesh? take heed—
  Nay, but for shame—what have you done with it?

CHASTELARD.
  Why, there it lies, torn up.

QUEEN.
  God help me, sir!
  Have you done this?

CHASTELARD.
  Yea, sweet; what should I do?
  Did I not know you to the bone, my sweet?
  God speed you well! you have a goodly lord.

QUEEN.
  My love, sweet love, you are more fair than he,
  Yea, fairer many times: I love you much,
  Sir, know you that.

CHASTELARD.
  I think I know that well.
  Sit here a little till I feel you through
  In all my breath and blood for some sweet while.
  O gracious body that mine arms have had,
  And hair my face has felt on it! grave eyes
  And low thick lids that keep since years agone
  In the blue sweet of each particular vein
  Some special print of me! I am right glad
  That I must never feel a bitterer thing
  Than your soft curled-up shoulder and amorous arms
  From this time forth; nothing can hap to me
  Less good than this for all my whole life through.
  I would not have some new pain after this
  Come spoil the savor. O, your round bird's throat,
  More soft than sleep or singing; your calm cheeks,
  Turned bright, turned wan with kisses hard and hot;
  The beautiful color of your deep curved hands,
  Made of a red rose that had changed to white;
  That mouth mine own holds half the sweetness of,
  Yea, my heart holds the sweetness of it, whence
  My life began in me; mine that ends here
  Because you have no mercy, nay you know
  You never could have mercy. My fair love,
  Kiss me again, God loves you not the less;
  Why should one woman have all goodly things?
  You have all beauty; let mean women's lips
  Be pitiful, and speak truth: they will not be
  Such perfect things as yours. Be not ashamed
  That hands not made like these that snare men's souls
  Should do men good, give alms, relieve men's pain;
  You have the better, being more fair than they,
  They are half foul, being rather good than fair;
  You are quite fair: to be quite fair is best.
  Why, two nights hence I dreamed that I could see
  In through your bosom under the left flower,
  And there was a round hollow, and at heart
  A little red snake sitting, without spot,
  That bit—like this, and sucked up sweet—like this,
  And curled its lithe light body right and left,
  And quivered like a woman in act to love.
  Then there was some low fluttered talk i' the lips,
  Faint sound of soft fierce words caressing them—
  Like a fair woman's when her love gets way.
  Ah, your old kiss—I know the ways of it:
  Let the lips cling a little. Take them off,
  And speak some word or I go mad with love.

QUEEN.
  Will you not have my chaplain come to you?

CHASTELARD.
  Some better thing of yours—some handkerchief,
  Some fringe of scarf to make confession to—
  You had some book about you that fell out—

QUEEN.
  A little written book of Ronsard's rhymes,
  His gift, I wear in there for love of him—
  See, here between our feet.

CHASTELARD.
  Ay, my old lord's—
  The sweet chief poet, my dear friend long since?
  Give me the book. Lo you, this verse of his:
  With coming lilies in late April came
  Her body, fashioned whiter for their shame;
  And roses, touched with blood since Adon bled,
  From her fair color filled their lips with red:
  A goodly praise: I could not praise you so.
  I read that while your marriage-feast went on.
  Leave me this book, I pray you: I would read
  The hymn of death here over ere I die;
  I shall know soon how much he knew of death
  When that was written. One thing I know now,
  I shall not die with half a heart at least,
  Nor shift my face, nor weep my fault alive,
  Nor swear if I might live and do new deeds
  I would do better. Let me keep the book.

QUEEN.
  Yea, keep it: as would God you had kept your life
  Out of mine eyes and hands. I am wrong to the heart:
  This hour feels dry and bitter in my mouth,
  As if its sorrow were my body's food
  More than my soul's. There are bad thoughts in me—
  Most bitter fancies biting me like birds
  That tear each other. Suppose you need not die?

CHASTELARD.
  You know I cannot live for two hours more.
  Our fate was made thus ere our days were made:
  Will you fight fortune for so small a grief?
  But for one thing I were full fain of death.

QUEEN.
  What thing is that?

