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ANDRÉ
By William Dunlap Edited and with an Introduction
by Wayne S.Turney
CHARACTERS GENERAL,
dress, American staff uniform, blue, faced with buff, large gold epaulets, cocked
hat, with the black and white cockade, indicating the union with France, buff
waistcoat and breeches, boots. . . ................................... .
Mr. Hallam
M 'DONALD, a man of forty years of age, uniform
nearly the same as the first. . . .... . .Mr. Tyler
SEWARD. a man of thirty
years of age, staff uniform. . . ......
..
. . . .
. . . . Mr. Martin ANDRE,
a man of twenty-nine years of age, full British uniform after the first scene.
. . . . ...................................................................................Mr.
Hodgkinson
BLAND,
a youthful but military figure, in the uniform of a Captain of horse-dress, a
short blue coat, faced with red, and trimmed with gold lace, two small epaulets,
a white waistcoat, leather breeches, boots and spurs; over the coat, crossing
the chest from the right shoulder, a broad buff belt, to which is suspended a
manageable hussar sword; a horseman's helmet on the head, decorated as usual,
and the union cockade affixed. . .Mr. Cooper
MELVILLE, a man of middle age,
and grave deportment; his dress a Captain's uniform when on duty. a blue coat
with red facings, gold epaulet, white waistcoat and breeches, boots and cocked
hat, with the union cockade. . ...................................
. . . . . . ... . . .Mr. Williamson BRITISH OFFICER. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.Mr. Hogg AMERICAN OFFICER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
...
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mr . Miller CHILDREN
.................... . . . . . . .
..
. . . . Master Stockwell and Miss Hogg AMERICAN SERGEANT...............
....
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mr . Seymour AMERICAN OFFICERS AND SOLDIERS,
&C. MRS.
BLAND........................ . . . . . . . .
..
. . . . . .Mrs. Melmoth
HONORA ...............
........
. . . . . Mrs. Johnson
Scene, the Village of Tappan, Encampment,
and adjoining country. Time, ten hours. PROLOGUE Spoken
by Mr. Martin. A Native Bard, a native scene displays, And claims your
candour for his daring lays : Daring, so soon, in mimic scenes to shew ,
What each remembers as a real woe. Who has forgot when gallant Andre died?
A name by Fate to Sorrow's self allied. Who has forgot, when O 'er the
untimely bier, Contending armies paus'd, to drop a tear. Our Poet builds
upon a fact to-night ; Y et claims, in building, every Poet's right ;
To choose, embellish, lop, or add, or blend, Fiction with truth, as best
may suit his end; Which, he avows, is pleasure to impart, And move the
passions but to mend the heart. O, may no party spirit blast his views,
Or turn to ill the meanings of the Muse ; She sings of wrongs long past,
Men as they were, To instruct, without reproach, the Men that are ; Then
judge the Story by the genius shown, And praise, or damn it, for its worth
alone. ACT FIRST.
SCENE 1. A wood seen by star-light;
an Encampment at a distance appearing between the trees. (Enter
MELVILLE.) MELVILLE. The solemn hour, "when night and morning meet,"
Mysterious time, to superstition dear, And superstition's guides, now
passes by; Deathlike in solitude. The sentinels, In drowsy tones, from
post to post send on The signal of the passing hour. " All's well,"
. Sounds through the camp. Alas, all is not well ; Else, why stand I,
a man, the friend of man, At midnight's depth, deck'd in this murderous guise,
The habiliment of death, the badge of dire Necessitous coercion. 'T
is not well. In vain the enlighten'd friends of suffering man Point out,
of war, the folly, guilt, and madness. Still, age succeeds to age, and war
to war; And man, the murderer, marshals out in hosts In all the gaiety
of festive pomp, To spread around him death and desolation. How long!
how long! - Methinks I hear the tread of feet this way. My meditating
mood may work me woe. (Draws.) Stand, whoso'er thou art. Answer. Who's
there ? (Enter BLAND.) BLAND. A friend. Advance and give the
countersign. MELVILLE. Hudson. What, Bland ! BLAND. Melville, my friend,
you here? MELVILLE. And well, my brave young friend. But why do you,
At this dead hour of night, approach the camp On foot, and thus alone ? BLAND.
I have but now Dismounted, and from yon sequester'd cot, Whose lonely
taper through the crannied wall Sheds its faint beams and twinkles midst
the trees, Have I, adventurous, grop'd my darksome way. My servant and
my horses, spent with toil, There wait till morn. MELVILLE. Why waited
not yourself? BLAND. Anxious to know the truth of those reports Which,
from the many mouths of busy fame, Still, as I pass'd, struck varying on
my ear, . Each making th' other void. Nor does delay The color of my
hasteful business suit. I bring dispatches for our great Commander . And
hasted hither with design to wait His rising, or awake him with the sun. MELVILLE.
You will not need the last, for the blest sun Ne'er rises on his slumbers;
by the dawn We see him mounted gaily in the field, Or find him wrapt
in meditation deep, Planning the welfare of our war-worn land. BLAND.
Prosper, kind Heaven, and recompense his cares. MEL VILLE. You 're from
the South, if I presume aright. BLAND. I am; and, Melville, I am fraught
with news. The South teems with events-convulsing ones. The Briton, there,
plays at no mimic war; With gallant face he moves, and gallantly is met.
Brave spirits, rous'd by glory, throng our camp ; The hardy hunter, skill'd
to fell the deer , Or start the sluggish bear from covert rude; And not
a clown that comes, but from his youth Is trained to pour from far the leaden
death, To climb the steep, to struggle with the stream, To labor firmly
under scorching skies, And bear, unshrinking, winter's roughest blast.
This, and that heaven-inspir'd enthusiasm Which ever animates the patriot's
breast, Shall far outweigh the lack of discipline. MELVILLE. Justice
is ours; what shall prevail against her ? BLAND. But as I pass'd along,
many strange tales . And monstrous rumors have my ears assail'd : That
Arnold had prov'd false; but he was ta 'en And hung, or to be hung-I know
not what. Another told that all our army, with their Much-lov'd Chief,
sold and betray'd, were captur'd. But as I nearer drew, at yonder cot '
T was said that Arnold, traitor like, had fled; And that a Briton, tried and
prov'd a spy, Was, on this day, as such, to suffer death. MELVILLE.
As you drew near, plain truth advanced to meet you. 'T is even as you heard,
my brave young friend. Never had people on a single throw More interest
at stake; when he who held For us the die prov'd false and play'd us foul.
But for a circumstance of that nice kind, Of cause so microscopic that the
tongues Of inattentive men call it the effect Of chance, we must have
lost the glorious game. BLAND. Blest, blest be heaven! whatever was the
cause ! MELVILLE. The blow ere this had fallen that would have bruis'd
The tender plant which we have striven to rear , Crush'd to the dust, no
more to bless this soil. BLAND. What warded off the blow? MELVILLE.
The brave young man, who this day dies, was seiz'd Within our bounds, in
rustic garb dis guis'd. He offer'd bribes to tempt the band that seiz'd him
. But the rough' farmer, for his country arm'd, . That soil defending
which his ploughshare turn' d, Those laws his father chose and he approv'd,
Cannot, as mercenary soldiers may , Be brib'd to sell the public Weal for
gold. BLAND. 'T is well. Just Heaven! O grant that thus may fall All
those who seek to bring this land to woe, All those, who, or by open force,
or dark And secret machinations, seek to shake The Tree of Liberty,
or stop its growth, In any soil where thou hast pleased to plant it. MELVILLE.
Yet not a heart but pities and would save him ; For all confirm that he is
brave and virtuous; Known, but till now, the darling child of Honor. BLAND.
(Contemptuously.) And how is call'd this-honorable spy MELVILLE.
Andre's his name. BLAND. (Much agitated.) Andre ! MELVILLE. Aye!
Major Andre. BLAND. Andre!-O no, my friend, you 're sure deceiv'd I?I
pawn my life, my ever sacred fame, My General's favor, or a soldier's honor,
That gallant Andre never yet put on The guise of falsehood. O, it cannot
be ! MELVILLE. How might I be deceiv'd? I've heard him, seen him, And
what I tell, I tell from well-prov'd knowledge ; No second tale-bearer who
heard the news. BLAND. Pardon me, Melville. O, that well-known name,
So link'd with circumstances infamous! My friend must pardon me. 'Thou wilt not
blame When I shall tell what cause I have to love him; What cause to
think him nothing more the pupil Of Honor stern, than sweet Humanity.
