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SCENE II - Joseph Addison, Cato: A Tragedy and Selected Essays [1710]

Edition used:

Cato: A Tragedy and Selected Essays, ed. by Christine Dunn Henderson and Mark E. Yellin, with a Foreword by Forrest McDonald (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2004).

About Liberty Fund:

Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational foundation established to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals.


SCENE II

Lucia, Portius.

Lucia

  • Did not I see your brother Marcus here?
  • Why did he fly the place, and shun my presence?

Portius

  • Oh, Lucia, language is too faint to show
  • His rage of love; it preys upon his life;
  • He pines, he sickens, he despairs, he dies:
  • His passions and his virtues lie confused,
  • And mixt together in so wild a tumult,
  • That the whole man is quite disfigured in him.
  • Heavens! would one think ’twere possible for love
  • To make such ravage in a noble soul!
  • Oh, Lucia, I’m distrest! my heart bleeds for him;
  • Ev’n now, while thus I stand blest in thy presence,
  • A secret damp of grief comes o’er my thoughts,
  • And I’m unhappy, though thou smil’st upon me.

Lucia

  • How wilt thou guard thy honour, in the shock
  • Of love and friendship! think betimes,3 my Portius,
  • Think how the nuptial tie, that might insure
  • Our mutual bliss, would raise to such a height
  • Thy brother’s griefs, as might perhaps destroy him.

Portius

  • Alas, poor youth! what dost thou think, my Lucia?
  • His generous, open, undesigning heart
  • Has begged his rival to solicit for him.
  • Then do not strike him dead with a denial,
  • But hold him up in life, and cheer his soul
  • With the faint glimmering of a doubtful hope:
  • Perhaps, when we have passed these gloomy hours,
  • And weathered out the storm that beats upon us—

Lucia

  • No, Portius, no! I see thy sister’s tears,
  • Thy father’s anguish, and thy brother’s death,
  • In the pursuit of our ill-fated loves.
  • And, Portius, here I swear, to heaven I swear,
  • To heaven, and all the powers that judge mankind,
  • Never to mix my plighted hands with thine,
  • While such a cloud of mischiefs hangs about us,
  • But to forget our loves, and drive thee out
  • From all my thoughts, as far—as I am able.

Portius

  • What hast thou said! I’m thunder-struck!—recall
  • Those hasty words, or I am lost for ever.

Lucia

  • Has not the vow already passed my lips?
  • The gods have heard it, and ’tis sealed in heaven.
  • May all the vengeance that was ever poured
  • On perjured heads o’erwhelm me, if I break it!  [After a pause.]

Portius

  • Fixt in astonishment, I gaze upon thee;
  • Like one just blasted by a stroke from heaven,
  • Who pants for breath, and stiffens, yet alive,
  • In dreadful looks:—a monument of wrath!

Lucia

  • At length I’ve acted my severest part,
  • I feel the woman breaking in upon me,
  • And melt about my heart! my tears will flow.
  • But oh I’ll think no more! the hand of fate
  • Has torn thee from me, and I must forget thee.

Portius

  • Hard-hearted, cruel maid!

Lucia

  •   Oh stop those sounds,
  • Those killing sounds! why dost thou frown upon me?
  • My blood runs cold, my heart forgets to heave,
  • And life itself goes out at thy displeasure.
  • The gods forbid us to indulge our loves,
  • But, oh! I cannot bear thy hate and live!

Portius

  • Talk not of love, thou never knew’st its force,
  • I’ve been deluded, led into a dream
  • Of fancied bliss. Oh Lucia, cruel maid!
  • Thy dreadful vow, loaden with death, still sounds
  • In my stunned ears. What shall I say or do?
  • Quick, let us part! perdition’s in thy presence,
  • And horror dwells about thee!—hah, she faints!
  • Wretch that I am! what has my rashness done!
  • Lucia, thou injured innocence! thou best
  • And loveliest of thy sex! awake, my Lucia,
  • Or Portius rushes on his sword to join thee.
  • —Her imprecations reach not to the tomb,
  • They shut not out society in death—
  • But, hah! she moves! life wanders up and down
  • Through all her face, and lights up every charm.

Lucia

  • O Portius, was this well!—to frown on her
  • That lives upon thy smiles! to call in doubt
  • The faith of one expiring at thy feet,
  • That loves thee more than ever woman loved!
  • —What do I say? my half-recovered sense
  • Forgets the vow in which my soul is bound.
  • Destruction stands betwixt us! we must part.

Portius

  • Name not the word, my frighted thoughts run back,
  • And startle into madness at the sound.

Lucia

  • What wouldst thou have me do? consider well
  • The train of ills our love would draw behind it.
  • Think, Portius, think, thou seest thy dying brother
  • Stabbed at his heart, and all besmeared with blood,
  • Storming at heaven and thee! thy awful sire
  • Sternly demands the cause, the accursed cause,
  • That robs him of his son! poor Marcia trembles,
  • Then tears her hair, and frantic in her griefs
  • Calls out on Lucia! What could Lucia answer?
  • Or how stand up in such a scene of sorrow?

Portius

  • To my confusion and eternal grief,
  • I must approve the sentence that destroys me.
  • The mist that hung about my mind clears up;
  • And now, athwart the terrors that thy vow
  • Has planted round thee, thou appear’st more fair,
  • More amiable, and risest in thy charms.
  • Loveliest of women! heaven is in thy soul,
  • Beauty and virtue shine for ever round thee,
  • Brightening each other! thou art all divine!

Lucia

  • Portius, no more! thy words shoot through my heart,
  • Melt my resolves, and turn me all to love.
  • Why are those tears of fondness in thy eyes?
  • Why heaves thy heart? why swells thy soul with sorrow?
  • It softens me too much—farewell, my Portius,
  • Farewell, though death is in the word, for ever!

Portius

  • Stay, Lucia, stay! what dost thou say? For ever?

Lucia

  • Have I not sworn? if, Portius, thy success
  • Must throw thy brother on his fate, farewell—
  • Oh, how shall I repeat the word?—for ever!

Portius

  • Thus o’er the dying lamp the unsteady flame
  • Hangs quivering on a point, leaps off by fits,
  • And falls again, as loth to quit its hold.
  • —Thou must not go, my soul still hovers o’er thee,
  • And can’t get loose.

Lucia

  •   If the firm Portius shake
  • To hear of parting, think what Lucia suffers!

Portius

  • ’Tis true; unruffled and serene I’ve met
  • The common accidents of life, but here
  • Such an unlooked-for storm of ills falls on me,
  • It beats down all my strength. I cannot bear it.
  • We must not part.

Lucia

  •   What dost thou say? not part?
  • Hast thou forgot the vow that I have made?
  • Are there not heavens, and gods, and thunder o’er us?
  • —But see! thy brother Marcus bends this way!
  • I sicken at the sight. Once more, farewell,
  • Farewell, and know thou wrong’st me, if thou think’st
  • Ever was love, or ever grief, like mine.  [Exit.]

[3. ]Quickly, soon.