CHASTELARD.
  No need to name the thing.
  Why, what can death do with me fit to fear?
  For if I sleep I shall not weep awake;
  Or if their saying be true of things to come,
  Though hell be sharp, in the worst ache of it
  I shall be eased so God will give me back
  Sometimes one golden gracious sight of you—
  The aureole woven flowerlike through your hair,
  And in your lips the little laugh as red
  As when it came upon a kiss and ceased,
  Touching my mouth.

QUEEN.
  As I do now, this way,
  With my heart after: would I could shed tears,
  Tears should not fail when the heart shudders so.
  But your bad thought?

CHASTELARD.
  Well, such a thought as this:
  It may be, long time after I am dead,
  For all you are, you may see bitter days;
  God may forget you or be wroth with you:
  Then shall you lack a little help of me,
  And I shall feel your sorrow touching you,
  A happy sorrow, though I may not touch:
  I that would fain be turned to flesh again,
  Fain get back life to give up life for you,
  To shed my blood for help, that long ago
  You shed and were not holpen: and your heart
  Will ache for help and comfort, yea for love,
  And find less love than mine—for I do think
  You never will be loved thus in your life.

QUEEN.
  It may be man will never love me more;
  For I am sure I shall not love man twice.

CHASTELARD.
  I know not: men must love you in life's spite;
  For you will always kill them; man by man
  Your lips will bite them dead; yea, though you would,
  You shall not spare one; all will die of you;
  I cannot tell what love shall do with these,
  But I for all my love shall have no might
  To help you more, mine arms and hands no power
  To fasten on you more. This cleaves my heart,
  That they shall never touch your body more.
  But for your grief—you will not have to grieve;
  For being in such poor eyes so beautiful
  It must needs be as God is more than I
  So much more love he hath of you than mine;
  Yea, God shall not be bitter with my love,
  Seeing she is so sweet.

QUEEN.
  Ah my sweet fool,
  Think you when God will ruin me for sin
  My face of color shall prevail so much
  With him, so soften the toothed iron's edge
  To save my throat a scar? nay, I am sure
  I shall die somehow sadly.

CHASTELARD.
  This is pure grief;
  The shadow of your pity for my death,
  Mere foolishness of pity: all sweet moods
  Throw out such little shadows of themselves,
  Leave such light fears behind. You, die like me?
  Stretch your throat out that I may kiss all round
  Where mine shall be cut through: suppose my mouth
  The axe-edge to bite so sweet a throat in twain
  With bitter iron, should not it turn soft
  As lip is soft to lip?

QUEEN.
  I am quite sure
  I shall die sadly some day, Chastelard;
  I am quite certain.

CHASTELARD.
  Do not think such things;
  Lest all my next world's memories of you be
  As heavy as this thought.

QUEEN.
  I will not grieve you;
  Forgive me that my thoughts were sick with grief.
  What can I do to give you ease at heart?
  Shall I kiss now? I pray you have no fear
  But that I love you.

CHASTELARD.
  Turn your face to me;
  I do not grudge your face this death of mine;
  It is too fair—by God, you are too fair.
  What noise is that?

QUEEN.
  Can the hour be through so soon?
  I bade them give me but a little hour.
  Ah! I do love you! such brief space for love!
  I am yours all through, do all your will with me;
  What if we lay and let them take us fast,
  Lips grasping lips? I dare do anything.

CHASTELARD.
  Show better cheer: let no man see you mazed;
  Make haste and kiss me; cover up your throat
  Lest one see tumbled lace and prate of it.

[Enter the Guard: MURRAY, DARNLEY, MARY
HAMILTON, MARY BEATON, and others with them.]

DARNLEY.
  Sirs, do your charge; let him not have much time.

MARY HAMILTON.
  Peace, lest you chafe the queen: look, her brows bend.

CHASTELARD.
  Lords, and all you come hither for my sake,
  If while my life was with me like a friend
  That I must now forget the friendship of,
  I have done a wrong to any man of you,
  As it may be by fault of mine I have;
  Of such an one I crave for courtesy
  He will now cast it from his mind and heed
  Like a dead thing; considering my dead fault
  Worth no remembrance further than my death.
  This for his gentle honor and goodwill
  I do beseech him, doubting not to find
  Such kindliness if he be nobly made
  And of his birth a courteous race of man.
  You, my Lord James, if you have aught toward me—
  Or you, Lord Darnley—I dare fear no jot,
  Whate'er this be wherein you were aggrieved,
  But you will pardon all for gentleness.