Rememberest thou, when cover'd o'er with wounds And left upon the field,
I fell the prey Of Britain'l To a loathsome prison-ship Confin'd, soon
had I sunk, victim of death, A death of aggravated miseries ; But, by
benevolence urg'd, this best of men, This gallant youth, then favor'd, high
in power, . Sought out the pit obscene of foul disease, Where I and many
a suffering soldier lay... And, like an angel, seeking good for man,
Restor'd us light and partial liberty. Me he mark'd out his own. He nurst
and cur'd, He lov'd and made his friend. I liv'd by him, And in my heart
he liv'd, till, when exchang'd, Duty and honor call'd me from my friend.
Judge how my heart is tortur'd.-Gracious Heaven, Thus, thus to meet him on
the brink of death A death so infamous. Heav'n grant my prayer. (Kneels.)
That I may save him, O inspire my heart With thoughts, my tongue with
words that move to pity. (Rises.) Quick, Melville, show me where my
Andre lies. MELVILLE. Good wishes go with you. BLAND. I'll save my
friend. (Exeunt.) SCENE 2, the Encampment by
star-light. (Enter the GENERAL, M'DONALD, and SEWARD.) GENERAL.
'T is well. Each sentinel upon his post Stands firm, and meets me at the bayonet's
point; While in his tent the weary soldier lies he sweet reward of wholesome
toil enjoying; Resting secure as erst within his cot He careless slept,
his rural labor o' er; Ere Britons dar'd to violate those laws. Those
boasted laws by which themselves are govern'd, And strove to make their fellow-subjects
slaves. SEWARD. They know to whom they owe their present safety. GENERAL.
I hope they know that to themselves they owe it; To that good discipline which
they observe, The discipline of men to order train'd Who know its value,
and in whom 't is virtue; To that prompt hardihood with which they meet
Or toil or danger, poverty or death. Mankind who know not whence that spirit
springs, Which holds at bay all Britain's boasted power, Gaze on their
deeds astonish'd. See the youth Start from his plough and straightway play
the hero; Unmurmuring bear such toils as veterans shun; Rest all content
upon the dampsome earth; Follow undaunted to the deathful charge; Or,
when occasion asks, lead to the breach, Fearless of all the unusual din of
War, His former peaceful mates. O patriotism! Thou wondrous principle
of godlike action. Wherever liberty is found, there reigns The love of
country. Now the self-same spirit Which fill'd the breast of great Leonidas
Swells in the hearts of thousands on these plains, Thousands who never
heard the hero's tale. 'T is this alone which saves thee, O my country!
And, till that spirit flies these western shores, No power on earth shall
crush thee. SEWARD. 'T is wondrous! The men of other climes from this shall
see How easy 't is to shake oppression off; How all-resistless is a union'd
people; And hence, from our success (which, by my soul, I feel as much
secur'd as though our foes Were now within their floating prisons hous'd,
And their proud prows all pointing to the east), Shall other nations
break their galling fetters, And re-assume the dignity of man. M'DONALD.
Are other nations in that happy state, That, having broke Coercion's iron
yoke, They can submit to Order's gentle voice, And walk on earth self-ruled?
I much do fear it. As to ourselves, in truth, I nothing see, In all the
wondrous deeds which we perform, But plain effects from causes full as plain.
Rises not man forever 'gainst oppression? It is the law of life; he can't
avoid it. But when the love of property unites With sense of injuries
past and dread of future, Is it then wonderful that he should brave
A lesser evil to avoid a greater? GENERAL. (Sportively.) 'T is hard,
quite hard, we may not please ourselves, By our great deeds ascribing to
our virtue. SEWARD. M'Donald never spares to lash our pride. M'DONALD.
In truth I know of naught to make you proud. I think there's none within the
camp that draws With better will his sword than does M'Donald. I have
a home to guard. My son is butcher'd- SEWARD. Hast thou no nobler motives
for thy arms Than love of property and thirst for vengeance? M'DONALD.
Yes, my good Seward, and yet nothing wondrous. I love this country for the
sake of man. My parents, and I thank them, cross'd the seas, And made
me native of fair Nature's world, With room to grow and thrive in. I have
thriven; And feel my mind unshackled, free, expanding, Grasping with
ken unbounded mighty thoughts, At which, if chance my mother had, good dame,
In Scotia, our revered parent soil, Given me to see the day, I should have
shrunk Affrighted. Now, I see in this new world A resting spot for man,
if he can stand Firm in his place, while Europe howls around him, And
all unsettled as the thoughts of vice, Each nation in its turn threats him
with feeble malice. One trial, now, we prove; and I have met it. GENERAL.
And met it like a man, my brave M'Donald. M'DONALD. I hope so; and I hope
my every act Has been the offspring of deliberate judgment; Yet feeling
seconds reason's cool resolves. O! I could hate, if I did not more pity
These bands of mercenary Europeans, So wanting in the common sense of nature,
As, without shame, to sell themselves for pelf To aid the cause of darkness;
murder man Without inquiry murder, and yet call Their trade the trade
of honor-high soul'd honor- Yet honor shall accord in act with falsehood.
O! that proud man should e' er descend to play The tempter's part, and lure
men to their ruin! Deceit and honor badly pair together. SEWARD. You have
much shew of reason; yet, methinks What you suggest of one, whom fickle Fortune,
In her changeling mood, hath hurl'd, unpitying, From her topmost height
to lowest misery, Tastes not of charity. Andre, I mean. M'DONALD. I
mean him, too; sunk by misdeed, not fortune. Fortune and chance, O, most convenient
words! Man runs the wild career of blind ambition, Plunges in vice, takes
falsehood for his buoy , And when he feels the waves of ruin o'er him,
Curses, "in good set terms," poor Lady Fortune. GENERAL. (Sportively
to SEWARD.) His mood is all untoward; let us leave him. Tho' he may think
that he is bound to rail, We are not bound to hear him. (To M'DONALD.)
Grant you that? . M'DONALD. O, freely, freely! You I never rail on. GENERAL.
No thanks for that; you've courtesy for office. M'DONALD. You slander me. GENERAL.
Slander that would not wound. W orthy M'Donald, though it suits full well
The virtuous man to frown on all misdeeds, Yet ever keep in mind that
man is frail; His tide of passion struggling still with Reason's Fair
and favorable gale, and adverse Driving his unstable Bark upon the Rocks
of error. Should he sink thus shipwreck'd, Sure, it is not Virtue's voice
that triumphs In his ruin. I must seek rest. Adieu ! (Exeunt
GENERAL and SEWARD.) M'DONALD. Both good and great thou art; first
among men; By nature, or by early habit, grac'd With that blest quality
which gives due force To every faculty "and keeps the mind In healthful
equipoise, ready for action; Invaluable temperance-by all To be acquired,
yet scarcely known to any. (Exit.) ACT SECOND. SCENE
1, a Prison. ANDRE discovered, in a pensive posture, sitting at a table;
a book by him and candles; his dress neglected, his hair disheveled; he rises
and comes forward. ANDRE. Kind Heaven be thank'd for that I stand alone
In this sad hour of life's brief pilgrimage! Single in misery; no one
else involving. In grief, in shame, and ruin. 'T is my comfort. Thou,
my thrice honor'd sire, in peace went'st down Unto the tomb, nor knew to blush,
nor knew A pang for me. And thou, revered matron, Could'st bless thy
child, and yield thy breath in peace! . No wife shall weep, no child lament
my loss. Thus may I consolation find in what Was once my woe. I little
thought to joy In not possessing, as I erst possest, Thy love, Honora!
Andre's death, perhaps, May cause a cloud pass o'er thy lovely face;
The pearly tear may steal from either eye; For thou mayest feel a transient
pang, nor wrong A husband's rights: more than a transient pang O mayest
thou never feel! The morn draws nigh To light me to my shame. Frail nature
shrinks And is death then so fearful? I have brav'd Him, fearless, in
the field, and steel'd my breast Against his thousand horrors ; but his cool,
His sure approach, requires a fortitude Which naught but conscious rectitude
can give. (Retires, and sits leaning.) (Enter BLAND, unperceived
by ANDRE.) BLAND. And is that Andre? O, how changed! Alas! Where is
that martial fire, that generous warmth, Which glow'd his manly countenance
throughout, And gave to every look, to every act, The tone of high chivalrous
animation? Andre, my friend, look up ! ANDRE. Who calls me friend?
