ster,
listens to the conversation of the others.]
1ST KNIGHT.
A leper has been stoned
Because he cried throughout Lubin that 'twas
The devil who had done the thing.
DINAS.
Such leaps
By God or devil can alone be done.
GANELUN.
'Tis true, my Lords, no mortal man can spring
An hundred fathoms.
[Mark steps up to the table and lays his
arm about Dinas' neck.]
SCENE II
MARK.
True, Lord Ganelun!
2D BARON (springing up).
The King!
1ST BARON
The King here! Pardon, sire!
MARK.
I thank
You all, my Lords, that ye were not enraged
And angered at a weak old man, and came
Again to me. I would not willingly
Have spent this night alone.
2D BARON.
Most cheerfully
We came. The Queen's miraculous escape
O'er joys us all.
1ST BARON.
There lack but three to make
The tale complete; those three, my Lords, who stood
As sponsors of the bond.
MARK.
They're coursing through
The gloomy forest paths and seek to catch
That which, since God hath spoken, cannot be
Therein. I've sent my riders to recall
Them here to me.
GANELUN.
Give me thy hand, King Mark,
For I am glad that thou didst err!
MARK (his voice is bitter and despairing).
I, too,
Am glad, for if this morning I appeared
A wreckless youth, a foolish boy who dared
In arrogant presumption to assert
Himself and to rebel against your word,
Forgive me. Passion is the heritage
Of man; his deeds the natural consequence
Of passion. Think ye not the same? And see,
How God, now for the second time, has wrought,
And sternly proved the truth! Is it, perchance,
His will that I should learn unseeingly,
Unquestioningly to revere His stars
On which our actions here on earth depend?
What think ye, sirs? for so it seems to me;
And therefore hath He hid from me that which
Most eagerly I wish to know, so that
Before this veiled uncertainty, my blood
Ran riot in my veins. But from this day
I'll change my mode of life; I will regard
My b
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