DARNLEY.
  For my part—yea, well, if the thing stand thus,
  As you must die—one would not bear folk hard—
  And if the rest shall hold it honorable,
  Why, I do pardon you.

MURRAY.
  Sir, in all things
  We find no cause to speak of you but well:
  For all I see, save this your deadly fault,
  I hold you for a noble perfect man.

CHASTELARD.
  I thank you, fair lord, for your nobleness.
  You likewise, for the courtesy you have
  I give you thanks, sir; and to all these lords
  That have not heart to load me at my death.
  Last, I beseech of the best queen of men
  And royallest fair lady in the world
  To pardon me my grievous mortal sin
  Done in such great offence of her: for, sirs,
  If ever since I came between her eyes
  She hath beheld me other than I am
  Or shown her honor other than it is,
  Or, save in royal faultless courtesies,
  Used me with favor; if by speech or face,
  By salutation or by tender eyes,
  She hath made a way for my desire to live,
  Given ear to me or boldness to my breath;
  I pray God cast me forth before day cease
  Even to the heaviest place there is in hell.
  Yea, if she be not stainless toward all men,
  I pray this axe that I shall die upon
  May cut me off body and soul from heaven.
  Now for my soul's sake I dare pray to you;
  Forgive me, madam.

QUEEN.
  Yea, I do, fair sir:
  With all my heart in all I pardon you.

CHASTELARD.
  God thank you for great mercies. Lords, set hence;
  I am right loth to hold your patience here;
  I must not hold much longer any man's.
  Bring me my way and bid me fare well forth.

[As they pass out the QUEEN stays MARY BEATON.]

QUEEN.
  Hark hither, sweet. Get back to Holyrood
  And take Carmichael with you: go both up
  In some chief window whence the squares lie clear—
  Seem not to know what I shall do—mark that—
  And watch how things fare under. Have good cheer;
  You do not think now I can let him die?
  Nay, this were shameful madness if you did,
  And I should hate you.

MARY BEATON.
  Pray you love me, madam,
  And swear you love me and will let me live,
  That I may die the quicker.

QUEEN.
  Nay, sweet, see,
  Nay, you shall see, this must not seem devised;
  I will take any man with me, and go;
  Yea, for pure hate of them that hate him: yea,
  Lay hold upon the headsman and bid strike
  Here on my neck; if they will have him die,
  Why, I will die too: queens have died this way
  For less things than his love is. Nay, I know
  They want no blood; I will bring swords to boot
  For dear love's rescue though half earth were slain;
  What should men do with blood? Stand fast at watch;
  For I will be his ransom if I die.

[Exeunt.]

SCENE III.—The Upper Chamber in Holyrood.

MARY BEATON seated; MARY CARMICHAEL at a window.

MARY BEATON.
  Do you see nothing?

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Nay, but swarms of men
  And talking women gathered in small space,
  Flapping their gowns and gaping with fools' eyes:
  And a thin ring round one that seems to speak,
  Holding his hands out eagerly; no more.

MARY BEATON.
  Why, I hear more, I hear men shout The Queen.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Nay, no cries yet.

MARY BEATON.
  Ah, they will cry out soon
  When she comes forth; they should cry out on her;
  I hear their crying in my heart. Nay, sweet,
  Do not you hate her? all men, if God please,
  Shall hate her one day; yea, one day no doubt
  I shall worse hate her.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Pray you, be at peace;
  You hurt yourself: she will be merciful;
  What, could you see a true man slain for you?
  I think I could not; it is not like our hearts
  To have such hard sides to them.

MARY BEATON.
  O, not you,
  And I could nowise; there's some blood in her
  That does not run to mercy as ours doth:
  That fair face and the cursed heart in her
  Made keener than a knife for manslaying
  Can bear strange things.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Peace, for the people come.
  Ah—Murray, hooded over half his face
  With plucked-down hat, few folk about him, eyes
  Like a man angered; Darnley after him,
  Holding our Hamilton above her wrist,
  His mouth put near her hair to whisper with—
  And she laughs softly, looking at her feet.