BLAND. Young Arthur Bland. ANDRE. (Rising.) That name sounds
like a friend's. (With emotion.) I have inquired for the-wish'd much to see
thee- I prythee take no note of these fool's tears- My heart was full-and
seeing thee- BLAND. (Embracing him.) O Andre! I have but now
arrived from the South- Nor heard-till now-of this-I cannot speak. Is
this a place?-O, thus to find my friend! ANDRE. Still dost thou call me
friend? I, who dared act Against my reason, my declared opinion; Against
my conscience and a soldier's fame? Oft in the generous heat of glowing youth,
Oft have I said how fully I despis'd All bribery base, all treacherous tricks
in war: Rather my blood should bathe these hostile shores, And have it
said, "he died a gallant soldier ," Than with my countrv's gold
encourage treason, And thereby purchase gratitude and fame. BLAND.
Still mayest thou say it, for thy heart's the same. ANDRE. Still is my heart
the same, still may I say it; But now my deeds will rise against my words;
And should I dare to talk of honest truth, Frank undissembling probity and
faith, Memorv would crimson o'er my burning cheek, And actions retrospected
choke the tale. Still is my heart the same. But there has past A day,
an hour, which ne'er can be recall'd. Unhappy man! Tho' all thy life pass
pure; Mark'd by benevolence thy every deed ; The out-spread map, which
shows the way thou 'st trod, Without one devious track or doubtful line;
It all avails thee naught, if in one hour, One hapless hour, thy feet are
led astray . Thy happy deeds all blotted from remembrance; Cancel'd the
record of thy former good. Is it not hard, my friend? Is't not unjust? BLAND.
Not every record cancel'd.-O, there are hearts Where Virtue's image, when
't is once engraved. Can never know erasure. ANDRE. Generous Bland!
(Takes his hand.) The hour draws nigh which ends my life's sad story.
I should be firm- BLAND. By heaven, thou shalt not die! Thou dost not sure
deserve it. Betray'd, perhaps- Condemn'd without due circumstance made known?
Thou didst not mean to tempt our officers? Betray our yeoman soldiers
to destruction? Silent! Nay, then 't was from a duteous wish To serve
the cause thou wast in honor bound- .ANDRE. Kind is my Bland, who to his
generous heart Still finds excuses for his erring friend. Attentive hear
and judge me. Pleas'd with the honors daily shower'd upon me, I glow'd
with martial heat my name to raise Above the vulgar herd, who live to die,
And die to be forgotten. Thus I stood, When avarice or ambition Arnold
tempted, His country, fame, and honor to betray, Linking his name to
infamy eternal. In confidence it was to me propos'd To plan with him
the means which should ensure Thy country's downfall. Nothing then I saw
But confidential favor in the service, My country's glory, and my mounting
fame; Forgot my former purity of thought, And high-ton'd honor's scruples
disregarded. BLAND. It was thy duty so to serve thy country. ANDRE.
Nay, nay; be cautious ever to admit That duty can beget dissimulation.
On ground, unoccupied by either part, Neutral esteem'd, I landed, and was
met. But ere my conference was with Arnold clos'd, The day began to dawn;
I then was told That till the night I must my safety seek In close concealment.
Within your posts convey'd, I found myself involved in unthought dangers.
Night came. I sought the vessel which had borne Me to the fatal spot; but
she was gone. Retreat that way cut off, again I sought Concealment with
the traitors of your army . Arnold now granted passes, and I doff'd My
martial garb, and put on curs'd disguise. Thus in a peasant's form I pass'd
your posts; And when, as I conceiv'd, my danger o'er, Was stopt and seiz'd
by some returning scouts. So did ambition lead me, step by step, To treat
with traitors, and encourage treason; And then, bewilder'd in the guilty scene,
To quit my martial designating badges, Deny my name, and sink into the
spy. BLAND. Thou didst no more than was a soldier's duty, To serve
the part on which he drew his sword. Thou shalt not die for this. Straight
will I fly-I surely shall prevail- ANDRE. It is in vain. All has been
tried. Each friendly argument- BLAND. All has not yet been tried. The powerful
voice Of friendship in thy cause has not been heard. My General favors
me, and loves my father- My gallant father! would that he were here! But he,
perhaps, now wants an Andre' s care, To cheer his hours-perhaps now languishes
Amidst those horrors whence thou sav'd'st his son. The present moment
claims my thought. Andre, I fly to save thee! ANDRE. Bland, it is in
vain But, hold-there is a service thou may's do me. BLAND. Speak it. ANDRE.
O, think, and as a soldier think How I must die-the manner of my death
Like the base ruffian, or the midnight thief, Ta'en in the act of stealing
from the poor , To be turn'd off the felon's-murderer's cart, A mid-air
spectacle to gaping clowns;- To run a short, an envied course of glory , And
end it on a gibbet.- BLAND. Damnation ! ANDRE. Such is my doom. O,
have the manner changed, And of mere death I'l1 think not. Dost thou think-?
Perhaps thou canst gain that-? BLAND. (Almost in a frenzy.) Thou
shalt not die. ANDRE. Let me, O, let me die a soldier's death, While
friendly clouds of smoke shroud from all eyes My last convulsive pangs, and
I'm content. BLAND. (With increasing emotion.) Thou shalt not die!
Curse on the laws of war! If wortlh like thine must thus be sacrificed
To policy so cruel and unjust, I will forswear my country and her service;
I'll hie me to the Briton, and with fire, And sword, and every instrument
of death Or devastation, join in the work of war! What! shall worth
weigh for nought? I will avenge thee! ANDRE. Hold, hold, my friend; thy
country's woes are full. What! wouldst thou make me cause another traitor?
No more of this; and, if I die, believe me, Thy country for my death incurs
no blame. Restrain thy ardor-but ceaselessly entreat That Andre may at
least die as he lived, A soldier. BLAND. By heaven thou shalt not die!
(BLAND rushes off; ANDRE looks after him with an expression of love
and gratitude, then retires up the stage. Scene closes.) SCENE
2, the GENERAL'S Quarters. (Enter M'DONALD and SEWARD,
in conversation.) M'DONALD. (Coming forward.) Three thousand
miles the Atlantic wave rolls on, Which bathed Columbia's shores, ere, on
the strand Of Europe, or of Africa, their continents, Or sea-girt isles,
it chafes. SEWARD. O, would to heaven That in midway between these
sever'd worlds Rose barriers, all impassable to man. Cutting off intercourse,
till either side Had lost all memory of the other! M'DONALD. What spur
now goads thy warm imagination? SEWARD. Then might, perhaps, one land on
earth be found, Free from th' extremes of poverty and riches; Where ne'er
a scepter'd tyrant should be known, Or tyrant lordling, curses of creation;-
Where the faint shrieks of woe-exhausted age, Raving, in feeble madness,
o'er the corse Of a polluted daughter, stained by lust Of viand-pampered
luxury, might ne'er be heard ; Where the blasted form of much abused
Beautv by villainy seduced, by knowledge All unguarded, might ne'er be viewed,
flitting Obscene, 'tween lamp and lamp, i' th' midnight street Of all-defiling
city. where the child- M'DONALD. Hold! Shroud thy raven imagination.
Torture not me With images so curst ! SEWARD. Soon shall our foes, inglorious,
fly these shores. Peace shall again return. Then Europe's ports Shall
pour a herd upon us, far more fell Than those, her mercenary sons, who now
Threaten our sore chastisement. M'DONALD. Prophet of ill, From Europe
shall enriching flow, And many an ill attendant; but from thence Shall
likewise flow blest science. Europe's best knowledge,. By sharp experience
bought, we should appropriate; Striving thus to leap from that simplicity,
With ignorance curst, to that simplicity By knowledge blest; unknown
the gulf between. SEWARD. Mere theoretic dreaming. M'DONALD. Blest
wisdom Seems, from out the chaos of the social world, Where good and
ill in strange commixture float, To rise, bv strong necessity impell'd;
Starting, like Love divine, from womb of Night, Illuming all, to order all
reducing ; And showing by its bright and noontide blaze That happiness
alone proceeds from justice. SEWARD. Dreams, dreams! Man can know naught
but ill on earth. M'DONALD. I'll to my bed, for I have watch'd all night;
And may my sleep give pleasing repetition Of these my waking dreams! Virtue's
incentives. (Exit.) SEWARD. Folly's chimeras rather: guides to error. (Enter
BLAND, preceded by a Sergeant.) SERGEANT. Pacquets for the General. BLAND.
(Exit.) Seward, my friend! SEWARD. Captain, I'm glad to see the hue
of health Sit on a visage from the sallow south. BLAND. The lustihood
of youth hath yet defied The parching sun, and chilling dew of even.
The General-Seward-? SEWARD. I will lead you to him. BLAND. Seward,
I must make bold Leave us together, When occasion offers. 'T will be friendly. SEWARD.
