FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   >>  
you! One blow! one deadly blow! Again forsaken! Draw thy sword, and have mercy upon me! CHARLES. Mercy has taken refuge among bears. I will not kill thee! AMELIA (embracing his knees). Oh, for heaven's sake! by all that is merciful! I ask no longer for love. I know that our stars fly from each other in opposition. Death is all I ask. Forsaken, forsaken! Take that word in all its dreadful import! Forsaken! I cannot survive it! Thou knowest well that no woman can survive that. All I ask is death. See, my hand trembles! I have not courage to strike the blow. I shrink from the gleaming blade! To thee it is so easy, so very easy; thou art a master in murder--draw thy sword, and make me happy! CHARLES. Wouldst thou alone be happy? Away with thee! I will kill no woman! AMELIA. Ha! destroyer! thou canst only kill the happy; they who are weary of existence thou sparest! (She glides towards the robbers.) Then do ye have mercy on me, disciples of murder! There lurks a bloodthirsty pity in your looks that is consoling to the wretched. Your master is a boaster and a coward. CHARLES. Woman, what dost thou say? (The ROBBERS turn away.) AMELIA. No friend? No; not even among these a friend? (She rises.) Well, then, let Dido teach me how to die! (She is going; a ROBBER takes aim at her.) CHARLES. Hold! dare it! Moor's Amelia shall die by no other hand than Moor's. (He strikes her dead.) THE ROBBERS. Captain! captain! what hast thou done? Art thou raving? CHARLES (with his eyes fixed on the body). One more pang and all will be over. She is immolated! Now, look on! have you any farther demand? Ye staked a life for me, a life which has ceased to be your own--a life full of infamy and shame! I have sacrificed an angel for you. Now! look upon her! Are you content? GRIMM. You have repaid your debt with usury. You have done all that man could do for his honor, and more. Now let's away. CHARLES. What say you? Is not the life of a saint for the life of a felon more than an equal exchange? Oh! I say unto you if every one of you were to--mount the scaffold, and to have his flesh torn from his bones piecemeal with red-hot pincers, through eleven long summer days of torture, yet would it not counterbalance these tears! (With a bitter laugh.) The scars! the Bohemian forests! Yes, yes! they must be repaid, of course! SCHWARZ. Compose yourself, captain! Come along with us! this is no sight for you. Lead us elsewhere! CHARLE
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   >>  



Top keywords:

CHARLES

 

AMELIA

 

repaid

 

ROBBERS

 

survive

 

forsaken

 

murder

 
master
 

captain

 

Forsaken


friend
 

sacrificed

 

Captain

 

immolated

 
content
 
staked
 

ceased

 

infamy

 

strikes

 

farther


raving

 

demand

 

scaffold

 

bitter

 
Bohemian
 

forests

 

torture

 
counterbalance
 

CHARLE

 

SCHWARZ


Compose

 

summer

 

exchange

 

pincers

 

eleven

 

piecemeal

 

wretched

 

knowest

 
dreadful
 

import


gleaming

 

trembles

 

courage

 

strike

 

shrink

 

embracing

 

heaven

 

refuge

 
deadly
 

merciful