MARY BEATON.
  She will not live long; God hath given her
  Few days and evil, full of hate and love,
  I see well now.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Hark, there's their cry—The Queen!
  Fair life and long, and good days to the Queen!

MARY BEATON.
  Yea, but God knows. I feel such patience here
  As I were sure in a brief while to die.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  She bends and laughs a little, graciously,
  And turns half, talking to I know not whom—
  A big man with great shoulders; ah, the face,
  You get his face now—wide and duskish, yea
  The youth burnt out of it. A goodly man,
  Thewed mightily and sunburnt to the bone;
  Doubtless he was away in banishment,
  Or kept some march far off.

MARY BEATON.
  Still you see nothing?

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Yea, now they bring him forth with a great noise,
  The folk all shouting and men thrust about
  Each way from him.

MARY BEATON.
  Ah, Lord God, bear with me,
  Help me to bear a little with my love
  For thine own love, or give me some quick death.
  Do not come down; I shall get strength again,
  Only my breath fails. Looks he sad or blithe?
  Not sad I doubt yet.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Nay, not sad a whit,
  But like a man who losing gold or lands
  Should lose a heavy sorrow; his face set,
  The eyes not curious to the right or left,
  And reading in a book, his hands unbound,
  With short fleet smiles. The whole place catches breath,
  Looking at him; she seems at point to speak:
  Now she lies back, and laughs, with her brows drawn
  And her lips drawn too. Now they read his crime—
  I see the laughter tightening her chin:
  Why do you bend your body and draw breath?
  They will not slay him in her sight; I am sure
  She will not have him slain.

MARY BEATON.
  Forth, and fear not:
  I was just praying to myself—one word,
  A prayer I have to say for her to God
  If he will mind it.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Now he looks her side;
  Something he says, if one could hear thus far:
  She leans out, lengthening her throat to hear
  And her eyes shining.

MARY BEATON.
  Ah, I had no hope:
  Yea thou God knowest that I had no hope.
  Let it end quickly.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Now his eyes are wide
  And his smile great; and like another smile
  The blood fills all his face. Her cheek and neck
  Work fast and hard; she must have pardoned him,
  He looks so merrily. Now he comes forth
  Out of that ring of people and kneels down;
  Ah, how the helve and edge of the great axe
  Turn in the sunlight as the man shifts hands—
  It must be for a show: because she sits
  And hardly moves her head this way—I see
  Her chin and lifted lips. Now she stands up,
  Puts out her hand, and they fall muttering;
  Ah!

MARY BEATON.
  Is it done now?

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  For God's love, stay there;
  Do not look out. Nay, he is dead by this;
  But gather up yourself from off the floor;
  Will she die too? I shut mine eyes and heard—
  Sweet, do not beat your face upon the ground.
  Nay, he is dead and slain.

MARY BEATON.
  What, slain indeed?
  I knew he would be slain. Ay, through the neck:
  I knew one must be smitten through the neck
  To die so quick: if one were stabbed to the heart,
  He would die slower.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Will you behold him dead?

MARY BEATON.
  Yea: must a dead man not be looked upon
  That living one was fain of? give me way.
  Lo you, what sort of hair this fellow had;
  The doomsman gathers it into his hand
  To grasp the head by for all men to see;
  I never did that.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  For God's love, let me go.

MARY BEATON.
  I think sometimes she must have held it so,
  Holding his head back, see you, by the hair
  To kiss his face, still lying in his arms.
  Ay, go and weep: it must be pitiful
  If one could see it. What is this they say?
  So perish the Queen's traitors! Yea, but so
  Perish the Queen! God, do thus much to her
  For his sake only: yea, for pity's sake
  Do thus much with her.

MARY CARMICHAEL.
  Prithee come in with me:
  Nay, come at once.

MARY BEATON.
  If I should meet with her
  And spit upon her at her coming in—
  But if I live then shall I see one day
  When God will smite her lying harlot's mouth—
  Surely I shall. Come, I will go with you;
  We will sit down together face to face
  Now, and keep silence; for this life is hard,
  And the end of it is quietness at last.
  Come, let us go: here is no word to say.

  AN USHER.
  Make way there for the lord of Bothwell; room—
  Place for my lord of Bothwell next the queen.

EXPLICIT