I will not cross your purpose. (Exeunt.) SCENE 3,
a Chamber. (Enter MRS. BLAND.) MRS. BLAND. Yes, ever be
this day a festival In my domestic calendar. This morn Will see my husband
free. Even now, perhaps, Ere yet Aurora flies the eastern hills, Shunning
the sultry sun, my Bland embarks. Already on the Hudson's dancing wave,
He chides the sluggish rowers, or supplicates For gales propitious; that his
eager arms May clasp his wife, may bless his little ones. O, how the
tide of joy makes my heart bound, Glowing with high and ardent expectation!
. (Enter two CHILDREN.) FIRST CHILD. Here we are, Mamma, up,
and dress'd already. MRS. BLAND. And why were ye so early ? FIRST
CHILD. Why, did not you tell us that Papa was to be home to-day? MRS. BLAND.
I said, perhaps. SECOND CHILD. (Disappointed.) Perhaps! FIRST
CHILD. I don't like perhaps's. SECOND CHILD. No, nor I neither. nor "may-be-so's."
MRS. BLAND. We make not certainties, my pretty loves; I do not like
"perhaps's" more than you do. SECOND CHILD. O, don't say so, Mama!
for I'm sure I hardly ever ask you anything but you answer me With "may be
So,"-"perhaps,"-or "very likely." "Mamma, shall
I go to the camp tomorrow, and see the General? " "May be so, my dear."
Hang "may be so," say I! MRS. BLAND. Well said, Sir Pertness ! FIRST
CHILD. But I am sure, Mama, you said, that, to-day, Papa would have his liberty. MIRS.
BLAND. So your dear father, by his letters, told me. SECOND CHILD. Why,
then, I am sure will be here today. When he can come to us, I'm sure he will not
stay among those strange Englishmen and Hessians. I often wish'd that I had wings
to fly, for then I would soon be with him. MRS. BLAND. Dear boy! . (Enter
SERVANT, and gives a letter to MRS. BLAND.) SERVANT. An express,
Madam, from New York to Headquarters, in passing, delivered this. SECOND
CHILD. Papa's coming home today, John . (Exeunt SERVANT and
CHILDREN.) MRS. BLAND. What fears assail me I O, I did not want
A letter now! (She reads in great agitation, exclaiming, while her eyes are
fixed on the paper:) My husband! doomed to die! Retaliation! (She
looks forward with wildness, consternation, and horror.) To die, if Andre
dies! He dies to-day! My husband to be murdered! And today! Today, if
Andre dies! Retaliation! O curst contrivance! Madness relieve me! Burst,
burst, my brain! Yet-Andre is not dead ; My husband lives. (Looks at the
letter.) "One man has power." I fly to save the father of my
children , (Rushes out.) ACT
THIRD. SCENE 1, the GENERAL'S quarters.
The GENERAL and BLAND come forward. GENERAL. (Papers in
his hand.) Captain, you are noted here with honorable Praises. Depend
upon that countenance From me, which you have prov'd yourself so richly
Meriting. Both for your father's virtues And your own, your country owes
you honor, The sole return the poor can make for service. BLAND. If
from my country ought I've merited, "' Or gain'd the approbation of
her champion, At any other time I should not dare, Presumptuously, to
show my sense of it; But now my tongue, all shameless, dares to name
The boon, the precious recompense, I wish, Which, granted, pays all service,
past or future, O'erpays the utmost I can e'er achieve. GENERAL. Brief,
my young friend, briefly , your purpose. BLAND. If I have done my duty as
a soldier; If I have brav'd all dangers for my country; If my brave father
has deserved aught; Call all to mind-and cancel all-but grant My one
request-mine, and humanity's. GENERAL. Be less profuse of words, and name
your wish; If fit, its fitness is the best assurance That not in vain
you sue; but, if unjust, Thy merits, nor the merits of thy race, Cannot
its nature alter, nor my mind, From its determined opposition change. BLAND.
You hold the fate of my most lov'd of friends ; As gallant soldier as e'er
fac'd a foe, Bless'd with each polish'd gift of social life, And every
virtue of humanity. To me, a savior from the pit of death, To me, and
many more, my countrymen. Oh, could my words portray him what he is! Bring
to your mind the blessings of his deeds, While thro' the £ever-heated,
loathsome holds Of floating hulks, dungeons obscene, where ne'er The
dewy breeze of morn, or evening's coolness, Breath'd on our parching skins,
he pass'd along, Diffusing blessings; still his power exerting , To
alleviate the woes which ruthless war, Perhaps thro' dire necessity, heap'd
on us; Surely the scene would move you to forget His late intent-(tho'
only serving then As duty prompted)-and turn the rigor of War's iron
law from him, the best of men, Meant only for the worst. GENERAL. Captain,
no more. BLAND. If Andre lives, the prisoner finds a friend ; Else helpless
and forlorn- All men will bless the act, and bless thee for it. GENERAL.
Think'st thou thy country would not curse the man Who, by a clemency ill-tim'd,
ill-judg'd, Encourag'd treason? That pride encourag'd, Which, by denying
us the rights of nations, Hath caus'd those ills which thou hast now portray'd?
Our prisoners, brave and generous peasantry, As rebels have been treated,
not as men. 'T is mine, brave yeomen, to assert your rights; 'T is mine
to teach the foe, that, though array'd In rude simplicity, ye yet are men,
And rank among the foremost. Oft their scouts, The very refuse of the
English arms, Unquestion'd, have our countrymen consign'd To death,
when captur'd, mocking their agonies. BLAND. Curse them! (Checking himself.)
Yet, let not censure fall on Andre. O, there are Englishmen as brave,
as good, As ever land on earth might call its own; And gallant Andre
is among the best! GENERAL. Since they have hurl'd war on us, we must show
That by the laws of war we will abide; And have the power to bring their
acts for trial To that tribunal, eminent 'mongst men, Erected by the
policy of nations, To stem the flood of ills, which else fell war Would
pour, uncheck'd, upon the sickening world, Sweeping away all trace of civil
life. BLAND. To pardon him would not encourage ill. His case is singular;
his station high; His qualities admir'd; his virtues lov'd. GENERAL.
No more, my good young friend: it is in vain. The men entrusted with thy country's
rights Have weigh'd, attentive, every circumstance. An individual's virtue
is by them As highly prized as it can be by thee. I know the virtues
of this man and love them. But the destiny of millions, millions Yet
unborn, depends upon the rigor Of this moment. The haughty Briton laughs
To scorn our armies and our councils. Mercy , Humanity, call loudly,
that we make Our now despised power be felt, vindictive. Millions demand
the death of this young man. My injur'd country, he his forfeit life
Must yield, to shield thy lacerated breast From torture. (To BLAND.)
Thy merits are not overlook'd. Promotion shall immediately attend thee. BLAND.
(With contemptuous irony.) Pardon me, sir, I never shall deserve it.
(With increasing heat.) The country that forgets to reverence virtue ;
That makes no difference 'twixt the sordid wretch Who, for reward, risks
treason's penalty, And him unfortunate, whose duteous service Is, by
mere accident, so chang'd in form As to assume guilt's semblance, I serve
not: Scorn to serve. I have a soldier's honor, But 't is in union with
a freeman's judgment, And when I act, both prompt. Thus from mv helm
I tear what once I proudly thought, badge Of virtuous fellowship. (Tears
the cockade from his helmet.) My sword I keep. (Puts on his helmet. ) Would,
Andre, thou hadst never put thine off. Then hadst thou through opposers' hearts
made To liberty, or bravely pierc'd thine own! (Exit) GENERAL. Rash,
headstrong, maddening boy! Had not this action past without a witness,
Duty would ask that thou shouldst rue thy folly But, for the motive, be the
deed forgotten. (Exit.) SCENE 2, a Village. At a distance tents.
In front muskets, drums, other indications of soldiers' quarters.
(Enter
MRS. BLAND and CHILDREN, attended by MELVILLE.) MELVILLE.
The General's doors to you are ever open. But why my worthy friend, this agitation?
Our colonel, your husband- MRS. BLAND. (In tears, gives him the
letter.) Read, Melville. FIRST CHILD. Do not cry, Mama, for I'm sure
if Papa said he would come home to-day, he will come yet; for he always does what
he says he will. MRS. BLAND. He cannot come, dear love; they will not
let him. SECOND CHILD. Why, then, they told him lies. O, fye upon them ! MELVILLE.
