Cromwell eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 119 pages of information about Cromwell.

Cromwell eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 119 pages of information about Cromwell.
As if, when some great exile to our land
Whose lips were touched with freedom’s sacred fire,
But poor in wealth as virtue’s richest heir,
Came speaking of the wrongs his country bore,
Men said in youth he robb’d an orphan trust,
The proof since burnt, betray’d a trusting friend,
Haply now dead, or any other lie
So monstrous, wicked, gross, improbable,
That weak men found it easier to believe
Than the invention; while the bad in heart,
By true worth most offended, felt relief,
Protesting still they wish’d it were not so,
With that lean babble, custom’s scant half-mask,
Worn uselessly by hatred. 
Think me not
Of these—­nor yet too rash in sympathy. 
I would reflect well ere I draw the sword
To fling the sheath away; I bid you now
A kind farewell.

Crom. Full soon to meet array’d
In arms, the instruments of Heaven together
Thou art of us.  Thy heart, thy tongue, thy sword. 
Are ours—­now good night! [With emotion.]
Sir, this poor land
Needs all her honest children—­noble sorrow,
And yet a cheerful spirit to assert
The truth of right, yea!  God’s eternal truth,
Lest the world die a foolish sacrifice
And perish flaming in the night of space,
An atheist torch to warn the universe—­
Smile not, I pray thee.  We meet soon; farewell!

[Exit CROMWELL, L.]

Arth. A rude and uncurb’d martialist!—­and yet
A God-intoxicated man.  ’Tis not
A hypocrite, too haggard is his face,
Too deep and harsh his voice.  His features wear
No soft, diluted, and conventional smile
Of smirk content; befitting lords, and dukes,
Not men of nature’s honoured stamp and wear—­
How fervently he spake
Of Milton.  Strange, what feeling is abroad! 
There is an earnest spirit in these times,
That makes men weep—­dull, heavy men, else born
For country sports, to slip into their graves,
When the mild season of their prime had reach’d
Mellow decay, whose very being had died
In the same breeze that bore their churchyard toll,
Without a memory, save in the hearts
Of the next generation, their own heirs,
When they in turn grew old and thought of dying—­
Even such men as these now gird themselves
With swords and Bibles, and, nought doubting, rush
Into the world’s undying chronicles! 
This struggle hath in it a solemn echo
Of the old world, when God was present still
In fiery columns, burning oracles: 
Ere earnest faith and new reality
Had grown diluted, fading from the earth
Through feeble ages of a mock existence,
Whose Heaven and Hell were but as outer fables,
That trouble not man’s stage-like dream of life.

[Exit into the Inn.]

END OF ACT I.

ACT II.

SCENE I.

[2nd Grooves.]

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Cromwell from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.