(Returning the letter.) Fear nothing, Madam, 't is an empty threat :
A trick of policy. They dare not do it. MRS. BLAND. Alas, alas! what dares
not power to do? What art of reasoning, or what magic words, Can still
the storm of fears these lines have raised? The wife's, the mother's fears?
Ye innocents, Unconscious on the brink of what a perilous Precipice
ye stand, unknowing that today Ye are cast down the gulf, poor babes, ye
weep From sympathy. Children of sorrow, nursed, Nurtur'd, 'midst camps
and arms; unknowing man, But as man's fell destroyer; must ye now, To
crown your piteous fate, be fatherless? O, lead me, lead me to him! Let me
kneel, Let these, my children, kneel, till Andre, pardon'd, Ensures
to me a husband, them a father. MELVILLE. Madam, duty forbids further attendance.
I am on guard today. But see your son; To him I leave your guidance. Good
wishes Prosper you. (Exit MELVILLE.) (Enter BLAND.) MRS.
BLAND. My Arthur, O my Arthur! BLAND. My mother' . (Embracing her.)
MRS. BLAND. My son, I have been Wishing For you(Bursts into tears,
unable to proceed.) BLAND. But whence this grief, these tears, my mother?
Why are these little cheeks bedew'd with sorrow? (He kisses the children, who
exclaim, Brother, brother! ) Have I done aught to cause a mother's sadness
? MRS. BLAND. No, my brave boy! I oft have fear'd, but never Sorrow'd
for thee. BLAND. High praise! Then bless me, Madam; For I have pass'd
through many a bustling scene Since I have seen a father or a mother MRS.
BLAND. Bless thee, my boy. , O bless him, bless him, Heaven! Render him worthy
to support these babes, So soon, perhaps, all fatherless-dependant. BLAND.
What mean'st thou, Madam? Why these tears ? MRs. BLAND. Thy father BLAND.
A prisoner of war-I long have known it But made so without blemish to his
honor , And soon exchang'd, returns unto his friends, To guard these
little ones, and point and lead To virtue and to glory. MRS. BLAND.
Never, never! . His life, a sacrifice to Andre's manes' Must soon be
offer'd. Even now; endungeon'd, Like a vile felon on the earth he lies,
His death expecting. Andre's execution Gives signal for the murder of thy
father-Andre now dies! BLAND. (Despairingly.) My father and my friend! MRS.
BLAND. There is but one on earth can save my husband But one can pardon Andre. BLAND.
Haste, my mother! Thou wilt prevail. Take with thee in each hand An
unoffending child of him thou weep'st. Save-save them both! This way-haste-lean
on me. (Exeunt.) SCENE, the GENERAL'S
Quarters. (Enter the GENERAL and M'DONALD.) GENERAL.
Here have I intimation from the foe, That still they deem the spy we have
condemn'd, Merely a captive; by the laws of arms From death protected;
and retaliation, As they term it, threaten, if we our purpose hold. Bland
is the victim they have singled out, Hoping his threaten'd death will Andre
save. M'DONALD. If I were Bland I boldly might advise My General how
to act. Free, and in safety, I will now suppose my counsel needless. (Enter
an AMERICAN OFFICER.) OFFICER. Another flag hath from the foe arrived,
And craves admittance. GENERAL. Conduct it hither. (Exit
OFFICER.) Let us, unwearied hear, unbias'd judge, Whate'er against our martial
court's decision, Our enemies can bring. (Enter BRITISH OFFICER,
conducted by the AMERICAN OFFICER.) GENERAL. You are Welcome, sir.
What further says Sir Henry ? BRITISH OFFICER. This from him. He calls
on you to think what weighty woes You now are busy bringing on your country.
He bids me say, that if your sentence reach The prisoner's life (prisoner
of arms he deems him, And no spy) on him alone it falls not. He bids
me loud proclaim it, and declare, If this brave officer, by cruel mockery
Of war's stern law, and justice' feign'd pretence, Be murder'd; the sequel
of our strife, bloody, Unsparing and remorseless, you will make. Think
of the many captives in our power. Already one is mark'd; for Andre mark'd;
And when his death, unparallel'd in war, The signal gives, then Colonel Blandmust
die. GENERAL. 'T is well, sir; bear this message in return. Sir Henry
Clinton knows the laws of arms: He is a soldier, and, I think, a brave one.
The prisoners he retains he must account for. Perhaps the reckoning's near.
I, likewise, am A soldier. entrusted by my country. What I shall judge
most for that country's good, That shall I do. When doubtful, I consult
My country's friends; never her enemies. In Andre's case there are no doubts;
'tis clear: Sir Henry Clinton knows it. BRITISH OFFICER. Weigh consequences. GENERAL.
In strict regard to consequence I act; And much should doubt to call that
action right, Howe'er specious, whose apparent end Was misery to man.
That brave officer Whose death you threaten, for himself drew not His
sword-his country's wrongs arous'd his mind; Her good alone his aim; and if
his fall Can further fire that country to resistance, He will, with
smiles, yield up his glorious life, And count his death a gain and tho' Columbians
Will lament his fall, they will lament in blood. (GENERAL walks
up the stage.) M'DONALD. Hear this, hear this, mankind ! BRITISH
OFFICER. Thus am I answered ? (Enter a SERGEANT with a letter.) SERGEANT.
Express from Colonel Bland. (Delivers it and exit.) GENERAL.
With your permission. (O pens it.) BRITISH OFFICER. Your pleasure, sir.
It may my mission further. M'DONALD. O Bland, my countryman, surely I know
thee! GENERAL. 'Tis short. I will put form aside, and read it. (Reads.)
"Excuse me, my Commander, for having a moment doubted your virtue; but you
love me. If you waver, let this confirm you. My wife and children, to you and
my country. Do your duty." Report this to your General. BRITISH OFFICER.
I shall, sir. (Bows, and exit with AMERICAN OFFICER.) GENERAL.
O Bland, my countryman ! (Exit, with emotion.) M'DONALD. Triumph
of virtue! Like him and thee, still be Americans. Then, tho' all-powerful
Europe league against us, And pour in arms her legions on our shores,
Who is so dull would doubt their shameful flight? Who doubt our safety, and
our glorious triumph? SCENE 3, the Prison. (Enter BLAND.) BLAND.
Lingering, I come to crush the bud of hope My breath has, flattering, to
existence warmed. Hard is the task to friendship! hard to say To the
lov'd object, there remains no hope, No consolation for thee; thou must die
The worst of deaths, no circumstance abated. (Enter ANDRE, in
his uniform and dress'd.) ANDRE. Is there that state on earth which
friendship cannot cheer? BLAND. Little I bring to cheer thee, Andre. ANDRE.
I understand. 'T is well. 'Twill soon be past. Yet, 't was not much I asked.
A soldier's death, A trifling change of form. BLAND. Of that I spoke
not. By vehemence of passion hurried on, I pleaded for thy precious life
alone; The which denied, my indignation barr'd All further parley. But
strong solicitation Now is urg'd to gain the wish'd-for favor. ANDRE.
What is't o' clock ? BLAND. 'T is past the stroke of nine. ANDRE.
Why, then, 't is almost o'er. But to be hung- Is there no way to escape that
infamy? What then is infamy? -no matter-no matter. BLAND. Our General
hath received another flag. ANDRE. Soliciting for me? BLAND. On thy
behalf. ANDRE. I have been ever favor'd. BLAND. Threat'nings, now.
No more solicitations. Harsh, indeed, The import of the message; harsh,
indeed. ANDRE. I am sorry for it. Would that I were dead, And all was
well with those I leave behind. BLAND. Such a threat! Is it not enough,
just Heaven, That I must lose this man? Yet there was left One for my
soul to rest on. But, to know That the same blow deprives them both of life- ANDRE.
What mean'st thou, Bland? Surely my General Threats not retaliation. In vengeance
Dooms not some better man to die for me? BLAND. The best of men. ANDRE.
Thou hast a father, captive- I dare not ask- BLAND. That father dies
for thee. ANDRE. Gracious Heaven, how woes are heap'd upon me! What!
cannot one, so trifling in life's scene, Fall, without drawing such a ruin?
Leave me, my friend, awhile-I yet life- A little space of life-let me
exert it To prevent injustice-From death to save Thy father, thee to
save from utter desolation. BLAND. What mean'st thou, Andre? ANDRE.
Seek thou the messenger Who brought this threat. I will my last entreaty
Send by him. My General, sure, will grant it. BLAND. To the last thyself!
( Exit.) ANDRE. If, at this moment, When the pangs of death
already touch me, Firmly my mind against injustice strives, And the
last impulse to my vital powers Is given by anxious wishes to redeem
My fellow-men from pain; surely my end, Howe'er accomplish'd, is not infamous.
( Exit.) ACT FOURTH. SCENE
1, the Encampment. (Enter M'DONALD and BLAND.)
BLAND. It doth in truth appear, that as a-spy- Detested word!-brave
Andre must be view'd. His sentence he confesses strictly just. Yet sure,
a deed of mercy from thy hand, Could never lead to ill. By such an act,
The stern and blood-stain'd brow of War Would be disarm'd of half its gorgon
horrors; More humanized customs be induced; And all the race of civilized
man Yet sure, a deed of mercy, from thy suit; 'Twill well become thy
character and station. M'DONALD. Trust me, young friend, I am alone the
judge Of what becomes my character and station; And having judg'd that
this young Briton's death, Even 'though attended by thy father's murder,
Is necessary, in these times accurs'd, When every thought of man is
ting'd with blood, I will not stir my finger to redeem them. Nay, much
I wonder, Bland, having so oft The reasons for this necessary rigor
Enforced upon thee, thou wilt still persist In vain solicitations. Imitate
Thy father! BLAND. My father knew not Andre. I know his value;
owe to him my life And gratitude, that first, that best of virtues, Without
the which man sinks beneath the brute, Binds me in ties indissoluble to him. M'DONALD.
That man-created virtue blinds thy reason. Man owes to man all love; when
exercised, He does no more than duty. Gratitude, That selfish rule of
action, which commands That we our preference make of men, Not for their
worth, but that they did us service, Misleading reason, casting in the way
Of justice stumbling-blocks, cannot be virtue. BLAND. Detested sophistry!
'T was Andre sav'd me. M'DONALD. He sav'd thy life, and thou art grateful
for it. How self intrudes, delusive, on man's thoughts. He sav'd thy life,
yet strove to damn thy country; Doom'd millions to the haughty Briton's yoke;
The best and foremost in the cause of virtue To death, by sword, by prison,
or the halter; His sacrifice now stands the only bar Between the wanton
cruelties of war And our much-suffering soldiers; yet when weigh'd With
gratitude, for that he sav'd thy life, These things prove gossamer, and balance
air;- Perversion monstrous of man's moral sense ! BLAND. Rather perversion
monstrous of all good Is thy accurs'd, detestable opinion. Cold-blooded
reasoners, such as thee, would blast All warm affection; asunder sever
Every social tie of humanized man. . Curst be thy sophisms, cunningly contriv'd
The callous coldness of thy heart to cover, And screen thee from the
brave man's detestation ! M'DONALD. Boy,.boy! BLAND. Thou knowest
that Andre's not a spy. M'DONALD. I know him one. Thou hast acknowledg'd
it. BLAND. Thou liest ! M'DONALD. Shame on thy ruffian tongue! How
passion Mars thee! I pity thee. Thou canst not harm, By words intemperate,
a virtuous man. I pity thee; for passion sometimes sways My older frame,
through former uncheck'd habit; But when I see the havoc which it makes
In others, I can shun the snare accurst, And nothing feel but pity. BLAND.
(Indignantly.) Pity me! (Approaches him, and speaks in an under voice.)
Thou canst be cool, yet, trust me, passion sways thee. Fear does not
warm the blood, yet 't is a passion. Hast thou no feeling? I have call' d
thee liar! M'DONALD. If thou could'st make me one, I then might grieve. BLAND.
Thy coolness goes to freezing; thou'rt a coward! M'DONALD. Thou knowest
thou tell'st a falsehood. BLAND. Thou shalt know None with impunity
speaks thus of me. That to rouse thy courage! (Touches him gently with
his open hand, in crossing him. M'DONALD looks at him unmoved.) Dost thou
not yet feel? M'DONALD. For thee I feel. And, tho' another's acts Cast
no dishonor on the worthy man, I still feel for thy father. Yet, remember,
I may not, haply, ever be thus guarded ; I may not always the distinction
make, However just, between the blow intended To provoke, and one that's
meant to injure. BLAND. Hast thou no sense of honor? M'DONALD. Truly,
yes : For I am honor's votary. Honor, with me, Is worth; 't is truth;
't is virtue; 't is a thing So high preeminent, that a boy's breath,
Or brute's, or madman's blow can never reach it. My honor is so much, so truly
mine, That none hath power to wound it, save myself. BLAND. I will
proclaim thee through the camp a coward. M'DONALD. Think better of it. Proclaim
not thine own shame. BLAND. I brand thee,-damnation! (Exit.)
M'DONALD. O passion, passion! A man who values fame far more than life;
A brave young man; in many things a good; Utters vile falsehoods; adds injury
to insult; Striving with blood to seal such foul injustice; And all from
impulse of unbridled feeling. (Pause.) Here comes the mother of this headstrong
boy, Severely rack'd. What shall allay her torture? For common consolation,
here, is insult. ( Enter MRS. BLAND and CHILDREN.) MRS.
BLAND. O my good friend! M'DONALD. (Taking her hand.) I know thy
cause of sorrow. Art thou now from our Commander ? MRS. BLAND. (Drying
her tears and assuming dignity.) I am. But vain is my entreaty. All unmov'd
He hears my words, he sees my desperate sorrow. Fain would I blame his
conduct,-but I cannot. Strictly examin'd, with intent to mark The error
which so fatal proves to me, My scrutiny but ends in admiration. Thus
when the prophet from the hills of Moab, Look'd down upon the chosen race
of Heaven, With fell intent to curse, ere yet he spake, Truth all resistless,
emanation bright From great Adonai, fill'd his froward mind, And chang'd
the curses of his heart to blessings. M'DONALD. Thou payest high praise
to virtue. Whither now? MRS. BLAND. I still must hover round this spot
until My doom is known. M'DONALD. Then to my quarters, lady . There
shall my mate give comfort and refreshment : One of your sex can best your
sorrows soothe. (Exeunt.) SCENE 2, the prison. (Enter
BLAND.) BLAND. Where'er I look, cold desolation meets me. My father-Andre-and
self-condemnation. Why seek I Andre now? Am I a man To soothe the sorrows
of a suffering friend? The weather-cock of passion! fool inebriate! Who
could with ruffian hand strive to provoke Hoar wisdom to intemperance! who
could lie! Aye, swagger, lie, and brag!-Liar! Damnation! O, let me steal
away and hide my head, Nor view a man, condemned to harshest death, Whose
words and actions, when by mine compar'd, Show white as innocence and bright
as truth. I now would shun him, but that his shorten'd Thread of life
gives me no line to play with. H e comes with smiles, and all the air of triumph,
While I am sinking with remorse and shame; Yet he is doom'd to death,
and I am free. (Enter ANDRE.) ANDRE. Welcome, my Bland! Cheerly,
a welcome hither! I feel assurance that my last request Will not be
slighted. Safely thy father Shall return to thee. (Holding out a paper.)
See what employment For a dying man. Take thou these verses; And, after
my decease, send them to her Whose name is woven in them; whose image
Hath controll'd my destiny. Such tokens Are rather out of date. Fashions
There are in love as in all else; they change As variously. A gallant
knight, erewhile, Of Coeur de Lion's day, would, dying, send His heart
home to its mistress; degenerate, Soldier, I send but some blotted paper. BLAND.
If 't would not damp thy present cheerfulness, I would require the meaning
of thy words. I ne'er till now did hear of Andre's mistress. ANDRE.
Mine is a story of that common kind, So often told, with scanty variation,
That the pall'd ear loaths the repeated tale. Each young romancer chooses
for his theme The woes of youthful hearts, by the cold hand Of frosty
age, arm'd with parental power, Asunder torn. But I long since have ceas'd
To mourn ; well satisfied that she I love, Happy in holy union with another,
Shares not my wayward fortunes. Nor would I Now these tokens send, remembrance
to awaken, But that I know her happy; and the happy, Can think on misery
and share it not. BLAND. (Agitated.) Some one approaches. ANDRE.
Why 't is near the time! But tell me, Bland, say-is the manner chang'd? BLAND.
I hope it, but I yet have no assurance. ANDRE. Well, well! HONORA.
(Without.) I must see him. ANDRE. Whose voice was that? My senses!-Do
I dream? (Leans on BLAND.) (Enter HONORA.) HONORA.
Where is he ?
ANDRE. 'Tis she! (Starts from BLAND and advances
wards HONORA; she rushes into his arms.) HONORA. It is enough!
He lives, and I shall save him. (She faints in the arms of ANDRE.)
ANDRE. She sinks-assist me, Bland! O, save her, save her! (Places
her in a chair and looks tenderly on her.) Yet, why should she awake
from that I sweet sleep? Why should she ope her eyes- ( wildly )-to
see me hung! What does she here? Stand off-(tenderly)-and let her
die. How pale she looks! . How worn that tender frame! She has known
sorrow! Who could injure her? BLAND. She revives-Andre-soft, bend her forward. (ANDRE
kneels and supports her.) HONORA. Andre! ANDRE. Lov'd excellence!
HONORA. Yes, it is Andre! (Rises and looks at him.) No more
deceived by visionary forms, By him supported-(Leans on him.) ANDRE.
Why is this? Thou dost look pale, Honora-sick and wan Languid thy fainting
limbs- HONORA. All will be well. But was it kind to leave me as thou
did'st? So rashly to desert thy vow-link'd wife? ANDRE. When made another's
both by vows and laws- HONORA. (Quitting his support.) What meanest
thou? ANDRE. Did'st thou not marry him? HONORA. Marry! ANDRE.
Did'st. thou not give thy hand away From me? HONORA. O, never, never. ANDRE.
Not married? HONORA. To none but thee, and but in will to thee. O blind,
blind wretch!-Thy father told me- HONORA. Thou wast deceived. They hurried
me away, Spreading false rumors to remove thy love- (Tenderly.)
Thou did'st too soon believe them. ANDRE. Thy father- How could I but
believe Honora's father? And he did tell me so. I reverenc'd age, Yet
knew age was not yirtue. I believed His snowy locks, and yet they did deceive
me! I have destroy'd myself and thee!-Alas, Ill-fated maid, why did'st
thou not forget me? Hast thou rude seas and hostile shores explor'd For
this? To see my death? Witness my shame? HONORA. I come to bless thee, Andre,
and shall do it. I bear such offers from thy kind Commander As must prevail
to save thee. Thus the daughter May repair the ills her cruel sire inflicted.
My father, dying, gave me cause to think That arts were us'd to drive thee
from thy home; But what those arts I knew not. An heiress left, Of years
mature, with power and liberty, I straight resolv'd to seek thee o'er the
seas. A long-known friend, who came to join her lord, Yielded protection
and lov'd fellowship,- Indeed, when I did hear of thy estate, It almost
kill'd me;-I was weak before- ANDRE. 'Tis I have murder'd thee! HONORA.
All shall be well. Thy General heard of me, and instant form'd The plan
of this my visit. I am strong, Compar'd with what I was. Hope strengthens
me; Nay, even solicitude supports me now; And when thou shalt be safe,
thou wilt support me. ANDRE. Support thee!-O Heaven! What!-and must I die?
Die! -and leave her thus-suffering unprotected! (Enter MELVILLE and
GUARD.) MELVILLE. I am sorry that my dutv should require Service,
at which my heart revolts; but, sir, Our soldiers wait in arms. All is prepar'd- HONORA.
To death! Impossible! Has my delay, Then, murder'd him? A momentary respite- MELVILLE.
Lady, I have no power. BLAND. Melville, my friend, This lady bears
dispatches of high import, Touching this business-should they arrive too
late- HONORA. For pity's sake, and heaven's, conduct me to him; And
wait the issue of our conference. O, 'twould be murder of the blackest dye,
Sin execrable, not to break thy orders- Inhuman, thou art not. MELVILLE.
Lady, thou say'st true ; For rather would I lose my rank in arms, And
stand cashier'd for lack of discipline, Than gain 'mongst military men all
praise, Wanting the touch of sweet humanity. HONORA. Thou grantest
my request? MELVILLE. Lady, I do. Retire! (Soldiers go out.)
BLAND. I know not what excuse, to martial men, Thou canst adyance
for this; but to thy heart Thou wilt need none, good Melville. ANDRE.
O Honora ! HONORA. Cheer up, I feel assur'd. Hope wings my flight,
To bring thee tidings of much joy to come. (Exit HONORA, with BLAND
and MELVILLE. ) ANDRE. Eternal blessings on thee, matchless woman!-
If Death now comes, he finds the veriest coward That e'er he dealt withal.
I cannot think Of dying. Void of fortitude, each thought Clings to the
world-the world that holds Honora! (Exit.) ACT
FIFTH. SCENE 1, the Encampment. (Enter
BLAND.) BLAND. Suspense-uncertainty-man's bane and solace! How racking
now to me! My mother comes. Forgive me, O my father, if in this war,
This wasting conflict of my 'wildering passions, Memory of thee holds here
a second place! M'DONALD. comes with her. I would not meet him; Yet
I will do it. Summon up some courage Confess my fault, and gain, if not his
love, At least the approbation of my judgment. (Enter MRS. BLAND
and CHILDREN, with M'DONALD.) BLAND. Say, Madam, is there
no change of counsel, Or new determination? MRS. BLAND. Nought new,
my son. The tale of misery is told unheard. The widow's and the orphans'
sighs Fly up, unnoted by the eye of man, And mingle, undistinguish'd,
with the winds. My friend (to M'DONALD ), attend thy duties. I must
away. SECOND CHILD. You need not cry, Mama, the General will do it, I am
sure, for I saw him cry. He turn'd away his head from you, but I saw it. MRS.
BLAND. Poor thing! Come, let us home and weep. Alas! I can no more, for war
hath made men rocks. (Exeunt MRS. BLAND and CHILDREN.) BLAND.
Colonel, I used thee ill this morning. M'DONALD. No! Thyself thou used'st
most vilely, I remember. BLAND. Myself sustained the injury true; But
the intent of what I said and did Was ill to thee alone. I'm sorry for it.
See'st thou these blushes? They proceed from warmth As honest as the
heart of man e'er felt; But not with shame unmingled, while I force This
tongue, debased, to own it slander'd thee And utter'-I could curse it-utter'd
falsehood. Howe'er misled by passion, still my mind Retains that sense
of honest rectitude Which makes the memory of an evil deed A troublesome
companion. I was wrong. M'DONALD. Why, now, this glads me; for thou now
art right. O, may thy tongue, henceforward, utter naught But Truth's
sweet precepts, in fair Virtue's cause! Give me thy hand. (Takes his hand.)
Ne'er may it grasp a sword But in defense of justice. BLAND. Yet, erewhile,
A few short hours scarce past, when this vile hand Attempted on thee
insult; and was raised Against thy honor; ready to be raised Against
thy life. If this my deep remorse- M'DONALD. No more, no more! 'T is past.
Remember But as thou would'st the action of another, By thy enlighten'd
judgment much condemn'd; And serving as a beacon in the storms Thy passions
yet may raise. Remorse is vice; Guard thee against its influence debasing.
Say to thyself: "I am not what I was, I am not now the instrument of
vice; I'm changed; I am a man; Virtue's firm friend ; Sever'd forever
from mv former self. N o link, but in remembrance salutary." BLAND.
Noble M'donald, truth and honor's champion! Yet think not strange that
my intemperance wrong'd thee : Good as thou art! for, would'st thou, can'st
thou, think it? My tongue unbridled, hath the same offense, With action
violent, and boisterous tone, Hurl'd on that glorious man, whose pious labors
Shield from every ill his grateful country. That man, whom friends to
adoration love, And enemies revere. Yes, M'donald, Even in the presence
of the first of men Did I abjure the service of my country, And reft
my helmet of that glorious badge Which graces even the brow of Washington.
How shall I see him more? M'DONALD. Alive himself to every generous impulse,
He hath excused the impetuous warmth of youth, In expectation that thy
fiery soul, Chasten'd by time and reason, will receive The stamp indelible
of godlike virtue. To me, in trust, he gave this badge disclaim'd, With
power, when thou should'st see thy wrongful error , From him, to reinstate
it in thy helm, And thee in his high favor. (Gives the cockade.) BLAND.
(Takes the cockade and replaces it.) Shall I speak my thoughts of
thee and him? No! let my actions henceforth show what thou And he have made
me. Ne'er shall my helmet Lack again its proudest, noblest ornament,
Until my country knows the rest of peace, Or Bland the peace of death. (Exit.)
SCENE 2, the General's quarters.
(Enter GENERAL
and SEWARD.) GENERAL. Ask her, my friend, to send by thee her pacquets.
(Exit SEWARD.) O, what keen struggles must I undergo! Unbless'd estate!
to have the power to pardon; The court's stern sentence to remit;-give life;-
Feel the strong wish to use such blessed power; Yet know that circumstances
strong as fate Forbid to obey the impulse. O, I feel That man should
never shed the blood of man! (Enter SEWARD.) SEWARD. Naught
can the lovely suitor satisfy, But conference with thee, and much I fear
Refusal would cause madness. GENERAL. Yet to admit, To hear, be
tortur'd, and refuse at last- SEWARD. Sure never man such spectacle of sorrow
. Saw before. Motionless the rough-hewn soldiers Silent view her, or
walk aside and weep. GENERAL. (After a pause.) Admit her. (SEWARD
goes out.) O, for the art, the precious art, To reconcile the sufferer
to his sorrows ! (HONORA rushes in, and throws herself wildly on her
knees before him; he endeavors to raise her.) HONORA. Nay, nay, here
is my place, or here, or lower , Unless thou grant'st his life. All forms
away! Thus will I clasp thy knees, thus cling to thee- I am his wife-'t
is I have ruin'd him- O, save him! Give him to me. Let us cross The mighty
seas, far, far-ne'er to offend again- (The GENERAL turns away,
and hides his eyes with his hand.) (Enter SEWARD and an
OFFICER.) GENERAL. Seward, support her; my heart is torn in twain. (HONORA,
as if exhausted, suffers herself to be raised, and leans on SEWARD.) OFFICER.
This moment, sir, a messenger arrived With well confirm'd and mournful information,
That gallant Hastings, by the lawless scouts Of Britain taken, after
cruel mockery With show of trial and of condemnation, On the next tree
was hung. HONORA. (Wildly.) O, it is false. GENERAL. Why, why,
my country, did I hesitate? (Exit.) (HONOR A sinks, faints, and
is borne off by SEWARD and OFFICER.) SCENE 3, the Prison. (ANDRE
meeting BLAND.) ANDRE. How speeds Honora'? (Pause.) Art thou
silent, Bland? Why, then, I know my task. The mind of man, If not by
vice debas'd, debilitated, Or by disease of body quite unton'd, Hath
o'er its thoughts a power-energy divine. Of fortitude the source and every
virtue A godlike power, which e'en o'er circumstance Its sov'reignty
exerts. Now from my thoughts, Honora! Yet she is left alone-expos'd- BLAND.
O, Andre, spurn me, strike me to the earth; For what a wretch am I in Andre's
mind, That he can think he leaves his love alone, And I retaining life
! ANDRE. Forgive me, Bland. My thoughts glanc'd not on thee. Imagination
Pictur'd only, then, her orphan state, helpless; Her weak and grief-exhausted
frame. Alas! . This blow will kill her. BLAND. (Kneeling.) Here, do
I myself Devote, my fortune consecrate, to thee, To thy remembrance,
and Honora's service. ANDRE. Enough! Let me not see her more-nor think of
her- Farewell, farewell, sweet image! Now for death. BLAND. Yet that
thou should'st the felon's fate fulfil- Damnation! My blood boils. Indignation
Makes the current of my life course wildly Through its round and maddens
each emotion. ANDRE. Come, come, it matters not. BLAND. I do remember,
When a boy at school, in our allotted tasks, We, by our puny acts, strove
to portray The giant thoughts of Otway. I was Pierre. O, thou art Pierre's
reality-a soldier, On whose manly brow sits fortitude enamor'd; A Mars,
abhorring vice, yet doom'd to die A death of infamy; thy corse expos'd
To vulgar gaze-halter'd-distorted-oh- (Pauses, and then adds in a low hollow
voice: ) Pierre had a friend to save him from such shame And so hast
thou. ANDRE. No more, as thou dost love me. BLAND. I have a sword,
and arm, that never fail'd me. ANDRE. Bland, such an act would justly thee
involve, And leave that helpless one thou sworest to guard Expos'd to
every ill. O, think not of it! BLAND. If thou wilt not my aid-take it thyself.
(Draws and offers his sword.) ANDRE. No, men will say that cowardice did
urge me. In my mind's weakness, I did wish to shun That mode of death
which error represented Infamous: now let me rise superior; And with
a fortitude too true to start From mere appearances, show your country
That she, in me, destroys a man who might Have liv'd to virtue. BLAND.
(Sheathing his sword.) I will not think more of it; I was again the sport
of erring passion. ANDRE. Go thou and guide Honora from this spot. HONORA.
(Entering.) Who shall oppose his wife? I will have way! They, cruel, would
have kept me from thee, Andre. Say, am I not thy wife? Wilt thou deny me?
Indeed I am not dress'd in bridal trim. But I have travelled far!-rough was
the road- Rugged and rough-that must excuse my dress. (Seeing ANDRE's
distress.) Thou art not glad to see me. ANDRE. Break my heart ! HONORA.
Indeed, I feel not much in spirits. I wept but now. (Enter MELVILLE and
GUARD.) BLAND. (To MELVILLE.) Say nothing. ANDRE. I am ready. HONORA.
(Seeing the GUARD.) Are they here? Here again-the same-but they shall not harm
me. I am with thee, my Andre-I am safe- And thou art safe with me. Is
it not so? (Clinging to him.) (Enter MRS. BLAND.) MRS. BLAND. Where
is this lovely victim? BLAND. Thanks, my mother. MRS. BLAND. M'Donald
sent me hither. My woes are past. Thy father, by the foe released, already
Is in safety. This be forgotten now; And every thought be turn'd to this
sad scene. Come, lady, home with me. HONORA. Go home with thee? Art
thou my Andre's mother? We will home And rest, for thou art weary-very weary.
(Leans on MRS. BLAND.) (ANDRE retires to the GUARD, and
goes off with them, looking on her to the last, and with an action of extreme
tenderness takes leave of her. MELVILLE and BLAND accompany him.) HONORA.
Now we will go. Come, love! Where is he? All gone!-I do remember-I awake-
They have him. Murder! Help! O, save him! save hirn! (HONORA attempts
to follow, but falls. MRS. BLAND kneels to assist her. Scene closes.) SCENE
4 the Encampment. (Procession to the execution of ANDRE.
First enter Pioneers-Detachmcnt of Infantry-Military Band of Music-Infantry.
The Music having passed off, enter ANDRE between MELVILLE and AMERICAN
OFFICER; they sorrowful, he cheerfully conversing as he passes over the stage.
) ANDRE. It may in me be merely prejudice, The effect of young opinion
deep engraved Upon the tender mind by care parental; But I must think
your country has mistook Her interests. Believe me, but for this I should
Not willingly have drawn a sword against her. (They bow their heads
in silence.) Opinion must, nay, ought to sway our actions; Therefore-
(Having crossed the stage, he goes out as still conversing with them. Another
detachment of Infantry, with muffled and craped drums, closes the procession;
as soon as they are off - SCENE draws and discovers
the distant view of the encampment.) (Procession enters in same
order as before, proceeds up the stage, and goes off the opposite side.) (Enter
M'DONALD, leading BLAND, who looks wildly back.) BLAND. I
dare not thee resist. yet why , O why Thus hurry me away?- M'DONALD.
Would 'st thou behold- BLAND. O, name it not! M'DONALD. Or would'st
thou, by looks And gestures wild, o'erthrow that manly calmness Which,
or assumed or felt, so well becomes thy friend ? BLAND. What means that
cannon's sound? M'DONALD. (After a pause.) Signal of death Appointed.
Andre, thy friend, no more. BLAND. Farewell, farewell, brave spirit! O!
let my countrymen Henceforward when the cruelties of war Arise in their
remembrance; when ready Speech would pour forth their foe's dispraise,
Think on this act accurst, and lock complaint in silence. (BLAND throws
himself on the earth.) M'DONALD. Such are are the dictates of the heart,
not head. O, may the children of Columbia still Be taught by every teacher
of mankind, Each circumstance of calculative gain, Or wounded pride,
which prompted our oppressors; May every child be taught to lisp the tale;
And may, in times to come, no foreign force, No European influence, tempt
to misstate, Or awe the tongue of eloquence to silence. Still may our
children's children deep abhor The motives, doubly deep detest the actors;
Ever remembering that the race who plann'd, Who acquiesced, or did the deeds
abhor'd, Has pass'd from off the earth; and, in its stead, Stand men
who challenge love or detestation But from their proper, individual deeds.
Never let memory of the sire's offence Descend upon the son. CURTAIN
DROPS. The lines marked <> above were omitted after the first
night and the following were inserted. (See Introduction.)
BLAND.l How all men tower above me! . M'DONALD. Nay, not so. Above
what once thou wast, some few do rise . None above what thou art. BLAND.
It shall be so. M'DONALD. It is so. BLAND. Then to prove it. For I
must yet a trial undergo, That will require a consciousness of virtue. (Exit.)
M'DONALD. O, what a temper doth in man reside! How capable of yet unthought
perfection! (Exit.) |